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skwirlinator
20-May-2005, 05:44 AM
Anyone know about this feature. I just looked up Quantum Teleportation.
AMAZING!

http://scholar.google.com/ =D>

crosscountry
20-May-2005, 02:07 PM
really neat. I tried Black hole radiation.

ToSeek
20-May-2005, 02:56 PM
4860 matches for Paris Hilton. :D

Tranquility
20-May-2005, 04:03 PM
681 results for Britney Spears, including:

Britney Spears Guide to Semiconductor Physics

:o

skwirlinator
20-May-2005, 06:29 PM
681 results for Britney Spears, including:

Britney Spears Guide to Semiconductor Physics

:o

Thats interesting, But what about real science. Is it a good thing or not. I'm sure anyone can pervert anything if they wish nowadays.

Does/Has anyone use(d) it as a recoarse for real information, It's new to me and I am wondering how many BBers already use it. How many of you could use it in your jobs? What kinds of Real Astronomy have you researched?


Oort Cloud-3,270 for Oort Cloud
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?bibcode=1996ASPC..107..265W&db_key=A ST
Abstract
Dynamical studies during the past two decades have greatly increased our understanding of the Oort cloud of comets which surrounds the solar system. Cometary orbits in the cloud evolve under the complex interaction of stellar, galactic, and giant molecular cloud perturbations, as well as planetary and nongravitational perturbations when the comets re-enter the planetary region. Evidence has continued to build for a dense, inner Oort cloud of comets which acts as a reservoir to replenish the outer cloud as comets there are stripped away. The total number of comets in the dynamically active outer Oort cloud is on the order of $1012$, and about five times that number in the unseen inner Oort cloud, with a total estimated mass of $\sim$38 Earth masses. Temporal variations in the flux of comets from the Oort cloud into the planetary region by a factor of four are possible due to the varying galactic tide, and by a factor of $\sim$300 due to perturbations by stars penetrating the Oort cloud or close GMC encounters. The most intense cometary ``showers'' may result in biological extinction events on the Earth. Comets in the Oort cloud are processed by galactic cosmic rays, heated by nearby supernovae, eroded by interstellar dust impacts, and disrupted by mutual collisions (in the inner cloud). A detailed estimate of the Oort cloud's dynamical history is not possible because of the inability to reconstruct the Sun's varying galactic motion over the history of the solar system, and because of uncertainty over where comets actually formed. However, it is likely that a substantial fraction of the original Oort cloud population has been lost to interstellar space. We are approaching the time when Oort clouds around other stars may be detectable, though searches to date have so far been negative.

not impressed-
Results 1 - 10 of about 347,000 for Wave propagation.
Scalar wave propagation in topological black hole backgrounds
B Wang, E Abdalla, RB Mann - Physical Review D - link.aps.org, 2002
Scalar wave propagation in topological black hole backgrounds. ... 2. Potential behavior
for j,1/6. SCALAR WAVE PROPAGATION IN TOPOLOGICAL . . . ...
Cited by 206 - Web Search - arxiv.org - arxiv.org - adsabs.harvard.edu - all 5 versions »
Late-Time Tail of Wave Propagation on Curved Spacetime
ESC Ching, PT Leung, WM Suen, K Young - Physical Review Letters - link.aps.org, 1995
Late-Time Tail of Wave Propagation on Curved Spacetime. ESC Ching 1 , PT
Leung 1 , WM Suen 2 , and K. Young 1 1 Department of Physics ...
Cited by 45 - Web Search - arxiv.org - adsabs.harvard.edu - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov - all 6 versions »

Results 1 - 10 of about 3,410 for Superclusters
A 120-Mpc Periodicity in the Three-Dimensional Distribution of Galaxy Superclusters
J Einasto, M Einasto, S Gottloeber, V Mueller, V … - Arxiv preprint astro-ph/9701018 - arxiv.org, 1997
... 34 +0100 (MET) (34kb) A 120-Mpc Periodicity in the Three-Dimensional
Distribution of Galaxy Superclusters. Authors: J. Einasto, M ...
Cited by 161 - Cached - Web Search - adsabs.harvard.edu - adsabs.harvard.edu

Results 1 - 10 of about 19,500 for graviton
Nonperturbative continuity in graviton mass versus perturbative discontinuity
C Deffayet, GR Dvali, G Gabadadze, AI Vainshtein - Physical Review D - link.aps.org, 2002
Nonperturbative continuity in graviton mass versus perturbative discontinuity. ... We
address the question of whether a graviton could have a small nonzero mass. ...
Cited by 69 - Web Search - arxiv.org - arxiv.org - adsabs.harvard.edu - all 5 versions »

