News
- From The New Yorker Magazine: A few months ago, I flew to Houston to visit a small startup called Lunar Resources, which aspires to build the largest telescope in the solar system—not on Earth but on the far side of the moon. Houston is nicknamed
- From The Space Show with host, Dr. David M. Livingston: Listen to the broadcast from June 19, 2024 withDr. Jack Burns
- From Space.com:Human technology like cell phones and broadcast towers constantly radiate radio waves intospace, and astronomers estimate this tell-tale signature of humanity has swept across75 nearby star systems, signaling
- From Earth.com:On February 22, a significant milestone in space exploration was achieved when the lunar lander Odysseus, developed byIntuitive Machines, successfully touched down near the Moon’s South Pole.This event is
- From the James McConnell Show:Join us to discuss Dr. Jack Burns' 50+ year career working as an Astrophysicist and Professor. We discuss his journey to put a radio telescope on the moon and future plans for an array of telescopes on the lunar
- From Business Insider:Gazing at the moon, you may see a face or a round of cheese, but some astronomers see the ideal spot for their next giant telescope. They're already drafting blueprints and making proposals — some with cash from an
- From Leonard David's Inside Outer Space:“We can clearly say that the dawn of radio astronomy from the Moon has begun!” That’s the word from Jack Burns, a University of Colorado/Vlogƽ astrophysicist. He is a co-investigator on the ROLSES
- From The Conversation:For the first time since 1972, NASA is putting science experiments on the Moon in 2024. And thanks to new technologies and public-private partnerships, these projects will open up new realms of scientific possibility. As
- From the American Astronomical Society Plenary Lecture series: Watch a talk by Dr. Jack Burns about Radio Astrophysics and Cosmology from the Moon from January 2024.
- From Space.com:NEW ORLEANS — It was only two days ago when Peregrine, the inaugural private lander contracted under NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload Services program, brilliantly blasted toward space aboard the first private flight of United