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Documentary The Universe Quantum Physics Microscopic Universe

Documentary The Universe Quantum Physics Microscopic Universe

Dark Matter: The Larger Invisible Universe | Joe Arrigo PERSPECTIVE Normal matter—you, me, oatmeal, mountains, oceans, moons, planets, galaxies—make up about twenty-percent of the universe; the other eighty-percent is dark matter—star-stuff we cannot see or detect…yet. Why are scientists so certain this enigmatic matter exists? Because the evidence permeates the universe, first observed by Fritz Zwicky, when he measured the motions of galaxies and calculated that there wasn’t enough visible matter to affect galaxies to extent they were being pulled around.WWWFirst, there isn’t enough gravitational force within galaxies to bind and hold them in their current formation; then there is an invisible element that keeps them rotating faster than scientists would expect, clusters of galaxies bend and distort light more than they should, and supercomputer simulations exhibit that clouds of ordinary matter in the early universe did not have enough gravity to create the tight formations of galaxies we now see.

Einstein Uncertain Principles Simply put, Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle states that it is impossible to know both the exact position and the exact velocity of an object at the same time. However, the effect is tiny and so is only noticeable on a subatomic scale. Werner Heisenberg (1901-1976) was a German physicist who helped to formulate quantum mechanics at the beginning of the 20th century. Light can be considered as being made up of packets of energy called photons. By learning the position, you have rendered any information you previously had on the velocity useless. Watch the full documentary now

The Search For The History Of The Universe's Light Emission The light emitted from all objects in the Universe during its entire history - stars, galaxies, quasars etc. forms a diffuse sea of photons that permeates intergalactic space, referred to as "diffuse extragalactic background light" (EBL). Scientists have long tried to measure this fossil record of the luminous activity in the Universe in their quest to decipher the history and evolution of the Cosmos, but its direct determination from the diffuse glow of the night sky is very difficult and uncertain. Very high energy (VHE) gamma-rays, some 100,000,000,000 times more energetic than normal light, offer an alternative way to probe this background light, and UK researchers from Durham University in collaboration with international partners used the High Energy Stereoscopic System (HESS) gamma-ray telescopes in the Khomas Highlands of Namibia to observe several quasars (the most luminous VHE gamma-ray sources known) with this goal in mind. Source: PPARC

Electric Universe theory links Ignore this box please. Add to Browser Install Firefox add-on More ways to add DDG Feedback Report Bad Results Other Help / Feedback Add to Browser Give feedback Try this search on : Wikipedia Amazon.com RationalWiki Quora Facebook Search syntax s:d sort by date r:uk uk region site: domain search \ search first result More... r:n turn off region !     This page requires Javascript. Electric Universe theory The Electric Universe . electricuniverse.info/Introduction More from electricuniverse.info thunderbolts.info | A voice for the Electric Universe Exploring our Electric Universe "Today, nothing is more important to the future and credibility of science than liberation from the gravity-driven universe of prior theory . thunderbolts.info/wp/ More from thunderbolts.info holoscience.com | The Electric Universe | A sound cosmology ... It is no coincidence that Scandinavian scientists led the way in showing that we live in an Electric Universe . holoscience.com/wp/ More from holoscience.com Description.

Softology - Visions Of Chaos "Vision of Chaos is a great Programm! I have many, many hour's fun. Thank you very much." "It is one of my favourite and most powerful pieces of software" "I'm a long-time user and big fan of the software, and find it more intuitive and full-featured than just about any other fractal generator out there. I'm also extremely happy that you've continued updating Visions Of Chaos" "Visions of Chaos is a remarkable and easy to use fractal and chaos program. "It is a 'mathematical Leeuvenhoek microscope' looking at objects never before seen. "I appreciate your efforts on Visions of Chaos, a very fine program indeed!" "I have your software which is OUTSTANDING!!!" "by far i think it is the only program which can do heightmap rendering easily" "a most excellent software" "VOC is a very fine program deserving wider recognition" "Impressive and beautiful 3D worlds are revealed with your software" "Visons Of Chaos is a great fractal program. "Voc reminds me of wolfenstein and the doom games.

