A dead galaxy shouldn't produce bursts of radio light. Yet this 11 billion-year-old one did — throwing scientists for a loop.
Astronomers have detected a repeating radio signal, captured multiple times, originating from an ancient and inactive galaxy. This discovery challenges current theories about the origin of fast ...
An Australian team has developed CRACO, an innovative radio system that detects cosmic flashes and pulses of energy in real ...
Astronomers say they've detected a mysterious type of signal known as a fast radio burst coming from an ancient, dead galaxy billions of light years away. Figuratively speaking, it makes for one ...
The event is designated EP240408a, as it was first detected by the Einstein Probe, an X-ray space telescope, on 8 April 2024. At a glance, it appeared to be a run-of-the-mill gamma ray burst, which ...
Hunting for alien civilizations isn't a matter of just waiting around for them to show up; it's the business of combing ...
Astronomers say they've detected a mysterious type of signal known as a fast radio burst coming from an ancient, dead galaxy billions of light years away. Figuratively speaking, it makes for one hell ...