World Science Scholars

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  • I would be interested to know if the size of the neuron is important in some way. In other words, can we make really tiny neurons like tranzistors in computer chips and create a small (in size) brain with 1 quadrillion nano-scale neurons with incredible intelligence?

    The best one looks to be at 120 degrees.

    I think your assertion is spot on, that’s exactly the case. It would be interesting (or scary) to see what kind of insects we would have in a 50% oxygen atmosphere, although that would be really dangerous as giant fires would also arise.

    It’s the square cube law. Whenever you increase the size of an animal, its surface area can square but the volume will cube – this is why from a point onwards you can’t just breathe through your skin like ants do and instead you need specialized organs like lungs.

    This reminds me of the square cube law, which is an essentail element of the structure of life, similar to what has been described so far. Something that wouldn’t scale as described by power laws would be the size of a cell – the size of the cell itself would remain the same, a bigger animal simply having more cells instead of “bigger” cells.

    Pushing forward mankind’s understanding of the universe. That’s a good reason. But besides that we can also get better technologies and also maybe something like the Internet, which started at CERN. The reality is that you never know what transpires trying to solve difficult problems, both experimentally and theoretically.

    The idea of using plasma sounds exciting, although I haven’t heard anything yet on this and it’s 2021. We may be quite some time away from it. Another option would be to create an accelerator in outer space and despite that sounding really futuristic and expensive, we might compensate with clever ideas such that we don’t have to use as much material as here on Earth.

    Bigger luminosity, smaller collision area, cheaper costs – they would all contribute.

    We could discover supersymmetric particles and use the theory together with the experimental results and astronomical observations and check if the dark matter could actually be in the form of an LSP = Lightest Supersymmetric Particles. Personally, I take this strongly under consideration as a potential candidate for dark matter.

    ILC could help with supersymmetry, dark matter, potentially other Higgs bosons, understanding the neutrino mass. It won’t help us quantize gravity, though (in fact, I believe quantizing gravity is the wrong way to do it, we should gravitize quantum mechanics not quantize gravity).

    Collider energy is directly proportional to its size, therefore collider size is the limiting factor. For exciting developments we would need to build it in space.

    LIGO is great, but it would be really cool to see a gravitational waves interferometer in outer space, where there’s no Earth-related noise and you can also make it really big since you’re not limited in length like on Earth. That’s what I’m waiting for.

    I would say that thought experiments are definitely underappreciated, and teaching others as well. It’s important to expose yourself to other opinions and questions and that’s what usually happens during teaching.

Viewing 13 posts - 106 through 118 (of 118 total)