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15.05.2026
23:52 UniverseToday.Com Turbulence in the Milky Way's ISM Distorts Light from Distant Quasars

We may be getting better images of the Milky Way's supermassive black hole in the future. Astronomers used 10 years of observations of a distant blazar to detect turbulence in the Milky Way's interstellar medium. This turbulence makes images of Sagittarius A-star blurry.

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20:54 Phys.org Sunlight-powered generation of correlated photon pairs

Pairs of correlated or entangled photons are a foundational resource in quantum optics. They are most commonly produced through spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC), a nonlinear optical process that typically relies on a stable, coherent laser to pump a nonlinear crystal. Because of this requirement, SPDC has long been viewed as impractical without laboratory-grade laser systems.

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19:38 Phys.org Physicists create hybrid light-matter particles that interact strongly enough to compute

Eighty years ago, Penn researchers J. Presper Eckert and John Mauchly launched the age of electronic computing by harnessing electrons to solve complex numerical problems with ENIAC, the world's first general-purpose electronic computer. Today, that same architecture still underlies general computing, but electrons are beginning to show their limits. Because they carry a charge, they lose energy as heat, encounter resistance as they move through materials, and become harder to manage as chips incorporate more transistors and handle larger volumes of data.

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19:24 Phys.org Dense soils may spread earthquake surface ruptures into wider damage zones, particle models suggest

Earthquakes can visibly and permanently crack the ground apart in dramatic and unpredictable surface fault rupture, but new research led by University of Michigan Engineering revealed that soil density strongly influences how and where they occur. The paper is published in the Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering.

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18:16 Yahoo Science JWST maps universe's largest structure in great our detail

The latest news and headlines from Yahoo! News. Get breaking news stories and in-depth coverage with videos and photos.

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17:08 PhysicsWorld.com Gravitational waves could leave traces in light from cold atoms

New theoretical work suggests that the pattern of light emitted by atoms could be used to detect gravitational waves at frequencies outside the range of traditional detectors The post Gravitational waves could leave traces in light from cold atoms appeared first on Physics World.

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16:12 Space.com James Webb Space Telescope maps our universe's largest structure in unprecedented detail

Using the James Webb Space Telescope, astronomers have mapped the "cosmic web" of galaxies, the largest structure in the universe, with unprecedented detail.

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15:23 Technology.org Sydney physicist outlines scalable future for quantum computing

A University of Sydney quantum physicist has developed a new approach to quantum error correction that could significantly

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15:23 Technology.org Photon framework scales AI vulnerability discovery

Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Center for Artificial Intelligence Security Research (CAISER) is shining a light on AI vulnerabilities.

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10:12 UniverseToday.Com Dark Matter May Have Left Its Fingerprint in a Gravitational Wave.

Dark matter makes up roughly 85 percent of all the matter in the universe. We have never directly detected a single particle of it. But a new method developed by physicists at MIT and across Europe may have just opened a door we didn't know existed. When two black holes collide and merge, they send ripples through the fabric of spacetime, these are known as gravitational waves and if those black holes happened to spiral through a dense cloud of dark matter on their way in, those waves carry an imprint of it. For the first time, scientists have a technique to read that imprint and one signal in the existing data is already raising eyebrows.

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05:17 Physics.Aps.org A Magic Trick for Simulating Quantum Computers

Author(s): Ryan WilkinsonA new technique efficiently simulates a crucial process in a fault-tolerant quantum computer: the preparation of so-called logical magic states. [Physics 19, s57] Published Thu May 14, 2026

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04:40 Phys.org How ion channels inside cells manipulate the cytoskeleton

Microglia, the immune cells that protect the brain, are thought to maintain a healthy brain environment by removing unwanted substances through dynamic remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton, the cell's internal framework. It has been known that microglia express Hv1/VSOP, a channel protein that transports protons, but it was believed to function at the cell membrane surface, regulating pH in its vicinity.

