The Phoenix Cluster's central galaxy is about 5.8 billion light-years away and should be mostly done with star formation.
A dead galaxy, over 11 billion years old, has surprised astronomers with powerful radio bursts. Once thought to be lifeless, this discovery raises questions about the origins of such phenomena.
A mysterious radio burst from a dead galaxy has been detected, challenging everything astronomers believed. This eerie pulse, traveling for billions of years, defies logic—coming from a place ...
A staccato blast of electromagnetic energy has been tracked to an old, dead galaxy for the first time. The discovery supports the idea that there are more ways to produce such flares, called fast ...
Astronomers have detected fast-repeating radio bursts from a distant "dead" galaxy that should not contain ... they combined it with a smaller CHIME-like telescope to pinpoint the location of ...
Take, for instance, one such fast radio burst astronomers recently tracked to the distant outskirts of a long-dead galaxy. Based on what scientists thought they knew about fast radio bursts ...
they combined it with a smaller CHIME-like telescope to pinpoint the location of the FRB. They then used the Gemini North telescope in Hawaii to image the region around the location of the FRBs. The ...
Astronomers say they've detected a mysterious type of signal known as a fast radio burst coming from an ancient, dead galaxy billions ... no FRB had been seen like it, leading us to believe ...
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