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Archive for the ‘cosmology’ category: Page 184

Sep 4, 2022

Is Dark Energy a Uniform Force Across Space and Time? (Weekend Feature)

Posted by in categories: cosmology, materials

Astronomers may soon have the answer to what is perhaps the greatest mystery of modern science –is dark energy a uniform force across space and time, or has its strength evolved over eons?

The universe is not only expanding – it is accelerating outward, driven by what is commonly referred to as “dark energy.” The term is a poetic analogy to the label for dark matter, the mysterious material that dominates the matter in the Universe and that really is dark because it does not radiate light (it reveals itself via its gravitational influence on galaxies).

Sep 3, 2022

5 Consensus Ideas in Astronomy That Might Soon be Overturned

Posted by in category: cosmology

From black holes to dark energy to chances for life in the Universe, our cosmic journey to understand it all is just getting started.

Sep 3, 2022

The Milky Way’s supermassive black hole erupted with a violent flare

Posted by in category: cosmology

Our own Milky Way has a relatively calm center, but this wasn’t always the case — just a few million years ago, the galaxy’s black hole flared briefly.

Sep 2, 2022

How The Penrose Singularity Theorem Predicts The End of Space Time

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics, singularity

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The Nobel prize in physics this year went to black holes. Generally speaking. Specifically, it was shared by the astronomers who revealed to us the Milky Way’s central black hole and by Roger Penrose, who proved that in general relativity, every black hole contains a place of infinite gravity — a singularity. But the true impact of Penrose’s singularity theorem would is much deeper — it leads us to the limits Einstein’s great theory and to the origin of the universe.

Continue reading “How The Penrose Singularity Theorem Predicts The End of Space Time” »

Sep 1, 2022

Thermodynamics, Information & Consciousness in a Quantum Multiverse (Max Tegmark)

Posted by in categories: cosmology, neuroscience, quantum physics

Lecture from the mini-series “Cosmology & Quantum Foundations” from the “Philosophy of Cosmology” project. A University of Oxford and Cambridge Collaboration.

Sep 1, 2022

Dark Matter: The Situation has Changed

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

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Today I tell you how my opinion about dark matter has changed an why. Is modified gravity better or worse? What evidence speaks for one side or the other, and is the case really as clear-cut as many astrophysicists claim?

Continue reading “Dark Matter: The Situation has Changed” »

Sep 1, 2022

Using magnetic and electric fields to emulate black hole and stellar accretion disks

Posted by in categories: computing, cosmology, mathematics, physics

A team of researchers at the Sorbonne University of Paris reports a new way to emulate black hole and stellar accretion disks. In their paper published in the journal Physical Review Letters, the group describes using magnetic and electric fields to create a rotating disk made of liquid metal to emulate the behavior of material surrounding black holes and stars, which leads to the development of accretion disks.

Prior research has shown that massive objects have a gravitational reach that pulls in gas, dust and other material. And since such massive objects tend to spin, the material they pull in tends to swirl around the object as it moves closer. When that happens, gravity exerted by materials in the swirling mass tends to coalesce, resulting in an . Astrophysicists have been studying the dynamics of accretion disks for many years but have not been able to figure out how angular momentum is transferred from the inner parts of a given accretion disk to its outer parts as material in the disk moves ever closer to the central object.

Methods used to study accretion disks have involved the development of math formulas, and real-world models using liquids that swirl like eddies. None of the approaches has proven suitable, however, which has led researchers to look for new models. In this new effort, the researchers developed a method to generate an accretion disk made of bits spinning in the air.

Aug 31, 2022

Artemis I New Launch Date and Starship Launch

Posted by in categories: cosmology, space travel

Why was NASA’s Artemis launch date rescheduled for 3 Sep 22? Get the real skinny here.


Why was NASA’s Artemis Iaunch date rescheduled for 3 Sep 22? Get the real skinny here.

Continue reading “Artemis I New Launch Date and Starship Launch” »

Aug 30, 2022

A Pair of Supermassive Black Holes Could Be Fated to Collide Within 3 Years

Posted by in category: cosmology

The weird behavior of a galaxy around a billion light-years away suggests that it might contain one of the most highly anticipated events in modern astronomy…

Aug 30, 2022

Astronomers have detected one of the biggest black hole jets in the sky

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

Luke barnes, lecturer in physics, western sydney university miroslav filipovic, professor, western sydney university ray norris, professor, school of science, western sydney university velibor velović, phd candidate, western sydney university.

Astronomers at Western Sydney University have discovered one of the biggest black hole jets in the sky.

Spanning more than a million light years from end to end, the jet shoots away from a black hole with enormous energy, and at almost the speed of light. But in the vast expanses of space between galaxies, it doesn’t always get its own way.