Fast-moving stars zooming through our galaxy might have been slingshotted from a black hole inside the neighbouring Large ...
A hidden giant may be on a slow journey towards our galaxy. Scientists have detected signs of a massive, invisible object within the Large Magellanic Cloud. Weighing around 600,000 times the Sun ...
These remnants exist in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a satellite galaxy of the Milky Way. Scientists say this region is perfect for studying stellar explosions in detail. Astronomers observed the ...
A Milky Way collision with a supermassive black hole might be closer than we thought. Hidden deep in the Large Magellanic Cloud dwarf galaxy that orbits the Milky Way on an ever-closing loop, signs of ...
Some fast-moving stars within the Milky Way have been traced back to the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC ... supermassive black hole within the nearby galaxy, whose gravity is accelerating the ...
The yellow crosses mark previously identified supernova remnants. The Large Magellanic Cloud is a dwarf galaxy so close to the Milky Way that it is visible to the naked eye from Earth's Southern ...
Supernova remnants J0624-6948 and J0614-7251 detected Discovery suggests unexpected ionised gas distribution Findings could reshape understanding of galaxy evolution ...
Scientists have identified a hidden black hole that could one day collide with our Milky Way galaxy. Weighing approximately 600,000 times the mass of our Sun, this black hole resides in the Large ...
This black hole is 600,000 times the mass of the Sun. The Large Magellanic Cloud may collide with the Milky Way in 2.4 billion years. This event could greatly change our galaxy's structure and ...