While the scientific community grapples with the loss of the Arecibo radio telescope, astronomers who revived a long-dormant radio telescope array in Argentina hope it can help compensate for the work Arecibo did in pulsar timing. Last year, scientists began a pulsar timing study using two upgraded radio telescopes in Argentina.
source https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/12/201221134156.htm
Tuesday, 22 December 2020
Previous Post
Melody of an Alpine summit falling apart
Related Posts
In a common genetic disorder, blood test reveals when benign tumors turn cancerousResearchers have developed a blood test that, they believe, could one … Read More
Fighting brain cancer at its rootResearchers identify proteins that drive cancer stem cells. Targeting … Read More
Hidden factors that affect solar farms during severe weatherResearchers combined large sets of real-world solar data and advanced … Read More
‘Tipping points’ in Earth’s system triggered rapid climate change 55 million years agoScientists have uncovered a fascinating new insight into what caused o… Read More
Using liquid metal to turn motion into electricity, even underwaterResearchers have created a soft, stretchable device that converts move… Read More
Record number of ancient elephant bone tools discoveredHumans living about 400,000 years ago produced an unprecedented divers… Read More
0 comments: