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Off Topic Dark Matter and other Astronomy information.

Discussion in 'Liverpool' started by BBFs Unpopular View, Feb 21, 2014.

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  1. Thus Spake Zarathustra

    Thus Spake Zarathustra GC Thread Terminator

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    Fascinating stuff all this. Does it mean 'information' travels instantly through other dimensions? I sort of have this tenuous vision that these four dimensions we experience are governed by relativity, but the quantum stuff, especially at Plank/string level. flits in and out of these dimensions. But I think I'm just imposing a solution that fits my own 4d experiences as opposed to a mathematical answer. A bit like trying to convince a caveman that the world's round and you don't fall off at the bottom.

    Love trying to get my head around stuff I don't understand.
     
    #3181
  2. Thus Spake Zarathustra

    Thus Spake Zarathustra GC Thread Terminator

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    We've had ****ing Christmas lights up in the city centre here in York from a few days after Bonfure night!
     
    #3182
  3. Thus Spake Zarathustra

    Thus Spake Zarathustra GC Thread Terminator

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    Godspeed Tim Peake, btw.
     
    #3183
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  4. Red Hadron Collider

    Red Hadron Collider The Hammerhead

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    Wolf 1061c: Astronomers spot nearest planets capable of supporting life ever seen
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    The Independent

    Andrew Griffin10 hrs ago
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    © Provided by The Independent An artist's impression shows what HD 219134b could look like (Picture: [copyright])
    Astronomers have spotted a planet that is the closest potentially habitable world humanity has ever seen.

    The planet is four times as big as Earth and sits perfectly within the “Goldilocks zone” that would make it able to support life. Astronomers look for worlds that sit in that perfect region, where it is not too hot or cold to support liquid water.

    It is one of the first times that astronomers have spotted a planet near to us that has the kind of rocky, solid surface that is thought to be necessary for alien life.

    "It is a particularly exciting find because all three planets are of low enough mass to be potentially rocky and have a solid surface, and the middle planet, Wolf 1061c, sits within the 'Goldilocks' zone where it might be possible for liquid water — and maybe even life — to exist," said lead study author Dr Duncan Wright in a statement.

    "It is fascinating to look out at the vastness of space and think a star so very close to us — a near neighbour — could host a habitable planet.”

    Scientists might now be able to catch a view of the planet, helping them study its atmosphere and explore whether it might be able to support life.

    The team found three planets going around a star that is stable like our own but smaller and relatively cool. One of the three planets, known as Wolf 1061c, sits squarely within the habitable zone.

    The team, from the University of New South Wales (UNSW), made the discovery using the HARPS spectrograph, which is part of the European Southern Observatory's 3.6 metre telescope in La Silla in Chile.

    "Our team has developed a new technique that improves the analysis of the data from this precise, purpose-built, planet-hunting instrument, and we have studied more than a decade's worth of observations of Wolf 1061," Professor Chris Tinney, head of the Exoplanetary Science at UNSW group, said in a statement.

    "These three planets right next door to us join the small but growing ranks of potentially habitable rocky worlds orbiting nearby stars cooler than our Sun."

    Scientists will now hope that they can explore the planet’s atmosphere in more detail.

    "The close proximity of the planets around Wolf 1061 means there is a good chance these planets may pass across the face of the star. If they do, then it may be possible to study the atmospheres of these planets in future to see whether they would be conducive to life," said team member UNSW's Dr Rob Wittenmyer in a statement.
     
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  5. terrifictraore

    terrifictraore Well-Known Member

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    If there is life on that planet, well **** em! coming here taking our jobs etc blah blah

    How many Goldilocks planets do we have to find before the odds of finding life on there start to turn in our favour? even if its as low as 100 000 how many of these have we found so far?
     
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  6. saintanton

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    The picture, and the first line underneath it make me laugh:
    Utterly meaningless.
     
    #3186
  7. terrifictraore

    terrifictraore Well-Known Member

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    I always love the artists impressions in the local media usually a new shopping centre etc they were always bollox. Viz used to do some great pisstakes of them.
     
