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Keyword: stringtheory

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  • Massive gamma ray bubbles discovered in galaxy center

    11/09/2010 5:57:02 PM PST · by NormsRevenge · 28 replies
    AFP on Yahoo ^ | 11/9/10 | AFP
    WASHINGTON (AFP) – Two huge, unexplained gamma ray emitting bubbles have been discovered at the center of the Milky Way galaxy, US astronomers said Tuesday. Masked by a fog of gamma rays that appears throughout the sky, the bubbles form a feature spanning 50,000 light-years and could be the remnant of a supersized black hole eruption or the outflows from a burst of star formation, the astronomers said. The structure spans more than half of the visible sky, from the constellation Virgo to the constellation Grus, and it may be millions of years old, the astronomers said in a paper...
  • Is Precognition Real? Cornell University Lab Releases Powerful New Evidence

    11/08/2010 8:33:23 AM PST · by The Comedian · 110 replies
    H+ ^ | November 4, 2010 | Ben Goertzel
    Is Precognition Real? Cornell University Lab Releases Powerful New Evidence that the Human Mind can Perceive the Future Written By: Ben Goertzel Date Published: November 4, 2010 According to today’s conventional scientific wisdom, time flows strictly forward — from the past to the future through the present. We can remember the past, and we can predict the future based on the past (albeit imperfectly) — but we can’t perceive the future. But if the recent data from the lab of Prof. Daryl Bem at Cornell University is correct, conventional scientific wisdom may need some corrections on this particular point. In...
  • Scientists collide lead ions in Big Bang machine

    11/08/2010 1:35:12 PM PST · by markomalley · 16 replies
    AP ^ | 11/8/2010 | FRANK JORDANS
    GENEVA – Scientists at the world's largest atom smasher said Monday they have succeeded in recreating conditions shortly after the Big Bang by switching the particles they use for collisions from protons to much heavier lead ions. The Large Hadron Collider recorded its first lead ion collisions on Sunday and has since stabilized the twin beams sufficiently to start running physics experiments, said a spokeswoman for the European Organization for Nuclear Research, or CERN. The collisions produce an effect that is as close as researchers have ever come to observing the state of matter moments after the formation of the...
  • New *Supernova* Lights Up Leo...

    11/07/2010 5:54:06 PM PST · by TaraP · 62 replies · 2+ views
    Universe Today | Nov 7th, 2010
    A new supernova? Darn right. Lighting up Leo? Well… not without some serious visual aid, but the fact that someone out there is watching and has invited us along for the ride is mighty important. And just who might that someone be? None other than Tim Puckett. Less than 24 hours ago, the American Association of Variable Star Observer’s Report #222 stated: “Bright Supernova in UGC 5189A: SN 2010jl November 5, 2010 We have been informed by Tim Puckett and by the Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams (CBET 2532, Daniel W. E. Green, Ed.) of the discovery of a bright...
  • Is the Universe a Big Hologram? This Device Could Find Out

    11/06/2010 6:09:36 PM PDT · by GiovannaNicoletta · 125 replies
    The Christian Science Monitor ^ | October 25, 2010 | Ian O'Neill
    During the hunt for the predicted ripples in space-time — known as gravitational waves — physicists stumbled across a rather puzzling phenomenon. Last year, I reported about the findings of scientists using the GEO600 experiment in Germany. Although the hi-tech piece of kit hadn’t turned up evidence for the gravitational waves it was seeking, it did turn up a lot of noise. snip As it turns out, Hogan thinks that noise at these scales are caused by a holographic projection from the horizon of our universe.
  • Physicists Discover "Violation of a Fundamental Symmetry of the Universe"

    11/04/2010 12:31:54 PM PDT · by lbryce · 110 replies · 1+ views
    i09.com ^ | November 3, 2010 | Staff
    Today physicists announced that they may have found the key to explaining dark matter in the universe. It all has to do with the potential discovery of a "sterile neutrino." According to a release about the new study: Neutrinos are neutral elementary particles born in the radioactive decay of other particles. The known "flavors" of neutrinos are the neutral counterparts of electrons and their heavier cousins, muons and taus. Regardless of a neutrino's original flavor, the particles constantly flip from one type to another in a phenomenon called "neutrino flavor oscillation." An electron neutrino might become a muon neutrino, and...
  • Time Will End in Five Billion Years, Physicists Predict

