Astronomers have uncovered a hidden population of dusty galaxies that formed just one billion years after the Big Bang, offering a new glimpse into the universe’s formative years. An international ...
Space on MSN
These 70 dusty galaxies at the edge of our universe could rewrite our understanding of the cosmos
Using the James Webb Space Telescope, astronomers have investigated 70 dusty galaxies at the very edge of the universe that ...
To find them, researchers first used the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile, a powerful telescope designed to observe the faint glow of cold dust in distant space. ALMA ...
The existence of massive, elliptical galaxies in the early universe has puzzled astronomers for two decades. An international ...
PRIMETIMER on MSN
Missing links in galaxy evolution found in early dusty galaxies
A global team led by UMass Amherst identified dusty, star-forming galaxies nearly 13 billion years old, bridging gaps between ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
How did massive elliptical galaxies appear so early after the Big Bang?
Four galaxies crowd the center of a collapsing structure 1.4 billion years after the Big Bang. Each one is churning out stars ...
This enormous chain of hundreds of galaxies—a cosmic filament—is twisting through space 400 million light-years away ...
An international collaboration using the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) has published an exceptionally detailed radio sky map, revealing 13.7 million cosmic sources and delivering the most complete ...
Among the hundreds of billions of galaxies that stretch across the known universe, even the smallest members can reveal secrets about our cosmic history. But even as we discover new galaxies, ...
New radio observations of molecular gas reveal how dozens of galaxies could have rapidly merged together in the early Universe.
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