Dark matter’s nature is illuminated by the earliest stars
Telegraph
Dark matter’s nature is illuminated by the earliest stars
Long-elusive particles might have left their mark on the primordial cosmos. Researchers have long theorized that dark matter makes up about 85% of the Universe, but the elusive material has never been directly detected. Rennan Barkana at Tel Aviv University…
Scientists Have a Crazy New Hypothesis About The Origin of The Moon
Telegraph
Scientists Have a Crazy New Hypothesis About The Origin of The Moon
The usual explanation for the origin of the Moon describes it as the result of a collision between Earth and something else that spun material into space. But a new paper suggests that our satellite could have emerged from the ring of a vapourised planet…
Forwarded from Gadget and device News 🗞️
New Russian missile with mostly unlimited fire range was presented by Russian president Vladimir Putin,
There's no analogs in the world and there won’t be any for next 10-15 yeras,
Missile interception is totally impossible
There's no analogs in the world and there won’t be any for next 10-15 yeras,
Missile interception is totally impossible
Telescope
1-st Sciecne&Tech TV
Forwarded from Daily Science to all
ScienceAlert - Latest
We Just Detected Signals From The Very First Stars in Our Universe - And It's Not What We Expected
➖ @sciencetoall ➖
We Just Detected Signals From The Very First Stars in Our Universe - And It's Not What We Expected
➖ @sciencetoall ➖
ScienceAlert
We Just Detected Signals From The Very First Stars in Our Universe - And It's Not What We Expected
The Big Bang may have been bright and dramatic, but immediately after it occurred the Universe got extremely dark for a long time.
Scientists now know when the first stars formed in the universe
Telegraph
Scientists now know when the first stars formed in the universe
Using a compact radio antenna 10 years in the making, researchers have discovered evidence of the oldest suns in the known universe. They’ve published their findings in Nature. When we look at stars, we see them as they were, not as they are. That’s because…
A Star Passing The Black Hole at The Centre of Our Galaxy Is About to Test Einstein's Theory
Telegraph
A Star Passing The Black Hole at The Centre of Our Galaxy Is About to Test Einstein's Theory
In a few months, astronomers are going to be pointing their telescopes to Sagittarius A*, the supermassive black hole at the centre of our galaxy. That's because it's going to be buzzed by a closely orbiting star - providing another context for testing Einstein's…
Quantum Theory Bends The Limits of Physics, Showing Two-Way Signaling May Be Possible
Telegraph
Quantum Theory Bends The Limits of Physics, Showing Two-Way Signaling May Be Possible
Quantum physics just beat classical physics again. A single quantum particle can send a two-way signal, scientists have discovered - something that's impossible in classical physics. That means a particle can essentially send messages to itself thanks to…
Scientists Discover a Self-Replicating Protein Structure, And It Could Have Built The First Life on Earth
Telegraph
Scientists Discover a Self-Replicating Protein Structure, And It Could Have Built The First Life on Earth
Roughly 4 billion years ago an assortment of complex organic compounds went from being mere carbon soup to replicating biochemistry – the first steps to life on Earth. The order of these steps has been a source of debate for decades. Now, a recent discovery…
How Does Life Come From Randomness?
Filming by Tom Hurwitz and Richard Fleming. Editing and motion graphics by Tom McNamara. Music by Podington Bear.
Filming by Tom Hurwitz and Richard Fleming. Editing and motion graphics by Tom McNamara. Music by Podington Bear.
Telegram
1-st Sciecne&Tech TV
This Is The First Detailed Footage of DNA Replication, And It Wasn't What We Expected
"It undermines a great deal of what's in the textbooks.": https://goo.gl/zkHN3s
"It undermines a great deal of what's in the textbooks.": https://goo.gl/zkHN3s
Telescope
1-st Sciecne&Tech TV
Here’s What Alien Life on Saturn’s Moon May Look Like
Enceladus, one of Saturn's moons, is currently a leading candidate for scientists searching for the ingredients for extraterrestrial life. One new study shows how microorganisms could survive there, living off of methane.
