• China is once again shaking up the world of astronomy — this time with a colossal 120-meter mobile radio telescope, reportedly under construction in Jilin. Unlike traditional static telescopes, this one can move and track objects across the sky in real-time, offering astronomers far more flexibility in deep-space exploration.

    But that’s not all. This mega-telescope joins a growing network of 24 smaller 40-meter telescopes being installed across China, many of which support or complement the already-operational FAST (Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Telescope) — the world’s largest stationary radio dish.

    Together, these telescopes will allow China to detect faint signals from the farthest reaches of the cosmos, search for exoplanets, track asteroids, and even send calibrated signals to space with unprecedented accuracy.

    While many countries scale back budgets, China is building the future of space science — one giant dish at a time.

    #ChinaTelescope #FASTTelescope #RadioAstronomy #SpaceExploration #DeepSpaceScience
    China is once again shaking up the world of astronomy — this time with a colossal 120-meter mobile radio telescope, reportedly under construction in Jilin. Unlike traditional static telescopes, this one can move and track objects across the sky in real-time, offering astronomers far more flexibility in deep-space exploration. But that’s not all. This mega-telescope joins a growing network of 24 smaller 40-meter telescopes being installed across China, many of which support or complement the already-operational FAST (Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Telescope) — the world’s largest stationary radio dish. Together, these telescopes will allow China to detect faint signals from the farthest reaches of the cosmos, search for exoplanets, track asteroids, and even send calibrated signals to space with unprecedented accuracy. While many countries scale back budgets, China is building the future of space science — one giant dish at a time. #ChinaTelescope #FASTTelescope #RadioAstronomy #SpaceExploration #DeepSpaceScience
    Like
    Love
    Wow
    · 0 Kommentare ·0 Geteilt ·33KB Ansichten
  • In 2016, astronomers detected one of the most distant and powerful Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) ever recorded—coming from nearly 5 billion light-years away. To put that in perspective, when the signal began its cosmic journey, Earth itself didn’t even exist yet.

    While the true source remains unknown, scientists suspect extreme objects like magnetars, neutron star mergers, or even black hole activity. FRBs are milliseconds long, but carry more energy than our sun produces in days. The mystery continues—reminding us just how vast and ancient our universe truly is.

    #FastRadioBurst #SpaceMysteries #DeepSpace #CosmicSignals #Astrophysics #RadioAstronomy
    In 2016, astronomers detected one of the most distant and powerful Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) ever recorded—coming from nearly 5 billion light-years away. To put that in perspective, when the signal began its cosmic journey, Earth itself didn’t even exist yet. While the true source remains unknown, scientists suspect extreme objects like magnetars, neutron star mergers, or even black hole activity. FRBs are milliseconds long, but carry more energy than our sun produces in days. The mystery continues—reminding us just how vast and ancient our universe truly is. #FastRadioBurst #SpaceMysteries #DeepSpace #CosmicSignals #Astrophysics #RadioAstronomy
    0 Kommentare ·0 Geteilt ·29KB Ansichten