SALT LAKE CITY (KTVX) – The Juno spacecraft orbiting Jupiter has discovered an FM radio signal coming from the moon Ganymede. The find is a first-time detection from the moon. “It’s not E.T.,” said ...
Hosted on MSN
Jupiter is slightly smaller than scientists believed for decades: NASA’s Juno mission finally explains why
Jupiter has long been described as a swollen, fast-spinning giant, but its exact dimensions have rested on ageing measurements. For decades, scientists relied on radio signals gathered briefly by ...
Equipped with a laptop, antenna, cables and connectors on a football field, a Smithtown High School West sophomore has set his sights on boldly exploring where no one has gone before — Jupiter.
Data from NASA’s Juno mission has revealed that the solar system’s largest planet is slightly smaller and more “squashed” than previously believed. By analyzing radio occultation data from 13 flybys ...
Astronomers pinpointed the source of the signal to a low mass star, but it can't generate that much energy on its own. Reading time 3 minutes A steady pulse of bright energy has been emanating from ...
Stellar storms could be masking Alien radio messages.
A spacecraft orbiting Jupiter discovered an FM radio signal from Ganymede, one of the gas giant's moons. The discovery marks the first time a signal has been detected from Ganymede. Patrick Wiggins, a ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results