trenchesofdiscovery.blogspot.com
The Trenches of Discovery: The science of three-parent children
https://trenchesofdiscovery.blogspot.com/2015/03/the-science-of-three-parent-children.html
The Trenches of Discovery. Wednesday, March 25, 2015. The science of three-parent children. 2015 has already been a significant year in the field of human medicine as February saw the UK become the first country in the world to legalise. A cellular energy crisis. As you may recall from a previous post. Are the powerhouses of our cells. They metabolise a range of molecules derived from food at use them to generate energy in the form of another molecule, ATP. And problems with the central nervous system.
trenchesofdiscovery.blogspot.com
The Trenches of Discovery: Combined constraints from BICEP2, Keck, Planck and WMAP on primordial gravitational waves
https://trenchesofdiscovery.blogspot.com/2015/02/combined-constraints-from-bicep2-keck.html
The Trenches of Discovery. Tuesday, February 3, 2015. Combined constraints from BICEP2, Keck, Planck and WMAP on primordial gravitational waves. This week, the joint analysis. Of BICEP2 ( BICEP2's successor Keck) and Planck has finally arrived. The result is more or less what was expected, which is that what BICEP2 saw last year. Combined constraint on (r ) from polarisation and temperature measurements (in blue). Freshly digitised in the spirit of modern cosmology. Of the dust that has been obtained by ...
trenchesofdiscovery.blogspot.com
The Trenches of Discovery: Recent Comments
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The Trenches of Discovery. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). Has probably discovered gravitational waves. The scientific papers are here. The shape of physical laws. Public Library of Science. Blank On The Map. Cosmo Qu. of the Week. Leaves on the Line. Why Evolution is True. Discover: Health and Medicine. Banner image: Étienne-Jules Marey, Chronophotograph of a gull in flight, 1887. Powered by Blogger.
cosmic-horizons.blogspot.com
Cosmic Horizons: April 2015
http://cosmic-horizons.blogspot.com/2015_04_01_archive.html
My personal take on what's going on within our Event Horizon. Mostly astronomical, often cosmological, usually quite grumpy. Saturday, 4 April 2015. Musings on an academic career - Part 2. Now, I am sure that some of you reading this, especially the more junior researchers of you, will be thinking "Well, duh! But, in fact, I think this goes to the heart of many of the touted problems with regards to academia, and it's a problem of our own making, and I mean all of us. A Life in Research. You could learn ...
cosmic-horizons.blogspot.com
Cosmic Horizons: January 2015
http://cosmic-horizons.blogspot.com/2015_01_01_archive.html
My personal take on what's going on within our Event Horizon. Mostly astronomical, often cosmological, usually quite grumpy. Sunday, 25 January 2015. The Constant Nature of the Speed of light in a vacuum. It has been a while, but I do have an excuse! I have been finishing up a book on the fine-tuning of the Universe and hopefully it will be published (and will become a really big best seller? In 2015. But time to rebirth the blog, and what a better way to start that a gripe. Why would one be shocked?
cosmic-horizons.blogspot.com
Cosmic Horizons: Scientists Have Figured Out What Colour The Universe Is
http://cosmic-horizons.blogspot.com/2014/11/scientists-have-figured-out-what-colour.html
My personal take on what's going on within our Event Horizon. Mostly astronomical, often cosmological, usually quite grumpy. Thursday, 6 November 2014. Scientists Have Figured Out What Colour The Universe Is. What's old is new again? Over at Business Insider Australia. We are told (with some lovely language) that Scientists have figured out what colour the Universe is. You've got to love a new and interesting astronomy story, but alas, the result is rather, well, beige (I refuse to say latte). With Karl ...
cosmic-horizons.blogspot.com
Cosmic Horizons: Shooting relativistic fish in a rational barrel
http://cosmic-horizons.blogspot.com/2015/02/shooting-relativistic-fish-in-rational.html
My personal take on what's going on within our Event Horizon. Mostly astronomical, often cosmological, usually quite grumpy. Saturday, 28 February 2015. Shooting relativistic fish in a rational barrel. I need to take a breather from grant writing, which is consuming almost every waking hour in between all of the other things that I still need to do. So see this post as a cathartic exercise. What makes a scientist? Is it the qualification? What you do day-to-day? These are not a new phenomenon, but were o...
cosmic-horizons.blogspot.com
Cosmic Horizons: The Constant Nature of the Speed of light in a vacuum
http://cosmic-horizons.blogspot.com/2015/01/speed-of-light-in-vacuum.html
My personal take on what's going on within our Event Horizon. Mostly astronomical, often cosmological, usually quite grumpy. Sunday, 25 January 2015. The Constant Nature of the Speed of light in a vacuum. It has been a while, but I do have an excuse! I have been finishing up a book on the fine-tuning of the Universe and hopefully it will be published (and will become a really big best seller? In 2015. But time to rebirth the blog, and what a better way to start that a gripe. Why would one be shocked?
cosmic-horizons.blogspot.com
Cosmic Horizons: May 2014
http://cosmic-horizons.blogspot.com/2014_05_01_archive.html
My personal take on what's going on within our Event Horizon. Mostly astronomical, often cosmological, usually quite grumpy. Thursday, 29 May 2014. Misconceptions About the Universe. Over on youtube, Veritasium. Has a nice discussion of Misconceptions about the Universe. I like it, especially as I was the consultant cosmologist :). A little look down the comments tho, and we see several claims that what Derek says is not correct. Here's a little excerpt. Now, does the Hubble sphere grow or shrink as time...
cosmic-horizons.blogspot.com
Cosmic Horizons: Musings on an academic career - Part 2
http://cosmic-horizons.blogspot.com/2015/04/musings-on-academic-career-part-2.html
My personal take on what's going on within our Event Horizon. Mostly astronomical, often cosmological, usually quite grumpy. Saturday, 4 April 2015. Musings on an academic career - Part 2. Now, I am sure that some of you reading this, especially the more junior researchers of you, will be thinking "Well, duh! But, in fact, I think this goes to the heart of many of the touted problems with regards to academia, and it's a problem of our own making, and I mean all of us. A Life in Research. You could learn ...