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Tuesday, June 24th, 2008
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10:28 pm
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| Thursday, June 5th, 2008
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10:52 pm - Fiddle faddle.
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Where do black holes come out? Is that a silly question? Are black holes synonymous with wormholes? What is the connection of black holes with white holes, if those in fact exist?
Lets back up. I'm not sure that a black hole isn't anything more than an abyss of despair but we'll give this a shot. A black hole is an infinitely dense point in space. Anything can become a black hole if you were to magically shrink everyday matter down small enough. When matter is small enough and when it's sufficiently dense it can create enough gravity to suck in everything around it such that nothing can escape it, even light. Black holes are usually formed from collapsing stars and can range in size. There are even theories of mini black holes, which are black holes set on an atomic scale. These are said to be the size of an atom but have tons and tons of mass. Freaky, huh?
So we can detect black holes and we know they exist through careful observation. Where do wormholes come in? A wormhole is generally defined as a bridge that links two points in space that could theoretically allow one to travel faster than the speed of light. Currently there is no evidence for wormholes, but there is also no evidence to disprove them either. So personally I think it's highly likely that it's all a bunch of nonsensical fiddle faddle. Anyway... these would form in the center of a collapsing galaxy so nothing would be able to survive the crushing gravity that has to be involved with the wormhole. I guess it really wouldn't matter if they exist because we'll never be able to even approach the event horizon of one because we would be ripped to shreds by the awesome gravity.
White holes are supposed to be the opposite of black holes. Go figure. In black holes matter and electromagnetic radiation are sucked in and presumably in white holes these things are spewed out. Where does all of this energy come from? I guess the idea is that a white hole is the time reversal of a black hole and it is a point mass that repels matter instead of attracting it. Some people, namely my brother, seem to think that white holes are somehow connected to black holes and everything that is sucked into a black hole is blown out of a corresponding white hole. I'm not sure this would work just because they are two separate point masses. But we don't know anything about white holes, they've never been observed, and the only reason the theory is around is because it solves some obscure equation that has something to do with worm holes (which we also don't know exist).
Could there be a theory to connect these black holes, white holes, and wormholes? Think a-bout, man! As long as we're entertaining mad science we could postulate that matter and energy are crushed down and ripped to shreds by the black hole, transported by the wormhole to the white hole, where it is all jettisoned out back into space. Well why not, right?
So to answer one of my original questions: yes, that is a silly question.
I still have a lot to think about.
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(comment on this)
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| Thursday, May 22nd, 2008
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11:29 pm - The Big Claim.
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I've always loved science. It's why I became an engineer I suppose. I'm not sure why, but theoretical astrophysics has really interested me as of late. The following rant is mere conjecture and is a compilation of many other people's ideas and theories. Read on cautiously.
In the beginning the universe was condensed in a singular point. All of the forces we know today were rolled into one singular energy, one enormously hot point dangling in a great pool of nothingness. When energy is condensed it is very very hot, and upon a single instant (something along the lines of 1e-35 seconds) it was released and began expanding. From then on all the forces of magnetism, gravity, and radiation began to unravel and the universe began to cool and expand. Since that moment 13.7 billion years ago the universe has set to cooling and expanding and forming the celestial bodies, including the lovely home here we all enjoy, to this very day. Matter formation is another science all together, but it was all formed from the heat and energy of the Big Bang. Matter is just frozen energy after all.
We can speculate about this event today through cosmic microwave background radiation. This specific form of radiation is said to be the remnants of the Big Bang and is widely accepted as the main evidentiary support for the theory. These wavelengths are present throughout the universe, simultaneously everywhere and just out of reach. The temperature of this black body hovers just above absolute zero, the state at which atoms stop jitterbugging. If first there was a bang, these universal frequencies would be the echo.
Free of philosophical implications, this event is our eventual creation and will one day be our demise. When will the expansion stop, if ever? It may stop once it reaches some sort of steady state equilibrium that none of us can predict or understand, or it may never stop. Will the universe eventually expand to a breaking point at which time it will be torn apart and the matter that was created in the beginning will come to a halt and cease to be? None of us will ever see the day. Thank goodness?
Stay tune for more wild speculations about the nature of the universe, dark matter, dark energy, relativity, and black holes.
Maybe.
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(comment on this)
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| Wednesday, May 21st, 2008
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11:51 pm - Page 2-3-6.
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Just because you're naked Doesn't mean you're sexy. Just because you're cynical Doesn't mean you're cool. You may tell the greatest lies And wear a brilliant disguise But you can't escape the eyes Of the one who sees right through you.
In the end what will prevail Is your passion not your tale, For love is the Holy Grail, Even in Cognito.
