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Misc. science facts

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A nice piece to read
  • Originally it was thought the journey from one side of the Earth to the other - such as London to Antipodes Islands - would take 42 minutes
  • It examines the hypothetical scenario of falling through Earth
  • But student claims this doesn't take into account Earth's changing density
  • Alexander Klotz from McGill University has published a new estimate
  • He claims the journey would actually take 38 minutes and 11 seconds
The full article is here
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencet...ught-density-taken-account.html#ixzz3VcMnvfvB
Taking in to account terminal velocity and increase in density, I call B.S.
If it were possible, any normal person would be crushed when nearing the core.
 
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*sigh* Just click it. Minutephysics and Vsauce to the rescue.

 
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*sigh* Just click it. Minutephysics and Vsauce to the rescue.
*sigh* Simple physics for the unthinking man.
According to a balding man with a beard wearing glasses (an attempt to appear intelligent?) gravity is 9.8m/s2 and we are expected to believe that is a constant, when in reality, it isn't. Everything they speak of is hypothesis and speculation.
 

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True enough. I don't think there's enough data to extrapolate the change in velocity from 9.8m/s/s as you get closer to the magnetic core, but you have to start somewhere....
 
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Holometer at Fermilab eliminates the possibility of high frequency gravity waves.

Absence of gravitational-wave signal extends limit on knowable universe

The Holometer is sensitive to high-frequency gravitational waves, allowing it to look for events such as cosmic strings. Photo: Reidar Hahn
Imagine an instrument that can measure motions a billion times smaller than an atom that last a millionth of a second. Fermilab's Holometer is currently the only machine with the ability to take these very precise measurements of space and time, and recently collected data has improved the limits on theories about exotic objects from the early universe.

Our universe is as mysterious as it is vast. According to Albert Einstein's theory of general relativity, anything that accelerates creates gravitational waves, which are disturbances in the fabric of space and time that travel at the speed of light and continue infinitely into space. Scientists are trying to measure these possible sources all the way to the beginning of the universe.

The Holometer experiment, based at the Department of Energy's Fermilab, is sensitive to gravitational waves at frequencies in the range of a million cycles per second. Thus it addresses a spectrum not covered by experiments such as the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory, which searches for lower-frequency waves to detect massive cosmic events such as colliding black holes and merging neutron stars.

"It's a huge advance in sensitivity compared to what anyone had done before," said Craig Hogan, director of the Center for Particle Astrophysics at Fermilab.

This unique sensitivity allows the Holometer to look for exotic sources that could not otherwise be found. These include tiny black holes and cosmic strings, both possible phenomena from the early universe that scientists expect to produce high-frequency gravitational waves. Tiny black holes could be less than a meter across and orbit each other a million times per second; cosmic strings are loops in space-time that vibrate at the speed of light.

The Holometer is composed of two Michelson interferometers that each split a laser beam down two 40-meter arms. The beams reflect off the mirrors at the ends of the arms and travel back to reunite. Passing gravitational waves alter the lengths of the beams' paths, causing fluctuations in the laser light's brightness, which physicists can detect.

The Holometer team spent five years building the apparatus and minimizing noise sources to prepare for experimentation. Now the Holometer is taking data continuously, and with an hour's worth of data, physicists were able to confirm that there are no high-frequency gravitational waves at the magnitude where they were searching.

The absence of a signal provides valuable information about our universe. Although this result does not prove whether the exotic objects exist, it has eliminated the region of the universe where they could be present.

"It means that if there are primordial cosmic string loops or tiny black hole binaries, they have to be far away," Hogan said. "It puts a limit on how much of that stuff can be out there."

Detecting these high-frequency gravitational waves is a secondary goal of the Holometer. Its main purpose is to determine whether our universe acts like a 2-D hologram, where information is coded into two-dimensional bits at the Planck scale, a length around ten trillion trillion times smaller than an atom. That investigation is still in progress.

"For me, it's gratifying to be able to contribute something new to science," said researcher Bobby Lanza, who recently earned his Ph.D. conducting research on the Holometer. He is the lead author on an upcoming paper about the result. "It's part of chipping away at the whole picture of the universe."

Diana Kwon
 
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Not sure if it belongs here, but whatever.


TU/ecomotive presents design ‘Nova’

Added friday 6 february 2015 - 07:29 |

The world's very first modular car, the first-ever car made of biocomposite, and the first three-seater 'consumer car' in which the driver is seated in the middle of the vehicle. These are the most striking features of Nova, the new electric car TU/ecomotive will be peddling over the next few months. The student team presented the design in the Auditorium of the Blauwe Zaal on Wednesday night.


