These starless worlds are difficult to find and study, but this particular one is teaching us new lessons about the universe.
A runaway “rogue planet” is gorging on space dust at a rate of six billion tonnes per second. The event marks the fastest planetary growth ever observed, hinting that some planets form more like stars ...
Rogue planet Cha 1107-7626 is swallowing gas and dust at roughly six billion tons each second, the fastest planetary growth ...
The growth spurt hints that the free-floating object evolves like a star, providing clues about rogue planets’ mysterious origins.
ESO's Very Large Telescope has observed a rogue planet and revealed that it is eating up gas and dust from its surroundings ...
Using the European Southern Observatory 's (ESO) Very Large Telescope (VLT), astronomers have caught it pulling in gas and ...
Using JWST, astronomers uncovered auroras, exotic clouds, and storms on a blazing rogue planet. Brilliant aurora-like ...
Astronomers spotted a young planet, WISPIT 2b, forming within a dusty ring around its star system, offering clues about the ...
NASA's Perseverance rover has captured the first-ever photo of "naked eye" auroras on Mars. The alien light show — snapped after the Red Planet was battered by a powerful solar storm last year — is ...
That raises the possibility that the TRAPPIST-1e exoplanet could also have liquid water and therefore support life.
A team of scientists and engineers led by Princeton researchers recently reported the successful operation of a new instrument for the Subaru Telescope in Hawaii that will allow astronomers to make ...