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03:06 FoxNews.com NYC Republican lawmaker slams Mamdani antisemitism office as a ‘black hole’ lacking public-facing resources

NYC Councilwoman Inna Vernikov accuses Mayor Zohran Mamdani of gaslighting the Jewish community, saying antisemitism office offers no accessible resources.

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00:32 Yahoo Science NASA's Psyche probe nears Mars for gravity boost en route to metal-rich asteroid

The latest news and headlines from Yahoo! News. Get breaking news stories and in-depth coverage with videos and photos.

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14.05.2026
23:03 Phys.org Seeing the invisible: The limits of two-photon vision

Near-infrared light is invisible to humans. And yet, under the right conditions, the human eye can perceive it. Researchers from Poland's International Center for Translational Eye Research (ICTER) have now shown that the efficiency of this phenomenon depends not only on the laser pulse itself, but also on two highly specific factors: the beam diameter and the precise focusing of light on the retina. The research is published in the journal Optics Letters.

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16:59 NewScientist.Com 3 things you need to know about quantum computers, from an expert

What use is a quantum computer? Perhaps both more and less than you think, according to quantum computing expert Shayan Majidy

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14:13 UniverseToday.Com The Universe's Biggest Black Holes Aren't Born, They're Built

When a massive star dies, it can leave behind a black hole. That much has been understood for decades. But the most monstrous black holes in the universe, the heavyweights detected by the faint ripples they send through the fabric of space and time aren't born that way at all. According to a new Cardiff University study, they're built through repeated, catastrophic collisions in the most densely packed star clusters in the cosmos.

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14:07 Photonics.com Quantum Firm NVision Raises $55M, Expands into Compute

Quantum technologies developer NVision has raised $55 million in a series B funding round. The company also revealed that it is expanding from quantum sensing into quantum computing. NVision has previously targeted quantum technologies for healthcare. POLARIS, NVision’s quantum-enhanced sensing platform, boosts the MRI signal of sugar-based imaging agents by orders of magnitude, enabling real-time measurement of metabolism on standard MRI systems. NVision is said it is now building on the quantum molecular approach behind POLARIS and extending its platform into quantum computation. NVision is expanding into quantum computing with its Photonic Integrated Quantum Circuits (PIQC) technology. Courtesy of NVision. While...

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12:05 NYT Science Can Some Very Tiny Particles Cool the Planet? One Tech Company Says Yes.

Stardust Solutions says its tiny spheres can reflect the sun’s rays without harming people or the environment. Critics say private companies have no business altering Earth’s atmosphere.

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11:15 PhysicsWorld.com Physicists spot signs of an atom-like system bound by the strong force alone

Observations of a nucleus paired with a neutral meson could provide new insights into the theory of quantum chromodynamics The post Physicists spot signs of an atom-like system bound by the strong force alone appeared first on Physics World.

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05:16 Physics.Aps.org A Solid-State Pathway to Neutrino Mass

Author(s): Christopher G. TullyNew density-functional-theory calculations describe the radioactive decay of tritium bound to graphene, offering a way to model experiments that could open cleaner windows onto neutrino mass. [Physics 19, 67] Published Wed May 13, 2026

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03:01 Phys.org In quantum gravity, the cosmological constant may behave similar to the quantum Hall effect

Trying to solve quantum gravity is frustrating. We have made tremendous progress in quantum theory, but it seems that every time we find a new quantum technique, there's a reason it doesn't quite work with gravity. Take, for example, the case of quantum fluctuations and renormalization.

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00:11 Yahoo Science What flings mysteriously powerful particles called 'cosmic rays' at Earth?

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13.05.2026
23:53 Phys.org British scientists among winners of top Spanish award

British chemists David Klenerman and Shankar Balasubramanian joined French biophysicist Pascal Mayer in winning Spain's top science award on Wednesday for DNA sequencing research that helped combat coronavirus.

