The Tiny Proton

neuraldump.com: The Tiny Proton

First of all, that’s five standard deviations off of the expected value. On a practical level, that means that of all the variability in every single measurement made of the size of the proton in the history of time, this new measurement is so damned far off that the guys doing the experiment didn’t even notice it the first two times (2003 and 2007) they measured it.

Anyhow, something is amiss. Most likely, this is not the sign that everything we know is wrong, or that the powerful equations of quantum mechanics are all wrong (as evidenced by the 20th century). Rather, this is probably a sign of some new interaction between muons and protons we haven’t seen before. That means new particles, and new physics. Wahoo!

Note: I can’t link you directly to the report from Nature, because you can’t access the information because we live in a stupid, fucked up world.

Hehe. J’avoue.

APAD: Comet McNaught Becoming Visible to the Unaided Eye

APAD: Comet McNaught Becoming Visible to the Unaided Eye

Explanation: A new comet is brightening and is now expected to become visible to the unaided eye later this month. C/2009 R1 (McNaught) is already showing an impressive tail and is currently visible through binoculars. The above image, taken yesterday from the Altamira Observatory in the Canary Islands and spanning about five degrees, shows an impressive green coma and a long ion tail in front of distant star trails. Although predicting the brightness of comets is notoriously difficult, current estimates place Comet McNaught as becoming visible to unaided northern hemisphere observers in late June, before sunrise, and in early July, after sunset. Discovered by Robert McNaught last year, the sun-orbiting iceberg will pass the Earth next week and will continue to melt and shed debris as it closes in on the Sun until early July. After reaching about half of the Earth-Sun distance from the Sun, the comet should fade rapidly as it then heads out of the inner Solar System.

Beaver Dam Visible From Space

foxnews.com: http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2010/05/04/enormous-beaver-dam-visible-space/

The incredible woodland construction is a staggering 2,790 feet in length — more than half a mile long.

It is thought that several beaver families joined forces to create the massive dam, containing thousands of trees, and took many months to complete it.

Je ne suis pas certain de comprendre ce que montre l’image.

Via: slashdot.org: Beaver Dam Visible From Space