News

This section includes scientific and technological news from the IAC and its Observatories, as well as press releases on scientific and technological results, astronomical events, educational projects, outreach activities and institutional events.

  • Cartel de la charla. Diseño: Miriam Cruz (MCC).
    Mañana viernes, a las 19h, la investigadora del IAC Antonia M. Varela dará una charla sobre la astrónoma estadounidense en el Museo de la Ciencia y el Cosmos. Le seguirá un debate con la también astrofísica del IAC Andrea Rodríguez
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  • Captura del vídeo de la ocultación de la estrella UCAC4 410-143659 por Tritón. Crédito: Sergio Velasco (IAC).
    On the night of 5th of October a star in the sky “was switched off”. Triton, the largest of the moons of Neptune, at some 4,500 million kilometres from the Earth passed in front of the star UCAC4 410-143659, briefly occulting it. It is not at all frequent that during their “cosmic passage” around the Sun, the planets and their satellites cross the line of sight to a distant star, but the telescopes of the Canary Island Observatories, among others, were able to point to the sky just when this occultation, which lasted 145 seconds, was taking place. Its occultation was observed with diverse
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  • NGC 4993 galaxy and position of GW170817, two merging neutron stars. Credti: Hubble Space Telescope.
    The IAC has participated in the detection of the counterpart, in the visible, the infrared and X-rays, of the source of gravitational waves GW170817 (neutron stars merging). The results are being published in the journals Nature and Astrophysical Journal. This is the first time that the electromagnetic counterpart of a gravitational wave event has been detected, which has been announced this morning in pressconferences organized by the research groups involved, among them the Universidad de las Illes Balears and the Universidad de Valencia, along with large part of the astrophysic and
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  • Presentación del proyecto "El regreso de Henrietta Leavitt. De la escuela a la carrera investigadora pasando por el teatro". De izquierda a derecha: Carmen del Puerto, Amaya Conde, Soledad Monzón, Rafael Rebolo y Helena Romero. Crédito: Elena Mora (IAC).
    Henrietta Leavitt fue una de esas figuras ocultas de la Ciencia que desarrolló un brillante trabajo en el Observatorio de Harvard. Sus valiosas aportaciones a la Astronomía, como su relación período-luminosidad para calcular grandes distancias en el Universo, no fueron suficientes para recibir en su época el reconocimiento que se merecía. Por ello, el Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias (IAC), en colaboración con la Fundación Española para la Ciencia y la Tecnología (FECYT), le rinde homenaje a través del proyecto transversal “El regreso de Henrietta Leavitt. De la escuela a la carrera
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