NASA scientists may have found the “ghost” of an exploded star near the Milky Way’s black hole. The ancient supernova remnant could be still expanding after 1,700 years.
Astronomers using NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory to observe galaxy Messier 83 (M83) spotted the unexpected explosive aftermath of a supernova. Typically, the aftermath of a stellar explosion is a ...
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NASA’s Webb caught a star that blew up when the universe was just 730 million years old
The James Webb Space Telescope has identified the earliest known supernova, a star that exploded when the universe was roughly 730 million years old. The discovery traces back to March 14, 2025, when ...
NASA's Chandra spacecraft detected supernova wreckage near Sagittarius A*, the Milky Way's central black hole, revealing ...
Morning Overview on MSN
NASA’s Fermi telescope just caught what may be the first gamma-ray signal from a superluminous supernova — one of the most extreme blasts in the known universe
A stellar explosion that briefly outshone its entire host galaxy may have left behind a calling card no superluminous supernova has ever produced before: a burst of high-energy gamma rays detected by ...
NASA is marking the United States' 250th birthday with four striking red, white, and blue images of deep space from the ...
If the supernova remnant is confirmed, it would be one of the closest to the supermassive black hole that lies in the center of the Milky Way ...
The research team found that about half of the 22 X-ray sources linked to supernova remnants changed significantly in ...
NASA’s Chandra Observatory has identified a 1,700-year-old supernova remnant near the Milky Way’s black hole, expanding at 3.2 million kilometers per hour.
Astro fans around the world have been waiting for months for a nova to occur in the "T Coronae Borealis" star system. The ...
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