Science and Souls (for geeks and spiritual explorers)

Bob Loblaw

Astralnaut
great illustrated book that talks about logical arguments

https://bookofbadarguments.com/?view=flipbook

press left and right to view it

equivocation.png
 

t-dub

Vapor Sloth

Bob Loblaw

Astralnaut
1383192_662774933757106_368290735_n.jpg


"Working with colleagues at the Harvard-MIT Center for Ultracold Atoms, a group led by Harvard Professor of Physics Mikhail Lukin and MIT Professor of Physics Vladan Vuletic have managed to coax photons into binding together to form molecules – a state of matter that, until recently, had been purely theoretical.

The discovery, Lukin said, runs contrary to decades of accepted wisdom about the nature of light. Photons have long been described as massless particles which don't interact with each other – shine two laser beams at each other, he said, and they simply pass through one another.

"Photonic molecules," however, behave less like traditional lasers and more like something you might find in science fiction – the light saber.

"Most of the properties of light we know about originate from the fact that photons are massless, and that they do not interact with each other," Lukin said. "What we have done is create a special type of medium in which photons interact with each other so strongly that they begin to act as though they have mass, and they bind together to form molecules. This type of photonic bound state has been discussed theoretically for quite a while, but until now it hadn't been observed."
 

Bob Loblaw

Astralnaut
http://www.cnn.com/2013/10/02/tech/...2d-material/index.html?sr=fb100213graphene11p

CNN:Your discovery was certainly a surprise to the science world, but was it a surprise to you?

AG: Yes. We live in a 3-dimensional world. My physics intuition, developed over the last thirty years, told me that this material shouldn't exist. And if you had asked 99.9% of scientists around the world they would have said the idea of a 2D material was rubbish and that graphene shouldn't exist. And in most cases they would have been right, but in the case of graphite or graphene, and a dozen other materials like it, our intuition was completely wrong. You can reach this limit of one-atom-thin layers.
 

t-dub

Vapor Sloth
I have dreamed of a flexible screen like that for a long time . . .

Here is the world's smallest movie. IBM researchers used a scanning tunneling microscope to move thousands of carbon monoxide molecules (two atoms stacked on top of each other), all in pursuit of exploring the limits of data storage. It's so small it can be seen only when you magnify it 100 million times.

 

nopartofme

Over the falls, in a barrel
Ah, I see. So its atomic configuration can be described as two-dimensional, but it does not only exist in two spatial dimensions.

I was really hoping it would be the latter when I clicked on the link, though. :lol: How mind blowing would it be if it somehow exhibited properties of not occupying one of our spatial dimensions?!

Thanks for clearing that up, I thought the guy in the CNN article was just exaggerating things for publicity.
 
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nopartofme,
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