Andrew Yee wrote in message m...
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Washington, D.C.
Contact:
Christina Smith, , 202-326-7088
December 18, 2003
Science's breakthrough of the year: Illumination of the dark, expanding universe
Science honors the top ten research advances of 2003
In 2003, new evidence cemented the bizarre idea that the universe is made mostly
of mysterious "dark matter," being stretched apart by an unknown force called
"dark energy." This set of discoveries claims top honors as the Breakthrough of
the Year, named by Science and its publisher, AAAS, the nonprofit science society.
It is a shame! Both the "dark matter" and "dark energy" are nonsenses,
they have no place near the sciences!
[...]
Climate Change Impacts: Global warming was no longer an abstract concept in
2003. Scientists reported melting ice, droughts, decreased plant productivity,
and altered plant and animal behavior.
That is indeed a breakthrough: the same scientists allow to get
here... and still no solution, how to correct the problem...
[...]
Starbursts and Gamma Rays: Scientists improved our understanding of the most
energetic explosions in the universe: tremendous blasts of energy called gamma
ray bursts. Astronomers confirmed the connection between gamma ray bursts and
supernovas -- explosions of massive stars -- when they spotted the unmistakable
fingerprint of a supernova in the glow of a bright gamma ray burst.
Check please: I posted the Daisy-petal graph on my site in 1999,
indicating this connection...
[...]
and studies of the
heavy "bottom" quark.
And that's a lady... Fat bottom lady...
Cheers!
Aladar
http://www.stolmarphysics.com