NASA has shared 10 breathtaking images capturing the vibrant beauty of the cosmos, featuring colourful stars, glowing nebulae, and explosive supernovae, showcasing the Universe’s spectacular and diverse wonders.
Scientists map the Universe’s large-scale structure quickly with Effort.jl emulator which offers accurate results faster than traditional cosmological models.
New data from DES and DESI surveys show something strange. The force called dark energy might be shifting with time.
Later this year, the Rubin Observatory will launch its Legacy Survey of Space and Time. This 10-year project aims to scan the entire southern sky every three to four nights.
In their study, the scientists examined both evolving dark energy and evolving dark matter. Their analysis showed that changing dark matter fits the data more closely.
New evidence from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) suggests that dark energy, the mysterious force driving the universe's expansion, may be changing, challenging our current understanding of space and time.
The Euclid space telescope has captured a stunning image of an Einstein ring, a rare phenomenon caused by gravitational lensing, around galaxy NGC 6505, 590 million light-years from Earth.
NASA's James Webb Space Telescope supports Hubble Space Telescope's findings on the universe's accelerating expansion rate, deepening the mystery of cosmic expansion and Hubble tension.
NASA is preparing to launch the Roman Space Telescope in 2027, a mission poised to transform our understanding of the universe.
Recent studies suggest that dark energy might be weakening over time.
Scientists use computer simulations which is built to help in the detection of dark matter and to broaden their understanding of it. Computer simulation has generated a 'Synthetic Universe' that will help in predicting the future universe which will be unveiled to the next generation of super-telescopes.
The Euclid telescope will take four weeks to reach Lagrange point L2, its final destination, which is 1.5 million km long journey from earth. After this, Euclid will spend six years in studying the dark universe.
According to the European Space Agency, the mysterious 'dark' components of the cosmos are thought to be the cause of the Universe's accelerating expansion, but their nature and origin are not known yet.
A team of astronomers have worked out precise distances of a large sample of galaxy clusters that may lead to a breakthrough in understanding the expansion history of the Universe and dark energy