On 12 July 2018 GeekWire reported:
An array of detectors buried under a half-mile-wide stretch of Antarctic ice has traced the path of a single neutrino back to a supermassive black hole in a faraway galaxy, shedding light on a century-old cosmic ray mystery in the process. .... Neutrinos are different: They don't carry an electrical charge, have virtually no mass, and interact so weakly with other types of matter that they typically pass right through anything that gets in their way -- including stars and planets. That means they travel in a straight line from their source.
Global Good News service views this news as a sign of rising positivity in the field of science, documenting the growth of life-supporting, evolutionary trends.
IceCube catches a cosmic neutrino Scientists explain how IceCube and other instruments identified the first source of high-energy neutrinos and cosmic rays. (Credit: IceCube Collaboration / NSF)
Every day Global Good News documents the rise of a better quality of life dawning in the world and highlights the need for introducing Natural Law based—Total
Knowledge based—programmes to bring the support of Nature to every individual, raise the quality of life of every society, and create a lasting state of world peace.
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