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23:25 Phys.org The hidden force of growth: Dividing cell colonies drive phase separation in passing particles

In physics, the spontaneous de-mixing of two substances is known as phase separation. It is an important mechanism in nature to create structure and patterns and typically requires some form of attraction between the constituents. Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization (MPI-DS) in Göttingen, together with collaborators at the University of Edinburgh and the Institute of Physical Chemistry in Warsaw, have now discovered a new route to phase separation available in systems where the constituents are inherently alive or active.

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23:11 Phys.org Atomic outfittery: Targeted substitution unlocks record thermoelectric performance in Heusler compounds

A research team at TU Wien has succeeded in modifying known materials in such a way that they possess new, desirable properties. These materials are expected to find application in the field of thermoelectricity.

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23:11 Phys.org Statistical technique could uncover secrets of 'ringing' black holes

Researchers have developed a technique to analyze how black holes "ring" when they collide and merge: one of the universe's most dramatic events. When black holes merge, the collision produces a new, larger black hole that "rings" like a plucked guitar string or a bell while it settles into its final, stable shape. But instead of sound waves, the new black hole rings with gravitational waves: ripples in spacetime first predicted by Albert Einstein.

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22:04 Space.com What flings mysteriously powerful particles called 'cosmic rays' at Earth?

High-energy cosmic rays, 10 million times more powerful than particles accelerated in Earth's strongest atom smasher, may hide a superheavy secret that is the key to unlocking a 60-year-old puzzle.

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20:43 UniverseToday.Com How Super-Quasars Shaped Early Galaxies and Confounded the JWST

Extremely powerful quasars in the early Universe drove star-forming gas out of their galaxies. These Super-quasars are behind the JWST's puzzling early Universe observations.

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20:15 Phys.org Tiny forces, big effects: How particle interactions control the flow of soft materials

Sitting in a restaurant, you reach for the ketchup bottle, eyeing the basket of fries in front of you. You give the bottle a shake, then a tap. For a moment, nothing happens—the ketchup clings stubbornly to the glass. Then, all at once, it lets go and rushes out, sometimes in a steady stream, sometimes in a messy surge that threatens to flood the basket.

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20:15 Phys.org Quantum geometry provides theoretical limits on measurable properties of solids

Two RIKEN physicists have established new theoretical limits for experimentally measurable quantities by viewing solids through a lens of quantum geometry. Their results shed light both on the physics of solids and on quantum mechanics.

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19:55 ScientificAmerican.Com Baby ‘cosmic fossil’ galaxy brings JWST closer to glimpsing the universe’s first stars

Seen just 800 million years after the big bang, an object called LAP1-B is a galactic building block that seems to hold some of the first stars to ever shine

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19:46 Technology.org NIST Weighs In on the Mystery of the Gravitational Constant

The time had come to open the envelope, but Stephan Schlamminger, a physicist at the National Institute of

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19:46 Phys.org Twisted liquid-crystal structures unlock on-demand skyrmions at room temperature

Researchers have recently found a new way to summon useful structures in magnetic materials using light, heat, and electric fields. This new method, described in a new study published in Physical Review Letters, may lead to more energy-efficient and flexible technologies for data storage and optical devices.

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19:06 Nature.com (news) Targeted electron beam creates thousands of atomic crystal defects

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19:06 Nature.com (news) Fast and furious: the gaseous outflows of quasars in the early Universe were extreme

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19:06 Nature.com (news) Mesoscale atomic engineering in a crystal lattice

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19:02 Phys.org Mostly empty foam overturns assumptions of electron beam stopping

When physicists fire beams of fast electrons at materials, they often need to know exactly how much energy those electrons will lose as they travel through. Through new research published in Physical Review Letters, a team led by Ke Jiang at Shenzhen Technology University in China has found that porous, mostly empty foam materials can stop high-current electron beams far more effectively than denser materials—overturning many previous assumptions about how these beams interact with solid materials.

