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Keyword: stringtheory

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  • China's 'artificial sun' shatters nuclear fusion record by generating steady loop of plasma for 1,000 seconds

    01/23/2025 2:42:17 AM PST · by Strict9 · 53 replies
    Live science ^ | 1-21-25 | Patrick Pester
    The Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak (EAST) nuclear fusion reactor maintained a steady, highly confined loop of plasma — the high-energy fourth state of matter — for 1,066 seconds on Monday (Jan. 20), which more than doubled its previous best of 403 seconds, Chinese state media reported. Nuclear fusion reactors are nicknamed "artificial suns" because they generate energy in a similar way to the sun
  • China’s “Artificial Sun” Shatters Fusion Record With Over 17 Minutes of Plasma

    01/23/2025 6:12:39 AM PST · by Red Badger · 32 replies
    Scitech Daily ^ | January 23, 2025 | Chinese Academy of Sciences
    The Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak achieved a remarkable scientific milestone by maintaining steady-state high-confinement plasma operation for an impressive 1,066 seconds. Credit: HFIPS China’s EAST project has set a new global record by maintaining a high-confinement plasma state for over 17 minutes, paving the way for future clean energy solutions by mimicking the sun’s fusion process. China’s Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak (EAST), also known as the “artificial sun,” has set a new world record by sustaining high-confinement plasma for an impressive 1,066 seconds. This achievement, reached on January 20, marks a major step forward in the quest to develop fusion...
  • Universe’s Expansion Defies Explanation: New Data Shatters Cosmological Models

    01/20/2025 6:10:09 AM PST · by Red Badger · 54 replies
    Scitech Daily ^ | January 19, 2025 | Marie Claire Chelini, Duke University
    The Hubble tension grows: new data shows the Universe’s expansion defies current physics models, suggesting our understanding of cosmology may need a major overhaul. Credit: SciTechDaily.com New research confirms the Universe is expanding faster than theoretical models predict, intensifying the Hubble tension. Using precise measurements of the Coma cluster, scientists recalibrated the cosmic distance ladder, suggesting flaws in existing cosmological models. Expanding Universe: A Startling Discovery The Universe appears to be expanding faster than expected — faster than theoretical models predict and beyond what our current understanding of physics can explain. New measurements have confirmed earlier, highly debated results showing...
  • Our Universe is expanding faster than science can explain, sending physics into "crisis" mode

    01/18/2025 7:17:27 AM PST · by Strict9 · 36 replies
    Earth.com ^ | 1-17-25 | Eric Ralls
    Observations suggest that galaxies are moving apart at a higher rate than scientists have long expected. Many now wonder if the standard model of cosmology can fully explain what’s going on. Dan Scolnic is an associate professor of physics at Duke University. He and his team led a new study, published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters, that strengthens the case for a mismatch between data and predictions. Century of tracking
  • Time Travel Paradoxes Solved? New Study Shows How Quantum Mechanics Prevents Changing the Past

    01/14/2025 11:01:23 AM PST · by Red Badger · 90 replies
    The Debrief ^ | January 14, 2025 | Tim McMillan
    Time travel has long captured the human imagination, from its appearances in science fiction fantasies to its profound implications in modern theoretical physics. Now, a recent study by Dr. Lorenzo Gavassino, a theoretical and mathematical physicist at Vanderbilt University, delves into the enigmatic nature of time travel involving time loops to examine their profound implications for quantum mechanics, entropy, and human experience. Dr. Gavassino’s findings, published in Classical and Quantum Gravity, present a strikingly different picture of time travel. They reveal that traveling through such time loops would prevent many classical time travel paradoxes, including the infamous “grandfather paradox.” “It...
  • Quantum Physics Just Got Even Stranger: Meet the Mysterious Paraparticles

    01/13/2025 6:04:08 AM PST · by Red Badger · 27 replies
    Scitech Daily ^ | January 13, 2025 | George Hale, Rice University
    Rice University physicists have mathematically unveiled the possibility of paraparticles, which defy the traditional binary classification of particles into bosons and fermions. Their research, which delves into the realms of abstract algebra and condensed matter, hints at groundbreaking applications in quantum computing and information systems, suggesting an exciting, albeit speculative, future for new material properties and particle behavior. Breaking Conventional Particle Categories Since the early days of quantum mechanics, scientists have believed that all particles fall into one of two categories — bosons or fermions — defined by their distinct behaviors. However, recent research by Rice University physicist Kaden Hazzard...
  • Researchers Unlock Fusion Mysteries with Novel Plasma Modeling, Propelling Nuclear Fusion Closer to Reality

    01/07/2025 8:57:11 AM PST · by Red Badger · 22 replies
    The Debrief ^ | January 06, 2025 | Micah Hanks
    Chinese researchers say that recent advancements in the burgeoning field of inertial confinement fusion are bringing us one step closer to making accessible nuclear fusion a reality. The new findings, which incorporate innovative new modeling approaches, could open new avenues for the exploration of the mysteries surrounding high-energy-density physics, and could potentially offer a window toward understanding the physics of the early universe. Harnessing controlled nuclear fusion as a potential source of clean energy has seen several significant advancements in recent years, and the recent research by a Chinese team, funded by the Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Academy...
  • New theory reveals the shape of a single photon

