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Space.com on MSNHow do the biggest stars in the universe grow so large?
There are several candidates for the biggest star in the universe. One of them, VY Canis Majoris, is over 1,500 times the ...
Understanding the early universe is a foundational goal in space science. We're driven to understand nature and how it evolved from a super-heated plasma after the Big Bang to the structured ...
For decades, astronomers have wondered what the very first stars in the universe were like. These stars formed new chemical ...
A radio signal from the dawn of time could help scientists weigh the first stars and reveal how they lifted the cosmic darkness.
“These insights are derived from simulations that integrate the primordial conditions of the universe, such as the hydrogen-helium composition produced by the Big Bang.” In developing their ...
A Universe Shaped by First Stars About 380,000 years after the Big Bang, the universe was a smooth, uniform expanse consisting mainly of hydrogen and helium gas.
New research suggests that primordial black holes could have played an important role in the formation of the universe's first stars, but did they help or hinder?
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Space.com on MSNScientists just recreated the universe's first ever molecules — and the results challenge our understanding of the early cosmos
In a first, scientists have recreated the formation of the first ever molecules in the universe to learn more about early ...
This image is from a ground-breaking simulation of the universe's primordial gas clouds. The universe's very first stars formed in these clouds. The color scale shows gas density.
The study of the universe’s most ancient stars hinges on the faint glow of the 21-centimetre signal, a subtle energy signal from over 13 billion years ago.
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