Astronomers using the MeerKAT telescope discovered a hydroxyl megamaser in a galactic merger 8 billion light-years away, amplified by gravitational lensing and operating at radio wavelengths.
Russia’s war has left many of Ukraine’s world-class observatories in ruins—but the besieged nation’s astronomers already have ...
Astronomers have used the LOFAR telescope array to create the largest radio survey of the cosmos, revealing 13.7 million ...
Modern Engineering Marvels on MSN
Truly extraordinary: A radio laser from 8 billion years away lights up Earth
“Such a system is indeed extraordinary,” said Dr. Thato Manamela. We are witnessing radio equivalent of a laser half way through the universe. The “laser” under discussion is not a beam of lightsaber ...
Astronomers wonder why there aren't more stars.
StudyFinds on MSN
Stellar turbulence could be hiding alien radio signals
Solar storms around distant stars may be erasing alien radio signals before we ever hear them In A Nutshell Stellar winds and ...
An international collaboration using the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) has published an exceptionally detailed radio sky map, ...
Dr John Bolton, once of the Radiophysics Laboratory in the CSIRO to conduct secret research on radar for the military, also ...
Isolation dictates where we go to see into the far reaches of the universe. The Atacama Desert of Chile, the summit of Mauna Kea in Hawaii, the vast expanse of the Australian Outback—these are where ...
An international team of astronomers reports the detection of four new gamma-ray millisecond pulsars using the Murriyang radio telescope at the Parkes Observatory in Australia. The discovery was ...
Using the MeerKAT telescope, South African scientists have detected a record-breaking radio laser from a distant galaxy, ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results