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| Your personal background. |
46 year old born in Romania and naturalized in USA since 1990.
Graduated from the Faculty of Building Services and Equipment.
I work as a system engineer: audio, video, intercom, phones and signal processing/data communications and information security systems.Hobbies: Web Design, programming in Visual Basic, Space Science and Finances.Prefered Genius:Einstein.Prefered scientists:Carl Sagan & Stephen Hawking.Prefered music bands: Pink Floyd(Roger Waters) & Phoenix.
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| Your opinions about Einstein@Home |
One of the crowning achievements of 20th century science is that all the laws of physics, at a fundamental level, can be summarized by just two formalisms: (1) Einstein's theory of gravity, which gives us a cosmic description of the very large, galaxies, black holes and the Big Bang, and (2) the quantum theory, which gives us a microscopic description of the very small, the microcosm of sub-atomic particles and radiation.
But the supreme irony, and surely one of Nature's cosmic jokes, is that they look bewilderingly different; even the world's greatest physicists, including Einstein , have failed to unify these into one. The two theories use different mathematics and different physical principles to describe the universe in their respective domains, the cosmic and the microscopic.
The universe is a symphony of vibrating strings. An added bonus is that, as a string moves in time, it warps the fabric of space around it, producing black holes, wormholes, and other exotic solutions of Einstein's equations.
The detection of gravity waves will be a great leap forward in both confirming our understanding of the general theory of relativity and in providing us a new set of eyes (or more like ears) for exploring the universe. This is a really exciting prospect of Einstein@Home |
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