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Gravitational waves reveal hidden structure of galactic centers

A new study published in Nature Astronomy indicates that the dense, star-and dark-matter–rich environments around supermassive black hole binaries pack on the order of a million solar masses into each cubic parsec. The team used gravitational-wave data from pulsar timing arrays to probe galactic centers that are otherwise impossible to observe directly.

Pulsar timing arrays (PTAs) use precise measurements of timing residuals from millisecond pulsars to detect gravitational waves at nanohertz frequencies. These arrays revealed a stochastic gravitational-wave background, an incoherent hum from countless supermassive black hole binaries spiraling together across the universe.

However, the signal carries a twist. At the lowest frequencies, the spectrum appears to turn over, deviating from predictions for binaries evolving purely under gravitational-wave emission. That bend suggests that something in the environment, or highly eccentric orbits, is reshaping how these massive binaries lose energy and tighten over time.

The Simulation Hypothesis Gets Scientific Backing

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Do we live in a computer simulation? So far this question has been pursued mostly by philosophers because it was just too vague to make scientific sense of it. But this situation has changed now. Physicists are beginning to explore the consequences of the simulation hypothesis and a computer scientist has proposed a scientific framework to make sense of it. Let’s take a look.

Paper: https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/2632-072X/ae1e50

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What’s inside neutron stars? New model could sharpen gravitational-wave ‘tide’ clues

Neutron stars harbor some of the most extreme environments in the universe: their densities soar to several times those of atomic nuclei, and they possess some of the strongest gravitational fields of any known objects, surpassed only by black holes. First observed in the 1960s, much of the internal composition of neutron stars is still unknown. Scientists are beginning to look to gravitational waves emitted by binary neutron‐star inspirals—pairs of mutually orbiting neutron stars—as possible sources of information about their interiors.

Physicists at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, together with colleagues at the University of California, Santa Barbara, Montana State University, and the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research in India have made a major theoretical breakthrough in understanding how inspiraling binary neutron stars respond to tidal forces, a key step in elucidating neutron stars’ makeup. The team has proven that the time‐dependent tidal responses of such stars can be described in terms of their oscillatory behavior, or modes, extending an analogous result from Newtonian gravity to the relativistic setting.

This research was published as an Editors’ Suggestion in the journal Physical Review Letters on February 18, 2026, and paves the way to probing the internal structure of neutron stars and some of nature’s most extreme types of matter using gravitational waves.

Scientists Spin Molecules Inside a Frictionless Superfluid for the First Time

A newly designed optical centrifuge allows scientists to control molecular rotation inside superfluid helium nano-droplets. Physicists have developed a new version of an optical centrifuge that can control how molecules rotate while they are suspended inside liquid helium nano-droplets. The advan

Why organisms are more than machines

We are living in the age of maximum AI hype: A superintelligence that surpasses humanity is going to emerge at any moment, according to the most breathless corners of the tech world.

There are basic technical grounds to be skeptical of that claim, but beyond that, a much deeper issue lies at the boundary between science and philosophy: What makes life different from non-life? Why is a rock inert and insensate, while even the simplest cell manifests open-ended activity in the relentless pursuit of staying alive? Since the only systems that indisputably display intelligence are alive, if we can’t understand life, we’re probably missing something essential about intelligence.

Sixty years ago, an influential but little-known philosopher named Hans Jonas gave a potent, creative, and radical answer to this question of what makes life different from non-life. In the decades since, the power and reach of his perspective have gained traction. Today, for a growing group of researchers — in fields ranging from neuroscience to the physics of complex systems — Jonas has become an incisive voice arguing forcefully that organisms are more than just machines, and minds are more than just computers.

New LVK catalog adds 128 gravitational-wave candidates, more than doubling detections

When the densest objects in the universe collide and merge, the violence sets off ripples, in the form of gravitational waves, that reverberate across space and time, over hundreds of millions and even billions of years. By the time they pass through Earth, such cosmic ripples are barely discernible.

And yet, scientists are able to detect them, thanks to a global network of gravitational-wave observatories: the U.S.-based National Science Foundation Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (NSF LIGO), the Virgo interferometer in Italy, and the Kamioka Gravitational Wave Detector (KAGRA) in Japan. Together, the observatories “listen” for faint wobbles in the gravitational field that could have come from far-off astrophysical smash-ups.

Now the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA (LVK) Collaboration is publishing its latest compilation of gravitational-wave detections, presented in a forthcoming special issue of Astrophysical Journal Letters. From the findings, it appears that the universe is echoing all over with a kaleidoscope of cosmic collisions.

Molecular ‘catapult’ fires electrons at the limits of physics

Electrons can be “kicked across” solar materials at almost the fastest speed nature allows, scientists have discovered, challenging long-held theories about how solar energy systems work. The finding could help researchers design more efficient ways of harvesting sunlight and converting it into electricity. The research is published in Nature Communications.

In experiments capturing events lasting just 18 femtoseconds —less than 20 quadrillionths of a second—researchers at the University of Cambridge observed charge separation happening within a single molecular vibration.

“We deliberately designed a system that—according to conventional theory—should not have transferred charge this fast,” said Dr. Pratyush Ghosh, Research Fellow, at St John’s College, Cambridge, and first author of the study. “By conventional design rules, this system should have been slow, and that’s what makes the result so striking.

Chimps’ love for crystals could help us understand our own ancestors’ fascination with these stones

Crystals have repeatedly been found at archaeological sites alongside Homo remains. Evidence shows that hominins have been collecting these stones for as long as 780,000 years. Yet, we know that our ancestors did not use them as weapons, tools, or even jewelry. So why did they collect them at all?

Now, in a new study appearing in Frontiers in Psychology, scientists in Spain have investigated which characteristics of crystals may have made them so fascinating to our ancestors. They designed experiments with chimpanzees—one of the two great ape species most closely related to modern humans—to identify the physical properties of crystals that may have attracted early hominins.

“We show that enculturated chimpanzees can distinguish crystals from other stones,” said lead author Prof. Juan Manuel García-Ruiz, an Ikerbasque Research Professor of crystallography at the Donostia International Physics Center in San Sebastián. “We were pleasantly surprised by how strong and seemingly natural the chimpanzees’ attraction to crystals was. This suggests that sensitivity to such objects may have deep evolutionary roots.”

What Geminga’s 100 TeV cutoff may mean for cosmic-ray acceleration in the Milky Way

For the first time, the Tibet ASγ Experiment has successfully measured magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence on scales below one parsec (approximately 3.3 light-years) within the gamma-ray halo surrounding the Geminga pulsar wind nebula (PWN). This observation extends to the highest energies, above 100 tera-electron volts (TeV), providing new insights into the behavior of cosmic rays and magnetic fields within the Milky Way.

The findings are published in Science Advances. The study was conducted by the Tibet ASγ Experiment, including the Institute of High Energy Physics (IHEP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and the National Astronomical Observatories of CAS.

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