New #openaccess publication #SciPost #Physics
An integrable deformed Landau-Lifshitz model with particle production?
Marius de Leeuw, Andrea Fontanella, Juan Miguel Nieto García
SciPost Phys. 20, 041 (2026)
https://scipost.org/SciPostPhys.20.2.041
New #openaccess publication #SciPost #Physics
An integrable deformed Landau-Lifshitz model with particle production?
Marius de Leeuw, Andrea Fontanella, Juan Miguel Nieto García
SciPost Phys. 20, 041 (2026)
https://scipost.org/SciPostPhys.20.2.041
New #openaccess publication #SciPost #Physics
On the maximum compactness of neutron stars
Luciano Rezzolla, Christian Ecker
SciPost Phys. 20, 014 (2026)
https://scipost.org/SciPostPhys.20.1.014
Emma Fourreau, députée européenne franco-suédoise, membre de la Global Sumud Flotilla, sera en conference au Trinity College, demain soir à 7:30 pour parler du rôle des étudiant•es et des enseignant•es-chercheur•euses dans la lutte contre le genocide et l’apartheid en Palestine.
Trinity College Dublin is advertising for an assistant professor position in Astrophysics.
Via Gay Project: 📝The School of Nursing and Midwifery in Trinity College Dublin is currently conducting a study to record the different kinds of abuses faced by LGBTQIA+ people in Ireland, in conjunction with UCD and DCU.
Once the study is completed, they will use this information to train support services to understand LGBTQIA+ experiences and provide informed care. Survey available via the QR code or here: https://eu.surveymonkey.com/r/QHBTLPK
NASA unveils incredibly precise new satellite tool that anyone can use: ‘You can zoom in to your country, your state, your city block’
Photo Credit: iStock“You can see that by a simple mouse click.”
by Leslie Sattler, July 20, 2025
NASA launched an incredible new web portal that reveals ground movements across North America with astonishing precision.
NASA’s new web portal reveals ground movements across North America with precision that captures tiny shifts smaller than an inch, reported NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
This tool helps people monitor the Earth’s movements, whether caused by natural phenomena such as earthquakes and volcanic activity or human activities such as the extraction of underground resources.
By converting complex satellite radar signals into user-friendly visual maps, NASA has made what was once specialist knowledge available to everyday users.
The project comes from NASA’s Observational Products for End-Users from Remote Sensing Analysis team working with the Alaska Satellite Facility. They’ve created a program that handles satellite information collected since 2014, with plans to include new data from another space mission launching this year.
“You can zoom in to your country, your state, your city block, and look at how the land there is moving over time,” said David Bekaert, OPERA project manager and radar scientist. “You can see that by a simple mouse click.”
Right now, you can explore data for areas such as the American Southwest, parts of Mexico’s northern region, and greater New York. The portal displays information for millions of spots on the map. When you click anywhere, you’ll see a chart showing that location’s movement history back to 2016.
Water experts have already started using this mapping tool. Take Arizona, where tracking the gradual sinking of land helps manage precious groundwater supplies.
Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.
Continue/Read Original Article Here: NASA unveils incredibly precise new satellite tool that anyone can use: ‘You can zoom in to your country, your state, your city block’
#2025 #America #Health #History #Libraries #LibraryOfCongress #NASA #Science #TCD #Technology #TheCoolDown #UnitedStates