lol, just noticed her name is also on lefty's linked image:
impp_1103_03_o gabby_jeanne profile.jpg
great site. It's how I find out who Lefty's obscure soccer avatars are.
Last edited by cantthinkofanything; 09-22-2011 at 03:26 PM.
God bless you!
You're just not a geek.
Wow, that would really be mind-blowing if it can be reproduced, especially since the neutrino is thought to have mass.
And now we're back on topic
The #mundaneneutrinoexplanations tag on twitter is pretty funny right now.
Wait...is this how Thor got to Earth?
LOL and you know that how? Mine are more earth science related interests (growing fruits, berries, vegetables, wine making, fish farming, etc.) but still an inquisitive and open mind. I'm certainly not allergic to physics, astronomy, meteorology etc.
Man you took my initial post way too personally and you took the subsequent one even more personally. Neither was a shot at you. You're worth and you're a geek. Happy?
9.9928668093B Light Years, I believe. And, Manny, you're not alone...this is pretty cool .
I'm guessing a liberal ran the test? Conservative maybe? Or was it funded by solyndra? Hmm.
I don't think any rational scientist was fixed on the notion that the speed of light was "it."
Any who are/were, do not follow scientific rules of being a skeptic first.
That bas Manny is trying to steal my thunder.......
J/K of course, good find. I knew about it before you though![]()
I really haven't had a chance to delve into it much yet although I got a call a few days ago from a colleague regarding this. I'll post thoughts later this evening (I've got a hot sushi date first.....).
At any rate, it will be interesting to see what level the uncertainty is at.
Yeah, like I said <10B!
No kidding. What if somehow the measurement was off.
I belive the moe was 10 nanoseconds and they recorded it at 40 nanoseconds faster than it should have been.
Except that the speed of light being "it" was (may still be) a fundemental of physics.
Lol. In all honestly when I heard the news "I wonder what agloco has to say about this" went through my head fairly quickly.
Wouldn't it be interesting if we found all elementary particles had a unique maximum speed?
It was 60 nanoseconds and a 10 nanosecond Margin of error.
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