Physics
X-rays from nuclear blasts could defend Earth from asteroids
The X-ray pulses could deflect asteroids up to 4 kilometers wide, a new study suggests.
By Nikk Ogasa
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The X-ray pulses could deflect asteroids up to 4 kilometers wide, a new study suggests.
The two plasma fountains, spanning 23 million light-years, could shape cosmic structures far beyond their home galaxy.
Flybys of primordial black holes may occur once a decade. Tweaks to the orbits of planets and GPS satellites could give away their presence.
In a first, astronomers captured how convective forces power the quick bubbling movement of gas cells on the surface of a distant, massive star.
The Earth’s ambipolar electric field is weak but strong enough to control the shape and evolution of the upper atmosphere.
Different measurements of the cosmic expansion rate disagree. The James Webb telescope could determine whether that disagreement is real.
Data from NASA’s Parker Solar Probe and ESA’s Solar Orbiter might have cracked an enduring solar riddle. But not everyone yet agrees.
Images by the James Webb telescope of six Jupiter-sized worlds, one of which may have a moon-forming disk, reveal clues into how planets and stars form.
One of the best possible signs of extraterrestrial communication may have an astrophysical explanation — albeit a weird one.
Astronomers recently reported that the Milky Way star cluster Omega Centauri hosts an elusive type of black hole. A new study says it does not.
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