Even Einstein, however, may not have got it right. Modern instruments have shown a departure from his predictions, too. In 1990 mission controllers at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, which operates America's unmanned interplanetary space probes, noticed something odd happen to a Jupiter-bound craft, called Galileo. As it was flung around the Earth in what is known as a slingshot manoeuvre (designed to speed it on its way to the outer solar system), Galileo picked up more velocity than expected. Not much. Four millimetres a second, to be precise. But well within the range that can reliably be detected.
Sunday, March 16, 2008
The laws of physics
Something seems to be wrong with the laws of physics writes The Economist
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2008
(71)
-
▼
March
(51)
- Tibet
- Extending China's reach
- The earliest audio recording - discovered!
- Making Beijing sweat
- Book of the week
- Explaining Religion
- Cartoon of the week
- Tibet
- Why Old Technologies are still kicking
- GDP per person
- China - The new colonialist
- Gorkhaland - Still Alive
- Globalization
- Wronged wives
- Jonestown - cult of murderers
- Border Crossings
- Iraq
- The laws of physics
- Battling the Babu Raj
- Why Shariah?
- Singapore's severe lesson in complacency
- India's bestselling author
- Tibet
- Mother's influence
- The long silence
- Bridge on the River Kwai?
- The end of TV as we know it
- Big Brother is watching....
- Baba Amte - RIP
- Business in South-East Asia
- Top 3 trends in IT
- The Truth about Autism
- Cycle of Violence - will it ever end?
- Zimbabwe - Regime Change anyone?
- Sri Lanka
- Empowering India's villages
- Books - The Sexual Paradox
- India and the Olympics
- The "old" economy finally catches with up the "new...
- On Langauge
- MSFT and Online Services
- Base of the Pyramid
- The Trouble with India's IT strategy
- Outsourcing motherhood to India
- The Torture of Turning Everything Off
- Chandigarh
- Russia
- Kosovo
- Prince Harry in Afghanistan
- SaaS - Business Model or Feature
- Google Sites - Hype??
-
▼
March
(51)
No comments:
Post a Comment