New findings have physicists questioning reality0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- November 30, 2017
Physicists at CERN are working to determine why the equal amounts of matter and antimatter in the universe haven’t annihilated each other.
Physicists at CERN are working to determine why the equal amounts of matter and antimatter in the universe haven’t annihilated each other.
We all want there to be aliens. Green ones, pink ones, brown ones, Greys. Or maybe Vulcans, Klingons, even a being of pure energy. Any type will do.
By all measures, graphene shouldn’t exist. The fact it does comes down to a neat loophole in physics that sees an impossible 2D sheet of atoms act like a solid 3D material.
A game camera meant for hunters managed to catch many sightings of UFOs in the sky.
A JAMA study has found that the flu vaccine, taken by 60% of people over 65-years-old, may be killing a significant number of senior citizens.
If you ask yourself how many pyramids are in the world you will be lost in thoughts. And it least you wouldn’t find the right number.
3200 Phaethon is an asteroid measuring about 3 miles across that roams our galaxy, passing in and out of planetary orbits on its journey. Next month, 3200 Phaethon will zoom by at 6.2 million miles from Earth, which, in space terms, is nearly too close for comfort.
The World Wide Web is all abuzz with Google Earth images of Antarctica that appear to show pyramids in the icy landscape.
It may not take an asteroid strike to transport life from one planet to another.
When people with incredible professional credentials come forward to talk about being covertly recruited for a ’20-years-and-back’ mission in space, that also have key pieces of collateral to prove their claims, it makes it hard not to listen — to at least ask more questions.