🔬 Trending in Physics

CERN Physicists Deeply Apologize After Parallel Universe Files Restraining Order Against Continued Observation

"We Just Wanted To Map Subatomic Interactions, Not Get Served Legal Papers From Another Dimension," Says Embarrassed Research Team
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Large Hadron Collider / Interdimensional Legal Notice
CERN's particle accelerator, where scientists discovered that parallel universes have surprisingly robust privacy laws.

In what physicists are calling "an unprecedented development in the field of quantum litigation," researchers at CERN announced Thursday that a parallel universe they had been observing has formally filed a restraining order against continued study, citing "persistent and unwanted attention across dimensional boundaries."

The legal action, which arrived via what scientists describe as "a quantum fluctuation that materialized as a notarized document," demands that CERN cease all observation activities within a 500-parsec radius of the alternate reality's spacetime coordinates.

"We thought we were observing them. Turns out they were observing us observing them. And they hired lawyers." — Dr. Elena Vásquez, Head of Theoretical Physics

"The existence of interdimensional legal frameworks was not something we had anticipated," admitted Dr. Heinrich Müller, lead researcher on the project. "Our models assumed alternate realities would be either uninhabited, unaware of our observation, or at minimum, not litigious. We were wrong on all counts."

According to the filing, the parallel universe—designated Universe-7B in CERN documentation—has been "subjected to invasive quantum measurement" since 2019, resulting in what their legal team describes as "wave function harassment" and "non-consensual particle entanglement."

The restraining order specifically prohibits CERN from: collapsing wave functions within Universe-7B's jurisdiction, entangling any of their electrons without written consent, and "staring at our quarks in a way that makes them uncomfortable."

Silicon Valley Bro Solves Space Travel By Building World's Largest Potato Gun, Promises Cocaine Island If It Fails

6-mile cannon to yeet satellites spaceward at Mach 23; Sam Altman and U.S. Air Force reportedly investors

In a development that perfectly encapsulates 2025 American ingenuity, Mike Grace, CEO of Longshot Space, has decided the problem with space travel is that we're simply not shooting things hard enough.

Grace's pitch is beautifully simple: Build a 6-mile-long cannon in the Nevada desert and shoot satellites into orbit at speeds that turn ordinary air into plasma. The company has secured funding from OpenAI's Sam Altman and the U.S. Air Force.

🎯 Key Innovations
"Baby Bear, Momma Bear, Pappa Bear" — The company's three planned gun sizes, because nothing says "serious aerospace" like nursery rhyme nomenclature.
Mach 4.5 "If You Squint" — Current test results, measured in the same units as "technically still married."
$10/Kilo — Promised cost to orbit, undercutting SpaceX using "concrete, steel and hydrogen."
The Cocaine Island Contingency — Grace's backup plan: sell to Raytheon and cry from his island "lighting Fabergé eggs on fire every morning."

The project draws inspiration from Gerald Bull, a Canadian engineer who built giant cannons in the 1960s and later worked for Saddam Hussein before being assassinated by Mossad—a career trajectory Grace presumably hopes to avoid.

Also in Science

Scientists Finally Let You Fondle Sweaters Through Instagram

Claim TSA Pat-Downs 'Right Around The Corner'

Researchers at Northwestern University have unveiled VoxeLite, a revolutionary bandage-like finger wearable that finally allows users to feel textures through their smartphone screens, ending humanity's long nightmare of having to imagine what sweaters feel like.

"For too long, humans have suffered in silence, scrolling past cashmere on Instagram with no way to fondle it," said lead researcher Dr. Harold Membrane. "We saw an unmet need and we met it. You're welcome, civilization."

The device wraps around the user's finger and delivers precisely calibrated electric shocks through a grid of nodes the team has branded "pixels of touch"—a term sources confirm required eleven meetings and a branding consultant to develop.

