* . *
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Monday, July 7, 2025
Earth-News
  • Home
  • Business
  • Entertainment
    Magicians and Battlebots light up Las Vegas entertainment scene – KSNV

    Magicians and Battlebots Take Las Vegas Entertainment by Storm

    Max-Matching Entertainments & Longhua District form partnership for new entertainment complex – Blooloop

    Max-Matching Entertainments and Longhua District Unite to Launch Thrilling New Entertainment Complex

    Kennedy Publishing, MGA Entertainment Launch Yummiland Magazine – License Global

    Kennedy Publishing, MGA Entertainment Launch Yummiland Magazine – License Global

    MAY HER SOUL REST IN PEACE 🙏 Veteran entertainment columnist and talent manager Lolit Solis has passed away. She was 78 years old. https://tinyurl.com/6kumarkx | LatestChika.com – Facebook

    Beloved Entertainment Icon Lolit Solis Passes Away at 78 – A Life Remembered with Love and Respect 🙏

    Neil Young Plays Rare Full-Band ‘Ambulance Blues’ With The Chrome Hearts – Yahoo

    Neil Young Stuns Fans with Rare Full-Band Performance of ‘Ambulance Blues’ Alongside The Chrome Hearts

    BTS Announce Their Big Return and Yes, They Already Have Some Major Plans in the Works – Yahoo

    BTS Announce Their Big Return and Yes, They Already Have Some Major Plans in the Works – Yahoo

  • General
  • Health
  • News

    Cracking the Code: Why China’s Economic Challenges Aren’t Shaking Markets, Unlike America’s” – Bloomberg

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Technology
    Column: Teach kupuna new technology skills – Honolulu Star-Advertiser

    Empowering Kupuna: Unlocking New Technology Skills for a Connected Future

    EIFO invests $5 million in D3, the Ukraine-focused defence technology venture fund – sUAS News

    EIFO Pledges $5 Million to Supercharge Ukraine-Focused Defense Technology Fund

    New Technology for Water Efficiency and Working with Mexico on Screwworm – AG INFORMATION NETWORK OF THE WEST

    Revolutionary Water Efficiency Technology and Cross-Border Collaboration to Defeat Screwworm

    Environmental cognitive distance, R&D capability distance, and supply chain green technology innovation – Nature

    Bridging Gaps: How Environmental and R&D Differences Drive Green Technology Innovation in Supply Chains

    LG Innotek CEO Moon Hyuksoo: “Our Next-gen Substrate Technology Will Change the Industry Paradigm” – TechPowerUp

    LG Innotek CEO Moon Hyuksoo: “Our Next-Gen Substrate Technology Will Revolutionize the Industry” Revolutionizing the Future: LG Innotek’s CEO Unveils Game-Changing Next-Gen Substrate Technology

    Inspira Technologies Secures Landmark $22.5M Deal: Major Revenue Breakthrough After FDA Clearance – Stock Titan

    Inspira Technologies Secures Landmark $22.5M Deal: Major Revenue Breakthrough After FDA Clearance – Stock Titan

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Entertainment
    Magicians and Battlebots light up Las Vegas entertainment scene – KSNV

    Magicians and Battlebots Take Las Vegas Entertainment by Storm

    Max-Matching Entertainments & Longhua District form partnership for new entertainment complex – Blooloop

    Max-Matching Entertainments and Longhua District Unite to Launch Thrilling New Entertainment Complex

    Kennedy Publishing, MGA Entertainment Launch Yummiland Magazine – License Global

    Kennedy Publishing, MGA Entertainment Launch Yummiland Magazine – License Global

    MAY HER SOUL REST IN PEACE 🙏 Veteran entertainment columnist and talent manager Lolit Solis has passed away. She was 78 years old. https://tinyurl.com/6kumarkx | LatestChika.com – Facebook

    Beloved Entertainment Icon Lolit Solis Passes Away at 78 – A Life Remembered with Love and Respect 🙏

    Neil Young Plays Rare Full-Band ‘Ambulance Blues’ With The Chrome Hearts – Yahoo

    Neil Young Stuns Fans with Rare Full-Band Performance of ‘Ambulance Blues’ Alongside The Chrome Hearts

