Like its mythological namesake, the Phoenix Cluster burns with blisteringly hot gas, which cools to birth stars. The James ...
A team of astronomers looking at data from the Murchison Widefield Array radio telescope in Western Australia were met with a ...
The sky is awash with radio-frequency interference (RFI), but thanks to two astronomers who tracked down a stray TV broadcast reflected off a passing airplane, there may be a new way to wipe out some ...
The number of satellites is increasing rapidly, which is becoming a problem for astronomy. An unexpected TV signal in ...
From the radio telescope array charting complex chemistry in Titan’s atmosphere to the telescopes that pinpointed the neutron star merger last year, Chilean observatories play a starring role in ...
While radio jets are relatively common in the nearby Universe, they have been elusive in the early Universe. This is partly ...
O ne of the greatest mysteries left for humans is the question; where is everybody else? Though there are around 200 billion trillion stars out there in the observable universe, we have found evidence ...
A dead galaxy shouldn't produce bursts of radio light. Yet this 11 billion-year-old one did — throwing scientists for a loop.
When Earth first formed, it was too hot to retain ice. This means all the water on our planet must have originated from ...
Astronomers have discovered that many infant stars born in stellar nurseries of the early universe may have preferred "fluffy ...
An American Astronomy team at Brown University found themselves in a mystery when an Australian telescope recorded some ...