Not exact matches
The LRP lists the projects the panel deems most crucial to the future of Canadian
Astronomy,
including the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA)-- a giant ground - based
radio observatory in Chile — and the James Webb Space Telescope, Hubble's successor.
In a new approach, members of the team
including Dr Attila Popping from International Centre for
Radio Astronomy Research and the ARC Centre of All - sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) in Australia are working with Amazon Web Services to process and move the large volumes of data via the «cloud».
Not so, says a team
including Chris Carilli of the National
Radio Astronomy Observatory in New Mexico (arxiv.org/abs/1201.3372v1).
The ADMX collaboration
includes scientists at Fermilab, the University of Washington, Lawrence Livermore, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Los Alamos National Laboratory, the National
Radio Astronomy Observatory, the University of California at Berkeley, the University of Chicago, the University of Florida and the University of Sheffield.
Opportunities also exist to develop software in other
radio astronomy - related domains
including embedded systems, FPGA systems, software defined
radio, and machine learning.
The scientists who conducted the study
include University of Chile astronomers Andrés Guzmán (principal researcher), Guido Garay (
Astronomy Department Director), Leonardo Bronfman, and Diego Mardones, as well as Luis Rodríguez (UNAM Center for
Radio Astronomy and Astrophysics), James M. Moran (Harvard - Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics), Kate Brooks (Center for
Astronomy and Space Science, CSIRO - Australia) and Lars - Ake Nyman (Joint ALMA Observatory).
Previously, all
astronomy observations have relied on light — which
includes X-rays,
radio waves, and other types of electromagnetic radiation emanating from objects in space — or on very - high - energy particles called neutrinos and cosmic rays.
On the occasion of the inauguration, the ALMA partners
including the NAOJ, the European Southern Observatory and the National
Radio Astronomy Observatory are releasing a 16 - minute movie called ALMA — In Search of Our Cosmic Origins, a photo book, a booklet about ethno - astronomy in the area and two brochures about the project and the contributions of the ex
Astronomy Observatory are releasing a 16 - minute movie called ALMA — In Search of Our Cosmic Origins, a photo book, a booklet about ethno -
astronomy in the area and two brochures about the project and the contributions of the ex
astronomy in the area and two brochures about the project and the contributions of the executives.
Astronomers using a world - wide collection of
radio telescopes, including the National Science Foundation's Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), have made a dramatic «movie» of a voracious, superdense neutron star repeatedly spitting out subatomic particles at nearly the speed of light into two narrow jets as it pulls material from a companion
radio telescopes,
including the National Science Foundation's Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) of the National
Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), have made a dramatic «movie» of a voracious, superdense neutron star repeatedly spitting out subatomic particles at nearly the speed of light into two narrow jets as it pulls material from a companion
Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), have made a dramatic «movie» of a voracious, superdense neutron star repeatedly spitting out subatomic particles at nearly the speed of light into two narrow jets as it pulls material from a companion star.
Radio telescopes,
including major facilities of the National Science Foundation's National
Radio Astronomy Observatory, have provided data needed to measure the winds encountered by the Huygens spacecraft as it descended through the atmosphere of Saturn's moon Titan last month — measurements feared lost because of a communication error between Huygens and its mother ship Cassini.
Other contributors
include: Robert Braun of the Netherlands Foundation for Research in
Astronomy; Rene A.M. Walterbos of New Mexico State University; Edvige Corbelli of the Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri in Italy; Felix J. Lockman and Ronald Maddalena of the National
Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) in Green Bank, West Virginia; and Edward Murphy of the University of Virginia.
The team, which
includes two scientists from the National
Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), will receive the award in a ceremony Sunday, October 16, in Fukuoka, Japan.
He has published numerous articles in professional journals and edited several books,
including Gaseous Halos of Galaxies and But It Was Fun: The First Forty Years of
Radio Astronomy at Green Bank.
Lead author Dr. Danail Obreschkow, from The University of Western Australia (UWA) node of the International Centre for
Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), said that ten billion years ago the Universe was full of clumpy galaxies, but these developed into more regular objects as they evolved; the majority of stars in the sky today,
including our five billion - year - old Sun, were probably born inside these clumpy galaxies.
The school's August 19 — 21 celebration will
include an Eclipse ComicCon,
Astronomy, Science & Technology Expo, and a Planetary
Radio Live stage show on Sunday, August 20th.
The school's August 19 - 21 celebration will
include an Eclipse ComicCon,
Astronomy, Science & Technology Expo, and a Planetary
Radio Live stage show on Sunday, August 20th.
Launched in 2014, the the PING program focuses on multiple levels of the physics and
astronomy pipeline, and
includes a two week summer camp that engages middle school students in physics and
astronomy, and an eight - ten week internship program designed to cultivate interest in physics and (
radio)
astronomy research in undergraduate students.
«We're accustomed to seeing how our Sun appears in visible light, but that can only tell us so much about the dynamic surface and energetic atmosphere of our nearest star,» said Tim Bastian, an astronomer with the National
Radio Astronomy Observatory in Charlottesville, Va. «To fully understand the Sun, we need to study it across the entire electromagnetic spectrum,
including the millimeter and submillimeter portion that ALMA can observe.»
A total of 242 accomplishments were selected from four categories: Engineering Science, Telecommunication, Electronics, and Information and Systems,
including two NAOJ - related items «high - sensitivity
radio telescope technology» and «the dedicated supercomputer for
astronomy GRAPE.