Elizabeth Hays, chief of the Astroparticle Physics Laboratory at NASA Goddard, told ABC7 in a live interview that this "zombie star" explodes in a blaze of light every 80 years or so, due to it ...
A pulsating red star and its spectacular nebula have been captured by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. What it is: The variable ...
Onboard Juno is its famed camera, dubbed "JunoCam." A two megapixel visible light camera, JunoCam is designed "to study the ...
Scientists think that the host star Kepler-70 stopped being a red giant around 18.4 million years ago. Eventually it will run ...
Astronomers have discovered an Earth-like planet orbiting a white dwarf 4,000 light years away, offering a glimpse into our ...
"Cosmologists calculate the current theoretical size limit of structures to be 1.2 billion light-years, yet both of these ...
A "zombie" star could possibly rise from the dead on Halloween night for the first time in decades, according to space experts.
Amy Simon of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, lead author of the paper published recently in The ...
Keep an eye on the night sky this Halloween night, NASA scientists expect a stellar explosion to wake up a dead star.
Every 80 years, a violent explosion makes the T Coronae Borealis star system visible with the naked eye for about one week.