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Archive for the ‘cosmology’ category: Page 4

Jun 13, 2024

Here’s Why We Might Live in a Multiverse

Posted by in categories: cosmology, quantum physics

Several branches of modern physics, including quantum theory and cosmology, suggest our universe may be just one of many.

By Sarah Scoles

Humans live in a universe; that is a fact. Up for debate, though, is whether that universe lives in a sea of other universes— a multiverse.

Jun 12, 2024

Astronomers discover parallel disks and jets erupting from a pair of young stars

Posted by in categories: chemistry, cosmology

Most of the universe is invisible to the human eye. The building blocks of stars are only revealed in wavelengths that are outside of the visible spectrum. Astronomers recently used two very different, and very powerful, telescopes to discover twin disks—and twin parallel jets—erupting from young stars in a multiple star system.

This discovery was unexpected, and unprecedented, given the age, size, and chemical makeup of the stars, disks, and jets. Their location in a known, well-studied part of the universe adds to the thrill.

Observations from the U.S. National Science Foundation’s (NSF) National Radio Astronomy Observatory’s (NRAO) Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) and NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope’s (JWST) Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) were combined for this research.

Jun 12, 2024

Astrophotographer gets close-up look at monster sunspot that led to May’s global auroras

Posted by in category: cosmology

Follow along step by step with astrophotographer Miguel Claro in this behind-the-scenes look at how such a mesmerizing solar photograph was made.

Jun 12, 2024

Scientists Reveal the Absolutely Metal Physics of Wormholes

Posted by in categories: climatology, cosmology, physics

Accreting wormholes likely form “plasma tornadoes” in its throat while firing matter at one-fifth the speed of light.

Jun 12, 2024

Complete Stellar Collapse: Unusual Star System Proves that Stars can Die Quietly

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

University of Copenhagen astrophysicists help explain a mysterious phenomenon, whereby stars suddenly vanish from the night sky. Their study of an unusual binary star system has resulted in convincing evidence that massive stars can completely collapse and become black holes without a supernova explosion.

One day, the star at the center of our own solar system, the Sun, will begin to expand until it engulfs Earth. It will then become increasingly unstable until it eventually contracts into a small and dense object known as a white dwarf.

However, if the Sun were of a weight class roughly eight times greater or more, it would probably go out with a huge bang — as a supernova. Its collapse would culminate into an explosion, ejecting energy and mass into space with enormous force, prior to leaving behind a neutron star or a black hole in its wake.

Jun 12, 2024

A Missing Piece in the Big Bang Theory Has Surfaced

Posted by in categories: cosmology, quantum physics

In research published earlier this year, physicists from the University of Hyderabad in India say they’re on the path to solving one of the universe’s biggest outstanding problems. Since Edwin Hubble realized the universe is always expanding nearly 100 years ago, scientists have used the “Hubble constant” in calculations on virtually every scale in the universe. But today, estimates for the Hubble constant don’t always align, with a difference of up to 10 percent between calculations made using different methods. (When someone at NASA mixes up meters and yards and loses an entire spacecraft, that’s not even a full 10 percent deviation.)

The paper appears in the peer reviewed journal Classical and Quantum Gravity. The journal has an ongoing, periodically updated “focus issue” specifically about this measurement tension, and the editors explain the problem there—scientists can’t say for sure that the different Hubble constants measured are actually different, rather than just observation or calibration issues.

Jun 12, 2024

From Rice University: “Chemical reactions can scramble quantum information as well as black holes”

Posted by in categories: chemistry, cosmology, quantum physics

From Rice University

4.5.24 Silvia Cernea Clark 713−348−6728 [email protected].

Chris Stipes 713−348−6778 [email protected].

Continue reading “From Rice University: ‘Chemical reactions can scramble quantum information as well as black holes’” »

Jun 12, 2024

Webb Is a Supernova Discovery Machine: 10x More Supernovae in Early Universe

Posted by in category: cosmology

The JADES Deep Field uses observations taken by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) as part of the JADES (JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey) program. A team of astronomers studying JADES data identified about 80 objects (circled in green) that changed in brightness over time. Most of these objects, known as transients, are the result of exploding stars or supernovae. Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, JADES Collaboration.

Peering deeply into the cosmos, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is providing scientists with their first detailed glimpse of supernovae from a time when our universe was just a small fraction of its current age. A team using Webb data has identified 10 times more supernovae in the early universe than were previously known. A few of the newfound exploding stars are the most distant examples of their type, including those used to measure the universe’s expansion rate.

Continue reading “Webb Is a Supernova Discovery Machine: 10x More Supernovae in Early Universe” »

Jun 11, 2024

Noclip on! Simulated primordial black holes could dance through Sun-like stars

Posted by in category: cosmology

What might the orbit of a primordial black hole going in and out of a Sun-like star look like?

Jun 11, 2024

Wind from black holes may influence development of surrounding galaxies

Posted by in category: cosmology

Clouds of gas in a distant galaxy are being pushed faster and faster—at more than 10,000 miles per second—out among neighboring stars by blasts of radiation from the supermassive black hole at the galaxy’s center. It’s a discovery that helps illuminate the way active black holes can continuously shape their galaxies by spurring on or snuffing out the development of new stars.

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