It’s always amazing, and more than a little humbling, when the universe reminds us that our “common sense” is provincial, ...
Heavy Spoilers on MSN
The Science Behind TENET Explained | Time Travel, Block Universe Theory And Entropy
Time Travel, Block Universe Theory And Entropy. We break down how time and entropy works in Tenet. #Tenet #ChristopherNolan ...
Space.com on MSNOpinion
How will the universe end?
Depending on how you look at it, the universe might not have an "end," after all. Whether the universe will "end" at all is ...
Space.com on MSN
Scientists discover one of our universe's largest spinning structures — a 50-million-light-year-long cosmic thread
The filament of matter stretches 50 million light-years, and contains a row of galaxies 5.5 million light-years long that are ...
Columbia professors contributed to new research that seeks to understand an anomaly that has puzzled particle physics for ...
Here’s what you’ll learn when you read this story: A new paper adjusts an equation that defines our universe in response to recent new data. The cosmological constant, which describes how our universe ...
Two clashing ideas about disorder inside black holes now point to the same strange conclusions, and it could reshape the ...
We can't see dark matter directly, so studying it pushes the boundaries of our creativity as scientists. How exciting, says ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
The Ten Best Science Books of 2025
From “experimental archaeology” to the mysterious appeal of exploration, the wide-ranging subjects detailed in these titles captivated Smithsonian magazine’s science contributors this year ...
Neutrinos are one of the most elusive and omnipresent particles in the universe. Their strange properties may explain why the amounts of matter and antimatter in our universe aren’t equal, as most ...
A radical new theory begins with a central claim: consciousness is the fundamental field of reality; time, space, and matter ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
At 50 million-light-years long, scientists discover one of the universe's largest structures
Look up on a dark night and the stars seem scattered at random. Step back in scale, though, and the Universe looks nothing ...
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