Ultrasharp
radio images reveal a rapidly moving shock wave where the winds collide, periodically creating fine dust that cascades into space.
Radio image reveals the distribution of gas and dust that are invisible in optical spectrums.
Not exact matches
MRI uses
radio waves to create more detailed
images,
revealing bleeds, tumors and crude structural damage, but it can not detect broken nerves.
Merging X-ray data (blue) from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory with microwave (orange) and visible
images reveals the jets and
radio - emitting lobes emanating from Centaurus A's central black hole.
Using the combined power of nine
radio telescopes arrayed across the Southern Hemisphere, the
images reveal features just 15 light - days across in the heart of the nearby galaxy Centaurus A, 12 million light - years away.
A deep
image from Chandra
reveals it can only be giving off a very small amount of X-rays, while recent VLA data indicates the source remains bright in
radio waves.
The
radio images of NGC 4151
reveal a chain of knots several light years in length, separated by a few light months, which then appear to make a fairly sharp turn — about 55 degrees — to merge with a previously known straight
radio jet about 800 light - years in length.
«This shows how well such
radio images of the gas distribution in galaxies can
reveal evidence of galactic interactions,» Lim said.