Morning Overview on MSN
Scientist claims the universe is intelligent and your brain taps it
The idea that the universe itself might be intelligent sounds like science fiction, yet a growing group of researchers is ...
Contrary to popular belief, our universe may not be constantly expanding after all. A groundbreaking study by South Korean ...
The universe has no brain. It has no gray matter, no nervous system, no neurons firing electrical impulses—and yet, that ...
If true (and it’s a pretty big “if”), Vopson’s new gravitational study would shake the foundations of the currently accepted view of the universe. In his paper, Vopson writes that his new work could ...
Scientists analysing dark energy say the universe’s expansion may be slowing, raising the possibility gravity could ...
Another batch of the ‘impossible’ galaxies turned out not to be standard galaxies at all, but a new type of object that ...
8don MSN
The Universe May Be Lopsided
The shape of the universe is not something we often think about. But my colleagues and I have published a new study suggests ...
For decades, the prevailing view has been that dark energy causes the universe’s expansion to accelerate indefinitely, potentially ending in a scenario known as the “Big Rip,” in which galaxies, stars ...
According to the theory, our reality is encoded on the boundary of a black hole within a much larger universe.
IFLScience on MSN
"Cosmic Dipole Anomaly" Suggests That Our Universe May Be "Lopsided", Seriously Challenging Our Understanding Of The Cosmos
"The cosmic dipole anomaly has thus established itself as a major challenge to the standard cosmological model, even if the ...
Live Science on MSN
30 models of the universe proved wrong by final data from groundbreaking cosmology telescope
The Atacama Cosmology Telescope in Chile has released its final batch of data after 15 years — and it proves that the Hubble tension is very real.
Live Science on MSN
Science history: James Webb Space Telescope launches — and promptly cracks our view of the universe — Dec. 25, 2021
The James Webb Space Telescope blasted off from a launchpad in French Guiana in 2021, before reaching a spot in orbit a million miles away. It soon began breaking cosmology.
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