Vue normale
The Arctic’s ‘last ice area’ is showing signs of weakness
Firefly to upgrade Alpha rocket to improve reliability

Firefly Aerospace says it will upgrade its Alpha launch vehicle, making changes intended to improve the reliability of a rocket that has experienced several failures.
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Congressional hearing highlights military’s reliance on NOAA weather data

SAN FRANCISCO – A Jan. 13 hearing underscored the importance of ongoing collaboration between the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the U.S. armed services. U.S. Air Force and U.S. Navy witnesses discussed their heavy reliance on datasets and weather models provided by NOAA and said their agencies are working closely to ensure NOAA’s […]
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Discover Mag
- Bacteria Like <em>E. coli </em>Swim Upstream in Our Bodies To Infect the Urinary Tract and Gut
Bacteria Like <em>E. coli </em>Swim Upstream in Our Bodies To Infect the Urinary Tract and Gut

What Cats Are Revealing About How COVID May Linger in the Human Immune System

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Discover Mag
- A Mysterious Ground Shift Returns to Yellowstone, and Advanced Tech Is Helping to Monitor It
A Mysterious Ground Shift Returns to Yellowstone, and Advanced Tech Is Helping to Monitor It



Where Does Conscious Experience Come From? We May Be Getting Closer to an Answer

ESA and ClearSpace announce PRELUDE in-orbit servicing and debris removal mission

MILAN — The European Space Agency and Luxembourg’s ClearSpace announced Jan. 12 a new collaboration on an in-orbit servicing and active debris removal mission called PRELUDE, one that will involve two small spacecraft designed to test close-proximity operations and could eventually enable satellite life extension, repair and removal in orbit. Officials are targeting a 2027 […]
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Pentagon commits $1 billion to L3Harris missile unit as ‘anchor investor’

Deal tied to planned IPO aims to expand solid rocket motor capacity
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How to cool down African homes—and keep mosquitoes out
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Discover Mag
- A Dead Galaxy From the Early Universe Succumbed to Starvation Due to its Own Black Hole
A Dead Galaxy From the Early Universe Succumbed to Starvation Due to its Own Black Hole

There’s no end in sight for a space ‘nuclear renaissance’

A widespread demand for nuclear power has led some to call this period a “nuclear renaissance,” one that will continue to build momentum in 2026. This growing need is being driven by two primary use cases: small modular nuclear reactors for cloud infrastructure and terrestrial data center needs, and nuclear electric reactors for lunar surface […]
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One Day, Your Skin Could Signal Inflammation by Glowing

