
China’s Li Tells US’s Kerry That Nations Can Boost Climate Work
China’s Premier Li Qiang pledged the nation can strengthen climate action with Washington as he met John Kerry
2023-07-18 13:29

Acer Chromebook Spin 513 (2023) Review
Acer has won more than its share of PCMag Editors' Choice awards for Chromebooks, with
2023-05-10 10:18

Amazon workers upset over job cuts, return-to-office mandate stage walkout
A group of Amazon workers upset about recent layoffs, a return-to-office mandate and the company’s environmental impact is planning a walkout at its Seattle headquarters Wednesday
2023-05-31 12:15

Nvidia Set to Become First $1 Trillion Chipmaker in AI Boom
Nvidia Corp. is set to became the first chipmaker to achieve a $1 trillion market capitalization as its
2023-05-30 17:47

How Meta got caught in tensions between the US and EU
Facebook-parent Meta has perhaps become the most high-profile casualty of a long-running privacy dispute between Europe and the United States — but it may not be the last.
2023-05-23 19:23

Astronomer uncovers ‘direct evidence’ of gravity breaking down in the universe
A scientist claims to have discovered a “gravitational anomaly” that calls into question our fundamental understanding of the universe. Astronomer Kyu-Hyun Chae from the university of Sejong University in South Korea made the discovery while studying binary star systems, which refer to two stars that orbit each other. His observations appear to go against the standard gravitational models established by Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein, and instead offer evidence that an alternative theory first proposed in the 1980s may explain the anomaly. Analysis of data collected by the European Space Agency’s Gaia space telescope revealed accelerations of stars in binaries that did not fit the standard gravitational models. At accelerations of lower than 0.1 nanometres per second squared, the orbit of the two stars deviated from Newton’s universal law of gravitation and Einstein’s general relativity. Instead, Professor Chae theorised that a model known as Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND) could explain why these previous theoretical frameworks were unable to explain the stars’ movements. “The deviation represents a direct evidence for the breakdown of standard gravity at weak acceleration,” Professor Chae wrote in a paper, titled ‘Breakdown of the Newton-Einstein standard gravity at low acceleration in internal dynamics of wide binary stars’, that was published in The Astrophysics Journal.. His research calls into question the existence of dark matter and other peculiar space phenomena that are typically used to justify irregularities with Newton-Einstein standards. “The data reveal an unambiguous and extremely strong signature of the breakdown of the standard Newton-Einstein gravity at weak acceleration,” the study concluded. “What is even more surprising is that the trend and magnitude of the gravitational anomaly agree with what the AQUAL [MOND] theory predicts.” Professor Chae predicts that his results will be confirmed and refined with larger data sets in the future, which could lead to a new revolution in physics. “Chae’s finding is a result of a very involved analysis of cutting-edge data, which, as far as I can judge, he has performed very meticulously and carefully,” said theoretical physicist Mordehai Milgrom at the Weizmann Institute in Israel, who first proposed the MOND model 40 years ago. “But for such a far-reaching finding – and it is indeed very far-reaching – we require confirmation by independent analyses, preferably with better future data. “If this anomaly is confirmed as a breakdown of Newtonian dynamics, and especially if it indeed agrees with the most straightforward predictions of MOND, it will have enormous implications for astrophysics, cosmology, and for fundamental physics at large.” Pavel Kroupa, professor at Charles University in Prague, added: “The implications for all of astrophysics are immense.” Read More Perseids 2023: Meteor beacon offers unique way to observe spectacular shower over UK Slack announces its biggest ever update Why you might never have to remember your password again AI can predict Parkinson’s subtype with up to 95% accuracy, study suggests
2023-08-11 15:52

Vanta Expands Partnership with CrowdStrike, Announces New Integration to Secure Access for Automated Compliance
SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 10, 2023--
2023-05-10 21:50

SoftBank seen returning to profit as tech stocks gain
By Anton Bridge TOKYO Japan's SoftBank Group is likely to report a return to profit when it announces
2023-08-07 08:25

Wildfire Smoke Spreads Haze Across US East, Threatening Flights
The worst Canadian wildfire season in recorded history spread an orange haze from Massachusetts to South Carolina and
2023-06-08 21:52

Conservative activist behind US affirmative action cases sues venture capital fund
By Nate Raymond A group founded by the conservative activist instrumental in the U.S. Supreme Court's June decision
2023-08-03 02:54

Mining Giant Looks to Tiny Microbes to Cut Stubborn Steel Emissions
The world’s biggest miner is trying to figure out if tiny rock-eating microbes can help it solve a
2023-07-07 19:22

West Point sued over using race as an admissions factor in the wake of landmark Supreme Court ruling
West Point has been sued in federal court for using race and ethnicity as factors in admissions by the same group behind the lawsuit that resulted in the U.S. Supreme Court striking down affirmative action in college admissions
2023-09-20 05:26
You Might Like...

Carl Icahn sues Illumina board for violating 'fiduciary duties'

Japan privacy watchdog warns ChatGPT maker OpenAI on data collection

Reddit to lay off about 5% of its workforce - WSJ

IShowSpeed’s brother opens up about getting bullied for 'weight' at school after 'IShowMeat' incident

Orsted Slumps as US Wind Cost Ruling Stokes Writedown Fear

Cisco forecasts annual revenue below estimates

Eternal space division wins NASA competition

Smartsheet Names Khozema Shipchandler to Board of Directors