Astronomers Just Saw a Star Eat a Planet for the First Time
A dying star swallowing a giant planet hints at the fate awaiting our solar system some five billion years from now
Charles Q. Choi is a frequent contributor to Scientific American. His work has also appeared in The New York Times, Science, Nature, Wired, and LiveScience, among others. In his spare time, he has traveled to all seven continents. Follow Charles Q. Choi on Twitter @cqchoi
A dying star swallowing a giant planet hints at the fate awaiting our solar system some five billion years from now
THESAN—the largest, most detailed computer model of the universe’s first billion years yet made—is helping set expectations for observations from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope...
Called Earendel, the star is nearly 13 billion light-years from Earth
Mineral deposits, not salty water, are the most likely cause of radar reflections spotted beneath the planet’s south pole, a new study finds
Cygnus X-1, the first black hole ever discovered, is significantly bigger than previously believed
New experiments have answered the decades-old question of how pieces of splitting nuclei get their spins
The giant planets will appear spectacularly close together in Earth’s sky during the solstice on December 21
In vivo bioprinting might also help repair hernias and treat infertility
Boosted by sunlight, “bubblecraft” might reach Proxima Centauri after a 185-year voyage
The dwarf planet could be a more habitable world than scientists had thought
The new method may be faster and easier than other genetic storage attempts
Nanoscale experiments reveal that quantum effects can transmit heat between objects separated by empty space
Worlds with off-kilter orbits may be much more common than previously believed
Astronomers have observed new details of black-hole growth previously hidden by obscuring clouds of gas and dust
A new study suggests a strange and surprisingly lively geological cycle for the small world
The ongoing search for the graviton—the proposed fundamental particle carrying gravitational force—is a crucial step in physicists’ long journey toward a theory of everything...
Ancient relics confirm our solar system’s tempestuous origins
A new look at old data from NASA’s Cassini orbiter shows complex organic molecules are gushing from the tiny moon
Data from NASA’s Juno spacecraft reveals thunderbolts around the giant planet’s stormy poles
New research suggests collisions between moonlets created the oddly-formed objects
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