So better listen to me, sister, And pay close attention, mister: It's very good to play the game, Amuse the gods, avoid the pain, But don't trust fortune, don't trust fame, Your real self doesn't know your name And in that we're all the same: We're all incognito.
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(comment on this)
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| Friday, May 2nd, 2008
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10:40 am
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I graduate UCF today!! No more school! I'm done.
Yeah, it's pretty awesome. I start making the big bucks next week, I'm pretty excited about it.
I really hope I don't fall while walking across the stage today, how much would that suck??
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(comment on this)
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| Sunday, April 27th, 2008
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11:54 pm
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| Thursday, April 17th, 2008
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8:45 pm
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| Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008
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12:11 am
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| Sunday, March 30th, 2008
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9:21 am
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My immune system finally caved in. I believe I have the sniffles. It's pretty gross... and plus now I'm going to go and meet with my design group in a computer lab, where I'll undoubtedly sneeze all over everything and everyone.
Come bring me soup.
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(comment on this)
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| Friday, March 28th, 2008
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10:37 am
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Duke got in a fight with an opossum last night. We inadvertently cornered the thing and it hissed and spit until I finally got Duke to listen to me and pulled him away. Those things are mean when they're in a tight spot! I though poor Duke was going to lose an eye!!
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(comment on this)
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| Sunday, February 17th, 2008
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9:15 pm
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| Saturday, February 16th, 2008
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10:11 pm
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BTW, my eyes are brown.
Your Inner Eye Color Is Brown
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You're smart, thoughtful, and the ideal woman for most men
You are kind and easy to trust. Men open up to you like no one else.
It's this inner warmness that attracts guys - and makes you an instant soulmate.
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(comment on this)
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| Sunday, January 27th, 2008
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12:00 am
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Barack Obama just won the South Carolina Primary with a staggering lead. Up until now the three candidates have kind of gone back and forth with votes split up 30-ish% among all from contest to contest, but in this election Obama received more votes than Hillary and John Edwards put together. Over a quarter of a million votes. Amazing.
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(comment on this)
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| Thursday, January 24th, 2008
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9:31 pm - My soapbox.
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"We can no longer afford to build ourselves up by tearing each other down."
Barack Obama on hope, taken from his speech to the congregation of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, Georgia:
"The implication is that if you are hopeful that you somehow must be engaging in wishful thinking, your head must be in the clouds, that you must be passive – just sit back and wait for things to happen to you. That seems to be the implication and so I have to explain to people that’s not what hope is. Hope is not blind optimism. Hope is not ignorance of the barriers and hurdles and hazards that stand in your way. Hope’s just the opposite. I know how hard it will be to provide health care to every single American. Insurance companies and drug companies don’t want to give up their profits. I know it won’t be easy to have an energy policy that makes sense for America because the oil companies like writing the energy bills. I know that alleviating poverty or making sure all our children can learn or eliminating the scourge of racism in our society, none of those things lend themselves to simple solutions.
I don’t believe in false hopes. Imagine if John F. Kennedy had looked up at the moon and said ‘that’s too far - false hopes, we can’t go there.’ If Dr. King had stood on the Lincoln Memorial and said ‘you all go home, we can’t overcome.’ There’s no such thing as false hopes. But what I know deep in my heart is that we can not bring about change unless we are unified, unless we do it together. Change does not happen from the top down in America or anywhere else, it happens from the bottom up. It happens because ordinary people dream extraordinary things."
current mood: hopeful
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(comment on this)
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| Sunday, January 13th, 2008
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10:38 pm
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From MSNBC:
Both New York Sen. Clinton and her husband, the former president, have engaged in damage control this week after black leaders criticized their comments shortly before the New Hampshire primary last Tuesday.
The senator was quoted as saying King's dream of racial equality was realized only when President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, while Bill Clinton said Illinois Sen. Obama was telling a "fairy tale" about his opposition to the Iraq war.
‘Fairy tale’ comment draws fire Former President Clinton has since appeared on several black radio programs to say he was referring to Obama's record on the Iraq war, not on his effort to become the nation's first black president.
At an awards dinner Sunday in Atlanta celebrating black achievement, Michelle Obama said her husband is the person America needs in the White House right now and was critical of anyone who would "dismiss this moment as an illusion, a fairy tale." He is the right candidate "not because of the color of his skin, but because of the quality and consistency of his character," she said.
As evidence the Obama campaign had pushed the story, Clinton advisers pointed to a memo written by an Obama staffer compiling examples of comments by Clinton and her surrogates that could be construed as racially insensitive. The memo later surfaced on a handful of political Web sites. Obama later called Clinton's accusations "ludicrous," and said he found Clinton's comments about King to be ill-advised and unfortunate.
