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Keyword: stringtheory

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  • Nanotech OLED electrode liberates 20% more light, could slash display power consumption

    06/25/2021 12:00:19 PM PDT · by Red Badger · 13 replies
    https://phys.org ^ | 25 JUNE 2021 | by University of Michigan
    A new electrode that could free up 20% more light from organic light-emitting diodes has been developed at the University of Michigan. It could help extend the battery life of smartphones and laptops, or make next-gen televisions and displays much more energy efficient. The approach prevents light from being trapped in the light-emitting part of an OLED, enabling OLEDs to maintain brightness while using less power. In addition, the electrode is easy to fit into existing processes for making OLED displays and light fixtures. "With our approach, you can do it all in the same vacuum chamber," said L. Jay...
  • Why 'nuclear batteries' offer a new approach to carbon-free energy

    06/25/2021 11:57:04 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 51 replies
    https://techxplore.com ^ | 25 JUNE 2021 | by David L. Chandler, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    This cut-away rendering of the MIT nuclear battery concept shows important components such as the instrumentation and control module, the reactor, and the power module. Credit: Massachusetts Institute of Technology ===================================================================================== We may be on the brink of a new paradigm for nuclear power, a group of nuclear specialists suggested recently in The Bridge, the journal of the National Academy of Engineering. Much as large, expensive, and centralized computers gave way to the widely distributed PCs of today, a new generation of relatively tiny and inexpensive factory-built reactors, designed for autonomous plug-and-play operation similar to plugging in an oversized battery,...
  • Largest Rotating Structures in the Universe Discovered – Fantastic Cosmic Filaments Where Galaxies Are Relatively Just Specs of Dust

    06/18/2021 11:32:28 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 34 replies
    https://scitechdaily.com ^ | By LEIBNIZ INSTITUTE FOR ASTROPHYSICS JUNE 16, 2021
    Artist’s impression of cosmic filaments: huge bridges of galaxies and dark matter connect clusters of galaxies to each other. Galaxies are funneled on corkscrew like orbits towards and into large clusters that sit at their ends. Their light appears blue-shifted when they move towards us, and red-shifted when they move away. Credit: AIP/ A. Khalatyan/ J. Fohlmeister ==================================================================================== By mapping the motion of galaxies in huge filaments that connect the cosmic web, astronomers at the Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam (AIP), in collaboration with scientists in China and Estonia, have found that these long tendrils of galaxies spin on the...
  • A Ginormous Arc of Galaxies Was Just Detected in The Distant Universe

    06/18/2021 8:53:42 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 22 replies
    https://www.sciencealert.com ^ | 18 JUNE 2021 | MICHELLE STARR
    The Universe is a large place, and there are a lot of large things in it. Not just galaxies, but groupings of galaxies, and the cosmic web that connects them all together. Scientists have just discovered what appears to be one of these groupings, and it could have serious implications for our understanding of the evolution of the Universe. It's an almost-symmetrical arc of galaxies at a distance of 9.2 billion light-years away, and, at 3.3 billion light-years across, it's one of the biggest structures ever identified. Astronomers are calling it the Giant Arc, and, if confirmed, it joins a...
  • Mystery object caused by spontaneous symmetry breaking revealed

    06/10/2021 4:16:17 PM PDT · by BenLurkin · 45 replies
    Phys.org ^ | JUNE 10, 2021 | Osaka City University
    Hiromitsu Takeuchi, a lecturer at the Graduate School of Science, Osaka City University, and a researcher at the Nambu Yoichiro Institute of Theoretical and Experimental Physics (NITEP), has theoretically identified the nature of a mysterious topological defect produced by the recently discovered non-equilibrium time evolution of spontaneous symmetry breaking (SSB). Since the SSB realized in this system is like the SSB that has been known to occur in isotropic superconductors and superfluid 4He, it was expected to produce topological defects with vortex-like properties in the fluid, called quantum vortices. However, the topological defect observed in this experiment has a structure...
  • Physicists Observe New Phase in Quantum Condensate of Light

    06/07/2021 3:56:49 AM PDT · by Kevmo · 11 replies
    Sci News ^ | Apr 2, 2021 | Enrico de Lazaro
    Physicists Observe New Phase in Quantum Condensate of Light Apr 2, 2021 by Enrico de Lazaro Physicists at the University of Bonn have experimentally observed a new, previously unknown phase in the photon Bose-Einstein condensate. The Bose-Einstein condensate is a gas of atoms so dense and cold that their matter waves lose their individuality and condense into a ‘superatom wave.’ It was predicted in the 1920s by Satyendra Nath Bose and Albert Einstein and was eventually created in the lab in the 1990s at the University of Colorado Boulder, MIT and Rice University using laser cooling and evaporative cooling techniques....
  • NASA Detects Lattice Confinement Fusion

