Newfound Exoplanets around Barnard’s Star Resolve Long-Standing Astronomical Quest

Confirmed at Last: Barnard’s Star Hosts Four Tiny Planets

After 100 Years of Searching, Astronomers Confirm Four Planets at Barnard’s Star

Four Mini-Earths Found at Barnard's Star!

Astronomers Find Evidence for Four Sub-Earth Exoplanets around Barnard’s Star

Barnard’s Star Finally Has a Planet, and Possibly More

Barnard’s Star Has a Confirmed Planet

Astronomers Spot a ‘Super-Mars’ Exoplanet around Barnard’s Star

Barnard’s star has at least one planet orbiting it after all

Astronomers Detect Sub-Earth-Mass Exoplanet around Barnard’s Star

Planet spotted orbiting Barnard's star just 6 light years away

IAC scientists detect a ‘sub-Earth’ orbiting Barnard’s star, the nearest isolated star to the Sun

Just 6 Light-Years Away: Astronomers Discover New Planet Around Barnard’s Star

50 years ago, astronomers challenged claims that Barnard’s star has a planet

The World's Largest Radio Telescope has Scanned Barnard's Star for Extraterrestrial Signals

The World's Largest Radio Telescope has Scanned Barnard's Star for Extraterrestrial Signals

Lose Yourself in the JWST’s Exquisite Image of Barnard’s Galaxy

Lose Yourself in the JWST's Exquisite Image of Barnard's Galaxy

Webb Takes Close Look at Barnard’s Galaxy

Astronomer Edward Barnard discovered Amalthea, the fifth satellite of Jupiter, using an eyepiece that yielded 520x on the 36-inch Lick Observatory refractor. Barnard observed asteroid Juno at 1,430x and 1,700x to make disk measurements between 0.2" and 0.26"