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  8. Peej

    Peej Fabio Borini Lover

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    That's just a big pharma myth.
     
    #3188
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  9. Peej

    Peej Fabio Borini Lover

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    Anyways......


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    Daniel is a deputy news editor for Science.

    Email Daniel
    By
    Daniel Clery
    16 December 2015 5:00 pm
    Comments
    Finding a supernova—the huge explosion that marks the death of a star—in a distant galaxy is lucky enough, but one group of astronomers also got the bonus of an instant replay, thanks to gravity. The team first witnessed the supernova last year, as it exploded behind a massive cluster of galaxies 5 billion light-years from Earth called MACS J1149.5+2223. They noticed four images of the same supernova arranged around a galaxy in what is known as an “Einstein cross.” This lensing effect happens when the gravity of a galaxy bends the light of an object behind it so that, from Earth, we see four images of the same object. The team realized that other galaxies in the cluster might be gravitationally lensing light from the same supernova. But, as the light would follow different paths, it would take more or less time to reach Earth. So they set out to carefully model all the matter, conventional and dark, in the galaxy cluster to predict when and where lensed images of the supernova might appear (pictured). One appearance, they calculated, must have happened in 1998, but no telescopes were watching. Another one, they reckoned, was due to happen just about now. On 11 December, the Hubble Space Telescope struck oil: An image of the same supernova appeared just as predicted, the first time such an event has been successfully forecast. The sighting is also a powerful demonstration of astronomers’ ability to model the effect of gravitational mass on light.


    http://news.sciencemag.org/space/20...acebook-text&utm_campaign=supernovatwice-1548
     
    #3189
  10. Diego

    Diego Lone Ranger

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    Made up story, I have it from a good source that gravity doesn't bend light :bandit:
     
    #3190
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  11. Peej

    Peej Fabio Borini Lover

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    I guess this just goes to show that the big science con is pulling the wool over the eyes of the masses
     
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  12. Red Hadron Collider

    Red Hadron Collider The Hammerhead

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    The Coolest Science Stories You May Have Missed in 2015
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    Jennifer Ouellette

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    Not every scientific advance is heralded as a revolutionary breakthrough, because science mostly progresses incrementally. Sure, certain high-profile stories caught the lion’s share of attention this year. But there’s still plenty of nifty research going on that deserves a nod of appreciation too. Here are ten of our favorite cool science stories that you may have missed in 2015.

    Is This the First Image of Light as Both Particle and Wave?
    Early in the year, the first ever photograph of light as a particle and a wave at the same time went viral — but we soon learned the truth was a bit more nuanced than that. Created by a research team led by Fabrizio Carbone at EPFL, the experiment added a twist to the classic photoelectric effect, which explains why, for, instance, UV light hitting a metal target emits electrons. To wit: light exhibits both particle- and wave-like behavior.

    This seemed positively revolutionary, since a cornerstone of quantum mechanics is that you just can’t see both particle and wave aspects at the same time. As Ben Stein explained at Inside Science News, the image is actually lots of photons (the elementary particles of light) imaged together, with some acting like particles and others acting like waves. It’s not the same photons exhibiting their dual nature simultaneously. Maybe it wasn’t as earth-shattering a breakthrough as the Internet originally thought, but it’s still a pretty darn cool picture. [Paper]


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    Credit: Luc Arnal

    The Science of Screaming
    Everybody finds the sound of a human scream shrill and jarring. A study byneuroscientists at New York University suggested this might have something to do with how the acoustic quality of a human scream triggers the brain’s fear response. The key is a property of sound known as roughness that refers to how fast a sound changes in loudness. Per co-author Luc Arnal, normal speech has very slow differences in loudness (between 5 and 5 Hz) while screams show faster differences in loudness (between 30 and 150 Hz). He likens the effect to a strobe light, only for sound instead of sight.

