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Archive for the ‘alien life’ category: Page 81

May 23, 2021

The Mental Universe Hypothesis: Reconnecting to Your Cosmic Self

Posted by in categories: alien life, chemistry, evolution, mathematics, particle physics, quantum physics

From a purely scientific frame of reference, many quantum phenomena like non-local correlations between distant entities and wave-particle duality, the wave function collapse and consistent histories, quantum entanglement and teleportation, the uncertainty principle and overall observer-dependence of reality pin down our conscious mind being intrinsic to reality. And this is the one thing the current physicalist paradigm fails to account for. Critical-mass anomalies will ultimately lead to the full paradigm shift in physics. It’s just a matter of time.

With consciousness as primary, everything remains the same and everything changes. Mathematics, physics, chemistry, biology are unchanged. What changes is our interpretation as to what they are describing. They are not describing the unfolding of an objective physical world, but transdimensional evolution of one’s conscious mind. There’s nothing “physical” about our physical reality except that we perceive it that way. By playing the “Game of Life” we evolved to survive not to see quantum mechanical reality. At our classical level of experiential reality we perceive ourselves as physical, at the quantum level we are a probabilistic wave function, which is pure information.

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May 22, 2021

In the Search for Alien Life, Scientists Must ‘Expect the Unexpected’

Posted by in category: alien life

Exoplanet hunting is difficult, and we are limited by our technology. But Peter Vickers believes we’re also limited by our biases.

May 22, 2021

Study reveals new details on what happened in the first microsecond of Big Bang

Posted by in categories: alien life, evolution, particle physics

Researchers from University of Copenhagen have investigated what happened to a specific kind of plasma—the first matter ever to be present—during the first microsecond of Big Bang. Their findings provide a piece of the puzzle to the evolution of the universe, as we know it today.

About 14 billion years ago, our changed from being a lot hotter and denser to expanding radically—a process that scientists have named the Big Bang.

And even though we know that this fast expansion created particles, atoms, stars, galaxies and life as we know it today, the details of how it all happened are still unknown.

May 21, 2021

SETI: how microbes could communicate with alien species

Posted by in category: alien life

A new study argues we should search for microbial life rather than human-like aliens.

May 21, 2021

Aliens are a mirror to humanity

Posted by in categories: alien life, futurism

Aliens symbolize the best and worst of humanity. When we dream of aliens, we are pondering our future selves.

May 20, 2021

Martian Life May Be Hiding in Islands of Habitability

Posted by in category: alien life

Islands of Habitability or finding the best places to search for life on Mars.


Zeroing in on the best environmental niches to explore during the next mission to Mars.

May 19, 2021

Kate Adamala (U of M) 1: Synthetic Cells: Building Life to Understand It

Posted by in categories: alien life, engineering, evolution, genetics

www.iBiology.org.

Dr. Kate Adamala describes what synthetic cells are and how they can teach us the fundamental principles of life.

Continue reading “Kate Adamala (U of M) 1: Synthetic Cells: Building Life to Understand It” »

May 10, 2021

The Science of Aliens, Part 2: What Kind of Genetic Code Would Extraterrestrials Have?

Posted by in categories: alien life, chemistry, genetics, science

Some thoughts about the genetic code aliens would use in the 2nd part of the series: The Science of Aliens:


Alien life would likely have different biochemistry, which may change the way it reproduces.

May 9, 2021

A rare glimpse of a star before it went supernova defies expectations

Posted by in category: alien life

A rare glimpse of a star before it exploded in a fiery supernova looks nothing like astronomers expected, a new study suggests.

Images from the Hubble Space Telescope reveal that a relatively cool, puffy star ended its life in a hydrogen-free supernova. Until now, supernovas without hydrogen were thought to originate only from extremely hot, compact stars.

The discovery “is a very important test case for stellar evolution,” says Sung-Chul Yoon, an astrophysicist at Seoul National University in South Korea, who was not involved in the work. Theorists have some ideas about how massive stars behave right before they blow up, but such hefty stars are scant in the local universe and many are nowhere near ready to go supernova, Yoon says. Retroactively identifying the star responsible for a supernova provides an opportunity to test scenarios of how stars evolve right before exploding.

May 9, 2021

Mushrooms on Mars: Do These Images Show Proof of Life on Mars?

Posted by in category: alien life

Scientists believe these photos show mushrooms on mars—and proof of life.


Could there be mushrooms on Mars? In a new paper, an international team of scientists from countries including the U.S., France, and China have gathered and compared photographic evidence they claim shows fungus-like objects growing on the Red Planet.

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