ASU undergraduate students Hamdi Mani (left) and Jose Chavez kneel in front of a telescope antenna tile at the Murchison Widefield Array radio telescope. Hamdi has graduated and now works as an ...
Tile 107, or "the Outlier" as it is known, is one of 256 tiles of the MWA located 1.5km from the core of the telescope. The MWA is a precursor instrument to the SKA. Disclaimer: AAAS and ...
New candidate detections (steady reflections) in range vs RCS parameter space using white circle markers. The background image is the detection summary of the blind survey performed in Prabu, Hancock, ...
This image shows a new view of the Milky Way from the Murchison Widefield Array, with the lowest frequencies in red, middle frequencies in green, and the highest frequencies in blue. Huge golden ...
Our nearest neighbouring radio galaxy, Centaurus A, observed in full at 185 MHz by the Murchison Widefield Array, has giant radio lobes extending 8 degrees across the sky — powered by the supermassive ...
A team of astronomers have used the Murchison Widefield Array, a massive network of over 4,000 antennas spread out over the Western Australian desert, to look for aliens. They collected seven ...
A radio telescope in the Western Australian outback has captured a spectacular new view of the centre of the galaxy in which we live, the Milky Way. The image from the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) ...