    Arnal and his then-advisor, NYU neuroscientist David Poeppel, used recordings from YouTube videos, films and screaming volunteers, with varying degrees of roughness, to study how subjects in an fMRI scanner responded. The rougher the sound, the more participants rated it scary or distressing — and the stronger the activation response in the amygdala (often dubbed the fear center of the brain), rather than the auditory cortex. This suggests that our response to roughness in the sounds we hear triggers fear responses, perhaps to help us better react to perceived danger. They also found similar responses to the shrill sounds of crying babies or car alarms. [Paper]

    A Quantum “Weeping Angel” Effect
    We all know that quantum mechanics is weird. Case in point: a mere act of observation determines the outcome of an experiment. But if we never look away, time effectively stands still. It’s known as the quantum Zeno effect, although a rough analogy can be drawn to the Weeping Angels in Doctor Who. A watched quantum pot never boils. And a watched Weeping Angel can’t move.

    There have been a series of experiments confirming that the quantum Zeno effect really happens. (There’s also an “Anti-Zeno Effect,” whereby staring at the metaphorical quantum pot brings it to a boil more quickly — also experimentally confirmed.) Most recently, Cornell University physicists used lasers to trap a gas of rubidium chilled to super-cold temperatures in a lattice of light. Thanks to the peculiarities of quantum mechanics, every now and then, an atom manages to tunnel out of the trap.

    But when they repeatedly zapped the atoms with laser pulses at shorter and shorter intervals —the equivalent of looking inside Schroedinger’s proverbial box again and again and again — they found this makes it more difficult for trapped atoms to tunnel out. When the intervals become short enough, the atoms make like a Weeping Angel and are effectively frozen in place. [Paper]

    Dance of the Liquid Droplets
    Water droplets spread out when they hit a glass surface, but Stanford University scientists were puzzled by the strange behavior of water droplets dyed with food coloring that also contained propylene glycol (PG). As Gizmodo’s Maddie Stone wrote, “When two droplets of the same PG concentration are placed near one another, they coalesce. However, when droplets of different concentrations are neighbors, they get close but never join. Sometimes they even chase one another.”

    In a paper published in Nature, the Stanford scientists described the “beautiful” science that explains why liquid droplets dance with each other in such strikingly synchronized motion. It’s because the dancing drops are “binary,” i.e., contain two different types of fluid. Water evaporates more quickly than PG, and also has a higher surface tension, so it leaves more of the chemical behind as it evaporates away from the droplet’s edge. Then the surface tension kicks in, driving an inward flow. Co-author Manu Prakash likened the effect to a tornado inside the droplet. “Now the engine is running like a car, but the clutch is not engaged,” he told the Washington Post. “The drop doesn’t know where to go.”

    When another drop is added, the evaporation from the first acts as a kind of signal, telling the second where to go. The result is that two droplets appear to dance together. The Stanford team even created a guide so you, too, can create dancing droplets at home: you just need food coloring, water, and a glass slide. [Paper]


    Earthly Cities Grow Like Galaxies
    One of the nifty things about a good mathematical model is that it can reveal hidden connections between two systems that, on the surface, appear to be very different from each other. Two cosmologists, Henry Lin and Abraham Loeb, uncovered just such a surprising correlation, demonstrating that the way galaxies evolve from variations in matter density in the early universe is mathematically equivalent to the way cities grow from changes in population density on Earth.

    Their analysis centers on a well-known scaling pattern known as Zipf’s law, observed in everything from personal friendships to the population density of cities. As Gizmodo’s Kelsey Campbell-Dollaghan wrote, “Basically, the city with the highest population in a country will be twice as large as the next most populous city, and three times as large as the third most populous city, and so on.” The same holds true for galaxies, it seems. Loeb and Lin took a mathematical formula describing how galaxies form and evolve and applied it to the evolution of cities on Earth. The two systems proved remarkably similar. The scientists think that similar mathematical tools could be used to better model the spread of epidemics, among other applications. [Paper]

    A Grand Theory of Wrinkles
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    Credit: Denis Terwagne and Pedro Reis, MIT

    Wrinkles are found all throughout nature, from the surfaces of planets, to the dimples on a golf ball, and even in the small intestine. But these systems are usually studied on a case-by-case basis, working backwards to create computer simulations to better understand how and why they form. This year a team of engineers and mathematicians at MIT came up with their owngrand unified theory of wrinkles, especially applicable to wrinkles that form on curved surfaces.

