News

Astronomers have traced mysterious radio pulses to a white dwarf star closely orbiting a red dwarf star. The stellar pair, located 1,600 light-years from Earth, completes an orbit every 125.5 minutes.
(CNN) — Over the past decade, scientists have detected a puzzling phenomenon: radio pulses coming from within our Milky Way ...
Over the past decade, scientists have detected a puzzling phenomenon: radio pulses coming from within our Milky Way galaxy that would pulse every two hours, like a cosmic heartbeat. The long radio ...
A powerful and mysterious blast of radio waves that astronomers believed was a fast radio burst (FRB) from far beyond the ...
The mystery object, located just a short 15,000 light-years from Earth in our Milky Way galaxy, was spotted emitting unusual pulses.
ASKAP J1832-091 emits pulses of radio waves and X-rays for two minutes every 44 minutes. The object is located about 15,000 light-years from Earth. Photo Credit: Ziteng Wang, ICRAR.
June means that Milky Way "Core Season" is here, according to NASA. This is the time of year when the Milky Way is visible as a faint band of hazy light arching across the sky all night.
Astronomers have traced mysterious radio pulses to a white dwarf star closely orbiting a red dwarf star. The stellar pair, located 1,600 light-years from Earth, completes an orbit every 125.5 minutes.
Over the past decade, scientists have detected a puzzling phenomenon: radio pulses coming from within our Milky Way galaxy ...
The objects, which emit radio pulses occurring minutes or hours apart, ... The team discovered the object, known as ASKAP J1832-0911, in the Milky Way by using a radio telescope in Australia.
To solve the Milky Way mystery, de Ruiter devised a method to identify radio pulses lasting seconds to minutes within the archives of the Low-Frequency Array telescope, or LOFAR, a network of ...