This week’s science news has been comet-ing thick and fast, with a flurry of reports on three dusty space snowballs that are hurtling through our cosmic backyard.

First are the comets Lemmon and SWAN, which reached their peaks in brightness in Earth’s skies this week, enabling skywatchers to easily glimpse them. This led to some stunning observations, with Lemmon captured flying through a sky drenched in auroral technicolor over Scotland and getting its tail temporarily shredded by solar wind above Czechia (also known as the Czech Republic).

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Milky Way galaxy, a flattened disk of unusually energetic gamma rays that has puzzled astronomers for more than a decade. Now, a new study has given weight to a possible explanation: colliding pockets of dark matter.

The results, made using high-resolution supercomputer simulations, suggest that our galaxy’s dark matter could have been squished into an oval-like shape through collisions and gravitational mergers.

The findings could lead to our first ever detection of the mysterious component thought to make up 85% of the universe’s matter, solving a major cosmic mystery.

Discover more space news

—Astronomers spot giant hidden ‘bridge’ and record-breaking tail between 2 dwarf galaxies

—James Webb telescope finds that galaxies in the early universe were much more chaotic than we thought

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—Astronomers detect first ‘heartbeat’ of a newborn star hidden within a powerful cosmic explosion

a surprising update changed everything this week.

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scientists have finally found hints of its neurological origins.

The process is called neural dedifferentiation, whereby the activity of different brain regions becomes less specific as we age, leading our brains to shift through fewer distinct states that it may use to mark the passage of time. And if older brains are logging fewer “events” in a given time frame, maybe that’s why time seems to fly by.

Discover more health news

—You don’t need to be very happy to avoid an early death from chronic disease, study finds

—Diagnostic dilemma: A toddler accidently ate gonorrhea bacteria from a lab dish

—New eye implants combined with augmented-reality glasses help blind people read again in small trial

Google’s breakthrough ‘Quantum Echoes’ algorithm pushes us closer to useful quantum computing — running 13,000 times faster than on a supercomputer

—1,300-year-old poop reveals pathogens plagued prehistoric people in Mexico’s ‘Cave of the Dead Children’

—‘Illegal’ metal detectorist found a huge hoard of Roman treasure in Germany — and kept it hidden for 8 years

Live Science sought out the answers.

‘It’s really an extraordinary story,’ historian Steven Tuck says of the Romans he tracked who survived the AD 79 eruption of Mount Vesuvius [Interview]

Live Science crossword puzzle #15: Explosive death of a star — 11 down [Crossword]

Science history: Scientists use ‘click chemistry’ to watch molecules in living organisms — Oct. 23, 2007 [Science history]

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