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Keyword: physics

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  • Brightest and fastest-growing: astronomers identify record-breaking quasar

    02/21/2024 7:03:26 PM PST · by Red Badger · 8 replies
    ESO ^ | 19 February 2024 | Staff
    Using the European Southern Observatory’s (ESO) Very Large Telescope (VLT), astronomers have characterised a bright quasar, finding it to be not only the brightest of its kind, but also the most luminous object ever observed. Quasars are the bright cores of distant galaxies and they are powered by supermassive black holes. The black hole in this record-breaking quasar is growing in mass by the equivalent of one Sun per day, making it the fastest-growing black hole to date. The black holes powering quasars collect matter from their surroundings in a process so energetic that it emits vast amounts of light....
  • James Webb Space Telescope finds neutron star mergers forge gold in the cosmos: 'It was thrilling'

    02/21/2024 8:26:51 PM PST · by Red Badger · 24 replies
    SPACE.com ^ | 21 FEB 2024 | By Robert Lea
    "This is the first time we've been able to verify that metals heavier than iron and silver were freshly made in front of us." An illustration of two neutron stars colliding and merging to create a kilonova blast. (Image credit: Robin Dienel/Carnegie Institution for Science) Scientists have analyzed an unusually long blast of high-energy radiation, known as a gamma-ray burst (GRB), and determined that it originated from the collision of two ultradense neutron stars. And, importantly, this result helped the team observe a flash of light emanating from the same event that confirms these mergers are the sites that create...
  • Our universe is merging with 'baby universes', causing it to expand, new theoretical study suggests

    02/18/2024 10:39:57 AM PST · by Red Badger · 68 replies
    SPACE.com ^ | 18 February 2024 | By Andrey Feldman
    The universe is expanding faster and faster, but not all scientists agree that dark energy is the cause. Perhaps, instead, our universe keeps colliding with and absorbing smaller 'baby universes,' a new theoretical study suggests. Our universe is expanding at an ever-accelerating rate — a phenomenon that all theories of cosmology agree upon but none can fully explain. Now, a new theoretical study offers an intriguing solution: Perhaps our universe is expanding because it keeps colliding with and absorbing "baby" parallel universes. Studies of the cosmic microwave background, the afterglow of the Big Bang, have revealed that our universe is...
  • String theory nonsense makes comeback

    02/12/2024 7:04:06 AM PST · by SunkenCiv · 40 replies
    YouTube ^ | February 7, 2024 | Sabine Hossenfelder
    I got a lot of questions last week about an article in Quanta Magazine about Dark Dimensions. it's about an idea motivated by string theory that combines large extra dimensions with dark matter. I had a look at the paper.The paper is here: https://arxiv.org/abs/2311.05318The article in quanta magazine is here: https://www.quantamagazine.org/...String theory nonsense makes comeback | 8:12Sabine Hossenfelder | 1.13M subscribers | 147,734 views | February 7, 2024
  • It's Confirmed! Laser Fusion Experiment Hit a Critical Milestone in Power Generation

    02/07/2024 6:58:26 AM PST · by Red Badger · 44 replies
    Science Alert ^ | 06 February 2024 | CLARE WATSON
    (Jacob Long/Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory) In December 2022, scientists at the US National Ignition Facility announced a historic milestone: for the first time, their laser-powered fusion reaction had 'broken even', producing more energy than it consumed. But advances as big as this need to be rigorously checked – and that can take some time. Importantly, a series of papers detailing the experimental design, technological advancements, and results of the initial breakthrough reaction have just passed peer review, meaning researchers not involved in the work have vetted the methods and findings in order to check the sums. "This achievement is the...
  • Scientists Succeed in Producing a Durable “TIME CRYSTAL”

    02/05/2024 9:41:20 AM PST · by Red Badger · 52 replies
    The Debrief ^ | FEBRUARY 2, 2024 | MJ BANIAS
    Researchers at Germany’s TU Dortmund University report that they have developed an ultra-robust time crystal. Their study, published in Nature Physics, offers new insights into the potential applications and the physics governing time crystals, and offers a new method for keeping them stable. Time crystals represent a new phase of matter, first theorized in 2012 by Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek. Unlike traditional crystals, which exhibit repeating patterns in space, time crystals display patterns that repeat in time. This means their atomic structures undergo periodic motion even without external energy, defying the traditional laws of thermodynamics that govern equilibrium in most...
  • Scientists warn: Declining academic standards mixed with DEI recipe for disaster

    02/04/2024 3:57:56 PM PST · by george76 · 46 replies
    College Fix ^ | FEBRUARY 1, 2024 | DANIEL NUCCIO
    The continued embrace of diversity, equity and inclusion in STEM combined with a broad decline in academic standards is producing a generation of scientists who are less capable than their predecessors, warned some scientists in recent interviews with The College Fix. From easier math classes in high school to the elimination of standardized tests to extreme grade-inflation to DEI tropes that elevate lived experiences and ways of knowing over facts and data, the trend represents a pressing problem for science professors working to protect STEM and preserve its standards and meritocracy. Alex Small, chair of the physics and astronomy department...
  • Scientists Have Solved This ANTI-GRAVITY Mystery While Confirming New Form of Magnetic Levitation

