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  1. "Every AI ever built has an electromagnetic shotgun wired to its forehead." - William Gibson, Neuromancer This quote has been on my mind for a while now. #Neuromancer #ai #cyberpunk

  2. "Every AI ever built has an electromagnetic shotgun wired to its forehead." - William Gibson, Neuromancer

    This quote has been on my mind for a while now. #Neuromancer #ai #cyberpunk

  3. Curious about the world of electromagnetic frequencies? On Day 2 of #OSH2026 Darcy Neal can show the way with a hands-on workshop putting together your very own EMF reader badge!

    Get your Summit tickets today: ticket.nodeforum.org/OHS26/

  4. Magnetosphere Evolution and Precursor-driven Electromagnetic Signals in Merging Binary Neutron Stars: iopscience.iop.org/article/10. -> NASA Researchers Probe Tangled Magnetospheres of Merging #NeutronStars: science.nasa.gov/science-resea

  5. LƯƠNG Huệ Trinh multimedia composer electroacoustics improviser organizer, producer www.luonghuetrinh.org/#compositions

    Luong Hue Trinh

  6. The #Sun regularly produces energetic outbursts of electromagnetic radiation called solar #flares.

    When these flares are accompanied by flows of plasma, they are known as coronal mass ejections (CMEs).

    Now, astronomers have spotted a similar event occurring on a #star other than our Sun – the first unambiguous detection of a CME outside our solar system.

    The detection consiats of short, intense #radio signals from a star located around 40 light-years away from Earth.

    This star, called StKM 1-1262, is very different from our Sun. At only around half of the Sun’s mass, it is classed as an M-dwarf star. It also rotates 20 times faster and boasts a magnetic field 300 times stronger.

    Nevertheless, the burst it produced had the same frequency, time and polarization properties as the plasma emission from an event called a solar type II burst that astronomers identify as a fast CME when it comes from the Sun.

    This detection has implications for extraterrestrial #life, as most of the known #planets are thought to orbit #stars of this type, and such bursts could be powerful enough to strip their atmospheres.

    Intense space weather may be even more extreme around smaller stars – the primary hosts of potentially #habitable #exoplanets.

    This has important implications for how these planets keep hold of their atmospheres and possibly remain habitable over time.

    #astronomy #astrobiology
    physicsworld.com/a/astronomers

    Paper by Callingham et al. (2025):
    nature.com/articles/s41586-025

  7. The #Sun regularly produces energetic outbursts of electromagnetic radiation called solar #flares.

    When these flares are accompanied by flows of plasma, they are known as coronal mass ejections (CMEs).

    Now, astronomers have spotted a similar event occurring on a #star other than our Sun – the first unambiguous detection of a CME outside our solar system.

    The detection consiats of short, intense #radio signals from a star located around 40 light-years away from Earth.

    This star, called StKM 1-1262, is very different from our Sun. At only around half of the Sun’s mass, it is classed as an M-dwarf star. It also rotates 20 times faster and boasts a magnetic field 300 times stronger.

    Nevertheless, the burst it produced had the same frequency, time and polarization properties as the plasma emission from an event called a solar type II burst that astronomers identify as a fast CME when it comes from the Sun.

    This detection has implications for extraterrestrial #life, as most of the known #planets are thought to orbit #stars of this type, and such bursts could be powerful enough to strip their atmospheres.

    Intense space weather may be even more extreme around smaller stars – the primary hosts of potentially #habitable #exoplanets.

    This has important implications for how these planets keep hold of their atmospheres and possibly remain habitable over time.

    #astronomy #astrobiology
    physicsworld.com/a/astronomers

    Paper by Callingham et al. (2025):
    nature.com/articles/s41586-025

  8. The #Sun regularly produces energetic outbursts of electromagnetic radiation called solar #flares.

    When these flares are accompanied by flows of plasma, they are known as coronal mass ejections (CMEs).