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18:57 Nature.Com Targeted electron beam creates thousands of atomic crystal defects

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18:57 Nature.Com Fast and furious: the gaseous outflows of quasars in the early Universe were extreme

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18:57 Nature.Com Mesoscale atomic engineering in a crystal lattice

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18:05 Phys.org 3D atomic rearrangement creates 40,000 quantum defects in 40 minutes

It's been 37 years since scientists first demonstrated the ability to move single atoms, suggesting the possibility of designing materials atom by atom to customize their properties. Today there are several techniques that allow researchers to move individual atoms in order to give materials exotic quantum properties and improve our understanding of quantum behavior.

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17:47 ScienceDaily.com New quantum algorithm solves “impossible” materials problem in seconds

A new quantum-inspired algorithm has cracked a problem so massive that conventional supercomputers struggle to even approach it. Researchers used the method to simulate extraordinarily complex quantum materials known as quasicrystals, opening the door to powerful new quantum devices and ultra-efficient electronics. The work could help scientists design advanced topological qubits and materials for future quantum computers.

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17:47 ScienceDaily.com Quantum breakthrough could revolutionize teleportation and computing

Scientists in Japan have developed a new way to instantly detect elusive quantum “W states,” a major milestone for quantum technology. The breakthrough could help unlock faster quantum communication, teleportation, and powerful new computing systems.

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17:36 UniverseToday.Com Psyche Spacecraft Spies Mars Ahead of May 15th Gravitational Assist

A close flyby past the Red Planet this week will send NASA’s Psyche mission on its way towards its final destination. The mission’s closest approach to Mars occurs on Friday, May 15th, when the spacecraft passes only 4,500 kilometers (2,800 miles) from the surface of the Red Planet. That’s just 1.3 Mars radii distant, inside the orbits of Phobos and Deimos.

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17:12 Yahoo Science 'Like putting a microscope into the core of the sun': World's 1st space-based neutrino detector launches to orbit

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16:13 Phys.org Atomic step–terrace ordering enables unprecedented precision in mechanical testing

As modern technologies shrink to the nanoscale, surfaces increasingly dictate how materials deform, yield, and fail. Yet probing this regime has long been hindered by the challenge of preparing and controlling surfaces with true atomic precision, particularly at the outermost atomic layer.

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15:24 ScientificAmerican.Com Each atom in the universe might be unique

Long-held assumptions tell us that atoms with the same number of protons, neutrons and electrons are indistinguishable, but one physicist wants to put this idea to the test

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15:07 Space.com 'Like putting a microscope into the core of the sun': World's 1st space-based neutrino detector launches to orbit

The world's first space-based neutrino detector launched to space this month to study elusive neutrino particles that constantly bombard Earth.

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13:49 Phys.org Atomic bands in two transition metal dichalcogenides hint at long-theorized quantum state

Insulators are materials in which electrons cannot move freely. Past theoretical studies predicted the existence of an unusual insulating state dubbed obstructed atomic insulator (OAI), in which electrons are localized inside a crystal, while their centers of charge lie in empty spaces between atoms, rather than on the atoms themselves.

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11:05 PhysicsWorld.com ‘Einstein’s flying mirror’ technique opens a path towards extreme light intensities

New strategy could allow physicists to conduct previously impossible experiments in which light interacts directly with the quantum vacuum The post ‘Einstein’s flying mirror’ technique opens a path towards extreme light intensities appeared first on Physics World.

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05:18 Physics.Aps.org Liquid Crystals Offer On-Demand Skyrmions

Author(s): Michael SchirberA new method for creating twisted structures in liquid crystals could be helpful in controlling them for possible memory-storage applications. [Physics 19, 71] Published Tue May 12, 2026

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03:03 Phys.org Gravitational wave detectors can now 'autotune' signals to harmonize the heavens

Gravitational wave researchers working on the world's most sensitive scientific instruments have found a way to tune their detectors using a process akin to the pitch-correction used in music production.

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02:22 Phys.org Largest-ever survey of physicists puts Standard Model of cosmology under scrutiny

The largest-ever survey of physicists from around the world—released today—shows a distinct lack of consensus across many of physics's most important questions, from the nature of black holes and dark matter, to the still-incomplete unification of Einstein's theory of gravity with quantum mechanics.

