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Education The Media Science

Perimeter Institute Launches Modern Physics Resource 30

An anonymous reader writes "You can find six new online sources of info about hot topics in modern physics at the 'What We Research' outreach page of Perimeter Institute. The info includes text, graphics and online presentations dealing with Cosmology, Superstring Theory, Quantum Gravity, Quantum Foundations, Quantum Information and Particle Physics. The resource section at the bottom of each page recommends a wealth of interesting online lectures by some famous scientists. PI is an independent, nonprofit scientific research and outreach organization."
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Perimeter Institute Launches Modern Physics Resource

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  • Wrong site? (Score:5, Funny)

    by dotancohen ( 1015143 ) on Sunday October 26, 2008 @07:32AM (#25516743) Homepage

    Cosmology, Superstring Theory, Quantum Gravity,...

    For a minute there my subconscious thought that I had browsed to a women's magazine by accident...

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      You mean Quantum Gravity!
    • This is what they say about them(selves):

      They cluster in Waterloo, Ontario, to forge new, mind-bending ideas about the ultimate nature of our universe, from space and time to matter and forces. Driven by curiosity, their mission is to unlock nature's most profound secrets hidden deep inside the atom and far across the universe.

      As Big Lebowski would say: "far out... far fucking out!"

  • All AC? (Score:1, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward

    This whole thread will be populated by AC's?

  • Web page is wrong (Score:5, Informative)

    by mangu ( 126918 ) on Sunday October 26, 2008 @08:22AM (#25516979)

    The Einstein portrait caption [perimeterinstitute.ca] reads "1870-1955". Einstein was born in 1879, the same year when Maxwell died.

    Let's hope their theoretical physicists are more careful than their webdesigners.

  • by Potor ( 658520 ) <farker1@gm[ ].com ['ail' in gap]> on Sunday October 26, 2008 @08:30AM (#25517007) Journal

    From one of the resources on superstring theory [perimeterinstitute.ca]

    Why do we see only point-like entities? The answer is simple: elementary strings, if they exist, are far too tiny to see. It is unlikely that even the most sophisticated microscope or particle accelerator that could be constructed would ever have enough resolution to directly "see" the strings of string theory.

    Sounds like Epicurus all over again - small, indivisible, and invisible particles whose motion explain everything. Only he called them atoms.

    I know superstring theory has better explanatory power than Epicurus' atomism, but I am intrigued by the invisibility of the strings, which the resourse above seems to make elementary, just like Epicurus.

    • Technically you can "see" the strings, since in string theory every elementary particle is a string. In string theory, any time you detect an electron or a photon, you're looking at a string. It's just that they're so small, we may never be able to tell that they're actually strings and not point particles.

      • by dotancohen ( 1015143 ) on Sunday October 26, 2008 @08:41AM (#25517085) Homepage

        Technically you can "see" the strings, since in string theory every elementary particle is a string. In string theory, any time you detect an electron or a photon, you're looking at a string. It's just that they're so small, we may never be able to tell that they're actually strings and not point particles.

        Correct me if I'm wrong, but as I understood it the particles are strings in x dimensions, and in the superplane of our 3d existence they appear as points. Just as a line passing through a plane appears as a point on the plane.

        • Exactly!

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          AFAIK that isn't a requirement, though it does lead to some neat things to think about.

          For example, imagine one string with both of its ends stuck on our 3D "plane", but with the bulk of it floating "above" the plane. The point at one end is an electron and the other end a positron. When they meet, the loop closes, forming a photon, which is a closed loop type of string.

          • An electron and a positron usually react to produce two photons (never just one). Sometimes other particles such as neutrinos are produced.

            • by dkf ( 304284 )

              An electron and a positron usually react to produce two photons (never just one). Sometimes other particles such as neutrinos are produced.

              If my scanty topology is correct, a loop intersecting a plane will (normally) do so at two points.

              But realistically, it's probably not a good idea to try to reason about superstrings by analogy with normal 3D entities. After all, it's pretty tricky to just go from 2D to 3D, and strings have rather a lot more dimensions than that...

        • by Potor ( 658520 )

          Correct me if I'm wrong, but as I understood it the particles are strings in x dimensions, and in the superplane of our 3d existence they appear as points. Just as a line passing through a plane appears as a point on the plane.

          that's corresponds with what little I know of string theory, and i must admit i find the concept esoteric, if not mystical.

          but then surely it is incorrect to say that they are too small to see? that's a serious question (IANAPP) and i will be happily corrected.

        • Strictly and classically speaking, that's correct. However, since the string is always vibrating, you're going to see more or less its full extent in our 3D space as different parts of it pass through our 3D hyperplane at nearby instants of time. If you could take an instantaneous (or Planck time) snapshot of a string, you'd only see a few points of it at once (wherever it intersects at that moment). In reality, if we could detect spatial structure on such small scales at all, we'd see it smeared out spa

  • At this point, Lubos Motl, high in his Transylvanian crag-side castle, let out a shout of anger, causing even his henchmen to scatter. "SMOOOOO-LINNNNN!"

  • If you follow the links and try to actually see one of the nice presentations on the PI website you'll find that these don't always work. In particular I can't hear any sound (I'm on OS X).

    Anybody the same problem?
  • "PI is an independent, nonprofit scientific research and outreach organization" Wrong. Here's what it is (to 20 decimal places) 3.14159265358979323846
  • Total of 30 posts, incl. 2 of mine... not exactly a hot topic is this PI launch, is it?

"If value corrupts then absolute value corrupts absolutely."

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