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  1. Home
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Home»Posts tagged with»astronomers

Our Solar System’s First Known Interstellar Object gets Unexpected Speed Boost

By Calla Cofield | Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Donna Weaver/ Ray Villard | Space Telescope Science Institute, Felicia Chou / JoAnna Wendel | NASA on Jun 27, 2018   Featured, Science/Education  

Our Solar System’s First Known Interstellar Object gets Unexpected Speed Boost

Using observations from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope and ground-based observatories, an international team of scientists have confirmed ‘Oumuamua (oh-MOO-ah-MOO-ah), the first known interstellar object to travel through our solar system, got an unexpected boost in speed and shift in trajectory as it passed through the inner solar system last year. “Our high-precision measurements of ‘Oumuamua’s […]

Fast Radio Burst Tied to Distant Dwarf Galaxy and, Perhaps, Magnetar

By Robert Sanders | University of California-Berkeley on Jan 5, 2017   Featured, Science/Education  

Fast Radio Burst Tied to Distant Dwarf Galaxy and, Perhaps, Magnetar

One of the rare and brief bursts of cosmic radio waves that have puzzled astronomers since they were first detected nearly 10 years ago has finally been tied to a source: an older dwarf galaxy more than 3 billion light years from Earth. Fast radio bursts, which flash for just a few milliseconds, created a […]

Suzaku Studies Supernova ‘Crime Scene,’ Shows a Single White Dwarf to Blame

By Francis Reddy | NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center on Apr 8, 2015   Science/Education  

Using archival data from the Japan-led Suzaku X-ray satellite, astronomers have determined the pre-explosion mass of a white dwarf star that blew up thousands of years ago. The measurement strongly suggests the explosion involved only a single white dwarf, ruling out a well-established alternative scenario involving a pair of merging white dwarfs. “Mounting evidence indicates […]

Two Planets Orbit Nearby Ancient Star

By Carnegie Institution for Science on Jun 6, 2014   Breaking News, Featured, Science/Education  

Washington, D.C.— An international team of astronomers, including five Carnegie scientists, reports the discovery of two new planets orbiting a very old star that is near to our own Sun. One of these planets orbits the star at the right distance to allow liquid water to exist on its surface, a key ingredient to support […]

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