Greetings fellow scientists and interested others,
In the interest of furthering this instance's /c/science, am starting this post for people to interact with.
Who are you? What's your interest?
I'm a particle astrophysicist with a strong computational background. Overspecialization seems unwise, so I do a bit of everything inside the theory-experiment-compute space.
Decentralization has some advantages so let's make a good science community here at !science@lemm.ee .
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-02203-6
Astrophysicists describe what galaxy-wide gravitational waves could mean for our understanding of black holes and the history of the cosmos.
https://nanograv.org/news/15yrRelease
https://nanograv.org/news/15yrRelease
https://ipta4gw.org/news/2023/06/28/IPTA_statement_on_PTA_results.html
Detection of the radio emission from the astronomical object in 1930+ by Karl Jansky started an era of Radio Astronomy followed by many discoveries enriching our understanding of the Universe we live in. Similarly, we are on the verge of opening a new window (ultra-low frequencies) in Gravitational Wave Astronomy. We are watching the rolling history of scientific discoveries in slow motion.
https://ipta4gw.org/news/2023/06/28/IPTA_statement_on_PTA_results.html
Detection of the radio emission from the astronomical object in 1930+ by Karl Jansky started an era of Radio Astronomy followed by many discoveries enriching our understanding of the Universe we live in. Similarly, we are on the verge of opening a new window (ultra-low frequencies) in Gravitational Wave Astronomy. We are watching the rolling history of scientific discoveries in slow motion.
https://arstechnica.com/science/2023/06/nanograv-picks-up-signal-of-cosmic-choir-of-supermassive-black-holes/
Exotic stars called millisecond pulsars serve as celestial metronomes.
@cuantar
@lemm.ee