On Monday, October 8, the groundbreaking climate change report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate change IPCC was released, the new report being the most important climate change report ever. It is overly alarming and shows that we actually have no time to waste.
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Author: ScienceQuest
Crucial new Higgs result to study the mysterious nature of mass
After an almost fifty year-long search, the Higgs boson’s discovery was finally announced in 2012. But even six years after the discovery of the elusive particle, many mysteries remain Continue reading "Crucial new Higgs result to study the mysterious nature of mass"
We still need to talk about the Higgs boson
Almost six years after the Higgs boson has been discovered, it still hasn’t lost its magic. It remains in the spotlight of physics conferences and is still a favorite topic in the media.
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What’s up with the Higgs since its groundbreaking discovery?
What has happened since the groundbreaking discovery of the Higgs boson at CERN’s Large Hadron collider in 2012?
Did physicists find what they expected, a Higgs boson which behaves as predicted? Or did they uncover deviations from the predicted properties, which could indicate the existence of new particles or forces that interact with the Higgs boson, or even additional Higgs boson species? Continue reading "What’s up with the Higgs since its groundbreaking discovery?"
First cosmic discovery in both gravitational waves and light
A groundbreaking announcement was made on 16th of October by the LIGO Scientific Collaboration, Virgo Collaboration, and its partners. For the very first time, both gravitational waves and electromagnetic waves have been observed from the same cosmic event, the inspiral and collision of two neutron stars. Continue reading "First cosmic discovery in both gravitational waves and light"
Nobel Prize goes to Gravitational Waves
On October 3, this year’s Nobel Prize in physics was awarded jointly to physicists Rainer Weiss, emeritus professor at MIT, Kip S. Thorne and Barry C. Barish, both emeritus professors at Caltech
"for decisive contributions to the LIGO detector and the observation of gravitational waves," as the Nobel Prize Committee put it.
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