Astronomers call these powerful
flashes Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs).
Not exact matches
Fast radio bursts, or FRBs, are mysterious
flashes of
radio waves originating outside our Milky Way galaxy.
MeerLICHT, a 65 - centimeter optical telescope, is expected to help identify the sources of
fast radio bursts (FRBs)-- extremely brief, energetic
flashes of
radio waves from remote galaxies.
Scientists have identified the source of mysterious
flashes of cosmic
radio waves known as
fast radio bursts (FRBs): a surprisingly small galaxy more than 3 billion light - years away.
Fast radio bursts, which
flash for just a few milliseconds, created a stir among astronomers because they seemed to be coming from outside our galaxy, which means they would have to be very powerful to be seen from Earth, and because none of those first observed were ever seen again.
As the name implies,
fast radio bursts are millisecond - long
flashes of
radio emission.
«A repeating
fast radio burst from an extreme environment: Extragalactic source of
radio - wave
flashes resides in a powerfully magnetized astrophysical region.»
Scientists have identified the source of mysterious
flashes of cosmic
radio waves known as
fast radio bursts: a surprisingly small galaxy more than 3 billion light - years away.
An artist's impression shows three bright red
flashes depicting
fast radio bursts far beyond the Milky Way.