    01/31/2024 8:18:58 AM PST · by Red Badger · 96 replies
    The Debrief ^ | JANUARY 8, 2024 | TIM MCMILLAN
    In a groundbreaking discovery, scientists have unraveled an anti-gravity mystery that seemingly defied the norms of classical physics, potentially paving the way for revolutionary advancements in magnetic levitation technology. The breakthrough centers on a unique form of magnetic levitation, first demonstrated in 2021 by Turkish scientist Hamdi Ucar, an electronics engineer from Göksal Aeronautics in Turkey. Typically, the setup becomes unstable when you try to balance two repelling magnets to counter gravity. However, in a study featured in the journal Symmetry, Ucar revealed that when positioned close to another swiftly rotating magnet, a magnet can both spin and levitate in...
  • Pioneering Quantum Physicists Win Nobel Prize in Physics

    10/26/2022 9:51:39 PM PDT · by NoLibZone · 14 replies
    Quantum magazine ^ | Oct 4,2022 | Charles Wood
    Alain Aspect, John Clauser and Anton Zeilinger have won the 2022 Nobel Prize in Physics for groundbreaking experiments with entangled particles. The physicists Alain Aspect, John Clauser and Anton Zeilinger have won the 2022 Nobel Prize in Physics for experiments that proved the profoundly strange quantum nature of reality. Their experiments collectively established the existence of a bizarre quantum phenomenon known as entanglement, where two widely separated particles appear to share information despite having no conceivable way of communicating. Entanglement lay at the heart of a fiery clash in the 1930s between physics titans Albert Einstein on the one hand...
  • At Just 54 ATOMS, Scientists Made History by Tying the World's Smallest Knot, and They Have No Idea How They Did It

    01/24/2024 1:06:11 PM PST · by Red Badger · 36 replies
    The Debrief ^ | JANUARY 23, 2024 | MICAH HANKS
    An international team of chemists has set a new world record for tying the world’s smallest knot, which they say consists of only 54 atoms. Remarkably, researchers involved with the achievement say it happened by accident, and are unable to account for how it occurred. Chemists Zhiwen Li, Jingjing Zhang, Gao Li with the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, and research colleague Richard J. Puddephatt with the University of Western Ontario, Canada, were attempting an entirely different process in the lab when the record breaking discovery was made. Their achievement is described in a study that...
  • Newton more important than Einstein: poll

    11/23/2005 6:04:12 PM PST · by PatrickHenry · 351 replies · 3,928+ views
    PhysOrg.com ^ | 23 November 2005 | Staff
    Newton, the 17th-century English scientist most famous for describing the laws of gravity and motion, beat Einstein in two polls conducted by eminent London-based scientific academy, the Royal Society. More than 1,300 members of the public and 345 Royal Society scientists were asked separately which famous scientist made a bigger overall contribution to science, given the state of knowledge during his time, and which made a bigger positive contribution to humankind. Newton was the winner on all counts, though he beat the German-born Einstein by only 0.2 of a percentage point (50.1 percent to 49.9 percent) in the public poll...
  • More Space Travel Problems for ETs: g-forces

    07/19/2023 1:23:49 AM PDT · by spirited irish · 66 replies
    PatriotandLiberty ^ | 2023 | Jonathan Sarfati
    the term “g-force” is misleading, because it refers to acceleration due to gravity. Under Newton’s Second Law, F = ma, or force = mass × acceleration. It is used because the weight force is proportional to mass, while acceleration is inversely proportional, so the acceleration of all objects due to gravity is equal. This explains Galileo’s apocryphal experiment of dropping a heavy ball and a light ball from the Leaning Tower of Pisa, and finding that they hit the ground at the same time (except for air resistance).At the earth’s surface, the acceleration due to gravity is 9.80665 m/s², or...
  • We've Been Misreading a Major Law of Physics For The Last 300 Years

    01/22/2024 8:49:07 AM PST · by Red Badger · 57 replies
    Science Alert ^ | 19 January 2024 | CLARE WATSON
    When Isaac Newton inscribed onto parchment his now-famed laws of motion in 1687, he could have only hoped we'd be discussing them three centuries later. Writing in Latin, Newton outlined three universal principles describing how the motion of objects is governed in our Universe, which have been translated, transcribed, discussed and debated at length. But according to a philosopher of language and mathematics, we might have been interpreting Newton's precise wording of his first law of motion slightly wrong all along. Virginia Tech philosopher Daniel Hoek wanted to "set the record straight" after discovering what he describes as a "clumsy...
  • Shooting the way to fusion energy...Super high-velocity projectiles might ultimately beat lasers in the race to achieve practical fusion energy

