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News Overview

Announcement: WSRT-Apertif Surveys to continue throughout 2021

The large-scale Apertif surveys with the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope (WSRT) that started on 1 July 2019 will continue to be supported during 2021.

News
WSRT-APERTIF
Published by the editorial team, 8 June 2020

10 years of LOFAR highlights: Using the existing SurfNet infrastructure to connect international stations and its European counterparts

In addition to the 40 Dutch antenna stations, LOFAR has 14 antenna stations elsewhere in Europe. Just like the antenna stations in the Netherlands, the European stations also send their observation data via fibre optic connections to the central processor (CEP) of LOFAR at Groningen.

LOFAR
News
Published by the editorial team, 8 June 2020

10 years of LOFAR highlights: Gentle reenergization of electrons in merging galaxy clusters

Supermassive black holes can leave a trail of energetic particles that astronomers are able to detect using radio telescopes. Usually the radio emissions from these particles fade away and become invisible.

LOFAR
News
Published by the editorial team, 6 June 2020

10 years of LOFAR highlights: Infographic – The evolution of LOFAR supercomputers

This infographic shows the ‘evolution’ of supercomputers used for LOFAR.

LOFAR
News
Published by the editorial team, 5 June 2020

10 years of LOFAR highlights: The LOFAR Transient Buffer Board

The LOFAR Transient Buffer Board (TBB) gave the LOFAR radio telescope a unique extra capability: looking back in time.

LOFAR
News
Published by the editorial team, 5 June 2020

10 years of LOFAR highlights:The use of a monitor & control system that monitors a physically widely distributed instrument

The day-to-day LOFAR operations require highly specialized monitoring and control systems. We use a system that easily enables us to visualize any values we put in our database in a graphic interface or time-sequenced graphs.

LOFAR
News
Published by the editorial team, 5 June 2020

10 years of LOFAR highlights: LOFAR pioneers new way to study exoplanet environments

With the help of LOFAR, astronomers have been able to indicate the presence of a planet around a red dwarf star and with that, prove a theory that was composed with observations of Jupiter and its moon Io.

LOFAR
News
Published by the editorial team, 5 June 2020

10 years of LOFAR highlights: The TBB boards that act as a time machine

The LOFAR Transient Buffer Board (TBB) gave the LOFAR radio telescope a unique extra capability: looking back in time.

LOFAR
News
Published by the editorial team, 5 June 2020

10 years of LOFAR highlights: Revisiting the Fanaroff-Riley dichotomy and radio-galaxy morphology with the LOFAR Two-Metre Sky Survey

It has been known since the 1970s that the radio structures made by jets from black holes come in two types: very powerful jets are brightest at the edges and weaker jets are brightest in the middle and fade out at large distances.

LOFAR
News
Published by the editorial team, 5 June 2020

10 years of LOFAR highlights: Pulsar shows sudden mood swings

In 2013 an international research team – led by Dutch astronomers (SRON, NOVA and ASTRON) – discovers that pulsar PSR B0943+10 can both radically change the amounts of radio waves and X-ray waves it emits within seconds.

LOFAR
News
Published by the editorial team, 3 June 2020

10 years of LOFAR highlights: Super-slow pulsar challenges theory

In 2017 LOFAR detects the slowest spinning radio pulsar to date. The neutron star spins around once only every 23.5 seconds almost three times more slowly than the slowest spinning radio pulsar detected up to that point (8.5 seconds).

LOFAR
News
Published by the editorial team, 3 June 2020

10 years of LOFAR highlights: The construction and use of our own broadband optical data transport system

In the Netherlands, the LOFAR telescope consists of approximately 40 antenna stations that are spread over the entire North of the Netherlands. The amount of LOFAR data that needs to be transferred from these stations is so large that it cannot be sent via the regular Internet.

LOFAR
News
Published by the editorial team, 2 June 2020
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