    BTS Announce Their Big Return and Yes, They Already Have Some Major Plans in the Works – Yahoo

    BTS Announce Their Big Return and Yes, They Already Have Some Major Plans in the Works – Yahoo

  • General
  • Health
  • News

    Cracking the Code: Why China’s Economic Challenges Aren’t Shaking Markets, Unlike America’s” – Bloomberg

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Technology
    Column: Teach kupuna new technology skills – Honolulu Star-Advertiser

    Empowering Kupuna: Unlocking New Technology Skills for a Connected Future

    EIFO invests $5 million in D3, the Ukraine-focused defence technology venture fund – sUAS News

    EIFO Pledges $5 Million to Supercharge Ukraine-Focused Defense Technology Fund

    New Technology for Water Efficiency and Working with Mexico on Screwworm – AG INFORMATION NETWORK OF THE WEST

    Revolutionary Water Efficiency Technology and Cross-Border Collaboration to Defeat Screwworm

    Environmental cognitive distance, R&D capability distance, and supply chain green technology innovation – Nature

    Bridging Gaps: How Environmental and R&D Differences Drive Green Technology Innovation in Supply Chains

    LG Innotek CEO Moon Hyuksoo: “Our Next-gen Substrate Technology Will Change the Industry Paradigm” – TechPowerUp

    LG Innotek CEO Moon Hyuksoo: “Our Next-Gen Substrate Technology Will Revolutionize the Industry” Revolutionizing the Future: LG Innotek’s CEO Unveils Game-Changing Next-Gen Substrate Technology

    Inspira Technologies Secures Landmark $22.5M Deal: Major Revenue Breakthrough After FDA Clearance – Stock Titan

    Inspira Technologies Secures Landmark $22.5M Deal: Major Revenue Breakthrough After FDA Clearance – Stock Titan

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
No Result
View All Result
Earth-News
No Result
View All Result
Home Science

Extra-Long Blasts Challenge Our Theories of Cosmic Cataclysms

December 12, 2023
in Science
Extra-Long Blasts Challenge Our Theories of Cosmic Cataclysms
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Astronomers thought they had solved the mystery of gamma-ray bursts. A few recent events suggest otherwise.

An illustration of two neutron stars spiraling in toward one another, about to collide. A jet of light erupts from the merger, which is surrounded by a glittering ring of dust.

When dead stars collide, they launch a blast of gamma rays into space — and in the glittering debris surrounding the smashup, elements such as gold and platinum are forged.

National Science Foundation/LIGO/Sonoma State University/A. Simonnet, edited by MIT News

Introduction

On December 11, 2021, a beam of gamma rays — the most energetic form of light — slammed into NASA’s Swift satellite. Within 120 seconds, the satellite had swiveled toward the blast and spotted the glowing embers of a cosmic catastrophe. Ten minutes later, alerts went out to astronomers around the world.

Among them was Jillian Rastinejad, a graduate student at Northwestern University. To Rastinejad and her collaborators, this gamma-ray burst looked oddly similar to an unusual burst from 2006. Rastinejad called up the Gemini Observatory in Hawai‘i and enlisted researchers there to stare deeply at the patch of sky where the burst had come from. A few days later, when clouds rolled in, a researcher at the MMT Observatory in Arizona took over, doing her best to keep the telescope trained on the fading spot of light a billion light-years away.

It was no small feat given that the weather was turning there too, Rastinejad said. “She found a hole in the clouds for us around 4 a.m. every day.”

By the time the chain of observations had wrapped up a week or so later, Rastinejad and her colleagues had a pretty good idea of what had fired those gamma rays across the universe. As they’d watched, the burst’s aftermath had turned redder and redder — an unmistakable sign that in the debris, heavy atoms like gold and platinum were being forged. The main source of such cosmic alchemy is collisions involving neutron stars, the unimaginably dense cores of dead suns.

The only problem was that such a conclusion seemed impossible. When neutron stars merge, astrophysicists suspect, it’s all over in a fraction of a second. But Swift had recorded a gamma-ray bombardment lasting a relatively interminable 51 seconds — normally the signature of a very different type of cosmic drama.

