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Reçu aujourd’hui — 16 septembre 20256.5 📰 Sciences English

Josef Aschbacher on geopolitics and Europe’s changing space debate

16 septembre 2025 à 13:59
Josef Aschbacher, Director General of the European Space Agency, speaks with SpaceNews Chief Content and Strategy Officer Mike Gruss during a taping of the Space Minds podcast at World Space Business Week Sept. 15. Credit: SpaceNews

PARIS – Josef Aschbacher, the head of the European Space Agency, said member states are quickly changing how they view space, from its role in geopolitics, to the need for sovereign capabilities to working more closely with their national security counterparts. During a Sept. 15 interview here at World Space Business Week, Aschbacher, the agency’s […]

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How SpaceX turned a Texas marsh into the world’s most watched spaceport

16 septembre 2025 à 13:00
A construction site at Starbase. Credit: Alexander Hatley via Wikimedia Commons; CC BY 2.0

EDITOR’S NOTE: Starbase is SpaceX’s massive rocket development site and the home of Starship — the vehicle Elon Musk envisions as humanity’s path to Mars and that many in the U.S. civil space program see as a way back to the moon. But Starbase started as little more than an impossible stretch of empty land […]

The post How SpaceX turned a Texas marsh into the world’s most watched spaceport appeared first on SpaceNews.

Quantum fluid instability produces eccentric skyrmions

16 septembre 2025 à 11:00

Physicists at Osaka Metropolitan University in Japan and the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) claim to have observed the quantum counterpart of the classic Kelvin-Helmholtz instability (KHI), which is the most basic instability in fluids. The effect, seen in a quantum gas of 7Li atoms, produces a new type of exotic vortex pattern called an eccentric fractional skyrmion. The finding not only advances our understanding of complex topological quantum systems, it could also help in the development of next-generation memory and storage devices.

Topological defects occur when a system rapidly transitions from a disordered to an ordered phase. These defects, which can occur in a wide range of condensed matter systems, from liquid crystals and atomic gases to the rapidly cooling early universe, can produce excitations such as solitons, vortices and skyrmions.

Skyrmions, first discovered in magnetic materials, are swirling vortex-like spin structures that extend across a few nanometres in a material. They can be likened to 2D knots in which the magnetic moments rotate about 360° within a plane.

Eccentric fractional skyrmions contain singularities

Skyrmions are topologically stable, which makes them robust to external perturbations, and are much smaller than the magnetic domains used to encode data in today’s disk drives. That makes them ideal building blocks for future data storage technologies such as “racetrack” memories. Eccentric fractional skyrmions (EFSs), which had only been predicted in theory until now, have a crescent-like shape and contain singularities – points in which the usual spin structure breaks down, creating sharp distortions as it becomes unsymmetrical.

“To me, the large crescent moon in the upper right corner of Van Gogh’s ‘The Starry Night’ also looks exactly like an EFS,” says Hiromitsu Takeuchi at Osaka, who co-led this new study with Jae-Yoon Choi of KAIST. “EFSs carry half the elementary charge, which means they do not fit into traditional classifications of topological defects.”

The KHI is a classic phenomenon in fluids in which waves and vortices form at the interface between two fluids moving at different speeds. “To observe the KHI in quantum systems, we need a structure containing a thin superfluid interface (a magnetic domain wall), such as in a quantum gas of 7Li atoms,” says Takeuchi. “We also need experimental techniques that can skilfully control the behaviour of this interface. Both of these criteria have recently been met by Choi’s group.”

The researchers began by cooling a gas of 7Li atoms to near absolute zero temperatures to create a multi-component Bose-Einstein condensate – a quantum superfluid containing two streams flowing at different speeds. At the interface of these streams, they observed vortices, which corresponded to the predicted EFSs.

The behaviour of the KHI is universal

“We have shown that the behaviour of the KHI is universal and exists in both the classical and quantum regimes,” says Takeuchi. This finding could not only lead to a better understanding of quantum turbulence and the unification of quantum and classic hydrodynamics, it could also help in the development of technologies such as next-generation storage and memory devices and spintronics, an emerging technology in which magnetic spin is used to store and transfer information using much less energy than existing electronic devices.

