Sea turtles navigate using Earth's magnetic field like a GPS. Scientists found they learn and remember magnetic locations.
A technique called sonification allows new discoveries, brings out subtleties in dense data, and makes astronomy more accessible.
A unique dataset of Type Ia supernovae being released today could change how cosmologists measure the expansion history of ...
RCW 38 lies approximately 5,500 light-years away in the constellation Vela. Unlike many star clusters that appear as simple ...
Firefly Aerospace 's moon-bound spacecraft has provided the closest thing to a reflecting pool in space, showing Earth as an ...
Loggerhead turtles navigate using magnetic fields, and new research has revealed more about this remarkable ability.
An American Astronomy team at Brown University found themselves in a mystery when an Australian telescope recorded some ...
From supermoons to a total eclipse to the national park’s biggest and best-attended star parties, these are the must-see celestial shows of the year ...
To comply with Trump's executive order about DEI, a federally funded telescope project has altered the biography of its ...
Kokoro Hosogi, a physics student at The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH), has achieved a rare honor for an ...
Over the next several weeks, astronomers will be looking closely at an asteroid called 2024 YR4 that could be as big as a ...
Astronomers sifting through data from the Murchison Widefield Array, a radio telescope in Western Australia, found themselves ...