Teleportation is No Longer Science Fiction or Theory0
- Featured Articles
- October 15, 2016
This latest series of experiments in Calgary tested quantum teleportation in actual infrastructure, representing a major step forward for the technology.
This latest series of experiments in Calgary tested quantum teleportation in actual infrastructure, representing a major step forward for the technology.
There’s a party in the galactic centre. We may have found the first solid evidence of a dense conference of stars around the Milky Way’s heart, which may one day help us observe the supermassive black hole living there.
The discovery of two massive holes punched through a stream of stars could help answer questions about the nature of dark matter, the mysterious substance holding galaxies together.
Each dot in this image is an entire galaxy. Each galaxy contains up to 1 trillion stars.
Each star may have a system of orbiting planets. There are over 10,000 galaxies in this photo alone.
Two astronomers—with the help of Twitter—have uncovered the strongest evidence yet that an enormous X-shaped structure made of stars lies within the central bulge of the Milky Way Galaxy.
Astronomers have recently discovered unusual source of intense radiation that is likely powered by a “direct-collapse black hole,” a type of object predicted by theorists more than a decade ago.
The Milky Way, the brilliant river of stars that has dominated the night sky and human imaginations since time immemorial, is but a faded memory to one third of humanity and 80 percent of Americans, according to a new global atlas of light pollution produced by Italian and American scientists.
Galaxies ‘waste’ large amounts of heavy elements generated by star formation by ejecting them up to a million light years away into their surrounding halos and deep space, according to a new study.
Astrophysicists put their ears to space as they hear the sounds coming from the oldest stars in our galaxy.
An international team of astronomers has discovered a possible connection between the magnetic fields of supernova remnants and that of our own Milky Way Galaxy.