AHEAD’s planetarium movie wins the international fulldome film competition
AHEAD’s planetarium movie “The Hot and Energetic Universe”, directed by Theofanis Matsopoulos, won the Golden Star Award at the international fulldome video competition.
AHEAD’s planetarium movie “The Hot and Energetic Universe”, directed by Theofanis Matsopoulos, won the Golden Star Award at the international fulldome video competition.
In June 2016 astronomers detected what was thought to be the brightest supernova ever observed. Later this year, new observations of the source, complicated things as they revealed phenomena never seen for a supernova. Now, new observations try to shed light on the nature of this source.
Astronomers discovered a galaxy, known as SPT 0346-52, that lies 12.7 billion years from Earth and undergoes an extraordinary rate of star formation.
First direct evidence of an Ultraluminous X-ray source moving outwards from its parental star cluster.
Astronomers took advantage of Chandra satellite’s unprecedented X-ray sensitivity, to create a new X-ray source catalogue. This new catalogue will help scientists investigate how Supermassive Black Holes (SMBHs) grow and co-evolve with galaxies and examine how the X-ray binary populations of starburst and normal galaxies evolve over most of cosmic time, among other exciting things.
AHEAD’s movie “The Hot and Energetic Universe”will be presented on Monday 28th November 2016, simultaneously at the New Digital Planetarium of the Eugenides Foundation, in Athens and the NOΕSIS Planetarium in Thessaloniki, in Greece.
A collision between two galaxies leaves a super massive black hole nearly naked, wandering though space.
Credit: NASA/CXC/UA/J.Irwin et al. Astronomers detected a pair of mysterious X-ray sources that flare up and become about hundred times brighter in less than a minute while they return to their initial X-ray levels about an hour later. One Read More …
Astronomers discovered a peculiar object that could be a wandering black hole following a collision and merger of two galaxies.
Astronomers used data from NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope and NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory to observe a galaxy changing its classification twice within five years. The cause of this rare phenomenon is a starving Black Hole at the centre of the galaxy.