NDTV Profit on MSN
How To Get A Perfect Basketball Shot? Google Doodle Shows Math Behind It
Google has used the quadratic equation to demonstrate algebra has direct application in sports, engineering, physics, and ...
Dot Physics on MSN
Is g Acceleration Due to Gravity or the Gravitational Field?
Physics and Python stuff. Most of the videos here are either adapted from class lectures or solving physics problems. I ...
Physics can feel inscrutable to students; this lesson helps them understand a graphing problem by analyzing their own ...
A tool called AI-Newton can derive scientific laws from raw data, but is some way from developing human-like reasoning.
A new theory-based approach provides access to the minute transverse motion of quarks within protons. Nuclear physicists have developed a new theoretical framework that allows them to calculate a ...
2don MSN
String theory: Scientists are trying new ways to verify the idea that could unite all of physics
In 1980, Stephen Hawking gave his first lecture as Lucasian Professor at the University of Cambridge. The lecture was called ...
Amaze Lab on MSN
Interstellar Visitor 3I/ATLAS Shows Acceleration—NASA Goes Dark Just as Mystery Deepens
Interstellar visitor 3I/ATLAS has captivated the scientific world with strange signs of acceleration that traditional physics ...
Speaker one We’ve been using Sir Isaac Newton’s theories for hundreds of years and still use his equations today. Now, how can we test Newton’s second law using equipment found in our laboratory?
Google’s Quantum Echoes now closes the loop: verification has become a measurable force, a resonance between consciousness and method. The many worlds seem to be bleeding together. Each observation is ...
If we take out all the matter, neutrinos, dark matter, cosmic rays, and radiation from the deepest parts of the voids, the only thing left is empty space. I know it sounds like a paradox, but the ...
One of Albert Einstein's greatest insights was realizing that time is relative. It speeds up or slows down depending on how fast one thing is moving relative to something else. How much does it change ...
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