“By further refining the experiment, we might be able to verify certain predictions (some of which were made as long ago as the 19th century) about the wavelength and frequency of KHI-driven interface waves in non-viscous quantum fluids, like the one studied in this work,” he adds.

“In addition to the universal finger pattern we observed, we expect structures like zipper and sealskin patterns, which are unique to such multi-component quantum fluids,” Takeuchi tells Physics World. “As well as experiments, it is necessary to develop a theory that more precisely describes the motion of EFSs, the interaction between these skyrmions and their internal structure in the context of quantum hydrodynamics and spontaneous symmetry breaking.”

The study is detailed in Nature Physics.

The post Quantum fluid instability produces eccentric skyrmions appeared first on Physics World.

Reçu hier — 15 septembre 20256.5 📰 Sciences English

Top quarks embrace in quasi-bound toponium

15 septembre 2025 à 17:35

For decades, physicists believed that the top quark, the heaviest known subatomic particle, was too short-lived to form a temporary pair with its antimatter partner. Unlike lighter quarks, which can combine to form protons, neutrons, or longer-lived quark–antiquark pairs, the top quark decays almost instantly. This made the idea of a top–antitop bound state – a fleeting association held together by the strong force – seem impossible. But now, the CMS collaboration at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) has found the first evidence of such a state, which is dubbed toponium.

Gautier Hamel de Monchenault, spokesperson for CMS, explains, “Many physicists long believed this was impossible. That’s why this result is so significant — it challenges assumptions that have been around for decades, and particle physics textbooks will likely need to be updated because of it.”

Protons and neutrons are formed from quarks, which are fundamental particles that cannot be broken down into smaller constituents.

“There are six types of quark,” explains the German physicist Christian Schwanenberger, who is at DESY and the University of Hamburg and was not involved in the study. “Five of them form bound states thanks to the strong force, one of the four fundamental forces of nature. The top quark, however, is somehow different. It is the heaviest fundamental particle we know, but so far we have not observed it forming bound states in the same way the others do.”

Quasi-bound state

The top quark’s extreme mass makes it decay almost immediately after it is produced. “The top and antitop quarks just have time to exchange a few gluons, the carriers of the strong force, before one of them decays, hence the appellation ‘quasi-bound state’,” Hamel de Monchenault explains.

By detecting these ephemeral interactions, physicists can observe the strong force in a new regime – and the CMS team developed a clever new method to do so. The breakthrough came when the team examined how the spins of the top quark and antitop quark influence each other to create a subtle signature in the particles produced when the quarks decay.

Top quarks are produced in proton–proton collisions at the LHC, where they quickly decay into other particles. These include bottom quarks that then decay to form jets of particles, which can be detected. Top quarks can also decay to form W bosons, which themselves decay into lighter particles (leptons) such as electrons or muons, accompanied by neutrinos.

“We can detect the charged leptons directly and measure their energy very precisely, but we have to infer the presence of the neutrinos indirectly, through an imbalance of the total energy measured,” says Hamel de Monchenault. By studying the pattern and energy of the leptons and jets, the CMS team deduced the existence of top–antitop pairs and spotted the subtle signature of the fleeting quasi-bound state.

Statistical significance

The CMS researchers observed an excess of events in which the top and antitop quarks were produced almost at rest relative to each other – the precise condition needed for a quasi-bound state to form. “The signal has a statistical significance above 5σ, which means the chance it’s just a statistical fluctuation is less than one in a few million,” Hamel de Monchenault says.

While this excess accounts for only about 1% of top quark pair production, it aligns with predictions for toponium formation and offers insights into the strong force.

“Within the achieved precision, the result matches the predictions of advanced calculations involving the strong force,” explains Hamel de Monchenault. “An effect once thought too subtle to detect with current technology has now been observed. It’s comforting in a way: even the heaviest known quarks are not always alone – they can briefly embrace their opposites.”

