Please Explain is all about matter, anti-matter, and dark matter. Lisa Randall, Professor of Theoretical Physics at Harvard University; Michael Tuts, Professor of Physics at Columbia University and Mordecai Mark Mac-Low, Chair of the Department of Physics at the American Museum of Natural History tell us all about what it is and what it means.
Please Explain: Matter, Anti-Matter, and Dark Matter
Also huffduffed as…
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Please Explain: Matter, Anti-Matter, and Dark Matter
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Please Explain: Matter, Anti-Matter, and Dark Matter
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Please Explain: Matter, Anti-Matter, and Dark Matter
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Please Explain: Matter, Anti-Matter, and Dark Matter
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Please Explain: Matter, Anti-Matter, and Dark Matter
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Please Explain: Matter, Anti-Matter, and Dark Matter
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Please Explain: Matter, Anti-Matter, and Dark Matter
Possibly related…
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Lisa Randall: Physics, Science, And The Universe
If you care about the big questions of the physical world, then Lisa Randall would be great company at a dinner party. Over drinks, the Harvard physicist could tell you what we know and don’t know about particle physics and cosmology.
During dinner she’d use poetry to describe the Large Hadron Collider – the biggest machine ever built – and the mysteries it could soon reveal. And with dessert — a passionate argument for the value of scientific thinking and what we lose when we put faith over logic.
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Lawrence Krauss: Life, The Universe, and Nothing
Lawrence Krauss is a professor in the Department of Physics at Arizona State University. His lecture entitled Life, the Universe and Nothing was recorded at the Isabel Bader Theatre in Toronto on March 27th, 2009.
http://www.tvo.org/TVOsites/WebObjects/TvoMicrosite.woa?bi?1255208400000
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Sir Roger Penrose | The Road to Reality: A Complete Guide to the Laws of the Universe
Sir Roger Penrose is Emeritus Rouse Ball Professor of Mathematics at the University of Oxford and is the best-selling author of The Emperor’s New Mind. He is the recipient of numerous prizes and awards, most notably the Wolf Prize in physics, which he shared with Stephen Hawking for their "development of the theory of general relativity, in which they have shown the necessity for cosmological singularities and have elucidated the physics of black holes… enlarging our understanding of the origin and possible fate of the Universe." Penrose was knighted in 1994 and currently lives in Oxford, England.
