Sentences with phrase «radio telescopes ever»

More than 44,000 radio antennas will soon link over the Internet to create one of the most ambitious radio telescopes ever built.
HERA has also been dubbed a precursor instrument to the Square Kilometer Array, which is scheduled to be the largest radio telescope ever built.

Not exact matches

It also is the first 6 - atom aromatic ring (a hexagonal array of carbon atoms bristling with hydrogen atoms) molecule ever detected with a radio telescope.
These are some of the sharpest measurements ever made by radio telescopes,» says Jun Yang.
An international team of astronomers led from Chalmers University of Technology has used the giant radio telescope Lofar to create the sharpest astronomical image ever taken at very long radio wavelengths.
It also is the first 13 - atom molecule with a 6 - atom aromatic carbon ring (a hexagonal array of carbon atoms bristling with hydrogen atoms) molecule ever detected with a radio telescope.
An ever - increasing number of satellites broadcast signals from the sky that radio telescopes pick up.
These networks of radio telescopes use sophisticated computer and communication technology called very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) to function as single continent spanning telescopes - the greatest eyes - on - the - sky ever created.
The first serious SETI search was made in 1960 by the radio astronomer Frank Drake, and SETI has continued on the world's largest telescopes ever since.
Also, the Square Kilometre Array SKA, the largest - ever radio telescope being built in South Africa and Australia, will look for characteristic helium radiation from the very early universe that is expected to be found around primordial black holes.
The radio telescope at the Parkes Observatory in Australia has picked up the brightest fast radio burst ever detected
With an orbit that carries it more than 13,000 miles above the Earth, HALCA, working with the ground - based telescopes, extends the «sharp vision» of radio astronomy farther than ever before.
The radio telescope at the Parkes Observatory in Australia has picked up the brightest fast radio burst ever detected (Credit: < a href ="https://depositphotos.com/39535225/stock-photo-radio-telescope-dish-in-parkes.html" rel="nofollow"> ribeiroantonio / Depositphotos )
The radio telescope at the Parkes Observatory in Australia has picked up the brightest fast radio burst ever detected (Credit: ribeiroantonio / Depositphotos)
The smallest protoplanetary disk ever seen rotating around a young star has been detected by an international team of astronomers using the National Science Foundation's Very Large Array radio telescope.
The launch of a Japanese satellite will help create the largest astronomical instrument ever built — a radio telescope more than two - and - a-half times the diameter of the Earth.
Scientists and engineers at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) have made a giant leap toward the future of radio astronomy by successfully utilizing the Very Large Array (VLA) radio telescope in conjunction with an antenna of the continent - wide Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) using the longest fiber - optic data link ever demonstrated in radio astroRadio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) have made a giant leap toward the future of radio astronomy by successfully utilizing the Very Large Array (VLA) radio telescope in conjunction with an antenna of the continent - wide Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) using the longest fiber - optic data link ever demonstrated in radio astroradio astronomy by successfully utilizing the Very Large Array (VLA) radio telescope in conjunction with an antenna of the continent - wide Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) using the longest fiber - optic data link ever demonstrated in radio astroradio telescope in conjunction with an antenna of the continent - wide Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) using the longest fiber - optic data link ever demonstrated in radio astroradio astronomy.
Astronomers have used the National Science Foundation's Very Long Baseline Array radio telescope to make the first - ever time - lapse movie showing details of gas motions around a star other than our Sun.
By comparison, the first FRB ever detected also struck the same dish — the 64 - meter Parkes radio telescope in Australia — in 2001, but was only reported in 2007.
A powerful new array of radio telescopes is being deployed for the first time this week, as the Atacama Large Millimeter / submillimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile joins a global network of antennas poised to make some of the highest resolution images that astronomers have ever obtained.
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