«
These new radio observations have given us more insights than infrared observations can provide,» said McGuire.
Not exact matches
Last week a team claimed to have traced a fast
radio burst to its source for the first time, but
new observations this weekend call the result into question
The Very Large Array
radio observatory in
New Mexico will supplement Juno's data with its own set of short - wavelength microwave
observations.
The
new VLA
observations revealed previously undetected regions where shocks accelerated subatomic particles, causing
radio emission.
In their
new paper, Pineda and colleagues report discovering the star system in the act of forming within the «stellar nursery» region of the constellation Perseus by following up on intriguing
observations made by the Very Large Array (VLA), an astronomical
radio observatory in Socorro, N.M., and the Green Bank Telescope (GBT), the world's largest fully steerable
radio telescope, in West Virginia.
«In the future,
new, giant
radio telescopes like FAST (Five hundred meter Aperture Spherical Telescope) and SKA (Square Kilometre Array) will allow us to make even more detailed
observations of these extreme and exciting events,» concludes Jun Yang.
Observations with the Very Large Array near Socorro,
New Mexico, revealed two objects whose
radio spectra resemble those of other black hole systems located outside of star clusters.
Science Interests Formation of galaxies and black holes in the early universe and their growth over cosmic time; large surveys with Hubble and other telescopes to discover
new populations of distant galaxies and black holes; physical properties of active galactic nuclei using
observations from
radio, infrared, optical, ultraviolet through to X-ray energies.
The Fachhochschule Nordwestschweiz (FHNW) invites applications for a postdoctoral research position in Heliophysics to work on the project «A
new perspective on particle acceleration on the Sun: Solar Flare
radio observations with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array», funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation.
This unprecedented image of Herbig - Haro object HH 46/47 combines
radio observations acquired with the Atacama Large Millimeter / submillimeter Array (ALMA) with much shorter wavelength visible light
observations from ESO's
New Technology Telescope (NTT).
Herbig - Haro object HH 46/47 seen with visible light
observations with ESO
New Technology Telescope and with
radio observations with ALMA (mouseover comparison).
Another of his recent work, on how to strategically point telescopes to find electromagnetic counterparts to gravitational wave sources, was adapted for
observations by the Very Large Array
radio telescope in
New Mexico, which successfully observed
radio emission from the merger.
They also gather
new observations of the H I gas distribution in the system using the Giant Metrewave
Radio Telescope in India.
Observations of Comet Hyakutake with the National Science Foundation's millimeter - wave
radio telescope in Arizona have revealed
new information about our Solar System's original material, including the first detection of the Carbonyl Sulfide (OCS) molecule in a comet.
On May 3, 2007, team of astronomers (including Jean - Luc Margot; Stan Peale; Igor V. Holin; Raymond F. Jurgens; and Martin A. Slade) announced
new evidence that Mercury has a partially molten core using
new observations of fluctuations in Mercury's spin obtained with radar signals bounced off the planet from Earth (with the 305 - meter Arecibo, the 34 - meter Goldstone, and the 100 - meter Robert C. Byrd Green Bank
radio telescopes).
New observations with the Atacama Large Millimeter / submillimeter Array (ALMA)
radio telescope in Chile show that the planet, located about 550 light - years away from Earth in the constellation Chamaeleon, is surrounded by a protoplanet - like disk of gas and dust — which is a distinctive feature of young stars, not planets.
Observations of Comet Hyakutake with the National Science Foundation's millimeter - wave
radio telescope in Arizona have revealed
new information about our Solar System's original material, including the first detection of the Carbonyl Sulfide molecule in a comet.
«These ALMA
observations give us
new insights into how organic molecules, the building blocks of life, form and evolve in a planet - like environment,» said Anthony Remijan, an astronomer at the National
Radio Astronomy Observatory in Charlottesville, Va., and coauthor on the paper.
New observations with the National Science Foundation's Very Long Baseline Array
radio telescope have deepened the mystery surrounding water molecules in a galaxy 65 million light - years away.
The Atacama Large Millimeter / submillimeter Array (ALMA), the most ambitious
radio astronomy observatory ever built, is announcing the first opportunity for the worldwide astronomical community to submit proposals for
new scientific
observations.
The satellite's
observations will concentrate on some of the most distant and intriguing objects in the universe, where the extremely sharp
radio «vision» of the
new system can provide much - needed information about a number of astronomical mysteries.
Abstract: A follow - up X-ray study was made of the west lobe of the
radio galaxy Fornax A, (NGC 1316) based on
new ASCA
observations made in 1997 for 98 ks, and incorporating the previous
observation in 1994 for 39 ks.
In order to catch this particular FRB in the act, astronomers had to use the National
Radio Astronomy Observatory's Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array, located near Socorro,
New Mexico, which provided more than 80 hours of
observation time.
The team is now conducting follow - up
observations with the Very Large Array
radio telescope (VLA) in
New Mexico.