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Physics

Displaying 127 Articles

Changes at the Helm of NASA: This Week in Space

The U.S. President reintroduces a previously rejected candidate to head the space agency, a first step toward a private space station, delays aboard China’s space station, and a debate over the expansion of the universe. This Week in Space

calendar 11.11.2025
reading-time 12 minutes

Nobel Prize in Physics 2025: Quantum Tunneling

The Nobel Prize in Physics will be awarded this year to three scientists for the discovery of macroscopic quantum tunneling—a breakthrough that laid the foundation for quantum encryption, advanced sensors, and the development of quantum computers.

calendar 8.10.2025
reading-time 8 minutes

NASA Sets Date for Crewed Lunar Mission: This Week in Space

NASA announced that it may send humans on a flight around the Moon as early as this coming February and named a new group of astronauts. Russian mice have returned from space, and new satellites are en route to study the Sun. This Week in Space.

calendar 29.9.2025
reading-time 7 minutes

The Birth of Planets: Capturing the First Moments

For the first time, researchers have documented the very beginning of planet formation around a young, distant star—a discovery that could shed new light on the early history of our own Solar System.

calendar 28.9.2025
reading-time 3 minutes

Why Do Shockwaves from Explosions Shatter Windows?

Why do explosions cause windows to shatter? And why does the glass sometimes blow inward into a building, while at other times it bursts outward?

calendar 18.6.2025
reading-time 3 minutes

The Chemist Who Saved a Life During the Holocaust

Fritz Strassmann, who took part in one of the most important scientific discoveries of the 20th century, risked his life to save a Jewish woman.

calendar 2.5.2025
reading-time 9 minutes

Charting the Course – Navigation Throughout History

From ancient Polynesian seafarers to nuclear submarines, from traders in camel caravans to astronauts – everyone must successfully navigate from one place to another. Throughout history, humanity has developed many sophisticated methods to find its way and refine the skill and art of navigation.

calendar 29.4.2025
reading-time 20 minutes

Dark Matter Bridge: This Week in Space

The veteran astronaut returns from space, changes and innovations aboard the Chinese space station, and how does one lose a spacecraft? This Week in Space

calendar 28.4.2025
reading-time 9 minutes

Real Signs of Life Beyond Earth?

Molecules identified in a distant planet’s atmosphere form on Earth only through biological activity.

calendar 20.4.2025
reading-time 6 minutes

Seeing the Universe in a New Light

A development led by an Israeli scientist has significantly improved the image quality of ground-based telescopes. “These are the sharpest images we’ll see this decade.”

calendar 10.4.2025
reading-time 5 minutes

Signals and Wonders – Prof. Yonina Eldar Receives the Israel Prize

Miniaturized medical devices, green technology, advanced radar systems, and new methods in artificial intelligence are just some of the technologies developed by Prof. Yonina Eldar of the Weizmann Institute of Science, recipient of the Israel Prize in Engineering Research and one of the world’s leading researchers in signal processing.

calendar 21.3.2025
reading-time 12 minutes

Strange Electrons and Plant Immunity: The 2025 Wolf Prizes

The prestigious Israeli prize this year will honor groundbreaking achievements in physics, antiviral research, chemical catalysis, discoveries in plant immunity, and architectural innovation in China.

calendar 15.3.2025
reading-time 12 minutes

Lots of Black Holes: This Week in Space

The risk of an asteroid impact has dropped, a private spacecraft is en route to the Moon, and titanium winds were discovered on an exoplanet. This Week in Space.

calendar 27.2.2025
reading-time 7 minutes

A Brief History Of Measurements

How long does a second last? Who determined the length of a meter and the weight of a Kilo? How were the units that we use to measure weight and distances determined?

calendar 24.2.2025
reading-time 6 minutes

The Refugee from Nazi Germany Who Unveiled the Echo of the Big Bang

Marking a year since the passing of physicist Arno Allan Penzias, who fled Nazi Germany as a child and co-discovered cosmic background radiation, a breakthrough that solidified the “Big Bang”.

calendar 23.1.2025
reading-time 9 minutes

Stephen Hawking – The Physicist Who Redefined Boundaries

Stephen Hawking, one of the world’s most renowned physicists, revolutionized our understanding of black holes and the universe, all while living with ALS and being confined to a wheelchair.

calendar 9.1.2025
reading-time 9 minutes

The Sun is Close, the Moon is Old: This Week in Space

A spacecraft sets a new record for a Sun flyby, NASA privatizes space communication, a new study reveals the Moon’s age, educational astronomy, and a unique ring. This Week in Space

calendar 2.1.2025
reading-time 10 minutes

The Science Behind Your Battery’s Charge Percentage

The charge percentage displayed on our devices’ batteries is a key indicator of their performance. But how is this figure determined?

calendar 19.12.2024
reading-time 5 minutes

Nobel Prizes 2024 – Celebrating Artificial Intelligence

This year’s Nobel Prizes underscore the transformative impact of the artificial intelligence revolution currently underway, with notable connections to the achievements recognized in physics and chemistry.

The Astronomer Who Brought the Cosmos Closer to Us

Marking 90 years since the birth of Carl Sagan, a trailblazer in planetary science and astrobiology, who became an iconic advocate for science in the media and the public sphere through popular books and a successful TV series.

calendar 8.12.2024
reading-time 16 minutes

Edwin Hubble: The Astronomer Who Expanded the Universe

Marking 135 years since the birth of Edwin Hubble, who revealed that the universe is much larger than the Milky Way, showed that it is steadily expanding, and laid the foundation for the Big Bang theory.

calendar 20.11.2024
reading-time 10 minutes

Uranus – New Insights into a Magnetic Mystery

For years, researchers have been puzzled by peculiar findings regarding Uranus’s magnetic field. A new study suggests these findings may have been atypical rather than representative of the planet’s usual characteristics.

calendar 14.11.2024
reading-time 4 minutes

Life Through The Looking Glass – Exploring Chirality in Nature

Amino acids exist in two mirror-image forms, but only one form serves as the foundation for the building blocks of life. A new study seeks to uncover how this preference emerged.

calendar 27.10.2024
reading-time 7 minutes

A Brief Wait for Europa: This Week in Space

Mission to Jupiter’s moon launched after a hurricane delay, a European spacecraft will study asteroid deflection, a new Mars sample return mission being developed and researchers investigate why the Moon cooled the COVID-19 pandemic. This Week in Space

calendar 15.10.2024
reading-time 7 minutes