Since then, astronomers have identified more events like this. The most recent occurred in March, when the second-brightest gamma-ray burst ever detected lasted for 35 seconds. Again, astronomers observed the ruddy aftermath of a neutron star collision. They also recruited the James Webb Space Telescope to study the bizarre burst and spotted signs of the heavy element tellurium in the settling dust.

Together, the string of observations brings a new mystery to an area of astronomy that most researchers had considered settled: What causes these supposedly quick, violent events to blast out gamma rays for so long? It’s a puzzle astrophysicists will have to solve if they want to achieve the more ambitious goal of understanding the origins of all the different elements in the universe, many of which are born from these violent outbursts.

“I’ve been really excited to see this,” said Daniel Kasen, an astrophysicist at the University of California, Berkeley who specializes in cosmic explosions. “It’s posed a real puzzle.”

Cold War, Brilliant Explosions

Today, Swift catches a gamma-ray burst every few days. But the blasts were unknown until the height of the Cold War, when they appeared out of nowhere. In the 1960s, the U.S. Air Force launched the Vela satellites to make sure the Soviet Union was abiding by a nuclear weapon test ban. If the Soviets detonated a nuclear bomb in space, the resulting flash of gamma rays — energetic waves of light as short as the nucleus of an atom — would be impossible to hide.

The satellites didn’t detect any Soviet violations. But between 1969 and 1972, they did pick up 16 mysterious flashes of gamma rays that researchers at Los Alamos National Laboratory determined to be of “cosmic origin.”

In the following decades, NASA took up the investigation. The space agency launched a dedicated burst-hunting satellite in 1991, and over the next nine years, it detected nearly 3,000 gamma-ray bursts. The events came in two varieties: short and long. Most short bursts lasted less than a second, while many long bursts went on for a minute or longer (the dividing line between the two flavors comes at around two seconds).

Whatever was causing these bursts seemed catastrophic; in less than half the duration of a pop song, they emitted about as much energy as our sun produces over billions of years. What could possibly blaze so brightly? Astrophysicists initially weren’t sure, but the tremendous energies involved pointed to world-ending cataclysms. And the two durations hinted at two types of catastrophes, a faster one lasting around a second and a (somewhat) slower one unfolding over a minute.

Astronomers found the origin of the slower bursts first. In the late 1990s, when researchers got better at pinpointing the direction a burst came from, they started to catch afterglows that hinted at cosmic explosions. Then, in 2003, astronomers watching a nearby afterglow saw the brilliant fireworks of a supernova just days after a long gamma-ray burst: The burst had signaled the first stage in the death of a giant star.

A technician in a clean suit fiddles with a lead plate the size of a dinner table. The plate is covered in patterns, made from squares, that collectively resemble a QR code.

Gamma rays are so energetic that they punch straight through standard optical materials. The Swift satellite stops gamma rays with this patterned lead plate and uses the “shadows” they cast on a sensor to estimate their location in the sky.

NASA

Introduction

Understanding the faster cataclysm would take another decade and sharper tools. The breakthrough instrument proved to be NASA’s Swift satellite. Launched in 2004, Swift featured a meter-long patterned lead plate that could snare gamma rays from a wide swath of the sky. Crucially, it also possessed the unique ability to swiftly swivel a pair of onboard telescopes in the direction of any astronomical outbursts. (According to lore among Swift scientists, this point-and-shoot technology was partially developed for another Cold War defense project: Ronald Reagan’s Strategic Defense Initiative — informally known as “Star Wars” — which aimed to shoot down nuclear missiles mid-flight.)

With Swift, astronomers could now get eyes on a burst within two minutes — quickly enough to catch the afterglows of short gamma-ray bursts for the first time. While watching the initial flash fade, astronomers also saw signs of an ensuing explosion, one that grew redder over time. Astrophysicists soon calculated that this redness was to be expected after a merger involving a neutron star (which could be a smashup between two neutron stars or between a neutron star and a black hole). Such a collision would expel debris that blocked shorter, bluer wavelengths of light. Matching those explosions, dubbed kilonovas, with the brief gamma-ray flashes that preceded them provided strong circumstantial evidence that neutron star mergers were the short catastrophe.

