It catches very low frequency radio waves made by lightning, solar storms and charged particles moving through Earth’s ...
Astronomers have detected radio signals coming from a long-dead neutron star known as the 'Blue Eye Pulsar' after searching ...
An international team led by Stefanie Komossa from the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy (MPIfR) in Bonn has studied a ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
For the first time ever, astronomers use radio waves from a supernova to reveal the final years of a star that collapsed in deep space
Astronomers have picked up the first-ever radio signals from aType Ibn supernova, a rare kind of stellar explosion tied to massive stars that shed helium-rich material shortly before they die. The ...
Scott Detrow speaks with extreme weather researcher Theodore Keeping about Europe's hottest heatwave. With over 1,000 deaths in France alone, lives depend on the EU's response to rising temperatures.
France has reported around 1,000 additional deaths during last week’s record-breaking heat wave, according to the country’s ...
France saw around 1,000 additional deaths last week at the height of its record-smashing heat wave, the country’s public health agency said Sunday, as Europeans elsewhere were ...
The Suffolk County Radio Club set up temporary antennas at the Tesla Science Center at Wardenclyffe to participate in the ...
Starlust on MSN
Caltech's new powerful radio telescope could find 20 million hidden cosmic objects on its first day
By the time its initial survey comes to an end, the telescope will have discovered about 1 billion new radio sources.
Comprising 1,650 individual radio dishes, the telescope aims to study supermassive black holes, spinning dead stars known as pulsars and fast radio bursts from deep space.
We often associate Antarctica with vast, silent expanses of ice. Imagine vast swathes of pure white snow, huge ice sheets grinding against one another and the planet, and a land so distant it’s ...
Scientists at the British Antarctic Survey use them to study space weather and its links to Earth’s climate. But for one scientist, the waves are more than just data points — they’re an artistic ...
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