News
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Star-Disk Collisions Most Likely to Cause the 'Disappearance' of Red Giants in the Milky Way
A new computer simulation suggests that the mass of red giant stars in the milky way galaxy were stripped away during its constant collision with high density clumps four to eight million years ago, making them harder to detect.
Latest Research Articles
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Last Surviving 9/11 Search Dog Dies At 16 Years Old; Watch Emotional Sendoff Here
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First Expandable Space Habitat is 'Cold," Astronaut Jeff Williams Says
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VIDEO: UFO Spotted Behind the ISS?
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Pluto's Icy Heart is 'Beating' Like a 'Cosmic Lava Lamp', Study Says
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VIDEO: A Small Asteroid Lit the Arizona Night Sky
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Inbreeding Neanderthals Left Humans a Harmful Gene That Reduces Reproductive Fitness
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SeaWorld Orca Attempts Suicide By Beaching Herself After Performance [Video]
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Turning Asteroids Into Spaceships for Off-Earth Mining, Is it Possible?
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'Wasteful' Galaxies Emit Heavy Elements into Deep Space
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Former NASA Chief Develops $100 Million Dollar "Brain-like" Neural Chip