News
New supercomputer simulations suggest the Milky Way could be surrounded by dozens more faint, undetected satellite ...
Stars pepper Gaia’s all-sky view of our Milky Way Galaxy and neighboring galaxies in this image based on the measurement of nearly 1.7 billion stars.
Related: 4 big Milky Way mysteries the next Gaia mission data dump may solve. The June 13 data release is set to supercharge this research as it contains new, previously unavailable information.
The Milky Way just got a little more crowded. The European Space Agency’s Gaia spacecraft has mapped more than a billion stars in the galaxy with unprecedented accuracy and detail — and it has ...
Although Gaia has been scanning the Milky Way since 2014, there is still a lot astronomers don't understand about the galaxy. Studying our galactic home is not an easy task.
The Gaia mission of the European Space Agency (ESA) has officially ceased its scientific operations after 12 years of service. This spacecraft, dedicated to mapping the Milky Way, has exhausted its ...
This is Gaia's third big data delivery since it launched in 2013. Spacecraft: ESA/ATG medialab; Milky Way: ESA/Gaia/DPAC; CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO. Acknowledgement: A. Moitinho.
Image: Halo stars: ESA/Gaia/DPAC, T Donlon et al. 2024; Background Milky Way and Magellanic Clouds: Stefan Payne-Wardenaar The region of interest in the Gaia data is the Milky Way’s inner ...
The European Space Agency's Milky Way-mapper Gaia has completed the sky-scanning phase of its mission, racking up more than 3 trillion observations of about 2 billion stars and other objects over ...
A monster exoplanet as big as 10 times the size of Jupiter has emerged from the stellar gas and dust surrounding a young star ...
Astronomers observing a short-lived evolutionary phase of dying stars have concluded that parts of the Milky Way are much older than previously thought. Using data from the Gaia mission, a team of ...
We are not alone—at least as a galaxy. About 50 dwarf galaxies surround the Milky Way.But when its intense gravity inevitably draws them to venture too close, they will probably be annihilated.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results