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Archive for the ‘cosmology’ category: Page 236

Sep 17, 2021

Physicists think we’ve detected the dark energy ripping our universe apart

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

In a tentative eureka moment, physicists from Cambride may have detected dark energy for the first time. This could be the biggest physics discovery ever!

Sep 16, 2021

A 10 billion-year-old supernova will soon replay before our eyes, new dark matter study predicts

Posted by in category: cosmology

The dying star’s light passes through the center of a gargantuan galaxy cluster — and dark matter is giving it a wild ride.

Sep 15, 2021

“X-Ray Magnifying Glass” Provides Unprecedented Look at Black Hole in the Early Universe

Posted by in categories: cosmology, government

This magnifying glass was used to sharpen X-ray images for the first time using NASA

Established in 1,958 the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) is an independent agency of the United States Federal Government that succeeded the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA). It is responsible for the civilian space program, as well as aeronautics and aerospace research. It’s vision is “To discover and expand knowledge for the benefit of humanity.”

Sep 14, 2021

Astronomers Find Over 1,200 Dark Matter Hot Spots

Posted by in categories: cosmology, information science, robotics/AI

Each gravitational lens could help unravel the mysteries of dark matter.

Sep 14, 2021

Scientists Bemused to Find Liquid Light at Room Temperature

Posted by in categories: cosmology, materials

https://youtube.com/watch?v=FiU5U_6ca0s

Of all the different dark matter detectors in the world, only one has consistently come up with a positive signal. The results of DAMA experiment in Italy are hotly debated — and now two experiments seeking to verify it using the same materials have returned conflicting results.

ANAIS, a dark matter detector run by the University of Zaragoza at the Canfranc Underground Laboratory in Spain, has delivered results that seem to contradict DAMA’s.

Continue reading “Scientists Bemused to Find Liquid Light at Room Temperature” »

Sep 14, 2021

Only One Experiment Has Detected Dark Matter So Far. Now, The Plot Has Thickened

Posted by in categories: cosmology, materials

Of all the different dark matter detectors in the world, only one has consistently come up with a positive signal. The results of DAMA experiment in Italy are hotly debated — and now two experiments seeking to verify it using the same materials have returned conflicting results.

ANAIS, a dark matter detector run by the University of Zaragoza at the Canfranc Underground Laboratory in Spain, has delivered results that seem to contradict DAMA’s.

But COSINE-100, run by a collaboration between the Korea Invisible Mass Search and Yale University at the Yangyang Underground Laboratory in South Korea, has now produced new output. These results are similar to what ANAIS’ threw up — but also a little closer to the results DAMA has produced over the last 20 years.

Sep 13, 2021

Direct Proof of Dark Matter May Lurk at Low-Energy Frontiers

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

Mysterious effects in a new generation of dark matter detectors could herald a revolutionary discovery.

Sep 9, 2021

Scientists recreate origin of the universe in a lab

Posted by in category: cosmology

Circa 2019


Think of it as a “Little Bang.”

Sep 9, 2021

The Big Bang and the genetic code

Posted by in categories: chemistry, cosmology, genetics, humor, particle physics

Circa 2000


A 1940 paper by Gamow and Mario Schoenberg was the first in a subject we now call particle astrophysics. The two authors presciently speculated that neutrinos could play a role in the cooling of massive collapsing stars. They named the neutrino reaction the Urca process, after a well known Rio de Janeiro casino. This name might seem a strange choice, but not to Gamow, a legendary prankster who once submitted a paper to Nature in which he suggested that the Coriolis force might account for his observation that cows chewed clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere and counterclockwise in the Southern Hemisphere.

In the 1940s Gamow began to attack, with his colleague Ralph Alpher, the problem of the origin of the chemical elements. Their first paper on the subject appeared in a 1948 issue of the Physical Review. At the last minute Gamow, liking the sound of ‘alpha, beta, gamma’, added his old friend Hans Bethe as middle author in absentia (Bethe went along with the joke, but the editors did not). Gamow and Alpher, with Robert Herman, then pursued the idea of an extremely hot neutron-dominated environment. They envisioned the neutrons decaying into protons, electrons and anti-neutrinos and, when the universe had cooled sufficiently, the neutrons and protons assembling heavier nuclei. They even estimated the photon background that would be necessary to account for nuclear abundances, suggesting a residual five-degree background radiation.

Continue reading “The Big Bang and the genetic code” »

Sep 9, 2021

Black holes just got much more complicated thanks to quantum pressure

Posted by in categories: cosmology, quantum physics

Black holes were once thought not to have pressure, but a new set of quantum calculations has found that they may have some at their edges, which was completely unexpected.