Exotic Four-Quark Particle Spotted at Large Hadron Collider

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August 11, 2021

Particle Physics

Exotic Four-Quark Particle Spotted at Large Hadron Collider

The rare tetraquark is one of dozens of non-elementary particles discovered at the accelerator, and could help test theories about the strong nuclear force

By Davide Castelvecchi,Nature magazine

Climate Change

How Much Worse Will Thawing Arctic Permafrost Make Climate Change?

Global warming is setting free carbon from life buried long ago in the Arctic's frozen soils, but its impact on the climate crisis is unclear

By Jordan Wilkerson

Natural Disasters

Could the Infrastructure Bill Make Wildfires Worse?

The legislation provides billions of dollars for thinning forests in ways that some scientists think are wrongheaded

By Adam Aton,E&E News

Climate Change

Let's Start Naming Climate-Related Disasters for Polluters and Their Enablers

The Marathon Oil Megadrought has a nice ring to it, don't you think?

By Drew Shindell

Quantum Computing

How Quantum Computing Could Remake Chemistry

It will bring molecular modeling to a new level of accuracy, reducing researchers' reliance on serendipity

By Jeannette M. Garcia

Climate Change

Walling Off One Coastal Area Can Flood Another

Seawalls and levees may simply shift rising water elsewhere—often into disadvantaged communities

By Robin Meadows

Memory

Digital Heads Help Eyewitnesses Identify Suspects

Witnesses were more accurate when they interacted with 3-D models than when they looked at still photographs. And the models were less expensive than an in-person lineup

By Sophie Bushwick

Space Exploration

The Ethics of Sending Humans to Mars

We need to avoid the mistakes European countries made during the age of colonization

By Nicholas Dirks

Renewable Energy

Wave Power Charges Ahead with Static Electricity Generators

An ocean-powered buoy brings technology closer to the dream of obtaining energy from the sea

By Maddie Bender

Microbiology

Inside Millions of Invisible Droplets, Potential Superbug Killers Grow

New research has created microscopic antibiotic factories in droplets that measure a trillionth of liter in volume.

By Sarah Vitak | 06:34

Climate Change

Here's How Climate Change Will Stress Your Homeland

Hotter Asia, drier Alps, stormier U.S., saltier island nations

By Sara Schonhardt,E&E News
FROM THE STORE

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FROM THE ARCHIVE

Unexplained Results Intrigue Physicists at World's Largest Particle Collider

Muons and electrons might not experience the same fundamental interactions, contrary to Standard Model predictions

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