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-   -   things scientists can't explain. yet... (https://www.homemadeturbo.com/general-discussion-6/things-scientists-cant-explain-yet-36357/)

45psi 03-20-2005 03:00 PM

things scientists can't explain. yet...
 
I thought this was pretty cool

http://www.newscientist.com/channel/...mg18524911.600

jinxy 03-20-2005 03:22 PM

Re: things scientists can't explain. yet...
 
good read

eman5038 03-20-2005 03:40 PM

Re: things scientists can't explain. yet...
 
Im actually gonna say that wasnt a complete waste of time....that stuff is pretty intresting....good find

d16forlife 03-20-2005 06:19 PM

Re: things scientists can't explain. yet...
 
I love reading ---- like this..good find!

fork 03-20-2005 06:57 PM

Re: things scientists can't explain. yet...
 
Tat ---- is really interesting, I tok a quantum physics class and it was realy interesting. I probably didn't learn anything I'll ever use but It was really interesting and I got to play with radioactive material.

kain 03-20-2005 07:26 PM

Re: things scientists can't explain. yet...
 
ineresting.

nonvtec 03-20-2005 08:18 PM

Re: things scientists can't explain. yet...
 
I'm fascinated

Xgenturbo 03-21-2005 12:53 AM

Re: things scientists can't explain. yet...
 
Finally something educational, lol, Great Read, and ----, I wish I was gonna live long enough to reach the edge of space in my turbo space craft and still make it home in time for my AI Android Wife to give me a blow job and cook me my Hungry man, Microwave Dinner. Hey, some things will never change.

Turbo-Dan 03-21-2005 01:24 AM

Re: things scientists can't explain. yet...
 
good read, thanx

JD 03-21-2005 01:57 AM

Re: things scientists can't explain. yet...
 
That was good. I think it's funny how people so smart find these things fascinating though. (sorry for being so overseeing in advance) But the univers is sooooo big in the first place how could somebody possibly understand everything that is in it. From what I read in that article they had a lot of references to einstien and other famous scientists but what the hell did they know? They didnt even have the same resources we have but yet they are so much more credible than we are today. Science sucks nowadays. When somebody makes a breakthrough you dont even hear about it but back in the day you hear everything that they ever put out. Nevermind this topic is something that could write a book. BTW ylou can tell this is something I'm kinda into :)

SpeedyJAY 03-21-2005 11:55 AM

Re: things scientists can't explain. yet...
 
You want some stuff to really puree your brain in zero flat....google up "String theory" and "Quantum Computer" ....

almost totally newly visited subjects in physics that deal with how the universe is built....and the applied technology might be....

1. computers using "Atomic" language that communicate with electron levels instead of binary cubits.....giving a computer millions of times more powerfull then today's mainframes

2. wormhole theory......yes wormholes may actually be created....and string theory may be the study that will predict when and where they happen.


String theory, when confirmed (and even before being confirmed) would change our perception of reality. Associated to the (possible) appearance of extra dimensions, we could imagine a whole new world opening up -- every point in the room we are in, we would then think of as a little ball, so small that we cannot see it -- but we would know it is there if string theory is confirmed. That is only one example of how knowledge can change our daily perception of our environment.
....from http://tena4.vub.ac.be/beyondstringtheory/index.html


Today's computers, like a Turing machine, work by manipulating bits that exist in one of two states: a 0 or a 1. Quantum computers aren't limited to two states; they encode information as quantum bits, or qubits. A qubit can be a 1 or a 0, or it can exist in a superposition that is simultaneously both 1 and 0 or somewhere in between. Qubits represent atoms that are working together to act as computer memory and a processor. Because a quantum computer can contain these multiple states simultaneously, it has the potential to be millions of times more powerful than today's most powerful supercomputers.
from
http://computer.howstuffworks.com/quantum-computer1.htm



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