    06/02/2021 1:27:37 AM PDT · by Kevmo · 49 replies
    NASA ^ | Page Last Updated: April 15, 2021 | NASA, Scott Graham
    Lattice Confinement Fusion NASA Detects Lattice Confinement Fusion A team of NASA researchers seeking a new energy source for deep-space exploration missions, recently revealed a method for triggering nuclear fusion in the space between the atoms of a metal solid. Their research was published in two peer-reviewed papers in the top journal in the field, Physical Review C, Volume 101 (April, 2020): “Nuclear fusion reactions in deuterated metals” and “Novel nuclear reactions observed in bremsstrahlung-irradiated deuterated metals.” Nuclear fusion is a process that produces energy when two nuclei join to form a heavier nucleus. “Scientists are interested in fusion, because...
  • Natural Plutonium Discovered Beneath The Oceans Shows Cataclysmic History

    05/28/2021 8:37:10 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 51 replies
    YouTube ^ | May 27, 2021 | Scott Manley (fly safe)
    Plutonium is generally thought of as an artificial element created by humans, primarily to make the pits of nuclear weapons, but naturally occurring plutonium can be found in ancient rocks. Plutonium 244 is the longest lived isotope of Plutonium, but it's not easy to make, and finding this specific isotope in interstellar dust grains laid down on the ocean floors tells us important things about the formation of the elements that make up the Earth.Based on this paper:60Fe and 244Pu deposited on Earth constrain the r-process yields of recent nearby supernovae A. Wallner et al
  • This Startling Image of Our Galaxy's Center Hints at a New Cosmic Phenomenon

    05/28/2021 8:20:46 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 49 replies
    https://www.sciencealert.com ^ | 28 MAY 2021 | MICHELLE STARR
    (NASA/CXC/UMass/Q.D. Wang; NRF/SARAO/MeerKAT) SPACE ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The center of the Milky Way is a strange and wild place. There dwells our galactic nucleus - a supermassive black hole 4 million times the mass of the Sun, a beast named Sgr A*. It's probably the most extreme environment in our galaxy, dominated by Sgr A*'s gravitational and magnetic fields. It's also very hard to see into, even though it's only 25,800 light-years away: The region is shrouded by thick clouds of dust and gas that obscure some wavelengths of light. But if we use technology to tweak our vision into the invisible...
  • Not Graphene: New Type of Atomically Thin Carbon Material Discovered

    05/26/2021 7:21:31 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 24 replies
    https://scitechdaily.com ^ | MAY 26, 2021 | By AALTO UNIVERSITY
    Structure of the new carbon network. The upper part shows schematically the linking of the carbon atoms, forming squares, hexagons, and octagons. The lower part is an image of the network, obtained with high-resolution microscopy. Credit: University of Marburg, Aalto University ================================================================================ Carbon exists in various forms. In addition to diamond and graphite, there are recently discovered forms with astonishing properties. For example graphene, with a thickness of just one atomic layer, is the thinnest known material, and its unusual properties make it an extremely exciting candidate for applications like future electronics and high-tech engineering. In graphene, each carbon atom...
  • Was Einstein wrong? Why some astrophysicists are questioning the theory of space-time

    05/26/2021 8:19:24 AM PDT · by BenLurkin · 78 replies
    livescience.com ^ | Colin Stuart
    The quantum world is notoriously weird. Single particles can be in two places at once, for example. Only by making an observation do we force it to 'choose'. Before an observation we can only assign probabilities to the likely outcomes. Such a picture cannot be reconciled with a smooth, continuous fabric of space-time. According to Einstein, space-time is warped by matter and energy, but quantum physics says matter and energy exist in multiple states simultaneously — they can be both here and over there. According to Einstein, space-time is like a stage that remains in place whether actors are treading...
  • Scientists are cooling antimatter with lasers (YouTube vid.. 7m45s)

    05/25/2021 4:26:56 PM PDT · by LibWhacker · 10 replies
    YouTube ^ | 5/25/2021
    Matter and antimatter are always created (or destroyed) in equal amounts. But there appears to be a dearth of antimatter in the universe. What happened to it?
  • Physicists Have Broken The Speed of Light With Pulses Inside Hot Plasma

    05/21/2021 7:15:00 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 25 replies
    https://www.sciencealert.com ^ | 21 MAY 2021 | MIKE MCRAE
    Sailing through the smooth waters of vacuum, a photon of light moves at around 300 thousand kilometers (186 thousand miles) a second. This sets a firm limit on how quickly a whisper of information can travel anywhere in the Universe. While this law isn't likely to ever be broken, there are features of light which don't play by the same rules. Manipulating them won't hasten our ability to travel to the stars, but they could help us clear the way to a whole new class of laser technology. Physicists have been playing hard and fast with the speed limit of...
  • Black Dwarf Supernovae

