Keio University astronomers measured the universe’s temperature 7 billion years ago at 5.13 K using ALMA data, which ...
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Simulations suggest the early universe helped black holes grow big, but not in the long run
At the heart of the Milky Way, just 27,000 light-years from Earth, there is a supermassive black hole with a mass of more ...
James Webb Space telescope spots 'big red dot' in the ancient universe: A ravenous supermassive black hole named 'BiRD' ...
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Our universe's oldest galaxies were hot messes
The universe's first galaxies were hot messes, according to a recent study. During their younger days, they were wild, ...
The Universe may not have begun with a Big Bang, but instead with a Big Bounce, according to a new theory about how the Universe expands ...
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How Big Are Supermassive Black Holes?
NASA compares the universe's biggest black holes with "each other and to our solar system," in this Goddard Space Flight ...
The Big Bang theory has dominated our understanding of the universe’s origin for almost 100 years. It describes a moment when ...
G Herbo is a fan of the Power universe. In an interview with Angela Yee for XXL, he shared that the original series and its ...
Led by doctoral student Tatsuya Kotani and Professor Tomoharu Oka from Keio University, the research team measured the ...
JWST observations show that early galaxies were chaotic, gas-filled systems rather than stable disks. Researchers from ...
Using the James Webb Space Telescope, astronomers have captured the clearest picture yet of how galaxies formed in the early universe.
Astronomers may have found the universe’s first stars formed after the Big Bang, using JWST data and gravitational lensing.
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