An International Institute Will Help Us Manage Climate Change
A collaborative center will help climate scientists build better models for prevention and mitigation
Sabine Hossenfelder is a physicist and research fellow at the Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies in Germany. She currently works on dark matter and the foundations of quantum mechanics. Credit: Nick Higgins
A collaborative center will help climate scientists build better models for prevention and mitigation
Two physicists object to a Scientific American essay calling for an end to one climate report. A science historian counters that the report has done its job
The discrepancy between the theoretical prediction and the experimentally determined value of the muon’s magnetic moment has become slightly stronger with a new result from Fermilab...
It would cost many billions of dollars, the potential rewards are unclear—and the money could be better spent researching threats such as climate change and emerging viruses
They don’t necessarily try to predict what will happen—but they can help us understand possible futures
Since Newton, the foundations of physics progressed in a virtuous cycle of hypothesis and experiment until the cycle broke 40 years ago. A bigger collider will not solve the problem
Astrophysicists have piled up observations that are difficult to explain with dark matter. It is time to consider that there may be more to gravity than Einstein taught us
A physicist decries the trend of chasing after aesthetically pleasing theories that lack empirical evidence
Einstein’s thought experiments left a long and somewhat mixed legacy of their own
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