Future directions

The discovery has energized the particle physics community. “Scientists are excited to explore the strong force in a completely new regime,” says Schwanenberger. Researchers will refine theoretical models, simulate toponium more precisely, and study its decay patterns and excited states. Much of this work will rely on the High-Luminosity LHC, expected to start operations around 2030, and potentially on future electron–positron colliders capable of studying top quarks with unprecedented precision.

“The present results are based on LHC data recorded between 2015 and 2018 [Run 2]. Since 2022, ATLAS and CMS are recording data at a slightly higher energy, which is favourable for top quark production. The amount of data already surpasses that of Run 2, and we expect that with such huge amounts of data, the properties of this new signal can be studied in detail,” Hamel de Monchenault says.

This research could ultimately answer a fundamental question: is the top quark simply another quark like its lighter siblings, or could it hold the key to physics beyond the Standard Model? “Investigating different toponium states will be a key part of the top quark research programme,” Schwanenberger says. “It could reshape our understanding of matter itself and reveal whatever holds the world together in its inmost folds.”

The results are published in Reports on Progress in Physics.

The post Top quarks embrace in quasi-bound toponium appeared first on Physics World.

To lead in space, we must go all-in on our industrial base

15 septembre 2025 à 15:00

The United States space enterprise is undergoing a sweeping transformation: commercial innovation is progressing at an incredible pace, with profound implications for national defense, economic competitiveness and industrial resilience. The shift represents unprecedented urgency across all levels of government to drive greater commercial space integration. At our annual 2025 State of the Space Industrial Base […]

The post To lead in space, we must go all-in on our industrial base appeared first on SpaceNews.

Military spending and direct-to-device competition are reshaping the space economy

15 septembre 2025 à 14:50

PARIS – Expanding defense budgets and the direct-to-device race are driving growth in the global space economy, Novaspace CEO Pacôme Révillon, said at the outset of the World Space Business Week conference here. At the same time, the space sector is experiencing significant consolidation, with an average of more than 50 annual mergers and acquisitions completed […]

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Celebrating 10 years of gravitational waves

15 septembre 2025 à 14:43

It was early in the morning of Monday 14 September 2015, exactly 10 years ago, when gravitational waves created from the collision of two black holes 1.3 billion light-years away hit the LIGO detectors in the US. The detections took place just as the two giant interferometers – one in Washington and the other in Louisiana – were being calibrated before the first observational run was due to begin four days later.

In one of those curious accidents of history, staff on duty at the Louisiana detector had gone to bed a few hours before the waves rolled in. If they hadn’t packed in their calibrations for the night, it would have prevented LIGO from making its historic measurement, dubbed GW150914. Of course, it would surely only have been a matter of time until LIGO had spotted its first signal, with more than 200 gravitational-wave events so far detected.

Observing these “ripples in space–time”, which had long been on many physicists’ bucket lists, has over the last decade become almost routine. Most gravitational-wave detections have been binary black-hole mergers, though there have also been a few neutron-star/black-hole collisions and some binary neutron-star mergers too. Gravitational-wave astronomy is now a well-established field not just thanks to LIGO but also Virgo in Italy and KAGRA in Japan.

In fact, physicists are already planning what would be a third-generation gravitational-wave detector. The Einstein Telescope, which could do in a day what took LIGO a decade, could be open by 2035, with three locations vying to host the facility. The Italian island of Sardinia is one option. Saxony in Germany is another, with the third being a site near where Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands meet.

A decision is expected to be made in two years’ time, but whichever site is picked – and assuming the €2bn construction costs can be found – Europe would be installed firmly at the forefront of gravitational-wave research. That’s because the European Space Agency is also planning a space-based gravitational-wave detector called LISA. It is set to start in 2035 – the same year as the Einstein Telescope.

The US has its own third-generation design, dubbed the Cosmic Explorer. But given the turmoil in US science under Donald Trump, it’s far from certain if it’ll ever be built. However, if other nations step in and build a network of such facilities around the world, as researchers hope, we could well be in for a new golden age for gravitational-wave astronomy. That bucket list just got longer.

The post Celebrating 10 years of gravitational waves appeared first on Physics World.

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