The Brighterside of News on MSN
Strange physics: Why Wi-Fi and radio waves can pass through walls but light can't
A closed door feels absolute. Light stays in one room, darkness settles in the next, and the boundary seems obvious enough to ...
Add Futurism (opens in a new tab) Adding us as a Preferred Source in Google by using this link indicates that you would like to see more of our content in Google News results. New observations of a ...
Instruments flying more than 18 miles (29 kilometers) above Antarctica detected two unexplainable radio pulses coming from below the ice — and these signals seem to defy particle physics. Researchers ...
Triggered by lightning in thunderstorms, whistler waves are radio waves that are channelled thousands of kilometres around the world via ducts in the magnetosphere. As Ian Randall reports, these ...
13 Radio Wave Events Detected Beneath Antarctic Ice Linked To The Askaryan Effect, Predicted In 1962
"First predicted by Askaryan in 1962, this radiation has its origin in the netnegative charge generated in the moving shower ...
Researchers propose that hydrogen gas from the early Universe emitted detectable radio waves influenced by dark matter. Studying these signals, especially from the Moon’s radio-quiet environment, ...
A comet from another star system is sweeping through our cosmic backyard and, for the first time, astronomers have picked up a clear radio signal coming from it. The object, known as Comet 3I/ATLAS, ...
Physicists at Stanford University and SLAC have built a contraption they hope will detect dark matter, though exactly which theoretical particles they think they’ll find—hidden photons or little blips ...
University of Otago physicists have used a small glass bulb containing an atomic vapor to demonstrate a new form of antenna for radio waves. The bulb was "wired up" with laser beams and could ...
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