Discover Magazine on MSN
JWST identifies a new class of planet with deep magma oceans — which is unlike anything in our Solar System
Learn more about L 98‑59 d, an exoplanet 35 light‑years away with a deep global magma ocean ...
Researchers have pushed quantum chip design into a new era by simulating every physical detail before fabrication. Using a ...
Oxford-led team found a sulfur-rich exoplanet with a vast magma ocean, 35 light-years away, challenging current planet ...
Astronomers have identified a strange new kind of exoplanet that challenges how scientists classify worlds beyond our Solar System. The planet, L 98-59 d, appears to contain a vast ocean of molten ...
A full-scale model of Parker Solar Probe, the history-making Johns Hopkins APL-built spacecraft that has flown closer to the ...
Garlick / markgarlick.com Astronomers have discovered an entirely new kind of planet outside our Solar System, one with a ...
Could moons beyond our solar system support life as we know it? This is what a recent study published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Soci | Space ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Newly discovered planet could be the smelliest in the universe, astronomers say
Astronomers have discovered a new class of exoplanet that defies traditional categories of planetary classification. In a ...
Using the James Webb Space Telescope, astronomers have discovered an example of a new class of exoplanet, and it smells like ...
The molten planet, with an atmosphere rich in sulfur-bearing gases, is unlike anything astronomers have ever smelled.
The James Webb Space Telescope and supplementary observations have revealed a new type of magma planet, rich in sulphur.
Astronomers have discovered a bizarre exoplanet with a giant underground ocean of magma that traps sulphur and may represent an entirely new class of worlds.
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