Nature


Nature and Science17 Jan 2013 08:19 pm

Whoa, dude. Check out those killer equations. Sweet. These realities are experienced separately by each individual. As far as either can tell, the other one doesn’t exist.

This seems weird to us, because each of us only experiences an individual existence, and we don’t get to see other branches. It’s as if each of us, like Schrödinger here, are a kind of coral branching into different possibilities. The mathematics of quantum mechanics tells us this is how the world works at tiny scales. It can be summed up in a single sentence: Everything that can happen, does. That’s quantum mechanics. But this does not mean everything happens. The rest of physics is about describing what can happen and what can’t. What physics tells us is that everything comes down to geometry and the interactions of elementary particles. And things can happen only if these interactions are perfectly balanced.

Nature and Science and Space07 Jan 2013 10:06 pm

“This movie from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory shows a fast moving jet of particles produced by a rapidly rotating neutron star, and may provide new insight into the nature of some of the densest matter in the universe. The star of this movie is the Vela pulsar, a neutron star that was formed when a massive star collapsed. The Vela pulsar is about 1,000 light years from Earth, spansis about 12 miles in diameter, and makes over 11 complete rotations every second, faster than a helicopter rotor. As the pulsar whips around, it spews out a jet of charged particles that race out along the pulsar’s rotation axis at about 70% of the speed of light” (NASA).

Best Of and Futuretechture and Nature and Science and Society30 Nov 2012 06:34 pm

“You know, most breakthroughs are actually quite simple. They’re actually things that lie right under our noses. Most breakthroughs don’t come from geniuses, they come from people that just see things differently and are willing to take the time sometimes months sometimes years sometimes decades to look at what most people see as noise and look for signal. What are we looking for when we’re looking at this noise? What kind of signal are we looking for? What we’re looking for is patterns that are hidden in plain sight.

EarthOS and Nature and Science29 Mar 2012 11:30 am

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