IN BRIEF
Enceladus, one of Saturn's moons, is currently a leading candidate for scientists searching for the ingredients for extraterrestrial life. One new study shows how microorganisms could survive there, living off of methane.
ASTROBIOLOGICAL FINDINGS
Enceladus, one of Saturn’s moons, is a leading candidate in the search for extraterrestrial life in our solar system. One new study improves the moon’s likelihood of holding life. Scientists have found that, under Enceladus-like conditions, certain microbes known as methanogenic archaea can grow and produce methane from carbon dioxide and hydrogen gases.
Read article
Enceladus, one of Saturn's moons, is currently a leading candidate for scientists searching for the ingredients for extraterrestrial life. One new study shows how microorganisms could survive there, living off of methane.
IN BRIEF
Enceladus, one of Saturn's moons, is currently a leading candidate for scientists searching for the ingredients for extraterrestrial life. One new study shows how microorganisms could survive there, living off of methane.
ASTROBIOLOGICAL FINDINGS
Enceladus, one of Saturn’s moons, is a leading candidate in the search for extraterrestrial life in our solar system. One new study improves the moon’s likelihood of holding life. Scientists have found that, under Enceladus-like conditions, certain microbes known as methanogenic archaea can grow and produce methane from carbon dioxide and hydrogen gases.
Read article
Futurism
Here’s What Alien Life on Saturn’s Moon May Look Like
Scientists mimicked the conditions of Enceladus, Saturn's icy moon, in the lab.They found that a methane-eating microorganism could survive there.
A Mysterious Anomaly Under Africa Is Radically Weakening Earth's Magnetic Field
Telegraph
A Mysterious Anomaly Under Africa Is Radically Weakening Earth's Magnetic Field
Above our heads, something is not right. Earth's magnetic field is in a state of dramatic weakening – and according to mind-boggling new research, this phenomenal disruption is part of a pattern lasting for over 1,000 years. Earth's magnetic field doesn't…
This Discovery of Bizarre Dying Mechanism in Worms Could Help Us Cheat Death
Telegraph
This Discovery of Bizarre Dying Mechanism in Worms Could Help Us Cheat Death
When it comes, it's unstoppable. An inescapable wave of cellular death no Earthly organism can deny - but it doesn't happen the same way for everybody. For the first time, scientists have observed the phenomenon of rigor mortis – the 'stiffness of death'…
Juno Spots Cyclones on Jupiter Locked in a Blazing Geometric Dance
Telegraph
Juno Spots Cyclones on Jupiter Locked in a Blazing Geometric Dance
We all recognise Jupiter by its banded pattern of counter-rotating zones and belts – this can be seen even with small garden telescopes. These stunning structures are powered by fast jet streams that are visible in the planet's clouds. But what happens near…
For The First Time Ever, We've Found a Deep-Earth Mineral Inside a Diamond
ScienceAlert
For The First Time Ever, We've Found a Deep-Earth Mineral Inside a Diamond
For the first time, scientists have found calcium silicate perovskite (CaSiO3) on the surface of Earth.
A Magnetic 'Wormhole' That Connects Two Regions of Space Was Created in The Lab
Telegraph
A Magnetic 'Wormhole' That Connects Two Regions of Space Was Created in The Lab
Back in 2015, researchers in Spain created a tiny magnetic wormhole for the first time ever. They used it to connect two regions of space so that a magnetic field could travel 'invisibly' between them. Before you get too excited, it wasn't the kind of gravitational…
This Amazing Website Helps You Detect if The Latest Viral Photo Was Faked
Telegraph
This Amazing Website Helps You Detect if The Latest Viral Photo Was Faked
If you've ever seen a crazy photo on the internet and wondered whether it's even real, you might be excited to find that yes, there's an app analysis tool for that. The FotoForensics website, developed by computer scientist Neal Krawetz, has been around since…
So lets try to comment this one, what do you think about AI Common Sense?