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01:13 Phys.org How a single radioactive cloud caused Fukushima particle contamination

A new study shows that a single radioactive cloud was responsible for a large share of the nuclear fallout during the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster on 11 March 2011. The work is published in the Journal of Hazardous Materials.

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12.05.2026
23:44 Phys.org AI surrogate accelerates nonlinear optics simulations by orders of magnitude

Simulating the nonlinear optical physics that underlies ultrafast laser systems is computationally demanding—a practical bottleneck in settings that require rapid feedback. A study by researchers at Stanford University, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), and SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory introduces a deep learning surrogate that delivers orders-of-magnitude acceleration over conventional simulation methods, while maintaining high fidelity across a challenging range of pulse shapes.

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23:38 NewScientist.Com Why do particle physicists like spending time in fields?

The concept of a field plays a key role in particle physics, but what exactly is it? From its origins in the study of magnetism to the quantum fields of today, columnist Chanda Prescod-Weinstein goes exploring

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23:28 Phys.org Airport readings uncover ultrafine particle spikes and oil residue in Zurich study

During takeoff and landing, planes emit ultrafine aerosol particles. Some particles also contain lubricating oil, as shown by measurements made by researchers from the Paul Scherrer Institute PSI in the environs of the Zurich Airport. Low-sulfur fuels could be the solution.

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23:16 Yahoo Science 'Cannibal stars,' AI and the Rubin Observatory could shed light on the mystery of dark energy. Here's how

The latest news and headlines from Yahoo! News. Get breaking news stories and in-depth coverage with videos and photos.

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22:44 Phys.org Gravitational waves from colliding black holes may allow detection of dark matter

Dark matter is thought to make up most of the matter in the universe, but the only way it interacts with its surroundings is through gravity. If two colliding black holes spiral through a dense region of dark matter and merge, gravitational waves rippling across space and time could carry an imprint of that dark matter.

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21:15 Space.com 'Cannibal stars,' AI and the Rubin Observatory could shed light on the mystery of dark energy. Here's how

Using AI and Rubin Observatory data, scientists are rethinking Type 1a supernova "standard candles," hunting for "unknown unknowns" that could lead us to missing ingredients in our recipe of the cosmos and solve the puzzle of dark energy.

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20:21 UniverseToday.Com In Quantum Gravity, the Cosmological Constant May Behave Similar To The Quantum Hall Effect

The cosmological constant has been a problem in physics since Einstein, but new research may show why it takes the value that it does despite quantum fluctuations that should make its value practically infinite.

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19:51 Phys.org Quantum circuit test finally exposes what has been warping performance

Quantum computers could someday solve pressing problems that are too convoluted for classical computers, such as modeling complex molecular interactions to streamline drug discovery and materials development.

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18:06 Phys.org New quantum protocol breaks distance and speed barriers in fiber networks

Scientists at the University of Science and Technology of China have successfully deployed a multi-mode quantum relay network, achieving matter–matter entanglement over 14.5 kilometers, according to media reports.

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17:39 IbTimes.co.uk Angels or Aliens? Christian Leaders Claim Pentagon UFOs Are 'Extra-Dimensional'

Christian leaders Jeremiah J. Johnston and Greg Laurie say the Pentagon's latest UFO files point not to aliens, but to a biblical spiritual realm filled with angels and demons.

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17:07 Phys.org Atoms vibrate on circular paths—with an unexpected twist

An international team of researchers, including scientists from HZDR and Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society, for the first time directly observed how angular momentum is transferred and conserved within a crystal lattice. Using intense terahertz laser pulses, the researchers were able to selectively control these processes, which unveiled a surprising effect: During the angular momentum transfer, the direction of rotation reverses—caused by the rotational symmetry of the material.

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16:52 Phys.org JWST maps cosmic web in record detail back to universe's first billion years

Using data from NASA's James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), astronomers led by researchers at the University of California, Riverside have produced the most detailed map of the cosmic web ever made, tracing the network of galaxies all the way back to when the universe was one billion years old.

