The strongest tests of curved space are only possible around the lowest-mass black holes of all. Their small event horizons are the key.
Search Results
You searched for: D A
Science news presents a flood of breakthroughs and discoveries that promise to change our lives. They rarely do.
Rich is brilliant at his job. He completes work in half the time of his coworkers. Should he have to sit at his desk just as long?
In a far-reaching discovery with astrophysicist Karolina Garcia, we discuss what’s in the Universe and how it grew up.
Taught in every introductory physics class for centuries, the parabola is only an imperfect approximation for the true path of a projectile.
Roughly half the world population, including in America, has insufficient levels of vitamin D. UV irradiated mushrooms can help.
Or are cults the religions we find distasteful?
Scientists used 3D scans to analyze the corpse of Amenhotep I. They discovered that his brain was never removed and that he was circumcised, among other curiosities.
In pre-War Cambridge, students had to ace an interview with Ludwig Wittgenstein to attend his lectures — Alan Turing passed that test, and went on to create one of his own.
Our thermodynamic arrow of time explains why the entropy of any isolated system always increases. But it can’t explain what we perceive.
Book Club
Positivity psychologist, lecturer and author Dr. Tal Ben-Shahar shares techniques on how to unlock happiness at work.
Big Think spoke with animator and animation historian Tom Sito about the cyclical evolution of animation.
“Upon emergence, these patients are sincerely unsure what was reality and what was a ‘dream.'”
Instead of fear, his delusions bring him cheer. His psychiatrist embraces them.
Music and sounds only seem to reduce pain in mice when played at a specific volume.
Just by observing the tiny amount of deuterium left over from the Big Bang, we can determine that dark matter and dark energy must exist.
While one may be helpful, the other may be harmful.
How do we deal with information overload and unlock creativity? Build a second brain.
▸
6 min
—
with
These 10 best practices can help organizations develop high-quality and engaging training videos for employees.
The mutual distance between well-separated galaxies increases with time as the Universe expands. What else expands, and what doesn’t?
AI researcher and author Ken Stanley wonders how our rear-view perspective on success fits into a serendipitous mode of innovation.
We often assume that movement means progress and that doing something is better than doing nothing. That is often not true.
What do ghosts and anomalous galaxy rotation rates have in common? Some sci-fi enthusiasts believe the answer involves “parallel universes.”
There are many ways asynchronous learning benefits both individuals and organizations, from learner autonomy to cost savings.
There are two methods to measure the expansion rate of the Universe. The results do not agree with each other, and this is a big problem.
When you wish upon a star, it probably makes a difference who you are.
There are plenty of alternatives to spending a fortune on employee training programs. These 10 options are a great place to start.
Forgetting and misremembering are the building blocks of creativity and imagination.
The corporate unicorn was yesterday — now we should consider the wisdom of black and white stripes.
It’s not about leaves in tall trees.