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656 results for "Adi Granth" — page 20 of 33
F_1_11 — Sweet Potato Paradox — Pre-Columbian Trans-Pacific Contact Evidence
The sweet potato paradox — the presence of Ipomoea batatas (a plant of unambiguous South American origin) across Polynesia in pre-Columbian contexts — is the single most widely accepted piece of evidence for trans-Pacifi
F_1_14 — Pre-Columbian Chicken Debate: Polynesian–South American Evidence
The pre-Columbian chicken debate centers on whether domestic chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus) — an Old World species originally domesticated in Southeast Asia — reached South America before European contact (1492+), v
F_4_08 — Mu and Lemuria — Lost Continent Theories
Mu and Lemuria are two related but distinct "lost continent" traditions that have profoundly influenced alternative history, esoteric thought, and popular culture. Lemuria originated as a legitimate biogeographic hypothe
F_3_17 — Megalithic Diffusion Debate: Atlantic Façade Connections
The megalithic diffusion debate is one of archaeology's longest-running controversies: did the remarkable concentrations of megalithic monuments (dolmens, passage tombs, standing stones, stone circles, alignments, and ch
ZA_2_08 — Modified Gravity Theories: MOND, f(R), and Alternatives to Dark Matter
Modified gravity theories attempt to explain the "missing mass" problem — the discrepancy between observed gravitational effects and visible matter — without invoking dark matter particles. The most empirically successfu
ZA_2_10 — Tachyons and Superluminal Physics
Tachyons — hypothetical particles that always travel faster than light — have fascinated physicists since Gerald Feinberg's 1967 formalization, yet no tachyon has ever been observed. In special relativity, a massive part
ZA_2_12 — The Black Hole Information Paradox
The black hole information paradox — first articulated by Stephen Hawking in 1976 — is arguably the most profound puzzle connecting quantum mechanics, general relativity, and information theory. When a black hole forms a
ZA_1_06 — Quantum Tunneling: Traversing the Classically Forbidden
Quantum tunneling is the phenomenon where particles traverse energy barriers that classical physics strictly forbids — a direct consequence of quantum mechanics' wave-like description of matter. First explained by George
ZA_1_15 — Quantum Biology Revisited: Quantum Effects in Living Systems
Quantum biology investigates whether non-trivial quantum-mechanical effects — coherence, entanglement, tunneling, and superposition — play functional roles in biological processes, rather than being washed out by the war
ZA_5_19 — Bekenstein Bound: Information Limits and the Physics of Black Holes
The Bekenstein bound — proposed by Jacob Bekenstein in 1981 — establishes a fundamental upper limit on the amount of information (entropy) that can be contained within a given region of space with a given amount of energ
ZA_5_11 — Quantum Chaos: Where Classical Chaos Meets Quantum Mechanics
Quantum chaos investigates the quantum-mechanical signatures of systems whose classical counterparts exhibit chaotic behavior — addressing the profound question of how quantum mechanics, which is fundamentally linear, en
ZA_5_20 — Squeezed States and Optomechanics
Squeezed states of light and cavity optomechanics represent two of the most important frontiers in applied quantum physics — technologies that exploit quantum mechanical effects to surpass classical measurement limits an
ZA_4_08 — Photon Physics and the Nature of Light
The photon — the quantum of the electromagnetic field — is simultaneously one of the most familiar and most enigmatic particles in physics. Planck's introduction of energy quanta (E = hf, 1900) and Einstein's explanation
ZA_4_19 — Cryogenics and Low-Temperature Physics
Cryogenics — the production and behavior of materials at temperatures below ~120 K (−153 °C) — began with Heike Kamerlingh Onnes (Leiden), who first liquefied helium on July 10, 1908, reaching 4.2 K and opening the ultra
ZA_4_25 — Caloric Theory: The Heat Fluid That Built Thermodynamics
Caloric theory held that heat is a self-repelling, weightless, indestructible fluid — calorique — that flows from hotter bodies to cooler ones and can be stored within matter. Formalized by Antoine-Laurent de Lavoisier i
ZA_3_07 — Particle Accelerators and Colliders: Probing the Fundamental Structure of Matter
Particle accelerators — machines that use electromagnetic fields to accelerate charged particles to extreme energies and smash them together — are humanity's most powerful microscopes, probing matter at scales below 10⁻¹
ZA_3_03 — Nuclear Physics: Fission, Fusion, and the Heart of Matter
Nuclear physics studies the atomic nucleus — the dense core of protons and neutrons bound by the strong nuclear force, containing 99.95% of an atom's mass in just 10⁻¹⁵ meters. The field revealed that mass can be convert
ZA_3_16 — Neutrino Astronomy: Ghost Particles as Cosmic Messengers
Neutrino astronomy — the detection of neutrinos from astrophysical sources — opens a fundamentally new window on the universe, observing objects and processes invisible to electromagnetic radiation. Neutrinos are nearly
I_2_11 — Canadian UAP Programs: From Wilbert Smith to Recent Activity
Canada has a significant but underappreciated history of official UAP investigation, including what may be the most technologically ambitious early government UAP research program in any Western nation. Wilbert B. Smith
I_2_05 — International UAP Programs (GEIPAN, COMETA, CEFAA, and Global Investigations)
While the United States has received the most attention for UAP investigation, numerous other nations have operated — and in several cases continue to operate — official government programs to study unidentified aerial p
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