Plus, the far-future fate of the moon
July 9—Well, we’re back. Thanks for bearing with us during a mid-summer hiatus in our newsletters. It’s a pleasure to return to your inbox!
This week, our top stories include strange signals from the edge of a newborn black hole, a new timekeeping proposal to adopt a “leap hour” rather than a leap second, a forecast for the far future fate of the moon, a guide to this weekend’s Manhattanhenge in New York City and—as always—much, much more. Enjoy, and stay cool out there.
Thoughts? Questions? Let me know via e-mail (lbillings@sciam.com), X or Bluesky.
—Lee Billings, Senior Editor, Physical Sciences
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Miami-based City Labs achieves a first for commercial nuclear power in space | Ars Technica
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Cut the Alien Jokes, These Mysterious Spheres Are Likely Space Debris | The New York Times
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This physicist is hunting for the biggest black hole in the universe | New Scientist
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