▲ 157 r/nasa

'No one thought it was going to be possible.' A space telescope is falling out of space. This is NASA's daring plan to save it.

space.com
u/spacedotc0m — 14 days ago

We have 4 fundamental forces of nature. 'Quantum gravity' could help lead us to a mysterious 5th

>For decades, scientists have searched for a fifth fundamental force of nature that can explain mysterious aspects of the universe such as dark energy and dark matter. These are pieces of our cosmos that simply can't be accounted for by the four fundamental forces we know of: gravity and electromagnetism as well as the strong and weak nuclear forces.

>In addition, while the hunt for this force has been ongoing, researchers have also been desperately hunting for a theory of quantum gravity. That's because quantum gravity can unite the best description we have of the universe on large scales — Albert Einstein's theory of general relativity — and the physics of the subatomic, aka quantum mechanics. Both theories emerged at the start of the 20th century and have been experimentally confirmed time and time again, yet they steadfastly refuse to overlap in a single unified theory.

>But now, these two scientific quests have overlapped. New research built a quantum gravity framework — finding that it actually offers clues about potential fifth fundamental forces of nature.

Link to read more - https://www.space.com/astronomy/we-have-4-fundamental-forces-of-nature-quantum-gravity-could-help-lead-us-to-a-mysterious-5th

u/spacedotc0m — 20 days ago
▲ 2.5k r/Hellenism+2 crossposts

NASA chief defends all-male Artemis 3 astronaut crew amid backlash: 'I don't think anyone should be reading into this'

space.com
u/looselyhuman — 24 days ago
▲ 1.9k r/politics

'This is actually taking a page out of the Communist Party playbook': New White House proposal could deny scientists funding based on their political opinions

space.com
u/spacedotc0m — 26 days ago