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What would another warm summer be like in Aspen without little children joyfully running (and screaming) through Aspen’s ...
Viewing extreme events through the lens of chaotic systems allows for a more precise definition that avoids ambiguity and ...
Instead of the big bang, some physicists have suggested that our universe may have come from a big bounce following another ...
Is the universe truly 3D—or just a hologram? The holographic principle flips reality on its head, suggesting our world may be ...
At the forefront of discovery, where cutting-edge scientific questions are tackled, we often don't have much data. Conversely ...
In a first, CERN physicists succeeded in observing matter-antimatter imbalance in baryons, fundamental particles that make up ...
A hundred years ago, the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Flow Research began its work. From it emerged today’s Max Planck ...
Battle of the Big Bang provides an entertaining update on the collective obsessions and controlled schizophrenias in ...
The Second City e.t.c.’s CHAOS THEORY OF EVERYTHING is a potpourri of comedy. While some past e.t.c. revues have loosely unified around a theme, CHAOS describes this one well. It’s a little ...
Egyptian fruit bat. Image via Openverse. Chaos theory, despite its name, isn’t about randomness but rather about finding underlying patterns in seemingly random systems. Developed in the 1960s by ...
Splinter Cell: Chaos Theory represented almost the very best of the graphical technology available at the time, and the team behind it would have been hard-pressed to have pushed it any further.
Where do you see patterns in chaos? It has been proven, in the incredibly tiny quantum realm, by an international team co-led by UC Santa Cruz physicist Jairo Velasco, Jr. In the journal Nature, the ...
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