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12:04 Phys.org Method for measuring energy amounts less than a trillionth of a billionth of a joule could boost quantum computing

The fundamentals of quantum mechanics are minuscule. Scientists constantly home in on finer resolutions to measure, quantify, and control these fundamentals, like photons that carry light and have no mass unless they are moving. The more precise the measurement, the more possibilities for better quantum technology or the ability to detect elusive dark-matter axions in deep space.

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10:39 Improbable Research TODAY Ig Nobel Prize Ceremony TICKETS go on sale

TODAY — TICKETS TICKETS TICKETS to attend the Ig Nobel Prize ceremony go on sale  TODAY — 12 May, 2026, 10 am CET). The 36th First Annual Ig Nobel Prize ceremony will take place in Zurich, Switzerland, in early September

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09:22 Aps.org Editors' Suggestions Bifurcated Impact of Neutrino Fast Flavor Conversion on Core-Collapse Supernovae Informed by Multiangle Neutrino Radiation Hydrodynamics

Author(s): Ryuichiro Akaho, Hiroki Nagakura, Wakana Iwakami, Shun Furusawa, Akira Harada, Hirotada Okawa, Hideo Matsufuru, Kohsuke Sumiyoshi, and Shoichi YamadaBy incorporating a detailed model of neutrino-flavor oscillations in simulations of collapsing stars, researchers have shown that the phenomenon can both promote and inhibit supernovae. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 136, 191002] Published Mon May 11, 2026

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09:13 Technology.org NASA Vacuum Tests Reveal Which Off-the-Shelf Cameras Survive Space Conditions

Sending a camera to space isn’t a matter of grabbing whichever body has the best autofocus. Vacuum, radiation,

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08:39 ScienceDaily.com Scientists put a tiny lump of metal in two places at once in record-breaking quantum experiment

Scientists have pulled off a mind-bending quantum experiment that sounds almost impossible: they showed that tiny metal particles made of thousands of atoms can exist in multiple places at once. Using advanced laser techniques, researchers at the University of Vienna observed quantum interference in sodium nanoparticles far larger than the kinds of particles usually seen behaving this way. The finding pushes quantum mechanics into a new realm, suggesting that even surprisingly “large” objects still obey the bizarre rules of the quantum world.

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08:39 ScienceDaily.com JUPITER supercomputer breaks world record with 50-qubit quantum simulation

Scientists in Germany have pulled off a staggering computing feat by fully simulating a 50-qubit quantum computer for the first time ever using Europe’s new exascale supercomputer, JUPITER. The breakthrough shatters the previous 48-qubit record and highlights just how powerful next-generation supercomputers have become.

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05:09 Physics.Aps.org How Neutrino Oscillations Affect Supernovae

Author(s): Martin ObergaulingerBy incorporating a detailed model of neutrino-flavor oscillations in simulations of collapsing stars, researchers have shown that the phenomenon can both promote and inhibit supernovae. [Physics 19, 66] Published Mon May 11, 2026

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02:42 Phys.org Unexplored interactions between electrons and atomic nuclei shed light on dark matter

Dark matter particles could be mediators of the interaction between electrons and atomic nuclei, as shown by a study conducted by junior group leader, Dr. Konstantin Gaul, Dr. Lei Cong, and Professor Dr. Dmitry Budker, of Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU), Helmholtz Institute Mainz (HIM) and the PRISMA++ Cluster of Excellence. Their work, published last week in Physical Review Letters, presents new constraints on previously unexplored candidates for dark matter and, more generally, some hypothetical particles that are not included in the Standard Model of particle physics (SM).

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01:32 Phys.org Researchers find coherent ferrons—polarization waves with potential across quantum and telecom applications

In new research published in Nature Materials, a team of researchers led by Columbia University chemist Xiaoyang Zhu, in collaboration with fellow Columbians Xavier Roy, Milan Delor, Dmitri Basov, and James McIver, has observed coherent ferrons for the first time.

