China's Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST) under maintenance in southwest China's Guizhou Province.
Space on MSN
This SETI program is chasing down its final 100 signals. Could one of them be from aliens?
SETI@home has been one of the largest citizen science projects ever, with millions of users around the world.
New insights are emerging into one of astronomy’s most perplexing signals. An international research team led in part by ...
FAST observations reported by Universe Today and the University of Hong Kong identify a repeating fast radio burst whose ...
Long-term observations reveal that at least some fast radio bursts are linked to magnetars orbiting companion stars.
A repeating fast radio burst has just given up one of its biggest secrets. Long-term observations revealed a rare signal ...
Astronomers have found compelling evidence that at least some fast radio bursts originate from stars in binary systems rather than from isolated objects. An international group of astronomers, ...
An international team of astronomers, including researchers from the Department of Physics at The University of Hong Kong ...
(CNN) — Astronomers have used mysterious fast radio bursts, or millisecond-long bright flashes of radio waves from space, to help them track down some of the missing matter in the universe. But the ...
Astronomers from Nanjing University in China have analyzed the archival data from the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical radio Telescope (FAST), searching for new pulsars. As a result, they ...
Fast radio bursts, or bright, millisecond-long flashes of radio waves in space, are one of the most enduring mysteries of the cosmos - and they just became a little stranger. The video in the media ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results