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Earth's Magnetosphere
Elucidating The Black Holes
The Surprising Power of a Solar Storm
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A Close Encounter With Jupiter
Ancient remnants deep in the Kuiper belt
The Super Fluid Core Of A Dead Neutron Star
Massive Cloud On Collision Course With Milky Way
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Spacecraft discovers thousands of doomed comets
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Fractal Wormhole Space Tunnel Time Travel
Please click on the 'PLAY' icon in the video if it does not start plaing automatically in a few seconds
This is an artist’s impression of the exoplanet Kepler-13Ab as compared in size to several of the planets in the Solar System. The behemoth exoplanet is six times more massive than Jupiter.
The heart has its own brain. Now, scientists have drawn a detailed map of this little brain, called the intracardiac nervous system, in rat hearts.
Astronomers using the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope have made images of several galaxies containing quasars, which act as gravitational lenses to amplify and distort images of the galaxies aligned behind them.
This Hubble Picture of the Week shows Messier 28, a globular cluster in the constellation of Sagittarius (The Archer), in jewel-bright detail. It is about 18 000 light-years away from Earth.
30 Doradus is the brightest star-forming region in our galactic neighbourhood and home to the most massive stars ever seen.
This graphic illustrates how a star can magnify and brighten the light of a background star when it passes in front of the distant star. If the foreground star has planets, then the planets may also magnify the light of the background star