The poet Blake wrote that you can see a world in a grain of sand. But even better, you can see a universe in an atom!
Whenever someone talks about black holes, they almost always talk about the event horizon and the singularity. After all, that's what defines a black hole, right? Well, it depends on what you mean by ...
The Scarborough News on MSN
Magician Kevin Quantum harnesses a million volts to read minds at Scarborough’s Stephen Joseph Theatre
After successful runs at the Adelaide and Edinburgh Festival Fringe, magician and physicist Kevin Quantum visits ...
A team of physicists led by Mir Faizal argues the universe cannot be simulated, saying reality includes non-computable truths beyond any algorithm or AI model ...
A book recently published by The Oaklea Press and written by bestselling author Stephen Hawley Martin entitled “Who You Are and Why You’re Here: The Truth That Will Set You Free” is as of this writing ...
Construction on the Star of Caledonia near Gretna Green will begin in March. The project is expected to cost £12 million, with half of that expected to be met by local firm CWP Energy.
The long-debated idea that we might all be living in a computer simulation—popularized by science fiction films like The Matrix—has taken a major hit.
In the mid-19th century, Bernhard Riemann conceived of a new way to think about mathematical spaces, providing the foundation for modern geometry and physics.
The Business & Financial Times on MSN
Choices, not gifts
By Joseph Appah Every human can boast of ever receiving a gift from a loved one. I have received many gifts from my loved ones too. Indeed, gifts are not worked for. We receive them because someone ...
Work to build “Scotland’s largest sculpture” on the border with England will soon get under way, the group behind the project has said. Construction on the Star of Caledonia near Gretna Green will ...
The Big Bang theory has dominated our understanding of the universe’s origin for almost 100 years. It describes a moment when ...
“The Star of Caledonia symbolises the brilliance of James Clerk Maxwell, the ‘Einstein of Scotland’. “Einstein once said he ...
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