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Every so often, the universe sends a signal that does not fit the existing explanation, and scientists are left scrambling to figure out where it came from and why. That is exactly what happened when a burst of high-energy neutrinos, some of the most elusive and energetic particles known to science, arrived at Earth from a direction in the sky that appeared to contain nothing particularly remarkable.

The European Space Agency's Euclid space telescope has delivered one of the most detailed views ever captured of our galaxy's crowded heart, revealing more than 60 million stars in a single extraordinary image. The observation offers astronomers an unprecedented look into the densely populated central regions of the Milky Way, a part of the galaxy that has long remained difficult to study because of thick clouds of dust and overlapping stellar populations.