The Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) has awarded Veni funding of up to 250,000 euros to two astronomers affiliated with ASTRON: Dr. Emily Petroff and Dr. Caterina Tiburzi
Astronomers using a global network of radio telescopes have produced one of the sharpest astronomical images ever.
South Africa’s 64-dish MeerKAT telescope, one of the SKA’s precursor telescopes, was officially inaugurated by Deputy President David Mabuza at a ceremony near Carnarvon today.
On Friday 6 July 2018 at 10:25 am (CEST), ASTRON’s Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) automatically responded to a transient astronomical event for the first time.
Weak and strong gravity objects fall the same way
A European team of astronomers has discovered that dust particles around a star already coagulate before the star is fully grown.
ASTRON joins the OpenCores.org membership program and partners up with Oliscience to collaborate on the engineering of tools that are essential to achieve scientific discoveries in the fields of particle physics and astronomy.
Astronomers made a surprise discovery when they found that one supernova explosion was actually a star being pulled apart by a supermassive black hole.
A complete prototype station of antennas for the future SKA-low telescope has been completed and is being tested at the SKA site in Western Australia.
On 21 May 2018*, the Chinese space agency will launch the relay satellite Chang’e 4 to an orbit behind the Moon.
The new era of radio astronomy we are entering involves solving the most pressing data challenges in IT.
Emily Petroff, astronomer of the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy ASTRON, is one of the contenders for the title New Scientist Science Talent 2018