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Factbox-Tesla courts interest from Turkey to India for next gigafactory
Factbox-Tesla courts interest from Turkey to India for next gigafactory
Tesla's plan to expand its global manufacturing footprint has sparked a race among some countries to woo CEO
2023-09-20 00:58
BlackRock Invests $550 Million in Occidental Carbon Capture
BlackRock Invests $550 Million in Occidental Carbon Capture
BlackRock Inc. will invest $550 million of client money into Occidental Petroleum Corp.’s Stratos project, which will be
2023-11-08 06:50
Mystery signals coming from space might finally have been explained by ‘starquakes’
Mystery signals coming from space might finally have been explained by ‘starquakes’
Mysterious blasts coming from deep in space could be the result of “starquakes”, according to a new study. For years, scientists have been observing fast radio bursts, or FRBs, coming from distant parts of space. They are very intense, very short blasts of energy – and despite finding many of them, researchers still do not know where they are coming from or how they might be formed. Now, scientists have spotted that there is appears to be similarities between those FRBs and earthquakes. Researchers behind the new study suggest that the blasts could be the result of similar behaviour on neutron stars, known as starquakes. It is just one possible explanation for the unusual bursts, which have led to suggestions they could be anything from neutron stars colliding with black holes to alien technology. Most have settled on the belief that at least some of those FRBs come from neutron stars, however, which are formed when supergiant stars collapse into an incredibly dense, small object. In the new study, researchers looked at data from nearly 7,000 bursts, taken from three different sources that are sending out repeated FRBs, examining the time and energy that they emerged in. They then also looked at earthquake information taken from Japan, and data on solar flares, and looked to compare the three. There was little connection between FRBs and solar flares, the researchers found. But there was a striking similarity between the blasts and earthquakes. “The results show notable similarities between FRBs and earthquakes in the following ways: First, the probability of an aftershock occurring for a single event is 10-50%; second, the aftershock occurrence rate decreases with time, as a power of time; third, the aftershock rate is always constant even if the FRB-earthquake activity (mean rate) changes significantly; and fourth, there is no correlation between the energies of the main shock and its aftershock,” said Tomonori Totani from the University of Tokyo, one of the leaders of the study. The findings have led scientists to speculate that there is a solid crust on the outer surface of neutron stars. That crust then experiences starquakes in the same way the Earth’s surface does – and those quakes then let out powerful blasts of energy that make their way to us as FRBs. But researchers say they will need to further examine those FRBs to better understand the connection between the two – as well as to help give us information about quakes and other physical phenomena that are closer to home. “By studying starquakes on distant ultradense stars, which are completely different environments from Earth, we may gain new insights into earthquakes,” said Professor Totani. “The interior of a neutron star is the densest place in the universe, comparable to that of the interior of an atomic nucleus. “Starquakes in neutron stars have opened up the possibility of gaining new insights into very high-density matter and the fundamental laws of nuclear physics.” The research is described in a new paper, ‘Fast radio bursts trigger aftershocks resembling earthquakes, but not solar flares’, published in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
2023-10-11 23:26
Does Ninja feel trapped? Streamer compares his 'miserable' work to 9-5 job after Tfue quits, fans remark 'rich people problems'
Does Ninja feel trapped? Streamer compares his 'miserable' work to 9-5 job after Tfue quits, fans remark 'rich people problems'
Ninja said, 'There are probably hundreds of thousands of people who don’t want to work where they work and they work 9-5'
2023-06-22 16:15
Juniper Research: Network Tokenisation to Facilitate 85% of All Global eCommerce Transactions by 2028
Juniper Research: Network Tokenisation to Facilitate 85% of All Global eCommerce Transactions by 2028
BASINGSTOKE, England--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sep 4, 2023--
2023-09-04 14:20
Olivia Dunne sizzles in black bikini as she shares polaroids from Malibu
Olivia Dunne sizzles in black bikini as she shares polaroids from Malibu
Olivia Dunne recently returned to California and was dressed to kill for yet another occasion in a sizzling black bikini
2023-07-12 14:21
Interphone brings multigigabit broadband to Australian residential market with Adtran Mosaic platform
Interphone brings multigigabit broadband to Australian residential market with Adtran Mosaic platform
PERTH, Australia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jul 27, 2023--
2023-07-27 20:30
Mystery origin of Earth's water has finally been solved
Mystery origin of Earth's water has finally been solved
Ever wondered how water first arrived on our planet? Well, it turns out the mystery could finally have been solved. Researchers have undertaken detailed analysis of asteroids and the findings could change the way the scientific community think about origins of water on our planet. Experts at the University of Arizona's Lunar and Planetary Laboratory (LPL) have discovered salt crystals on samples recovered from space. As their findings state, these crystals could only have formed with the presence of water. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter The research was undertaken on samples of the asteroid Itokawa in 2005 by the Japanese Hayabusa mission. It suggests that S-type asteroids could be home to more water than previously thought. The new findings led some scientists to claim that water is likely to have arrived on asteroids when our planet was first being formed. The senior’s author Tom Zega said: "The grains look exactly like what you would see if you took table salt at home and placed it under an electron microscope. "They're these nice, square crystals. It was funny, too, because we had many spirited group meeting conversations about them, because it was just so unreal. Zega added: "It has long been thought that ordinary chondrites are an unlikely source of water on Earth. Our discovery of sodium chloride tells us this asteroid population could harbour much more water than we thought." Itokawa is a S-type asteroid, and it’s thought that temperatures on their surfaces were too high for water to form. Shaofan Che, who is the lead study author, said: "In other words, the water here on Earth had to be delivered from the outer reaches of the solar nebula, where temperatures were much colder and allowed water to exist, most likely in the form of ice. "The most likely scenario is that comets or another type of asteroid known as C-type asteroids, which resided farther out in the solar nebula, migrated inward and delivered their watery cargo by impacting the young Earth." Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-06-16 20:24
Orbit Fab Selects Impulse Space to Support GEO Refueling Mission
Orbit Fab Selects Impulse Space to Support GEO Refueling Mission
REDONDO BEACH, Calif. & LAFAYETTE, Colo.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 25, 2023--
2023-05-26 03:27
SEC’s Gensler Says He’s Disappointed With Ripple Ruling on Retail Investors
SEC’s Gensler Says He’s Disappointed With Ripple Ruling on Retail Investors
Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler said he’s “disappointed” with a judge’s ruling that Ripple Labs Inc.’s
2023-07-18 03:16
Eight dead as floods batter northern Italy, Formula One race called off
Eight dead as floods batter northern Italy, Formula One race called off
By Claudia Greco and Crispian Balmer BOLOGNA, Italy (Reuters) -At least eight people died and thousands were evacuated from their
2023-05-17 23:15
Kai Cenat asks xQc to collaborate with him after successful first episode with IShowSpeed on Rumble: ‘Can we just come together for a weekend?’
Kai Cenat asks xQc to collaborate with him after successful first episode with IShowSpeed on Rumble: ‘Can we just come together for a weekend?’
Kai Cenat proposed xQc collaborate with him as they have already met for a fun-filled outing at Universal Studios and Super Nintendo World
2023-05-29 15:28