    01/07/2025 12:05:21 PM PST · by Red Badger · 42 replies
    www.birmingham.ac.uk ^ | November 30, 2024 | Professor Angela Demetriadou BSc, MSc, PhD, MInstP, FHEA
    A new theory, that explains how light and matter interact at the quantum level has enabled researchers to define the precise shape of a single photon. Research at the University of Birmingham, published in Physical Review Letters, explores the nature of photons (individual particles of light) in unprecedented detail to show how they are emitted by atoms or molecules and shaped by their environment. The nature of this interaction leads to infinite possibilities for light to exist and propagate, or travel, through its surrounding environment. This limitless possibility, however, makes the interactions exceptionally hard to model, and is a challenge...
  • Bright Galaxies of the Early Universe Defy Expectations, Sending Astronomers Back to the Drawing Board

    01/02/2025 5:36:20 AM PST · by Red Badger · 37 replies
    Scitech Daily ^ | January 2, 2025 | Case Western Reserve University
    The James Webb Space Telescope has found evidence of large, bright galaxies in the early universe, challenging traditional dark matter theories and suggesting a rapid galactic formation as predicted by MOND. Credit: SciTechDaily.com New findings from the James Webb Space Telescope contradict traditional theories about early galaxy formation, revealing large and bright galaxies instead of the expected small, dim structures. This observation supports the Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND) theory, which disputes the role of dark matter and suggests a rapid formation of galaxies in the early universe, presenting a challenge to the widely accepted dark matter hypothesis. Challenging Conventional Galaxy...
  • Scientists Are Pretty Sure They Found a Portal to the Fifth Dimension

    12/25/2024 10:33:07 AM PST · by Eleutheria5 · 101 replies
    Popular Mechanic ^ | 23/12/24 | Caroline Delbert
    Dark matter could be the result of fermions pushed into a warped fifth dimension. This theory builds on an idea first stated in 1999, but is unique in its findings. Dark matter makes up 75 percent of matter but has never been observed ... yet. Scientists say they can explain dark matter by positing a particle that links to a fifth dimension. While the “warped extra dimension” (WED) is a trademark of a popular physics model first introduced in 1999, this research, published in The European Physical Journal C, is the first to cohesively use the theory to explain the...
  • Quantum teleportation has begun to change the world

    12/24/2024 7:20:50 PM PST · by RomanSoldier19 · 152 replies
    The Brighterside of News ^ | 12/24/25 | Story by Joseph Shavit
    Quantum teleportation, once confined to the pages of science fiction, is steadily becoming a tangible scientific achievement. Advances in quantum mechanics over the last decade have transformed teleportation from a theoretical concept into an experimental reality. These breakthroughs have revealed innovative methods for transmitting information instantaneously over vast distances, offering transformative possibilities for computing, communication, and cryptography. Scientists are now closer than ever to bridging the gap between imagination and reality in this cutting-edge field.
  • Oops! Newly Discovered Infinities Might Have Broken The Mathematical Universe..."This changes completely the landscape of large cardinals."

    12/20/2024 1:14:13 PM PST · by Red Badger · 77 replies
    IFL Science ^ | December 19, 2024 | Dr. Katie Spalding
    It’s an idea straight out of the schoolyard: that you might one day accidentally count so high that you break the laws of math. A new preprint (that has not yet been peer-reviewed) seems to have done just that, however – and it could have huge ramifications for how we ought to understand infinity. It’s fitting that such a baffling result would have come from set theory: it’s an area with a reputation for being abstract and often counter-intuitive; it has its own esoteric alphabet and language; and it’s famous for results that seem either too basic to have even...
  • Astronomers Uncover Explosive Mystery as Enormous Gamma-Ray Flare Erupts from M87’s Black Hole

    12/18/2024 11:24:08 AM PST · by Red Badger · 13 replies
    The Debrief ^ | December 16, 2001 | Ryan Whalen
    The M87 Galaxy, as seen via the Hubble Space Telescope (NASA/Hubble). For the first time in a decade, the black hole at the center of the M87 galaxy has erupted in an enormous gamma-ray flare, a rare and significant event that defied expectations in the latest analysis by astrophysicists. Several large collaborations, including the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), as well as the Fermi Gamma Ray Space Telescope, and the MAGIC, VERITAS, HESS, and EAVN telescopes pooled their resources to observe the massive cosmic event, detailed in a new paper published in Astronomy and Astrophysics. M87 Black Hole Messier 87 is...
  • Physicists Baffled by Odd Quasiparticle That Seems to Have No Mass—Until It Changes Direction

