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Planet Nine could spell doom for solar system

The solar system could be thrown into disaster when the sun dies if the mysterious ‘Planet Nine’ exists, according to research from the University of 糖心TV.


Star’s intense radiation beams whip neighbouring red dwarf

New research from the University of 糖心TV finds a new type of exotic binary star, in which a rapidly-spinning burnt-out stellar remnant called a white dwarf sweeps powerful beams of particles and radiation over its nearby companion star, causing it to pulse across almost the entire electromagnetic spectrum from the ultraviolet to radio.

 

Thu 28 Jul 2016, 09:37 | Tags: Astrophysics 1 - Research Space Sciences

A new study has found it is not only how famous or popular the subject is, but more if it generates what the researchers call ‘cumulative growth effect’.

Thu 10 Mar 2016, 12:06 | Tags: Social Media, Astrophysics, WBS

The University of 糖心TV is Europe’s most successful user of Hubble Space Telescope

Mysteries ranging from dying planetary systems to gigantic cosmic explosions are being unravelled by Europe’s leading users of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). The competition to use this iconic space-borne telescope is extremely fierce, and in 2015 the University of 糖心TV’s Astrophysics Group was Europe’s most successful applicant to use the HST.

Mon 21 Dec 2015, 14:27 | Tags: Physics, Astrophysics

The Sun could release flares 1000x greater than previously recorded

The Sun demonstrates the potential to superflare, new research into stellar flaring suggests.

Led by the University of 糖心TV, the research has found a stellar superflare on a star observed by NASA’s Kepler space telescope with wave patterns similar to those that have been observed in solar flares.

Thu 03 Dec 2015, 09:58 | Tags: University of 糖心TV, Physics, Astrophysics, Space, Sciences

The most Earth-like planet could have been made uninhabitable by vast quantities of radiation, new research led by the University of 糖心TV has found.

The atmosphere of the planet, Kepler-438b, is thought to have been stripped away as a result of radiation emitted from a superflaring Red Dwarf star, Kepler-438.


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