Discover Magazine on MSN
TRAPPIST-1e likely doesn’t have what it takes to be a habitable planet — here’s why
The mystery of whether TRAPPIST-1e has an atmosphere capable of hosting life continues. Discover more about it.
In a recent Hot Take segment, the China Global Television Network recently released an interesting video detailing China's future plans for space. Titled "Earth 2.0? China's plan to find new Earth," ...
No, not that Nancy Grace. NASA's newest space telescope, named after the agency's first Chief of Astronomy, is physically ...
Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb claims the interstellar object 3I/ATLAS is not just a comet, but a technological artefact ...
A former Israeli space chief's claims about an alien galactic federation have resurfaced, sparking a viral debate and renewed ...
Space.com on MSN
Which exoplanet in the TRAPPIST-1 system could be habitable? Scientists are modeling the star to find out
New research shows how the star's powerful outbursts could help scientists assess which worlds might support life.
However, astronomers in Hawaii just spotted a pair of exciting discoveries — a huge exoplanet and a brown dwarf — using Japan ...
For the first time, scientists have continuously monitored a planet's escaping atmosphere over a complete orbit, revealing ...
A newly-detected spinning galaxy filament is reshaping our understanding of cosmic structure, gas flows, and the origins of ...
The RISTRETTO project, dedicated to observing Proxima b –the closest exoplanet to the Solar System — is reaching a new ...
More research is needed before scientists can determine whether the recently observed methane signatures point to the presence of an atmosphere or are simply the result of contamination from the host ...
Wonder Bound, the product of a collaboration between Johns Hopkins University, the Space Telescope Science Institute, and the ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results