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00:19 Phys.org Looped polymers unlock stronger, faster molecular binding through entropy, model suggests

Entropy gets a bad rap. Typically associated with randomness and chaos, it can also correlate with freedom and diversity. Cornell researchers have found that, thanks to the latter qualities, entropy can help bind certain pairs of molecules faster and more robustly—an approach that could have broad applications in drug development and assembling nanoparticles to form new materials.

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11.05.2026
21:53 Phys.org JWST spots two early black holes growing far faster than their galaxies

Astronomers have discovered two early-universe galaxies where the central black holes appear to have grown far faster than their host galaxies. Observations with the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) reveal that the black holes in these galaxies, seen just 800 million years after the Big Bang, are significantly more massive relative to their host galaxies, as opposed to what astronomers see in the nearby universe. The study is published on the arXiv preprint server.

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18:43 Phys.org Black holes don't live forever, but they might live long enough to look like white holes

Black holes live forever, at least according to general relativity. Once material crosses a black hole's event horizon, it is trapped forever, until the last day of cosmic time. But we know that isn't true. General relativity is a classical model. It doesn't take into account the fuzzy, indeterminate nature of the quantum. We don't have a complete and consistent theory of quantum gravity, but we do have some understanding of quantum black holes.

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18:14 Yahoo Science New James Webb Space Telescope images reveal how massive star clusters can reshape galaxies

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18:12 LiveScience.com New 'trick' fixes major flaw in neutral-atom quantum computers — inching us closer to a superpowerful system

A new "geometry‑based" quantum swap gate makes neutral‑atom computers far less sensitive to laser noise — bringing large‑scale, stable quantum processors a step closer to reality.

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17:56 Phys.org 'Elegant triangle' experiment suggests quantum internet may be closer than we think

For more than 60 years, Bell's theorem has been the gold standard for demonstrating that quantum mechanics defies the rules of classical physics. Now, an international team of researchers, including Constructor University Professor Dr. Nicolas Gisin, has extended this principle to new limits, using an "elegant triangle" to reveal new forms of quantum nonlocality that specifically emerge in multi-node quantum networks.

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16:11 Space.com New James Webb Space Telescope images reveal how massive star clusters can reshape galaxies

The James Webb Space Telescope has helped scientists peek into the secrets of galactic evolution — and the view is stunning, too.

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14:12 Technology.org Pulsed Electron Driven CVD Delivers Cleaner Iron Films at Low Temperatures

A LiU team led by Professor Henrik Pedersen has shown that switching from continuous to pulsed electron driven

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14:03 Photonics.com eleQtron Becomes Latest Quantum Computing Firm to Secure Financing, Adds $66M

eleQtron, a developer of trapped-ion quantum computers, has closed a €57 million ($66M) Series A funding round. The company plans to use the funding to scale its production capacity, expand cloud-based access to systems, and further advance the development of its hardware platform. Jan Henrik Leisse (left) and Michael Johanning, CEO and CTO, respectively, of eleQtron. Courtesy of sichtplan. eleQtron was founded in 2020 as a spinoff from the University of Siegen. The company employs more than 100 people and said that it currently partners with leading European research and computing centers to advance the industrial use of quantum computing. The company said that it currently has an order backlog of more than €54 million....

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14:03 Photonics.com Plasma Harmonics Charts a Course for New Avenues of Attosecond Study

High harmonic generation (HHG) theory predicts that under optimized conditions, a plasma medium can support strong spatiotemporal compression of laser energy, boosting the intensity of the light many orders of magnitude greater than the incident driving laser pulse. This theory has now been experimentally proven by an international team of scientists from the University of Oxford, Queen’s University Belfast, the Central Laser Facility (CLF), AWE plc, the University of Michigan, and the University of Jena. Researcher Robin Timmis aligns the OHREX spectrometer. Courtesy of the University of Oxford/Helen Towrie. Using the Gemini laser at the CLF in England, the research team demonstrated that the highly nonlinear...

