Aliens might just not have yet to be Born
According to a new theoretical study, most Earth-like exoplanets have yet to be born.
According to a new theoretical study, most Earth-like exoplanets have yet to be born.
The first discovery of an exoplanet, called 51 Pegasi b, orbiting a sun-like star beyond our solar system, discovered 20 years ago, on October 6.
This video shows the exoplanet β Pic b orbiting the star β Pictoris, which lies over 60 light-years from Earth.
The newly proposed High Definition Space Telescope (HDST), makes Hubble Telescope look like a toy.
By looking at younger star systems in the early stages of development, astronomers can better learn how our solar system evolved.
The closest rocky exoplanet confirmed outside our solar system, lies 21 light-years away, located just off the “W” pattern of the Cassiopeia constellation.
NASA’s Kepler mission discovers Kepler-452b exoplanet orbiting in the habitable zone, that is the most similar yet to Earth.
An exoplanet inhabited by small globosomes, forming a complex society by replicating, that finally destroys their planet.
The universe is unbelievably big – trillions of stars and even more exoplanets. So… there just has to be life out there, right? But where is it?
In a new effort NASA with NExSS, is bringing together experts spanning a variety of scientific fields for an unprecedented initiative dedicated to the search for life on