The most comprehensive assessment of the energy output in the nearby universe reveals that today's produced energy is only about half of what it was 2 billion years ago. A team of international scientists used several of the world's most powerful telescopes to study the energy of the universe and concluded that the universe is slowly dying.
"We used as many space- and ground-based telescopes as we could get our hands on to measure the energy output of over 200,000 galaxies across as broad a wavelength range as possible," Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) team leader Simon Driver, of the University of Western Australia, said in a statement. The astronomers created a video explaining the slow death of the universe to illustrate the discovery.
A chance to roll out your cosmology humor...
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 14 2015, @01:01AM
When you're talking particles, they don't sink down. There is a whole research area having to do with this. Not surprisingly, the cereal manufacturers research this because they want their raisins or marshmallow bits to be uniformly distributed. Turns out if you put big heavy objects in with a bunch of little light objects and shake it up, the big heavy objects rise to the top.
Let it be two different kinds of rice anyways. They aren't going to separate themselves. As for the red bead comments, 10 +/- 1 is well within the error to support my argument. OP was claiming that you pulled from such a small sample that you can't make any valid claims.