Science Updates

Sciences, Environmental/Climate issues, Academia and Technical interests
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Super Nova
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Re: Science Updates

Post by Super Nova » Mon Jun 09, 2014 10:39 pm

Rorschach wrote:Doesn't explain the nose does it?
Or why we don't all have heavy brows to protect the eyes.
Or a great many other things.
It only explains the adaptation from fist fighting.

What about the nose that is important to you?
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IQS.RLOW
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Re: Science Updates

Post by IQS.RLOW » Mon Jun 09, 2014 10:54 pm

The nose could be the bumper bar of the head. Developed that way with cartilage so it can take a pounding. Most of the population has managed to evolve out of the jutting forehead because it has been used less for cracking heads and coconuts.
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Re: Science Updates

Post by Super Nova » Mon Jun 09, 2014 10:56 pm

IQS.RLOW wrote:The nose could be the bumper bar of the head. Developed that way with cartilage so it can take a pounding. Most of the population has managed to evolve out of the jutting forehead because it has been used less for cracking heads and coconuts.
Yep. Having been punched in the nose and had it broken I can validate it is not a survival disadvantage the way it has currently evolved. Look at boxers... over time the nose remains flat and punch proof.
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Re: Science Updates

Post by IQS.RLOW » Mon Jun 09, 2014 11:03 pm

Ouch...don't remind me. I can still remember that coppery smell after coping one in the check or nose...
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Re: Science Updates

Post by Rorschach » Tue Jun 10, 2014 3:00 pm

Super Nova wrote:
Rorschach wrote:Doesn't explain the nose does it?
Or why we don't all have heavy brows to protect the eyes.
Or a great many other things.
It only explains the adaptation from fist fighting.

What about the nose that is important to you?
Never been in a fight?
Ever had your nose broken?
Never seen boxers' noses?
Believe me it blows the theory right out of the water.

Just read the latest comments above... and still you don't get the idea re the theory?
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Re: Science Updates

Post by Neferti » Wed Jun 11, 2014 4:27 pm

Why do males think "punching someone in the nose" is the way to sort out differences? :o

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Re: Science Updates

Post by Super Nova » Thu Jun 12, 2014 11:30 pm

When I read numbers like these I figure it's about time we collectively got off our arses and developed the political will to go to space.
* “A rough cost estimate for Mars … about $20 billion to develop all the required hardware … each individual Mars mission costing about $2 billion … While representing a great sum, spent over ten years, it would only represent about 7 percent of the existing combined military and civilian space budgets … this money could drive our economy … the same way as the spending of $70 billion (in today’s terms) … the Apollo program contributed to the high rates of economic growth in America during the 1960′s.” The Case for Mars by Robert Zubrin (New York: The Free Press, 1996).
http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/gue ... -starship/
Time for Australia to wake up and catch-up. We made some bad decisions in the 70's.
Back in 1967, the launch of the WRESAT satellite made Australia just the fourth country in the world to launch its own satellite from its own territory. After that, though, Australia rapidly fell off the pace and it is now one of only a handful of developed nations not to have its own Earth observation satellite.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/ ... z34Qo7kJ2H
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Re: Science Updates

Post by Super Nova » Fri Jun 13, 2014 4:57 pm

An innovative spin on how we could have a view on the unification of everything into one model.

A Meta-Law to Rule Them All: Physicists Devise a “Theory of Everything”

“Constructor theory” unites in one framework how information is processed in the classical and quantum realms
May 26, 2014 |By Zeeya Merali

“Once you have eliminated the impossible,” the fictional detective Sherlock Holmes famously opined, “whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.” That adage forms the foundational principle of “constructor theory”—a candidate “theory of everything” first sketched out by David Deutsch, a quantum physicist at the University of Oxford, in 2012. His aim was to find a framework that could encompass all physical theories by determining a set of overarching “meta-laws” that describe what can happen in the universe and what is forbidden. In a May 23 paper posted to the physics preprint server, arXiv, constructor theory claims its first success toward that goal by unifying the two separate theories that are currently used to describe information processing in macroscopic, classical systems as well as in subatomic, quantum objects.