The Theory of Everything | Joe Arrigo PERSPECTIVE The above equation was written by Dr. Michio Kaku, theoretical physicist, who gradu­ated first in his physics class at Harvard, and, when he was in high school built a 2.3 million electron volt atom-smasher in his parents garage. It is an equation for String Field Theory—a theory that may unite The Theory of Relativity with Quantum Theory, into a uni­fied theory called The Theory of Everything. Theoretical physicists are those scientists who work in that twilight zone cutting edge realm be­tween reality and science fiction. For thirty years Einstein sought a unified theory of physics that would integrate all the forces of nature into a single beautiful tapestry. Even he failed. String Theory says that at the subatomic level, there are vibrating strings—that particles like protons, electrons and quarks are nothing but musical notes on a tiny vibrating string, that all the stupendous activities in the universe are born from a sub-atomic loop of energy deep within all matter. © Joe Arrigo

Conscious Cosmology In a "Rainbow" Universe Time May Have No Beginning What if the universe had no beginning, and time stretched back infinitely without a big bang to start things off? That's one possible consequence of an idea called "rainbow gravity," so-named because it posits that gravity's effects on spacetime are felt differently by different wavelengths of light, aka different colors in the rainbow. Rainbow gravity was first proposed 10 years ago as a possible step toward repairing the rifts between the theories of general relativity (covering the very big) and quantum mechanics (concerning the realm of the very small). The idea is not a complete theory for describing quantum effects on gravity, and is not widely accepted. Nevertheless, physicists have now applied the concept to the question of how the universe began, and found that if rainbow gravity is correct, spacetime may have a drastically different origin story than the widely accepted picture of the big bang. Yet the concept has its critics.

Cosmology Cosmology is a branch of study concerned with the origins and nature of the universe. The classical Greeks defined reality as a homogeneous, ordered whole. In contrast, modern Western culture has tended to view reality dualistically, splitting it into subject and object, humanity and nature, mind and matter. The very word cosmology raises issues of time and creation, beginnings and endings. Some people believe that we are living in an ojectively meaningless universe and that we subjectively project meaning on to it. Jung’s observations were based on the rejection of a coincidental, one-dimensional life, and instead, the recognition that we engage in the world in a very complex way through our psyches, our energies, our emotions, and our actions and experiences. The western tradition that we have inherited from the Greek and Hebrew sources is excessively committed to an anthropocentric cosmology, the view of human beings as having dominion over all earthly creatures. Links

Four things you might not know about dark matter Not long after physicists on experiments at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN laboratory discovered the Higgs boson, CERN Director-General Rolf Heuer was asked, “What’s next?” One of the top priorities he named: figuring out dark matter. Dark matter is five times more prevalent than ordinary matter. Dark matter shows up periodically in the media, often when an experiment has spotted a potential sign of it. Here are four facts to get you up to speed on one of the most exciting topics in particle physics: 1. Illustration by: Sandbox Studio, Chicago At this moment, several experiments are on the hunt for dark matter. In the 1930s, astrophysicist Fritz Zwicky was observing the rotations of the galaxies that form the Coma cluster, a group of more than 1000 galaxies located more than 300 million light years from Earth. The idea of dark matter was largely ignored until the 1970s, when astronomer Vera Rubin saw something that gave her the same thought. 2. 3. 4.

Metaphysical Cosmology The combined implications of recent developments in the understanding of neuroscience and quantum physics represents a profound break thru in our understanding of the basic nature of reality. Apparently it is consciousness that determines whether a quanta becomes matter or remains pure energy. In the quantum world view, there is not much that exists in the physical world. So, the mechanistic, linear dualism of Issac Newton and René Descartes must now give way to a dynamic new non-local physics where we are no longer locked in to past events as victims of painful experiences in our past or even our own genetics. According to Dr. A quanta is tens of millions of times smaller than an atom. But if you've stubbed your toe on a table leg, you know it is quite real. Cosmology is "a branch of study concerned with the origins and nature of the universe." How can a human being living on earth be related to the universe? One of the early issues in metaphysics is the idea of evil.

You know, during some time the scientifc community was divided into those defended electron (and others ..) like particle and the others defended like wave.
On the first ones were Planck, Einstein, Heisenberg

On the second ones were Schrödinger, de Broglie, ...

when Einstein discovered photoelectric effect (those of the cells) he argued better the "corpuscules" are particle by lenadias May 26

Like the electron only can spin (rotate) on two ways, this is the reason 1 orbital only can be 2 electrons - they have diferent spin: + 1/2 and -1/2 - Exclusion's Pauli Principle by lenadias May 26

not microscopic world, but submicroscopic world by lenadias May 26

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