Direct evidence came on August 17, 2017. Two nearby neutron stars collided and shook the fabric of space-time, producing gravitational waves that the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) could detect. By reading the information coded in those ripples, scientists would later calculate the masses of the colliding objects and learn that they were neutron stars. Just after the gravitational waves arrived, the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope picked up a two-second-long gamma-ray burst. And in the following days, astronomers saw the telltale reddening of a kilonova in the same spot as the gamma-ray burst. The three back-to-back observations left little room for doubt: Short bursts could come from neutron star mergers.

“That cemented everything,” said Brian Metzger, an astrophysicist at Columbia University and one of the theorists who first predicted what the kilonova after a merger would look like. “[We thought] ‘OK, this picture really makes sense.’”

That picture is now starting to fracture.

A Third-Act Twist

First came Rastinejad’s 51-second burst in late 2021. It looked a lot like a lengthy nearby burst from 2006 that, puzzlingly, appeared to lack a supernova. But with modern instruments and a deeper understanding of what to look for, Rastinejad and colleagues were able to see what astronomers in 2006 had not: The 2021 burst was followed by a dim red kilonova.

That observation spurred Andrew Levan of Radboud University to revisit a mysterious 64-second burst he’d been puzzling over since 2019. The burst had gone off in the heart of an ancient galaxy where star births and deaths (in the form of supernovas) had ceased eons ago. In June, Levan and his collaborators argued that the most likely explanation for their long burst was that two stellar corpses — at least one of which was probably a neutron star — had found each other and merged.

NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, about to be enclosed in a rocket faring. Four technicians in clean suits are working on the rocket.

NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, now in low Earth orbit, helps scientists study the cosmic events that produce gamma rays, the most energetic form of light in the cosmos.

NASA/Jim Grossmann

Introduction

And now, the James Webb Space Telescope has supplied the clearest view yet of what comes after an anomalous burst. When the 35-second burst reached Earth on March 7, Swift’s gamma-ray-sensing lead plate was facing in a different direction. The energetic rays were detected mainly by Fermi, which pegged it as the second-brightest gamma-ray burst of all time (following a record-setting event in 2022).

In lieu of Swift, astronomers used an interplanetary fleet of spacecraft (including probes at Mars and Mercury) to pinpoint the burst’s position. In the days afterward, when telescopes on the ground again saw the signature reddening of a kilonova, Levan quickly fired off an emergency request for an almost real-time JWST observation of the event. “Luckily for us, they said yes,” Levan said. “That allowed us to get those observations about a month after the initial burst.”

JWST collected a bonanza of data from the billowing debris field. Optical telescopes can’t see deeply into the thick kilonova cloud for precisely the reason the event captivates astrophysicists: It spews out giant, light-blocking atoms through an arcane chain of events known as the r-process.

Stars typically fuse hydrogen atoms into helium and then later fuse lighter atoms into somewhat heavier atoms like oxygen and carbon. The r-process is one of the only ways to leap straight to the heaviest naturally occurring elements. That’s because a neutron star collision creates a dense maelstrom of neutrons. In the chaos, neutrons repeatedly worm their way into atomic cores, forming highly unstable and radioactive atoms. As neutrons in these atoms decay, they transmute into protons. If you end up with 78 protons, that’s an atom of platinum. If you get 79 protons, that’s gold.

The bulky atoms forged by a neutron star dust-up block visible light and shine mostly in infrared light. That’s why JWST — an infrared telescope — was so well suited to peering into a kilonova cloud. “We’ve never observed a kilonova with JWST before,” Metzger said. “It’s the perfect instrument.”

In the debris, JWST spotted tellurium atoms (52 protons), which confirms that neutron star mergers can forge the rather heavy elements toward the end of the fifth row of the periodic table. “It’s a much heavier element than ones we’ve seen before,” Levan said.

But at the same time, the JWST observation adds to the growing realization that, regardless of how unlikely it once seemed, mergers involving neutron stars can produce long gamma-ray bursts. The question now is: How?