    Now, astronomers have spotted a similar event occurring on a #star other than our Sun – the first unambiguous detection of a CME outside our solar system.

    The detection consiats of short, intense #radio signals from a star located around 40 light-years away from Earth.

    This star, called StKM 1-1262, is very different from our Sun. At only around half of the Sun’s mass, it is classed as an M-dwarf star. It also rotates 20 times faster and boasts a magnetic field 300 times stronger.

    Nevertheless, the burst it produced had the same frequency, time and polarization properties as the plasma emission from an event called a solar type II burst that astronomers identify as a fast CME when it comes from the Sun.

    This detection has implications for extraterrestrial #life, as most of the known #planets are thought to orbit #stars of this type, and such bursts could be powerful enough to strip their atmospheres.

    Intense space weather may be even more extreme around smaller stars – the primary hosts of potentially #habitable #exoplanets.

    This has important implications for how these planets keep hold of their atmospheres and possibly remain habitable over time.

    #astronomy #astrobiology
    physicsworld.com/a/astronomers

    Paper by Callingham et al. (2025):
    nature.com/articles/s41586-025

  9. The #Sun regularly produces energetic outbursts of electromagnetic radiation called solar #flares.

    When these flares are accompanied by flows of plasma, they are known as coronal mass ejections (CMEs).

    Now, astronomers have spotted a similar event occurring on a #star other than our Sun – the first unambiguous detection of a CME outside our solar system.

    The detection consiats of short, intense #radio signals from a star located around 40 light-years away from Earth.

    This star, called StKM 1-1262, is very different from our Sun. At only around half of the Sun’s mass, it is classed as an M-dwarf star. It also rotates 20 times faster and boasts a magnetic field 300 times stronger.

    Nevertheless, the burst it produced had the same frequency, time and polarization properties as the plasma emission from an event called a solar type II burst that astronomers identify as a fast CME when it comes from the Sun.

    This detection has implications for extraterrestrial #life, as most of the known #planets are thought to orbit #stars of this type, and such bursts could be powerful enough to strip their atmospheres.

    Intense space weather may be even more extreme around smaller stars – the primary hosts of potentially #habitable #exoplanets.

    This has important implications for how these planets keep hold of their atmospheres and possibly remain habitable over time.

    #astronomy #astrobiology
    physicsworld.com/a/astronomers

    Paper by Callingham et al. (2025):
    nature.com/articles/s41586-025

  10. The #Sun regularly produces energetic outbursts of electromagnetic radiation called solar #flares.

    When these flares are accompanied by flows of plasma, they are known as coronal mass ejections (CMEs).

    Now, astronomers have spotted a similar event occurring on a #star other than our Sun – the first unambiguous detection of a CME outside our solar system.

    The detection consiats of short, intense #radio signals from a star located around 40 light-years away from Earth.

    This star, called StKM 1-1262, is very different from our Sun. At only around half of the Sun’s mass, it is classed as an M-dwarf star. It also rotates 20 times faster and boasts a magnetic field 300 times stronger.

    Nevertheless, the burst it produced had the same frequency, time and polarization properties as the plasma emission from an event called a solar type II burst that astronomers identify as a fast CME when it comes from the Sun.

    This detection has implications for extraterrestrial #life, as most of the known #planets are thought to orbit #stars of this type, and such bursts could be powerful enough to strip their atmospheres.

    Intense space weather may be even more extreme around smaller stars – the primary hosts of potentially #habitable #exoplanets.

    This has important implications for how these planets keep hold of their atmospheres and possibly remain habitable over time.

    #astronomy #astrobiology
    physicsworld.com/a/astronomers

    Paper by Callingham et al. (2025):
    nature.com/articles/s41586-025

  11. DNA: More Than Code—It's an Electromagnetic Resonator.

    DNA is not just code. It’s a quantum resonator that vibrates at 40 GHz, letting it receive vital electromagnetic signals.

    #DNAAntenna #QuantumDNA #40GHz #Resonator