    MIT engineer Pedro Reis has spent years studying how objects wrinkle. While conducting experiments on silicone test spheres, he noted that when he sucked the air out, some of those spheres formed dimples under pressure, but others formed a more squiggly pattern. His MIT colleague, mathematician Jorn Dunkel, noted a similarity between the latter and the patterns that appear when one heats a thin layer of oil. The two departments combined their efforts, pouring over all of Reis’ experimental data.

    They found that the kind of patterns that formed depended on just two factors: the curvature of the lower layer in relation to the thickness of the top wrinkling layer, and how much stress was applied to the wrinkling layer. “Our theory you could basically apply to the surface of the moon or Mars, or the surface of a grape,” co-author Norbert Stroop told Quanta magazine. [Paper]

    Getting to the Bottom of the Lollipop Hypothesis
    It’s a question that featured in a classic candy commercial: how many licks does it take to get to to center of a Tootsie-Pop? This year we learned the answer: about 2500, according to experiments by physicists at New York University. Call it the Lollipop Hypothesis. The NYU researchers used the candy to determine how fluids dissolve solids, a topic that also applies to the erosion of rivers and how pills dissolve in the body.

    The NYU team made their own homemade lollipops out of boiled sugar, corn syrup, and water, which they then molded into various shapes. Then they immersed the lollipops in a “water tunnel” (the aquatic equivalent of a wind tunnel) and watched them dissolve, varying the flow speed of the water. They found that there seems to be a preferred shape that objects take on as they dissolve, per Physics Buzz: “a smooth rounded front, a beveled facet in the middle, and a flat back side.” They also found that the dissolve rate depends on flow speed: for example, change the speed from 1 MPH to 4 MPH and the lollipop would completely dissolve in half the time.

    As for counting the number of licks, they calculated it would take an estimated 1000 swipes of the tongue per centimeter of candy to reach the center of a Tootsie-Pop. Since the candy measures about 1.063 in diameter, that translates into 2500 licks. [Paper]


    Solving the Mystery of How Glass Forms
    Glass is a class of materials that has been around for a very long time, yet its deeper secrets still elude physicists — particularly the stubborn mystery of how glass forms at the molecular level. A team of Canadian and French scientists devised a new model for how a liquid turns into a glass by combining, for the first time, two decades-old theories: crowding and cooperative movement.

    Molecular crowding basically treats molecules within glasses as people moving about a crowded room. The key element is density. As more and more people squeeze into the room, there is less space, so people (or molecules) move more slowly — although those located near the door are still able to move more freely, just like the molecules on a glassy surface never stop flowing, even at lower temperatures.

    That’s where cooperative movement kicks in. As the crowd thickens, people tend to move in conjunction with their nearest neighbors. The scientists found that molecules exhibit similar behavior, forming strings of weak molecular bonds with their nearest neighbors. The new model could prove useful for developing novel glassy nano materials with useful properties. [Paper]

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    Credit: Evangelidis, V. et al./Journal of Archaeological Science

    Slime Mold Builds an Ancient Road Network
    Take a moment to marvel at the humble slime mold, an ancient group of organisms that reproduce via spores and get their name from the dimly stuff they excrete. When times get tough, slime molds band together, and exhibit a strange kind of hive-mind, or cooperative intelligence. They can solve mazes, change their appearance, and find the most efficient path between two food sources. And this year they helped reconstruct an ancient road network.