    12/17/2024 10:53:12 AM PST · by Red Badger · 26 replies
    The Debrief ^ | December 16, 2001 | Micah Hanks
    Scientists report the first known observation of a variety of quasiparticle that exhibits a very peculiar behavior: it appears to have mass, but only while moving in one direction. Scientists at Pennsylvania State University recently succeeded in detecting the unusual quasiparticle while conducting studies involving a semi-metallic crystalline material. Known as a semi-Dirac fermion, this unique formation of particles was first theorized more than a decade ago, but until now had never been directly observed. The discovery potentially paves the way toward future advances in a range of emerging technologies that include power storage and novel forms of sensor technologies....
  • Google claims it has accessed “parallel universes” with its new supercomputer

    12/15/2024 5:51:07 PM PST · by Ronaldus Magnus III · 69 replies
    Google’s quantum computing breakthrough on Monday has left the physicist who heads the project a believer in ‘the idea that we live in a multiverse.’
  • James Webb Space Telescope Finds Stunning Evidence for Alternate Theory of Gravity

    12/12/2024 3:43:39 AM PST · by Red Badger · 61 replies
    The Debrief ^ | November 15, 2024 | Christopher Plain and Ryan Whalen
    Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope to peer back in time into the farthest reaches of the universe have found stunning evidence for an alternate theory of gravity. Current models of galaxy formation in the early cosmos predict the presence of excess gravity caused by dark matter to pull material into slowly forming galaxies. However, an alternate theory of gravity first proposed in 1998 called Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND) suggests that structures in the early universe formed very quickly without the need for theoretical dark matter. Now, researchers from Case Western Reserve University say that scans of ancient galaxies...
  • James Webb Space Telescope Confirms Controversial ‘Hubble Tension’ in Most Extensive Study of Universal Expansion

    12/09/2024 10:59:26 PM PST · by Red Badger · 48 replies
    The Debrief ^ | December 09, 2024 | Christopher Plain
    The James Webb Space Telescope (Credit: NASA) The James Webb Space Telescope has confirmed controversial Hubble Telescope measurements that seemingly contradict the standard model of cosmology, giving rise to what is known as the ‘Hubble Tension,’ according to new findings involving the most extensive study of the universe’s expansion ever conducted. Confirmation of the decades-long Hubble Tension, which reveals that the universe is expanding faster than cosmological models predict, has sent astrophysicists back to the drawing board in search of previously unknown physics that could account for the measurements, potentially rewriting the standard model. “The discrepancy between the observed expansion...
  • Ultra-Powerful New WEAVE Telescope Undergoing ‘First-Light’ Spots High-Speed Cosmic Collision

    12/06/2024 8:51:05 AM PST · by Red Badger · 21 replies
    The Debrief ^ | December 06, 2024 | Christopher Plain
    Europe’s ultra-powerful new WEAVE telescope, undergoing its inaugural ‘first-light’ instrument activation, recorded a collision between galaxies in a region of deep space called Stephan’s Quintet, where one of the galaxies was traveling at two million miles per hour. Designed to study the composition of stars and galaxies, the William Herschel Telescope is a 20-million Euro collaboration between France, Italy, the UK, the Netherlands, and Spain, with the latter hosting the actual facility in La Palma. The facility’s Enhanced Area Velocity Explorer (WEAVE) wide-field spectrograph’s Large Integral Field Unit (LIFU) is the first of the telescope’s instruments to be activated and...
  • Einstein Vindicated: Stunning Cosmic Map Confirms Gravity Theory Across Billions of Years

    11/26/2024 6:17:26 AM PST · by Red Badger · 32 replies
    Scitech Daily ^ | November 26, 2024 | University of Portsmouth
    Einstein’s General Relativity holds firm as DESI data confirms its predictions on cosmic scales, while also revealing new insights into neutrino masses and galaxy clustering. Credit: SciTechDaily.com ========================================================================== Albert Einstein’s prediction about how gravity behaves has been tested on a cosmic scale. Albert Einstein’s prediction about how gravity behaves has been supported by an international team of researchers who studied how the force acts on cosmic scales. Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) researchers found that the way galaxies cluster is consistent with our standard model of gravity and the predictions from Einstein’s theory of General Relativity. A complex analysis of...
  • Inside the Neutron: Scientists Discover Hidden Layers of Matter

    11/25/2024 5:31:19 AM PST · by Red Badger · 31 replies
    Scitech Daily ^ | November 24, 2024 | Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
    The Central Neutron Detector installed in Experimental Hall B. Silvia Niccolai and her team at the Laboratory of the Physics of the two Infinities Irène Joliot-Curie (IJCLab), a joint research unit of CNRS in Orsay, France, Paris-Saclay University, and Paris-City University, began constructing the detector in 2011 with funding from the French National Institute of Nuclear and Particle Physics. Credit: Silvia Niccolai ================================================================================= Recent advancements at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility have enabled physicists to explore the internal structure of neutrons in unprecedented detail. Using a new detector, researchers have achieved a deeper understanding of how quarks and gluons...