He is a member of the survey team for the low - cost Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (KELT) system that consists of a pair of robotic telescopes designed to find exoplanets around bright stars
operated by astronomers at Ohio State University, Vanderbilt University, Lehigh University and the South African Astronomical Observatory.
The discovery was made using inexpensive ground - based telescopes, including one specially designed to detect exoplanets and jointly
operated by astronomers at Ohio State University and Vanderbilt University.
Not exact matches
Several hours later, a team of
astronomers known as the ROTSE (Robotic Optical Transient Search Experiment) collaboration, led
by Carl Akerlof of the University of Michigan, reported that the visible - light counterpart of the burst was also seen in the images taken with a small, robotic telescope
operated by their team, starting only 22 seconds after the burst.
Astronomers at the University of Wisconsin at Madison
operate WHAM
by remote control.
These collaborations bring me to work with the data collected
by professional
astronomers operating the most powerful telescopes and detectors ever built, like the NASA / ESA's Hubble Space Telescope and the ESO's Very Large Telescope.
After spotting a potential candidate with the 2.4 - meter Hubble Space Telescope, the team of
astronomers pointed the 10 - meter Keck II telescope,
operated by the W. M. Keck Observatory, to witness the turbulent, star - bursting galactic core forming millions of stars at a ferocious rate.
The result is reported in the Dec. 10 issue of Nature magazine
by the team of Liverpool John Moores University (LJMU)
astronomers who built and
operate the telescope and its unique scientific camera, named RINGO.
For millimeter - wave
astronomers, in particular, there is significant access4 to the facilities
operated by universities.
A specialized camera on a telescope
operated by U.K.
astronomers from Liverpool has made the first measurement of magnetic fields in the afterglow of a gamma - ray burst (GRB).
On November 21, 2012,
astronomers using seven different Earth - based telescopes (including three
operated by the European Southern Observatory) announced that Make - make may lack a «significant atmosphere» like Pluto or Sedna.