Star Is Discovered To Be a Close Neighbor of the Sun and the Coldest of Its Kind
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This image is an artist's conception of the brown dwarf WISE J085510.83-071442.5. The Sun is the bright star directly to the right of the brown dwarf. Credit: Robert Hurt/JPL, Janella Williams/Penn State University.
Solved: Mysteries of a Nearby Planetary System's Dynamics
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An illustration of the orbital distances and relative sizes of the four innermost planets known to orbit the star 55 Cancri A (bottom) in comparison with planets in own inner Solar System (top). Both Jupiter and the Jupiter-mass planet 55 Cancri are outside this picture, orbiting their host star with a distance of nearly 5 astronomical units (AU), where one AU is equal to the average distance between the Earth and the Sun. Credit: Center for Exoplanets and Habitable Worlds, Penn State University
First Earth-Size Planet Is Discovered in Another Star's "Habitable Zone"
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This artist's concept depicts Kepler-186f ,the first validated Earth-size planet to orbit a distant star in the habitable zone -- a range of distance from a star where liquid water might pool on the planet's surface. Credit: NASA Ames/SETI Institute/JPL-Caltech
The Most Precise Measurement Yet of the Expanding Universe Is Achieved by Astronomers of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
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This drawing illustrates how astronomers of the third Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-III) used quasar light to trace the expansion of the universe. Credit: Paul Hooper at Spirit Design, with Mat Pieri and Gongbo Zhao, ICG
WISE Satellite Finds No Evidence for Planet X in Survey of the Sky
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This chart shows what types of objects WISE can and cannot see at certain distances from our sun. Bodies with larger masses are brighter, and therefore can be seen at greater distances. For example, if a Jupiter-mass planet existed at 10,000 au, WISE would have easily seen it. But WISE would not have been able to see a Jupiter-mass planet residing at 100,000 au -- it would have been too faint. (To learn more about this image click here.) Credit: Janella Williams, Penn State University.
Water is Detected in a Planet Outside Our Solar System
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An artist's conception of a hot-Jupiter extrasolar planet orbiting a star similar to Tau Boötes. Credit: Image used with permission of David Aguilar, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
Asteroid Named for Two Penn State Students
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The Sloan Digital Sky Survey's 2.5-meter telescope at the Apache Point Observatory in the Sacramento Mountains of New Mexico is on the left. Credit: SDSS.
A New, "Exceptionally Close" Exploding Star
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Swift UVOT images showing M82 before and after the new supernova. The pre-explosion view combines data taken between 2007 and 2013. The view showing SN 2014J merges three exposures taken on Jan. 22, 2014. Mid-ultraviolet light is shown in blue, near-UV light in green, and visible light in red. Credit: NASA/Swift/P. Brown, TAMU
Book on Statistics in Astronomy Wins PROSE Award for Cosmology and Astronomy
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Modern Statistical Methods for Astronomy with R Applications book cover
Size of the Universe Now Measured to Within One Percent
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An artist's concept of the new measurement of the size of the Universe. The gray spheres show the pattern of the baryon acoustic oscillations from the early Universe. Galaxies today have a slight tendency to align on the spheres -- the alignment is greatly exaggerated in this illustration. By comparing the size of the spheres (white line) to the predicted value, astronomers can determine to 1% accuracy how far away the galaxies are. Image Credit: Zosia Rostomian, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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