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Almost everything we know about the cosmos today, we have learned by observing different forms of light – not only through the light to which our eyes are sensitive, but also through infrared, ultraviolet, radio, X-ray and gamma ray radiation, which differ from visible light only through their wavelengths.
However, this electromagnetic radiation is only one of four different messengers from the universe, along with neutrinos, electrically charged subatomic particles (dubbed “cosmic rays”) and gravitational waves.
The new discipline of multimessenger astronomy tries to combine signals of different messengers into a new view of the cosmos in order to gain previously unattainable insights into the secrets of the universe.
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List of parties involved
Observatories:
IceCube
MAGIC
H.E.S.S.
VERITAS
HAWC
ASAS-SN
The Liverpool Telescope
Kanata-Telescope
Kiso Observatory
SALT
Subaru
Very Large Telescope
Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA)
Credits
Developed by: Science Communication Lab
Scientific advice: Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY