Biomolecules Detected in Alien Atmospheres to Will We Ever Know if Our Universe Belongs to a Multiverse?
Today’s stories include: An amino acid essential for human growth detected in star-forming region, and more.
The multiverse is cosmology’s unreachable frontier--The multiverse pushes beyond the limits of the scientific method. From our vantage point in the Universe, we cannot know if it's real, reports Big Think. "Unless we violate a few laws of physics, we will never know for sure whether our Universe belongs to a multiverse or not."
An amino acid essential for human growth detected in star-forming region--The amino acid tryptophan has been discovered in the star-forming region IC 348, which is located in the constellation Perseus around 1,000 light-years from Earth. Tryptophan is one of the 20 necessary amino acids for human development, reports Interesting Engineering.
Scientists Believe Webb Telescope Is Powerful Enough to Detect Alien Life--The telescope should be powerful enough to spot biomolecules in alien atmospheres, reports Extreme Tech.
95% of the Universe is a total mystery--In many ways, we are still novices playing with toy models seeking to understand the stars, reports Big Think. "It is in our nature as humans to seek meaning in the stars. But sometimes, the answers aren’t the ones we were searching for."
The supermassive black hole Sagittarius A* woke up 200 years ago--No effect was felt on Earth, as the distance between the celestial object and our planet is too great, reports Interesting Engineering. " Over a period of one year at the beginning of the 19th century, the black hole gobbled up cosmic objects that got a little too close to it, before once more entering a state of quiescence,”
95% of the Universe is a total mystery--In many ways, we are still novices playing with toy models seeking to understand the stars, reports Big Think. "It is in our nature as humans to seek meaning in the stars. But sometimes, the answers aren’t the ones we were searching for."
JWST’s Hunt for Habitable Exoplanets Finds Disappointment, Again--Observations from the James Webb Space Telescope suggest that TRAPPIST-1 c, the second world in a seven-planet system, lacks an atmosphere, reports Alexandra Witze, Nature magazine.
Physicists Make Matter out of Light to Find Quantum Singularities--Experiments that imitate solid materials with light waves reveal the quantum basis of exotic physical effects, reports Charles D. Brown II for Scientific American.
Curated by The Galaxy Report editorial staff.
this is not a comment about this days report. Galaxy Report has recently switched itself to become a mailing list. However, I cannot tell from the links given which websites the links you send will take me. not all of the sources you site are run reputably, or perhaps their reputation is notorious. In any event, I cannot go to these sites, or some I can go to, I cannot log in to as an account there is not allowed.
basically, since you now only provide a link and a small snippet of the article in question, you have effectively made yourself useless as a source of information. would you consider returning to your previous format so that you may be of some use as a source of information, at least until you perhaps have some alternative resolution? of course, if you have no intention of trying to fix the problems you have caused, letting people know that would be appreciated as we can then know to stop following you.