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"intense radio waves" is a grammatically correct phrase that can be used in written English.
It refers to strong, powerful, or concentrated radio waves that are used for communication or other purposes. Example: The scientists observed an increase in the intensity of radio waves coming from the distant galaxy, indicating the presence of a potential new supernova.
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Arp 299 is important because today's telescopes can stare deeply into the hidden region where supernova remnants churn out intense radio waves, he notes.
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The planet became an intense emitter of radio waves (TV, cellphone, and radar transmissions).
Fast radio bursts, or FRBs, are short, intense blasts of radio waves that come from far outside our galaxy.
For the first time, astronomers have captured an intense flash of radio waves known as a fast radio burst in real time, EarthSky reports.
The planet orbits its parent sun a pulsar, or a rapidly-spinning neutron star that emits an intense beam of radio waves, dubbed PSR J1719-1438 once every 2 hours and 10 minutes, the researchers report online today in Science.
They are so dense that all their atoms have been crushed to form a huge ball of neutrons that spins through space and time.If a neutron star spins fast enough once every 100 seconds or so and also has a strong magnetic field, it emits pulses of radio waves intense enough to reach the earth.
In particular, Iridium threatened a 1612-megahertz radio signal produced by hydroxyl masers, intense blasts of laserlike radio waves that have provided important insights into how stars are born and die.
In particular, it might serve to cool atoms trapped in an intense beam of laser light, a situation in which radio waves have no effect.
In 1966, working with an American colleague, Ernst discovered that the sensitivity of NMR techniques (hitherto limited to analysis of only a few nuclei) could be dramatically increased by replacing the slow, sweeping radio waves traditionally used in NMR spectroscopy with short, intense pulses.
The trapping of high-frequency radio waves between the E and F regions during intense sporadic E is also illustrated.
ATOMIC BLASTS ALSO UNLEASH an electromagnetic pulse a blitzkrieg of gamma rays, x-rays, and radio waves that instantly fries most nearby electronics—as well as intense light, seismic waves, air pressure waves, and infrasound.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com