    11/01/2010 5:18:12 AM PDT · by decimon · 51 replies
    National Geographic ^ | October 28, 2010 | Ker Than
    Our universe has existed for nearly 14 billion years, and as far as most people are concerned, the universe should continue to exist for billions of years more. But according to a new paper, there's one theory for the origins of the universe that predicts time itself will end in just five billion years—coincidentally, right around the time our sun is slated to die.The prediction comes from the theory of eternal inflation, which says our universe is part of the multiverse. This vast structure is made up of an infinite number of universes, each of which can spawn an infinite...
  • Advance could change modern electronics ("metal-insulator-metal" diode)

    10/29/2010 2:06:17 PM PDT · by decimon · 27 replies · 1+ views
    Oregon State University ^ | October 29, 2010 | Unknown
    CORVALLIS, Ore. – Researchers at Oregon State University have solved a quest in fundamental material science that has eluded scientists since the 1960s, and could form the basis of a new approach to electronics. The discovery, just reported online in the professional journal Advanced Materials, outlines the creation for the first time of a high-performance "metal-insulator-metal" diode. "Researchers have been trying to do this for decades, until now without success," said Douglas Keszler, a distinguished professor of chemistry at OSU and one of the nation's leading material science researchers. "Diodes made previously with other approaches always had poor yield and...
  • Quantum entanglement stronger than suspected

    07/17/2002 3:47:40 PM PDT · by gcruse · 113 replies · 512+ views
    New Scientist ^ | July 17, 2002 | Ian Sample
    Pairs of photons linked by the weird quantum effect of entanglement can pass through sheets of metal without the entanglement being destroyed. The finding means the quantum linking of particles is far more robust than scientists thought and could help them develop new ways of making quantum computers. Scientists think quantum computers could be hugely powerful because of their ability to perform many calculations at once, instead of doing one after another like regular computers. When photons are entangled, the physical properties of one are intimately linked to the other. Measuring the properties of one will instantly tell you the...
  • Benoit Mandelbrot, Mathematician, Dies at 85 (Fractal geometry)

    10/16/2010 8:13:34 AM PDT · by tlb · 30 replies
    New York Times ^ | October 16, 2010 | JASCHA HOFFMAN
    Benoit B. Mandelbrot, a maverick mathematician who developed an innovative theory of roughness and applied it to physics, biology, finance and many other fields, died on Thursday in Cambridge, Mass. He was 85. His death, at a hospice, was caused by pancreatic cancer, his wife, Aliette, said. He had lived in Cambridge. Dr. Mandelbrot coined the term “fractal” to refer to a new class of mathematical shapes whose uneven contours could mimic the irregularities found in nature. “Applied mathematics had been concentrating for a century on phenomena which were smooth, but many things were not like that: the more you...
  • Physicists Discover Universal "Wet-Dog Shake" Rule

    10/21/2010 11:28:12 AM PDT · by Fractal Trader · 86 replies · 1+ views
    Technology Review ^ | 20 October 2010
    How fast should a wet dog rotate its body to dry its fur? It's a question that many dog owners will have spent sleepless nights pondering. How rapidly should a wet dog oscillate its body to dry its fur? Today we have an answer thanks to the pioneering work of Andrew Dickerson at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta and a few buddies. But more than that, their work generates an interesting new conundrum about the nature of shaken fur dynamics. Dickerson and co filmed a number of dogs shaking their fur and used the images to measure the...
  • Oldest Object In Universe Found

    10/20/2010 11:38:54 AM PDT · by hsrazorback1 · 53 replies · 1+ views
    Discovery News ^ | 10-20-2010 | Irene Klotz
    Homing in on an object found during the Hubble Space Telescope's long, deep stare into the distant past, astronomers have fished out a galaxy whose light has traveled more than 13 billion light-years to get here, making it the oldest astronomical object found so far. The universe's most senior citizen is called UDFy-38135539, but scientists suspect its title as record-holder -- previously held by a gamma-ray burst -- will not last.
  • 'Telescope' buried a mile under the Antarctic ice to find source of cosmic rays

    10/18/2010 6:44:01 AM PDT · by LucyT · 18 replies
    Telegraph.co.uk ^ | 18 Oct 2010 | Richard Gray, Science Correspondent
    A "telescope" buried deep under Antarctic ice has detected the first signals that scientists hope will allow them to identify the source of mysterious particles that bombard Earth from outer space. For the past ten years scientists have been planning and building an ambitious experiment to explain the mystery of what produces the cosmic rays and elusive particles known as neutrinos, which constantly pepper our planet. more at Telegraph.co.UK
  • Curious Mathematical Law Is Rife In Nature

