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Garry Golden

RIKEN | Press Release | 2011 | New metal hydride clusters provide insights into hydroge... - 0 views

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    s synthesized by the RIKEN researchers use rare-earth and d-transition metals as building blocks and exploit the advantages of both. Rare earth metal hydrides remove one major obstacle by enabling analysis using X-ray diffraction, a techniq
Garry Golden

OpenPaths - 0 views

  • ces, social services, and more. Own your data. Your data is protected with the highest level of security so that you control access to it. Use your data. Visualize your location data, build applications and more with the OpenPaths API. Contribute your data. Review project proposals and donate your data to a worthy cause. Where we've been See an aggregate map of all OpenPaths location data. Log In Sign Up Sign in Since you last logged in, OpenPaths has migrated to a new security model. To migrate your data, enter your passphrase now — this is the last time you will need it. Read more about the migration. Migration failed. Is your passphrase correct? Login incorrect. Please try again. Please activate this account first using the email we sent you. If you didn't get an email when you registered, you can resend your activation email. Are you new to OpenPaths? © 2012 The New York Times Company • Terms of Service • Privacy Policy • FAQ •   
Bill Tracer

Time Travel: Some Say Impossible, but is it? Part 2 - News - Bubblews - 0 views

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    In part 1 of this series, published here at Bubblews, www.bubblews.com/news/454618-time-travel-some-say-impossible-but-is-it-part-1 we introduced this debate, and discussed how as a consequence of Professor Einstein's Relativity Theory, approaching the speed of light creates the phenomenon of time dilation, which is effectively time travel forward into the future at an accelerated rate. This kind of forward time travel is however theoretically a one way trip, without any opportunity to return from that future to your originating "present time". We also dealt with the first, (weakest), of the major arguments used by time travel detractors to justify their unproven stand that time travel into the past is impossible. Here in part 2 we will move on to talking about another much stronger issue; the so-called paradox problem, often employed by those who declare backward time travel impossible. At first glance, this argument appears quite sound, but to really examine any subject properly one must do more than just glance at it.
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