everything in the universe is a wave ヽ༼ຈل͜ຈ༽ノ

Author Topic: everything in the universe is a wave ヽ༼ຈل͜ຈ༽ノ  (Read 1637 times)

judging by his richard size, they are shorter than gamma rays

judging by your richard size, you're not gonna have one if you don't sleep with your eyes open tonight punk

yes

photons are the bosons that couple to the electromagnetic force

gravitons are the hypothetical bosons that couple to the force of gravity

gravitons sound cool af

cool

now waddaforget do we do with it

hypothetically, they can use gravity waves instead of light waves to see back to the creation of the universe as they understand it
« Last Edit: February 11, 2016, 11:47:27 PM by Frequency »

judging by your sick size, you're not gonna have one if you don't sleep with your eyes open tonight punk
I'm not sick at all right now

I'm not sick at all right now

you know what I knew swipe-texting would duck me over eventually

you know what I knew swipe-texting would duck me over eventually
i was HOPING for like, warp drives or something but thats cool too

i was HOPING for like, warp drives or something but thats cool too

well it's a pretty important discovery for a big chunk of astronomy, so stuff like that might even hinge on our understanding of how these things work.

idk if I should or want to make a topic for this, but while we're on the topic of physics-

https://www.yahoo.com/autos/chinese-fusion-reactor-sustains-90-193628367.html

that's really hot

idk if I should or want to make a topic for this, but while we're on the topic of physics-

https://www.yahoo.com/autos/chinese-fusion-reactor-sustains-90-193628367.html

that's really hot
Crazy. That's 50 million ºC.
The core of the sun is 15 million ºC.

idk if I should or want to make a topic for this, but while we're on the topic of physics-
https://www.yahoo.com/autos/chinese-fusion-reactor-sustains-90-193628367.html
that's cool, but why is it in yahoo.com/autos??

because everyone knows that the only purpose for nuclear fusion reactors is for cars, duh

that's cool, but why is it in yahoo.com/autos??
The article comes from a mechanics website, which generally shares info about cars, but also other mechanical/engineering things, including space tech, reactors, etc...

Huh, so I guess the professor I had for Physics 1 was actually a specialist in this field, and is on the LIGO collaboration's executive committee...
Here's a short video he made to explain some stuff: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g72_RidIg6E