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Brian Cox – Big Bang Day – BBC Radio 4

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More info: www.bbc.co.uk Playlist: www.youtube.com Radio 4 joins CERN on 10 September 2008 as scientists attempt to discover more about the origins of the Universe by recreating the aftermath of the Big Bang. Here’s Brian Cox on particle collisions and journeys into the unknown.

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Amazing Universe: Hubble Space Telescope Eyes II

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The most important images ever taken by Hubble space telescope. Beyond our universal Big Bang Little is known about the earliest moments of the Universe’s history. The Penrose-Hawking singularity theorems require the existence of a singularity at the beginning of cosmic time. However these theorems assume that general relativity is correct, but general relativity must break down before the Universe reaches the Planck temperature – 1,416785(71) 10^32K -, and a correct treatment of quantum gravity may avoid the singularity. Some proposals, each of which entails untested hypotheses are: * models including the Hartle-Hawking no-boundary condition in which the whole space and time is finite, the Big Bang does represent the limit of time, but without the need for a singularity. * brane cosmology in which the inflation is due to a movement of branes in string theory, the pre-Big Bang image; the ekpyrotic model, in which the Big Bang is the result of a collision between branes; and the cyclic model, a variant of the ekpyrotic model in which collisions occur periodically. In the later model, the Big Bang was preceded by a Big Crunch and the Universe endlessly cycles from one process to the other. The ekpyrotic model came out pf work by Neil Turok and Paul Steinhardt and maintains that the Universe did not start in a singularity, but came out from a collision of two branes (a spatially extended mathematical concept that appears in string theory and its relatives that exists in a

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Our Universe: Through Hubble Space Telescope Eyes I

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Our Universe inside and Omniverse The Omniverse is the conceptual ensemble of all possible universes, with all possible laws of physics. In this physical cosmology context, the limitation of the definition of “universe” that it has only one set of “physical laws and constants that govern them” is extended to include multiple sets of physical laws and constants, each expressed as a wholly or partially separate universe. The term is used in quantum mechanics to differentiate the concept of a limited number of universes from all existent universes. Hierarchy within the Omniverse Universe: The inside description of a context that is relative in size/structure (attributes/modes) to the known universe that we inhabit. A universe, also known as a Cosmos, is a particular individual space-time organization with a specific number of dimensions of space and time and definite and specific laws of physics. Other Universes may have different numbers of dimensions of space and time and different laws of physics and constants than our own Universe. Multiverse: The part of the infinity that directly joins a given universe with all possible configurations of that universe. Metaverse: In string theory, the part that is along with, after; over also denoting change in the multiverse that houses the branes or film that each universe is said to be attached to and hang like individual sheets in a hypermagnetic wave with rhythms of hypercosmic strings going up and down that has a third element

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Eric Pepin :: Spirituality and Artificial Intelligence ( AI ) Part 1

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The merging between Spirituality and Artificial Intelligence. How Artificial Intelligence from the future will move through time to now, what changes that will create in the world, and how science is transforming spirituality. And how our evolution spiritually is taking a massing leap in a very short time. Alien Life, Cern and what are the Greys? More FREE courses at: www.higherbalance.com

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BBC: Radio Telescope Biggest Ear in the World – Most of Our Universe is Missing

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A chance to see one of the world’s most sophisticated and large radio telescopes tuning into space to discover the truth behind dark matter. Great clip from BBC science show ‘Most of our universe is missing’.

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Hubble’s History Told by Hubble’s Scientists

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Hubblecast 41: Hubble’s History Told by Hubble’s Scientists Hubble’s history of scientific breakthroughs has made us think afresh about our Universe. But behind the astronomical successes is a rollercoaster ride of scientific and technical challenges going back decades. The Hubblecast caught up with some of the key players in Hubble’s history, including an astronaut, a Nobel Prize winner and one of the scientists who diagnosed Hubble’s blurred vision in 1990. In this episode, narrated by veteran ESA scientist Bob Fosbury, they tell Hubble’s story through their personal experiences. — Please subscribe to Science & Reason: • www.youtube.com • www.youtube.com • www.youtube.com • www.youtube.com — Venice is just a few centimetres above sea level, about as far from space as you can get. But in 1609, Galileo Galilei brought this city a bit closer to the stars when he gave one of the very first demonstrations of his telescope. A few months after that, he discovered Jupiter’s moons, Io, Ganymede, Callisto and Europa. Four centuries later, another telescope is making history here, as scientists gather to discuss the latest results from Hubble. Hubble was launched in 1990. And that’s of course when its history of scientific discoveries starts. But Hubble’s history isn’t just about science and technology. Like Galileo’s story, it’s also one of politics, money … and extremely smart people doing very difficult things. Bob O’Dell: “I became the first project scientist for the

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The Universe And Dark Matter (Part 2of5)

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Documentary about dark matter in our universe and the evidence to suggest so.

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The Universe And Dark Matter (Part 1of5)

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Documentary about dark matter in our universe and the evidence to suggest so.

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The Invisible Beauty

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For the Beauty that cannot be seen, For the honor of those whose shoulders we stand on, For the hope of those we aspire to become, And for the inspiration of those who will surpass our achievements. Music, beginning Omnibus End Music, Miles

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Heavy Ion Collision Event Animation

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Early heavy ion events in first heavy-ion fill with stable beam collisions seen in the ATLAS Experiment, 8 November 2010.

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