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21. |
Black Holes and the Information Paradox; The Edge of Physics; Special Editions; by Leonard Susskind; 6 page(s)
What happens to the information in matter destroyed by a black hole? Searching for that answer, physicists are groping toward a quantum theory of gravity
Relevance: 97%
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23. |
Reviews: The Inelegant Universe; September 2006; Scientific American Magazine; by George Johnson; 3 page(s)
The Trouble with Physics and Not Even Wrong argue that it is time for string theory to give way
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24. |
Black Holes and the Information Paradox; April 1997; Scientific American Magazine; by Susskind; 6 page(s)
What happens to the information in matter destroyed
by a black hole? Searching for that answer, physicists
are groping toward a quantum theory of gravity
Relevance: 97%
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25. |
Life in the Universe; October 1994; Scientific American Magazine; by Weinberg; 6 page(s)
We comprehend the universe and our place in it. But there are limits to what we can explain at present. Will research at the boundaries of science reveal a special role for intelligent life?
Relevance: 97%
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26. |
Questions That Plague Physics; August 2004; Scientific American Magazine; by Claudia Dreifus; 4 page(s)
Lawrence M. Krauss speaks about unfinished business
Relevance: 95%
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27. |
Reviews: Beyond the Standard Model; April 2006; Scientific American Magazine; by Jim Holt; 2 page(s)
Warped Passages, The Cosmic Landscape and Hiding in the Mirror explore three possibilities for the future of physics theory
Relevance: 93%
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28. |
Profile: Monstrous Moonshine is True; November 1998; Scientific American Magazine; by Gibbs; 2 page(s)
Richard Borcherds proved it--and discovered spooky connections between the smallest objects imagined by physics and one of the most complex objects known to mathematics
Relevance: 93%
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29. |
String Instruments; October 1998; Scientific American Magazine; by Musser; 2 page(s)
String theory may soon be testable
Relevance: 93%
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30. |
The Search for Relativity Violations; The Frontiers of Physics; Special Editions; by Alan Kostelecky; 10 page(s)
To uncover evidence for an ultimate theory, scientists are looking for infractions of Einstein's once sacrosanct physical principal
Relevance: 93%
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