PPhysics Read More Dark energy could lead to a ‘Big Crunch’ end for our universe: StudyDecember 29, 2025 For nearly three decades, the scientific world has operated under an assumption: the universe is flying apart faster…
SScience Read More Why NASA’s New $4 Billion Telescope Will Stare at Absolutely NothingDecember 16, 2025 Earlier this year, leaked budget cuts cast a dark shadow over the future of NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman…
SScience Read More NASA Completes Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope ConstructionDecember 4, 2025 NASA’s next big eye on the cosmos is now fully assembled. On Nov. 25, technicians joined the inner…
SScience Read More Scientists Think They Figured Out How and When the Universe Will EndNovember 6, 2025 Here’s what you’ll learn when you read this story: A new paper adjusts an equation that defines our…
PPhysics Read More Scientists May Have Found the Smallest Clump of Dark Matter Ever Seen — and It’s Still a Million Times Heavier Than the SunOctober 19, 2025 Overlay of the infrared emission (black and white) with the radio emission (colored). The dark, low-mass object is…
PPhysics Read More Information could be a fundamental part of the universe – and may explain dark energy and dark matterOctober 13, 2025 When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. An…
PPhysics Read More The observable universe is just 5% of reality, 95% remains invisible!September 4, 2025 Ordinary matter, also called baryonic matter, consists of protons, neutrons, and electrons. This is the material that emits…
PPhysics Read More DESI Hints Dark Energy Isn’t What We ThoughtSeptember 3, 2025 The Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument is mounted on the U.S. National Science Foundation’s Nicholas U. Mayall 4-meter Telescope…
SScience Read More Is the universe infinite? Scientists reveal how vast it really is..September 1, 2025 One of the strongest indicators of this limit is the cosmic microwave background radiation, faint afterglow from the…
PPhysics Read More Observable universe is 93 billion light years wide but what’s beyond it? Here’s what we can’t see…September 1, 2025 One of the most important pieces of evidence for this limit is the cosmic microwave background radiation, faint…