Sitemap
- Hard Science Fiction
- Astrophysics
- Six exoplanets in unusual resonance
- In search of the axion, a hypothetical elementary particle
- Premature birth? The most distant quasar raises questions
- I welcome our future rulers, the Artificial Superintelligences
- How Earth rocks on the sea of space-time
- Were the first black holes born in the form of baby universes?
- Intergalactic gas filaments crisscross the universe
- The most distant galaxy in the universe
- When the fog dissolves
- Milky Way's Family Tree
- How the universe heats up
- Why the brain and the cosmos are structurally similar
- In search of dark matter with pendulums
- Massive black hole turns star in solar size into spaghetti
- Galaxies in a cosmic spider web made of dark matter
- Black holes reveal themselves in the X-ray spectrum
- The giant and the dwarf
- How the Magellanic Stream was formed
- Is dark energy hidden in the husks of burned-out stars?
- Milky Way vs. Andromeda: the collision has already begun
- Time travel in the quantum world: how to generate a self-healing reality
- This star system will never be the Solar System
- In the orbit of two giants
- How does a star simply vanish?
- Too heavy to be a neutron star, too light to be a black hole
- Sunspot problems in older stars
- Giant stars prevent the formation of planets
- What a rare ring galaxy reveals about cosmic history
- 2019 LD2: the unruly comet
- Life in a hydrogen-rich atmosphere
- Silent Sun: The phenomenon of our quiet star
- Pulsars: of black widows and redback spiders
- How monster galaxies feed off of their neighbors
- Blown to dust: the first exoplanet visible in a telescope is no more
- Searching for the super supernova
- Einstein was right – and Sagittarius A* is a giant black hole
- Kepler-1649c: an Earth twin with a short-tempered host star
- Dark matter: on the trail of the Zʹ boson
- The Sun as a lens: A new method for taking high-resolution photographs of exoplanets
- Can the special theory of relativity explain the strangeness of quantum physics?
- 50,000 solar masses – and that’s just a midsize black hole
- Axions to the rescue?
- Hexaquark d*(2380): a new candidate for dark matter
- Cosmic strings and our existence in the universe
- Sleeping monster from the early days of the universe
- The dramatic end of a starry couple
- Galaxy group from the epoch of reionization discovered
- Strange objects at the center of the Milky Way
- Hubble detects small clumps of dark matter
- Is the universe repelled by itself?
- In the early universe, a hydrogen diet made black holes fat
- Three giant black holes at the center of one galaxy
- Hot and cold: an ice giant orbiting a white dwarf
- When a black hole is simply too big
- How exoplanets develop in multiple-star systems
- Fascinating images from the beginning of the universe
- How much energy can we borrow from a vacuum?
- How a universe made out of fuzzy dark matter might look
- At the end of the Solar System, there’s a surprisingly high pressure
- How, not that long ago, the center of the Milky Way exploded
- Big baby stars grow the same way as small baby stars
- Structures in the cosmic mist
- A radio view into a black hole’s backyard
- How our Milky Way was born
- Have you ever seen a moon being born?
- Old and young at the same time? The mystery of red giants
- How does a radio telescope work? A visit to the Very Large Array
- The first star explosions were gigantic – and asymmetrical
- Two values for one constant – impossible, but true
- Airborne telescope detects helium hydride ion in space
- What dark matter is (not) made of
- The weather for HR 8799 e: 1000 degrees Celsius with clouds of iron and silicate dust
- What does the interior of Neptune or Uranus look like?
- Physicists turn back time – a bit
- How to look inside a black hole
- Why does dark matter behave differently in small galaxies than in large ones?
- Book
- Enceladus
- Richly covered menu in the Enceladus ocean
- Where the geysers on Europa could come from
- Fresh frozen items delivered to Enceladus’s north pole too
- How a steam-powered robot could explore Enceladus
- What’s going on at the bottom of Enceladus’s oceans?
