Astronomers found a supermassive black hole in the center of the Milky Way galaxy that has been 6 million years since this swallowed a large clump of gas that causes it to release a massive bubble that weighs 2 million suns.
A mysterious gamma ray signal found by NASA's fermi telescope was found in the nearby Andromeda Galaxy. Researchers then classify that the source of the rays might be dark matter. Find out more details here.
A new study by Eden Girma, an undergraduate student at Harvard University and a member of the Banneker/Aztlan Institute, has found that every few thousand years a star wanders too close to the black hole present at the core of our galaxy - the Milky Way. The black hole shreds the stars in a day through a process called tidal disruption.
The twinkle things are not only the stars, instead of asteroids, nebula, meteors, and planets with their moons. Besides of the planets, a meteor shower, comet and eclipse are scheduled to have a show in 2017