RSS feed source: Global Disaster Alert and Coordination Systems (GDACS).

Fri, 1 Aug 2025, 11:22 | BY: EARTHQUAKEMONITOR

An earthquake of magnitude 4.7 occurred early evening on Friday, August 1st, 2025, at 6:15 pm local time near Jakarta, Daerah Khusus Ibukota Jakarta, Indonesia, as reported by Indonesia’s Meteorology, Climatology, and Geophysical Agency.
According to preliminary data, the quake was located at a great depth of 387. km. The strength of the earthquake may have been tempered by its relative great depth below the surface, which makes it feel weaker in absolute terms. The exact magnitude, epicenter, and depth of the quake might be revised within the next few hours or minutes as seismologists review data and refine their calculations, or as other agencies issue their report.
According to preliminary calculations, we do not expect that the quake was felt by many people and did not cause any damage. In Teluknaga (pop. 128,300, 77 km away), Sepatan (pop. 118,400, 78 km away), Kresek (pop. 110,200, 78 km away), Pasarkemis (pop. 273,700, 83 km away), Serang (pop. 692,100, 83 km away), Tangerang (pop. 1,912,700, 85 km away), Cikupa (pop. 174,000, 90 km away), Ciputat (pop. 207,900, 94 km away), Jakarta (pop. 8,540,100, 97 km away), and Bekasi (pop. 2,564,900, 107 km away), the quake was probably not felt.
VolcanoDiscovery will automatically update magnitude and depth if these change and follow up if other significant news about the

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RSS feed source: Global Disaster Alert and Coordination Systems (GDACS).

A tiny 3 kg detector has made a huge leap in neutrino science by detecting rare CEvNS interactions at a Swiss reactor. This elusive effect, long predicted and hard to measure, was captured with unprecedented clarity. The achievement could kick off a new era of compact, mobile neutrino detectors with powerful applications.

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