SCIREA Journal of Astronomy (ISSN: 2995-7192)

SCIREA Journal of Astronomy is an international, scientific peer-reviewed open access journal published online by SCIREA.

Open Access free for readers, with article processing charges (APC)paid by authors or their institutions.

High visibility: Indexed in the Google Scholar and other databases.

Rapid publication: manuscripts are peer-reviewed and a first decision provided to authors approximately 20 days after submission; acceptance to publication is undertaken in 5 days.

Recognition of reviewers: reviewers who provide timely, thorough peer-review reports receive vouchers entitling them to a discount on the APC of their next publication in any SCIREA journal, in appreciation of the work done.

Archiving

Volume 5, Issue 2, April 2023

Open Access
Félix Llorente de Andrés
Abstract: A recent study shows, from an empirical deduction, that the number and the presence of the blue straggler stars (BSS) in an open cluster follow a function whose components are the ratio between age and the relaxation time, ƒ, and a factor, ϖ, which is an indicator of stellar collisions plus primordial binaries. The relation
Abstract       References PDF (511 k) 90 Downloads     93740 Views     DOI: 10.54647/astronomy160048

Volume 5, Issue 1, February 2023

Open Access
Yi-Fang Chang
Abstract: Based on Dirac negative energy, Einstein mass-energy relation and principle of equivalence, we propose the negative matter as the simplest model of unified dark matter and dark energy. All theories are known, only mass includes positive and negative. Because there is repulsion between positive matter and negative matter, so
Abstract       References PDF (333 k) 76 Downloads     88195 Views     DOI: 10.54647/astronomy160043
Open Access
Chernobay Ivan Alesandrovich
Abstract: The work relates to the creation of new methods and instruments for observational astronomy, in particular to gravitational astrophysics. The ultrasonic gravitational method for obtaining information about such exotic objects as neutron pulsar stars has been developed and successfully tested. Gravitational waves are detecte
Abstract       References PDF (686 k) 87 Downloads     88113 Views     DOI: 10.54647/astronomy160044

Volume 4, Issue 1, February 2022

Open Access
Flavio Barbiero
Abstract: All astronomical bodies originate inside clouds of gas and dust, therefore there should be a common process that leads to their condensation. A galactic cloud normally has some turbulence and therefore a gradient of speeds from point to point. Thanks to it, a vortex originates that rakes the material of the surrounding clou
Abstract       References PDF (526 k) 95 Downloads     88620 Views     DOI: 10.54647/astronomy16035
Open Access
Flavio Barbiero
Abstract: The dark matter is a mysterious kind of matter with no mass, no inertia and none of the other characteristics that we attribute to matter, but for the fact that it exerts a force that prevents the stars of the arms of the spiral galaxies to disperse into space. A force that, to achieve this result, should decrease not with
Abstract       References PDF (1299 k) 89 Downloads     88336 Views     DOI: 10.54647/astronomy16039

Volume 3, Issue 2, April 2019

Open Access
Liu Taixiang
Abstract: This paper briefly describes the principle of the formation of the solar system, and explains the cause of the Titius-Bode law, the rotational angular momentum and revolutionary momentum of a celestial body.
Abstract       References PDF (412 k) 240 Downloads     89881 Views     DOI:

Volume 3, Issue 1, February 2019

Open Access
K K Singh
Abstract: Axions and axion like particles in general are consequences of the extensions of the standard model in particle physics. Axions have been proposed as hypothetical pseudo-scalar particles in particle physics to solve the strong Charge-Parity problem using quantum chromodynamics. These particles are also proposed to be an att
Abstract       References PDF (186 k) 341 Downloads     113698 Views     DOI:
Open Access
Peter Kopanov
Abstract: In this paper we consider a quantitative relationship between the probabilistic standard normal distribution and the distribution of matter and energy in the Universe, according to the observations from the Planck cosmic laboratory.
Abstract       References PDF (223 k) 279 Downloads     113963 Views     DOI:

Volume 2, Issue 2, August 2018

Open Access
Michał Marek
Abstract: Data gathered by the Planck i.e. maps of temperature Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) have been used for analysis of a number of counts of the CMB as a function of their temperature by IDL software. Recently I presented a histogram made by Fv software (Marek 2018). Power-law slope for reasonable range of data is alpha=1.81.
Abstract       References PDF (147 k) 1465 Downloads     114582 Views     DOI:

Volume 2, Issue 1, June 2018

Open Access
Michał Marek
Abstract: Sandpile Paradigm was proposed by Bak, Tang and Wiesenfeld (Bak et al. 1987) to explain simple model of Self-Organized Criticality (SOC). When the piles fall on the sandpile (input driver), we will see, that at some critical point (reaching adequate angle of response), sand will slide down to get the saturation phase.
T
Abstract       References PDF (610 k) 283 Downloads     114110 Views     DOI:

Volume 1, Issue 1, April 2017

Open Access
Raul Isea
Abstract: This work introduces a new gravitational redshift function to the Morris-Thorne wormhole model that is defined as Φ(r)≡r_0/r ln⁡(r/r_0 ) with spherical symmetry and stabilized by phantom energy.
Abstract       References PDF (384 k) 331 Downloads     8341 Views     DOI: