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The erupting magnetar observed by IXPE is known as 1E 1841-045, a neutron star located around 28,000 light-years from Earth ...
Either we are uncovering something entirely new, or we’re seeing a known type of object emitting radio and X-ray waves in a ...
A team of researchers have discovered a binary system in which a pulsar orbited inside the outer layers of its companion star ...
Astronomers detected both X-ray and radio pulses from a single mysterious space object, known as ASKAP J1832-0911, every 44 ...
Six well-traveled adventurers went where they've never gone before when Blue Origin sent them on a 10-minute suborbital space ...
ASKAP J1832 pulses every 44 minutes in both radio and X-rays—something never seen before—hinting at an entirely new type of star or system. ASKAP J1832 is part of a rare group of space objects that ...
The “National Science Foundation FY 2026 Budget Request to Congress” calls the LIGO system “the most sensitive detector of ...
A type of hydrogen that doesn't interact with light could explain how long neutrons live and reveal the identity of the ...
Prior to the discovery of MoM z14, the galaxy holding the title of earliest and distant was JADES-GS-z14-0, which existed ...
The object give off pulses of radio waves and X-rays, and repeats the cycle of X-rays and radio waves every 44 minutes.
Fifteen thousand light years away something is semaphoring into space. And scientists are eager to solve its riddle.
Every 44 minutes, a mysterious space object nearly 15,000 light-years away sends out a blast of radio waves and high-energy X ...
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