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العلماء الأرمن من مركز علم الكونيات الفلكية الأرمينية يتعاونون مع وكالة ناسا لمهمة قمر أرتيميس
armenpress.am - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from armenpress.am Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
¿Será posible alguna vez crear campos gravitatorios como ahora creamos campos electromagnéticos?
elpais.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from elpais.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A new regime for analyzing properties of topological materials A pair of studies demonstrates how two related metal alloys, cobalt monosilicide and rhodium monosilicide, can convert light into electric current efficiently thanks to their topology. A pair of new studies demonstrates that two metal alloys are able convert light into electric current efficiently thanks to their topology. This fundamental research could provide a new approach for developing devices such as photo detectors and solar cells in the future.
Two recent studies demonstrate that there is a topological origin of two related metal alloys’ ability to convert light into electrical current. New fundamental research on rhodium monosilicide (RhSi), published in
Personally Speaking: Falling Felines and Fundamental Physics
Why do falling cats always land on their feet? The question has long intrigued humans. In Falling Felines and Fundamental Physics, UNC Charlotte physicist Gregory J. Gbur explores how attempts to understand the cat-righting reflex have provided crucial insights into puzzles in mathematics, geophysics, neuroscience, and human space exploration. Discover how the solution stumped brilliant minds and how it helped solve other seemingly impossible puzzles.
Join the virtual Personally Speaking Published Experts Series conversation with Gbur on Tuesday, February 23, 2021, at 7 p.m. Registration is required. Free
Merging massive objects, like black holes, create gravitational waves
The Atom Interferometry Observatory and Network (AION), led by Imperial researchers, will accelerate searches for dark matter and gravitational waves.
The UKRI Science Technology and Facilities Council (STFC) has provided £7.2m of initial funding for the project within its new Quantum Technologies for Fundamental Physics programme.
AION is a uniquely interdisciplinary mission that will harness cold atom technologies to address key issues in fundamental physics, astrophysics and cosmology that can be realised in the next few decades. Professor Oliver Buchmueller
AION will enable a ground-breaking search for ultra-light candidates for dark matter – a mysterious substance that makes up 85 percent of the ‘missing’ matter of the Universe.
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