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Best wine bars in Miami - Decanter decanter.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from decanter.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Normal text size Very large text size He died of the cold. His name was Benjamin, the thylacine, Ben, the last Tasmanian Tiger – only we didn’t know that when he was captured and put in a zoo in 1933. In grainy black-and-white footage, Benjamin paces his enclosure, yawning and baring his jaws. He lies down, he sniffs the concrete. At one point (off-screen) he even gives the cameraman a cheeky bite on the bum. He died three years later, locked out of his backroom shelter one freezing night, just weeks after his species was at last granted protected status in Tasmania following decades of hunting. Eventually, the world came to realise that Benjamin really was the last of Australia’s great striped marsupial. But, when he died, they saw only an animal too damaged to be preserved in a museum. His body was tossed in a dumpster. ....
UMass Amherst researchers contribute to landmark findings April 7, 2021 David Flay examines the Muon g-2 plunging probe installation. Photo courtesy DOE. AMHERST, Mass. – The long-awaited first results from the Muon g-2 experiment at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory show fundamental particles called muons behaving in a way that is not predicted by scientists’ best theory, the Standard Model of particle physics. This landmark result, made with unprecedented precision and to which UMass Amherst’s David Kawall’s research group made key contributions, confirms a discrepancy that has been gnawing at researchers for decades. “Today is an extraordinary day, long awaited not only by us but by the whole international physics community,” said Graziano Venanzoni, co-spokesperson of the Muon g-2 experiment and physicist at the Italian National Institute for Nuclear Physics. “A large amount of credit goes to our ....
First Muon G-2 Experiment Results Strengthen Evidence of New Physics labmanager.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from labmanager.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Measuring the Magnet that Measures the Muon April 7, 2021• Physics 14, 53 To precisely measure the magnetic moment of the muon, physicists first needed to precisely measure the field produced by the 680-ton magnet that guides the muons. Argonne National Laboratory Image of the trolley carrying the nuclear magnetic resonance probes used to measure the magnetic field in the Muon g Argonne National Laboratory Image of the trolley carrying the nuclear magnetic resonance probes used to measure the magnetic field in the Muon g g − 2 experiment at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab), Illinois, is to detect the wobbles of microscopic magnets traveling around a 15-m-wide ring-shaped magnet. The tiny magnets are elementary particles called muons, and the wobbles reveal the magnetic strength, or moment, of the muons. The results reported today don’t match up with standard model predictions, which is making the muo ....