https://www.afinalwarning.com/518381.html (Natural News) A new study suggests that the gigantic blobs of radio emissions found floating in outer space in 2019 could be the result of two colliding black holes.
Researchers note that the blobs, which they dubbed “odd radio circles” (ORC), are unlike anything seen before. While they have offered other hypotheses, they also raise the possibility that a highly energetic event took place billions of light-years away, creating a blast wave that traveled out as a sphere and took the shape of a ring.
Lead researcher Barbel Koribalski, a galactic astronomer at
Western Sydney University in Australia, and her colleagues are not certain what this high-energy event could possibly be. The team notes that they are not aware of any phenomenon that can produce such strange blobs. But if anything, ORCs may be previously unknown products of a black hole merger, the researchers posit.
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New network for mental health research
A new national collaboration to transform the way mental health treatment is developed and tested will be led by Deakin University and partners including The University of Western Australia, with $12 million support from the Federal Government’s Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF).
The Mental Health Australia General Clinical Trial Network (MAGNET) will start as a five-year project that will be funded through the MRFF’s Million Minds Mission, as recently announced in the Federal Budget.
Professor Sean Hood, Head of UWA Medical School’s Psychiatry Division, and Osvaldo Almeida, Professor in Psychiatry, also from the UWA Medical School, are among 50 chief investigators involved in the project.
Western Sydney University Students have viewed Western Sydney University s courses this week
As the largest and most established educational provider in Western Sydney, Western Sydney University has a 30-year track-record of collaboratively supporting its region’s development, generating in excess of $1.4 billion in economic uplift per year, across 11 major campuses.
The University has been an agent of transformation: delivering profound and considered research, education, training and infrastructure interventions to make positive, material changes across its region.
Western Sydney University is ranked in the top 500 in the world in the Academic Ranking of World Universities, Times Higher Education World University and top 2% in the QS World University Rankings, and top 25 universities in Australia in the QS National rankings.
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A mysterious circle of radio waves has been detected, the fifth odd radio circle (ORC) ever spotted, but its cause is still unclear. It could simply be the side view of a galaxy with an active black hole at its centre, although it might be the result of a supermassive black hole merger.
In 2020, Ray Norris at Western Sydney University, Australia, and his colleagues found four strange circles made from radio waves in space. No one had seen such objects before and the team had … Continue reading Subscribe now for unlimited access
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