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Search results 971 - 980 of 2278 matching essays
- 971: The Search for Black Holes: Both As A Concept And An Understanding
- ... appears purely black on all readings even through the use of radiation detection devices. The first scientists to really take an in depth look at black holes and the collapsing of stars, were a professor, Robert Oppenheimer and his student Hartland Snyder, in the early nineteen hundreds. They concluded on the basis of Einstein's theory of relativity that if the speed of light was the utmost speed over any massive ...
- 972: The Big Bang
- ... radiation in all directions into space. In time, that radiation would spread out, cool, and fill the expanding universe uniformly. By now it would strike Earth as microwave radiation. In 1965 physicists Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson detected microwave radiation coming equally from all directions in the sky, day and night, all year.3 And so it appears that astronomers have detected the fireball radiation that was produced by the Big ...
- 973: The Big Bang
- ... radiation in all directions into space. In time, that radiation would spread out, cool, and fill the expanding universe uniformly. By now it would strike Earth as microwave radiation. In 1965 physicists Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson detected microwave radiation coming equally from all directions in the sky, day and night, all year. And so it appears that astronomers have detected the fireball radiation that was produced by the Big Bang ...
- 974: Into the Depths of A Black Hole
- ... we assume there must be a black hole that it is in orbit with. The first scientists to really take an in depth look at black holes and the collapsing of stars, were a professor, Robert Oppenheimer and his student Hartland Snyder, in the early nineteen hundreds. They concluded on the basis of Einstein's theory of relativity that if the speed of light was the utmost speed over any massive ...
- 975: Supernova
- ... could have mixed with the solar nebula, eventually becoming part of the structures of the Sun, the Earth, and all living things. Bibliography: Clark, D. W., and Stephenson, F. R., eds., Historical Supernovae (1977); Jastrow, Robert, and Thompson, Malcolm, Astronomy (1984); Marschall, Laurence A., The Supernova Story (1988); Murdin, Paul and Leslie, Supernovae (1985); Shy, Frank, The Physical Universe (1982); Woosley, Stan, and Weaver, Tom, "The Great Supernova of 1987," Scientific ...
- 976: Could Gambling Save Science: Encouraging an Honest Consensus
- ... review channels, unfairly gaining extra attention and funding. Supporters countered that popular media spread information quickly to other scientists; cold fusion, if right, was too important to wait for normal channels. In the journal Science, Robert Pool speculated that a market in cold fusion might have gone something like Figure 1 [Poo]. If there really had been a betting market, then there really would have been a market price that journalists ...
- 977: Ozone
- ... Time is what we have not of. BIBLIOGRAPHY 1. Auliciems, Andris and Ian Burton. Perception and Awareness Of Air Pollution In Toronto. Working Paper No. 3. Univer- sity of Toronto, 1970. 2. Fishman, Jack and Robert Kalish. Global Alert: The Ozone Pollution Crisis. New York: Plenum Press, 1990. 3. Mainwaring, S. J. and W. Strauss. Air Pollution. Balti- more: Edward Arnold, 1984. 4. Oxtoby, David W., Norman H. Nachtribe and Wade ...
- 978: The Black Hole
- ... we assume there must be a black hole that it is in orbit with. The first scientists to really take an in depth look at black holes and the collapsing of stars, were a professor, Robert Oppenheimer and his student Hartland Snyder, in the early nineteen hundreds. They concluded on the basis of Einstein's theory of relativity that if the speed of light was the utmost speed over any massive ...
- 979: The Big Bang Model
- ... radiation in all directions into space. In time, that radiation would spread out, cool, and fill the expanding universe uniformly. By now it would strike Earth as microwave radiation. In 1965 physicists Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson detected microwave radiation coming equally from all directions in the sky, day and night, all year.3 And so it appears that astronomers have detected the fireball radiation that was produced by the Big ...
- 980: Evolution
- ... to observe unique species to each respective island, particularly tortoises which possessed sufficiently differentiated shells to tell them apart. From these observations he concluded that the tortoises could only have evolved on the islands32. Thomas Robert Malthus was an English economist and clergyman whose work An Essay on the Principal of Population led Darwin to a more complete understanding of density dependent factors and the "struggle in nature". Malthus noted that ...
Search results 971 - 980 of 2278 matching essays
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