Computer scientists currently use a theory developed by the American mathematician and cryptographer Claude Shannon in the 1940s to describe how classical information can be encoded and transmitted across noisy channels efficiently—what, for instance, is the most data that can be streamed, in theory, down a fiber-optic cable without becoming irretrievably corrupted. At the same time, physicists are striving to build quantum computers that could, in principle, exploit peculiar aspects of the subatomic realm to perform certain tasks at a far faster rate than today’s classical machines.

But the principles defined by Shannon’s theory cannot be applied to information processing by quantum computers. In fact, Deutsch notes, physicists have no clear definition for what “quantum information” even is or how it relates to classical information. “If we want to make progress in finding new algorithms for quantum computers, we need to understand what quantum information actually is!” he says. “So far, the algorithms that have been discovered for quantum computers have been surprises that were discovered by blundering about because we have no underlying theory to guide us.”

In 2012 Deutsch outlined constructor theory, which, he believes, could provide the underlying foundation for a grand unification of all theories in both the classical and quantum domains. This latest paper is a first step toward that larger goal—a demonstration of how classical and quantum information can be used to unify two physical theories. According to constructor theory, the most fundamental components of reality are entities—“constructors”—that perform particular tasks, accompanied by a set of laws that define which tasks are actually possible for a constructor to carry out. For instance, a kettle with a power supply can serve as a constructor that can perform the task of heating water. “The language of constructor theory gives a natural way to describe the most fundamental principles that must be obeyed by all subsidiary theories, like conservation of energy,” explains Chiara Marletto, a quantum physicist also at Oxford, who co-authored the new paper. “You simply say that the task of creating energy from nothing is impossible.”

Dean Rickles, a philosopher of physics at the University of Sydney who was not involved in the development of the theory, is intrigued by its potential to unify nature’s laws. “It’s a very curious new take on the notion of a theory of everything,” he says. “In principle, everything possible in our universe could be written down in a big book consisting of nothing but tasks [and in] this big book will also be encoded all of the laws of physics.”

To develop their description of information, Deutsch and Marletto homed in on one key task that is possible in classical systems but impossible in quantum systems: the ability to make a copy. Since the 1980s physicists have known that it is impossible to make an identical copy of an unknown quantum state. In their new paper Deutsch and Marletto define a classical information medium as one in which states can all be precisely copied. They then work out which tasks must be possible in such a system to remain in line with Shannon’s theory.

The collaborators then go on to define the concept of a “superinformation” medium that encodes messages that specify particular physical states—in this case, one in which copying is impossible. They discovered that a special subset of their superinformation media display the properties associated with quantum information processing. “We found that with this one constraint in place telling you what you cannot do in a superinformation medium—the task of copying—you end up discovering the weird new information-processing power that is a property of quantum systems,” Marletto says.

The team showed that with this restriction on copying in place a number of other properties begin to emerge: Measuring the state of a superinformation medium will inevitably disturb it—a feature commonly associated with quantum systems. But because it is forbidden to make an exact copy of certain sets of states in a superinformation medium this forces some uncertainty into the outcome of the measurement.

The team has also shown that entanglement—the spooky property that binds quantum objects together so that they act in tandem, no matter how far apart they are—also arises naturally, once this constraint on copying is in place. According to Marletto, the crucial property of a system containing two entangled states is that the information stored in the combined system is more than the information that can be gleaned just by examining each member of the pair individually. The quantum whole is more than the sum of its parts.

In their paper Deutsch and Marletto demonstrate that information can be encoded in two superinformation media in such a way that it is impossible to retrieve it by measuring the single subsystems separately—that is, entanglement is inevitable. Similarly, in a classical medium, entanglement is impossible. “The appealing thing about this formalism is the way that common features of quantum mechanics fall out,” says Patrick Hayden, a quantum physicist at Stanford University, adding: “I have real respect for the creative thinking behind constructor theory and its ambitions.” He notes, however, that there are competing attempts by other researchers to develop a deeper understanding of quantum mechanics, including ideas based on copying, and as yet it is too early to say which, if any, will prove to be the best description.