The earliest <em>Homo</em> species did not look human, partial skeleton shows
Microsoft Has a Plan to Keep Its Data Centers From Raising Your Electric Bill
CERN team solves decades-old mystery of light nuclei formation
When particle colliders smash particles into each other, the resulting debris cloud sometimes contains a puzzling ingredient: light atomic nuclei. Such nuclei have relatively low binding energies, and they would normally break down at temperatures far below those found in high-energy collisions. Somehow, though, their signature remains. This mystery has stumped physicists for decades, but researchers in the ALICE collaboration at CERN have now figured it out. Their experiments showed that light nuclei form via a process called resonance-decay formation – a result that could pave the way towards searches for physics beyond the Standard Model.
Baryon resonance
The ALICE team studied deuterons (a bound proton and neutron) and antideuterons (a bound antiproton and antineutron) that form in experiments at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider. Both deuterons and antideuterons are fragile, and their binding energies of 2.2 MeV would seemingly make it hard for them to form in collisions with energies that can exceed 100 MeV – 100 000 times hotter than the centre of the Sun.
The collaboration found that roughly 90% of the deuterons seen after such collisions form in a three-phase process. In the first phase, an initial collision creates a so-called baryon resonance, which is an excited state of a particle made of three quarks (such as a proton or neutron). This particle is called a Δ baryon and is highly unstable, so it rapidly decays into a pion and a nucleon (a proton or a neutron) during the second phase of the process. Then, in the third (and, crucially, much later) phase, the nucleon cools down to a point where its energy properties allow it to bind with another nucleon to form a deuteron.
Smoking gun
Measuring such a complex process is not easy, especially as everything happens on a length scale of femtometres (10-15 meter). To tease out the details, the collaboration performed precision measurements to correlate the momenta of the pions and deuterons. When they analysed the momentum difference between these particle pairs, they observed a peak in the data corresponding to the mass of the Δ baryon. This peak shows that the pion and the deuteron are kinematically linked because they share a common ancestor: the pion came from the same Δ decay that provided one of the deuteron’s nucleons.
Panos Christakoglou, a member of the ALICE collaboration based at the Netherlands’ Maastricht University, says the experiment is special because in contrast to most previous attempts, where results were interpreted in light of models or phenomenological assumptions, this technique is model-independent. He adds that the results of this study could be used to improve models of high energy proton-proton collisions in which light nuclei (and maybe hadrons more generally) are formed. Other possibilities include improving our interpretations of cosmic-ray studies that measure the fluxes of (anti)nuclei in the galaxy – a useful probe for astrophysical processes.
The hunt is on
Intriguingly, Christakoglou suggests that the team’s technique could also be used to search for indirect signs of dark matter. Many models predict that dark-matter candidates such as Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs) will decay or annihilate in processes that also produce Standard Model particles, including (anti)deuterons. “If for example one measures the flux of (anti)nuclei in cosmic rays being above the ‘Standard Model based’ astrophysical background, then this excess could be attributed to new physics which might be connected to dark matter,” Christakoglou tells Physics World.
Michael Kachelriess, a physicist at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim, Norway, who was not involved in this research, says the debate over the correct formation mechanism for light nuclei (and antinuclei) has divided particle physicists for a long time. In his view, the data collected by the ALICE collaboration decisively resolves this debate by showing that light nuclei form in the late stages of a collision via the coalescence of nucleons. Kachelriess calls this a “great achievement” in itself, and adds that similar approaches could make it possible to address other questions, such as whether thermal plasmas form in proton-proton collisions as well as in collisions between heavy ions.
The post CERN team solves decades-old mystery of light nuclei formation appeared first on Physics World.
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SpaceNews
- Turion Space Corp. Acquires Tychee Research Group to Accelerate Autonomous Space Operations and Mission Engineering
Turion Space Corp. Acquires Tychee Research Group to Accelerate Autonomous Space Operations and Mission Engineering

IRVINE, Calif. & LOS ANGELES, Calif. — January 13, 2026 — Turion Space Corp. (“Turion”), a space infrastructure company that builds and operates mission-grade spacecraft and space operations software, today […]
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Space Force wants competition. Satellite makers want stability.

Behind the rhetoric about competition and innovation, not everyone is convinced SDA’s approach is a win-win
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Orbion delivers 33 electric thrusters to York Space for U.S. military constellation

Michigan-based supplier cites rising government and commercial demand amid tight smallsat supply chain
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2026 will be the year of space nuclear power and surviving the lunar night

Lunar night survival becomes an imperative “Surviving the lunar night has crossed a critical threshold: what was once a ‘nice-to-have’ is now the imperative for any serious lunar mission. We’re seeing this ‘survive, operate, thrive’ progression play out in real time: we’ve proven we can land repeatedly, now we’re focused on surviving that brutal two-week […]
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Eutelsat orders 340 additional satellites to replenish OneWeb constellation

Eutelsat has ordered the remaining 340 satellites needed to replenish its OneWeb satellite constellation from Airbus Defence and Space.
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Trump Declared a Space Race With China. The US Is Losing
Aerospacelab to build eight satellites for Xona’s navigation constellation

Belgian manufacturer to support early rollout as U.S. commercial PNT startup builds in-house production
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