For the first time, scientists witness a supermassive black hole releasing jets of material at immense speeds, offering a glimpse into jet formation and propagation in active galactic nuclei.
In an article published in Physical Review Letters on Thursday, scientists carried out an innovative study testing the existence of mirror asymmetries in our universe by studying the handedness of the ...
The Westminster College Planetarium will host four new shows this spring.
Astronomers have witnessed a monster supermassive black hole erupting with a light-year-long jet traveling at one-third the ...
Early data of “little red dots,” or LRDs, from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) appeared to suggest the presence of ...
Rethinking the Underlying Trigger of Quasar Jets Building on the groundbreaking 2020 discovery of newborn jets in several ...
Collaboration published the first image of a black hole, of M87* from the center of the galaxy M87. The measurement data on which the image was based was obtained in 2017. The EHT Collaboration has ...
Astronomers have warned that billions of black holes are consuming "hidden" matter in the universe. Experts identified these ...
Using observations from 2017 and 2018, the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) Collaboration has advanced our understanding of the ...
Infrared observations help astronomers uncover hundreds of obscured supermassive black holes, reshaping cosmic understanding.
MIT astronomers have been captivated by the strange behaviors of a supermassive black located 270 million light-years away, ...
Sgr A*, at the heart of the Milky Way and clocking in at 4.3 million solar masses, is the closest supermassive black hole we have access to. It's also on the quiescent end of the activity scale, which ...