Recent content by Berenices
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Undergrad How to Define a Shape Based on Variables
Ah okay, that makes sense. Now I'm curious, what inequalities are needed to describe curvilinear shapes?- Berenices
- Post #3
- Forum: General Math
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Undergrad How to Define a Shape Based on Variables
Hello all, I am not too experienced with geometry. I am just curious whether it would be possible to define a shape based on variables. Say you have a simple relationship between volume and some variables. V=x+y. This tells you about the volume of a 3D object, however, it does not describe the...- Berenices
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- Geometry Shape Volume
- Replies: 4
- Forum: General Math
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Graduate Could an entropic force help explain size of the cosmological constant?
The final equation before the discussion reads cV ≤ S ≤ c ′VlogV. The paper only specifies the c and c' as constants, do the c's describe a non-random variable, or are they fine-tuned, or are they completely randomisable. Apologies if I misunderstood. -
Undergrad Does The LCDM Model need reworking?
I think this is true due to the fact that we are educated and trained to think in a certain way, and this generally can lead to biases. I don't want to sound like a crank, but imagination is scorned within science, it seems we need to be logical and forward thinking, and adhere to the... -
Undergrad Does The LCDM Model need reworking?
Okay, I will when I have time. Note: about the referencing, of course fewer papers are going to be written about discrepancies from the LCDM. That is out of the domain of mainstream science. As stated, I think we need to at least put in the effort to see whether tweaking the Cosmological... -
Undergrad Does The LCDM Model need reworking?
Okay, AFAIK, that has to do with the SGW. The Hercules-Corona Borealis Wall is about much larger, is that type of discrepancy covered? Sorry, I am not fully informed about the refutation of how these large structures can form within our current framework. What I think matters is if we can prove... -
Undergrad Does The LCDM Model need reworking?
To my knowledge, The Great Cold spot is an anomaly that has a 1% chance of forming due to random fluctuations, that in itself does not warrant that the LCDM model is wrong. However, we also see structures - such as the Hercules-Corona Borealis Great Wall, which should not form within 13 billion... -
Undergrad Does The LCDM Model need reworking?
Okay, Thomas Buchert says that the results are intermediate. Removing the cosmological principle could explain dark energy, but the effects could also be not very pronounced. He does say that however pronounced they are it will probably have an effect on the modelling of the late universe. IMO... -
Undergrad Does The LCDM Model need reworking?
Surely all the evidence does point to an accelerating expansion? However I think these propositions probably need to be at least tested to see if they fit the universe. -
Undergrad Does The LCDM Model need reworking?
Greetings, I am slightly curious as to whether the LCDM model may require a slight tweaking. The reason I am curious is because I recall reading a while back that removing the homogeneity assumption from our current models could assist in accounting for some of the large-scale structures, and... -
Graduate Measuring Time: What Does it Mean?
thanks ogg, So i'll look at this from a different perspective: say we humans could process information so fast the we could observe quantum events happening. The question is, from our perspective, would we observe more time? So in a conscious mind is experience of time related to processing...- Berenices
- Post #11
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
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Graduate Measuring Time: What Does it Mean?
okay, thanks for all the answers, I was thinking there might be something philosophical because time is a slippery area of physics and I'm pretty new to some of these concepts. So from what I've read, yes time does pass this fast, at least psychologically. A second is a second, always, but...- Berenices
- Post #7
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
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Graduate Measuring Time: What Does it Mean?
Just as a fore-note, I understand this question may be hard to answer, and I'm sorry if I slip into philosophy. We humans can understand time on our scale, but we cannot necessarily comprehend events that occur say on a quantum level, they seem to go to fast. Now my question that arises is that...- Berenices
- Thread
- General relativity Measure Time
- Replies: 11
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
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Graduate A layman's guide to the accelerating expansion of space
Okay can I clean up one topic. Say you had two distant galaxies just the right distance away from each other that the effects of gravitational acceleration and dark energy were essentially the same. I am fairly certain that dark energy does not effect the actual velocity of objects but only the... -
Graduate Inflation and Monopoles: Exploring the Mysteries of Cosmic Expansion
Inflation arises as a prediction of GUT and resolves the horizon, smoothness, density and magnetic monopole problems of the 1970's. Reference https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/addressing-impossibilities-in-the-standard-cosmological-model.105441/ I can't really say much more than that...