In The News: College of Sciences

EurekAlert!

A flurry of more than 1,650 FRBs detected by FAST telescope over 47 days in 2019 unlocks clues to the nature and location of the powerful millisecond-long cosmic radio explosions.

Universe Today

Astronomers may have spotted the first ever known planet orbiting not one, not two, but three stars.

KSNV-TV: News 3

UNLV researchers say they’ve made a discovery 13-hundred light-years from Earth that could possibly be the first planet to orbit three stars.

New Atlas

One Sun is plenty for our solar system, but some planets have been found orbiting two stars at once. Now the ante has been upped again, with evidence emerging of a planet orbiting three stars at once.

Space.com

Star clusters are not only beautiful to look at through telescopes, but they're also the key to unlocking the mysteries of how a star is born.

New Scientist

Astronomers have found clues to a large planet orbiting three stars.

CNET

It's like a Tatooine supreme.

Chemistry World

Researchers in the UK have devised a process that uses electricity to remove radioactive contaminants from irradiated nuclear graphite. The process could reduce the volume of waste from nuclear power plants that requires expensive and long-term storage.

CNN Indonesia

Researchers from the Ê×Ò³| Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­ (UNLV) in the United States said they had discovered an exoplanet orbiting three suns, also known as the 3rd Binary Star (Trinari).

Medium

In a distant star system — a mere 1,300 light-years away from Earth — researchers may have identified the first known planet to orbit three stars. The potential discovery of a circumtriple planet has implications for bolstering understanding of planet formation.

Randrlife

Although our solar system has only one star in the center, half of the systems contain two or even more stars that orbit each other by gravity. But so far, no one has seen a planet orbiting the three stars.

Forbes

Planets orbit stars. Everyone knows that, but have you ever heard of a planet that orbits not two stars, but three?