News Overview
LOFAR telescope shines at Noorderzon Festival
Between 18 and 28 August, the LOFAR telescope will be part of a show at the famous Noorderzon Performing Arts Festival in Groningen, the Netherlands.
ATLAS3D project: Replacing handle of Hubble’s tuning fork
A team of 25 astronomers has shown that many presumed spheroid galaxies are in fact spiral galaxies.
Heino Falcke receives highest Dutch scientific award
Prof.Heino Falcke, Professor of Astroparticle Physics and Radio Astronomy at RadboudUniversity Nijmegen, received a Spinoza prize on Monday 6 June.
LOFAR makes deeper images of Universe than ever before
A team led by astronomers at ASTRON and the Kapteyn Institute have used LOFAR to make the deepest wide-field images in the spectrum around 150 MHz.
LOFAR takes the pulse of the radio sky
A powerful new telescope designed and built by ASTRON is allowing an international team of scientists to have their “best-ever look” at pulsars.
New monitoring facility ready for European navigation system
On Wednesday 6 April, ASTRON will demonstrate the first qualified monitoring facility for the Galileo navigation system to TAS-I and ESA.
Radio telescope gets double vision
ASTRON has demonstrated the ability to multi-task astronomical observations by pointing one telescope in two completely different directions simultaneously.
C’est magnifique: LOFAR goes multi-national
The signals from antenna stations of LOFAR have been simultaneously combined together in the LOFAR BlueGene/P supercomputer.
Dutch school teacher reveals Hubble images
Dutch school teacher reveals Hubble Speace Telescope images of Hanny’s voorwerp, a space oddity
ASTRON astronomer Marijke Haverkorn winner of the National Science Quiz 2010!
ASTRON astronomer Marijke Haverkorn winner of the National Science Quiz 2010!
ASTRON astronomer competes in National Science Quiz 2010
Marijke Haverkorn is competing in the 17th edition of the National Science Quiz with two other scientists on Sunday 26 December against a team of journalists.
Astronomers over the moon about Apertif!
Astronomers at ASTRON have demonstrated the feasibility of a new receiver technology that will have a great impact on radio astronomy.