future
Exploring the future of science today, while looking back on the achievements from yesterday. Science fiction is science future.
Why does time go forwards, not backwards?
When Isaac Newton published his famous Principia in 1687, his three elegant laws of motion solved a lot of problems. Without them, we couldn't have landed people on the Moon 282 years later. But these laws brought to physics a new problem, which wasn't fully appreciated until centuries after Newton and still nags at cosmologists today.
By Gu Wei Di Qi3 years ago in Futurism
Why do the experts always want to blow up the moon?
Since ancient times, the moon has been of great importance to mankind, both from a scientific and cultural point of view. Out of curiosity about the moon, people began to fantasize about the universe, and ancient Chinese mythology came about as a result of the fantasy about the universe, and as a result, mankind began to develop technology step by step and explore the universe little by little.
By Mao Jiao Li3 years ago in Futurism
How scary is the universe level civilization
In 1964 the Russian astrophysicist Haberdasher divided the cosmic civilization hierarchy into four classes according to the utilization of energy in the universe, and at a later stage, scientists made three additional classes.
By Alessandro Algardi3 years ago in Futurism
The spiral arms of the Milky Way are breaking off, and what's causing it?
In the Milky Way, galaxies or celestial systems are closely related to each other, and if one of them changes, it is likely to have an impact on the other systems as well, even with serious consequences, such as falling apart.
By Copperchaleu3 years ago in Futurism
How does the Earth get its water resources?
I don't know if you have noticed, but the Earth is a little bit wet compared to the planets. How the Earth gets all its water has been a major mystery in the formation of the solar system, and recently a team of Japanese researchers found an important clue - the answer is hidden in Mercury.
By Alessandro Algardi3 years ago in Futurism
Dark matter in the universe is decreasing?
Recently, an international research team from the University of Melbourne, Rice University, CERT, and other universities and research institutions has proposed a new view about dark matter through a large amount of data research and analysis: it is believed that the dark matter in the universe is decreasing, what is going on?
By Copperchaleu3 years ago in Futurism










