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On June 13, 2024, astronomers using the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) detected an extraordinarily brief flash of radio waves, lasting less than 30 nanoseconds and peaking at ...
A NASA satellite that went silent nearly 60 years ago has shocked scientists by suddenly firing off one of the most powerful ...
The chip utilises brain-like technology to process sensor data on the device, reducing power consumption and enabling devices ...
Earth has been receiving a radio signal every 22 minutes - without fail. Discovered in 2022 using the Murchison Widefield Array, this signal defies explanation. It might be a pulsar… but it doesn’t ...
Smaller, smarter, and radically efficient - bringing brain-inspired intelligence to battery-powered devices, unlocking new era of real-time, ultra-low power AI at edge ...
Astronomers have uncovered a bizarre star, ASKAP J1832, that pulses radio waves and X-rays every 44 minutes—thousands of times slower than typical pulsars. This rare object also dims dramatically over ...
The future of yellow dwarf stars, like our sun, is determined almost entirely by their mass. The most massive stars, about ...
Startup Xona Space Systems hopes to provide an unspoofable alternative to increasingly threatened GPS.
A new simulation by researchers shows how a neutron star violently cracks seconds before vanishing into a black hole.
Scientists have discovered a strange signal coming from deep space, and what’s surprising is that it repeats every 44 minutes like clockwork. The signal comes in short bursts of radio and X-ray waves.
The pulsar and its companion revolve around each other every 3.6 hours, with the pulsar signal being eclipsed by its companion for roughly one-sixth of each orbit. Estimates suggest that the ...