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News/Events

Our more recent newsworthy research results, group members news and awards, and all current events related to the Center — you'll find it here.

GWAC research in the news.

Mind the (Detection) Gap

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When searching for Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) across our vast Universe, we must first sift through the dense gas and dust of our own galaxy, the Milky Way, in order to get an observable signal.

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WVUniverse explores the dance of space plasma

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Space plasma dominates our solar system and makes up about 99% of visible matter in our universe. Conducted by electricity, the choreography of space plasma affects everything from space weather, GPS accuracy, radio communications and more. 

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Advancing new machine learning models to better understand the mysterious Fast Radio Burst

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While automation has become the new normal in our everyday modern lives, it is also assisting scientists in making strides in analyzing large data sets. With decades of archival data from radio telescopes from around the world available in storage, astronomers at West Virginia University (WVU) are using automation and machine learning techniques to dig through mounds of archival data with the hopes of uncovering new clues about mysterious cosmic phenomena like Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs). 

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WVU engineers recalibrate radio telescopes to illuminate dark energy

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Scientists know dark energy makes up about 70% of the universe and is responsible for the universe’s accelerating expansion. Beyond that, little about it is certain, so WVU engineer Kevin Bandura is enhancing the calibration of radio telescopes that can tell astronomers about dark energy by measuring the “neutral hydrogen” in the universe, a simple form of hydrogen with no net electric charge.

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McLaughlin awarded NSF grant to lead development of infrastructure for a new radio telescope under construction in Nevada

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Maura McLaughlin, Eberly Distinguished Professor and Chair in the West Virginia University Department of Physics and Astronomy and the Center for Gravitational Waves and Cosmology, has been awarded a National Science Foundation (NSF) grant. The grant, Collaborative Research: Building the Next-Generation NANOGrav Pulsar Timing Array with the DSA-2000 was awarded to McLaughlin and team as part of the Windows on the Universe program at NSF.  The dedicated $313,000 will support multi-faceted research and training programs across the country, involving a new radio telescope array called the Deep Synoptic Array, or DSA-2000.

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