Dead monster galaxy found lurking in the distant universe0
- From Around the Web, Space
- February 7, 2020
An ultramassive monster galaxy dating back to the early days of the universe lived fast and died young, astronomers say in a new study.
An ultramassive monster galaxy dating back to the early days of the universe lived fast and died young, astronomers say in a new study.
These supremely stable particles could explain dark matter.
Earth is bracing for a solar minimum: a dormant period in which the Sun radiates less energy or heat at our planet than usual.
Physicists have now cooled beams of the subatomic particles
At first it looked like a monkey. Maybe even an old man.
Physicists will try to observe quantum properties of superposition—existing in two states at once—on a larger object than ever before
“The Phenomenon” showing in Theaters Nationwide this Sept!
In physics, there are very different types of particles: Elementary particles are the fundamental building blocks of matter. Other particles, such as atoms, are bound states consisting of several smaller constituents. And then there are so-called “quasi-particles”—excitations in a system that consists of many particles, which in many ways behave just like a particle themselves.
NASA’s Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN (MAVEN) spacecraft has detected sporadic ‘layers’ and ‘rifts’ in the ionosphere — the electrically charged part of the upper atmosphere — of Mars.
A “beating heart” of frozen nitrogen controls Pluto’s winds and may give rise to features on its surface, according to a new study.