The brightest natural radio sources have flux densities of the order of one to one hundred jansky. |
Jansky Very Large Array, and the MPIfR's 100-meter Effelsberg radio telescope in Germany. |
This made no sense to the astronomers of the day as Jansky did not find radio emissions from the Sun. |
It is named after the pioneering radio astronomer Karl Jansky. |
Later observers, for example jansky and Moss, established four groups. |
The 1930s brought more signal results from Jansky and Reber, early pioneers in the recognition of radio signatures from the Milky Way. |