In the season nine premiere of Monash’s podcast, learn how AI, deepfakes and humanoid robots are transforming human interaction and our perception of reality.
Do all big black holes in very massive galaxies emit radio waves? Scientists used the latest radio telescopes to find out.
Gravitational waves have revealed the demise of super-dense neutron stars spiralling into their black hole companions – the first time such strange and exotic star systems have been observed.
Researchers are proposing an Australian facility to supplement the data that will be supplied by future gravitational wave detectors, expanding our understanding of the universe.
President Joe Biden's message of hope is in stark contrast to his predecessor, and is key to healing a deeply divided US.
We often think of archaeology as Western science, but First Peoples have been interpreting their ancestral landscapes for generations.
How about uninterrupted internet three times faster than the NBN? Dr Susan Carland discovers that advances in space tech could see this happen within two years. Listen now.
In this episode of What Happens Next? podcast on space, we'll learn about what space can teach us about life on Earth, and how to make a better future for all of us.
Governments will rely on taxation to repair the fiscal damage wrought by the COVID-19 pandemic, and that will likely mean a GST rise, even if there are better, but politically unpalatable, alternatives.
Neutron star explosion causes a wobble in space-time.
It was a big day for physics: 14 September 2015. Scientists made the first confirmed detection of a gravitational wave – a ripple in space-time theorised by Albert Einstein a century ago, but until that moment unproven.
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