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'Like trying to see fog in the dark': How strange pulses of energy are helping scientists build the ultimate map of the universe
Astronomers are using radio pulses from space to find missing baryonic matter and learn about supermassive black holes, stellar formation and galaxy evolution.
It sounds like something from the latest science fiction blockbuster. But scientists have revealed the terrifyingly high odds a black hole will explode in the next 10 years.
Astronomers have long relied on supercomputers to simulate the immense structure of the Universe, but a new tool called ...
By extending a proof of a physically important behavior in one-dimensional quantum spin systems to higher dimensions, a RIKEN ...
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Louisville Ford Plant Goes All-Electric in $2 Billion Bet
Louisville Ford plant will stop making gas cars after 70 years, shifting to EVs in a $2 billion overhaul. The first model, a ...
Copper selenide (Cu₂Se) attracts scientific interest for its thermoelectric ability to convert heat into electricity, but a ...
Neutrino oscillation is weird, but it may be weird in a useful way, because it might allow physicists to probe certain ...
For decades, physicists believed black hole explosions were rare cosmic events, happening maybe once every 100,000 years. But ...
Wang Yifang, from the Chinese Academy of Sciences which collaborated with 700 physicists worldwide, told The Times: “We are ...
There could be a 90 percent chance that in the next decade, astronomers will spot a deep space explosion that confirms ...
A decade ago, the first gravitational waves confirmed that black holes collide. Telescopes soon revealed shadows of giants ...
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