NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has recently made a historic observation, identifying the earliest supernova ever detected.
Previously, the most ancient supernova ever confirmed dated back to when the universe was 1.8 billion years old.
NASA’s Webb Telescope detects the earliest known supernova, GRB 250314A, 730 million years after the Big Bang, capturing its host galaxy and providing unprecedented early-universe observations.
Cradled in the nose of a high-altitude research airplane, a new NASA sensor has taken to the skies to help geoscientists map ...
The James Webb Space Telescope and other international observatories have spotted a 13-billion-year-old supernova. On Tuesday ...
Growing up in central England during the heyday of NASA's Apollo program, Colin Nicholls dreamed of one day going to space ...
New Hubble images show the interstellar object in detail, amid claims by Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb that 3I/ATLAS could ...
Using the JWST, an international team featuring UNIGE scientists has detected enormous clouds of helium streaming away from ...
Sugars essential for biology have been discovered in a gum-like substance in fragments from the Bennu space-rock.
When NASA engineers want to test a concept for exploring the Red Planet, they have to find ways to create Mars-like ...
NASA has warned that a strong solar flare could disrupt life on Earth. The space agency announced Monday, Dec 1, that the ...
According to NASA, the NIRCam on the JWST has near infrared imagery that provided high-resolution imagery for the ...