Rickles agrees that it will take time for physicists to verify that the theory—which has not yet passed through peer review—is truly successful at uniting classical and quantum information theory. But if affirmed, it would give a boost to Deutsch’s goal to help in the hunt for the long-sought theory of quantum gravity, uniting the currently incompatible quantum theory and general relativity. “This is the first time in the history of science that it’s known that our deepest theories are wrong, so it’s obvious that we need a deeper theory,” Deutsch says.

Rickles believes that constructor theory has the potential to prescribe meta-laws that general relativity and quantum theory must obey. “The meta-laws are more stable creatures, they survive scientific revolutions,” he says. “Having such principles in hand gives us a better grasp of the nature of reality. I’d say that’s a pretty good advantage.”

http://www.scientificamerican.com/artic ... verything/
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Super Nova
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Re: Science Updates

Post by Super Nova » Tue Jun 17, 2014 8:23 pm

My god, Journey to the Centre of the Earth could have been science fact rather than fiction.

Image

The current theory of were water came from is possibly wrong.....

Scientists find evidence of 'oceans’ at Earth's centre

In a discovery that could explain why water covers so much of our planet's surface, scientists find evidence of vast underground “oceans” trapped hundreds of miles beneath the Earth's surface

These huge hidden reservoirs, which may represent nearly three times the water on the world’s surface, would help scientists to understand how the planet was formed and its inner workings.

The water is not in the familiar forms of liquid, ice or vapour, but is bound up in high-pressure rock 400 miles deep in the “transition zone” where temperatures exceed 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit.

Scientists have for decades looked for the “holy grail” of missing water sources within the Earth as they tried to work out whether water may be cycling between the surface oceans and buried reservoirs.

The findings by two American university professors using the latest seismic technology and laboratory simulations alter previous assumptions of how the world was formed by providing the first scientific evidence that water is locked within the Earth.

Their discovery indicates that the source of the oceans may be these large hidden stores rather than water traces in icy comets that hit the planet as it was formed.

These buried reservoirs could also explain why the oceans have remained at similar levels for millennia as tectonic movements cycle the water through the Earth.

Steve Jacobsen, a geophysicist at Northwestern University, and Brandon Schmandt, a University of New Mexico seismologist, revealed their breakthrough in a paper in the journal Science.

Prof Jacobsen said: “I think we are finally seeing evidence for a whole-Earth water cycle, which may help explain the vast amount of liquid water on the surface.

“Scientists have been looking for this missing deep water for decades.”

Prof Schmandt investigated the structure of the Earth’s crust using a trove of seismic wave data from earthquakes collected from more than 2,000 seismometers across the United States.

And in laboratory experiments, Prof Jacobsen studied mantle rock under the simulated high pressures of 400 miles below the Earth’s surface, an area far beyond direct observation.

With temperatures passing 2,000F and the weight of 250 miles of solid rock above, the water comes in a fourth form, trapped inside the molecular structure of the minerals in the mantle rock.

The scientists’ findings build on another remarkable discovery announced this year.

In research reported in the journal Nature in March, scientists analysed the make-up of a piece of the mineral ringwoodite that was found inside a diamond forced up from a depth of 400 miles by a volcano in Brazil.

That ringwoodite, the only sample in existence from within the Earth, contained unexpectedly high levels of water bound in solid form.

“The ringwoodite is like a sponge, soaking up water,” Prof Jacobsen s
[url][/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldne ... re.htmlurl]
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Re: Science Updates

Post by Super Nova » Thu Jun 19, 2014 12:40 am

Not bloody surprising really. There will be evidence of our existence well after we are gone. Nice to know.... well until the sun dies out anyway.

Rock made of plastic turns up on Hawaii beach
by Ashley Yeager 11:52am, June 12, 2014

Image

There's a new rock on Earth — or at least at Hawaii's Kamilo Beach.

Called plastiglomerate, the rock forms when plastic melts and gets mixed with lava rock, coral and sand, researchers report in the June Geological Society of America Today. The team notes that because plastic is everywhere and does not degrade naturally, plastiglomerate may permanently preserve humans' trashy ways in the planet's future rock record.

https://www.sciencenews.org/blog/scienc ... waii-beach
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