31 March 2023
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Latest News
  • [ 29 March 2023 ] Supermassive black holes not impressive enough? Try the ultramassive version News
  • [ 28 March 2023 ] James Webb’s infrared vision lets astronomers take an exoplanet’s temperature News
  • [ 27 March 2023 ] NASA gearing up for OSIRIS-REx asteroid sample recovery News
  • [ 23 March 2023 ] A simpler, more mundane explanation for ‘Oumuamua’s strange behaviour News
  • [ 22 March 2023 ] Japanese Hakuto-R moon lander slips into lunar orbit News
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Eric Burns

News

Gamma-ray space telescope poised to pin down gravitational wave sources

19 April 2016 Astronomy Now

On 14 September 2015, gravitational waves produced by a pair of merging black holes gently rattled space-time in the vicinity of Earth. Less than half a second later, NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope picked up a brief, weak burst of high-energy light consistent with the same part of the sky. Analysis of this burst suggests that the events are connected.

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News Headlines

  • Supermassive black holes not impressive enough? Try the ultramassive version
    29 March 2023
  • James Webb’s infrared vision lets astronomers take an exoplanet’s temperature
    28 March 2023
  • NASA gearing up for OSIRIS-REx asteroid sample recovery
    27 March 2023
  • A simpler, more mundane explanation for ‘Oumuamua’s strange behaviour
    23 March 2023
  • Japanese Hakuto-R moon lander slips into lunar orbit
    22 March 2023
  • Home
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      • March last issue
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  • Reviews
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  • Spaceflight Now
  • Shop
  • Contact Us
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    • Ask Astronomy Now
    • Editorial
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