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Posts by CosmicPinot

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How to avoid nuclear war in an era of AI and misinformation Nuclear deterrence is no longer a two-player game, and emerging technologies further threaten the status quo. The result is a risky new nuclear age.

Are you ready to read about nuclear arsenals & operations? Of course you are! I explore the modern risks of nuclear war, from AI to misinformation, for @nature.com.

Thx to many experts including @mattkorda.bsky.social @cosmicpinot.bsky.social for this one.

www.nature.com/articles/d41...

🧪

9 months ago 16 6 1 1
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The Impact of Early Massive Galaxy Formation on the Cosmic Microwave Background The Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) anisotropies, corrected for foreground effects, form the foundation of cosmology and support the Big Bang model. A previously overlooked foreground component is t...

A wee thread on a paper I think has big holes and some suggestions for grad students out there looking for a fun calculation... (Technical) 🔭 🧪 #cosmology It's this one; it claims at least 1% of the photons in the CMB are actually generated in early-forming galaxies. 1/N arxiv.org/abs/2505.04687

9 months ago 22 8 1 3
MoM-z14, the most distant galaxy spectroscopically confirmed so far, observed by the James Webb Space Telescope appears as a small, extremely compact object with a reddish color, due to the cosmological redshift, which shifts UV/visible light towards the infrared due to the expansion of the universe.

MoM-z14, the most distant galaxy spectroscopically confirmed so far, observed by the James Webb Space Telescope appears as a small, extremely compact object with a reddish color, due to the cosmological redshift, which shifts UV/visible light towards the infrared due to the expansion of the universe.

🧵
Here is MoM-z14, the most distant galaxy spectroscopically confirmed to date.

It is an extraordinarily luminous galaxy, discovered by a research team using #JWST, which has broken its previous record.

Research paper➡️ arxiv.org/abs/2505.11263

🔭 🧪 #science #cosmology #Webb

10 months ago 84 12 3 8
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Nobel laureate Brian Schmidt is ‘scared’ about Australia’s research capacity – this is why In an uncertain world, Australia is spending about 1.7% of its Gross Domestic Product on research and development. The OECD average is 2.7%.

People we need to encourage PBS to post on bsky. Wise dude be he.
@cosmicpinot.bsky.social

“I look around& I am scared,” Schmidt said. “The Australian government investment in its sovereign research capability was 50% higher 15 years ago as a fraction of GDP.”
theconversation.com/nobel-laurea...

10 months ago 30 21 1 0
PNAS Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), a peer reviewed journal of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) - an authoritative source of high-impact, original research that broadly spans...

Large increases in public R&D investment are needed to avoid declines of US agricultural productivity | PNAS www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...

11 months ago 2 5 0 0

probably wouldn't have found this on my own!

11 months ago 2 1 2 0
A raw 2-dimensional CCD image from the Subaru Prime Focus Spectrograph. The very first one from the 360-night Strategic Program.

A raw 2-dimensional CCD image from the Subaru Prime Focus Spectrograph. The very first one from the 360-night Strategic Program.

The first of millions!

The Subaru Prime Focus Spectrograph (PFS) has begun science operations, and I had the pleasure of leading the first night’s observations of the 360-night Strategic Program.

~2000 high-z galaxy spectra exposure, in 0.6 arcsec seeing! #cosmology 🔭🧪

1 year ago 28 5 2 0
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No Easy Fix for Cosmology’s “Other” Tension The tension—a disagreement between cosmic-clumpiness measurements—is not going away, according to a new analysis of galaxy lensing data.

The s8 tension is not going away. ⚛️ 🧪

physics.aps.org/articles/v18...

1 year ago 37 11 4 0

The Astronomy feeds now include 11 (!!!) brand new specific subfeeds! 🔭

The subfeeds try to cover every part of astronomy research with at least one feed.

All subfeeds automatically crosspost to the main Astronomy feed, too!

Here's a thread with links to all of them ⬇️

1 year ago 2254 240 73 32

it is true- I am not ARC tracker - and I agree, ARC tracker has shown, anonymously, great leadership in science. I think ARC tracker's anonymity, must be preserved. so if ARC tracker were to win, a coreflute essence of them would need to accept the prize. Perhaps we could have a design contest?

