Alien Planet Debris Detected Deep Under Earth’s Crust to All-Dark-Matter Galaxy Found
Have Astronomers found a galaxy that's all dark matter, with no stars? The object long predicted in cosmology may finally have been discovered.
A new theory of matter may help explain life--Bridging the gap between physics and biology, reports iAi News. "A new theory suggests that the assembly history of material objects, how they came to have the complexity they do, is an essential property of all matter. Lee Cronin, Regius Professor of Chemistry, University of Glasgow, argues that this assembly theory of matter shows how evolution by modification and selection isn’t simply the preserve of life but describes how all matter develops.
The Guardian: ‘We’ve uncovered some things’: Pentagon’s UFO online reporting tool launches—Move signals US government slowly opening up about what it knows, or doesn’t, about unidentified anomalous phenomena. “We’ve got a package of a lot of new material that we’ve got ready for release. We’ve uncovered some things that we are having declassified. Not just operational videos, but historical documents,” he said, without giving details," says Sean Kirkpatrick, the director of Aaro, the defense department’s blandly named All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office.
Scientists discover alien planet debris buried deep under Earth’s crust--Eons ago, an alien planet crashed into Earth – causing a collision so big the debris formed the Moon and left mysterious remnants lodged deep in the Earth’s mantle. "For years, scientists have puzzled over anomalous seismic activity deep under the Earth’s crust. There are two places where seismic activity has a mysteriously low velocity: one beneath the African tectonic plate, and the other under the Pacific tectonic plate," reports Science Focus.
Is There a true center of the Universe?--Everything we observe beyond our Local Group is speeding away from us, omnidirectionally. If the Universe is expanding, where is the center? explores Big Think. "The Big Bang didn't occur at a single point in space, but rather long ago and everywhere at once: at a moment in time. Here's how to properly think about the "center" of the Universe.
Curated by The Galaxy Report editorial staff