What is happening in Israel? In the USA president Trump has said that the USA will be celebrate Sabbath once and Uganda is sending troops to combat the troops of Iran.
This blog discusses the historical reliability of the Bible, the creation/evolution debate and apologetics in general.
What is happening in Israel? In the USA president Trump has said that the USA will be celebrate Sabbath once and Uganda is sending troops to combat the troops of Iran.
Image courtesy of ESA/Euclid/Euclid Consortium/NASA, image processing by M. Schirmer (MPIA, Heidelberg)
Joel Kontinen
In 1773, British scientist Henry Cavendish set up a simple experiment aimed at uncovering the nature of electromagnetism. It involved measuring the electric potential at the surface of two nested metal shells to discern how charged particles affect each other within them.
Now, Peter Graham at Stanford University in California and
his colleagues say that reviving Cavendish’s experiment could help reveal an
even more mysterious feature of our cosmos – the particles that make up dark
matter. Dark matter makes
up more of our universe than ordinary matter.
A
centuries-old experiment could help accelerate the search for new and exotic
particles, including those that make up dark matter.
Source:
Karmela Padavic-Callaghan 2026 300-year-old experiment could become world's best dark matter detector | New Scientist 4 May
Image courtesy of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
Joel Kontinen
How many
exoplanets are there? A new survey put the number at over 10,000. But how many of them harbour life is difficult
question, as only the creator can create life-giving minerals and other elements to a planet.
Since
the first alien planet was spotted in
1995, the number of
exoplanet discoveries has slowly risen in line with new technologies, such as
the James Webb Space Telescope, which are better equipped to spot
these weird alien worlds. In September 2025, astronomers
revealed that the number of confirmed exoplanets had surpassed 6,000, and nearly 300 have been added to
the list since then, according to NASA.
But in a
new study uploaded April 20 to the preprint server arXiv, researchers report that they've uncovered an
astonishing 11,554 exoplanet candidates at once. If all of them can be
confirmed, it would bring the total number of exoplanets to nearly 18,000,
which is almost triple the current total.
Using a
machine learning algorithm, the team analyzed the light curves of precisely
83,717,159 stars captured by NASA's
Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), a car-sized space telescope that
has been circling Earth since 2018. By looking for subtle dips in the stars'
brightness, astronomers can tell when a planet has likely passed in front of,
or transited, its home star.
This
revealed more than 11,000 exoplanet candidates, of which 10,052 had never been
seen before. Around 87% of the candidates were spotted transiting twice or
more, allowing the researchers to calculate the planets' orbital periods, which
range from 0.5 to 27 days, according to StellarCatalog.com.
Using one
of the 21-foot (6.5 meters) Magellan telescopes in Chile's Atacama Desert, the
team identified a "hot Jupiter" exoplanet, dubbed TIC 183374187 b, that orbits a star around 3,950
light-years from Earth — right where the algorithm predicted.
TESS was
specifically designed to detect transiting objects, and it has already
discovered 882 confirmed exoplanets — roughly 14% of the current total — so it
may seem strange that no one has seen most of the new candidates until now.
Most
researchers prioritize analyzing the light curves of the brightest stars in the
TESS dataset, because transit events for these stars are much more noticeable
and easier to confirm. But there are many more faint stars that end up being
captured in the telescope's wide-field photos.
Source:
Harry Baker 2026 Scientists identify 10,000 'impossible' exoplanet candidates, potentially tripling the number of known alien worlds | Live Science 2 May
Image courtesy of NAOJ/Ko Arimatsu.
Joel Kontinen
A tiny The
object, located in the Kuiper Belt of distant frozen bodies at the edge of the
solar system, is formally named (612533) 2002 XV93, after the date of its
discovery nearly a quarter of a century ago. It has a diameter of less than 500
kilometres.
he object
also belongs to a class of objects known as plutinos because they are in the
same stable orbit as Pluto, completing three revolutions around the sun for
every two made by Neptune.
It seems
that this object, though it is small, has an atmosphere,
On 10
January 2024, 2002 XV93 passed in front of a distant star, causing what is
called an occultation. Ko Arimatsu at Kyoto University and his colleagues
observed this event from three locations in Japan.
The team
saw the star gradually fade and recover over about 1.5 seconds near the edge of
the shadow.
“These
gradual changes are best explained if the star’s light was bent by a very thin
atmosphere around 2002 XV93,” says Arimatsu.