Results 1 - 10 of about 1,520 for Saturn 2005
Implications of rapid planetary rotation for the Dungey magnetotail of Saturn
SE Milan, EJ Bunce, SWH Cowley, CM Jackman - JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH - agu.org, 2005
... Citation: Milan, SE, EJ Bunce, SWH Cowley, and CM Jackman (2005), Implications of
rapid planetary rotation for the Dungey magnetotail of Saturn, J. Geophys. ...
Cached - Web Search
Effects of ring shadowing on the detection of electrostatic discharges at Saturn
M Mendillo, L Moore, J Clarke, I Mueller-Wodarg, … - GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS - agu.org, 2005
... Moore, J. Clarke, I. Mueller-Wodarg, WS Kurth, and ML Kaiser (2005), Effects of
ring shadowing on the detection of electrostatic discharges at Saturn, Geophys. ...
Cached - Web Search

Results 1 - 10 of about 79,700 for impact velocities.
Collision rates and impact velocities in the Trojan asteroid swarms
F Marzari, H Scholl, P Farinella - Icarus - ingenta.com, 1996
... Collision Rates and Impact Velocities in the Trojan Asteroid Swarms Icarus
January 1996, vol. 119, no. 1, pp. 192-201(10) Marzari ...
Cited by 15 - Web Search - ingenta.com - adsabs.harvard.edu
Collision rates and impact velocities in the Main Asteroid Belt
P FARINELLA, D DAVIS - Icarus - adsabs.harvard.edu, 1992
Title: Collision rates and impact velocities in the Main Asteroid Belt Authors:
Farinella, Paolo; Davis, Donald R. Affiliation: AA(Pisa, Universita, Italy), AB ...
Cited by 45 - Web Search - csa.com

one more...
Results 1 - 10 of about 11,600 for real time telemetry.
GRB 021219: The first Gamma-Ray Burst localized in real time with IBAS
S Mereghetti, D Gotz, V Beckmann, A von Kienlin, P … - A&A - edpsciences.org, 2003
... GRB 021219 is the first GRB detected in real time by IBAS. ... 2.2. SPI At the time
of GRB 021219 the SPI instrument was in low-telemetry mode. ...
Cited by 20 - Web Search - arxiv.org - edpsciences.nao.ac.jp - aanda.u-strasbg.fr - all 7 versions »
On-board real-time state and fault identification for rovers
R Washington - PROC IEEE INT CONF ROB AUTOM - ieeexplore.ieee.org, 2000
... On-Board Real-Time State and Fault Identification ... the implicit transitions are thus
dependent on the time step ... of MAKSI and tested it on telemetry data gathered ...
Cited by 16 - Web Search - ic.arc.nasa.gov - arc.nasa.gov - csa.com - all 7 versions »
The INTEGRAL ground segment and its science operations centre
R Much, P Barr, L Hansson, E Kuulkers, P Maldari, … - A&A - edpsciences.org, 2003
... The ISDC is responsible for searching for gamma-ray bursts and other phenomena in
the real-time telemetry, for scientific processing of the satellite telemetry ...
Cited by 4 - Web Search - arxiv.org - aanda.u-strasbg.fr - adsabs.harvard.edu - all 6 versions »

I know Someone must find this as facinating as I!
I love this stuff and now when you guys start puffing out those scientific phrases I have a recoarse to INVESTIGATE what you're talkin about.
I wish I had this when I was in school, but computers were huge, expensive things in big cities and government buildings and I had to rely on encyclopedias. What a resource!

Tranquility
20-May-2005, 09:15 PM
I remember posting a topic about it a really long time ago actually, but I cant find it by searching. Might have been pruned. I also remember seeing it referenced in an Against The Mainstream topic.

Its definitely a cool service.

kucharek
20-May-2005, 09:24 PM
4860 matches for Paris Hilton. :D
681 results for Britney Spears...

Tststs [-X

My first try was Phil Plait 8-[

skwirlinator
20-May-2005, 10:45 PM
I remember posting a topic about it a really long time ago actually, but I cant find it by searching. Might have been pruned. I also remember seeing it referenced in an Against The Mainstream topic.

Its definitely a cool service.

WOW, I thought it was a brand new thing?

