Fermi Inc. (NASDAQ:FRMI) surged 15.75% ahead of its upcoming business update and participation in the Evercore Power Conference, amid renewed optimism in the AI industry and recent developments in its data center operations, including a major tenant pullout and a new power supply agreement.
NASA's Fermi Telescope has observed a young star cluster, Westerlund 1, emitting gamma-ray bubbles extending over 650 light-years, providing new insights into cosmic ray outflows and their role in galaxy evolution.
Fermi, a data centre real estate start-up co-founded by ex-US energy secretary Rick Perry, surged 55% on its Nasdaq debut, raising over $682 million. The company plans to build the world's largest energy and data campus in Texas, leveraging nuclear, natural gas, and renewable energy sources to support the AI industry, amid a surge in energy-related stocks and significant interest from international investors, especially in London.
Researchers from the University of Naples, the University of Wroclaw, and the University of Bergen have found preliminary evidence supporting quantum gravity models that predict a decrease in the speed of ultrarelativistic particles with rising energy. The investigation used gamma-ray bursts observed by the Fermi telescope and ultra-high-energy neutrinos detected by the IceCube Neutrino Observatory. This marks a significant milestone in the field of quantum gravity research since it is the first time that such a level of quantum gravity-supportive statistical evidence is found.