Gravitational Waves: Discovered. So long ago…

Some time ago a lot of fuss was created for the discovery of gravitational waves. [1]

People.

Living in a unique cosmos.

A cosmos where everything exist in unison.

Afraid of the consequences of such unity, we DECIDED to split the cosmos into many pieces. And now we just see and analyze these pieces separately.

Once in a while someone comes to remind them of the unity of the cosmos. That everything affects everything. That all beings and things are interconnected – with gravitational waves, with cosmic sympathy, with love…

But still we do not believe it. We want “proof”.

And wait for hundreds of years for that proof.

Then we see.

But again not what we are supposed to see.

Listen to Parmenides.

The ripples of his poem rip through time…

Science. Miracles.

Walking on water: Researchers unravel science of skipping spheres. [1]

Atheists deny Christ walking on water on the grounds on it being scientifically impossible. But science is not there to tell what is possible and what is not. Science just describes the miracles of the cosmos. Watch the skipping stones “walking” on water. Marvel them. No need to explain them. Just watch. A stone walking on water. An insect walking on water. A man walking on water…

Entangled timelines… One…

A new experiment suggests that reality can split into multiple intertwined timelines, a phenomenon termed “entangled histories”. Choose Your Own Adventure books are fun, but they let readers choose only one version of events at a time. Quantum mechanics, a new experiment suggests, requires that multiple adventures occur simultaneously to create a consistent account of history. Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek at MIT and colleague Jordan Cotler, now at Stanford University, provide evidence for what they call entangled histories in a paper posted online January 12 at arXiv.org. The researchers proposed and collaborated on an experiment that started and ended by measuring a particular property of a photon; in between, the experimenters subtly probed the photon without disturbing its delicate quantum state. The head-scratching result was that there was no way to create a single chronology that could describe how the photon changed. Instead, there must be multiple chronologies that are entangled, sharing a quantum connection usually reserved for groups of particles rather than chunks of time. “There really is something very deep going on here about the nature of quantum mechanics and time”, Cotler says. “Our best description of the past is not a fixed chronology but multiple chronologies that are intertwined with each other”.

In other words a single chronology is insufficient to explain the observed changes in the properties of a particle. Just as the understanding of an entangled particle is impossible without considering its partner, the history of a particle could be incomplete without the existence of multiple entangled timelines. [1]

Many worlds? Or many histories?

Many particles? Or one particle?

One possibility? Or a magnitude of probabilities?

Parmenides just saw One.

We broke that One into pieces.

And now we understand that we cannot describe the world unless we bring the pieces together…

Phonons. Photons. All the same…

A research group at Osaka University has succeeded in observing at the intended timing two-phonon quantum interference by using two cold calcium ions in ion traps, which spatially confine charged particles. A phonon is a unit of vibrational energy that arises from oscillating particles within crystals. Two-particle quantum interference experiments using two photons or atoms have been previously reported, but this group’s achievement is the world’s first observation using two phonons. This group demonstrated that the phonon, a quantum mechanical description of an elementary vibrational motion in matter, and the photon, an elementary particle of light, share common properties. [1]

Matter. Energy. Oscillating.

All different. All the same.

In an everlasting universe, everything is a “particle” of something else.

And at the very bottom of existence only one thing can exist.

Something oscillating at the very fundamental level of existence.

Creating everything else.

The only thing which can demonstrate self-reference.

Search yourself. You know what it is.

You.

Oscillating in darkness.

Near the silent Saturn.

Souls passing by…

Magnetism. [Where is Velikovsky?]

Astronomers have for the first time probed the magnetic fields in the mysterious inner regions of stars. Using a technique called asteroseismology, which uses sound waves generated by turbulence on the surface of stars to determine their inner properties, the scientists found that the fusion-powered cores of red giants, stars that are evolved versions of our sun, are strongly magnetized. The findings will help astronomers better understand the evolution of stars. (1)

Magnetism.

An all too common phenomenon.

Too boring to deal with.

We all “know” it.

We teach it to first grade students.

CERN is not concerned with it.

And yet, the more “boring” and “simple” phenomena, the most common ones, are the most interesting.

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