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Keyword: stringtheory

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  • Tsunami invisibility cloak, dark energy v. the void, sorting nanotubes with light, and more

    09/26/2008 4:30:39 AM PDT · by decimon · 12 replies · 490+ views
    American Physical Society ^ | Sep 26, 2008 | Unknown
    Tsunami invisibility cloak, dark energy v. the void, sorting nanotubes with light, and moreNews from the American Physical SocietyTsunami Invisibility Cloak M. Farhat, S. Enoch, S. Guenneau and A.B. Movchan Physical Review Letters (forthcoming) Rather than building stronger ocean-based structures to withstand tsunamis, it might be easier to simply make the structures disappear. A collaboration of physicists from the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) and Aix-Marseille Universite in France and the University of Liverpool in England have conducted laboratory experiments showing that it's possible to make type of dike that acts as an invisibility cloak that hides off-shore...
  • Mysterious New 'Dark Flow' Discovered in Space

    09/25/2008 8:58:58 AM PDT · by nobama08 · 18 replies · 755+ views
    foxnews.com ^ | Thursday, September 25, 2008 | Clara Moskowitz
    As if the mysteries of dark matter and dark energy weren't vexing enough, another baffling cosmic puzzle has been discovered. Patches of matter in the universe seem to be moving at very high speeds and in a uniform direction that can't be explained by any of the known gravitational forces in the observable universe. Astronomers are calling the phenomenon "dark flow." The stuff that's pulling this matter must be outside the observable universe, researchers conclude.
  • Chinese Create First Warp Drive_(space military application)

    09/24/2008 6:17:27 PM PDT · by Flavius · 27 replies · 1,076+ views
    io9 ^ | 9/25/08 | io9
    military application electromagnetic drive in space
  • Chinese Say They're Building 'Impossible' Space Drive

    09/24/2008 9:44:37 AM PDT · by Fractal Trader · 36 replies · 1,193+ views
    Wired | 24 Sep 2008
    (wired) Link Only: http://blog.wired.com/defense/2008/09/chinese-buildin.html
  • Mysterious New 'Dark Flow' Discovered in Space

    09/23/2008 4:46:02 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 37 replies · 252+ views
    Space.com on Yahoo ^ | 9/23/08 | Clara Moskowitz
    As if the mysteries of dark matter and dark energy weren't vexing enough, another baffling cosmic puzzle has been discovered. Patches of matter in the universe seem to be moving at very high speeds and in a uniform direction that can't be explained by any of the known gravitational forces in the observable universe. Astronomers are calling the phenomenon "dark flow." The stuff that's pulling this matter must be outside the observable universe, researchers conclude. When scientists talk about the observable universe, they don't just mean as far out as the eye, or even the most powerful telescope, can see....
  • Hadron Collider forced to halt

    09/20/2008 5:31:24 AM PDT · by chessplayer · 26 replies · 149+ views
    "Plans to begin smashing particles at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) may be delayed after a magnet failure forced engineers to halt work." "The failure, known as a quench, caused around 100 of the LHC's super-cooled magnets to heat up by as much as 100C." "The fire brigade were called out after a tonne of liquid helium leaked into the tunnel at Cern, near Geneva." "The LHC beam will remain turned off over the weekend while engineers investigate the severity of the fault."
  • Hubble Finds a Mystery Object (something that astronomers cannot make any sense of)

    09/15/2008 11:47:36 AM PDT · by LibWhacker · 142 replies · 1,305+ views
    Don't get the idea that we've found every kind of astronomical object there is in the universe. In a paper to appear in the Astrophysical Journal, astronomers working on the Supernova Cosmology Project report finding a new kind of something that they cannot make any sense of. Now you don't see it, now you do. Something in Bootes truly in the middle of nowhere — apparently not even in a galaxy — brightened by at least 120 times during more than three months and then faded away. Its spectrum was like nothing ever seen, write the discoverers, with "five broad...
  • Black Hole's 'Birth Scream' Heard Across Universe

