César Guerra (@cesar__guerra) 's Twitter Profile
César Guerra

@cesar__guerra

Explorando por aquí y por allá, destilando lo que parece ser cierto.

ID: 336410444

calendar_today16-07-2011 07:29:07

75 Tweet

111 Followers

705 Following

literland (@literlandweb1) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Shahin_Sepehrri, un estudiante de cine, ha elaborado este maravilloso vídeo, a ritmo del vals compuesto por Henry Mancini para "El prisionero de Zenda". Disfrutadlo, es una belleza.

Mario Livio (@mario_livio) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This stunning image of the galaxy M104 (the "Sombrero Galaxy") is a composite taken by the NASASpitzer and Hubble Space Telescope space telescopes. The galaxy is about 28 million light-years away.

This stunning image of the galaxy M104 (the "Sombrero Galaxy") is a composite taken by the <a href="/NasaSpitzer/">NASASpitzer</a> and <a href="/HubbleTelescope/">Hubble Space Telescope</a> space telescopes. The galaxy is about 28 million light-years away.
Quanta Magazine (@quantamagazine) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In 2018, the European spacecraft Gaia released a years-long dataset describing the detailed motions of roughly a billion stars. Astronomers rushed to analyze the data, which is now spinning a new story about the formation of our galaxy. quantamagazine.org/the-new-histor…

Ethan Siegel (@startswithabang) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Why Do Physicists Say A Multiverse Has To Exist? forbes.com/sites/startswi… Have you ever wondered why physicists seem to take the existence of the multiverse for granted? We might not ever be able to observe it, but it's clearly predicted by our best theories.

The Nobel Prize (@nobelprize) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"When I ask myself, 'Who are the happiest people on the planet?' my answer is, 'Those who can't wait to wake up in the morning to get back to what they were doing the day before.'" - 1980 Physics Laureate and particle physicist James Cronin. #HappinessDay

"When I ask myself, 'Who are the happiest people on the planet?' my answer is, 'Those who can't wait to wake up in the morning to get back to what they were doing the day before.'" 

- 1980 Physics Laureate and particle physicist James Cronin.

#HappinessDay
Fortran (@fortranlang) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"This dinosaur is back in the top 20 after more than 10 years. Fortran was the first commercial programming language ever, and is gaining popularity thanks to the massive need for (scientific) number crunching. Welcome back Fortran," says Tiobe. zdnet.com/article/this-o…

Dr. Claire Lee (@claire_lee) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Two weeks ago LHCb Experiment announced their interesting new Rk results, and today we're eagerly awaiting the new #gminus2 results from Fermilab. But what does this mean, and why are physicists #CautiouslyExcited? PART 1: The Standard Model, Sigmas, and Hunting for Dragons 1/

Two weeks ago <a href="/LHCbExperiment/">LHCb Experiment</a> announced their interesting new Rk results, and today we're eagerly awaiting the new #gminus2 results from <a href="/Fermilab/">Fermilab</a>. But what does this mean, and why are physicists #CautiouslyExcited?

PART 1: The Standard Model, Sigmas, and Hunting for Dragons

1/
Sean Carroll (@seanmcarroll) 's Twitter Profile Photo

All of the Nobel Prizes in Physics for which general relativity played an absolutely crucial role. Einstein's theory is belatedly becoming central to modern physics. 1978 (CMB) 1993 (binary pulsar) 2011 (cosmic acceleration) 2017 (grav. waves) 2019 (cosmology) 2020 (black holes)

Ciencia Infusa (@ciencia__infusa) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Un cubo equilibrado mediante tres ruedas de reacción, que se utilizan en satélites para corregir su actitud mediante el principio de acción-reacción: al rotar en un sentido, provocan un movimiento opuesto

Cliff Pickover (@pickover) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"There are odors that dogs can smell and we cannot... there are wavelengths of light we cannot see.... Why then... does the remark, 'Perhaps there are thoughts we cannot think,' surprise you?" ~Richard Hamming, The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics, 1980

"There are odors that dogs can smell and we cannot... there are wavelengths of light we cannot see.... Why then... does the remark, 'Perhaps there are thoughts we cannot think,' surprise you?"

~Richard Hamming, The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics, 1980