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The "Science and Space" Thread #2

382K views 6K replies 43 participants last post by  ekim68 
#1 ·
Big Bang Conditions Created in Lab.

By smashing gold particles together at super-fast speeds, physicists have basically melted protons, creating a kind of "quark soup" of matter that is about 250,000 times hotter than the center of the sun and similar to conditions just after the birth of the universe.

-- Tom
 
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#2 ·
First bounds on the Higgs boson from hadron colliders.

The two experimental collaborations at the Fermilab Tevatron accelerator have published first results of searches for the Higgs boson, excluding parts of the otherwise allowed mass range.

3 PDF papers available at above link.


Global fit to all published data sensitive to the Higgs boson mass. This comprises direct searches as well as electroweak precision data. The left vertical axis shows goodness-of-fit relative to the minimum χ2 value, while the right vertical axis shows σ values as a function of Higgs mass. The dashed line shows the situation before the Tevatron publications, while they are included in the solid line. The left shaded portion is the mass range excluded by LEP, and the central shaded region is the range excluded by the Tevatron. High masses are excluded by precision measurements of the weak mixing angle and the W mass, leaving only the range 115-150 GeV/c2 for future searches if the standard model is the correct theory.

-- Tom
 
#4 ·
Starship pilots: speed kills, especially warp speed.

Star Trek fans, prepare to be disappointed. Kirk, Spock and the rest of the crew would die within a second of the USS Enterprise approaching the speed of light.
In other words, traveling at warp speed is as lethal as standing in front of the Large Hadron Collider beam at full power.

-- Tom
 
#5 ·
Supermassive Black Holes Spinning Backwards Create Death Ray Jets?.

Why do some of the supermassive black holes in active galactic nuclei create back-to-back jets that can vaporize entire solar systems, while others have no jets at all?


Centaurus A. Image credit: NASA


Radio image of a typical DRAGN, showing the main features (Image credit:C. L. Carilli)


1477 MHz image of 3C 33 (Credit: Leahy & Perley (1991))

-- Tom
 
#6 ·
Fish hold the key to better wind farms.

Wind farm power is significantly limited by how close one turbine can be to another. But a fish-like configuration could change all of that.



Wind farms traditionally use the horizontal axis (HAWTs). But by doing so, the maximum power a rotor can extract is proportional to the cube of the windspeed. More specifically, the power coefficient for HAWTs is defined as the mechanical power output of the turbine divided by the power of the free-stream air through the cross-sectional area of the rotor normal to the free-stream direction.

But since they slow the air passing through them, neighboring turbines need to be around 10 turbine diameters apart. This is a huge limit on what can be generated from a given area of land.
-- Tom
 
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#8 ·
Most precise test yet of Einstein's gravitational redshift.

While airplane and rocket experiments have proved that gravity makes clocks tick more slowly - a central prediction of Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity - a new experiment in an atom interferometer measures this slowdown 10,000 times more accurately than before, and finds it to be exactly what Einstein predicted.


Cesium atom matter waves oscillate more slowly along the lower path because the gravitational field is stronger, which means time passes more slowly. In the experiment, laser pulses kicked half the atoms 0.1 mm higher than the others; a second laser sent them on a course to merge; and a third laser measured the phase difference between the interfering matter waves. (Courtesy of Nature magazine)

-- Tom
 
#9 ·
Upside-down answer for deep Earth mystery: Clues point to 'density trap' in early mantle.

When Earth was young, it exhaled the atmosphere. During a period of intense volcanic activity, lava carried light elements from the planet's molten interior and released them into the sky. However, some light elements got trapped inside the planet. In this week's issue of Nature, a Rice University-based team of scientists is offering a new answer to a longstanding mystery: What caused Earth to hold its last breath?

-- Tom
 
#10 ·
Chandra Reveals Origin of Key Cosmic Explosions.

New findings from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory have provided a major advance in understanding a type of supernova critical for studying the dark energy that astronomers think pervades the universe. The results show mergers of two dense stellar remnants are the likely cause of many of the supernovae that have been used to measure the accelerated expansion of the universe.


Composite image of M31, also known as the Andromeda galaxy. Image credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/MPA/ M.Gilfanov & A.Bogdan; Infrared: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ SSC; Optical: DSS

-- Tom
 
#12 ·
Jurassic Space: Ancient Galaxies Come Together After Billions of Years.

Imagine finding a living dinosaur in your backyard. Astronomers have found the astronomical equivalent of prehistoric life in our intergalactic backyard: a group of small, ancient galaxies that has waited 10 billion years to come together. These "late bloomers" are on their way to building a large elliptical galaxy.


These four dwarf galaxies waited billions of years to come together, setting off a fireworks show as thousands of new star clusters come to life. The distorted galaxies are quickly producing massive, hot, young stars that are pumping out ultraviolet radiation, heating up surrounding gas clouds, and causing them to glow. Credit: NASA, ESA, S. Gallagher (The University of Western Ontario), and J. English (University of Manitoba)

-- Tom
 
#13 ·
Exploring the secrets of dark matter.

