A rotating neutron star known as a pulsar.
The pulsar might be considered the lighthouse of space. It "flashes" or "blinks" at different rates depending on its speed of rotation. Pulsars (pulsating stars) are spinning neutron stars that are highly magnetized. Their spin, coupled with their emission of higly direction oriented "beams" of radiation, makes them appear to pulsate in a lighthouse effect. And that's how they got their nickname. A link is provided to the Wikipedia article on the pulsar.
i don't know this thing is screwed >:)
Objects such as pulsars, radio galaxies, supernova remnants, and active galactic nuclei are known to emit radio waves in space. These emissions can be detected by radio telescopes and provide valuable information about the nature and behavior of these cosmic objects.
A star is a massive collection of gas in space, that emits large amounts of energy.
almost exclusively by radio
You're talking about a "pulsar". The reason it acts like a lighthouse is that it emits continuously but we only receive the emissions periodically, because it rotates.
The pulsar might be considered the lighthouse of space. It "flashes" or "blinks" at different rates depending on its speed of rotation. Pulsars (pulsating stars) are spinning neutron stars that are highly magnetized. Their spin, coupled with their emission of higly direction oriented "beams" of radiation, makes them appear to pulsate in a lighthouse effect. And that's how they got their nickname. A link is provided to the Wikipedia article on the pulsar.
Lost in Space - Lighthouse Family song - was created on 1998-06-22.
Lost in Space - 1965 The Haunted Lighthouse 3-7 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G
Lost in Space - 1965 The Haunted Lighthouse 3-7 was released on: USA: 18 October 1967
i don't know this thing is screwed >:)
You can get a radio signal from space on your computer using SETI.
radio astronomy...:)
radio astronomy
Rod Brown of the Rocket Rangers - 1953 Terror in the Space Lighthouse 1-53 was released on: USA: 17 April 1954
A radio telescope.
The entire electromagnetic spectrum is detectable, emanating from various objects in space. Space itself emits the 3K cosmic microwave background, the echo of the big bang from whence our universe came. Stars emit radio waves, infrared, and ultraviolet. If you consider neutrinos EMR, those two come from supernova.