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A giant object that has been lurking in the relative galactic vicinity of the Solar System this entire time has just been unmasked in all its enormous, invisible glory.
You might be able to see the so-called 'smiley face' if you're just at the right spot. But this facial feature will only have ...
At 41 degrees south latitude, you would see seasonal changes of all of the southern hemisphere stars. The circumpolar ...
The cloud, named Eos, is chock-full of molecular hydrogen and possibly rife with star-forming potential in the future.
The find shines light on how galaxies begin to turn gas and dust "into stars and planets," said astrophysicist Blakesley ...
A newly found, huge cloud near our solar system probably won't form stars, but will rather disperse as part of a feedback ...
The crescent ... and how a galaxy begins to transform interstellar gas and dust into stars and planets." An artist's impression shows what Eos would look like in the night sky if the vast ...
Night vision relies on a type of photoreceptor in your eye called a rod, while cones (a different kind of photoreceptor) ...
A celestial leap is set to take place over two nights as the moon and Jupiter will appear to dance near to each other in the night sky.