A star shredded by a black hole may have spit out an extremely energetic neutrino0
- From Around the Web, Space
- May 27, 2020
If true, this would be only the second time such a neutrino has been traced back to its source

If true, this would be only the second time such a neutrino has been traced back to its source

A YouTuber shared a video last week in which he claimed that a shape-shifting UFO has been spotted in the Colombian sky. Later the same video was shared by a prominent conspiracy theorist Scott C Waring.

When the US Department of Defense released three declassified videos of “unexplained aerial phenomena” at the end of April, the Pentagon said it wanted to “clear up any misconceptions by the public on whether or not the footage that has been circulating was real”.

A Duke University research team has found a small area of the brain in mice that can profoundly control the animals’ sense of pain.

Atoms can arrange themselves in regular configurations thanks to the Pauli exclusion principle
Have you ever seen a sprite? Some say it’s impossible.

If so, China may be in the lead.

When American astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley arrive at the International Space Station this week, they will find an unusual message waiting for them.

Spoiler alert: This spaceship did not explode. But it looked like it did.

With two barren peaks that rise only about 170 feet above sea level, the now extinct Pūhāhonu volcano in the Northwestern Hawaii Islands doesn’t look like much. This is especially true since in the same archipelago, Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa tower over every other volcano at over 13,000 feet above sea level.





























































