PLato said,"Look to the perfection of the heavens for truth," while Aristotle said "look around you at what is, if you would know the truth" To Remember: Eskesthai
Launched in November 2013, Swarm is providing unprecedented insights
into the complex workings of Earth’s magnetic field, which safeguards us
from the bombarding cosmic radiation and charged particles.
June 2014 magnetic field
Measurements made over the past six months confirm the general trend of
the field’s weakening, with the most dramatic declines over the Western
Hemisphere. SEE: Swarm reveals Earth's changing Magnetism
AMS-02 is a multipurpose magnetic spectrometer designed to measure
elementary particles and nuclei to the TeV region.
In the five years since its installation on the International Space
Station, it has collected more than 90 billion cosmic rays. Some of the
unexpected results and their possible interpretations will be
presented.
I had been on this pathway a long time to ask the question of what lays at the very foundation of our reality. I was intrigued by Plato's solids to wonder if this was the first attempt to describe the nature of reality as it is?
The Planck scale is the universal limit, beyond which the currently
known laws of physics break. In order to comprehend anything beyond it,
we need new, unbreakable physics See: The Planck Scale
I was constraint then to know that what lies beyond the Planck scale to say what if anything could we measure that we could call the item of dissertation as a particulate of this reality, then becomes the materialist function I choose to describe reality, as it is.
Thomas Young (13 June 1773 – 10 May 1829)
But more then this, an experiment speaks to me about what the idea is that once I as a detector look at what the photon is doing through the Double slit experiment, is to cancel out the wave function. So some may say, on observation, I create the the foundation of this reality by observing?
This view from NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope is the deepest
and best-resolved portrait of the gamma-ray sky to date. The image shows
how the sky appears at energies more than 150 million times greater
than that of visible light. Among the signatures of bright pulsars and
active galaxies is something familiar -- a faint path traced by the sun.
Credit: NASA/DOE/Fermi LAT Collaboration
The all-sky image released today shows us how the cosmos would look if
our eyes could detect radiation 150 million times more energetic than
visible light. The view merges LAT observations spanning 87 days, from
August 4 to October 30, 2008. See: Fermi's Best-Ever Look at the Gamma-Ray Sky
We're inclined to think that perception
is like a window on reality as it is.The theory of evolution is telling us
that this is an incorrect interpretationof our perceptions.Instead, reality is more like a 3D desktopthat's designed to hide
the complexity of the real worldand guide adaptive behavior.Space as you perceive it is your desktop.Physical objects are just
the icons in that desktop.