It will truly be the end of an era. Gaia is first and foremost a map maker; its mission to create the largest, most detailed three-dimensional map of our galaxy, cataloging the position ...
The intrepid mapping mission has collected more than three trillion observations that'll change the way we see our neck of the cosmic woods.
ESA’s decade-long Milky Way Gaia mapping mission still has tons of data to release over the next few years. Expect surprises.
The ESA’s Gaia mission mapped the positions and velocities of stars with extreme precision by measuring about one billion ...
Data from the Gaia spacecraft shows that even unassuming stars can host monumental companions like massive planets.
This information has enabled the creation of the most detailed 3D map of our galaxy. Despite the end of observations, Gaia's legacy is far from over. Scientists are already preparing the fourth data ...
"I expect Gaia's best results are still to come ... The aim is to build the largest and most precise 3D map of our local universe. The spacecraft's first data release dropped on Sept.
This has enabled Gaia to deliver on its primary goal of building the largest, most precise map of the Milky Way, showing us our home galaxy like no other mission has done before. As such ...
Gaia closed its eyes on January 15 ... to determine the trajectories of around 150,000 asteroids in our Solar System, or to map 1.3 million quasars, the bright, active nuclei of distant galaxies.
Gaia was launched in 2013 to map and characterize more than one billion of the stars in the Milky Way. The researchers used data from the Gaia satellite to accurately date the age of red giant ...
The Gaia mission, launched by the European Space Agency, has completed a decade of groundbreaking astronomical observations, collecting over three trillion data points on two billion stars and ...