How far is the moon? Read More »
livescience.com By Paul Sutter, Astrophysicist | March 1, 2019 07:52am ET The governing theory of particle physics explains everything about the subatomic world … except for the parts that it doesn’t. And unfortunately, there aren’t a lot of flattering adjectives that can be applied to the so-called Standard Model. Built up bit by bit over the course of
Where Are All the ‘Sparticles’ That Could Explain What’s Wrong with the Universe? Read More »
pctechmag.com Millions of people around the world today lack access to internet, particularly in rural areas where fiber optic cables, wireless infrastructures are difficult to reach. Companies then opted to provide internet down to consumers from space. Many have tried and failed but not OneWeb. Virginia-based OneWeb on Wednesday afternoon launched its first batch of six
Rwanda, OneWeb Launch Satellite ‘Icyerekezo’ To Connect Remote Schools To Internet Read More »
space.com Here’s a mysterious truth that scientists have known since 1983: Protons and neutrons act differently when they’re inside an atom, versus floating freely through space. Specifically, the subatomic particles that make up those protons and neutrons, called quarks, slow down massively once they’re confined to a nucleus in an atom. Physicists really didn’t like this,
Physicists Just Solved a 35-Year-Old Mystery Hidden Inside Atomic Cores Read More »
me.mashable.com When a star is born, a chaotic light show ensues. NASA’s long-lived Hubble Space Telescope captured vivid bright clumps moving through the cosmos at some 1,000 light years from Earth. The space agency called these objects clear “smoking gun” evidence of a newly formed star — as new stars blast colossal amounts of energy-rich
NASA posts image of ghostly blue objects, deep in the cosmos Read More »
In February of 2019, SpaceIL’s historic mission to the moon with the Beresheet lander is expected to launch from SpaceX Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. It will be the first privately developed moon mission and you can see it herein photos. This view is an artist’s illustration of the mission’s lander
Israel’s 1st Moon Lander: The SpaceIL Beresheet Lunar Mission in Pictures Read More »
Harvard’s top astronomer says an object spied in the Milky Way could be a sign of life in other parts of the universe. Source: CNN Well, an erection arises when a person try my drugshop now purchase cheap levitra sexually gets motivated.
Are we alone in the universe? Read More »
www.washingtonpost.com Editor’s note: An earlier version of this story mischaracterized the statement North Carolina State University astrophysicist Katie Mack made to the Verge about why an astrophysicist might publish a theory he doesn’t believe to be true. It has been corrected. CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Before he started the whole alien spaceship thing last year, the chairman of
Scientists accelerated the update of a model of Earth’s fluctuating magnetic field, which is needed to keep navigational systems functioning. Many wondered what’s happening inside the planet’s core. the New York Times – By Shannon Hall The north magnetic pole is restless. Distinct from the geographic North Pole, where all the lines of longitude
The North Magnetic Pole’s Mysterious Journey Across the Arctic Read More »
Last year, Pieter van Dokkum et al., Nature volume 555, p 629–632 (29 March 2018), reported absence of DM in a certain galaxy. Since result upsets the DM paradigm, the unexpected discovery received significant amount of BACKLASH, and even the hype the paper received drew some criticism. Now van Dokkum et al. report the discovery
ANOTHER GALAXY WITHOUT “DARK MATTER” Read More »






