News

Webb is casting the universe in a new light, but the space telescope's discovery of a cosmological question mark has us scratching our heads.
Two of our galaxy’s most famous stars were recently photobombed by what appears to be a celestial question mark. The symbol was spotted in a new image from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST ...
A near-infrared light image made by the James Webb Space Telescope of actively forming stars, known as Herbig-Haro 46/47, had at the bottom of the frame an apparent question mark.
A cosmic object in the shape of a glowing question mark has photobombed one of the latest images captured by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope — and scientists think they know what it might be ...
Distorted galaxy forming cosmic question mark Date: September 4, 2024 Source: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Summary: It's 7 billion years ago, and the universe's heyday of star formation is ...
The question mark follows a map of cosmic radiation - the background light left over from the Big Bang which formed the universe - which appeared to include the initials of the famous physicist ...
Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope have discovered a pair of distant galaxies being twisted into a cosmic question mark thanks to a rare form of gravitational lensing.
But if you’re asking why should we care that the universe decided to doodle a question mark 7 billion light-years away, this cosmic quirk actually helps glimpse into the universe’s teenage years.
The “Question Mark Pair” is an optical illusion created by two galaxies that astronomers have observed in deep space with the James Webb Space Telescope.
Did light shine in the universe’s earliest moments, or was it hidden from view? While this question may seem simple at first, arecent article by Live Sciencereveals that the reality is far more ...
We just got the clearest snapshot yet of the first light that streamed through the Universe. After five years of staring unblinking at the sky, the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) has compiled ...
However, we do know that the universe is larger than 93 billion light-years across. ... The existence of edges remains a question mark, ...