Category Archives: — By the Physicist

Q: Why does oxygen necessarily indicate the presence of life?

Physicist: Short answer: Life is the only thing that makes lots of oxygen. This question comes in the context of a conversation about the Kepler mission.  So far (as of January 11, 2010) 424 “exoplanets” have been discovered and confirmed … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Astronomy, Biology, Physics | 3 Comments

Q: What’s the relationship between entropy in the information-theory sense and the thermodynamics sense?

Physicist: The term “Entropy” shows up both in thermodynamics and information theory, so (since thermodynamics called dibs), I’ll call thermodynamic entropy “entropy”, and information theoretic entropy “information”. I can’t think of a good way to demonstrate intuitively that entropy and … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Entropy/Information, Equations, Math, Philosophical, Physics | 12 Comments

Q: Would it be possible to kill ALL of Earth’s life with nuclear bombs?

Physicist: Probably not.  We could kill all of the large (insects and up) life no problem.  Hell, we’re doing all right by mistake so far.  There are about 30,000 nuclear weapons in the world today, so in what follows I’ll … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Biology, Physics | 20 Comments

Q: Will black holes ever release their energy and will we be able to tell what had gone into them?

Physicist: In any reasonable sense the answer to both of these questions is a dull “nope”.  In theory however, the answer is an excitable “yup”! Blackholes lose energy through “Hawking Radiation”, which is a surprising convergence of general relativity, quantum … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Astronomy, Entropy/Information, Physics, Quantum Theory | 4 Comments

Q: How far away is the edge of the universe?

Physicist: If you ever hear a physicist talking about “the edge of the universe”, what they probably mean is “the edge of the visible universe”.  The oldest light (from the most distant sources) is around 15 billion years old.  Through … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Astronomy, Physics, Relativity | 79 Comments

Q: Why do superconductors have to be cold?

Physicist: The long answer is really, really long.  Superconductivity comes in a variety of different forms, and there’s a different explanation for each.  To sum them up in a thumbnail sketch of a thumbnail sketch: In conductors, the primary cause … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Physics, Quantum Theory | 5 Comments