k Carl JanskyDate of shooting unknown Karl Jansky. Portrait of Karl Jansky 19051950, American radio engineer. After studying physics at Wisconsin, Jansky took a job at Bell Telephone Co in 1928. He was given the task of investigating static that interfered with shortwave radio communication. This static was unrelated to common sources, and Jansky demonstrated that it was coming from the centre of our galaxy. In 1932 he suggested it was caused by interstellar ionized gas. This received little attention. But this discovery represented the birth of radio astronomy, in which microwaves are received from space and interpreted. The unit of radio emission strength, the jansky, was named in his honour. Editorial Stock Photo - Afloimages
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Carl Jansky  Date of shooting unknown  Karl Jansky. Portrait of Karl Jansky  1905 1950 , American radio engineer. After studying physics at Wisconsin, Jansky took a job at Bell Telephone Co in 1928. He was given the task of investigating static that interfered with shortwave radio communication. This static was unrelated to common sources, and Jansky demonstrated that it was coming from the centre of our galaxy. In 1932 he suggested it was caused by interstellar ionized gas. This received little attention. But this discovery represented the birth of radio astronomy, in which microwaves are received from space and interpreted. The unit of radio emission strength, the jansky, was named in his honour.
ED

Carl Jansky (Date of shooting unknown)

Karl Jansky. Portrait of Karl Jansky (1905-1950), American radio engineer. After studying physics at Wisconsin, Jansky took a job at Bell Telephone Co in 1928. He was given the task of investigating static that interfered with shortwave radio communication. This static was unrelated to common sources, and Jansky demonstrated that it was coming from the centre of our galaxy. In 1932 he suggested it was caused by interstellar ionized gas. This received little attention. But this discovery represented the birth of radio astronomy, in which microwaves are received from space and interpreted. The unit of radio emission strength, the jansky, was named in his honour.

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ID
10587933

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License type
Editorial

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Creation date
17-11-2010

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