In 1974,
radio astronomers Russell Hulse and Joseph Taylor, then of the University of Massachusetts Amherst, found just such a system: a pair of dense neutron stars in orbit around each other.
Not exact matches
In 1974, U.S.
astronomers Russell Hulse and Joseph Taylor discovered a pair of
radio - emitting neutron stars called pulsars orbiting each other.
«With ALMA we can see that there's a direct link between these
radio bubbles inflated by the supermassive black hole and the future fuel for galaxy growth,» said Helen
Russell, an
astronomer with the University of Cambridge, UK, and lead author on a paper appearing in the Astrophysical Journal.
In 1974,
astronomers Russell Hulse and Joseph Taylor detected a binary pulsar, a pair of two dead stars emitting pulses of
radio waves.