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Astronomer News | Astronomer Current Events
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Arecibo telescope finds critical ingredients for the soup of life in a galaxy far, far away Astronomers from Arecibo Observatory radio telescope in Arecibo, Puerto Rico, have detected for the first time the molecules methanimine and hydrogen cyanide - two ingredients that build life-forming amino acids - in a galaxy some 250 million light years away. view more (2008-01-15)
Students air views on science A group of graduate students at the University of Cambridge has been awarded a £7,000 grant to promote science over the airwaves. The project is part of a new scheme run by the Biological and Biotechnological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) which aims to raise public awareness of science... view more (2000-03-14)
Oxfordshire Astronomer Is Finalist In The European Women Of Achievement Award An astronomer from Oxfordshire is one of five finalists in the Professional category of the European Women of Achievement Awards. Dr Helen Walker from the CCLRC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory will attend a luncheon in London on Friday 9 July where the winners will be announced. "I am honoured... view more (2004-07-02)
It's our solar system Jim, but not as we know it There are many more objects orbiting our sun than we once thought, and a new book from Cambridge University Press sets out to tell the story of their discovery. Beyond Pluto: Exploring the Outer Limits of the Solar System by John Davies traces the history of the search for objects at the periphery... view more (2001-07-25)
A blue ring around the planet Uranus The outermost ring of the planet Uranus turns out to have a bright blue color, according to a report in the April 7 issue of the journal Science. view more (2006-04-07)
Mapping Orion's winds For the past few months, Bob O'Dell has been mapping the winds blowing in the Orion Nebula, the closest stellar nursery similar to the one in which the sun was born. view more (2006-01-11)
Hidden Planet Pushes Star's Ring a Billion Miles Off-Center A young star's strange elliptical ring of dust likely heralds the presence of an undiscovered Neptune-sized planet, says a University of Rochester astronomer in the latest Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. view more (2007-06-14)
Research suggests social factors behind higher schizophrenia rate in British African-Caribbeans Unemployment and earlier separation from both parents may be key factors behind the higher rates of schizophrenia in British African-Caribbeans, according to new research by a scientist at The Centre for Caribbean Medicine, King's College London. view more (2002-06-19)
Astronomers search for orphan stars using newly upgraded telescope Using new charge coupled device (CCD) instrumentation, Case Western Reserve University astronomers can now view the night sky wider and deeper than before. view more (2008-05-20)
Supernova Imposter Goes Supernova In a galaxy far, far away, a massive star suffered a nasty double whammy. On Oct. 20, 2004, Japanese amateur astronomer Koichi Itagaki saw the star let loose an outburst so bright that it was initially mistaken for a supernova. The star survived, but for only two years. On Oct. 11, 2006,... view more (2007-04-05)
Light echoes whisper the distance to a star Taking advantage of the presence of light echoes, a team of astronomers have used an ESO telescope to measure, at the 1% precision level, the distance of a Cepheid - a class of variable stars that constitutes one of the first steps in the cosmic distance ladder. view more (2008-02-11)
Solar Games at Paranal Cerro Paranal, home of ESO's Very Large Telescope, is certainly one of the best astronomical sites on the planet. Stunning images, obtained by ESO staff at Paranal, of the green and blue flashes, as well as of the so-called 'Gegenschein', are real cases in point. view more (2008-05-05)
Massive star cluster found in Milky Way A massive cluster of red supergiants-super-sized stars on the verge of exploding-was recently discovered in the Milky Way by a group of stronomers using infrared technology to penetrate the thick dust that cloaks much of the galaxy. view more (2006-01-10)
Another bar in the Bulge Using 2MASS data, Christophe Alard (astronomer at Paris Observatory) has reconstructed a map of the projected density of the old stellar population of the Galactic Bulge region. By making a combination of the H and K photometric bands, it is possible to overcome the effect of reddening, and thus... view more (2001-11-21)
Spectacular Views Of An Exploding Star An astronomer from the Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes has obtained spectacular images of the star V838 Monocerotis which became the brightest in our Galaxy when it exploded in January 2002. One of the images will be highlighted on the front cover of the journal Nature on 27 March 2003 and in a... view more (2003-03-27)
University Scientists Will Not See the Eclipse...At Least, Not With Their Eyes! The sun constantly radiates energy across the spectrum of frequencies from radio, through heat, to visible light and beyond. During the period of totality, only radiation present in the sun's annular corona will be detectable, with energy directly radiated from the sun being masked by the moon. view more (1999-08-06)
Sir Isaac Newton Visits California Famous physicist Isaac Newton and astronomer Galileo are visiting Falkirk schools, including California Primary School, to celebrate National Science Week. Actor Peter Joyce will bring the two historical figures to life in performances to over 1700 children as part of the Society of Chemical... view more (2002-03-11)
Multi-wavelength images help astronomers study star birth, death In recent years, a number of ground-based optical and radio surveys of the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds - Earth's nearest neighboring galaxies - have become available. view more (2006-01-12)
A Vanishing Star Revisited Reinhold H'¤fner of the Munich University Observatory (Germany) is a happy astronomer. view more (1999-07-20)
Black hole found in enigmatic Omega Centauri A new discovery has resolved some of the mystery surrounding Omega Centauri, the largest and brightest globular cluster in the sky. Images obtained with the Advanced Camera for Surveys onboard the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope and data obtained by the GMOS spectrograph on the Gemini South... view more (2008-04-02)
Dusty old star offers window to our future, astronomers report Astronomers have glimpsed dusty debris around an essentially dead star where gravity and radiation should have long ago removed any sign of dust - a discovery that may provide insights into our own solar system's eventual demise several billion years from now. view more (2005-09-09)
Astronomers discover largest-ever dark matter structures spanning 270M light-years A University of British Columbia astronomer with an international team has discovered the largest structures of dark matter ever seen. Measuring 270 million light-years across, these dark matter structures criss-cross the night sky, each spanning an area that is eight times larger than the full... view more (2008-02-22)
Amateurs and professionals combine observations to produce detailed picture of double asteroid Roping together observations from the world's largest telescopes as well as the small instrument of a local backyard amateur, astronomers have assembled the most complete picture yet of a pair of asteroids whirling around one another in a perpetual pas de deux. view more (2007-03-30)
Dust-enshrouded star looks similar to our sun Astronomers report tremendous quantities of warm dusty debris surrounding a star with luminosity and mass similar to the sun's, but located 300 light-years from Earth. view more (2005-07-21)
XO-3b: Supersized planet or oasis in the 'brown dwarf desert'? The latest find from an international planet-hunting team of amateur and professional astronomers is one of the oddest extrasolar planets ever cataloged -- a mammoth orb more than 13 times the mass of Jupiter that orbits its star in less than four days. view more (2007-05-31)
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