Tag Archives: Universe

Gravity Is ‘An Illusion’ Top Scientist Argues

It’s hard to imagine a more fundamental and ubiquitous aspect of life on the Earth than gravity. But what if it’s all an illusion, a sort of cosmic frill, or a side effect of something else going on at deeper levels of reality? So says Erik Verlinde, 48, a respected string theorist and professor of physics at the University of Amsterdam, whose contention that gravity is indeed an illusion has caused a continuing ruckus among physicists, or at least among those who profess to understand it. Reversing the logic of 300 years of science, he argued in a recent paper, titled “On the Origin of Gravity and the Laws of Newton,” that gravity is a consequence of the venerable laws of thermodynamics, which describe the behavior of heat and gases. “For me gravity doesn’t exist,” said Dr. Verlinde, who was recently in the United States to explain himself. Not that he can’t fall down, but Dr. Verlinde is among a number of physicists who say that science has been looking at gravity the wrong way and that there is something more basic, from which gravity “emerges,” the way stock markets emerge from the collective behavior of individual investors or that elasticity emerges from the mechanics of atoms. Looking at gravity from this angle, they say, could shed light on some of the vexing cosmic issues of the day, like the dark energy, a kind of anti-gravity that seems to be speeding up the expansion of the universe, or the dark matter that is supposedly needed to hold galaxies together. Dr. Verlinde’s argument turns on something you could call the “bad hair day” theory of gravity. It goes something like this: your hair frizzles in the heat and humidity, because there are more ways for your hair to be curled than to be straight, and nature likes options. So it takes a force to pull hair straight and eliminate nature’s options. Forget curved space or the spooky attraction at a distance described by Isaac Newton’s equations well enough to let us navigate the rings of Saturn, the force we call gravity is simply a byproduct of nature’s propensity to maximize disorder. Some of the best physicists in the world say they don’t understand Dr. Verlinde’s paper, and many are outright skeptical. But some of those very same physicists say he has provided a fresh perspective on some of the deepest questions in science, namely why space, time and gravity exist at all — even if he has not yet answered them. “Some people have said it can’t be right, others that it’s right and we already knew it — that it’s right and profound, right and trivial,” Andrew Strominger, a string theorist at Harvard said. Read more at link . . . http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/13/science/13gravity.html?_r=2 added by: pjacobs51

Hollywood Tuna’s AmaTuna Moment – Ms. Bikini Universe

Here’s some contestants from the Ms. Bikini Universe contest. Another competition that I wasn’t asked to judge. I’m seriously getting fed up. It’s not a bikini competition if I’m not judging. Ms Bikini Universe Video More AmaTuna

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Hollywood Tuna’s AmaTuna Moment – Ms. Bikini Universe

‘I Was Scared to Sleep’: LGBT Youth Face Violence Behind Bars | The Nation

Over the phone, Krystal has a calm and lilting Southern accent. She identifies as a woman now, but when she entered Louisiana's juvenile justice system at 12 years of age, she presented herself as a boy and used male pronouns. Today, she's 18 and was just recently released from the system. Being closeted about her gender identity was never an option for her. “It's very obvious with me because of how I walk, talk, the way I do things,” she says. And while her sentencing judge had told her that she wouldn't be in prison for long, it was five years before a sympathetic counselor made a formal request for her release. In her letter to the judge, the counselor mentioned in passing that Krystal had confided in her that she was probably transgender, and that she was in a romantic relationship with another boy at the facility. On the voicemail he left in response to the counselor's report, the judge openly laughed and called the recommendation a joke. He said that based on those facts, he would absolutely deny the request for a release hearing. “Many judges in rural Louisiana still conflate sex offenses with sexual orientation and gender identity,” says Wesley Ware of the Juvenile Justice Project of Louisiana. It was months before Krystal was finally set free. added by: toyotabedzrock

From BT cotton to GM salmon: Unnatural Selection

This stunning European documentary available for the first time in the US reveals the consequences of GMOs worldwide from BT cotton, BT canola, GM pigs, to GM salmon, which threatens natural species in the wild. It shows how unnecessary and profit driven this technology is, and how it is interfering in the natural processes of this planet. When you play master of the universe without respect for the nature you are interfering in, the end result cannot be good. added by: JanforGore

What questions would you like to see Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan answer?