Maksutov
20-May-2005, 11:52 PM
4860 matches for Paris Hilton. :D
That's a lot of matches for one hotel. Must be due to the location... :)

skwirlinator
21-May-2005, 12:32 AM
4860 matches for Paris Hilton. :D
That's a lot of matches for one hotel. Must be due to the location... :)

Or it is dimensionally unstable

AndrewGPaul
21-May-2005, 01:48 AM
681 results for Britney Spears, including:

Britney Spears Guide to Semiconductor Physics

:o

Mocketh not. That website was given to me as a course reference for a 3rd year university Semiconductor Physics class.

skwirlinator
21-May-2005, 03:09 AM
What did you learn ?

AndrewGPaul
21-May-2005, 10:29 AM
Actually, I think I've forgotten it all :)

skwirlinator
21-May-2005, 10:30 AM
Actually, I think I've forgotten it all :)

Except the title :P

Candy
23-May-2005, 03:14 PM
Results 1 - 10 of about 5,880 for Dr Brian Cox. (0.23 seconds)

:-"

skwirlinator
24-May-2005, 06:55 PM
On regular Google
Results 1 - 10 of about 853,000 for Dr Brian Cox.

I'm an Advanced Research Fellow for PPARC, the Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council. I'm based in the High Energy Physics group at the University of Manchester.

I work on three experiments: H1 at DESY in Hamburg , DZero at Fermilab in Chicago and ATLAS at CERN in Geneva.

My complete list of published papers, outside of H1, D0 and ATLAS, can be found here.

The Manchester forward physics conference web page is here.

If you know what POMWIG means, and want to use it, then go here.

The KT++ project homepage is here.

I completed my thesis in 1998 on diffraction at large momentum transfer at HERA.

Candy
24-May-2005, 07:07 PM
On regular Google
Results 1 - 10 of about 853,000 for Dr Brian Cox.

I'm an Advanced Research Fellow for PPARC, the Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council. I'm based in the High Energy Physics group at the University of Manchester.

I work on three experiments: H1 at DESY in Hamburg , DZero at Fermilab in Chicago and ATLAS at CERN in Geneva.

My complete list of published papers, outside of H1, D0 and ATLAS, can be found here.

The Manchester forward physics conference web page is here.

If you know what POMWIG means, and want to use it, then go here.

The KT++ project homepage is here.

I completed my thesis in 1998 on diffraction at large momentum transfer at HERA.
Did you notice, the BABB is on the first page? 8)

skwirlinator
25-May-2005, 07:09 PM
Bad Astronomy Bulletin Board :: View topic - Who's Dr. Brian Cox ...
Bad Astronomy deals with myths and misconceptions about astronomy. It also debunks
pseudoscience like astrology, the Moon Landing Hoax, Planet X, ...
www.badastronomy.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?p=463943 - 113k - Cached - Similar pages

Candy
25-May-2005, 07:16 PM
Bad Astronomy Bulletin Board :: View topic - Who's Dr. Brian Cox ...
Bad Astronomy deals with myths and misconceptions about astronomy. It also debunks
pseudoscience like astrology, the Moon Landing Hoax, Planet X, ...
www.badastronomy.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?p=463943 - 113k - Cached - Similar pages
And he only reads some of the threads here. After I posted about Dr. Brian Cox, his home website was the number one hit in England. Does that show you the power of the BABB? 8)

Weird Dave
25-May-2005, 07:32 PM
Bad Astronomy Bulletin Board :: View topic - Who's Dr. Brian Cox ...
Bad Astronomy deals with myths and misconceptions about astronomy. It also debunks
pseudoscience like astrology, the Moon Landing Hoax, Planet X, ...
www.badastronomy.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?p=463943 - 113k - Cached - Similar pages
And he only reads some of the threads here. After I posted about Dr. Brian Cox, his home website was the number one hit in England. Does that show you the power of the BABB? 8)
Maybe it will make Stephen Hawking famous! :)

Candy
25-May-2005, 08:16 PM
Bad Astronomy Bulletin Board :: View topic - Who's Dr. Brian Cox ...
Bad Astronomy deals with myths and misconceptions about astronomy. It also debunks
pseudoscience like astrology, the Moon Landing Hoax, Planet X, ...
www.badastronomy.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?p=463943 - 113k - Cached - Similar pages
And he only reads some of the threads here. After I posted about Dr. Brian Cox, his home website was the number one hit in England. Does that show you the power of the BABB? 8)
Maybe it will make Stephen Hawking famous! :)
:lol:

[edited]