Posts Tagged ‘Echoes from the Beginning’

Science Fun Fact #5: In a hurry? The earth beneath your feet is spinning at almost 800 mph

Thursday, May 29th, 2008

In a hurry?

And yet you don’t feel it. In fact, the Earth itself moves around the Sun at more than 65,000 mph, and Sun revolves around the center of the Milky Way galaxy at nearly 80,000 mph. This all leads to an interesting question: what kind of motion can you feel, at least in principle, and what kind is it simply impossible to feel? If you follow this question all the way to its logical conclusion, (more…)

Science Fun Fact #3: You weigh slightly less with the moon directly overhead

Tuesday, May 27th, 2008

You weigh slightly less...The reason there’s no moon diet is that the difference is very, very slight. Too small to measure, really, but readily found by a calculation using no more than high-school math. The inspiring point is that science allows hidden features and layers of reality to be revealed.

At the Festival, a number of programs will highlight breathtaking aspects of reality that science has brought to light, but which you’d never expect based on ordinary perception.

Echoes from the Beginning, featuring leading cosmologists Paul Steinhardt, Lyman Page, and Lawrence Krauss, and moderated by Ira Flatow, will show how, through mathematics and observation, science has peered back to a tiny fraction of a second after the beginning of cosmic history. In Invisible Reality, with Brian Greene, Alan Alda, and Nobel Laureate William Phillips, journey through the strange world of quantum theory. In Looking for the Laws of Life with synthetic biologist Steven Benner, and astrobiologists Paul Davies and Maggie Turnbull, consider the probability of life as we don’t know it. And in Illuminating Genius, join choreographer and dancer Bill T. Jones, actor Michael York, artist Matthew Ritchie and inventor Saul Griffith as they explore the roots of creativity with neuroscientists V.S. Ramachandran, Nancy C. Andreasen, and David Eagleman.

Science Fun Fact #2: If the Universe’s history were compressed into a year, recorded human history would comprise the last 13 seconds

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

If the history...

Science is ambitious. And among its most ambitious goals is seeking to understand the origin and evolution of the entire universe. All the more impressive is that, (more…)