UFO Mysteries Astronomers Can't Solve to Dark Stars may Exist in a Mirror Universe
The UFO Mysteries Scientists Can't Solve, reports Newsweek. There's a gap to be bridged between government officials concerned with national security and scientists, and researchers insist that there need not be one, and the United States government is receptive
Dark stars may exist in a mirror universe --Physicists have proposed that a mirror universe alongside our own might explain dark matter – and we might be able to see traces of its stars, reports Jonathan O’Callaghan for New Scientist.
International fleet of spacecraft is heading to the moon in 2024--More than 10 missions are heading to the moon in 2024, with orbiters, landers, rovers and even crewed spacecraft making the trip and paving the way for future exploration reports Leah Crane for New Scientist.
Black holes May Not Only Arise from the Collapse of Dead Stars. But a Webb telescope image showing the early universe hints at another possibility, reports Dennis Overbye for The New York Times. "It turns out that a dead star might not be needed to make a black hole. Instead, at least in the early universe, giant clouds of primordial gas may have collapsed directly into black holes, bypassing millions of years spent in stardom."
What are astronomers learning from the James Webb Space Telescope? explores NPRs Nell Greenfieldboyce.
13 record-breaking space discoveries of 2023, reports Keith Cooper for Space.com. "The past 12 months have seen a host of new astronomical records broken, from exploding stars to faraway black holes."
Have we found filaments of pure energy unleashed during the big bang?--Puzzling ancient galaxies and oddly shaped clusters suggest we have glimpsed cosmic strings travelling at the speed of light – and with them clues to a deeper theory of reality, reports Dan Falk for New Scientist.
What we actually know about aliens, according to science--The evidence says all possibilities remain in play, including the possibility that we are alone. reports Washington Post.
Curated by The Galaxy Report editorial staff.