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James Webb telescope detects 'galaxy-killing wind' near the dawn of time
New observations from the James Webb Space Telescope show that ancient galaxies lived fast and died young because of intense, collision-driven winds.
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A massive galaxy in the early universe seems to be growing itself toward ruin. While it churns out new stars at a furious ...
Astronomers used the James Webb Space Telescope to observe CRISTAL-02 and discovered a galaxy-killing wind.
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The Webb telescope found a giant galaxy that doesn’t spin, defying how galaxies form
Astronomers working with the James Webb Space Telescope report that a massive galaxy from the early universe shows no sign of ...
Astronomers have uncovered a galaxy-killing wind in the early universe that may solve a longstanding cosmic mystery: why massive galaxies appear to “die” far earlier than expected. Using the James ...
Looking ahead: Future Euclid observations will enable scientists to watch how galaxy collisions spark bursts of star formation, fuel shrouded black holes, and unleash energetic feedback. According to ...
What happens when two rare ring galaxies collide? They form an infinity symbol—or the face of a cosmic owl, depending on how you look at it. The James Webb Space Telescope has helped two international ...
It could explain why the early universe is littered with dead realms. The post Scientists Discover Fearsome Wind That Destroys Entire Galaxies appeared first on Futurism.
Astronomers have surveyed massive, dense star factories, unlike any found in the Milky Way, in a large number of galaxies across the local universe. The findings provide a rare glimpse into processes ...
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