Duke University Does The Ruben Tube (Ruben's Tube)
Discovery in Action: Brandeis Lab Unlocks New Laws of Physics
Inside Brandeis University labs, you can watch discovery in action. Our researchers are reshaping our understanding of the world and unlocking the secrets of ...
Evolution is physics: organization & freedom
Life of A Physics Major Pt. 2 (Duke)
Physics - Neil Tyson + Some Fun and Quality Time = This Duke APS Conference. Previous Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJuLQ3-_IkA APS ...
The Physics of Figure Skating - Noelle Cunningham
Project for Physics 53 at Duke University.
Neutrons, Quarks and the Search for a New Force of Nature
Tiny particles can hold big secrets. Haiyan Gao, chair of Duke's physics department, probes inside atoms to study the structure and spin of neutrons. One aim of ...
It's 4am for me now and I'm too tired to think, so call me crazy if you
like, but....
I wonder if it would be possible to manifest something from a dream into
the waking world by using resonance. Say for instance you have a lucid
dream, and imagine an object, something simple like a marble or pearl, and
having that object vibrate in your dream so that it produces a certain
frequency of sound. Then while awake, perhaps during an alpha or theta
state, try to vividly re-imagine the same frequency the object had. There's
probably millions of conditions to consider, from the material composing
the object, to the frequency or sound used, even the color or shape of the
object may come into play. Perhaps the use of specially shaped magnetic
fields (hexagonal like the universe?) would help in some way.
Technically, there's no proof that a lucid dream is any less "real" than
waking life, and if the waking mind were to resonate (ie the whole corpus
callosum in resonance like a concert hall) at the exact same frequency as
it did during the dream, with that resonance transferred consciously
through the body (ie hold the object in your hand in the dream, and try to
imagine the sound/vibrations coming from the object in your hand as it did
in the dream), then perhaps it would be worth a try. As quantum physicists
know, only impossibility is impossible.
I'm about out of steam for my rant, so I'll end it there. The idea is
either very deep or very stupid, and I'm too tired to tell the difference,
so I'm going to bed!
As a side note, I think that once science sounds the bottom of the quantum
sea, they may find that the tiniest things are tiny north and south
mono-polar magnets, and that they form tiny hexagons which come together
like pixels to form the "fabric" of the holographic universe around and
within us.
The world needs stupid people like myself to ramble on about the possibly
futile ideas that the real smarties wouldn't dare ponder. ;P
very interesting.. and really best of luck i sure she will do well.. as for
me unfortunately i don't have the amount of money that she able to have to
do such test as i myself would like and so i have only my sq principle
system i have deviced to show me how, where and the un- found particles and
atoms smaller than neutrinos .. which leads to hundreds of paperwork ..
glad someone is able to be able to make real test on this things... carlos
portela ( sittos_science )
Celebrating 50 years of collaboration, innovation
One of only four Department of Energy Centers of Excellence for Nuclear Physics in the nation, TUNL brings together the resources of three universities: the ...
Surprised that Duke did not have transistors in their labs in the early
60's. As a kid in Covington, KY I was literally playing with the Raytheon
CK722 transistor in the 1960 timeframe. There was a book I had that
described how to make a regenerative radio using that simple germanium
transistor. Not yet driving, I bought most of my components from the
Burstein-Applebee mail order catalog. I earned my spending money by being a
caddy at the local country club. I still play with circuits and
programming. de N3GAQ.
Having started my career at TI (1973-77) and DEC (1978-1995) and 12 years
(1995-2007) at Intel, this was very nostalgic to hear the names of people
I know. Especially interesting to hear what Jack had to say about Morris
Chang, J. Fred Bucy, and Craig Barrett. Too bad he was not asked more about
Dean Toombs, another TIer who joined him at Intel.