Dense Objects, Long Bursts

Supernovas shoot out long gamma-ray bursts because stellar explosions are relatively slow and messy. A giant star’s death starts with its center collapsing into a black hole. After that happens, a substantial amount of the external star stuff — perhaps adding up to the mass of several suns — spirals into the black hole, launching powerful jets of particles that fire gamma rays into the void for up to several minutes.

Neutron star mergers, by contrast, are supposed to be over in a flash. A neutron star packs the mass of a sun or so into a smooth, tiny sphere just a few miles across. When two of those dense orbs collide — or when one smacks into a black hole — the matter collapses into a black hole. During that final spasm, far less leftover matter gets thrown into orbit than in the case of stellar collapse. As the black hole scarfs down this light snack, which might weigh 10 times less than the sun, it briefly powers jets (and a gamma-ray burst) lasting tenths of a second.

Andrew Levan wearing a plaid shirt and standing onstage, giving a public lecture.

Andrew Levan and his colleagues want to figure out which cosmic events forge each naturally occurring element in the periodic table. To do that, they need to keep a detailed account of cataclysms such as neutron star mergers.

University of Warwick

Introduction

The new observations from Levan, Rastinejad and others clash with this quick and clean image of neutron star mergers. “It doesn’t make any sense to have a 10-second burst from a system that lives only a fraction of a second,” said Ore Gottlieb, a computational astrophysicist at the Flatiron Institute who was not involved with the observations.

One possibility is that something larger and messier than neutron stars is sending out these enduring blasts. In particular, their longer duration would more naturally fit with a merger between a white dwarf — a larger kind of stellar corpse left behind when a small star runs out of fuel — and a black hole or neutron star. That scenario results in more matter surrounding a black hole. But it’s unclear if collisions involving white dwarfs would produce the right sorts of gamma-ray bursts, or even kilonovas. “The whole phenomenon has been much less studied,” said Kasen of Berkeley. “We’re working on it right now.”

Another option is that the long gamma-ray bursts don’t come from feasting newborn black holes at all. Instead, if you smash together two tiny neutron stars and the resulting blob spins fast enough, it might resist collapsing into a black hole for a few minutes. The short-lived object would be a highly magnetized neutron star — a “magnetar” — that would emit a longer gamma-ray burst as its twirling slowed. Metzger helped flesh out this scenario, but even he considers it a radical notion. “I’m still just sort of rightfully skeptical of it,” he said.

The most conservative possibility, Metzger said, is that mergers involving neutron stars are just messier than astrophysicists thought. Over the summer, detailed simulations from a collaboration led by Gottlieb suggested that this might often be the case. In particular, when a light neutron star meets up with a sufficiently heavy spinning black hole, the neutron star spirals in and the black hole shreds it over hundreds of orbits, leaving a heavier disk of material that the black hole needs tens of seconds to consume. While simulating collisions between neutron stars and black holes, Gottlieb, Metzger and collaborators found that heavier disks driving longer gamma-ray bursts were quite common.

In fact, in an ironic twist, their simulations didn’t produce the often-observed short bursts as readily as they did long bursts, raising questions about what exactly powers the short bursts.

“We don’t [fully] understand these things,” Gottlieb said. “I think this is probably the biggest problem now.”

Filling in the Gaps

To figure out what really goes down when dead stars collide, astronomers will need to redouble their efforts to build a detailed catalog of gamma-ray bursts, since what they assumed to be a batch of mainly supernova-driven explosions now appears to be mixed up with some unknown number of neutron star mergers. That will require hunting for kilonovas — the signature of collisions — after both long bursts and short ones. If the distinction between long and short persists, it could be a sign that there’s more than one way to cook up a kilonova.

“We’re learning that anytime there’s an event that’s relatively close by, we should go for it,” Rastinejad said.

LIGO will also play a critical role. The observatory was offline for upgrades during these recent oddball bursts, but it’s currently in the middle of its fourth run listening for the distant collisions. If LIGO can pick up gravitational waves coming from a long gamma-ray burst, scientists will know whether neutron stars or black holes were involved. This will also allow them to rule out white dwarfs, which don’t make gravitational waves detectable by LIGO. Detailed wiggles in waves at future observatories might even offer hints about whether the immediate product was a magnetar or a black hole.

