Not exact matches
«Fast
radio burst «
afterglow» was actually a flickering black hole.»
Last February a team of astronomers reported detecting an
afterglow from a mysterious event called a fast
radio burst, which would pinpoint the precise position of the
burst's origin, a longstanding goal in studies of these mysterious events.
New research by Harvard astronomers Peter Williams and Edo Berger shows that the
radio emission believed to be an
afterglow actually originated from a distant galaxy's core and was unassociated with the fast
radio burst.
First limits on the very - high energy gamma - ray
afterglow emission of a fast
radio burst.
While the
burst's
afterglow showed a steady decline in brightness at both optical and X-ray wavelengths, that was not the case at
radio wavelengths.