"Gamers in virtual reality could use the wearable to sense the slick surface of a well-lacquered doorknob." — An actual sentence from a peer-reviewed paper

In testing, participants correctly identified fabric textures 81% of the time—meaning nearly one in five users couldn't distinguish leather from terry cloth while wearing technology specifically designed to distinguish leather from terry cloth.

The device is vulnerable to "dirt, debris, or other variables"—concerning given that fingers famously never touch anything dirty. While it handles sweat admirably, full water submersion disables it until "air-dried," a resilience profile shared by most sandwiches.

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Retired Mall Security Consultant Unlocks Secret To Human Limb Regeneration While Taking Morning Constitutional On LinkedIn

In a breakthrough that has sent shockwaves through the "Open to Work" demographic, a retired electronic security professional with 30+ years of experience installing motion sensors at strip malls has cracked the code on human limb regeneration, according to a post that received 73 reactions.

"Your body already knows how to regrow limbs. We just haven't figured out how to turn it on yet," wrote Vincentius Liong/Leong—a discovery that apparently eluded researchers at Harvard, MIT, and every pharmaceutical company until a man whose headline contains "Retired Leader" weighed in.

The post explains that humans produce "the exact same regeneration chemicals" as salamanders. The key difference is that evolution made a catastrophic product decision 300 million years ago by shipping "fast healing via scar tissue" instead of "regrow entire leg."

The post is accompanied by an AI-generated image of a salamander made entirely of holographic Fruit Roll-Ups. Image credit: "CTTO"—the sacred incantation roughly translating to "I have no idea where this came from."

Tech Briefs
Billionaire Ends 3-Year Relationship After 2-Hour Fling, Needs 3.2 Million People To Know About It

Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff announced via X that after using Google's Gemini for "2 hours," he's switching from ChatGPT—ending a relationship he'd previously called transformative. "I'm not going back," Benioff declared, in a post that caused OpenAI stock to briefly flutter before everyone remembered this is one man's opinion after two hours of testing.

The announcement prompted market analysts to question whether "2 hours" constitutes adequate due diligence for enterprise software decisions affecting thousands of employees.

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Mouse Reports "Partial" Limb Regeneration Was "One Slightly Thicker Toenail"

A laboratory mouse cited in regeneration research clarified that "partial limb regeneration" meant growing back one marginally thicker toenail. "You're welcome for my service. Please send cheese."

Alameda Refuses Permit For Mach 23 Launches During Brunch Hours

City officials remain "squeamish" about firing what is technically a weapon of mass acceleration within city limits.

VR Gamer Successfully Feels "Well-Lacquered Doorknob," Declares Victory

"I've been waiting my whole life for this," said no one ever, according to sources.

CORRECTION: An earlier version suggested scientists were "getting closer" to limb regeneration. They have been "getting closer" since 1974. We regret not clarifying that "closer" is a relative term.
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✉️ Letters to the Science Editor

Re: The Parallel Universe Restraining Order

As a resident of Universe-7B, I want to thank HuckFinn for finally covering our side of the story. You try collapsing into a superposition every time some grad student in Switzerland decides to "take measurements." It's exhausting.

— Schrödinger's Other Cat, Universe-7B

Re: The Space Potato Gun

I am a potato and I find this offensive. We have contributed so much to society (fries, vodka, the Irish economy) and now we're being associated with Mach 23 orbital bombardment? This is a new low.

— A Concerned Russet, Idaho

Re: Haptic Sweater Fondling

As an actual doorknob, I did not consent to being sensed "slickly" through anyone's finger bandage. Please stop involving us in your research. We just want to be turned.

— Anonymous Doorknob, A Door Somewhere

Re: LinkedIn Limb Regeneration

I have been a salamander for 6 years and at no point have I posted on LinkedIn about it. Please leave us out of your "thought leadership." We regrow limbs because we have to, not for engagement.

— Actually_A_Salamander 🦎, A Moist Log

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