Entrada destacada

jueves, 14 de julio de 2016

Según los entusiastas de la ufologia, el objeto espacial fue captado durante un 'live' de la Estación Espacial Internacional (EEI) mientras entraba en la atmósfera

martes, 12 de julio de 2016

The human universe: Exploring our place in space

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On Earth, we rule the roost: Homo sapiens is the planet’s most intelligent, influential and destructive species. We are so dominant that we are considering naming an entire geological epoch after ourselves, the Anthropocene.
But there’s a whole universe out there. How do we measure up by that cosmic yardstick?
Are we really the only intelligence? What, if anything, does the rest of the universe know about us? Could we, or should we, spread to other planets? What, if anything, will our lasting legacy be?
The human universe: Was the cosmos made for us?

The human universe: Does consciousness create reality?
The human universe: Can we understand everything?

The human universe: Could we destroy the fabric of the cosmos?
The human universe: If aliens exist, do they know we’re here?

The human universe: Could we colonise the stars?
The human universe: Could we engineer the galaxy?

The human universe: Could we become gods?

lunes, 27 de junio de 2016

Juan Tres ha compartido un enlace.
3 horas
Hoy, lunes 27 de junio de 2016, es un día histórico para la transparencia de los laboratorios farmacéuticos presentes en España. Por primera vez -en una iniciativa…
DE ELECONOMISTA.ES


icle X could be the biggest physics breakthrough in decades

ATLAS_largeCERN
One of the most inspiring things about scientists is how incredibly excited they get about being proven wrong.
And right now, physicists think that may be happening in a huge way.
Here's how particle physicist Michele Redi describes the recent buzz in Scientific American:
"This is by far the most exciting thing that has happened in particle physics over the last three decades. If this hint of new physics is confirmed - something that could happen within just a few weeks, or possibly even within days - it is difficult to state the importance of such a discovery. It would be bigger than the detection of the Higgs boson, which was just confirmation of what was already known.
"If the bump is real, we are about to start writing a whole new chapter in the history of fundamental physics. It is impossible to imagine where this could lead."
Redi is writing about what physicists are calling Particle X.
Scientists at CERN, the organization that runs the Large Hadron Collider, saw a small blip in their results that they can't explain using what they know now about particles and how they work.
So far, the blip hasn't been large enough to meet the meticulous standards particle physicists hold for confirming a new discovery. But since the detectors have been gathering a new set of data, scientists are hoping they'll have a better sense of whether the blip is real and what it could mean within the next two mont

"If this is really true, then it would possibly be the most exciting thing that I have seen in particle physics in my career," Csaba Csaki, a physicist at Cornell University, told the Associated Press.
standard model particle physics fermilabFermilab
The Standard Model of physics, which is often called "the most successful theory ever" because it has predicted so many observations in nature.
That's because it would finally overthrow the so-called Standard Model, a set of mathematical rules that physicists developed to describe, sort, explain, and predictparticles of matter in the universe.
The last time physics grappled with a challenge that big was a century ago, when Einstein's theory of relativity completely overhauled Newtonian physics.
The Standard Model made its debut in the early 1970s. In general, it works pretty well, but it has some holes: It can't explain gravity, or elegantly connect quantum mechanics (the physics of the very small) and general relativity (the physics of the very large), or solve the mystery of dark matter. So scientists have been hopingfor awhile now that something better would come along.
Particle X, if it really exists, may be the first step of pulling together a theory that explains everything the Standard Model does, yet can also tackle the problems that defy it.
Scientists have some (very) complicated theories of what the mysterious particle may be, but they have no idea what precisely the particle they're hoping to find would do, beyond overthrowing the standard model.
Still, that would be enough to change everything we think we know about physics.

domingo, 26 de junio de 2016

Stillness in the Storm : No Transhumanism Needed! | 10 Ordinary Humans With...

Stillness in the Storm : No Transhumanism Needed! | 10 Ordinary Humans With...: (Stillness in the Storm Editor) With the growing popularity of transhumanism and biohacking , a reminder of our true potential as embodime...
Las imágenes fueron captadas por un potente telescopio que realiza "mediciones extraordinariamente precisas de objetos astronómicos".

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LOS EMPLEADOS DEL PODER MUNDIAL : proximos intentos de caos global.







      1. As expected, the globalists engineered a victory for the BREXIT referendum yesterday, so the first of three punches that’ll bring down the EU has been thrown. Putting…
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