Uncategorized

Astronomers Catch Planets in the Act of Being Born

Astronomers have spotted centimeter-sized “pebbles” swirling around two infant stars 450 light-years away, revealing the raw ingredients of planets already stretching to Neptune-like orbits. Using the UK’s e-MERLIN radio array, the PEBBLeS project found these rocky seeds in unprecedented detail, bridging the elusive gap between dusty discs and fully-formed worlds. The discovery hints that systems […]

Astronomers Catch Planets in the Act of Being Born Read More »

Ice in a million-degree Fermi bubble reveals the Milky Way’s recent eruption

Astronomers using the Green Bank Telescope spotted surprisingly cold, dense hydrogen clouds embedded inside the Milky Way’s vast, super-hot Fermi bubbles—structures thought to be created by a recent, violent outburst from the galaxy’s core. Because such chilled gas should evaporate quickly in million-degree surroundings, its survival hints that the bubbles are only about a million

Ice in a million-degree Fermi bubble reveals the Milky Way’s recent eruption Read More »

Hidden DNA-sized crystals in cosmic ice could rewrite water—and life itself

Scientists from UCL and the University of Cambridge have revealed that “space ice”—long thought to be completely disordered—is actually sprinkled with tiny crystals, changing our fundamental understanding of ice in the cosmos. These micro-crystals, just nanometers wide, were identified through simulations and lab experiments, revealing that even the most common ice in space retains a

Hidden DNA-sized crystals in cosmic ice could rewrite water—and life itself Read More »

They glow without fusion—hidden stars that may finally reveal dark matter

Some of the faintest, coldest stars in the universe may be powered not by fusion—but by the annihilation of dark matter deep within them. These “dark dwarfs” could exist in regions like the galactic center, where dark matter is thickest. Unlike typical stars, they glow without burning hydrogen, and their heat could come from invisible

They glow without fusion—hidden stars that may finally reveal dark matter Read More »

Scientists discover the moment AI truly understands language

Neural networks first treat sentences like puzzles solved by word order, but once they read enough, a tipping point sends them diving into word meaning instead—an abrupt “phase transition” reminiscent of water flashing into steam. By revealing this hidden switch, researchers open a window into how transformer models such as ChatGPT grow smarter and hint

Scientists discover the moment AI truly understands language Read More »

Tiny quantum drumhead sends sound with 1-in-a-million loss—poised to rewrite tech

Researchers have developed an ultra-thin drumhead-like membrane that lets sound signals, or phonons, travel through it with astonishingly low loss, better than even electronic circuits. These near-lossless vibrations open the door to new ways of transferring information in systems like quantum computers or ultra-sensitive biological sensors.

Tiny quantum drumhead sends sound with 1-in-a-million loss—poised to rewrite tech Read More »

Defying physics: This rare crystal cools itself using pure magnetism

Deep in Chile’s Atacama Desert, scientists studied a green crystal called atacamite—and discovered it can cool itself dramatically when placed in a magnetic field. Unlike a regular fridge, this effect doesn’t rely on gases or compressors. Instead, it’s tied to the crystal’s unusual inner structure, where tiny magnetic forces get tangled in a kind of

Defying physics: This rare crystal cools itself using pure magnetism Read More »

Scientists capture real-time birth of ultrafast laser pulses

Scientists have captured the moment a laser “comes to life”—and what they found challenges long-held beliefs. Using a special technique to film laser light in real time, researchers observed how multiple pulses grow and organize themselves into a stable rhythm. Instead of one pulse splitting into many (as previously thought), these pulses are amplified and

Scientists capture real-time birth of ultrafast laser pulses Read More »

A shocking new way to make ammonia, no fossil fuels needed

Australian scientists have discovered a method to produce ammonia—an essential component in fertilizers—using only air and electricity. By mimicking lightning and channeling that energy through a small device, they’ve bypassed the traditional, fossil fuel-heavy method that’s been used for over a century. This breakthrough could lead to cleaner, cheaper fertilizer and even help power the

A shocking new way to make ammonia, no fossil fuels needed Read More »