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.
2,501 results for "La Niña" — page 77 of 126
Q_4_24 — Modified Gravity Theories: MOND, TeVeS, and f(R) Gravity
Modified gravity theories propose that the observed discrepancies between luminous matter and dynamical mass in galaxies and galaxy clusters — conventionally attributed to dark matter — instead arise from a modification
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
Q_4_10 — Fluid Dynamics: Turbulence, Navier-Stokes, and the Millennium Problem
Fluid dynamics is the study of the motion of fluids (liquids and gases) — a branch of physics with applications spanning aeronautics, meteorology, oceanography, astrophysics, cardiovascular medicine, chemical engineering
Q_4_12 — Optics: Refraction, Diffraction, and the Nature of Light
Optics — the science of light and vision — is one of the oldest branches of physics, with roots in ancient Greece, the Islamic Golden Age, and the European Scientific Revolution, and it remains central to modern technolo
Q_2_19 — Modified Gravity Theories: MOND, TeVeS & Alternatives to Dark Matter
Modified gravity theories propose that the observed discrepancies between predicted and measured gravitational effects in galaxies and galaxy clusters — conventionally attributed to dark matter — instead result from modi
Q_2_15 — Magnetars and Fast Radio Bursts
Magnetars are neutron stars with ultra-strong magnetic fields (B ~ 10¹³–10¹⁵ gauss — a thousand times stronger than typical radio pulsars and ~10¹⁰ times the strongest laboratory magnets), powered not by rotation (as wit
Q_2_06 — Nucleosynthesis: How the Elements Were Forged
Every element in the periodic table has a specific cosmic origin story. Big Bang nucleosynthesis (BBN) produced hydrogen, helium, and traces of lithium in the first 20 minutes after the Big Bang. Stellar nucleosynthesis
Q_2_09 — Binary Star Systems and X-Ray Sources
Most stars in the Milky Way exist in binary or multiple-star systems — estimates range from ~50% for solar-type stars to >70% for massive O/B stars. Binary star interactions drive some of the most energetic phenomena in
Q_2_03 — Cosmic Rays and High-Energy Astrophysics
Cosmic rays — high-energy particles from space, mostly protons and atomic nuclei — were discovered by Victor Hess in 1912 via balloon flights that measured ionization increasing with altitude, earning him the Nobel Prize
Q_2_14 — Gamma-Ray Bursts
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are the most energetic electromagnetic events in the universe — brief, intense flashes of gamma radiation that, when corrected for beaming, release ~10⁴⁴–10⁴⁷ joules in seconds to minutes. First d
Q_2_18 — Neutrino Astronomy: Ghostly Messengers from the Cosmos
Neutrino astronomy — the observation of astrophysical sources through their neutrino emission rather than electromagnetic radiation — opened a new window on the universe by detecting particles that can escape from region
Q_3_05 — Olbers' Paradox and the Dark Night Sky
Olbers' paradox — named after German astronomer Heinrich Olbers (1826), though discussed earlier by Kepler (1610), Halley (1720), and de Chéseaux (1744) — asks: if the universe is infinite, static, and uniformly filled w
Q_3_12 — Telescope Technology and Observational Cosmology
The history of astronomy is inseparable from the history of telescope technology, and each major advance in instrumentation has triggered transformative discoveries. Galileo (1609) turned a simple refracting telescope to
Q_3_01 — The Fermi Paradox & Drake Equation
Enrico Fermi's 1950 lunch question — "Where is everybody?" — remains one of the deepest unanswered questions in science. The galaxy is ~13.6 billion years old, contains ~100–400 billion stars, and (as we now know from Ke
Q_3_04 — Gravitational Lensing: Bending Light and Mapping the Invisible Universe
Gravitational lensing — the bending of light by massive objects predicted by Einstein's general relativity — has become one of the most powerful observational tools in modern astrophysics. First confirmed during the 1919
Q_3_00 — Planetary Solar Astrobiology: Subfolder Summary
Q_3_02 — Ancient-Modern Scientific Parallels Synthesis
Every major ancient cosmological tradition contains concepts that map remarkably onto modern scientific discoveries. From the Hindu kalpa aligning within 5% of Earth's actual age, to the universal "cosmic egg" motif mirr
INTERDOC_65 — The Constants of Existence: A Cross-Domain Architecture
[KEY FINDING] The universe appears to run on approximately 30 physical constants (CODATA 2022), none of which are derived from theory. Life on Earth obeys approximately 12 biological constants (genetic code, ATP, homochi
INTERDOC_53 — Substrate-Independent Information Patterns: Empirical Cases
A pattern is empirically substrate-independent if the same information content is preserved across changes in the physical material carrying it. Across multiple domains, biology and physics provide concrete instances of
INTERDOC_59 — Intergenerational Trauma: A Three-Channel Synthesis (Epigenetic, Psychological, Cultural)
Trauma is empirically heritable — but not through any single mechanism. The dominant public framing (epigenetics-as-Lamarckism) is overconfident; the dominant academic counter-framing (it's all attachment / it's all cult
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