- How the ice moon Enceladus got its tiger stripes
- New organic molecules discovered on Saturn’s moon Enceladus
- Complex organic molecules from the depths of Enceladus
- Ice geysers also on Jupiter’s moon Europa
- Fun
- Life
- I welcome our future rulers, the Artificial Superintelligences
- Intelligent life in the Milky Way is slowly dying out
- Richly covered menu in the Enceladus ocean
- Mysterious Signal from Proxima Centauri
- Spiders in Space: Light as a Substitute for Gravity
- Life on Mars: Search deeper!
- Megafloods on Ancient Mars
- Where the geysers on Europa could come from
- Salt lakes under the south pole of Mars
- BepiColombo photographs Venus in flight
- Who's watching us?
- Astronomers are searching for the super planet
- Fresh frozen items delivered to Enceladus’s north pole too
- Signs of life from the clouds of Venus?
- Panspermia: colonies of bacteria can survive in interplanetary space
- How many planets fit into a star’s habitable zone?
- How many civilizations are there in the Milky Way?
- How common is life in the universe?
- Salty Mars puddles no place for life
- Life in a hydrogen-rich atmosphere
- Silent Sun: The phenomenon of our quiet star
- Kepler-1649c: an Earth twin with a short-tempered host star
- There’s life, even hundreds of meters below the ocean floor
- Bad news for life on Titan – or not?
- How the ice moon Enceladus got its tiger stripes
- Water detected on one of Jupiter’s moons, Europa
- A place on Earth where everything’s dead
- Could an Earth-like planet also survive in an eccentric solar system?
- New organic molecules discovered on Saturn’s moon Enceladus
- Water vapor in the atmosphere of an inhabitable rocky planet
- Life might also exist on cold planets
- Transforming Mars into a second Earth – a simple trick
- Do bacteria use tungsten for protection from interstellar radiation?
- The Very Large Telescope checks out the Alpha Centauri system
- Gliding in the clouds of Venus: NASA studies two Venus missions
- Traces of life in a meteorite from Mars
- Where are we most likely to find signs of extraterrestrial life?
- Here we are: a signal for extraterrestrial civilizations
- Eu:Cropis – more than just growing tomatoes in space
- Bacteria survive one year on the outer shell of the ISS
- Rocky with a hint of hydrogen: what’s a good recipe for a planet?
- When can we be certain that we’re the only civilization in the galaxy?
- Terraforming Mars: There’s not enough carbon dioxide
- Life on distant moons?
- Organic matter on Mars – and a seasonal methane cycle
- Book now: NASA opens a travel bureau for exoplanets
- Did life come from outer space?
- Mars
- Life on Mars: Search deeper!
- Megafloods on Ancient Mars
- Salt lakes under the south pole of Mars
- When the sky glows green on Mars
- Salty Mars puddles no place for life
- There’s life, even hundreds of meters below the ocean floor
- Transforming Mars into a second Earth – a simple trick
- Fly to Mars with NASA – on board the next Mars rover
- Traces of life in a meteorite from Mars
- Is it possible to fly on Mars?
- Become an astronaut now: the Austrian Space Forum is looking for two new analog astronauts
- Where does the dust on Mars come from?
- Other books
- Proxima
- Space
- Six exoplanets in unusual resonance
- How deep is Titan's largest lake?
- Luhman-16 B: The striped dwarf
- Intelligent life in the Milky Way is slowly dying out
- Intergalactic gas filaments crisscross the universe
- A lonely pair of gas giants that could never become a star
- Spiders in Space: Light as a Substitute for Gravity
- When the fog dissolves
- The solar system - a crash birth
- Milky Way's Family Tree
- Where the geysers on Europa could come from
- Why the brain and the cosmos are structurally similar
- Where it rains rocks into magma oceans
- Hotter than a star
- BepiColombo photographs Venus in flight
- Why it snows on Pluto's mountains
- Massive black hole turns star in solar size into spaghetti
- Who's watching us?
- Astronomers are searching for the super planet
- Why Jupiter's storms behave so strangely
- How the Magellanic Stream was formed
- Deformed disk around the triple star system GW Orionis
- Is dark energy hidden in the husks of burned-out stars?
- Signs of life from the clouds of Venus?
- Panspermia: colonies of bacteria can survive in interplanetary space
- Milky Way vs. Andromeda: the collision has already begun
- More rogue planets than stars in the Milky Way?
- The last of its kind?
