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posted by martyb on Wednesday February 20 2019, @01:38PM   Printer-friendly
from the check-what-happens-when-i-point-this-laser-pointer-at-that-telescope dept.

Using radio astronomy, over 200 astronomers hailing from 18 different countries have gathered over 20 petabyes of data and published a new map of the night sky that has over 300,000 previously undiscovered galaxies in it.

In-depth coverage here. Mainstream articles here and here.

Good Video Fly through the LOFAR Survey radio Universe. LOFAR image gallery here

The team used the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) telescope in the Netherlands to pick up traces -- or "jets" -- of ancient radiation produced when galaxies merge. These jets, previously undetected, can extend over millions of light years.

"With radio observations we can detect radiation from the tenuous medium that exists between galaxies," said Amanda Wilber, of the University of Hamburg.

"LOFAR allows us to detect many more of these sources and understand what is powering them."

These jets occur near the supermassive black holes at the center of galaxies.

These detections are only the beginning however, so buckle in and prep for lightspeed

The LOFAR telescope, which is made up of a network of radio antenna located across seven European countries, has helped scientists chart just just 2 percent of the sky so far. The team plans to create high-resolution images of the entire northern sky, which they say will reveal up to 15 million previously undetected radio sources.

Too bad it can't focus in on Proxima Centauri.


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  • (Score: 2) by RandomFactor on Wednesday February 20 2019, @06:19PM

    by RandomFactor (3682) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday February 20 2019, @06:19PM (#804086) Journal

    But maybe we mean the kind of dates you eat which grow on trees? I don't know how many bites each of those are.

    You answered this!

    Suppose a single date is represented in 8 bites

    If it takes 8 bites per date (admittedly a bit birdlike, but ok),
      - assuming 2 chews per bite, and a chewing rate of 2 chews per second, that's a consumption rate of 900 dates per hour
      - Average caloric consumption of 11 calories per hour
      - 1.1111111e12 hours to consume them
      - 1.2222222e+12 calories burned processing 20 petabites of dates

    However each date contains ~70 calories or 7e16 calories, making the calories expended consuming them effectively irrelevant.

    999569974676.29 Calories is ~1 Kiloton of TNT

    Rounding a little, it sounds like they are storing the equivalent of ~1.2 Kilotons of TNT worth of dates.

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