Archive for the ‘physics’ category: Page 267
Apr 16, 2018
A City-Sized ‘Telescope’ Could Watch Space-Time Ripple 1 Million Times a Year
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: cosmology, physics
COLUMBUS, Ohio — A gravitational wave detector that’s 2.5 miles long isn’t cool. You know what’s cool? A 25-mile-long gravitational wave detector.
That’s the upshot of a series of talks given here Saturday (April 14) at the April meeting of the American Physical Society. The next generation of gravitational wave detectors will peer right up to the outer edge of the observable universe, looking for ripples in the very fabric of space-time, which Einstein predicted would occur when massive objects like black holes collide. But there are still some significant challenges standing in the way of their construction, presenters told the audience.
“The current detectors you might think are very sensitive,” Matthew Evans, a physicist at MIT, told the audience. “And that’s true, but they’re also the least sensitive detectors with which you can [possibly] detect gravitational waves.” [8 Ways You Can See Einstein’s Theory of Relativity in Real Life].
Continue reading “A City-Sized ‘Telescope’ Could Watch Space-Time Ripple 1 Million Times a Year” »
Apr 14, 2018
‘There is no such thing as past or future’: physicist Carlo Rovelli on changing how we think about time
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: futurism, physics
Seven Brief Lessons on Physics sold over a million copies around the world. Now Rovelli is back to explore the mysteries of time. He tells Charlotte Higgins about student revolution and how his quantum leap began with an acid trip.
• Extract from Carlo Rovelli’s new book: on the elastic concept of time.
Apr 12, 2018
Scientists Create Beautiful Iridescent Material That Could Be Edible
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: food, physics
What makes something red, or blue, or green? It’s all in the way light bounces off its surface. Something that primarily reflects light with shorter wavelengths will appear bluer, while something that reflects longer wavelengths will appear redder. By playing around with that principle, scientists have created a material that, much like soap bubbles and certain insect wings, displays a gorgeous iridescence—a shifting rainbow of colors they can tweak with the same surface.
Even more interestingly, the researchers made this material from common cellulose, the simple stuff that makes up paper and which can be extracted from wood, cotton, or other renewable sources. We’ve already mentioned scientists arranging cellulose fibers in a way that makes them appear incredibly white. But now instead of laying fibers, a team of physicists are molding cellulose films with tiny, regularly spaced impressions (like an upside-down Lego piece).
The outcome was a thin, single-centimeter iridescent film that reflects light based on the spacing of the dots, according to the paper published recently in Nature Photonics.
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Apr 11, 2018
How gravitational waves might help fundamental cosmology
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: cosmology, physics
New observations could help us understand discrepancies in measurements of the expansion of the Universe.
Apr 11, 2018
Five Years After The Higgs, What Else Has The LHC Found?
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: physics
Sure, we found the Higgs Boson at the LHC earlier this decade. But what else has, and more importantly, hasn’t turned up?
Apr 11, 2018
The most powerful physics machine on Earth may have found something that breaks the laws of physics as we know them
Posted by Michael Lance in category: physics
Apr 10, 2018
Why a New Idea to Search for Extra Dimensions in the Pulse of Spacetime Is Turning Heads
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: physics
If physicists do find that gravitational waves have travelled through dimensions other than the four we live in, it will be the start of a revolution in physics. But how close are we really?
Apr 8, 2018
Physicists Just Discovered an Entirely New Type of Superconductivity
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: materials, physics
One of the ultimate goals of modern physics is to unlock the power of superconductivity, where electricity flows with zero resistance at room temperature.
Progress has been slow, but physicists have just made an unexpected breakthrough. They’ve discovered a superconductor that works in a way no one’s ever seen before — and it opens the door to a whole world of possibilities not considered until now.
In other words, they’ve identified a brand new type of superconductivity.
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Apr 8, 2018
How Scientists Listen to Black Holes Colliding A Billion Years Ago
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: cosmology, physics
Scientists at LIGO detected billion-year-old gravitational waves, and they are expecting to detect a lot more. This is an excerpt from ‘The Little Book of Black Holes’ by Frans Pretorius and Steven S. Gubser, reprinted with permission from the publisher Princeton University Press.