“[Gravitational waves] will be really the only definitive way forward on this question,” Metzger said.

By sensing the gravitational rumbles of neutron star mergers and observing gamma-ray bursts and kilonovas, astrophysicists might eventually accomplish their long-term goal of fully accounting for the origin of every substance in the universe — from hydrogen to platinum to plutonium. To do that, they need to know what types of mergers happen, how frequent each type is, which elements each type produces and in what quantities, and what role other events like supernovas play. It’s a daunting undertaking that’s only just beginning.

“There’s still a core goal of working out the astrophysical sites where every single element in the periodic table is formed,” Levan said. “There are still blanks, and so we think this is starting to fill in several of those important blanks.”

Editor’s note: The Flatiron Institute is funded by the Simons Foundation, which also funds this editorially independent magazine. Neither the Flatiron Institute nor the Simons Foundation has any influence over our coverage. More information available here.

>>> Read full article>>>
Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source : Quanta Magazine – https://www.quantamagazine.org/extra-long-blasts-challenge-our-theories-of-cosmic-cataclysms-20231211/

Tags: BlastsExtra-Longscience
Previous Post

Florida has a python problem—are bounty hunters the solution?

Next Post

Trump hits 53rd century of season in Wilson whitewash, Allen crashes out in opener

Intl forum on ecology opens with over 1,000 domestic and foreign guests – China Daily

Intl forum on ecology opens with over 1,000 domestic and foreign guests – China Daily

July 7, 2025
How New DNA Science Could Help More Families of the Missing – The New York Times

How New DNA Science Could Help More Families of the Missing – The New York Times

July 7, 2025
Letter | Dismissing science comes at a cost – thegazette.com

The High Cost of Ignoring Science

July 7, 2025
Hyatt Pushes Lifestyle Brands Into Asia Pacific Region – Luxury Travel Advisor

Hyatt Pushes Lifestyle Brands Into Asia Pacific Region – Luxury Travel Advisor

July 7, 2025
Kylian Mbappé’s stunning bicycle kick propels Real Madrid to win over Borussia Dortmund, and Club World Cup semifinals – CNN

Kylian Mbappé’s Spectacular Bicycle Kick Secures Real Madrid’s Victory Over Borussia Dortmund and Spot in Club World Cup Semifinals

July 7, 2025
Inside Iran’s war economy – The Economist

Inside the Secret Power Struggles Fueling Iran’s War Economy

July 7, 2025

Santa Cruz Shakespeare Launches Exciting New Monday Night Series

July 7, 2025
When it comes to vaccines, how are pediatricians restoring trust? – NPR

How Pediatricians Are Rebuilding Trust in Vaccines for Children

July 7, 2025
The battle to sway voters over Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ begins – CNN

The battle to sway voters over Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ begins – CNN

July 7, 2025
Column: Teach kupuna new technology skills – Honolulu Star-Advertiser

Empowering Kupuna: Unlocking New Technology Skills for a Connected Future

July 6, 2025

Categories

Archives

July 2025
MTWTFSS
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031 
« Jun    
Earth-News.info

The Earth News is an independent English-language daily published Website from all around the World News

Browse by Category

  • Business (20,132)
  • Ecology (708)
  • Economy (733)
  • Entertainment (21,621)
  • General (15,750)
  • Health (9,771)
  • Lifestyle (738)
  • News (22,149)
  • People (734)
  • Politics (742)
  • Science (15,950)
  • Sports (21,232)
  • Technology (15,717)
  • World (714)

Recent News

Intl forum on ecology opens with over 1,000 domestic and foreign guests – China Daily

Intl forum on ecology opens with over 1,000 domestic and foreign guests – China Daily

July 7, 2025
How New DNA Science Could Help More Families of the Missing – The New York Times

How New DNA Science Could Help More Families of the Missing – The New York Times

July 7, 2025
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2023 earth-news.info

No Result
View All Result

© 2023 earth-news.info

No Result
View All Result

© 2023 earth-news.info

Go to mobile version