Spencer Axani, assistant professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy, is the inventor of CosmicWatch, a portable, ...
You can't see, feel, hear, taste or smell them, but tiny particles from space are constantly raining down on us.
Scientists aim to build the first graviton detector to explore gravity's quantum nature, despite significant challenges.
Nearly everything in the universe is made of mysterious dark matter and dark energy, yet we can’t see either of them directly ...
The most direct probe of λ3 comes from Higgs-boson pair production (HH). HH production happens most often by the fusion of ...
When it comes to understanding the universe, what we know is only a sliver of the whole picture.
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Silicon vibrations add a new twist to dark matter research and quantum computing
At Texas A&M University, experimental particle physicist Dr. Rupak Mahapatra spends his days chasing some of the faintest ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
CosmicWatch: Handheld device democratizes study of cosmic particles from exploding stars
The CosmicWatch device costs only $100 to make, making it accessible for both high school students and spacecraft operators.
The ALICE collaboration has performed one of the most precise studies of strange-to-non-strange hadron production to date at ...
Green Matters on MSN
Chinese Scientists Finally Prove a Forgotten 1930s Theory — Key Find for Dark Matter Research
After decades, Chinese researchers confirm the Migdal effect that may help reveal dark matter particles.
Advanced quantum detectors designed at Texas A&M University are reinventing the search for dark matter, an unseen force that ...
While explaining the Interplanetary Dust Particles (IDPs), ISRO said that they are "microscopic shrapnel" from comets and ...
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