Professor Emeritus Hale Van Dorn Bradt, an X-ray astronomy pioneer, dies at 93
Longtime MIT faculty member used X-ray astronomy to study neutron stars and black holes and led the All-Sky Monitor instrument on NASA's Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer.
Longtime MIT faculty member used X-ray astronomy to study neutron stars and black holes and led the All-Sky Monitor instrument on NASA's Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer.
The method could help communities visualize and prepare for approaching storms.
A weak magnetic field likely pulled matter inward to form the outer planetary bodies, from Jupiter to Neptune.
MIT Kavli Institute scientists and collaborators will produce a concept study to launch a $1B experiment to investigate the X-ray universe.
In the universe’s first billion years, this brief and mysterious force could have produced more bright galaxies than theory predicts.
Knowing where to look for this signal will help researchers identify specific sources of the potent greenhouse gas.
The planet’s wild orbit offers clues to how such large, hot planets take shape.
The challenge asked teams to develop AI algorithms to track and predict satellites’ patterns of life in orbit using passively collected data
Portugal’s second-ever satellite was developed in collaboration with the MIT Portugal Program.
Lincoln Laboratory researchers are using AI to get a better picture of the atmospheric layer closest to Earth's surface. Their techniques could improve weather and drought prediction.
Analysis reveals a tiny black hole repeatedly punching through a larger black hole’s disk of gas.
The team used machine learning to analyze satellite and roadside images of areas where small farms predominate and agricultural data are sparse.
The detections more than double the number of known tidal disruption events in the nearby universe.
The findings suggest our galaxy’s core may contain less dark matter than previously estimated.