Linn Bedrok LP12 Plinth Upgrade


mofimadness

@newton_john

It is striking how little progress has been made in fundamental physics since I was at university fifty years ago, despite the huge expenditure incurred. So far, string theory hasn’t produced a single experimentally testable finding. The only tangible result we have is the confirmation of the Higgs Boson which was postulated in the sixties.

I think it depends on how narrowly you define fundamental physics!  The great breakthroughs are best confirmed if seemingly unlikely predictions are discovered later to be true.  It took about 100 years before experimenters discovered the gravity waves predicted by Einstein.  The Standard Model of particle physics was good theory until the predicted Higgs boson was discovered decades later.  Nobody knows if string theory is just a theory, or maybe m-branes fit better?

The Big Bang theory was a nice theory until the predicted cosmic background microwave radiation was accidentally ’discovered’ by researchers who weren’t looking for it, and did not know what it was when they found it!  Did not stop them getting a Nobel prize.

To me the most profound recent development comes from detailed analysis of the fine structure of the cosmic background microwave radiation, which is absolutely uniform to within 1 part in 50,000.  Cosmology has only recently become a hard science, and the fine structure is believed to come from quantum effects in the very early universe, for the first time linking the very large to the very small.  We now have a pretty good handle on the detailed evolution of our universe, and possible multi-verses

We also have another new window into our own evolution, through the mapping of RNA and DNA changes from very early organisms.

I for one am happy with some by-products of pure research, like the www and WiFi.  All thanks in some measure to technicians like your great uncle

@daveyf

The way you took part of my argument out of context and added  "??? LOL. OK."  was glib and disingenuous, not to mention downright rude.

You can add your dear leader with his 20% import tariff to list of middle men pushing up the price of Linn Products in the US. Unless of course he has a last minute change of heart on a British carve out, given the balance of trade between our respective counties.

@richardbrand 

What you point to is all amazing technological progress of which we can be proud. My point was that it is all based on physical principles that were already established when we were young.

As far as expanding our knowledge of these physical principles go, I find progress to be disappointing, especially given the huge resources expended. We have a lot of unanswered questions. 

Maybe like at the start of the twentieth century, we are on the threshold of some amazing new breakthroughs and a new golden age of physics. Alternatively, physics may become a dead science - I certainly hope this is not the case. 

 

@newton_john

between our respective counties

Hope that was a typo, though the good folk in the state of Canada will be watching closely.  Australia buys much more from the US than it exports to the US at the moment, but no reprieve for us!

There are reports that Canada is about to purchase our Jindalee over-the-horizon radar (it bounces radar off the ionosphere to pick up unwanted visitors in very remote regions).  Not sure which direction they will be pointing it in!

@newton_john

Maybe like at the start of the twentieth century

A lot of physicists at that time thought there was nothing new to discover - all that was left was measuring things more accurately.  Mind you, they had no idea what powered the sun.  Then in the greatest failed experiment of all time, Michelson and Morley failed to measure the drift of the presumed aether enabling light waves. The speed of light was the same, no matter how fast you were moving towards or from the thing you were looking at.  Then radioactivity raised its ugly head ...

... maybe there's not much fundamental physics left to discover - apart from what consciousness is, and dark matter, and dark energy.  Our picture of the world is dramatically different from 100 years ago, and today we can see back about 14-billion years though we cannot see past our event horizon.