LIGO is on the lookout for these 8 sources of gravitational waves0
- From Around the Web, Space
- May 7, 2019
Astronomers still hope to catch a star going supernova and a bumpy neutron star, among others
Astronomers still hope to catch a star going supernova and a bumpy neutron star, among others
A 4,500-year-old cemetery has been discovered southeast of the famous Giza Pyramids, the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities announced this morning (May 4).
Astrophysicists have detected the gravitational waves produced by a black hole colliding with a neutron star.
Divers excavating an underwater cave in Mexico have discovered the bones of giant meat eaters that lived there during the last ice age, a new study reported.
While space agencies simulate an asteroid impact this week at the 2019 Planetary Defense Conference, there’s a real asteroid they’re monitoring that will make a close appearance in just 10 years.
The US government already ran a short-lived ‘X-Files’ office in the Obama-era, which studied military reports about UFO sightings. Funding for the programme allegedly dried up in 2012, but the navy now wants this effort to be revitalised.
A 15,600-year old footprint discovered in southern Chile is believed to be the oldest ever found in the Americas, according to researchers.
A variation of the classic double-slit experiment is applied to a positron for the first time
An enormous ocean whirlpool the size of Colorado appears every spring off the coast of Somalia, and it’s so big, scientists can see it from space.
Researchers in Germany have created transparent human organs using a new technology that could pave the way to print three-dimensional body parts such as kidneys for transplants.