PBS | xltronic messageboard
 
You are not logged in!

F.A.Q
Log in

Register
  
 
  
 
(nobody)
...and 93 guests

Last 5 registered
Oplandisks
nothingstar
N_loop
yipe
foxtrotromeo

Browse members...
  
 
Members 8025
Messages 2616800
Today 1
Topics 127718
  
 
Messageboard index
PBS
 

offline Zeus from San Francisco (United States) on 2003-10-30 16:42 [#00926062]
Points: 14042 Status: Lurker



man, PBS rocks.

Anyone see the documentry on string theory? I only caught
the first one... there are a couple parts to it...

PBS is just damn awesome.


 

offline eXXailon from purgatory on 2003-10-30 16:42 [#00926064]
Points: 6745 Status: Lurker



Pubic Ball-hair Syndrome?


 

offline Zeus from San Francisco (United States) on 2003-10-30 16:43 [#00926066]
Points: 14042 Status: Lurker



HA-

oh wait. That wasnt clever

:-P


 

offline eXXailon from purgatory on 2003-10-30 16:45 [#00926069]
Points: 6745 Status: Lurker | Followup to Zeus: #00926066



I failed in being clever

:-((((


 

offline Zephyr Twin from ΔΔΔ on 2003-10-30 16:45 [#00926070]
Points: 16982 Status: Regular | Followup to eXXailon: #00926064 | Show recordbag



Well if its a syndrome then count me INFECTED! hah...

but yeah PBS is pretty cool, I've caught some cool
documentaries about undersea life there.. Do you mean string
theory as in like "strings" instruments like cellos and
violins, or is this something else?


 

offline Zeus from San Francisco (United States) on 2003-10-30 16:46 [#00926072]
Points: 14042 Status: Lurker



string theory, as in quantum physics...theory of the
universe...


 

offline eXXailon from purgatory on 2003-10-30 16:48 [#00926075]
Points: 6745 Status: Lurker | Followup to Zeus: #00926072



please explain some details, as I'm quite interested in
philosofical astronomy (seriously)


 

offline Zeus from San Francisco (United States) on 2003-10-30 16:53 [#00926083]
Points: 14042 Status: Lurker



well, I only saw the first part of the show...

but like, string theory trys to bring einstiens theory of
relativity, and make it work with another theory (forget the
name).

The theory is that the smallest particales in the universe
are these things called.. strings.

And actually, they do vibrate... and according to how the
vibrate, dictates their function, or something like that.

I dont know... its really complex... but they were saying
that if they could actually prove it, then we could
understand the universe.

But the problem is... that the strings are so incredibly
small... its hard to prove they exist.

*shrug*

I really want to see the other episode(s?)



 

offline eXXailon from purgatory on 2003-10-30 17:03 [#00926093]
Points: 6745 Status: Lurker | Followup to Zeus: #00926083



It's kinda hard to imagine reading about this from the
board. Sounds interesting though. I am very interested in
black holes (of the universe type), especially the
singularity thing and just the principle of gravity so big
it actually slows down time. Wicked isn't it?


 

offline earthleakage from tell the world you're winning on 2003-10-30 17:13 [#00926099]
Points: 27836 Status: Regular



quantum phyisics is half the theory of the universe


 

offline Zephyr Twin from ΔΔΔ on 2003-10-30 18:46 [#00926186]
Points: 16982 Status: Regular | Followup to eXXailon: #00926093 | Show recordbag



oh now I see.. thats pretty crazy...

I don't see how something can slow down time.. time is
something that is relative to experience, there's no real
way to measure its passage that works everywhere in the
universe. Time as we know it is solely based on the
revolutions of the earth.


 

offline Zephyr Twin from ΔΔΔ on 2003-10-30 18:46 [#00926188]
Points: 16982 Status: Regular | Followup to Zephyr Twin: #00926186 | Show recordbag



(that first part was directed to zeus)


 

offline tragedy from Gloucester (United States) on 2003-10-30 18:54 [#00926204]
Points: 4423 Status: Lurker



peanut butter sandwich


 

offline electro from detroit on 2003-10-30 19:53 [#00926255]
Points: 2880 Status: Regular



pbs, bbc america and hbop are the three channels i mostly
watch



 

offline eXXailon from purgatory on 2003-10-31 05:14 [#00926857]
Points: 6745 Status: Lurker | Followup to Zephyr Twin: #00926186



I was only partially right when I said that.
Time only seemingly slows down for someone who would watch
something being attracted by a black hole.
The gravity of a black hole is so enormous that it even
attracts photons (= light). According to Einstein's theory
going faster than light would mean you'd be going forward in
time.

Supposed you'd fly into a black hole with someone observing
you from a safe distance:
As you get closer and closer to the horizon*, the
light that you're emitting takes longer and longer to climb
back out to reach the observer. In fact, the radiation you
emit right as you cross the horizon will hover right there
at the horizon forever and never reach him/her. You've long
since passed through the horizon, but the light signal
telling her that won't reach the observing person for an
infinitely long time.

*horizon = point after which you cannot esacpe
singularity**, unless you travel faster than light
in opposite direction

**singularity = center of a black hole where mass and
gravity are infinite

Call me a geek, but these things interest me very much.


 

offline Bob Mcbob on 2003-10-31 06:25 [#00926913]
Points: 9939 Status: Regular



^all old news.

what i dont get is how you can say you love a whole channel
because you liked one show on it.


 

offline weatheredstoner from same shit babes. (United States) on 2003-10-31 06:52 [#00926958]
Points: 12585 Status: Lurker



www.superstringtheory.com


 

offline theo himself from +- on 2003-10-31 07:11 [#00927008]
Points: 3348 Status: Regular



yup.. I loved that.. when's the next segment on


 

offline JAroen from the pineal gland on 2003-10-31 07:17 [#00927026]
Points: 16065 Status: Regular



these things make you demented when you think about it.. its
quite interested

i read a lot of those books... it slips out of my mind a
week after i read it tho its too tough to understand and
memorize


 

offline eXXailon from purgatory on 2003-10-31 07:43 [#00927096]
Points: 6745 Status: Lurker | Followup to JAroen: #00927026



That's what makes it so damn fascinating IMO. Trying to
comprehend something that is completely devoid of the
principles and laws as we know them. It's surreal.

I am seriously considering ordering a ¤50 american book
called Spacetime Physics.


 

offline Zephyr Twin from ΔΔΔ on 2003-10-31 08:26 [#00927155]
Points: 16982 Status: Regular | Followup to eXXailon: #00926857 | Show recordbag



Ah, I see what you mean now... I used to talk about all this
sort of stuff with a friend who goes to school in texas now,
so we don't really get to talk like we used to (it's too
annoying typing it all over AIM!) But the study of these
things is to me the one topic I have encountered that only
grows more interesting with repeated thought/discussion, not
less.


 


Messageboard index