    05/18/2021 4:43:32 PM PDT · by Sawdring · 9 replies
    Word Press ^ | 4/18/2021 | John Baez
    “Black dwarf supernovae”. They sound quite dramatic! And indeed, they may be the last really exciting events in the Universe.It’s too early to be sure. There could be plenty of things about astrophysics we don’t understand yet—and intelligent life may throw up surprises even in the very far future. But there’s a nice scenario here:• M. E. Caplan, Black dwarf supernova in the far future, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 497 (2020), 4357–4362.First, let me set the stage. What happens in the short run: say, the first 1023 years or so?For a while, galaxies will keep colliding. These...
  • More accurate clocks may add more disorder to the universe, scientists say

    05/17/2021 8:22:05 PM PDT · by LucyT · 82 replies
    Live Science ^ | May 17, 2021 | Ben Turner - Staff Writer
    What’s the price of an accurate clock? Entropy, a new study has revealed. Entropy — or disorder — is created every time a clock ticks. Now scientists working with a tiny clock have proven a simple relationship: The more accurate a clock runs, the more entropy it generates. "If you want your clock to be more accurate, you’ve got to pay for it,” study co-author Natalia Ares, a physicist at the University of Oxford, told Live Science. “Every time we measure time, we are increasing the universe’s entropy." As we go forward in time, the second law of thermodynamics states...
  • Warp Drives and Negative Energy: Physicists Give Chances of Faster-Than-Light Space Travel a Boost

    05/18/2021 12:11:52 PM PDT · by Red Badger · 103 replies
    https://scitechdaily.com ^ | MAY 16, 2021 | By MARIO BORUNDA, OKLAHOMA STATE UNIVERSITY
    Faster than light travel is the only way humans could ever get to other stars in a reasonable amount of time. Credit: NASA The closest star to Earth is Proxima Centauri. It is about 4.25 light-years away, or about 25 trillion miles (40 trillion km). The fastest ever spacecraft, the now-in-space Parker Solar Probe will reach a top speed of 450,000 mph. It would take just 20 seconds to go from Los Angeles to New York City at that speed, but it would take the solar probe about 6,633 years to reach Earth’s nearest neighboring solar system. If humanity ever...
  • Physicists Just Found The Lightest Known Form of Uranium, And It Has Unique Behaviors

    05/04/2021 7:49:05 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 47 replies
    https://www.sciencealert.com ^ | 4 MAY 2021 | MARA JOHNSON-GROH
    Scientists have discovered a new type of uranium that is the lightest ever known. The discovery could reveal more about a weird alpha particle that gets ejected from certain radioactive elements as they decay. The newfound uranium, called uranium-214, is an isotope, or a variant of the element, with 30 more neutrons than protons, one fewer neutron than the next-lightest known uranium isotope. Because neutrons have mass, uranium-214 is much lighter than more common uranium isotopes, including uranium-235, which is used in nuclear reactors and has 51 extra neutrons. This newfound isotope isn't just lighter than others, but it also...
  • Can our brains help prove the universe is conscious?

    04/25/2021 5:21:05 PM PDT · by ETL · 32 replies
    Space.com ^ | April 25, 2021 | David Crookes
    As humans, we know we are conscious because we experience and feel things. Yet scientists and great thinkers are unable to explain what consciousness is and they are equally baffled about where it comes from."Consciousness — or better, conscious experience — is obviously a part of reality," said Johannes Kleiner, a mathematician and theoretical physicist at the Munich Center For Mathematical Philosophy, Germany. "We're all having it but without understanding how it relates to the known physics, our understanding of the universe is incomplete."With that in mind, Kleiner is hoping math will enable him to precisely define consciousness. Working with...
  • Sizing Up the Most Massive Neutron Star

    04/29/2021 3:00:32 PM PDT · by LibWhacker · 8 replies
    APS - physics ^ | 4/29/2021 | Matteo Rini
    A satellite experiment has revealed that the heaviest known neutron star is unexpectedly large, which suggests that the matter in the star’s inner core is less “squeezable” than some models predict. NICER measures the size of a neutron star by tracking the x-ray emission from “hot spots” on the surface as the star rotates. These spots occur at the magnetic poles of the star, where the field slams particles onto the star surface. Neutron stars are “cosmic zombies”­—corpses of massive stars that collapsed in violent explosions after running out of fuel. By studying these ultradense objects, researchers hope to understand...
  • Isaac Newton latest historical figure swept up in 'decolonisation' drive

    04/29/2021 12:16:28 PM PDT · by LibWhacker · 65 replies
    The Telegraph ^ | 4/24/2021 | Ewan Somerville
    Sheffield University said the mathematician may have benefited from "colonial-era activity" as it looks to overhaul its physics curriculumStudents learning about the mathematician and scientist’s three laws of motion, the core of modern physics, could see changes in their teaching to explain the “global origins and historical context” of his theories Students learning about the mathematician and scientist’s three laws of motion, the core of modern physics, could see changes in their teaching to explain the “global origins and historical context” of his theories Sir Isaac Newton has been labelled as a potential beneficiary of “colonial-era activity” in draft plans...