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1-13 of 13
- A lecture series featuring some of the world's most prominent scientists who explore topics ranging from theories about universes before the Big Bang, to the fantastical world of quantum mechanics.
- Explores wave-particle duality: the mind-bending notion that electrons can be two completely different things - waves and particles.
- Discoveries at the Large Hadron Collider, in Geneva, Switzerland, will establish a new Golden Age, bringing our fundamental understanding of the physical world to a new level.
- Professor Roger Penrose describes a very different proposal, one that suggests a succession of universes prior to our own.
- Jeffrey Rosenthal shows us how probability and randomness can shed new light on many familiar situations in our everyday lives.
- Modern scientific and technological developments are vastly different from the forecasts by science fiction authors who promised us space travel and intelligent humanoid robots.
- International researchers at the Large Hadron Collider, in Geneva, Switzerland, will soon embark on one of science's greatest adventures.
- Ben Schumacher describes how some things can happen in our universe, and others cannot. The laws of physics establish the boundary between possibility and impossibility.
- At the beginning of the 20th century Einstein published three revolutionary ideas that changed forever how we view nature.
- Neil Turok discusses the overwhelming evidence of the Big Bang theory and how the cause of this event remains deeply mysterious.
- There's a gigantic black hole at the center of our galaxy with gravity so strong that nothing can escape from it, not even light.
- Acclaimed writer and scientist Leonard Mlodinow shows us how randomness, change, and probability reveal a tremendous amount about our daily lives.
- Brian Schmidt discusses the life of the universe, and how astronomers have traced its history back more than 13 billion years.