TU/ecomotive presents design ‘Nova’
Last year, TU/ecomotive built a bona fide city car, but this year the new team wanted to present a car that can be used in a number of situations. On top of that, Nova is supposed to be a car for life that 'matures' with its owners, as they can modify their vehicles in all kinds of ways to suit their use and needs.

One of Nova's features that stand out the most is the fact that it's a three-seater in which the driver is in the front on his own, in the very middle of the dashboard. Team manager Steven Nelemans points out that it's a perfect example of User-centricity: "The driver is the center of the vehicle, quite literally".

Nova's body will be made of biocomposite, a relatively new organic material that's used for the tables in the new Sprinter trains of NS, for example. The team says Nova will be the first car with a body made of said material. Users can opt for several colours and shapes and can give their cars a completely new look in only thirty minutes.

There were no examples of the interior yet last Wednesday night, but Nova can be personalized on the inside just as well. The battery packs and engine can be tinkered with to one's heart's content as well. Nova comes with three compact ten-kilo battery packs: thirty kilos in total. De Geus: "If one pack dies, you just install the other pack and you're ready to go again straight away." The team claims the three packs will get the driver some 100 to 150 kilometers on the highway.

Mid April, Nova will debut at the 2015 AutoRAI. However, it will not be driving until May 11, when TU/ecomotive will start its week-and-a-half company roadshow. Final destination will be Rotterdam, as that's the starting point of the Shell Eco Marathon on May 21.

Source: www.cursor.tue.nl
By: Monique van de Ven

Full article
Official site
 
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Sure dude, it's cool. This was meant to be a general depository for things that generally fit the S&T category but which you don't feel deserve their own thread. :toast:
 
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Fermilab has broken ground for the Mu2e detector
Muons and electrons are two different flavors in the charged-lepton family. Muons are 200 times more massive than electrons and decay quickly into lighter particles, while electrons are stable and live forever. Most of the time, a muon decays into an electron and two neutrinos, but physicists have reason to believe that once in a blue moon, muons will convert directly into an electron without releasing any neutrinos. This is physics beyond the Standard Model.

Under the Standard Model, the muon-to-electron direct conversion happens too rarely to ever observe. In more sophisticated models, however, this occurs just frequently enough for an extremely sensitive machine to detect.

The Mu2e detector, when complete, will be the instrument to do this. The 92-foot-long apparatus will have three sections, each with its own superconducting magnet. Its unique S-shape was designed to capture as many slow muons as possible with an aluminum target. The direct conversion of a muon to an electron in an aluminum nucleus would release exactly 105 million electronvolts of energy, which means that if it occurs, the signal in the detector will be unmistakable. Scientists expect Mu2e to be 10,000 times more sensitive than previous attempts to see this process.
 
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I got about 4:45 into this and actually started to laugh. "...Science and Magic...Wormhole... Apollo..."

This guy? WOW! A little bit...Crazy? :twitch:
 

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For me it lost any chance of credability 26 Seconds into the Video when he mentioned the ""Sky fairy handbook"":banghead:o_O
 
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The search for neutrinoless double beta decay gets serious - and very, very cold.

The full CUORE experiment requires 19 towers of tellurium dioxide crystals, each made of 52 blocks just smaller than a Rubik’s cube. Physicists will place these towers into a refrigerator called a cryostat and cool it to 10 millikelvin, barely above absolute zero. The cryostat will eclipse even the chill of empty space, which registers a toasty 2.7 Kelvin (minus 455 degrees Fahrenheit).

CUORE uses the cold crystals to search for a small change in temperature caused by these rare nuclear decays. Unlike ordinary beta decays, in which electrons and antineutrinos share energy, the neutrinoless double beta decay produces two electrons, but no neutrinos at all. It is as if the two antineutrinos that should have been produced annihilate one another inside the nucleus.

“This would be really cool because it would mean that the neutrino and the antineutrino are the same particle, and most of the time we just can’t tell the difference,” says Lindley Winslow, a professor at MIT and one of over 160 scientists working on CUORE.
IOW, it would prove that neutrinos are majorana fermions.
 
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Is that a shark in your pocket?



Why, yes. Yes it is.

A juvenile male pocket shark has been discovered, making it the second of this type of shark ever recorded, scientists with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) say.

The teensy shark, extending just 5.5 inches (14 centimeters) in length and weighing a mere half ounce (14.6 grams), was found in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010, though it was only recently identified, when Mark Grace, of NOAA Fisheries' Pascagoula, Mississippi, Laboratory, examined the specimen.
 
