Charles Q. Choi
Charles Q. Choi is a contributing writer for Space.com and Live Science. He covers all things human origins and astronomy as well as physics, animals and general science topics. Charles has a Master of Arts degree from the University of Missouri-Columbia, School of Journalism and a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of South Florida. Charles has visited every continent on Earth, drinking rancid yak butter tea in Lhasa, snorkeling with sea lions in the Galapagos and even climbing an iceberg in Antarctica. Visit him at http://www.sciwriter.us
Latest articles by Charles Q. Choi
The strangest black holes in the universe
By Charles Q. Choi last updated
Look at these weird, light-gobbling cosmic monsters.
Jupiter and Saturn may leave marks on the sun's corpse
By Charles Q. Choi published
The outer layers of superdense stellar remnants known as white dwarfs may often possess the remains of giant planets, a new study suggests.
The mystery behind a superbright supernova may just have been solved
By Charles Q. Choi published
The explosion likely occurred within a dense shell of matter shed by a companion star.
Mars Loses Its Water Even Faster Than Anyone Thought
By Charles Q. Choi published
Why is Mars dry? Water might escape the atmosphere more effectively than previously thought, potentially helping to explain how the Red Planet lost its vast oceans.
Beam Rider: New 'Self-Centering' Laser Sail Could Enable Interstellar Travel
By Charles Q. Choi published
Spacecraft could fly to distant stars using sails with surfaces similar to those of CDs and DVDs to help them stay centered on laser beams, a new study finds.
There May Be Active Volcanoes on Venus: New Evidence
By Charles Q. Choi published
Venus may still harbor active volcanoes, with eruptions taking place as recently as a few years ago, a new study finds.
There's Water on Alien Planets, Just Not As Much as Scientists Thought: Study
By Charles Q. Choi published
Water appears both common and unexpectedly scarce in exoplanets — many distant worlds have it, but less of it than predicted, a new study finds.
Historic 1st Photo of a Black Hole Named Science Breakthrough of 2019
By Charles Q. Choi published
The first image of a black hole, previously thought nigh impossible to capture, was named the top scientific breakthrough of 2019 by the journal Science.
Eruptions on Asteroid Bennu Hint at Causes of Space Rock Explosions
By Charles Q. Choi published
For the first time, astronomers have gotten an up-close view of eruptions from an asteroid, shedding light on what might drive such explosions.
The Most Powerful Explosions in the Universe Emit Way More Energy Than Anyone Thought
By Charles Q. Choi published
Gamma-ray bursts, the most powerful kinds of explosions known in the universe, can generate even more energetic light beams than astronomers previously realized, according to a set of new studies.
How Weather Satellites Changed the World
By Charles Q. Choi last updated
The world's first weather satellite, TIROS-1, launched 50 years ago,and changed the world.
Earth-Like Planets with Giant 'Wrecking Ball' Neighbors Can Host Life After All
By Charles Q. Choi published
A giant planet wildly careening around a star may not prevent an Earth-size planet from staying in a stable orbit friendly to life as we know it, a new study finds.
A Million Geysers of Plasma Spout from the Sun, and Scientists May Finally Know Why
By Charles Q. Choi published
When it comes to the mystery behind what causes jets of plasma that regularly erupt from the sun, clues have now emerged suggesting magnetic clashes on the surface of the sun may be the culprits.
'Star Wars' Gets the Parsec Wrong Again in 'The Mandalorian'
By Charles Q. Choi published
"Star Wars' has had a history of using — and, many would say, misusing — the word "parsec."
Einstein Was Right (Again)! General Relativity Passes Another Test
By Charles Q. Choi last updated
This one involved the Milky Way's supermassive black hole.
We May Finally Know How the Universe's Heavy Elements Formed
By Charles Q. Choi published
For the first time, scientists have detected a newly born heavy element in space, forged in the aftermath of a collision between a pair of dead stars known as neutron stars.
Rogue, Starless Planets May Circle Black Holes
By Charles Q. Choi published
Thousands of planets may form and orbit around the kind of supermassive black holes found in the cores of most, if not all, galaxies, a new study finds.
This Poofy, Inflated Exoplanet Is One of the Puffiest Ever Seen
By Charles Q. Choi published
Giant alien worlds with searing, close orbits to their host stars can inflate like balloons. Now astronomers have discovered one so puffy that it is one of the least dense planets ever discovered.
Doomed Alien Planets 'Polluted' White Dwarf Stars with Earth-Like Rocks
By Charles Q. Choi published
By analyzing the disintegrated remains of distant worlds consumed by their stars, a new study found that at least some rocky exoplanets may have interiors similar to those of Earth and Mars.
Scientists Propose New Satellite Tech to Dodge Space Junk from Megaconstellations
By Charles Q. Choi published
New infrared cameras and gel-based thrusters just might help future satellites dodge space debris, a new study finds.
Supermagnetic Stars May Form from Mergers
By Charles Q. Choi published
The most magnetic stars may have their origins in merging stars, a new study finds.
Most Extreme 'Hot Jupiter' Alien Planet Completes 1 Orbit Every 18 Hours
By Charles Q. Choi published
NGTS-10b is a very weird world.
Faint Filaments of Universe-Spanning 'Cosmic Web' Finally Found
By Charles Q. Choi published
The faintly glowing wisps of gas that make up the intergalactic filaments of a universe-spanning cosmic web may have finally been detected for the first time, a new study reports.
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