“We are really learning about a brand new Jupiter in many ways.”
Matthew R. Francis is a physicist, science writer, public speaker, educator, and frequent wearer of jaunty hats. His website is BowlerHatScience.org.
The discovery of gravitational waves toppled what we thought we knew about dimensions.
Planets too far away to photograph could yield some clues to whether water—and maybe even life—could exist.
Dying stars were an enigma—until an astronomer measured seismic shifts on them, giving us clues about the sun’s future and the expansion rate of the universe.
The mystery formations and data discrepancies of Tabby’s Star turned out to have explanations. But that’s not what’s important about the mystery star.
They’re not habitable, but the dual discoveries change how we’re going to hunt for the next Earth.
Constellations of spots on these school bus-sized animals were hard to track, until now.
A new law grants private companies ownership over the materials they extract from asteroids or the Moon. But don’t call it a gold rush just yet.
That’s what some scientists believe. And it might have a heart, too.
In a field dominated by white men, Claudia Alexander was a pioneer.