Today is the second day of Senate confirmation hearings for Obama's second Supreme Court nominee, Elena Kagan. With the 2010 elections approaching, plenty of Senators are expected to use this as an opportunity to do a little campaigning before a national audience. But outside of partisan positioning – what questions would you like to see her answer? What are the biggest questions facing out Supreme Court these days? http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/30/us/30kagan.html added by: afitzgerald

The Geek Galaxy

The Universe according to geeks. added by: Geoffiroth

Sir Geoff Hurst | Small Talk

The 66 World Cup winner on Alf Ramsey’s tanning rules, playing first-class cricket and being tripped up by a strange presence Hello Geoff. Hello Small Talk. Let’s crack on shall we? Does winning the World Cup feel like yesterday or does it feel like 44 years ago? It’s both. Because of the nature of people reminding you about the day, not only every four years, but people still talk about it on a daily basis. It really brings it home how significant and important a national occasion it is and how the support of the country is behind that. The players will be aware that there’s public support, but they will never really be aware how much support and feeling there is in the country until they actually go and win it. Nobody can tell them apart from myself and twenty-one other guys who played. Indeed. An old opponent of yours, Franz Beckenbauer, has had a few things to say about England. Do you think he’s right or do you just think he’s starting the mind games? I never felt it appropriate for any level of football, where a manager is talking disparagingly about another team. If we get through and we play Germany that will be the most motivating speech they can give to the team. Small Talk spoke to George Cohen a while ago, he thought the Argentina team you played that tournament were the best team you faced throughout it … I wouldn’t necessarily say the best. They were the toughest. I think the three teams we played in the quarters, semi and final were terrific sides. I mean the Portugal side in the semi-final was fantastic and with Eusebio scoring eight or nine goals in the tournament arguably one of the best players that’s played up front in any year of football. And that German side was a terrific team, they were going on to win the European Championship in ’72 and the World Cup in ’74. I would put them very close together. Certainly in terms of the tough game, really tough physical game, Argentina sticks out way above the others. Are the rumours true about it all kicking off a bit in the tunnel afterwards? Yes that’s very true. It was kept quiet. It was obviously a very physical match on and off the field. Controversial incidents with the captain being sent off. As it was in those days, it was much easier to keep things quiet. It would be impossible to keep things quiet today because of the huge media coverage. You then played against one of the greatest teams of all time, that Brazil team in Mexico … Arguably the greatest Brazilian side that won a world cup. Quite. Can you remember that game well? I remember the game for a number of things. For one you’re playing against one of the greatest sides ever. We were as strong if not stronger at the time but we were that close with the result in the match playing in their backyard under their conditions, in their heat. If you analyse the game we were fantastic and should have at least drawn or possibly won. A couple of misses and also the performance of Bobby Moore who arguably was better in ’70 than he was in ’66 if that’s possible. Bearing in mind he’d been locked up under house arrest only three days before the tournament. There were a couple of misses. Everybody remembers Jeff Astle’s horrible miss towards the end. Were you on the pitch when that happened? I was and people relive that moment saying it was me who missed it but I do remember it. I love looking at that film today and realising what a good side we had, the bulk had been together since ’66, the backbone of the side was there. In ’68 we were close in the European Championships but ’70 we looked like we were going to go there and play in the final again. I read in Alf Ramsey’s biography recently that he had one of his coaches blowing his whistle every 10 minutes so you wouldn’t get too much sun when you were in Brazil? Yes that’s absolutely true. Five minutes on your front, five minutes on your back, five minutes in the pool. The discipline was very strict. On the floor we were on in the hotel, you’d have either Alf or Les Cocker sitting outside the door of the lift to check on people’s whereabouts. Sounds harsh. How late would you they be there till? Probably midnight. Very few people would be late. It’s how it should be. Now, just away from football you also played a single game of county cricket for Essex … That’s correct. In 1962. Essex v Lancashire in a district of Liverpool, which was interesting. West Ham went away on tour to Ghana that year but because I was split between the two sports at that stage I decided to stay behind and got an opportunity to play one first-class game. Did you have real hopes of making a go of the cricket? Well yes I did. The big downfall for me was trying to do two. Looking back, like in anything in life you have to focus on something 100%. I wasn’t. All my life I played cricket in the summer and football in the winter, it was how I was brought up. In many respects it was the end of an era for me. Prior to that you could probably do the two. When you hear now of Dennis Compton, William Watson and many other players who played cricket for England and football for England. You look at it today and think how did anybody play those sports? What was your strongest suit? I’ve read that you were a very good fielder. I was a good fielder because I had the hand-eye coordination. Primarily I was a batsman and we didn’t have a wicketkeeper in Essex’s second team so I kept wicket a fair bit. And then I had the opportunity when there were a couple of injuries to play in that game against Lancashire, which we won. Do you think England will ever win another World Cup or do they have they to change all the coaching and everything like Trevor Booking has suggested? Yes we can win the World Cup. But certainly there is a concern from Trevor quite rightly and the current situation clearly illustrates that with the strength of the squad. We’re not producing enough international players of the Wayne Rooneys and Steven Gerrards. It’s quite clear that the system we have isn’t working. The system we had in my day which was pretty simplistic. You kick the ball in the road, the streets, the playground till you were 15, you played for your schools a bit maybe for the county. The people in charge were not coaching – they were probably a PE teacher who’s second subject was art. And that system produced some of the greatest players at that time and any other time. When we do get a good player like Joe Cole they get wasted because we don’t trust the more skilful player. Do you think that’s a problem with English football? Glenn Hoddle is an outstanding example of that in the game Had he been in another country he would have got 150 caps. Whatever the coaching is, it can try and replicate what happened in our time to an extent. Let the guys play, let them enjoy, let them have some freedom. We should be producing more street players like Wayne Rooney shouldn’t we … You also get your players, currently Frank Lampard, who’s not quite as gifted but appears he has a fantastic attitude. Makes the most of what he’s got … ‘Makes the most of’ is probably unfair, he’s made himself into great player. Bobby Moore probably wasn’t as gifted as many people think when he joined the club but he made himself into one of the great players by the other attributes you need as a great player, your attitude, determination, learning, leadership. You mentioned Harry Redknapp before. You played with him at West Ham. Wasn’t he a speedy winger … I think that was about it. With very skinny legs … Yeah he was quite a lean individual. Very quick and very fit and could run all day. Unfortunately he had to pack-up from injury very quickly. Do you believe in God? That is quite a difficult question to answer. That’s a fairly serious question. I don’t think that’s a silly question. I need time to think about it, is my answer to that. What about extra-terrestrial life? No. You don’t think anything’s out there, the universe is empty? Eh? er, yes. What about ghosts then? Have you ever seen one? No. Have you ever felt or sensed a presence? Yes. Last Sunday. This is a serious answer. When I tripped over my suitcase and banged my head and had four stitches in it. I sensed that when I tripped over the suitcase something was holding my leg in the suitcase. And was it? Normally when you trip, you know, you recover and stumble over something like a suitcase. Really? This was in the hotel? In the hotel in South Africa. And that’s an honest, genuine answer. Small Talk likes honest, genuine answers. How was the South African healthcare? Fine, fine, very good. We were looked after. The security guys who look after a lot of people, one of the roles seemed to be that they ensured that if anything did happen to us, physically, not by a terrorist, but a simple little trip, they were there to look after us. So they took me to a clinic, had a tetanus injection, antibiotics, painkillers and they got me a hat to wear. Have you still got a headache? No it was OK. I think it just caught the corner of the table. It was a big enough gash to have four stitches. My wife still doesn’t believe that I wasn’t drunk … She actually didn’t say that. And after I did it I couldn’t believe how stupid it was to do that and I was cursing like mad. What have you got in your pockets? A handkerchief. Always carry a handkerchief? Mostly. What was the favourite toy you played with as a child? A football. Always the football? Yeah. And if you could describe in one sentence what it was like in Essex in the 1950s … My first answer would be it’s impossible to answer. Eh? How is it different then? The most noticeable change is the amount of cars on the roads now. Now there’s a line of cars outside all the houses. I’m giving you a two pound coin in the petrol station and you can go in and buy any chocolate bar you want, what’s it going to be? Kit-Kat. The chunky or the four finger? Four finger. I can share that with my wife. Exactly. Does she get one finger or two? It’s two mostly, but occasionally she doesn’t fancy too much so she’ll have one and I’ll have the three. But I do like the chunky one as well. Who doesn’t? Thanks Geoff. Goodbye … Bye Small Talk. World Cup 2010 England Barney Ronay guardian.co.uk

