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Why were galaxies so active in the early universe? We may be getting close to the answer
Early galaxies were star-forming machines, furiously gobbling up gas and spitting out stars. A new model helps explain why ...
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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, chaotic bundles of turbulent gas, churned up by huge gulps of intergalactic gas, ...
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Dusty galaxies from the universe's far edges show star formation had begun earlier than suspected
A large research team, led by Jorge K. Zavala, an assistant professor of astronomy at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, has provided a snapshot of the early universe. They discovered specific ...
Galaxy Y1 shines thanks to dust grains heated by newly-formed stars (circled in this image from the James Webb telescope). Astronomers have uncovered a previously unknown, extreme kind of star factory ...
A supermassive black hole, ULAS J1120+0641, outgrows its galaxy and disrupts the cosmic balance, revealing a mystery of the ...
This story was provided by Live Science, a sister site of Space.com. Astronomers have discovered over a dozen "dormant" galaxies that paused their star formation within the first billion years after ...
Uncover the economic and political parallels between the Star Wars universe and real-world systems, exploring trade routes, ...
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