The Print on MSN
How 2 PhD students helped James Webb telescope see better with AI, from their desks on Earth
ScientiFix, our weekly feature, offers you a summary of the top global science stories of the week, with links to their sources.
A small piece of metal engineered in Australia helped sharpen the James Webb telescope's vision from a million miles away.
The Richard F Caris Mirror Lab in Tucson is actually attached to the UA football stadium, with some parts being below seats ...
Space.com on MSN
How AI fixed the James Webb Space Telescope's blurry vision
To fix the problem, former University of Sydney Ph.D. students Max Charles and Louis Desdoigts developed a neural network, a ...
The observatory’s proximity to Kirkwood Avenue, a hotspot for IU students, helps attract people outside of the astronomy ...
A ‘selfie’ taken during Webb’s testing on Earth. Ball Aerospace After Christmas dinner in 2021, our family was glued to the ...
A class of University of Texas astronomy students has discovered that nearby dwarf galaxy Segue-1 seems to host a ...
The James Webb Space Telescope was built with a flaw, and because it's a million miles away, we can't repair it, but we can correct it with software.
Three first-year students recently took the Thomas Jefferson Foundation up on its offer. Here are their stories.
The 1891 structure has been relocated to the middle of the college's athletic fields and outfitted with a new dome and mounted telescope.
Two Sydney PhD students have pulled off a remarkable space science feat from Earth—using AI-driven software to correct image blurring in NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope. Their innovation, called ...
Namibian Sun on MSN
‘It’s ours’: Namibia builds radio telescope from scratch
Connecting Namibia to the stars Francouis Pretorius The University of Namibia’s (Unam's) main campus in Windhoek became a hub of innovation and curiosity in October as students, researchers, and ...
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