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[i]"We report the detection of a burst of emission over a 695.5 megahertz to 1031.5 megahertz bandwidth by the Australian Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder, ASKAP," writes a team led by astronomer Clancy James of the Curtin University node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research in Australia. "The burst was localized through analysis of near-field time delays to the long-decommissioned Relay 2 satellite." ... This burst could not have been the result of reflecting sunlight. Rather, the team was able to narrow it down to two possibilities: an electrostatic discharge, or a plasma discharge following an impact by a tiny piece of space rock – a micrometeoroid.[/i]
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