    Greek archaeologists used a bright yellow slime mold called Physarum polycephalum to, in essence, redraw the ancient Roman road networks running through the Balkans between the 1st and 4th centuries A.D. They grew the molds on a map of the area made up of agar gel, with oat flakes at strategic locations, representing major Roman cities. The slime molds reproduced the network accurately. Those roads were well known from historical documents; this experiment was proof of principle. The archaeologists hope that they can use slime molds to help reconstruct lesser-known pathways that have been lost. So the best archaeological assistants of the 21st may well be be slime molds. [Paper]

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    Prat-Camps, J. et al./Scientific Reports

    A Magnetic Wormhole Illusion
    A team of scientists at Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain took materials science into stealth mode, creating a “wormhole illusion” that causes magnetic field to move through space undetected. The operative word here is “illusion.” This is not a bona fide wormhole connecting two points in space-time — a staple of science fiction decades, although we’ve never observed any directly. Rather, it’s created using metamaterials to tunnel magnetic fields from one point to another

    The device is made of two concentric spheres encasing a spiral of ferromagnetic metal. As Gizmodo’s Maddie Stone wrote,

    The ferromagnet transmits magnetic field lines from one end of the device to the other. Meanwhile, a shell of yttrium barium copper oxide (a superconducting material, yellow) bends and distorts the magnetic field lines as they travel. An outer shell composed of “mu-metals” (used for shielding electronic devices, silver) perfectly cancels out the magnetic distortion of the superconductor, rendering the entire thing “magnetically invisible” from the outside. Dunk it all in a liquid nitrogen bath—superconductors only work at extremely low temperatures—and voila, you’ve got yourself a wormhole.

    It’s a very cool experiment, with a purpose: it could one day help improve medical scanners. Per New Scientist: “Wormholes could let multiple magnetic imagers work together without interfering with each other, or could be used to put some distance between bulky sensors and patients – all without changing the background magnetic field MRIs rely on.”
     
    #3192
  13. astro

    astro Well-Known Member

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    Today's headlines:
    • Tornadoes in Texas 'kill eight'
    • South America flood 'worst in 50 years'
    • UK homes evacuated as flooding persists

    All faked by NASA
     
    #3193
  14. astro

    astro Well-Known Member

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    NASA's $17 billion budget is more than enough to put people in space AND take on the $200 trillion oil industry AND fake fundamental physics results

    What bends light? Mirrors.

    Who puts mirrors in space? NASA.

    End of.
     
    #3194
  15. Peej

    Peej Fabio Borini Lover

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    It's amazing how NASA have made me believe that this is the warmest December on record, especially as we have been snow bound since early November.
     
    #3195
  16. BBFs Unpopular View

    BBFs Unpopular View Well-Known Member

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    That's weather lad, NASA fake data, hyperbole from the "statistician"

    Pitty your degree was not signal detection eh. This news article from 1955 owns you, I dont need to

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    global warming right now



    More than half of the US was over 60 degrees on Christmas Day, 1955

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    #3196
    Last edited: Dec 27, 2015
  17. BBFs Unpopular View

    BBFs Unpopular View Well-Known Member

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    A pseudo scientific theory is easy to identify, everything confirms it.

    Every tornado every flood every hot day every cold day every rainfall every fluctuation in weather, all of it confirms man made climate change.

    Cold day = Weather
    Wet day, climate changte
    Warm day, climate change
    Storm, climate change
    <laugh>
    weather is climate, until it's snowfall, then it's just weather <laugh>

    Astro, you are an embarrassment to human inteligence stick to football charts lad, science is well outside your realm of understanding
     
    #3197
  18. BBFs Unpopular View

    BBFs Unpopular View Well-Known Member

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    In June, NOAA widely publicized a study as refuting the nearly two-decade pause in climate change. After three letters requesting all communications from the agency surrounding the role of political appointees in the agency’s scientific process, Chairman Smith issued a subpoena for the information. Smith subsequently sent a letter on December 1st offering to accept documents and communications from NOAA political, policy and non-scientific staff as a first step in satisfying the subpoena requirements.

    Information provided to the Committee by whistleblowers appears to show that the study was rushed to publication despite the concerns and objections of a number of NOAA employees

    http://www.judicialwatch.org/press-...ld-from-congress-in-new-climate-data-scandal/

    #fraud
     
    #3198
  19. BBFs Unpopular View

    BBFs Unpopular View Well-Known Member

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    and while astro talks about a tornado and a flood as "proof of climate change" <doh> The arctic continues to set records. #globalwarming
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  20. BBFs Unpopular View

    BBFs Unpopular View Well-Known Member

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    #3200
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