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Sir Geoff Hurst | Small Talk

NAACP Forces Hallmark To Pull ‘Racist’ Graduation Card

The Los Angeles chapter of the NAACP last week forced Hallmark to pull from its shelves a graduation card the civil rights group deemed racist. “Printed on the card, is dialogue such as, ‘Watch out, Saturn, this grad is gonna run rings around you!'” reported the Orange County Register on June 3. “And on the audio chip that plays once the card is opened, [characters] Hoops and Yoyo continue their riffing on all the things new graduates are going to do once they get out there to take on the universe…’And you black holes — you’re so ominous! And you planets? Watch your back!'”  But as KABC-TV reported, folks at the NAACP hear the words “black whores” (video follows with additional quotes from the OC Register and commentary, h/t Hot Air headlines ): Sounds like an innocent enough reference to that peculiar feature of the solar system known as a black hole to us. But members of the NAACP hear it differently, saying the high-pitched voice of Hoops — or Yoyo, we still can’t keep ’em straight — says “black whores” and is a racist slur against African-American women. Hallmark’s response to KABC was to defend the card — which has been sold for three years now with no complaints — as not being racist at all, but then to go ahead and pull it from all its stores anyway.  Imagine that. The card has been around for three years, has a planetary theme addressing a common astronomical term “black holes,” but because some people hear the word “whores,” it has to be pulled — in the same week America’s media lined up to support Helen Thomas despite her anti-Semitic remarks to a rabbi. Sure is an interesting world we live in today.

