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Jan 14, 2025

Strange Flashes Could Be Signs of Closest Object Seen Near a Black Hole

Posted by in category: cosmology

Some 275 million light-years from the Milky Way lies a true cosmic mystery.

There, in the heart of a galaxy named 1ES 1927+654, squats a supermassive black hole whose monkeyshines and hijinks have baffled astronomers for years.

Continue reading “Strange Flashes Could Be Signs of Closest Object Seen Near a Black Hole” »

Jan 14, 2025

A Team Of Physicists Says There May Be Another Universe Running Backward In Time Prior To The Big Bang

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

What lies beyond the beginning of time? Physicists are exploring groundbreaking ideas that could reveal a hidden universe behind the Big Bang.

This mind-bending theory challenges everything we know about existence and the mysteries of our cosmic origins.

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Jan 14, 2025

Astronomers are captivated by a ‘perfect explosion,’ a spherical cosmic fireball

Posted by in category: space

The Perfect Cosmic Fireball

Astronomers have unveiled the extraordinary details of a nearly perfect spherical explosion—a kilonova—caused by the collision of two neutron stars. This dramatic event unfolded in 2017 in the galaxy NGC 4,993, located 140–150 million light years from Earth in the Hydra constellation. With a combined mass of 2.7 times that of the sun, the neutron stars had orbited each other for billions of years before their explosive merger.

Lead researcher Albert Sneppen of the Cosmic Dawn Center described the event as “a perfect explosion” due to its symmetry and scientific implications. The kilonova’s luminous fireball emitted a light equivalent to a billion suns for several days, dwarfing any earthly nuclear explosion in intensity.

Jan 14, 2025

Outbreak of Incurable ‘Bleeding Eye’ Virus Leads to Travel Warnings and Concern

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Link :


Marburg Virus Outbreak Sparks Global Concern: Travel Warnings Issued Amid Deadly ‘Bleeding Eye’ Symptoms and Spread Risks.

Jan 14, 2025

Lasers help archaeologists study ancient tattoos on Peruvian mummies

Posted by in category: futurism

For more than 5,000 years, humans have adorned themselves with tattoos.

In a new study, researchers used lasers to uncover highly intricate designs of ancient on mummies from Peru.

The preserved skin of the mummies and the black tattoo ink used show a stark contrast—revealing fine details in tattoos dating to around 1,250 A.D. that aren’t visible to the naked eye, said study co-author Michael Pittman, an archaeologist at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Jan 14, 2025

Fully recyclable carbon nanotube fibers have far-reaching implications for manufacturing across sectors

Posted by in categories: chemistry, economics, energy, engineering, nanotechnology, sustainability

In a significant step toward creating a sustainable and circular economy, Rice University researchers have published a study in the journal Carbon demonstrating that carbon nanotube (CNT) fibers can be fully recycled without any loss in their structure or properties. This discovery positions CNT fibers as a sustainable alternative to traditional materials like metals, polymers and the much larger carbon fibers, which are notoriously difficult to recycle.

“Recycling has long been a challenge in the materials industry—metals recycling is often inefficient and energy-intensive, polymers tend to lose their properties after reprocessing and carbon fibers cannot be recycled at all, only downcycled by chopping them up into short pieces,” said corresponding author Matteo Pasquali, director of Rice’s Carbon Hub and the A.J. Hartsook Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Materials Science and NanoEngineering and Chemistry.

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Jan 14, 2025

Increased AI use linked to eroding critical thinking skills

Posted by in categories: business, robotics/AI

A study by Michael Gerlich at SBS Swiss Business School has found that increased reliance on artificial intelligence (AI) tools is linked to diminished critical thinking abilities. It points to cognitive offloading as a primary driver of the decline.

AI’s influence is growing fast. A quick search of AI-related science stories reveals how fundamental a tool it has become. Thousands of AI-assisted, AI-supported and AI-driven analyses and decision-making tools help scientists improve their research.

AI has also become more integrated into , from virtual assistants to complex information and decision support. Increased usage is beginning to influence how people think, especially impactful among , who are avid users of the technology in their personal lives.

Jan 14, 2025

Neutron star ‘mountains’ would cause ripples in space-time

Posted by in categories: physics, space

Collapsed dead stars, known as neutron stars, are a trillion times denser than lead, and their surface features are largely unknown. Nuclear theorists have explored mountain building mechanisms active on the moons and planets in our solar system. Some of these mechanisms suggest that neutron stars are likely to have mountains.

Neutron star “mountains” would be much more massive than any on Earth—so massive that gravity just from these mountains could produce small oscillations, or ripples, in the fabric of space and time.

Mountains, or non-axisymmetric deformations of rotating neutron stars, efficiently radiate gravitational waves. In a study published in the journal Physical Review D, nuclear theorists at Indiana University consider analogies between neutron star mountains and surface features of solar system bodies.

Jan 14, 2025

Revealing an unexpectedly low electron injection threshold via reinforced shock acceleration

Posted by in categories: particle physics, space

The mechanisms resulting in particle acceleration to relativistic energies in space plasmas are an open question. Here, the authors show a reinforced shock acceleration model which enables electrons to efficiently achieve relativistic energies and reveal a low electron injection threshold.

Jan 14, 2025

New training technique opens the door to neural networks that require much less energy

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

AI applications like ChatGPT are based on artificial neural networks that, in many respects, imitate the nerve cells in our brains. They are trained with vast quantities of data on high-performance computers, gobbling up massive amounts of energy in the process.

Spiking , which are much less energy-intensive, could be one solution to this problem. In the past, however, the normal techniques used to train them only worked with significant limitations.

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