News
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Science June 15, 2023
Unburying CIZA Galaxy Cluster
Now astronomers have used a newly upgraded world-leading radio telescope to unbury the radio emissions from a galaxy cluster known as CIZA1359. The signal has until now been buried in noise from a nearby foreground object.
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Topics June 9, 2023
NINS President Maki Kawai and NAOJ Director General Saku Tsuneta Visit Dignitaries in Chile
From May 29 to June 2, 2023, Dr. Maki Kawai, President of NINS; Dr. Saku Tsuneta, Director General of NAOJ; officials from MEXT; and others, visited the Chilean Ministry of Foreign Affairs; the JAO Santiago Central Office; the Chilean Ministry of Science, Technology, Knowledge and Innovation; University of Chile, and the Office of Chilean Affairs of AUI.
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Science June 7, 2023
Tracking Vanished Massive Stars by their Chemical Footprints
Astronomers have discovered a star on the outskirts of the Milky Way Galaxy with a chemical composition unlike anything they have ever seen. It matches theoretical expectations for the chemical footprint left behind by very massive, very early stars. This is the clearest evidence yet that the first stars included very massive stars. Models show such stars would not have left behind any other remnants, so a footprint like this is the best evidence that can be hoped for.
This article is including a link to a article for kids.
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Topics May 24, 2023
Certificate of Appreciation Presented to Former Governor of the State of Hawai`i
On May 8, the National Institutes for Natural Sciences and the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan presented Mr. Ige with a certificate of appreciation.
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Science May 18, 2023
First Observed Radio Waves from a Type Ia Supernova
For the first time, astronomers have observed radio waves emitted by a Type Ia supernova, a type of explosion originating from a white dwarf star. This provides important clues to understand how white dwarfs explode.
This article is including a link to a article for kids.
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Science May 15, 2023
Out of this World Control on Ice Age Cycles
A research team, composed of climatologists and an astronomer, have used an improved computer model to reproduce the cycle of ice ages (glacial periods) 1.6 to 1.2 million years ago. The results show that the glacial cycle was driven primarily by astronomical forces in quite a different way than it works in the modern age. These results will help us to better understand the past, present, and future of ice sheets and the Earth’s climate.
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Science April 28, 2023
Superflare with Massive, High-Velocity Prominence Eruption
A team of Japanese astronomers used simultaneous ground-based and space-based observations to capture a more complete picture of a superflare on a star. The observed flare started with a very massive, high-velocity prominence eruption. These results give us a better idea of how superflares and stellar prominence eruptions occur.
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Science April 27, 2023
Astronomers Image for the First Time a Black Hole’s Accretion Flow Together With a Powerful Jet
An international team of scientists has used new millimeter-wavelength observations to produce an image that shows, for the first time, both the ring-like structure that reveals the matter falling into the central black hole and the powerful relativistic jet in the prominent radio galaxy Messier?87.
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Science April 14, 2023
Playing Hide and Seek with Planets
An international team of astronomers announced the first exoplanet discovered through a combined approach of direct imaging and precision measurements of a star’s motion on the sky. This new method promises to improve the efficiency of exoplanet searches, paving the way for the discovery of an Earth twin.
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Science March 23, 2023
AI Finds that First Stars were Clustered Together
An international team has used artificial intelligence to analyze the chemical abundances of old stars and found indications that the very first stars in the Universe were born in groups rather than as isolated single stars. Now the team hopes to apply this method to new data from on-going and planned observation surveys to better understand the early days of the Universe.
This article is including a link to a article for kids.