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NAACP Forces Hallmark To Pull ‘Racist’ Graduation Card

World Cup: What to Wear When Watching It

Image from Philosophers Football Sic transit. We asked this important question in 2006 when the World Cup for football (soccer) was held in Germany and here we are again still pondering the universe, as the championship moves to South Africa. We know that the teams will be sporting jerseys by Nike made of recycled plastic bottles. But what about our men, sprawled in front of th… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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World Cup: What to Wear When Watching It

Jeff Beck Soars At Intimate Les Paul Tribute Concert, By Kurt Loder

Legendary guitarist gets small at New York’s Iridium club. By Kurt Loder Jeff Beck performs in New York on Wednesday Photo: Larry Busacca/ Getty Images NEW YORK — How rare an event was the small-club show Jeff Beck played here on Wednesday night? Well, Metallica guitarist Kirk Hammett flew in from his home in Hawaii to catch it. And he wasn’t the only weighty player in attendance. Also crowding into the packed-out Iridium, a Broadway jazz club, were E Street Band (and “Sopranos”) veteran Steven Van Zandt; onetime Stray Cat Brian Setzer; psychedelic-blues virtuoso Warren Haynes, of Gov’t Mule; and such notable Beck buddies as Letterman bandleader Paul Shaffer. They were all on hand to catch the great guitarist in an uncommon context. Beck’s fiery, soaring style — which has been unendingly influential ever since he emerged as Eric Clapton’s replacement in the Yardbirds in 1965 — makes glorious use of maximum volume. However, his two Iridium dates (the first one, the night before, had drawn such admirers as David Bowie) were a birthday tribute to Beck’s late friend, the innovative guitarist Les Paul, whose own style was clean, sharp and jazzy. In saluting Paul — who maintained a weekly Iridium gig virtually up to the time of his death last year , at the age of 94 — Beck would necessarily be turning down the volume a bit; and since Paul had a strong country side, too, his English acolyte would also be showcasing his rockabilly chops. Beck was joined for these dates by Irish singer Imelda May and her tight three-piece band. May is a belter with range — she’s up for taking on early Elvis and even Howlin’ Wolf, and she held her own as Beck called forth the ghosts of such rockabilly guitar masters as Cliff Gallup and Paul Burlison (on a stomping rendition of “Train Kept A-Rollin’,” a tune Beck covered with the Yardbirds). But May also shifted down to a smoky purr for Julie London’s late-night lounge standard, “Cry Me a River” (with Beck flawlessly replicating Barney Kessel’s original plaintive chord patterns); and her takes on such vintage Les Paul recordings as “How High the Moon” and “Bye Bye Blues,” whipped along by Beck’s heavily echoed riffing, were pure, jumping ’50s pop. Paul invented the solid-body Gibson guitar that bears his name, and Beck has played one at various times throughout his career. But he’s most closely associated with the Fender Stratocaster, which has a throatier, more sinuous tone. So when he strapped one on midway through the show (possibly to the dismay of Gibson Guitar execs in the audience), the music grew noticeably more muscular. Bringing on a four-piece horn section, he unleashed the deathless crunch of “The Peter Gunn Theme,” and then — out of nowhere — launched into a rendition of the Shangri-Las’ girl-group classic, “Remember (Walkin’ in the Sand),” that might have actually raised the roof if the club weren’t located in a basement. The show peaked when Beck invited Brian Setzer out onstage (“the only guy in the room who could give him competition,” Van Zandt whispered) with his trademark Gretsch guitar. Their extended, dueling-riffs run-through of Eddie Cochran’s “Twenty Flight Rock” was the sort of thing guitar fans might expect to hear only in heaven. The crowd was still buzzing at an upstairs party following the show. Most people have a favorite Beck phase: the Yardbirds stuff, of course, or maybe the mid-’70s jazz-fusion period of Blow by Blow and Wired. For Kirk Hammett, the Jeff Beck Group’s 1968 blues-rock touchstone, Truth, was a major album. “One of the very first guitar solos I ever heard was the one on ‘Let Me Love You,’ ” Hammett said. “I flew in from Hawaii, but he flew in from some other universe.” Related Artists Jeff Beck Les Paul

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Jeff Beck Soars At Intimate Les Paul Tribute Concert, By Kurt Loder