    10/16/2010 5:27:23 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 57 replies
    New Scientist ^ | Thursday, October 14, 2010 | Rachel Courtland
    What do earthquakes, spinning stellar remnants, bright space objects and a host of other natural phenomena have in common? Some of their properties conform to a curious and little known mathematical law, which could now find new uses. A subject of fascination to mathematicians, Benford's law states that for many sets of numbers, the first or "leading" digit of each number is not random. Instead, there is a 30.1 per cent chance that a number's leading digit is a 1. Progressively higher leading digits get increasingly unlikely, and a number has just a 4.6 per cent chance of beginning with...
  • Organic Crystal Allows Excitons to Travel Further, Produces More Efficient Plastic Solar Cells

    10/12/2010 10:33:05 AM PDT · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 14 replies
    Daily Tech ^ | October 11, 2010 10:56 AM | Tiffany Kaiser
    Rubrene crystal raises hope for the use of organic semiconductors and cheaper, more efficient solar cells Rutgers University physicists have found new properties within a material that could lead to the production of less expensive and more efficient plastic solar cells. Vitaly Podzorov, co-author of the study and assistant professor of physics at Rutgers University, along with his research team have discovered that organic semiconductors allow energy-carrying particles -- which are created by "packets" of light -- to journey a thousand times farther than researchers previously thought. "Organic semiconductors are promising for solar cells and other uses, such as video displays, because they can be...
  • Cool gas answers riddle of galaxy growth (possibly solving the mystery of galactic proportions)

    10/13/2010 7:57:26 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 28 replies
    AFP on Yahoo ^ | 10/13/10 | AFP
    PARIS (AFP) – European astrophysicists said on Wednesday they could settle a mystery about how galaxies crank up in size, developing from proto-structures in the early Universe to the billion-star behemoths of today. Analysis of ancient light, known as redshift, indicates that the first galaxies were formed nearly 13 billion years ago, about a billion years after the "Big Bang" that created the Universe. They then dramatically fattened up to become the giant systems we see today, and the question is why. Until now, many experts believed that galaxies increased in size by colliding with others, in the same way...
  • Physicists Observe Electron Ejected from Atom for First Time

    10/12/2010 1:01:13 PM PDT · by decimon · 48 replies
    Wright-Patterson Air Force Base ^ | September 28, 2010 | Maria Callier
    9/24/2010 - ARLINGTON, Va. -- Air Force Office of Scientific Research-supported physicists at the University of California, Berkeley in collaboration with researchers from the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics and the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, became the first researchers to observe the motion of an atom's valence or outermost electrons in real-time by investigating the ejection of an electron from an atom by an intense laser pulse. In the experiments, an electron in a krypton atom is removed by a laser pulse that lasts less than four femtoseconds (one femtosecond is one millionth of one...
  • Scale of the Universe

    10/11/2010 8:17:30 AM PDT · by Natufian · 45 replies
    Primaxstudio ^ | Cary Huang
    An attempt to show the scale of things from the tiniest to the galactic. Wow.
  • After Big Bang Came Moment of Pure Chaos, Study Finds (order eventually came out of chaos?)

    10/05/2010 10:58:20 AM PDT · by WebFocus · 82 replies · 1+ views
    Space.com ^ | 10/05/2010 | Clara Moskowitz
    <p>The universe was in chaos after the Big Bang kick-started the cosmos, a new study suggests.</p> <p>While one might expect the explosion that began the universe to wreak some havoc, scientists mean something very specific when they refer to chaos. In a chaotic system, small changes can cause large-scale effects. A commonly cited example is the "butterfly effect" — the idea that a butterfly beating its wing in Brazil can bring about a tornado in Texas.</p>
  • Science and its Enemies on the Left: An Update - The Democrats' and the Left's War on Science

    10/08/2010 7:27:27 PM PDT · by neverdem · 22 replies
    redstate.com ^ | October 8, 2010 | Dan McLaughlin
    Scientific integrity and scientific progress continue to take a beating from the Left.In Part I of my series of essays on Science and its Enemies on the Left, I looked at the toll of junk science, quackery and anti-technological Luddism and the role of the social and political Left in promoting all three. In Part II, I looked at politicized science (both the misuse of science by politicians and the politicization of scientists themselves) and the temptations presented to scientists by their ability to gain power through science.I’m overdue to finish Part III of the series, but in the meantime,...