Morning Overview on MSN
What does the entire universe actually look like through AI’s eyes?
The latest generation of astronomy algorithms is not just cataloguing stars and galaxies, it is learning the hidden rules ...
The largest known structure in the Universe may be even larger than the large we thought it was. A re-examination of the distribution of powerful space explosions suggests that the Hercules-Corona ...
Astronomers have identified what could be the largest structure ever observed in the known universe—a vast network of galaxy clusters and superclusters containing an astonishing 200 quadrillion solar ...
A new AI-powered method is changing how scientists measure the universe. Developed by researchers at the Flatiron Institute and their partners, this technique offers a far more accurate way to ...
For years, scientists have worked to chart the universe’s massive structure, aiming to test key models of cosmology. These efforts also help uncover how galaxies form and change over time. While most ...
A small group of young researchers at the Cosmic Dawn Center, Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, have, through ...
James is a published author with multiple pop-history and science books to his name. He specializes in history, space, strange science, and anything out of the ordinary.View full profile James is a ...
Nearly everything in the universe is made of mysterious dark matter and dark energy, yet we can’t see either of them directly ...
We preselected all newsletters you had before unsubscribing.
A new JCAP study tests an “emulator” to reconstruct the large-scale structure of the cosmos If you think a galaxy is big, compare it to the size of the Universe: it’s just a tiny dot which, together ...
The Nature Network on MSN
What happens when the universe runs out of energy?
When people hear “the universe running out of energy,” it sounds dramatic, like everything suddenly switching off. In reality ...
Space.com on MSN
'It would be a fundamental breakthrough': Mysterious dark matter may interact with cosmic 'ghost particles'
New research puts forward compelling new evidence that dark matter interacts with cosmic "ghost particles" called neutrinos.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results