Thursday, March 19, 2026

Nailing Neutrino-Nucleus Interaction Rates

An experimental test of how frequently neutrinos interact with atomic nuclei has a best fit value of the Standard Model expectation and an uncertainty of less than ± 15%, which is impressive given how slight the interaction is, fit 10^22 trials yielding just 124 observed interactions.
The COHERENT collaboration reports the most precise measurement of the coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering cross section to date. This measurement was performed with COHERENT's germanium detector array, Ge-Mini, at the Spallation Neutron Source at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. 
A cumulative exposure of 4.68 × 10^22 protons on target yielded a total number of observed counts of 124 + 14 −12 and a flux-averaged cross section of 1.00 ± 0.10 (statistical) ± 0.10 (systematic) relative to the standard-model expectation of 5.9 × 10^−39 cm^2. 
The well-understood energy and timing distributions of the neutrino source allow for independent measurements of muon- and electron-neutrino scattering rates. This information is used to improve constraints on non-standard neutrino interactions mediated by heavy particles.
M. Adhikari, et al., "Measurement of coherent elastic neutrino nucleus scattering on germanium by COHERENT" arXiv:2603.17951 (March 18, 2026).

Palau Is An Oceania Outlier

This is a further refinement of an already pretty well worked out story of Oceanian origins.
About 3200 years ago, Southeast Asian seafarers known as the Lapita pushed east into the tropical islands of the Pacific Ocean, hitting nearly every habitable isle in that corner of the globe from New Guinea to Fiji and Tonga. As they did so, they left behind artifacts of their culture, including pottery stamped with distinctive geometric patterns.

But on Palau, there’s not a single shard of Lapita pottery—and the island’s inhabitants speak a language that’s distinct from the tongues spoken on other Pacific islands. So who were the first Palauans, and where did they come from?

A new study published last week in Cell suggests an answer. Genetic evidence confirms Palau’s first settlers descended from Southeast Asians who had intermingled with the Papuans, Indigenous peoples who settled the island of New Guinea some 50,000 years ago.

“It’s lovely to see a piece of Pacific history—which we’ve traditionally been at a bit of a loss to explain—finally start to come together into a more understandable story,” says Murray Cox, a computational biologist at Massey University of New Zealand who wasn’t involved in the new work.

The discovery builds on previous ancient DNA research into the origins of the Lapita themselves. That work, led by evolutionary biologist David Reich at Harvard University and his colleagues, showed that Lapita were essentially pure Southeast Asians of Taiwanese roots—but that modern populations on Pacific islands showed Papuan ancestry, too. The studies suggested this Papuan ancestry came in about 2500 years ago, as Papuans began to join the same canoe voyages that had earlier carried Lapita settlers into the region.
From Science.

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

A System With Three Galaxies Showing No Dark Matter-Like Phenomena

This is also consistent with the MONDian External Field Effect explanation.
While most dwarf galaxies are strongly dark matter dominated, two remarkable objects in the NGC 1052 field, DF2 and DF4, appear to lack dark matter. DF2 and DF4 were recently found to be part of a trail of low luminosity galaxies that follow a linear relation between their position on the trail and their radial velocity. If the other galaxies on this trail formed together with DF2 and DF4, e.g., from gas that was separated from dark matter through a 'bullet dwarf' collision, they may lack dark matter as well. 
Here we constrain the dark matter content of DF9, the galaxy on the trail that most closely resembles DF2 and DF4. Using Keck/KCWI absorption line spectroscopy we find that DF9's stellar velocity dispersion is 6.4 + 4.0 − 4.3 km/s. This is consistent with the 8.3 + 0.9 − 1.4 km/s dispersion that is expected from DF9's 1.4 × 10^8 M⊙ stellar mass alone, and we conclude that -- like DF2 and DF4 -- dark matter is not required to explain the kinematics of DF9. The dispersion is far below the 27 ± 3 km/s expected if DF9 fell on the stellar mass--halo mass relation. Our results are further evidence that the trail of low mass galaxies in the NGC 1052 field formed together in a unique galaxy formation channel, and are consistent with the prediction of the bullet dwarf scenario that other trail galaxies should show the same lack of dark matter as DF2 and DF4.
Michael A. Keim, Pieter van Dokkum, Zili Shen, Shany Danieli, Imad Pasha, "A Third Galaxy Missing Dark Matter along a Trail of Galaxies in the NGC 1052 Field" arXiv:2603.15860 (March 16, 2026) (Submitted to ApJL).