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This unprecedented view of the Bullet Cluster provided by the James Webb Space Telescope and the Chandra X-ray Observatory ...
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Live Science on MSNJames Webb and Hubble telescopes join forces to explore a cosmic nursery: Space photo of the weekThe mighty James Webb and Hubble space telescopes united to reveal stars being born inside the Small Magellanic Cloud, which ...
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The day before my thesis examination, my friend and radio astronomer Joe Callingham showed me an image we'd been awaiting for ...
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Space.com on MSNJames Webb Space Telescope celebrates 3 years of science with dazzling 'toe beans' image of Cat's Paw NebulaThe James Webb Space Telescope ( JWST) is celebrating three years of transformational science with a striking new image of ...
The most powerful telescope ever launched into space uncovered a cluster of forming stars within the "toe beans" of the Cat's ...
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Space.com on MSNHubble and James Webb Space Telescopes show 2 sides of star cluster duo | Space photo of the day for July 10, 2025A new 527-megapixel image captures two open star clusters, NGC 456 and NGC 460, orbiting our Milky Way galaxy. The image uses ...
A conception of the James Webb Space Telescope orbiting 1 million miles from Earth. Credit: NASA GSFC / CIL / Adriana Manrique Gutierrez Space is phantasmagorical. Astronomers using the powerful ...
NASA's James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has produced a new image of the Bullet Cluster, which is a titanic collision between two individual galaxy clusters.
The James Webb Space Telescope has pointed its infrared optics at the 'Crystal Ball Nebula' NGC 1514, ... For more sublime space images, check out our Space Photo of the Week archives. Advertisement.
The James Webb Space Telescope has captured its first exoplanet through rare direct images. The telescope, which can see farther into the universe than anything before it, has turbocharged the search ...
Finding a Saturn-sized world around the young star TWA 7 could pave the way for the Webb space telescope’s direct observation of other exoplanets.
Launched in 2021 as the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope, Webb observed the scene in the infrared. NASA said in a statement it was “a lucky alignment” of the two unrelated objects.
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