Astronomers now estimate there is at least one planet for every star in our galaxy. These worlds, called exoplanets, are planets that orbit stars outside our solar system. But new research from ...
Our search for exoplanets is focused on Milky Way stars. It's been successful, with more than 6,000 detected so far. Scientists are even beginning to move beyond mere detections, and working on ...
A Stanford scientist's model suggests many small rocky planets can't sustain atmospheres, potentially explaining the scarcity ...
The European Space Agency releases the most detailed image of the Milky Way's center, the galactic bulge, in visible light.
– January 7, 2026 (London time) – One of the biggest recent surprises in astronomy is the discovery that most stars like the Sun harbor a planet between the size of Earth and Neptune within the orbit ...
In a blow to anyone dreaming that complex life may exist elsewhere in the universe, a new study suggests we're unlikely to find it around many of the most common stars in the galaxy. Earth-like ...
Euclid's new photo reveals more than 60 million stars and provides new insights into exoplanet detection through microlensing ...
Could the supermassive black hole at the centre of the Milky Way Galaxy be dark matter instead?
NASA’s next big planet hunter is designed to explore regions of the galaxy that almost no one has looked at or studied. The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, now fully assembled (after construction ...
Back in the spring of 2018, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched into space something that at the time was NASA’s most ambitious project aimed at discovering new alien worlds in solar systems far away.
NASA’s next great space telescope will see 100 times more sky than Hubble. It’s about to arrive in Florida for launch in September.
Erik Gillis, a PhD student in McMaster University’s Department of Physics and Astronomy, is lead author of a new study revealing that the most common planets in our galaxy don't exist around the most ...