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The ALMA radio telescope array in the Atacama Desert temporarily halted operations after a rare snowfall blanketed the base ...
Scientists say that the construction of a vast new radio telescope array in the Utah desert — known as the Deep Synoptic ...
A powerful and mysterious blast of radio waves that astronomers believed was a fast radio burst (FRB) from far beyond the ...
"Fast radio bursts shine through the fog of the intergalactic medium, and by precisely measuring how the light slows down, we can weigh that fog, even when it's too faint to see." ...
A NASA satellite that’s been orbiting as space junk since 1967, Relay 2, emitted an unexpected, powerful radio burst that ...
It’s the kind of junk data we’d normally throw away. Yet the burst had us intrigued. For one thing, this burst was fast. The fastest known fast radio burst lasted about 10 millionths of a second.
Astronomers have used mysterious fast radio bursts, or millisecond-long bright flashes of radio waves from space, to help them track down some of the missing matter in the universe.
Although most of these radio signals emanate from deep space and are not thought to be technological in origin, the burst of ...
The telescope array, designed to trace fast radio bursts back to their origin points, is located near Bishop, California, at Caltech’s Owens Valley Radio Observatory.
The telescope array, designed to trace fast radio bursts back to their origin points, is located near Bishop, California, at Caltech’s Owens Valley Radio Observatory.
The telescope array, designed to trace fast radio bursts back to their origin points, is located near Bishop, California, at Caltech’s Owens Valley Radio Observatory.