    09/13/2008 9:25:42 AM PDT · by nobama08 · 12 replies · 448+ views
    foxnews.com ^ | Friday, September 12, 2008 | Andrea Thompson
    Six months ago, satellite telescopes spotted an exceptionally bright burst of energy that would have been the most distant object in the universe ever visible to the naked eye, if anyone had noticed it. Even though no humans have reported seeing it directly, the gamma-ray burst, an explosion that signals the violent death of a massive star, is changing theories of how these events look. Gamma-ray bursts are typically accompanied by intense releases of other forms of radiation, from X-rays to visible light. This burst, dubbed GRB 080319B, was first detected by the Swift satellite on March 19, while the...
  • The Origins of the Universe: A Crash Course

    09/12/2008 10:07:14 PM PDT · by neverdem · 32 replies · 814+ views
    NY Times ^ | September 12, 2008 | BRIAN GREENE
    THREE hundred feet below the outskirts of Geneva lies part of a 17-mile-long tubular track, circling its way across the French border and back again, whose interior is so pristine and whose nearly 10,000 surrounding magnets so frigid, that it’s one of the emptiest and coldest regions of space in the solar system. The track is part of the Large Hadron Collider, a technological marvel built by physicists and engineers, and described alternatively as heralding the next revolution in our understanding of the universe or, less felicitously, as a doomsday machine that may destroy the planet. After more than a...
  • 5 Things You Need to Know About the Large Hadron Collider Now

    09/10/2008 5:13:56 AM PDT · by yankeedame · 42 replies · 2,488+ views
    Popular Mechancis ^ | September 10, 2008 | Erik Sofge
    5 Things You Need to Know About the Large Hadron Collider Now Study up with new mysteries from the celebrity particle collider before it doesn't destroy the world on Wednesday, then talk physics with the interactive chat widget below—and stay tuned for on-the-scene reporting in the morning! A a large dipole magnet is lowered into the tunnel to complete the basic installation of the more than 1700 magnets that make up the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), which measures 27 km in circumference. The largest particle accelerator in history will take another step on Wednesday toward living up to its own...
  • Gamma-Ray Burst Aimed Directly at Earth

    09/10/2008 4:42:43 PM PDT · by LibWhacker · 50 replies · 710+ views
    A massive gamma-ray burst detected last March, believed to be the brightest ever seen, turns out to have been aimed directly at the Earth. A narrow jet that drove material toward us at 99.99995 of the speed of light is revealed in the data, itself wrapped within a somewhat slower and wider jet. The best estimates are that an alignment like this occurs only once every ten years. Says Paul O’Brien (University of Leicester, and a member of the team working on the Swift satellite): “We normally detect only the wide jet of a GRB as the inner jet is...
  • Upper Mass Limit For Black Holes?

    09/10/2008 12:03:56 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 24 replies · 168+ views
    ScienceDaily ^ | Wednesday, September 10, 2008 | Royal Astronomical Society
    Once considered rare and exotic objects, black holes are now known to exist throughout the Universe, with the largest and most massive found at the centres of the largest galaxies. These "ultra-massive" black holes have been shown to have masses upwards of one billion times that of our own Sun. Now, Priyamvada Natarajan, an associate professor of astronomy and physics at Yale University and a fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, has shown that even the biggest of these gravitational monsters can't keep growing forever. Instead, they appear to curb their own growth - once they accumulate about...
  • CERN fires up new atom smasher to near Big Bang

    09/08/2008 4:17:18 PM PDT · by OneVike · 17 replies · 344+ views
    AP ^ | September 7, 2008 | ALEXANDER G. HIGGINS
    GENEVA - It has been called an Alice in Wonderland investigation into the makeup of the universe — or dangerous tampering with nature that could spell doomsday. Whatever the case, the most powerful atom-smasher ever built comes online Wednesday, eagerly anticipated by scientists worldwide who have awaited this moment for two decades.
  • Big Bang Machine' Set to Start Up Wednesday