- How many planets fit into a star’s habitable zone?
- This star system will never be the Solar System
- Centaurs: they’ve been with us for a long time
- Meanwhile, in the outer edges of the Solar System
- In the orbit of two giants
- When you gotta go, you gotta go, even on the Moon…
- Moving blocks of ice around on Triton – the reality
- How a steam-powered robot could explore Enceladus
- Too heavy to be a neutron star, too light to be a black hole
- Sunspot problems in older stars
- Where are the very first stars hiding?
- Giant stars prevent the formation of planets
- What a rare ring galaxy reveals about cosmic history
- 2019 LD2: the unruly comet
- How a planet grows up
- How common is life in the universe?
- What the cloud layers above Saturn’s hexagon are made of
- Silent Sun: The phenomenon of our quiet star
- How monster galaxies feed off of their neighbors
- Blown to dust: the first exoplanet visible in a telescope is no more
- Searching for the super supernova
- Einstein was right – and Sagittarius A* is a giant black hole
- Kepler-1649c: an Earth twin with a short-tempered host star
- The Sun as a lens: A new method for taking high-resolution photographs of exoplanets
- 50,000 solar masses – and that’s just a midsize black hole
- Review: eVscope, the telescope for amateur astronomers who want to stay warm and cozy
- Triple system made from brown dwarfs discovered
- Today’s forecast: cloudy with a 100% chance of iron rain in the evening
- Bad news for life on Titan – or not?
- Why the star of Orion’s left shoulder is fading
- NASA wants to visit Triton, Io, and Venus
- Cosmic strings and our existence in the universe
- Sleeping monster from the early days of the universe
- Spectacular details on the Sun’s surface
- The dramatic end of a starry couple
- New simulations of the cosmos in 3D
- Galaxy group from the epoch of reionization discovered
- Strange objects at the center of the Milky Way
- Hubble detects small clumps of dark matter
- In the early universe, a hydrogen diet made black holes fat
- Three giant black holes at the center of one galaxy
- When a black hole is simply too big
- How exoplanets develop in multiple-star systems
- Water detected on one of Jupiter’s moons, Europa
- A black-hole Sun: planets could also form around black holes
- A place on Earth where everything’s dead
- Fascinating images from the beginning of the universe
- Could an Earth-like planet also survive in an eccentric solar system?
- New organic molecules discovered on Saturn’s moon Enceladus
- Will our Solar System soon have its sixth dwarf planet?
- Saturn is the new King of Moons – and you can help name the moons just discovered!
- A planet that shouldn’t exist
- Our second interstellar visitor has a name: 2I/Borisov
- New NASA simulations: what it’s like around a black hole
- Exo-Io: volcanic exomoon in orbit around WASP-49 b?
- Water vapor in the atmosphere of an inhabitable rocky planet
- When storms carry ammonia gas to the top
- Structures in the cosmic mist
- ISS Above: your direct line to the International Space Station
- A radio view into a black hole’s backyard
- Next year in space? Launch your very own satellite
- How our Milky Way was born
- Have you ever seen a moon being born?
- Do bacteria use tungsten for protection from interstellar radiation?
- Old and young at the same time? The mystery of red giants
- Interstellar medium as a filling station – a model calculation
- Launch of Dragonfly Mission to Saturn’s moon, Titan, planned for 2026
- The Very Large Telescope checks out the Alpha Centauri system
- Into space with Blue Origin: test seating in New Shepard
- Three exocomets discovered in orbit around Beta Pictoris
- Where the geysers on Neptune’s moon, Triton, come from
- Gas-hydrate layer keeps Pluto’s ocean warm
- Titan
- Pages
- Blue Origin: New Shepard
- Book Table
- Books by Brandon Q. Morris
- Get news from Brandon (and the book PDF)
- Libri di Brandon Q. Morris
- Libros de Brandon Q. Morris
- Livres de Brandon Q. Morris
- Obtenga noticias de Brandon Q. Morris (y la colorida guía en PDF)
- Recevez des nouvelles de Brandon Q. Morris (et du guide PDF coloré)
- Ricevi notizie da Brandon (e il libro in PDF)
- Who is Brandon Q. Morris?