    01/18/2024 7:25:14 PM PST · by Red Badger · 38 replies
    Asia Times ^ | DECEMBER 18, 2023 | By JONATHAN TENNENBAUM
    Looking down the barrel of the First Light Fusion’s “Big Friendly Gun” – a two-stage gas gun that's used to generate fusion reactions by the impact of a high-velocity projectile on a specially-designed target. Photo: First Light Fusion In my discussion (published starting here) with Paul Methven, head of Britain’s STEP program to build a first electricity-producing fusion power plant, Methven stressed that the program is open to more than one technological option. While STEP is betting mainly on the spherical tokamak, it is supporting the formation of a “fusion cluster” that will include private fusion companies pursuing entirely different...
  • The Hubble Space Telescope captures incredible images of the universe

    01/17/2024 7:16:12 PM PST · by Red Badger · 58 replies
    Accuweather - Space ^ | May 15, 2023 | Staff
    This Hubble Space Telescope image shows the unbarred spiral galaxy NGC 5033, located about 40 million light-years away in the constellation of Canes Venatici (the Hunting Dogs). The galaxy is similar in size to our own galaxy, the Milky Way, at just over 100,000 light-years across. (Image Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA; Acknowledgment: Judy Schmidt) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ At the center of this image is a monster young star 200,000 times brighter than our Sun that is blasting powerful ultraviolet radiation and hurricane-like stellar winds, carving out a fantasy landscape of ridges, cavities, and mountains of gas and dust. (NASA, ESA, and STScI)...
  • The Oldest Black Hole Ever Discovered Is Surprisingly Big

    01/17/2024 9:46:54 PM PST · by Red Badger · 16 replies
    Inverse ^ | January 17, 2024 | BY KIONA SMITH
    The James Webb Space Telescope peered 13.4 billion years into the past and found a black hole-sized conundrum. The oldest supermassive black hole astronomers have ever seen is gorging messily on the heart of its host galaxy, which may ultimately doom the black hole along with its prey. In the process, this ancient black hole — or at least as it looked 13.4 billion years ago — may offer important clues about how the universe’s first supermassive black holes formed and grew. University of Cambridge astrophysicist Roberto Maiolino and his colleagues recently used the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) instruments...
  • Stars alone can’t explain black holes, JWST data reveals

    01/17/2024 7:00:19 AM PST · by Red Badger · 13 replies
    bigthink.com ^ | JANUARY 17, 2024 | Ethan Siegel
    Today, supermassive black holes and their host galaxies tell a specific story in terms of mass. But JWST reveals a different story early on. primordial black holes The overdense regions that the Universe was born with grow and grow over time, but are limited in their growth by both the initial small sizes of the overdensities and also by the presence of radiation that's still energetic, which prevents structure from growing any faster. It takes tens-to-hundreds of millions of years to form the first stars; clumps of matter exist long before that, however, and some may directly collapse to form...
  • Fusion from filaments on Earth and in the cosmos...Part 2 of ‘The Big Bang never happened – so what did?’

    01/12/2024 7:02:52 PM PST · by Red Badger · 3 replies
    Asia Times ^ | DECEMBER 11, 2023 | By ERIC LERNER
    The Orion: A molecular cloud shows cosmic filamentary structures where stars are being born. Image: ESA / Herschel / Ph. André, D Polychroni, A. Roy, V Könyves, N Schneider for the Gould Belt survey Key Program ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In the first part of this series, we saw that electromagnetic processes in plasmas – electrically conducting gases – could, over trillions of years, produce the giant filaments that we see today as the largest structures in the universe. This happened without a Big Bang, without dark energy or dark matter, based on processes that we observe here on Earth in the laboratory...
  • How One Line in the Oldest Math Text Hinted at Hidden Universes [31:11]

    12/28/2023 9:05:47 AM PST · by SunkenCiv · 29 replies
    YouTube ^ | October 21, 2023 | Veritasium
    How One Line in the Oldest Math Text Hinted at Hidden Universes | 31:11Veritasium | 14.3M subscribers | 3,229,898 views | October 21, 2023
  • Tiny cosmic particles can cause planes to free-fall, freeze computers and can even change the outcome of elections, scientists say

    11/24/2023 1:45:08 PM PST · by spirited irish · 61 replies
    Daily Mail ^ | 11/23 | CECILE BORKHATARIA
    Tiny cosmic particles can have serious impacts on Earth, causing election votes to be miscounted, planes to free-fall and computers to reboot, scientists say.These cosmic particles can hit electronic devices on Earth, which can cause components to burn out and cause malfunctions. Cosmic particles come from cosmic rays from outside our solar system. They crash into the Earth's atmosphere creating a range of particles, including protons, electrons, X-rays and gamma-rays that can penetrate aircraft.These cosmic particles constantly hit Earth, and can cause bits of information in electronics to change.