For the first time, astronomers pinpointed the location of a fast radio burst (FRB), which is a phenomena where a very strong burst of
radio emission occurs.
Not exact matches
They
occur when charged space particles, typically from the sun, stream along a planet's magnetic field lines and interact with atmospheric atoms, producing not only optical light but also
radio emissions.
«Since both stars and the planets in our Solar System produce
radio emission, detailed study of the
radio emission properties of these brown dwarfs may enable us to distinguish where the boundary between stellar and planetary behavior
occurs in these not - quite - stars, not - quite - planets,» Osten explained.
Radio telescopes are able to detect the naturally occurring radio emission from neutral atomic hydr
Radio telescopes are able to detect the naturally
occurring radio emission from neutral atomic hydr
radio emission from neutral atomic hydrogen.
Another idea is that the variations in the
radio emission are not connected to the burst itself, but are arising within an active galaxy in which the burst
occurred.