By Will Dunham WASHINGTON, Feb 4 (Reuters) - Jupiter, without a doubt, is the biggest planet in our solar system. But it ...
The curious minds at What If take us on a cosmic auditory journey, imagining what it would be like to hear the distinctive ...
A young star called V1298 Tau is giving astronomers a front-row seat to the birth of the galaxy’s most common planets. Four ...
The curious minds at What If predict the effects if Planet X entered our solar system, revealing orbital chaos, climate ...
From dazzling Jupiter high in the evening sky to elusive Mercury low at sunset, February 2026 offers one of the year's best ...
In March 2025, the International Astronomical Union recognised the discovery of a whopping 128 more moons orbiting around ...
“Textbooks will need to be updated,” study co-author Yohai Kaspi, a planetary scientist at the Weizmann Institute of Science ...
Point Galaxy is an outer space riff on Point Salad, twisting that board game's score-focused play without overcomplicating it ...
For over 50 years, we thought we knew the size and shape of Jupiter, the solar system's largest planet. Now, Weizmann ...
New simulations suggest Jupiter holds far more water than once thought, reshaping ideas about how the largest planet formed.
NASA’s Juno spacecraft finds Jupiter’s diameter slightly smaller than old estimates, providing precise data on the gas ...
Astronomers have found thousands of exoplanets around single stars, but few around binary stars—even though both types of stars are equally common. Physicists can now explain the dearth.