And The Prize Goes To Dark Energy!

October 4, 2011
The Nobel prize committee have just announced that the 2011 prize for physics will go to the two teams that inadvertently discovered dark energy (or at least their leaders).

For those who haven't followed this story, here is a brief review.

Back in 1915 Einstein published his General Theory of Relativity which describes the properties of space, time and gravity. One of its predictions was that the size of the Universe is changing - but Einstein didn't like that so he added an extra term called the Cosmological Constant whose sole purpose was to stop the Universe from growing.

A few years later Hubble discovered that the Universe is expanding, and Einstein felt rather foolish.

Now fast forward to the year 1998. Two teams of astronomers are cataloging distant supernovae (exploding stars) and independently discover that the supernovae are travelling faster away from us than expected. More study and they discover that in fact they are accelerating away.

Many explanations were proposed, but ultimately the only one the withstood further experimental data was that the Universe is not only growing as Einstein predicted and Hubble measured, but it is accelerating in size! (In other terms, the larger it gets, the faster it grows)

The only way to explain this is to either alter the laws of gravity which are valid for all other experiments or to add a large amount of mysterious substance called dark energy. In fact other experiments in the mid 2000s have determined that nearly three quarters of the energy in the Universe is in this dark energy form, but no one can explain what it is. (A leading candidate though is Einstein's Cosmological Constant but with the sign reversed).

So here we are 13 years after the discovery, and more evidence mounts for the existence of dark energy but with still no evidence for what it is. A most interesting mystery, and one that certainly warrants a Nobel Prize for its discoverers!
 

The Four Colour Theorem

October 3, 2011
A couple of days ago I was discussing the four-colour theorem with one of my mathematics students, and I realized that there is some misunderstanding of it even among bright young (amateur) mathematicians. (Not to imply that even older or professional mathematicians don't sometimes misunderstand it as well)

And so I thought I would take this opportunity to give a brief review of some of the overlooked details...

Suppose you take a two-dimensional map (by which I mean a bunch of lines separating...

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Faster Than Light is Not So Bad

September 24, 2011
There has been an article circulating through the popular media which claims physicists at the Large Hadron Collider have observed subatomic particles travelling faster than the speed of light. They claim that this disproves Einstein's theory of relativity, and so are getting a lot of attention. Unfortunately this highlights several flaws in the way scientific results are reported, and perhaps more disturbing proves a lack of physics knowledge by active physicists.

For in spite of the claims m...
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Back To School

September 5, 2011
Some loyal readers will recognize this entry as a repeat from last year. I had requests from some of my readers to repeat it, so I acquiesced to the masses...

To all the students starting University, enjoy this time of your life. Long ago when I started, a prof told me that this is the start of your real education. Now you get to choose your own courses and your own field of study. It is entirely up to you to decide what to do with this chance. 

I know from my own experience that the first days...

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To The Stars!

July 14, 2011
As a species, humans are about to experience an important milestone, although few will make note of it. But in my ongoing efforts to bring science and technology to the masses, I feel it is my duty to celebrate this event.

For the first time in history, a man made object is leaving our solar system. (I refer here of course to a material object - man made radio waves have been travelling into deep space for decades).

The Voyager 1 probe was launched in 1977 to study the outer planets of our sola...

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Blow Your Own Sail

June 27, 2011

I enjoyed tonight's episode of the Discovery program, Mythbusters, as I do every Sunday, but this episode was especially interesting because of a segment on a physics thought experiment called “Blow Your Own Sail”.

This is a very old thought experiment for physics students. Suppose you are in a sailboat on a day with no wind, and there is no motor onboard but there is a large fan. Can you use the fan to blow the sail and propel yourself along?

According to Newtonian physics for every acti...


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To My Students...

June 17, 2011
I posted the following commentary last year at graduation time, and so many people wrote to thank me for it and asking to quote it, that I have decided to re-post it. And every word of it applies just as much to my students this year as the ones last year...

 Today marked the graduation for a number of students who I have tutored or taught in the past, and I want to send out my congratulations. And to thank you for letting me be a small part of that journey.

I know how hard some of you have had...

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Another Era Ends...

June 6, 2011
I just finished watching the final episode of Daily Planet with Jay Ingram, and it made me more than a little nostalgic. ( OK, so maybe the title is a little too dramatic, but in my opinion this show deserves it!).

 For those of you who live outside of Canada, let me start by explaining this show a little. Way back in 1995, when no one had really heard of the Discovery Channel, long before the creation of popular shows like Mythbusters or Dirty Jobs, an idea was formed for a nightly TV show wh...
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Nonmagnetic NMR/MRI?

May 22, 2011
There was an interesting result (at least to physicists and chemists) published this week which could have wide ranging effects on medicine and various other disciplines. Two groups of researchers have done some preliminary work on obtaining Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) without using magnets!

 That might seem rather dull and pedantic to many of you reading this, but allow me to digress for a moment and explain one reason why it is important...

One of the most powerful medical imaging method...
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Who I Am Not, Part 2

May 12, 2011
For those of you who missed the first part, I have been plagued with a very common name. This has led over the years to many confusions of people who think I am someone else. So here is Part 2 of my list of people I Am and Am Not:


  • I AM the alumnus of Tillicum School, Esquimalt Secondary, and the University of Victoria
  • I did publish several video games in the 1980s and 1990s
  • I did operate a computer repair service in the 1990s
  • I did present several results on particles physics and astrophysics in ...

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About Me


Dr. Christopher S. Bird I am a physicist recently graduated from the University of Victoria, with a doctorate in theoretical physics. I also have training in mathematics, engineering and computer programming.

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