1. The
Horizon
It is believed that our universe is 14 billion years old,
and the age within its end points, which can be observed, is 28 billion years.
It was found that the temperature of the background radiation is the same
everywhere. To reach this temperature, it would require expansion of the
universe to its current size in 10-33 seconds! Did this actually happen?
Uniform “heating” remains an anomaly for science.
2.
Belfast homeopathy results
Pharmacologist Madeleine Ennis decided to prove the absolute
falsehood of homeopathy, but instead came up with a stunning result: no matter
how much a solution with a certain drug is diluted, it continues to have
medicinal properties. Even when it is contrary to common sense, when not a
single drug molecule is left in the solution. Or maybe some undetectable traces
of the drug.
3. Dark
Matter
The phenomenon of gravity is described in detail in every
physics textbook. But textbooks do not reveal the fact that if scientific
theories are correct, the universe may fall apart. This is because spinning
galaxies do not have enough mass for their gravitational attraction, which
would create centripetal forces. Where is an explanation for this discrepancy?
Perhaps there is “dark matter”, which could account for 90% of the mass of the
universe, but it has not been found yet.
4.
Martian Methane
If the soil on Mars emits methane, then there must be life
present. But despite the CH4 is present, there is no life. Devices sent to Mars
from Earth have proven this, not a single organic molecule was detected.
Scientists have one more opportunity to find life by finding “chiral” molecules and measuring their ratios. If the
proportion of right-handed molecules is greater than the
proportion of left-handed molecules, life on the red planet may
exist. Or existed in the past.
5. Dark
Energy
In 1998 it became known that the universe is expanding at an
increasing rate. But according to the postulates of modern physics, the rate
must be declining. One possible explanation is dark energy which we really do not know much about.
6. A
signal from space
In 1977, the American astronomer Jerry R. Ehman recorded an
unusual signal from the Sagittarius constellation which was 37 seconds in
duration. The radiation surge had a narrow frequency band of around 1420 MHz.
All transmissions of this frequency are prohibited by the international
agreement. Natural sources of radiation have much broader frequency bands. This
mysterious source of the signal remains unknown.
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