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2,223 results for "om" — page 10 of 112
G_4_22 — Emergence and Self-Organization: From Physics to Biology
Emergence — the appearance of macroscopic properties that are not reducible to the behavior of individual components — is one of the most important and contested concepts in modern science and philosophy. From Bénard con
G_4_21 — Archaeogenomics: Ancient DNA and the Reconstruction of Human History
Archaeogenomics — the extraction, sequencing, and analysis of DNA from ancient biological remains — has revolutionized understanding of human migration, admixture, and population history since Svante Pääbo's pioneering w
G_4_24 — Post-Scarcity Economics and Resource-Based Models
Post-scarcity economics addresses the theoretical conditions under which advanced automation, AI, and energy abundance could eliminate material scarcity as the organizing principle of economic life. The concept has deep
G_4_11 — Archaeoastronomy Methods and Systematic Evidence
Archaeoastronomy — the study of how past civilizations understood, observed, and used astronomical phenomena — has matured from a field plagued by speculative alignment claims into a rigorous interdisciplinary discipline
G_3_11 — Information Theory and Biological Complexity
Information theory, founded by Claude Shannon (1948, A Mathematical Theory of Communication), provides a rigorous mathematical framework for quantifying information content, communication capacity, and complexity — conce
G_3_16 — Complexity Theory and Civilizational Collapse
Complexity theory — drawn from physics, mathematics, ecology, and information theory — provides a powerful framework for understanding why civilizations collapse: not as the result of a single catastrophic event, but as
G_3_13 — Self-Organization from Atoms to Civilizations
Self-organization is the process by which ordered, complex structures emerge spontaneously from simpler components without centralized control or external direction — driven by local interactions among parts that collect
G_2_04 — Complexity Economics and Ancient Trade Systems
Complexity economics — the application of complex systems theory, non-linear dynamics, and agent-based modeling to economic phenomena — provides a powerful modern framework for understanding ancient and premodern trade s
G_2_18 — Digital Humanities and Computational Text Analysis
Digital humanities (DH) encompasses the application of computational methods — text mining, natural language processing (NLP), statistical analysis, data visualization, geographic information systems (GIS), network analy
O_1_12 — The Hum: Worldwide Low-Frequency Acoustic Anomaly
"The Hum" refers to a persistent, low-pitched, droning noise perceived by a small but significant percentage of the population (estimated 2–11% depending on the locality and study) in diverse locations worldwide. The Hum
O_1_13 — South Atlantic Anomaly: Geomagnetic Weakness and Radiation Belt Gap
The South Atlantic Anomaly (SAA) is the largest known weakness in Earth's magnetic field, centered over South America and the South Atlantic Ocean (roughly between Brazil and southern Africa), where the inner Van Allen r
O_1_18 — Ball Lightning and Earthquake Lights: Transient Luminous Phenomena
Ball lightning — a luminous, roughly spherical phenomenon observed during or near thunderstorms, typically 10–50 cm in diameter and lasting 1–10 seconds — and earthquake lights (EQLs) — luminous atmospheric phenomena obs
O_1_16 — Geomagnetic-Consciousness Mechanism
The hypothesis that Earth's geomagnetic field influences human consciousness encompasses several distinct mechanisms: biogenic magnetite in the brain as a magnetoreceptor, Schumann resonance coupling with neural oscillat
O_1_04 — Atmospheric Anomalies — Ball Lightning, Hessdalen, and Earthquake Lights
The atmosphere produces a range of luminous phenomena that, despite centuries of observation and thousands of documented reports, remain incompletely understood or only recently explained. Ball lightning — glowing sphere
O_1_08 — Aurora Borealis and Geomagnetic Storms
The aurora borealis (northern lights) and aurora australis (southern lights) are luminous atmospheric phenomena caused by charged particles from the solar wind interacting with Earth's magnetosphere and exciting atmosphe
O_1_07 — Gravity Anomalies, Mascons & Earth's Uneven Field
Earth's gravitational field is not uniform — it varies by approximately ±0.05% from the global average, creating a lumpy "geoid" where the local strength of gravity depends on the density and distribution of mass beneath
O_1_05 — Hessdalen Lights — Scientific Monitoring of Persistent Anomaly
The Hessdalen lights are recurring luminous aerial phenomena observed in and around the Hessdalen valley in central Norway (Holtålen municipality, Trøndelag county), scientifically monitored since 1983.
O_1_06 — Geomagnetic Anomalies at Ancient Megalithic Sites
A small but growing body of geophysical research has documented measurable electromagnetic and geomagnetic anomalies at several ancient megalithic sites, including the Rollright Stones (Oxfordshire, England), Carnac (Bri
O_1_09 — Persinger's Tectonic Strain Theory and Geomagnetic Anomalies
Michael Persinger (1945–2018), a neuroscientist at Laurentian University (Sudbury, Ontario), developed the Tectonic Strain Theory (TST) — a hypothesis proposing that stress accumulating along geological fault zones produ
O_1_03 — Geomagnetic Anomalies and Human Health Effects
Earth's geomagnetic field is not uniform — dramatic anomalies like the South Atlantic Anomaly (SAA) expose organisms and technology to increased radiation, while laboratory experiments have shown that weak magnetic field
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