I am enough of a geek to have watched, live, the seminary last July 4th that announced the discovery of the Higgs Boson.
Sean Carrol wrote a book on the topic of the Higgs called The Particle at the End of the Universe. I downloaded the kindle version to my iPod.
Sean Carrol gave a talk at The Royal Institution explaining the Higgs.
Here is the Q & A for the talk.
The video below is the seminar of 4th July, 2012 announcing the very probable discovery of the Higgs.
Sean Carrol's description is a simplified one. In the video below Leonard Susskind gives a much more technical description:
Monday, February 18, 2013
Successful Predictions
Here is a talk given by Ray Pierrehumbert at the recent AGU conference.
Steve Easterbrook discusses the talk here. He summarises the talk as follows:
Ray’s talk spanned 120 years of research on climate change. The key message is that science is a long, slow process of discovery, in which theories (and their predictions) tend to emerge long before they can be tested. We often learn just as much from the predictions that turned out to be wrong as we do from those that were right. But successful predictions eventually form the body of knowledge that we can be sure about, not just because they were successful, but because they build up into a coherent explanation of multiple lines of evidence.
For a post explaining the multiple lines of evidence for global warming click here. This talk lists many successful predictions by climate scientists (and also some unsuccessful ones by contrarians) it also provides a useful summary of the development of climate science.
Steve Easterbrook discusses the talk here. He summarises the talk as follows:
Ray’s talk spanned 120 years of research on climate change. The key message is that science is a long, slow process of discovery, in which theories (and their predictions) tend to emerge long before they can be tested. We often learn just as much from the predictions that turned out to be wrong as we do from those that were right. But successful predictions eventually form the body of knowledge that we can be sure about, not just because they were successful, but because they build up into a coherent explanation of multiple lines of evidence.
For a post explaining the multiple lines of evidence for global warming click here. This talk lists many successful predictions by climate scientists (and also some unsuccessful ones by contrarians) it also provides a useful summary of the development of climate science.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)