• What does it take to claim discovery of the Higgs?

    Updated: 2012-06-29 15:49:52
    If the Higgs exists, why has discovering it taken so long – and why, if no definitive discovery is announced next week, might it continue to take even longer?

  • Scientists discover that Milky Way was struck some 100 million years ago, still rings like a bell

    Updated: 2012-06-28 17:24:48
    Our galaxy, the Milky Way, is a large spiral galaxy surrounded by dozens of smaller satellite galaxies. Scientists have long theorized that occasionally these satellites will pass through the disk of the Milky Way, perturbing both the satellite and the disk. A team of astronomers from Canada and the United States have discovered what may well be the smoking gun of such an encounter, one that occurred close to our position in the galaxy and relatively recently, at least in the cosmological sense.

  • The galaxy that shouldn’t be there | Bad Astronomy

    Updated: 2012-06-27 01:58:43
    Subscribe Today Renew Give a Gift Archives Customer Service Facebook Twitter Newsletter SEARCH Health Medicine Mind Brain Technology Space Human Origins Living World Environment Physics Math Video Photos Podcast RSS A light bending exercise in space Teachers : help your kids detect cosmic rays The galaxy that shouldn’t be there It’s generally said that discoveries in science tend to be at the thin hairy edge of what you can do always at the faintest limits you can see , the furthest reaches , the lowest signals . That can be trivially true because stuff that’s easy to find has already been discovered . But many times , when you’re looking farther and fainter than you ever have , you find things that really are new and can maybe be a problem for existing models of how the Universe . behaves

  • Designing the Lens Zoo: Have Your Say!

    Updated: 2012-06-25 14:35:35
    Over at the brand new Lens Zoo project blog we are starting to document our progress towards a new zoo being built this autumn – a zoo for finding gravitational lenses! A small but dedicated band of lens hunters has been active on the Galaxy Zoo forum for several years – while we are still working [...]

  • Guests take a peek inside Tevatron experiments

    Updated: 2012-06-20 18:48:42
    In connection with a symposium celebrating the Tevatron, Fermilab scientists gave special tours of the collider's two experiments. A reporter from Naperville Community Television Channel 17 took the opportunity to visit the detectors and filed this report.

  • New “particle physics Bible” released

    Updated: 2012-06-19 16:10:15
    Every two years, the international Particle Data Group releases a new edition of The Review of Particle Physics. The 2012 edition, which runs over 1,400 pages long, was released online today.

  • BaBar data may hint at new physics

    Updated: 2012-06-18 15:17:38
    A new crack in the Standard Model may be starting to form. Recently analyzed data from the BaBar experiment show that one type of particle decay happens more often than predicted by the Standard Model.

  • 99 things to do at TRIUMF physics laboratory

    Updated: 2012-06-15 16:00:34
    Over a couple of months in late 2011, the two communication interns, along with TRIUMF web publishing coordinator Jennifer Gagné, created “99 Things You Can Do At TRIUMF,” a video to give the non-initiated a peek into the lab life.

  • High-energy X-ray telescope lifts off

    Updated: 2012-06-14 22:33:35
    In a scene straight out of a James Bond film, NASA’s newest high-energy telescope launched into orbit yesterday after being dropped from the underbelly of a Lockheed airplane.

  • Hubble spies the Teacup, and I spy Hubble

    Updated: 2012-06-14 19:47:33
    Our Hubble image of Voorwerpje galaxies continue to come in, and it seems each one is stranger than the last. Overnight we got our data on the Teacup system (SDSS J143029.88+133912.0). This one attracted attention through a giant emission-line loop over 16,000 light-years in diameter to one side of the nucleus. I was worried to [...]

  • Beating the odds in the study of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays

    Updated: 2012-06-12 07:45:22
    It’s a mystery where ultra-high-energy cosmic rays come from and what they’re made of. But a new technique, currently in the works, could drastically improve scientists’ chances of finding out.

  • Greetings from Anchorage Alaska!

    Updated: 2012-06-11 18:09:16
    Hi all, I’ve just arrived at the American Astronomical Society 220th meeting in Anchorage AK (#aas220 on Twitter, follow it). Quite a few people working on the Zoo are here too and it promises to be an exciting meeting. But what I really wanted to share was this sign spotted by a cafe just outside [...]

  • Black Hole Growth Found to be Out of Synch

    Updated: 2012-06-11 06:00:00
    New results based on these two objects are challenging the prevailing ideas as to how supermassive black holes grow in the centers of galaxies.

  • Neutrino velocity consistent with speed of light

    Updated: 2012-06-08 15:12:44
    Einstein can breathe a sigh of relief – neutrinos obey the cosmic speed limit after all.

  • Chandra X-ray Observations of Mergers found in the Zoo Published

    Updated: 2012-06-07 17:20:29
    I hope you all had clear skies during the Transit of Venus. If not, it’ll be over a hundred years before you get another chance…. and in Zoo-related news, the Transit of Venus is an example of one way we find planets around other stars. We look for a dip in the brightness of the [...]

  • Episode 16 Letters from viewers Astronomy Magazine

    Updated: 2012-06-07 00:51:47
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  • Giant Black Hole Kicked Out of Home Galaxy

    Updated: 2012-06-04 06:00:00
    The galaxy at the center of this image contains an Xray source, CID-42, with exceptional properties.

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