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NASA entdeckt den Ursprung von mysteriösen Fast Radio Bursts
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talks cam : Model-independent Reionization constraints with Fast Radio Bursts
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Scientists Come Up With More Credible Theories On Mysterious Fast Radio Burst
Two scientists groups have been tasked with the mission to uncover the mysteries of the fast radio bust discovered last year. Here are the details.
Scientists come up with more credible theories on the mysterious fast radio bust (Image Source: Astron)
In 2007, astronomers had discovered some mysterious signals, named fast radio burst (FRB), a phenomenon that they cannot yet explain. According to EarthSky, these bursts are short but strong. Although lasting .001 of a second long, the energy it radiates in that millisecond is stronger than what Sun puts out in three days. In April 2020, the fast radio burst repeated three times, once in January, following with July and then November. Currently, two scientist teams have been tasked with the mission to study the source of the FRB. Here is what has been discovered till now.
Sursauts radio rapides : la fin de l énigme avec des astéroïdes ?
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But we still have much to learn, such as what causes them.
We know the intense bursts originate in galaxies billions of light years away. We have also used these bursts (called FRBs) to find missing matter that couldn’t be found otherwise.
With teams of astronomers around the world racing to understand their enigma, how did we get to where we are now?
The first burst
The first FRB was discovered in 2007 by a team led by British-American astronomer Duncan Lorimer using Murriyang, the traditional Indigenous name for the iconic Parkes radio telescope (image, top).
The team found an incredibly bright pulse so bright that many astronomers did not believe it to be real. But there was yet more intrigue.