All posts tagged: Theory

Gravastar theory offers alternative to black holes

Gravastar theory offers alternative to black holes

Two theoretical physicists, Daniel Jampolski and Professor Luciano Rezzolla of Goethe University Frankfurt, have developed a new mathematical model that could explain how a gravastar forms during the collapse of a massive star. Their work addresses a long-standing question in astrophysics and presents a possible alternative to the conventional black hole scenario. The research focuses on what happens when a giant star exhausts its nuclear fuel and can no longer resist its own gravity. Under standard theory, the star collapses into a black hole, creating a singularity where matter is compressed into an infinitely small point. However, the new study suggests that a different outcome may be possible under certain extreme conditions. According to the model, the collapse of a dying star could trigger the birth of a miniature expanding Universe inside the collapsing object. This internal expansion, powered by dark energy, could balance the inward pull of gravity and prevent the formation of a black hole. The result would be a stable gravastar, an ultra-compact object that mimics many properties of a black hole …

Steven Spielberg bluntly addresses theory that Disclosure Day is Close Encounters sequel

Steven Spielberg bluntly addresses theory that Disclosure Day is Close Encounters sequel

Get the latest entertainment news, reviews and star-studded interviews with our Independent Culture email Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Steven Spielberg’s new sci-fi movie Disclosure Day may mark his return to the worlds of UFOs and space aliens — but fans hoping for the film to be linked to his 1977 classic Close Encounters of the Third Kind will be disappointed. The Oscar-winning director, 79, is back with his first film in four years, in which a TV meteorologist (Emily Blunt) and a cybersecurity expert (Josh O’Connor) uncover a widespread conspiracy around the existence of aliens. Ahead of its release, many Spielberg fans became convinced that the film could be sequel to his 1977 classic Close Encounters – in which Richard Dreyfuss plays a man from small-town Indiana whose life is upended when he encounters a UFO. It came after the release of Disclosure Day’s trailer, with some interpreting its closing moment, where a flying saucer appears from the sky, …

Grim new theory emerges in disappearance of missing grandmother Nancy Guthrie

Grim new theory emerges in disappearance of missing grandmother Nancy Guthrie

Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance has taken a heartbreaking new turn after a former detective shared his grim interpretation of evidence found at the scene of the 84-year-old’s suspected abduction. Savannah Guthrie’s mom has been missing since February 1 after authorities say she was taken from her Arizona home during the early hours of the morning.  Despite an extensive investigation, thousands of public tips and months of searching, investigators have yet to identify a suspect or determine what happened to the beloved grandmother. © NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal viaSavannah Guthrie and mom Nancy Now, former detective Jon Buehler has revealed why he fears the outcome may be far worse than many had hoped. Speaking to NewsNation’s Brian Entin, Jon said several factors from the early stages of the investigation have led him to believe that Nancy may not have survived the ordeal. “The reason I’m fearful she didn’t survive the abduction is kind of twofold,” he explained. Jon pointed first to the lack of communication from any potential kidnapper. © Getty ImagesA picture is displayed in front of …

New tachyon theory could unlock the secrets of time travel and causality

New tachyon theory could unlock the secrets of time travel and causality

Faster-than-light particles have spent decades in physics as both temptation and warning. They offered a way to test the limits of Einstein’s relativity, but they also seemed to wreck the basic order of cause and effect. If something could outrun light, what would stop an effect from showing up before its cause? That question has kept tachyons, the long-hypothetical particles that would always move faster than light, on the edge of serious physics for more than half a century. A new paper from researchers at the University of Warsaw and the University of Oxford argues that the problem may not be the particles themselves, but the mathematical framework physicists have been using to describe them. In work published in Physical Review D, the team lays out a revised quantum field theory for tachyons that they say avoids several of the contradictions that pushed the idea to the margins. The paper does not claim tachyons have been found in nature. It does argue that they may not be forbidden by special relativity in the way many …

Pope Leo begins to update ‘just war’ theory

Pope Leo begins to update ‘just war’ theory

(RNS) — One of the most important aspects of Pope Leo XIV’s encyclical on artificial intelligence is his seeming rejection of “just war” theory.  “Today, more than ever, without prejudice to the right to self-defense in the strictest sense, it is important to reaffirm that the ‘just war’ theory, which has all too often been used to justify any kind of war, is now outdated,” he writes in “Magnifica Humanitas.” Does that mean he wants to jettison a theory that, going back to St. Augustine, has been a staple of Catholic moral theology? To be sure, Leo acknowledges a right to self-defense, in line with what the church’s Catechism calls “the ‘just war’ doctrine.” At the same time, he has sometimes sounded as though he believes there’s no such thing as a just war. “War does not solve problems, but rather it amplifies them and produces deep wounds in the history of people that take generations to heal,” he said after the U.S. bombed the sites of three nuclear-enrichment facilities in Iran last year. “No …

The ‘Permacession’ Theory Suggests Everyone Is Unhappy Even Though The Economy Isn’t That Bad

The ‘Permacession’ Theory Suggests Everyone Is Unhappy Even Though The Economy Isn’t That Bad

