Explore the astonishing findings from the Webb Telescope on the restless black hole Sagittarius A* at the Milky Way's center.
The sky is awash with radio-frequency interference (RFI), but thanks to two astronomers who tracked down a stray TV broadcast reflected off a passing airplane, there may be a new way to wipe out some ...
13d
Space on MSNNew fast radio burst detector could sift through 'a whole beach of sand' to solve big cosmic mysteryFRBs are sporadic, intense flashes of radio wave energy that can be brighter than entire galaxies. In just thousandths of a ...
2d
IFLScience on MSNAstronomers Puzzled By TV Signals Coming From The Sky For 5 Years Solve MysteryA team of astronomers looking at data from the Murchison Widefield Array radio telescope in Western Australia were met with a ...
Like its mythological namesake, the Phoenix Cluster burns with blisteringly hot gas, which cools to birth stars. The James ...
West Virginians might have been surprised to see their home state make an appearance in “Captain America: Brave New World.” ...
Astronomers used an array of telescopes to find the most massive radio jet in the early universe. The celestial object is ...
8don MSN
An unexpected television signal traced to an airplane led to a new method for pinpointing unwanted radio signals, as growing satellite activity threatens the future of radio astronomy.
The number of satellites is increasing rapidly, which is becoming a problem for astronomy. An unexpected TV signal in ...
An Australian team has developed CRACO, an innovative radio system that detects cosmic flashes and pulses of energy in real ...
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