1 year ago 3 0 1 0
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@cosmicpinot.bsky.social any chance you can boost the signal on this? The one thing I do know is that you are not ARC Tracker!

1 year ago 6 3 2 0
Comet

Comet

Looks like Comet C/2024 G3 ATLAS’s days may be numbered… the comet has faded & may have broken up post-perihelion as the nucleus fades from view, leaving a ‘tail-less wonder’ crossing the sky. Here's a great parting view w/ESO’s Paranal Observatory by Yuri Beletsky: www.instagram.com/p/DFF3LKtpIz4/

1 year ago 168 45 0 3

Professor Ute Roessner AM FAA has been appointed as ARC CEO by the ARC Board.

They are Pro Vice-Chancellor, Research, at ANU at the moment. Their appointment starts 31st March and lasts for 5 years.

1 year ago 17 3 0 3

another 10° and you're there. Not sure about no power though.

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
Comet G3 ATLAS over with broad tail, taken from my backyard over Toowoomba

Comet G3 ATLAS over with broad tail, taken from my backyard over Toowoomba

Comet G3 is getting exciting! Here it is from my back porch overlooking Toowoomba just an hour after sunset.

110mm 26x4s

1 year ago 121 23 3 2
False colour JWST NIRCam image of a nearby star forming region in front of a deep back ground of colorful galaxies. NASA, ESA, CSA, K. McQuinn (STScI), J. DePasquale (STScI)

False colour JWST NIRCam image of a nearby star forming region in front of a deep back ground of colorful galaxies. NASA, ESA, CSA, K. McQuinn (STScI), J. DePasquale (STScI)

Oh come ON now. This new JWST image is just ASTOUNDING.

I feel like I’m falling looking into it, and that I would fall forever, and that I would enjoy it.

NASA, ESA, CSA, K. McQuinn (STScI), J. DePasquale (STScI)

1 year ago 2500 701 58 97

the next 20C is where the action is! but unlikely to see anything other than cool light pillars and aurora - moose will duck for cover. Enjoy winter - i'm about to get 2 days of it in Toronto - i'm b glad I remembered my hat!

1 year ago 1 0 2 0

then you need to get to a place where it's -40 and see it really in action - it's serious cool (in all dimensions)

1 year ago 0 0 1 0

Congratulations Prof Natarajan!

1 year ago 23 4 1 0
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so my experience is this happens most of the time at <-37C or so - but requires special conditions much warmer than this? How cold is it?

1 year ago 0 0 1 0
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Fara Dabhoiwala · A Man of Parts and Learning: Francis Williams Gets His Due The only certainty about the picture is that it shows Francis Williams. No one has ever been able to discover who...

Here is a historical research piece that combines a story about astronomy, art, history, and racism - it's both interesting and a highly enjoyable read. Thanks to Frank Bonjourno to pointing it out. www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v4... 🔭🧪

1 year ago 46 15 5 3
looking out through the seabreeze across the eucalypts that creates a haze

looking out through the seabreeze across the eucalypts that creates a haze

I live a 100km inland from the ocean, and we live at this time of year for the seabreeze- called locally the easterly. Today the wind turned from W to E, the dewpoint rose from 9 16C within 2 minutes, and the temp fell from 30C to 21C. The air smells of the sea, and becomes hazy.

1 year ago 37 3 1 1

my new ones have lost 3% in first year - I think they lose a lot to begin with and then settle down

1 year ago 2 0 1 0

managed not to export anything today - but 1.5kw is a bit brutal!

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
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a perfectly clear day from sunrise to sunset today - broke my all time record for solar production (92kwH) today as I was able to use all of the production and not ground it (had to fully charge the car!)

1 year ago 32 0 6 0
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1 year ago 4 2 0 0
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I have a battery partially paid for by the NSW govt which, for the first time, was discharged remotely during a 'grid event' between 6.15 and 7.15pm today. Interesting to see the technology in action.

1 year ago 15 1 1 0

no reason it will not take off on its own - the french work easily taken on here. Comes down to cost and increased income. So I would not be surprised to see it be used

1 year ago 2 0 0 0

so haven't seen anything - might be good in the riverina in the first instance?

1 year ago 2 0 1 0

need a couple more degrees of warming before we're ready for this

1 year ago 1 0 2 0