Maunakea observatories play crucial role in first image of Milky Way black hole
The image provides overwhelming evidence that the object, 4-million-times more massive than the Sun, is indeed a black hole.
The image provides overwhelming evidence that the object, 4-million-times more massive than the Sun, is indeed a black hole.
The Maunakea Scholars program awarded telescope time to three Lānaʻi students for the first time.
Onlookers labeled the sighting a “flying whirlpool” and pondered whether it was connected to eerie extraterrestrial spacecraft.
Astronomy activities generated $68 million in labor income and $10 million in state taxes.
Alumni and graduate students of the Institute for Astronomy receive awards and fellowships I for their outstanding contributions to astronomy.
The Women in Space Exploration Talks series provides a window into the lives of women working in space careers.
Lucy Will authored a paper that was accepted for publication in the Research Notes of the American Astronomical Society.
The draft will be amended based on the public comments/feedback received and go to the BOR for public review.
IfA astronomers built instruments for the telescope to help solve some of the most enigmatic mysteries of the Sun.
Four haumāna from Waipahu High School will be given time to utilize a telescope on Maunakea and Haleakalā.