RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
252 results for "structure from motion" — page 3 of 13
S_4_19 — Dyson Sphere Engineering
A Dyson sphere is a hypothetical megastructure that encompasses an entire star to capture a substantial fraction of its energy output — representing the ultimate engineering achievement of a technologically advanced civi
M_2_03 — Yonaguni Monument — Natural or Man-Made?
The Yonaguni Monument is a massive underwater rock formation located off the southern coast of Yonaguni Island, Japan's westernmost point in the Ryukyu archipelago.
M_2_16 — Gunung Padang: Indonesia's Megalithic Controversy
Gunung Padang ("Mountain of Enlightenment" in Sundanese) is a megalithic site in Karyamukti village, Cianjur Regency, West Java, Indonesia, situated atop a volcanic hill at ~885 meters elevation. The visible surface cons
A_1_18 — Sumerian King List: Antediluvian Records and Divine Kingship
The Sumerian King List (SKL) is a cuneiform document cataloguing the rulers of Sumer from the beginning of kingship — which "descended from heaven" — through successive dynasties across multiple city-states. The most com
U_1_22 — Music Therapy Neuroscience
Music therapy neuroscience investigates the neural mechanisms by which music influences brain function, emotion, movement, and cognition — and applies these findings to treat neurological, psychiatric, and developmental
U_1_19 — Neuroscience of Music
The neuroscience of music investigates how the human brain perceives, processes, produces, and responds emotionally to music — revealing that music engages a remarkably distributed network of brain regions spanning audit
U_2_06 — Cinema and Film History
Cinema — the art and technology of moving images — emerged from late 19th-century developments in photography and persistence of vision. Pioneer technologies: Eadweard Muybridge's sequential photographs of a galloping ho
ZH_1_11 — Copernicus, Kepler, and the Astronomical Revolution
The astronomical revolution of the 16th and 17th centuries — transforming humanity's understanding of its place in the cosmos from an Earth-centered (geocentric) to a Sun-centered (heliocentric) model — is one of the mos
C_4_04 — Tuareg and Saharan Serpent Traditions
The Sahara Desert — the world's largest hot desert at 9.2 million km² — was GREEN, wet, and densely inhabited for most of the last 11,000 years. The "African Humid Period" (AHP, ~11,000-5,000 BP) transformed the Sahara i
Z_5_04 — Structural Biology: Seeing Molecules at Atomic Resolution
Structural biology — the determination of the three-dimensional atomic structures of biological macromolecules (proteins, nucleic acids, and their complexes) — has been one of the most transformative disciplines in moder
Z_1_21 — Riboswitches and RNA Thermometers
Riboswitches are structured RNA elements typically found in the 5' untranslated regions (5' UTRs) of bacterial messenger RNAs that directly sense and bind specific small-molecule metabolites — changing their three-dimens
Z_4_08 — The Ribosome: The Molecular Machine of Translation
The ribosome — the massive molecular machine responsible for translating the genetic information encoded in messenger RNA (mRNA) into functional proteins — is arguably the most important macromolecular complex in all of
J_2_06 — Damascus Steel and Wootz
Damascus steel — the legendary blade material prized for its distinctive watered pattern (bands of light and dark on the polished surface), exceptional cutting ability, and reputed capacity to cut silk falling on the bla
J_4_18 — Ancient Hydraulic Engineering: Aqueducts, Qanat & Water Management
Ancient hydraulic engineering represents some of humanity's most sophisticated and enduring technological achievements. From the qanat systems of Persia (first millennium BCE) — underground galleries that transported gro
TH_05 — The Water-Carbon-Chirality Triple Lock
Life appears to need three separate lucky breaks: water, with all its strange life-friendly quirks; carbon, the one atom flexible enough to build living molecules; and a curious one-handedness, where life uses only "left
Q_1_08 — Observable Universe and Cosmic Web
The observable universe has a diameter of ~93 billion light-years (comoving distance) and contains an estimated 2 trillion galaxies (Conselice et al. 2016), ~10²⁴ stars, and ~10⁸⁰ atoms. But its most striking feature is
Q_1_07 — CMB Anomalies and the Axis of Evil
The Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) — the afterglow of the Big Bang, emitted ~380,000 years after the universe began — is the most precisely measured radiation in the history of science. It matches the theoretical pred
Q_4_31 — Water Memory, Anomalous Properties, and Homeopathy Critique
The "water memory" hypothesis — the claim that water retains a structural or informational imprint of substances previously dissolved in it, even after dilution past Avogadro's number — sits at the center of one of 20th-
Q_4_13 — Classical Mechanics: Newton, Lagrange, Hamilton, and the Action Principle
Classical mechanics — the study of the motion of bodies under the action of forces — is the oldest and most mature branch of physics, tracing from Galileo's kinematics (1638) and Newton's three laws and universal gravita
Q_4_32 — The Fundamental Constants: Physics, Life, and Mathematics
The universe runs on numbers — and not arbitrary ones. A small set of fundamental constants, mostly dimensionless, determines every property of matter, energy, space, and time. Change any of them by a fraction and atoms
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