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UAE’s Departure from OPEC Exposes Latent Tension Amongst Gulf Nations

As the crown prince of Saudi Arabia commenced a summit of Gulf Arab leaders, the UAE announced that it will be leaving the oil cartel OPEC and OPEC+ (an alliance of 11 member countries of OPEC and 10

Dandenong Residents Shut Out of Council Meeting

On Monday 20 April, residents were shut out of a routine council meeting during a motion to show solidarity with Greater Dandenong’s Lebanese residents, amidst the ongoing invasion of Lebanon by Israe

Victorian Teachers to Strike on March 24 as Union Rejects Pay Offer

Victorian public school teachers will walk off the job after the Australian Education Union (AEU) rejected the state government’s latest pay offer on March 24. This will escalate a long- running dis

The F1 Grand Prix of Hometown Tragedy and the Mercedes Comeback

With the Formula 1 season back in action for its 2026 season under new regulations, we have seen Melbourne's hometown hero, Oscar Piastri, fail to make it to the starting grid, and Mercedes and Ferrar

Seminar Series: Prof. David Jamieson

Seminar Series: Prof. David Jamieson

25/05/2026–25/05/2026
12:00 PM–1:00 PM
Geoff Opat Seminar Room (Level 6, David Caro Building)
Physics Students Society

A familiar face to our first-year and statistical physics students! Little did you know, Prof. David Jamieson has also been on a quest to overturn history... and perhaps find out that Galileo may have discovered Neptune? Come and see what mysteries may have been unravelled through Galileo's original notebooks during David Jamieson's trip to Florence, Italy. Take a seat, increase your physics history lore and devour the pizza before the second law of thermodynamics takes over (and increases its entropy)!

Overturning history - did Galileo discover Neptune?

History tells us that the planet Neptune was discovered in the mid-1800s.  It is widely accepted that Galileo Galilei observed it over 200 years earlier but recorded it in his notebooks as a star. There may be evidence in those same notebooks that could suggest the great astronomer, working with the first astronomical telescope he had crafted himself, knew that he was looking at a planet. I will report on my trip to Florence to examine Galileo’s original notebooks on my quest to prove this hypothesis.

Farrago's magazine cover - Edition Two 2026

EDITION TWO 2026 AVAILABLE NOW!

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