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13:08 PhysicsWorld.com Building up the quantum workforce: an undergraduate route into industry

Colorado School of Mines’ Frédéric Sarazin on a new undergraduate route into quantum engineering The post Building up the quantum workforce: an undergraduate route into industry appeared first on Physics World.

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12:06 Improbable Research TOMORROW Ig Nobel Prize Ceremony TICKETS

ONE DAY until Ig Nobel Prize Ceremony tickets go on sale (12 May 2026, at 10:00 CET). The 36th first annual Ig Nobel Prize ceremony will take place in Zurich Switzerland, in early September.

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09:06 Technology.org New chip can protect wireless biomedical devices from quantum attacks

As quantum computers advance, they are expected to be able to break tried-and-true security schemes that currently keep

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09:06 Technology.org New study bridges the worlds of classical and quantum physics

When you throw a ball in the air, the equations of classical physics will tell you exactly what

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00:06 Phys.org Good vibrations for quantum communications: Engineers couple single phonon to single atomic spin

Researchers at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) have demonstrated, for the first time, a single quantum of vibrational energy interacting with a single atomic spin, seeding a pathway to quantum technologies that use sound as an information carrier, instead of light or electricity. The results are published in Nature.

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10.05.2026
14:12 LiveScience.com James Webb telescope zooms in on a black hole that could reveal the truth about 'little red dots'

A peculiar object dubbed an 'X-ray dot' could help solve the mystery of the 'little red dots' discovered by the James Webb Space Telescope.

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12:35 Improbable Research 2 Days until Ig Nobel Prize Ceremony TICKETS

2 DAYS until Ig Nobel Prize Ceremony tickets go on sale (12 May 2026). The 36th first annual Ig Nobel Prize ceremony will take place in Zurich Switzerland, in early September.

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08:42 Technology.org With a swipe of a magnet, microscopic “magno-bots” perform complex maneuvers

Under a microscope, a bouquet of lollipop-like structures, each smaller than a grain of sand, waves gently in

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06:21 ScienceDaily.com The hidden atomic gap that could break next-generation computer chips

A major obstacle may be standing in the way of the next generation of ultra-tiny computer chips. Researchers discovered that many promising 2D materials lose their advantages because an invisible atomic-scale gap forms when they are combined with insulating layers. That tiny gap weakens electronic performance and could prevent further miniaturization. The team says new “zipper materials” that lock together more tightly may offer a path forward.

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06:21 ScienceDaily.com Scientists just sent unhackable quantum keys across 120 kilometers

Scientists have taken a major step toward ultra-secure quantum communication by demonstrating a remarkably stable quantum encryption system that worked across more than 120 kilometers of optical fiber. Using tiny semiconductor quantum dots that emit single particles of light on demand, the team achieved one of the highest secure key rates yet for this type of technology while maintaining continuous operation for over six hours without manual adjustments.

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09.05.2026
17:56 Phys.org Black hole jets measured in real time, revealing 10,000-sun power

For the first time, scientists have measured the instantaneous mind-blowing power of jets blasting from a black hole.

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16:01 ScienceDaily.com Physicists discover quantum particles that break the rules of reality

Physicists may have just cracked open a hidden side of the quantum world. For decades, every known particle was thought to belong to one of two categories — bosons or fermions — but researchers have now shown that bizarre “in-between” particles called anyons could also exist in a one-dimensional system. Even more exciting, these strange particles may be adjustable, allowing scientists to tune their behavior in ways never before possible.

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14:15 LiveScience.com Science news this week: The latest on the cruise ship hantavirus infections, a shortcut to Mars, and a fast-charging quantum battery

May 9, 2026: Our weekly roundup of the latest science in the news, as well as a few fascinating articles to keep you entertained over the weekend

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11:40 Improbable Research 3 Days until Ig Nobel Prize Ceremony TICKETS

3 DAYS until Ig Nobel Prize Ceremony tickets go on sale (12 May 2026). The 36th first annual Ig Nobel Prize ceremony will take place in Zurich Switzerland, in early September.

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