The team
estimates a surface pressure of about 100 to 200 nanobars, roughly 5 million to
10 million times thinner than Earth’s atmosphere and about 50 to 100 times
thinner than Pluto’s tenuous atmosphere.
“You could
not breathe it, feel wind from it, or see anything like Earth’s sky,” says
Arimatsu. “But it is not negligible scientifically because even such a thin
atmosphere can measurably bend starlight, and it tells us that volatile gases
are present or being supplied around a very small icy body.”
The team
couldn’t determine the composition of the atmosphere directly from the
data. Arimatsu suggests methane, nitrogen and carbon monoxide are the most
plausible candidates because they are among the few substances volatile enough
to become gases at the very low temperatures of the outer solar system.
“This
discovery challenges our conventional view of small worlds in the outer solar system,” says Arimatsu. “Until now, clearly detectable atmospheres in the solar
system were essentially associated with planets, dwarf planets and some
large satellites. 2002 XV93 appears to be one of the smallest solar system
bodies yet with a clearly detected atmosphere.”
Souurse:
James Woodford 2026 Tiny frozen world unexpectedly appears to have an atmosphere | New Scientist 4 May
Image courtesy of Zeresenay Alemseged
Joel Kontinen
Since the
early 20th century, people’s skulls have got rounder and their jaws have got
wider, probably because of changes in health, diet and environment.
In the past
100 years, the heads of Japanese people have got rounder, with narrower
cheekbones, wider upper jaws and slimmer, more prominent noses.
While
changes outside Japan may vary, the overall trend is probably common across the
globe, says Shiori Usui at the National Research Institute of
Police Science in Chiba, Japan.
Humans are
the only primate that has a chin. This is not according to Darwinian evolution but
according to creation.
Source:
Christa Lesté-Lasserre 2026
Image courtesy of NASA, ESA, IPAC/Caltech, STScI, Arizona State University.
Joel Kontinen
Some
scientists may be in for a surprise. A recent survey has said that the universe in surprising
lumpy.
Assumptions
that physicists have made about the universe for over a century may be about to be
overturned. Evidence is emerging that it is far lumpier than we had thought – a
finding that could solve some of today’s most puzzling cosmological mysteries.
When
modelling the universe, cosmologists can’t describe every single galaxy, so
they make simplifications. Typically, they assume that the universe on the
largest scales is homogeneous and isotropic, meaning that it is roughly the
same no matter where you look.
Our universe may look surprising lumpy, but that is the way God made it, For example, our solar system is very different
from other solar systems.
Matt von Hippel 2026 100-year-old assumption about the universe may soon be overturned | New Scientist 27 April
Image courtesy of Erwin Niemand/Shutterstock
Joel Kontinen
Some animals
use metals to strengthen their body parts- just like the teeth in Komodo dragons
(Varanus komodoensis), for instance, and the scorpions also use metals such as iron,
zinc and manganese, and also copper, nickel, silicon, chlorine, titanium and
bromine.
Sam Campbell at the University of
Queensland, Australia, and his colleagues examined the claws and stingers of 18
species of scorpion from around the world to determine the extent and
composition of their metal reinforcements.
The metals
are largely found within the tips of the stingers and along the cutting edge of
the claws, as well as in their mouth and teeth and in their tarsal claws,
making their weapons “like a steel-toe-capped boot”, Campbell says. The rest of
the animal’s exoskeleton is still hard, but much softer in comparison.
Scorpions
all fluoresce light green or blue under ultraviolet light. But metal-enriched
parts of the body don’t glow when exposed to UV, the team found.
It isn’t
yet known how the scorpions obtain the metals that they incorporate into their
exoskeletons, though their prey is the most likely source.
The team
also found that different scorpion species had more metal in different parts of
their bodies, and this is related to their behaviour. “What we identified was
that when zinc was high in the claws, it would be low in the stinger, and vice
versa,” says Campbell. “Because scorpions use their weapons so
differently, it is possible that metal enrichment has adapted to provide
beneficial biomechanical properties in the weapons where it is most needed by
the scorpion.”
Metal
enrichment in animal tissues appears to be more common than once thought,
says Aaron LeBlanc at King’s College London. “A
growing number of studies are pointing this out in vertebrate teeth as well,”
he says. “The next logical step after discovering these features is to try to
understand how they have evolved across major lineages, and this study is a
pioneering one for that reason.”
Source:
James Woodford 2026 Scorpions reinforce their claws and stingers with metals | New Scientist29 April
A Romanesco broccoli. Image courtesy of Jon Sullivan. Joel Kontinen It is practically impossible to believe that some of the phenomen...