Modern astronomy happens at the speed and scale of our globalized, interconnected world. And like the rest of society, it requires faster, more robust networking for scientists to keep up with new ...
On February 24, 1987, a spectacular signal was seen as never before. From 165,000 light-years away, the first signals from a recently destroyed star — a core-collapse supernova — arrived on Earth.
Modern astronomy happens at the speed and scale of our globalized, interconnected world. And like the rest of society, it requires faster, more robust networking for scientists to keep up with new ...
A new simulation of supermassive black holes—the behemoths at the centers of galaxies—uses a realistic scenario to predict the light signals emitted in the surrounding gas before the masses collide, ...
“The promise of multi-messenger astrophysics, however, can be realized only if sufficient cyberinfrastructure is available to rapidly handle, combine and analyze the very large-scale distributed data ...
Bishop's University has received $800,000 from the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI), the Government of Québec, and ...
Combining the way that massive galaxies and galaxy clusters bend space and magnify our view of the distant universe with powerful new instruments sensitive to gravitational waves and electromagnetic ...
You know how the classic Beatles song goes: scientists make novel discoveries with a little help from their academically tangential friends. (Or something like that.) In the case of a recent study, ...
Modern astronomy happens at the speed and scale of our globalized, interconnected world. And like the rest of society, it requires faster, more robust networking for scientists to keep up with new ...