Astronomers have detected oxygen in the most distant galaxy ever found. It’s 13.4 billion light-years away from Earth, according to new research.
The latest discovery marks the furthest detection of oxygen ever made and defies what we thought about how galaxies formed in the early universe.
Scientists using two enormous telescopes — one on Earth and the other in space — have detected oxygen in the most ancient known galaxy, a star-scape beaming light just 300 million years after the Big ...
NASA’s James Webb Telescope uncovers a ‘star factory’ inside the Flame Nebula, offering new insights into star formation and ...
Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) have uncovered something extraordinary: a primordial galaxy, JADES-GS ...
In a remarkable discovery, the NASA James Webb Telescope has unearthed 55 Cancri e, a super-Earth in our universe 41 ...
NASA's James Webb Space Telescope has detected 55 Cancri e, a super-Earth located 41 light-years away. The planet is five ...
When astronomers pointed the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) at a young red star in the constellation Columba, they noticed ...
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has achieved a groundbreaking feat by directly observing carbon dioxide (CO2) in the ...
The James Webb Space Telescope captures the first direct images of carbon dioxide in a distant planetary system, HR 8799, ...
Astronomers have made an exciting discovery—a massive spiral disk galaxy, much larger than expected, in the early universe.
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope uncovered a new milestone in exoplanet research by capturing images of exoplanets containing carbon dioxide in their ...