November 26, 2012
SCIENCE.

When I work on my research project in a public place, I feel like the people around me must think I’m inadequately veiling a bad tendency for procrastination via an all-consuming 80s action movie trailer viewing addiction.

Like, I’m doing a content analysis of women in action movie trailers, so I’m constantly switching back and forth between videos on imdb and a very important-looking excel spreadsheet, so I must seem like one of those people who switches tabs to avoid looking like they’re wasting time. Except it’s all science.

SCIENCE.

Telecommunications is such a cool major and you should all go get a master’s in it because they’ll pay you and you’ll get to watch a ton of Nicolas Cage sex scenes from the 90s. And let’s be real here, we ALL love doing that.

September 17, 2012
timecowboy:

And I will always love you. 
Thanks for taking one for the team Jupiter.

I love that this happened, and that apparently it has happened a lot of times throughout the history of our solar system, and that apparently it’s why giant asteroids do not hit us more often and completely fuck up all this evolutionary process we’ve got goin’ on here on Earth.
Jupiter is the big kid sticking up for us in the sandbox.

timecowboy:

And I will always love you. 

Thanks for taking one for the team Jupiter.

I love that this happened, and that apparently it has happened a lot of times throughout the history of our solar system, and that apparently it’s why giant asteroids do not hit us more often and completely fuck up all this evolutionary process we’ve got goin’ on here on Earth.

Jupiter is the big kid sticking up for us in the sandbox.

(via itscandidlycara)

12:52am  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZadQVyTYLsBN
  
Filed under: science space 
July 17, 2012

sciencesoup:

Teleportation in Time

One of the spookiest phenomenon of the quantum world is entanglement, where two particles can become so deeply linked that they share the same fate—the behaviour of one immediately influences the other, even if they’re separated in space. Quantum entanglement has helped create uncrackable codes, build ultrafast computers and transmit huge amounts of information using only a few atoms—and now, Jay Olson and Timothy Ralph at the University of Queensland, Australia, have mathematically described how entanglement could bind particles not only through space, but also through time. It isn’t yet clear how it can be tested, but it’s a strangely intuitive conclusion. The idea originated from a simplified view of the universe, consisting of one dimension of space (x-axis) and one dimension of time (t-axis), where there are points of symmetry in the past and future, and for a quantum “message” to be sent, the particle must be symmetric in time. For this reason, the process is called “teleportation in time.” Olson says that “it’s not time travel as you would ordinarily think of it, where it’s like, poof! you’re in the future—but you get to skip the intervening time.”

Read Olson and Ralph’s original paper

I cannot tell you how much I dig quantum entanglement as a phenomenon. It makes my science brain go wild, my inner romantic swoon, and the part of me that wishes to be a god leap for joy with hopefulness.

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