    09/08/2008 1:36:08 PM PDT · by GiovannaNicoletta · 63 replies · 211+ views
    Foxnews.com ^ | September 8, 2008 | Unattributed (Associated Press)
    GENEVA — It's been called an Alice in Wonderland investigation into the makeup of the universe — or dangerous tampering with nature that could spell doomsday.
  • Fermilab physicists discover "doubly strange" particle

    09/03/2008 12:54:20 PM PDT · by decimon · 29 replies · 421+ views
    Fermilab ^ | Sept. 3, 2008 | Unknown
    Batavia, Ill. - Physicists of the DZero experiment at the U.S. Department of Energy's Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory have discovered a new particle made of three quarks, the Omega-sub-b (Ωb). The particle contains two strange quarks and a bottom quark (s-s-b). It is an exotic relative of the much more common proton and weighs about six times the proton mass. The discovery of the doubly strange particle brings scientists a step closer to understanding exactly how quarks form matter and to completing the "periodic table of baryons." Baryons (derived from the Greek word "barys," meaning "heavy") are particles that contain...
  • Do nuclear decay rates depend on our distance from the sun?

    09/02/2008 8:14:57 PM PDT · by B-Chan · 114 replies · 590+ views
    The Physics Arxiv Blog ^ | August 29th, 2008 | KFC
    Here’s an interesting conundrum involving nuclear decay rates. We think that the decay rates of elements are constant regardless of the ambient conditions (except in a few special cases where beta decay can be influenced by powerful electric fields). So that makes it hard to explain the curious periodic variations in the decay rates of silicon-32 and radium-226 observed by groups at the Brookhaven National Labs in the US and at the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesandstalt in Germany in the 1980s. Today, the story gets even more puzzling. Jere Jenkins and pals at Purdue University in Indiana have re-analysed the raw data...
  • Large Hadron Rap [funny video about the Large Hadron Collider]

    08/31/2008 4:37:53 PM PDT · by 1rudeboy · 11 replies · 358+ views
    Want to know more? Can't sleep, and are too lazy to get up and turn on George Noory? Let this woman put you to sleep.
  • Purdue Reprimands Fusion Scientist for Misconduct

    08/30/2008 1:35:52 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 6 replies · 167+ views
    Sci-Tech Today ^ | August 29, 2008 | Associated Press
    The Purdue panel said Rusi Taleyarkhan misled the scientific community by claiming his "bubble fusion" findings had been independently replicated.
  • Arguments that Prove that Climate Change is driven by Solar Activity and not by CO2 Emission

    05/26/2008 4:09:08 PM PDT · by Delacon · 45 replies · 228+ views
    Canada Free Press ^ | May 26, 2008 | Dr. Gerhard Löbert
    <p>Conveyor of a super-Einsteinian theory of gravitation that explains, among many other post-Einstein-effects, the Sun-Earth-Connection and the true cause of the global climate changes.</p> <p>As the glaciological and tree ring evidence shows, climate change is a natural phenomenon that has occurred many times in the past, both with the magnitude as well as with the time rate of temperature change that have occurred in the recent decades. The following facts prove that the recent global warming is not man-made but is a natural phenomenon.</p>
  • Do nuclear decay rates depend on our distance from the sun?

    08/29/2008 9:29:09 AM PDT · by LibWhacker · 108 replies · 776+ views
    Here’s an interesting conundrum involving nuclear decay rates. We think that the decay rates of elements are constant regardless of the ambient conditions (except in a few special cases where beta decay can be influenced by powerful electric fields). So that makes it hard to explain the curious periodic variations in the decay rates of silicon-32 and radium-226 observed by groups at the Brookhaven National Labs in the US and at the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesandstalt in Germany in the 1980s. Today, the story gets even more puzzling. Jere Jenkins and pals at Purdue University in Indiana have re-analysed the raw data...