News

A quiet, glowing gas cloud has been hiding in plain sight not far from Earth. For decades, astronomers have predicted that ...
Astronomers used 200,000 Hubble Space Telescope images to discover an eerie glow surrounding the solar system even after all other light sources have been eliminated. Skip to main content.
Scientists have discovered a gigantic, glowing gas of hydrogen gas lurking just 300 light-years away. As detailed in a paper to be published in the journal Nature Astronomy, the international team ...
One of the studies was led by Rogier Windhorst from ASU, who points out that over 95 percent of the photons in Hubble's images come from distances on our side of the universe, less than 3 billion ...
Hubble detects ghostly glow surrounding our solar system. ScienceDaily . Retrieved May 29, 2025 from www.sciencedaily.com / releases / 2022 / 12 / 221209135557.htm ...
An enormous glowing cloud that contains approximately 3,400 solar masses worth of gas has been discovered near the solar system. Skip to main content. Scientific American.
Glow Up Someone forgot to turn the lights out. Astronomers have detected a residual "ghostly glow," tainting the near pitch blackness of the sky, after painstakingly analyzing 200,000 images ...
Understanding the solar system's local bubble. The eROSITA telescope, the primary instrument of the Spectrum-Roentgen-Gamma (SRG) mission launched in 2019, is the ideal instrument to tackle this ...
Researchers using data from the Hubble Space Telescope have made a strange discovery: a “ghostly light” surrounding our solar system. When light from stars, planets, and even the glow of ...
The cloud, named Eos after the Greek goddess of dawn, was discovered around 300 light-years away from our solar system. It is one of the largest single structures in the sky, and may be the ...
Using data from the eROSITA All-Sky Survey, astronomers have created a 3D map of the low-density bubble of X-ray-emitting, million-degree hot gas that surrounds the solar system.