The Phoenix Cluster's central galaxy is about 5.8 billion light-years away and should be mostly done with star formation.
Like its mythological namesake, the Phoenix Cluster burns with blisteringly hot gas, which cools to birth stars. The James ...
"The Phoenix cluster has the largest reservoir of hot, cooling gas of any galaxy cluster." How do you cool down a phoenix? I don't mean the mythological birds of flame and rebirth, but rather a ...
This breakthrough builds on more than a decade of research using NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and Hubble Space Telescope, along with several powerful ground-based observatories.
A team of international astronomers has discovered something that could reshape our understanding of outer space.
A galaxy cluster once thought to be “dead” is unexpectedly forming stars at an astonishing rate, challenging established ...
Researchers have solved the mystery of a galaxy cluster's rapid star formation. Using the James Webb Space Telescope, they studied the Phoenix cluster. This cluster, 5.8 billion light-years from ...
JWST’s observations confirm missing cooling gas in the Phoenix Cluster, explaining its rapid star formation rate.
New research suggests millions of unseen interstellar objects, some as big as the Statue of Liberty, could be trapped in the ...
Alphabet's 2024 growth in Cloud & Waymo, AI advancements, and strategic investments position it for success in 2025. Click ...
The research, based on 410,000 gala... The James Webb Space Telescope has detected the missing cooling gas in the Phoenix Cluster, a galaxy cluster located 5.8 billion light-years away.