In a piece for The Atlantic, economics and politics journalist Annie Lowrey introduced the idea of a “permacession,” or a permanent recession in which Americans are convinced the economy is constantly on life support even when it’s not.  For a few years now, “vibecession” has been a buzzword. The term was coined by economic writer Kyla Scanlon to describe an economy that isn’t doing all that bad, but people still aren’t thrilled about it because they aren’t seeing improvements in their own lives. In other words, they’re getting bad vibes. The question is, do the facts really back that up? The ‘permacession’ theory says Americans’ persistent pessimism has created an environment in which they can’t actually recognize how strong the economy is. Lowrey has written about the “vibecession” extensively, but she feels like that isn’t the right descriptor to use anymore since “vibes are temporary.” Instead, she thinks that something deeper is going on that she can’t quite explain. “Americans are expressing some of the deepest, broadest, and stubbornest economic pessimism ever recorded,” she wrote. …

Tribal coalition urges appeals court to reject Kalshi betting theory challenge in Tennessee

Tribal coalition urges appeals court to reject Kalshi betting theory challenge in Tennessee

A coalition of tribal organizations and federally recognized tribes is asking a federal appeals court to overturn a ruling that temporarily blocked Tennessee from enforcing its sports wagering laws against prediction market operator Kalshi. The filing, submitted Tuesday (May 26) to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, backs Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti and state officials in their challenge to a preliminary injunction granted to Kalshi. Tribal groups argue the company’s legal position would weaken tribal sovereignty, disrupt long-standing gaming regulations, and erode revenue that supports tribal governments. NEW: More than 25 tribes and gaming groups urged a federal appeals court to overturn #Kalshi’s Tennessee injunction victory. @RWW pic.twitter.com/f9JYtqGkZc — Suswati Basu (@suswatibasu) May 28, 2026 The coalition includes more than 25 groups such as the Indian Gaming Association, the National Congress of American Indians, the United South and Eastern Tribes Sovereignty Protection Fund, regional tribal gaming groups, and tribes from across the country. On the same day, the American Gaming Association also filed its own supporting brief. Why the tribal coalition …

The Antitrust Theory of Everything

The Antitrust Theory of Everything

“I helped set in motion a revolution that aims to rebuild something like a true liberal democracy in America,” Barry C. Lynn wrote two years ago in Harper’s. The claim is notable less for being impossibly grandiose than for being more or less correct. Lynn is the intellectual godfather of what is now known as the neo-Brandeisian movement, which identifies corporate consolidation as the singular, villainous force behind everything that has gone wrong in the United States. “It is vital to understand,” Lynn wrote in his 2020 book, Liberty from All Masters, “that monopoly is not one of many economics problems but rather the political economic problem of our time,” causing “just about every ill in our society today.” When he says that he holds corporate consolidation responsible for just about every problem, he means it. A list of social ills Lynn has attributed to monopolists includes not just the cost of goods and services but also: “The vast and growing inequality of wealth, political power, and control. The rise of the radical right. The …

Does gravity create reality? A shocking path to a theory of everything

Does gravity create reality? A shocking path to a theory of everything

Sometimes, you work tirelessly on a problem, only to realise you have been going about it all backwards. Imagine trying to fit a massive antique piano through a tiny doorway. You have tried everything – rotating it, removing the legs, forceful shoving – but you just can’t get it to fit. Eventually, you realise it is easier to construct a room to house the piano where it already sits. Now, some physicists are grappling with a similar rethink. For decades, the accepted route to an ultimate theory of everything has involved taking our best theory of gravity and squeezing it into the frame of quantum mechanics. Given that quantum theory is wildly successful in describing the other three of the four fundamental forces of nature, it is an understandable approach. Yet, almost a century later, scientists still haven’t managed to make gravity fit. That’s why a few mavericks have championed an alternative strategy. They suggest that tweaking the equations of quantum mechanics – constructing a new room for gravity – helps explain how the strange world of particles gives rise to our everyday reality. Various experimental avenues are opening up to probe this approach, involving everything from levitating diamonds and glowing metals to swinging pendulums and ticking clocks. The tests promise to shine a light on how the quantum world operates and …

Pope Leo calls on Catholics to ‘move beyond’ just war theory in new encyclical

Pope Leo calls on Catholics to ‘move beyond’ just war theory in new encyclical

(RNS) — While Pope Leo XIV’s new encyclical mostly focuses on AI, it also includes language that suggests that Catholics move past their longstanding reliance on just war theory, offering an assessment of armed conflict likely to spark debate among Catholics and non-Catholics alike. The Catholic tradition has long drawn on saints like Augustine and Thomas Aquinas to teach that war is permissible in a very narrow set of circumstances — where war is justified as a last resort to respond to damage that must be “lasting, grave and certain.” Per church teaching of just war theory, the war must also be likely to be successful and create less harm than the harm eliminated. Since becoming pope last year, Leo has been clear he intended to take a firm stand against war. His first words greeting the world after his election were, “Peace be with you all!” in a speech that went on to call for peace that is “unarmed and disarming.” More recently, in his Palm Sunday homily in March, Leo said, “This is …