Even the biggest Star Trek fan would probably have trouble understanding the technical details of the research done by Queen's University Particle Astrophysics Professor Wolfgang Rau of Kingston, Canada.

-- Tom
 
#14 ·
Chickens 'One-Up' Humans in Ability to See Color.

Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have peered deep into the eye of the chicken and found a masterpiece of biological design.


All five cone types are interwoven together in the chicken retina so that all cone types are present throughout the retina, but two cones of the same type are never directly next to each other. (Credit: Joseph Corbo/Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis)

-- Tom
 
#4,551 ·
Chickens 'One-Up' Humans in Ability to See Color.

Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have peered deep into the eye of the chicken and found a masterpiece of biological design.


All five cone types are interwoven together in the chicken retina so that all cone types are present throughout the retina, but two cones of the same type are never directly next to each other. (Credit: Joseph Corbo/Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis)

-- Tom
It's amazing what evolution can accomplish by accident.
 
#15 ·
Astronomers discover secret of the supernova.

Nasa astronomers may have finally discovered what initially sparks a cosmic explosion, according to new research.


Supernovas are often used by astronomers as 'cosmic mile markers' to measure the expansion of the universe Photo: AFP/GETTY IMAGES

-- Tom
 
#16 ·
Voyager Celebrates 20-Year-Old Valentine to Solar System

Twenty years ago on February 14, NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft had sailed beyond the outermost planet in our solar system and turned its camera inward to snap a series of final images that would be its parting valentine to the string of planets it called home.

Mercury was too close to the sun to see, Mars showed only a thin crescent of sunlight, and Pluto was too dim, but Voyager was able to capture cameos of Neptune, Uranus, Saturn, Jupiter, Earth and Venus from its unique vantage point. These images, later arranged in a large-scale mosaic, make up the only family portrait of our planets arrayed about the sun.

http://www.astrobiology.com/news/viewsr.html?pid=33502
 
#17 ·
LHC Ready for Duty Again.

For the Christmas holiday, the Large Hadron Collider at CERN was shut down for a break and for a little technical tinkering. But next week, the hope is that the LHC will start up again around the 25 of February.


CERN LHC Tunnel Image source: Julian Herzog via Wikimedia Commons

-- Tom
 
#18 ·
Scientists unlock mystery in photosynthesis step.

An international team of scientists, including two from Arizona State University, have taken a significant step closer to unlocking the secrets of photosynthesis, and possibly to cleaner fuels.

Plants and algae, as well as cyanobacteria, use photosynthesis to produce oxygen and "fuels," the latter being oxidizable substances like carbohydrates and hydrogen. There are two pigment-protein complexes that orchestrate the primary reactions of light in oxygenic photosynthesis: photosystem I (PSI) and photosystem II (PSII). Understanding how these photosystems work their magic is one of the long-sought goals of biochemistry.
-- Tom
 
#19 ·
#20 ·
Weird Science: The Bootstrap Hypothesis w/Videos.

There are many topics in Astronomy that are fascinating, but one of the most intriguing is the Bootstrap Hypothesis. This cosmological idea contends that as we examine the larger and larger things in the universe, they are ultimately microscopic parts of a far larger universe, one that merges with the very small.



-- Tom
 
#21 ·
#22 ·
Rewriting Science: Is the Universe Actually a Multiverse? (w/Video).

Thanks to advanced cosmological technology, we may be on the verge of changing the way we see life, the universe, and everything. According to theoretical physicist Michio Kaku, we may be edging nearer and nearer to a new Copernican revolution - one that will push us to see our Universe as a Multiverse.

-- Tom
 
#23 ·
Warp Drives: Making the 'Impossible' Possible.

When it comes to warp drives -- the staple of Star Trek propulsion systems -- there's no shortage of critics, but singling out the impracticalities of faster than light-speed travel could be considered a little premature, says an expert.

Slide show at above link: The warpship concept.

-- Tom
 
#24 ·
#25 ·
#26 ·
Milky Way galaxy littered with 'alien' stars

Dwarf galaxies gobbled up by our own Milky Way make up about a quarter of the 160 star-packed "globular clusters" littering the galaxy, astronomers report Tuesday.

In the Monthly Notioves of the Royal Astronomical Society report, which was led by Duncan Forbes of the United Kingdom's University of Swinburne, a team looked at chemical signatures of 93 globular clusters. The clusters are balls containing hundreds to millions of stars littered throughout the galaxy.

"It turns out that many of the stars and globular star clusters we see when we look into the night sky are not natives, but aliens from other galaxies," Forbes said in a statement.

http://content.usatoday.com/communi...2/mily-way-galaxy-littered-with-alien-stars/1
 
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