Physics

Schrödinger’s Jew: How antisemitism is more absurd than quantum mechanics - opinion

Schrödinger’s cat is a famous thought experiment used to describe the complex nature of quantum mechanics, but it can also be used to explain the incoherent nature of antisemites.

A MEMBER of a neo-Nazi party gives a salute outside a speech by Richard Spencer on the campus of Michigan State University on March 5
El Al Plane.

A revolution in the skies: How a curved wing saves airlines millions of dollars

A mechanical clock

Scientists warn that the Earth’s rotation is accelerating, making Wed. shortest in living memory

 PROF. MUHAMMAD Y. BASHOUTI: On the cutting edge at BGU.

The alchemist of innovation: Prof. Muhammad Y. Bashouti’s pioneering research at BGU


WATCH: 'They teach you to think outside the box'

Joel Bar-El, Chairman & Co-Founder of Trax retail and TAU alumnus in conversation with Tamar Uriel-Beeri, Deputy Editor-in-Chief of the Jerusalem Post.

 Joel Bar-El, Chairman & Co-Founder, Trax Retail and Tamar Uriel-Beeri, Deputy Editor-in-Chief of the Jerusalem Post

Supernovae give rise to black holes or neutron stars, finds Israeli-led team

The connection was long suspected, but the direct link was elusive until now.

 An artistic illustration of a black hole in space.

New findings about the early universe - 50 million years after the Big Bang

Tel Aviv University astronomical breakthrough: The history and contents of the universe can be determined using radio telescopes on the moon.

 This artist’s impression shows a distant gas cloud that contains different chemical elements, illustrated here with schematic representations of various atoms.

The 'demon particle': Have scientists discovered the impossible? - study

Massless, invisible demon quasiparticles may help scientists better understand how superconductivity works.

 Atom (illustrative)

US researchers decipher secrets behind Benjamin Franklin’s paper money

Not only Poor Richard’s Almanack and Pennsylvania Gazette – American founding father Benjamin Franklin also worked to prevent the counterfeiting of Colonial bills.

 Prof. Khachatur Manukyan and his team employed cutting-edge spectroscopic and imaging instruments to get a closer look than ever at the inks, paper and fibers that made Benjamin Franklin’s bills distinctive and hard to replicate.

For first time, scientists use neutrinos to create 'ghostly' map of Milky Way

The new mapping method may allow astronomers to study previously obscured parts of the galaxy and of the universe.

 An artist’s composition of the Milky Way seen through a neutrino lens (blue).

Israeli astrophysicists may have solved the mystery of early massive galaxies

A new theoretical model made by Israeli astrophysicists reveals an excess of massive galaxies, in contrast to previously accepted theories.

 Artist's impression of the surroundings of a supermassive black hole (Illustrative).

How does Jupiter appear in different colors?

Magnetic oscillations produce the different colored bands and interact with the massive storms on Jupiter's surface.

 This photo of Jupiter, taken from the Hubble Space Telescope on June 27, 2019, features the Great Red Spot, a storm the size of Earth that has been raging for hundreds of years.

Scientists discover that galactic collisions cause quasars - study

Contrary to previous beliefs that the quasars are formed at the peak of galactic collision, researchers found that they are actually formed during the initial stages of collision.

 This artist’s impression shows how ULAS J1120+0641, a very distant quasar powered by a black hole with a mass two billion times that of the Sun, may have looked.

Detailed dark matter map provides further support for Einstein's theory of general relativity

Astronomers have created the most detailed map of dark matter distribution.

 One of the Unit Telescopes of ESO's Very Large Telescope (VLT) is producing artificial stars in the skies above the Atacama Desert, above the Milky Way.

What are mysterious cosmic objects shining brighter than the sun?

They produce way more energy than the sun and appear to break a physical boundary called the Eddington limit - now scientist found a possible explanation.

 Swift X-ray observations of galaxy NGC 5408 indicate its ultraluminous X-ray source undergoes periodic changes every 115.5 days. This cycle, astronomers suspect, is linked to the orbit of a donor star around a middleweight black hole, as shown in this artist's view.