Menu

Blog

Archive for the ‘cosmology’ category: Page 87

Sep 5, 2023

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope Unveils New Structures of an Iconic Supernova

Posted by in category: cosmology

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has captured an image of this iconic supernova with a keyhole in its center.

Sep 4, 2023

‘Twisty’ new theory of gravity says information can escape black holes after all

Posted by in category: cosmology

Einstein’s theory of relativity say black holes are ‘bald’, but a new tweak to his research may give the mysterious objects their long-sought ‘hair.’

Sep 4, 2023

Black hole ‘seeds’ discovered in the early universe for 1st time ever

Posted by in category: cosmology

Astronomers may have discovered the first evidence of heavy black hole “seeds” in the early universe.

These so-called seeds could help explain how some supermassive black holes with masses equivalent to millions, or even billions, times that of the sun could have grown quickly enough to exist less than 1 billion years after the Big Bang.

Potentially, heavy black hole seeds are black holes with masses around 40 million time that of our sun. They are believed to form from the direct collapse of a massive cloud of gas, unlike your typical black hole that’s born when a massive star reaches the end of its life and collapses under its own gravity. Galaxies theorized to host such heavy black hole seeds are referred to as Outsize Black Hole Galaxies (OBGs).

Sep 3, 2023

‘Twisty’ new theory of gravity suggests information can escape black holes after all

Posted by in category: cosmology

There’s a proverb in astronomy that goes something like, “black holes have no hair.” This indicates that black holes are extremely straightforward entities under the framework of general relativity. The only necessary characteristics of a black hole are its mass, electric charge, and spin rate. You now know everything there is to know about black holes just from those three numbers. That is to say, they are bare; they lack any further data.

This feature of black holes has been a major source of frustration for astronomers trying to figure out the inner workings of these cosmic behemoths. However, understanding black holes and their inner workings is impossible due to the absence of any kind of “hair” on their surfaces. Unfortunately, black holes continue to be among the universe’s most elusive and baffling features.

The present knowledge of general relativity, however, is essential to the “no-hair” black hole notion. The emphasis of this relativity illustration is on the curved nature of space-time. Any object with enough mass or energy to bend space-time around it will provide that object directions for movement.

Sep 3, 2023

The Story of Our Universe May Be Starting to Unravel

Posted by in category: cosmology

Is cosmology in crisis?

Sep 3, 2023

Dead Stars Could Hold the Secrets of Dark Matter

Posted by in category: cosmology

If you want to find something that’s invisible except for its gravitational effects, look down the steepest gravity wells in the universe.

Sep 2, 2023

A new image from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope blows past Hubble again, revealing an iconic supernova in unprecedented detail

Posted by in category: cosmology

The supernova, which was first discovered in 1987, has a keyhole-like formation, full of clumpy gas and dust, at its center.

Aug 31, 2023

Earth has been hit by an ‘impossible’ blast of light. Scientists now know how

Posted by in category: cosmology

Scientists believe they have found an explanation for an “impossible” blast of energy that hit Earth.

Last year, scientists reported that they had seen evidence that gamma-ray bursts could come out of mergers between neutron stars and another compact object, in the form of a neutron star or black hole. That was previously thought not to be possible.

Scientists had initially thought that the 50-second blast came when a massive star collapsed, but further work looking at the afterglow of the emission showed that it was in fact a “kilonova”, which happens when neutron stars merge with other compact objects. Previously, it was thought that only a supernova could make a long gamma-ray burst of that kind.

Aug 31, 2023

Challenging Einstein — New Study Suggests That Dark Matter Interacts With Gravity in a Non-Local Way

Posted by in categories: cosmology, quantum physics

Isaac Newton described his theory of gravity as a force that acts instantaneously across space: a planet immediately senses the effects of another astronomical object, regardless of the separation between them. This aspect inspired Einstein to create the renowned theory of general relativity, where gravity becomes a local deformation of spacetime.

The principle of locality states that an object is directly influenced only by its surrounding environment: distant objects cannot communicate instantaneously, only what is here right now matters. However, in the past century, with the birth and development of quantum mechanics, physicists discovered that non-local phenomena not only exist but are fundamental to understanding the nature of reality.

Now, a new study from SISSA – Scuola Internazionale Superiore di Studi Avanzati, recently published in The Astrophysical Journal.

Aug 29, 2023

Pulsars Detected the Background Gravitational Hum of the Universe. Now Can They Detect Single Mergers?

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

After over a decade of observations of pulsars, astronomers could finally tease out the gravitational wave background of the Universe, the combined signal from merging supermassive black holes. But it was just the general presence of mergers, not specific events. A new paper proposes that the same pulsars could next be used to detect the gravitational waves from individual merging supermassive black holes. The more nearby pulsars astronomers can find, the more accurate their measurements will become.

Page 87 of 399First8485868788899091Last