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Archive for the ‘cosmology’ category: Page 328

Dec 14, 2018

A cosmic fountain is just as cool as it sounds — and stunningly beautiful to match

Posted by in category: cosmology

When vast amounts of gas fall toward a supermassive black hole at the center of a galaxy cluster, gravitational and electromagnetic forces spray most of the gas away continuously for tens of millions of years. See for yourself: https://go.nasa.gov/2GfhvLd

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Dec 14, 2018

Doctoral Student Just Published a Paper Describing How Time Travel Would Be Possible

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics, time travel

And how to build a time machine.


The concept of time travel has always captured the imagination of physicists and laypersons alike. But is it really possible? Of course it is. We’re doing it right now, aren’t we? We are all traveling into the future one second at a time.

But that was not what you were thinking. Can we travel much further into the future? Absolutely.

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Dec 13, 2018

This Ancient Galaxy Was Loaded With Dark Matter

Posted by in category: cosmology

Light that reaches Earth from this galaxy is 9 billion years old.


The light they analyzed was 9 billion years old.

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Dec 12, 2018

Droplets of primordial soup are cooked up by scientists

Posted by in category: cosmology

And all three of these shapes were exactly what the PHENIX scientists observed. It’s our first good peek at what the universe began forming in its very earliest moments after the Big Bang.

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Dec 10, 2018

Physics Suggests That Our Dreams Might Be Glimpses Of Other Dimensions

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

If you have ever looked into the ‘many world’s theory’ you know that the world we live in is quite possibly one of many. Regardless of the multiverse hypotheses, you choose to follow/look into each one is truly fascinating for a number of reasons.

Basically, most of them touch on how there are many different worlds, universes, dimensions, or whatever you would like to call them. Each one the same as our own but also different in some way. For instance, in another world, you might be living the same life as you are now but perhaps politics had gone in a different direction. Maybe all of the presidents that were elected here in the US were opposite from how they are in our world. Maybe everything is the same except for you have different colored hair? The differences between worlds could be minuscule or extreme, it all varies.

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Dec 9, 2018

How Dark Energy Beat Out ‘Grey Dust’

Posted by in category: cosmology

RealClearScience.

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Dec 9, 2018

Wind From A Distant Black Hole Spotted 228,000 Light-Years Away From Its Galaxy

Posted by in category: cosmology

This is the farthest away that black hole wind has ever been known to extend.

Astronomers studying the universe’s first light — the light from the first stars, which ignited nearly 14 billion years ago, according to the European Southern Observatory (ESO) — have made an unexpected discovery.

While scouring the distant cosmos with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in northern Chile, the scientists came across a streak of thermal wind spewed from a far-flung black hole, which had traveled a staggering distance from the galaxy where it originated.

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Dec 8, 2018

Ancient black hole collision is the most massive researchers have ever observed

Posted by in category: cosmology

The discovery of three other black hole collisions were announced at the same time.


The best is yet to come.

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Dec 7, 2018

Kepler Telescope Captures First Moments of a Star’s Death

Posted by in category: cosmology

Using NASA’s Kepler space telescope, astronomers detected the light of a supernova called SN 2018oh, which exploded about 170 million years ago.

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Dec 6, 2018

Astronomers Think They’ve Figured Out the Raging Swirls of Gas Around Supermassive Black Holes

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

There are churning, hellish, hot-and-cold gas storms swirling around our universe’s supermassive black holes. But the scientists who discovered them would prefer you call them “fountains.”

That’s a change from “donuts,” the term researchers previously used to describe the roiling masses. But a paper published Oct. 30 in The Astrophysical Journal reveals that the donut model of the mass around black holes may have been too simplistic.

About two decades ago, researchers noticed that the monster black holes at the centers of galaxies tended to be obscured by clouds of matter — matter that wasn’t falling into the black holes but rather circulating nearby. But astronomers couldn’t get a clear look at those clouds. They were able to simulate the currents around black holes, though, as in this example published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters in 2002, and they concluded that those clouds were donut-shaped — gas falling toward the black hole, getting heated up by proximity and bouncing away, only to fall back toward it again.[What’s That? Your Physics Questions Answered].

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