Two possibilities exist: Either we are alone in the Universe or we are not.
Both are equally terrifying.

— Arthur C. Clarke

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This Tiny Fish Makes an Ear-Blasting Screech for Love

Scientific American.com - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 9:00am

A rice-grain-size fish screams louder than a jackhammer—and we have a lot to learn from its minuscule brain

Categories: Astronomy

How Plant Intelligence Can Soothe Climate Anxiety

Scientific American.com - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 9:00am

In a new book, the wisdom of plants is a balm for our changing planet

Categories: Astronomy

Contributors to Scientific American’s May 2024 Issue

Scientific American.com - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 9:00am

Writers, artists, photographers and researchers share the stories behind the stories

Categories: Astronomy

Why Feathers Are One of Evolution’s Cleverest Inventions

Scientific American.com - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 9:00am

Fossil and living birds reveal the dazzling biology of feathers

Categories: Astronomy

A ‘Computer’ Built from DNA Can Find Patterns in Photographs

Scientific American.com - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 9:00am

Artificial DNA sorts images like a neural network does

Categories: Astronomy

Unraveling the Secrets of This Weird Beetle’s 48-Hour Clock

Scientific American.com - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 9:00am

New research examines the molecular machinery behind a beetle’s strange biological cycle

Categories: Astronomy

Readers Respond to the January 2024 Issue

Scientific American.com - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 9:00am

Letters to the editors for the January 2024 issue of Scientific American

Categories: Astronomy

Scientists Discover Extensive Brain-Wave Patterns

Scientific American.com - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 9:00am

Certain brain layers specialize in particular waves—which might aid understanding of neuropsychiatric disorders

Categories: Astronomy

Poem: ‘Lucy’

Scientific American.com - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 9:00am

Science in meter and verse

Categories: Astronomy

Fiddler Crabs Unleash Special Vibrations to Attract Mates—And Deter Foes

Scientific American.com - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 9:00am

Social context shapes how fiddler crabs communicate by vibrating the ground underneath their burrows

Categories: Astronomy

Dark energy could be getting weaker, suggesting the universe will end in a 'Big Crunch'

Space.com - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 8:00am
The first year of Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) data seems to show that dark energy is weakening over time, possibly the biggest cosmological discovery for 25 years.
Categories: Astronomy

New Image of Our Galaxy’s Biggest Black Hole Previews What’s Next for Globe-Spanning Telescope

Scientific American.com - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 8:00am

As the Event Horizon Telescope pursues ambitious upgrades, the project’s latest results reveal the magnetic fields around our galaxy’s supermassive black hole

Categories: Astronomy

Guilt-Tripping for the Public Good Often Achieves Its Intended Result

Scientific American.com - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 7:30am

The emerging science of laying guilt through public messaging can help safeguard the planet and improve health behaviors

Categories: Astronomy

Locs Represent Resistance for Black People in the U.S. That’s Why They Are under Fire

Scientific American.com - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 7:00am

In cultures hostile to African hairstyles, so-called dreadlocks have long been a countercultural symbol for those who stand in opposition to oppressive ideals

Categories: Astronomy

Watch a swarm of cyborg cockroaches controlled by computers

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 6:49am
Remote-controlled cockroaches with computers mounted on their backs can move as a swarm towards a target location, and could be used for search missions
Categories: Astronomy

Watch a swarm of cyborg cockroaches controlled by computers

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 6:49am
Remote-controlled cockroaches with computers mounted on their backs can move as a swarm towards a target location, and could be used for search missions
Categories: Astronomy

Venomous Snakes Are Spreading because of Climate Change

Scientific American.com - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 6:45am

Deadly bites could surge as venomous snakes migrate into unprepared countries as the climate changes

Categories: Astronomy

Peter Higgs Dies at 94

Universe Today - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 6:28am

Just like Isaac Newton, Galileo and Albert Einstein, I’m not sure exactly when I became aware of Peter Higgs. He has been one of those names that anyone who has even the slightest interest in science, especially physics, has become aware of at some point. Professor Higgs was catapulted to fame by the concept of the Higgs Boson – or God Particle as it became known. Sadly, this shy yet key player in the world of physics passed away earlier this month.

Peter Higgs was born on 29th May 1929 in Newcastle upon Tyne. He suffered with asthma as a child and, coupled with the family moving around due to his father’s work, was schooled at home for much of his earlier years. Whilst living in Bristol, Higgs’ father had to move to Bedford so Peter and is Mum stayed behind. Eventually he enrolled in Cotham Grammar School in Bristol where he excelled at science and won many prizes for his work. Surprisingly this tended to focus around chemistry rather than physics. It was at Cotham that he became fascinated by quantum mechanics.

By the time he was 17, he had moved to City of London School and here he focussed on mathematics, eventually graduating with a first-class honours degree in physics. His masters came two years later in 1952. In 1954, he was awarded a PhD with a thesis titled ‘Some Problems in the Theory of Molecular Vibrations from the Universe.’ Higgs tried to get a job at Kings College where he earned his PhD but was unsuccessful so moved to the University of Edinburgh and set about answering the question – Why do some particles have mass?

He worked upon the idea that, at the time when the Universe began, particles did not have mass. This was later gained due to interactions with something which became known as the Higgs Field. The concept was a field that permeates through space giving mass to sub-atomic particles like quarks and leptons. His work was an evolution of earlier work from Yoichiro Nambu from the University of Chicago.

Two other groups of scientists published work at similar times with a similar concept, but Higgs’ work published in 1964 was prominent and so the (theoretical) particle, that transferred mass, became known as the Higgs Boson. In the years that followed, scientists hunted for the new particle, chiefly using the Large Hadron Collider at CERN but Higgs retired by 2006 with nothing detected.

The Hadron Collider is a particle accelerator that had been built to simulate conditions equivalent to billionths of a second after the Big Bang. By crashing subatomic particles together and observing the interactions, scientists can probe the very nature of matter. It cost $10bn and it was this that scientists hoped would prove, or otherwise Higgs’ theory.

In 2012, Higgs received word from CERN at the collider ‘Peter should come to the CERN event or he will regret it!’ Higgs went along and to his delight and amazement, and at the age of 83 and 48 years after he published his theory, he heard that the Higgs Boson had finally been discovered. Higgs later said “It’s been a long wait but it might have been even longer, I might not have been still around. At the beginning I had no idea whether a discovery would be made in my lifetime.”

The discovery changed the face of physics and it was this that led to being awarded a Nobel Prize. Higgs didn’t own a mobile phone though and he found out about his award when a neighbour stopped him in the street to congratulate him. It is clear though that Higgs was in it for the science and not the fame that came with his groundbreaking discovery. He was a man who was often referred to as shy and retiring and he will be a great loss to the world of Physics. Professor Higgs died on 8th April 2021.

The post Peter Higgs Dies at 94 appeared first on Universe Today.

Categories: Astronomy

Record breaker! Milky Way's most monstrous stellar-mass black hole is sleeping giant lurking close to Earth

Space.com - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 6:00am
Astronomers have discovered the most massive stellar-born black hole ever seen in the Milky Way, and it lies relatively close to Earth.
Categories: Astronomy

A surprisingly enormous black hole has been found in our galaxy

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Tue, 04/16/2024 - 4:00am
A black hole 33 times the mass of the sun is the largest stellar black hole ever spotted, and its strange companion star could help explain how it got so huge
Categories: Astronomy