"If Senator Clinton wants to be distracted by the sorts of political point-scoring that was evident today then that is going to be her prerogative," Obama said.
Another rival, John Edwards, added his voice to the chorus of criticism of Clinton's comments about King.
"I must say I was troubled recently to see a suggestion that real change came not through the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King but through a Washington politician. I fundamentally disagree with that," Edwards told more than 200 people gathered at a predominantly black Baptist church in Sumter, S.C.
Later Sunday, the Clinton campaign scrambled to explain comments by one of its top black supporters, BET founder Bob Johnson, that seemed to raise the issue of Obama's admitted teenage drug use.
"I am frankly insulted the Obama campaign would imply that we are so stupid that we would think Hillary and Bill Clinton, who have been deeply and emotionally involved in black issues when Barack Obama was doing something in the neighborhood; I won't say what he was doing, but he said it in his book when they have been involved," Johnson said at an event with Clinton in Columbia, S.C.
In his memoir, "Dreams from My Father," Obama described using marijuana and occasionally sampling cocaine as a youth. He declined to respond directly to Johnson later when asked about it.
"I'm not going to spend all my time running down the other candidates, which seems to be what Senator Clinton has been obsessed with for the last month," Obama said between visits to people's door steps in a Las Vegas neighborhood.
The Clinton campaign later released a statement in which Johnson said his comments referred to Obama's years as a community organizer in Chicago. Is this pettiness what the campaign trail has turned into? No one looks at the issues any more. Personally, I think Hillary is digging herself into a hole by slinging mud instead of focusing on her base.
AKA - Obama 2008, bitches.
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| Monday, January 7th, 2008
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9:49 pm - "That's how we do it in the paper biz."
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So I'm all moved in to my new house!
... Okay, let me back up. I moved. It's a 3/2 house off of University Blvd between Rouse and Dean. It's such a cute house! I don't have any money though ... or cable... and also I'm pirating my wireless internet from my unsuspecting neighbors. I've been watching the Office Season 1 and 2 on DVD. Getting a little bored with it. I think I'm going to move to Seinfeld Season 8 soon.
The kitchen is completely unpacked and set up. It's adorable. The house has vaulted ceilings and I just bought some garden lights for the back yard. There are so many things I need to buy. Is that why I love the idea of moving? Because I get to buy things? Sad but plausible.
Oh hey and Merry Christmas - it's a little late I know, but the sentiment remains true. I got a Garmin (GPS Navigation HOLLA!) and some luggage. Farmin' awesome. So I can pack up and actually know where I'm going.
Work is good. A new guy started on our design team today. I'm worried that he's going to somehow take my spot. I'm doing design exercises tomorrow and I'm afraid there's just a smidgen of a chance that he's going to get to jump in and do it instead. It's irrational but still... enough.
School started today. I had Construction Equipment and Productivity and Geotechnical Engineering today. Construction is SOOOOO unspeakably boring. Geotech is interesting. I'm also taking Surveying and Water Resources Design but haven't been to class yet.
current mood: accomplished current music: sting and the police
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(comment on this)
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| Thursday, December 6th, 2007
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11:31 am
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| Wednesday, December 5th, 2007
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12:04 am
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The weight of lies will bring you down
And follow you to every town
Cause nothing happens here that doesn't happen there
So when you run make sure you run
To something and not away from
Cause lies don't need an aeroplane to chase you down.
So I bought a CD today and it is reallllllllllllllllllly outstandingly great.
Just sayin'
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(comment on this)
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| Monday, December 3rd, 2007
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11:22 pm
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The Avett Brothers are performing on Fridayyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy!!
They'll be at the Social. I need to figure out a way to sneak out of a friend's party to go ...
But where there's a will there's a way!

Bringing back the banjo.
current mood: bouncy
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(comment on this)
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| Wednesday, November 28th, 2007
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11:59 pm
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Okay so I have this professor for Environmental Process Design who is really nice and seems to be genuinely interested and concerned for me doing well in the course ... and I emailed him today because I wanted to get started on the homework problems (which were just for our benefit and not for a grade). He knows I don't have a book, and I reminded him of that fact when I emailed him. He didn't have to respond, but he did and was really cool about it. He attached the homework assignment that I had asked for, but when I opened it up it was just "Problem number yadda yadda from the book," and so on and so forth.
Is that some kind of joke? Because if it is... it's pretty funny. Well it's funny in a nonsensical sort of cosmic kind of way.
Bugger.
Oh and the I hate my life downward spiral has ended. I feel better. Doing well in all of my classes, save for steel structures, which was arguably created by the devil. I'm even thinking about Grad School, which had never really been an option for me before. I think that I'm going to work a lot over the winter break and save some money and prepare for the GRE. Feels good to have a plan.
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