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I guess this is technically off topic but I know a lot of people here have kids and/or pets so you might find this interesting and it's sort of sciencey.

There’s a new label hitting store shelves this spring and summer that will make it easier to find cleaning products that are safer for everyone, including our pets and the environment.

To display the new Safer Choice label, a product must first be reviewed by Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) scientists to ensure every ingredient it contains meets strict human health and environmental standards. Products are also tested to confirm they work well.

There are already 2,000 cleaning products that meet the requirements. You should start seeing them carry the new label soon. In the meantime, you can search online for products that meet the Safer Choice Standard.
 

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I think you buried the lede:
The EM drive is controversial in that it appears to violate conventional physics and the law of conservation of momentum; the engine, invented by British scientist Roger Sawyer, converts electric power to thrust without the need for any propellant by bouncing microwaves within a closed container. So, with no expulsion of propellant, there’s nothing to balance the change in the spacecraft’s momentum during acceleration. Hence the skepticism. But as stated by NASA Eagleworks scientist Harold White:
if that's really how it works, that's just freakin' amazing. It's a little like harnessing Hawking radiation for space flight.
 
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RHIC gets a gently used 20 ton, superconducting magnet. It was only used by a little old lady from Akron to go to an alternate universe on Sundays.

Mapping primordial plasma
The subatomic collisions inside RHIC’s 2.4-mile particle racetrack reach temperatures 250,000 times hotter than the center of the sun, melting protons and freeing the quarks and gluons otherwise bound inside the nucleus. The resulting quark-gluon plasma, known as QGP, only exists for a tiny fraction of a second, but it filled the universe microseconds after the big bang and reveals otherwise imperceptible aspects of the strong nuclear force.

RHIC physicists saw the first hints that they were creating QGP at RHIC in 2001 and were the first to reveal that it behaves like a perfect liquid with virtually zero resistance in 2005.

“We still don’t know why these subatomic particles flow as friction-flee liquid or the characteristics across the phase transition from normal matter to QGP,” Morrison says.

The ongoing QGP puzzle drives the motivation of the sPHENIX upgrade.

“A powerful, uniform field allows us to track charged particles and measure their momentum with high precision,” Haggerty says. “We often turn to superconducting solenoid magnets to achieve this because they can produce a strong magnetic field without putting a lot of material in the path of the particles, which might scatter them and lead to measurement errors.”
 
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Sounded feasible until they threw speculation in to the mix:
"The resulting quark-gluon plasma, known as QGP, only exists for a tiny fraction of a second, but it filled the universe microseconds after the big bang"
There is doubt as to whether the Big Bang actually occurred, when proof is presented that indisputably and irrefutably proves it occurred, then they may include it in scientific peer reviewed articles.
 
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Yeah there are still problems with that theory, but it does seem to partially explain things like the microwave background. Anyway, the RHIC is a pretty impressive machine and we still know so little about quantum chromodynamics that it might provide some interesting new insights. What I don't understand it why we have to wait until 2021 for their starting to take data. I know things like this tend to move slowly, but 6 years to install a magnet that was already in use for many years? I don't get that.
 
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Strange worm shoots out appendage that grabs food. Some might find this a little gross so think twice before clicking the spoiler.


The white thing that shoots out of the worm is its proboscis, the appendage it uses to eat. Seriously, that growing rootlike structure that's vomited out is designed to drag food inside. Crab, fish, snails, other worms — anything will do (depending on the type and size of the ribbon worm we are talking about).

Until the worm needs to eat, the proboscis stays in a sac on top of the worm's gut.

But once the worm senses prey approaching, its muscles contract quickly, forcing fluid into the sheath and the proboscis out into the world through a pore in the worm's head.

The proboscis then grabs what's for lunch and drags it into the worm's belly.

Talk about crazy ways to eat.
 
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Just a note for any fans of Through the Wormhole with Morgan Freeman - the new season started April 29 and we're 2 episodes in now. It airs in the US Wednesdays at 10 EDT on the Science Channel.
 

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Just a note for any fans of Through the Wormhole with Morgan Freeman - the new season started April 29 and we're 2 episodes in now. It airs in the US Wednesdays at 10 EDT on the Science Channel.

Old episodes can be watched on youtube. He's an excellent narrator for the series. He makes the subject more interesting because of his amiable personality.
 
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Just a note for any fans of Through the Wormhole with Morgan Freeman - the new season started April 29 and we're 2 episodes in now. It airs in the US Wednesdays at 10 EDT on the Science Channel.

Indeed :toast: and Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey Neil is kickass.

Carl Sagan father of kosmos :rockout:
 
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