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Dr Farihi's team reports its work in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
BBC: 'Dirty' stars hint at Sun's future
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Professor Roy was a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society and the British Interplanetary Society.
BBC: Academic and writer Archie E Roy dies aged 88
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The new results appear in a paper in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
BBC: Astronomers detect 'monster star'
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The Royal Astronomical Society National Astronomy Meeting ran from 31 March to 4 April at Queen's University Belfast.
BBC: Astronomers 'must make own case'
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His paper, published in the latest edition of the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, was leaked to the press on October 7th.
ECONOMIST: X marks the spot
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In a paper accepted for publication by The Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS), lead author Rob Fender and colleagues assert that as many as 100 such black holes should be detectable nearby.
FORBES: Free-Floating, Nearby Black Holes Detectable By Decade's End, New Study Reports
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John Herschel, son of the discoverer of Uranus and a founder of the Royal Astronomical Society, argued that it would have been a waste of a Universe if God had only created one place where there were people He loved.
BBC: Artist's drawing of Kepler's search space
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This is the sort of omission that peer review is intended to correct, but Dr Dar got in touch anyway, and Sir Martin agreed to make the change in the published version, which is about to come out in a journal called Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
ECONOMIST: More on gamma-ray bursts
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After Hubble published his findings in 1929, he, Einstein, British astronomer Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington, and Dutch astronomer Willem de Sitter, all gathered at a special meeting of the Royal Astronomical Society and pondered how they could account for such developments based on static universe models that Einstein and de Sitter had derived with General Relativity.
FORBES: Why Hubble's Law ... Wasn't Really Hubble's
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What is new about Dr Cinzano's research, which is about to be published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, is that he and his colleagues have managed to take account of the effects of back-scattering by clouds and dust in the atmosphere, as well as the effects of the original sources of the light themselves.
ECONOMIST: Going, going, nearly gone