Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Bookforum Omnivore - The Vast Majority of the Universe

From Bookforum's Omnivore blog, this is a coo collection of links on cosmology, including a couple of articles on the ever-mysterious "dark matter," and an article on the largest "object" ever discovered in the universe, which is composed of 73 quasars.


The vast majority of the universe

JAN 18 2013 
9:00AM


  • From Cosmos, the vast majority of the universe is something we can't see, can't touch and is expanding the universe at ever-increasing speeds; Tamara Davis explains why dark energy poses more questions than answers. 
  • Can time just stop? Michael Byrne wonders. 
  • The God Particle: What explains the current wave of popular physics
  • Virginia Trimble reviews Gravity's Engines: The Other Side of Black Holes by Caleb Scharf. 
  • Dark matter mystery may soon be solved: Experiments to detect dark matter, which scientists believe makes up about a quarter of the universe, are underway and may yield direct evidence within a decade. 
  • What is string theory, and why should we bother finding out? Steven Gubser explains. 
  • Most fundamental clock ever could redefine kilogram: Physicists have created the first clock with a tick that depends on the hyper-regular frequency of matter itself. 
  • Rebecca J. Rosen on the largest structure ever observed in the universe: At 4 billion light years across, this quote-unquote "object" throws astronomical assumptions that go back to Einstein into doubt.

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