Not exact matches
In advancing these
theories they disregard factors universally admitted by all scientists — that in the initial period
of the «birth»
of the universe, conditions
of temperature, atmospheric pressure,
radioactivity, and a host
of other catalytic factors were totally different than those existing presently, including the fact that we don't know how single atoms or their components would bind and consolidate, which involved totally unknown processes and variables, as single atoms behave far differently than conglomerations
of atoms.
Isaac Newton the Newtonian Revolution Anglican William Harvey Circulation
of the Blood Anglican Charles Darwin Evolution Anglican; Unitarian Christiaan Huygens the Wave
Theory of Light Calvinist Leonard Euler Eighteenth - Century Mathematics Calvinist Alexander Fleming Penicillin Catholic Andreas Vesalius the New Anatomy Catholic Antoine Laurent Lavoisier the Revolution in Chemistry Catholic Enrico Fermi Atomic Physics Catholic Erwin Schrodinger Wave Mechanics Catholic Galileo Galilei the New Science Catholic Louis Pasteur the Germ
Theory of Disease Catholic Marcello Malpighi Microscopic Anatomy Catholic Marie Curie
Radioactivity Catholic Gregor Mendel the Laws
of Inheritance Catholic (Augustinian monk) Nicolaus Copernicus the Heliocentric Universe Catholic (priest) Carl Linnaeus the Binomial Nomenclature Christianity Anton van Leeuwenhoek the Simple Microscope Dutch Reformed Albert Einstein Twentieth - Century Science Jewish Claude Levi - Strauss Structural Anthropology Jewish Edward Teller the Bomb Jewish Franz Boas Modern Anthropology Jewish Hans Bethe the Energy
of the Sun Jewish J. Robert Oppenheimer the Atomic Era Jewish Jonas Salk Vaccination Jewish Karl Landsteiner the Blood Groups Jewish Lynn Margulis Symbiosis
Theory Jewish Murray Gell - Mann the Eightfold Way Jewish Paul Ehrlich Chemotherapy Jewish Richard Feynman Quantum Electrodynamics Jewish Sheldon Glashow the Discovery
of Charm Jewish William Herschel the Discovery
of the Heavens Jewish John von Neumann the Modern Computer Jewish Catholic Max Born Quantum Mechanics Jewish Lutheran Neils Bohr the Atom Jewish Lutheran Carl Gauss (Karl Friedrich Gauss) Mathematical Genius Lutheran Johannes Kepler Motion
of the Planets Lutheran Linus Pauling Twentieth - Century Chemistry Lutheran Tycho Brahe the New Astronomy Lutheran Werner Heisenberg Quantum
Theory Lutheran James Clerk Maxwell the Electromagnetic Field Presbyterian; Anglican; Baptist Max Planck the Quanta Protestant Arthur Eddington Modern Astronomy Quaker John Dalton the
Theory of the Atom Quaker Theodosius Dobzhansky the Modern Synthesis Russian Orthodox Trofim Lysenko Soviet Genetics Russian Orthodox Michael Faraday the Classical Field
Theory Sandemanian
It successfully explained phenomena such as
radioactivity and antimatter, and no other
theory can match its description
of how light and particles behave on small scales.
You can view videos
of some past Perimeter physics lectures below: Strange, Dense Matter: The Power
of Neutron Stars [Video] How
Radioactivity Can Benefit Your Health [Video] The Promise
of Optical Atomic Clocks: Watch Live Wednesday [Video] The Astonishing Simplicity
of Everything [Video] The Man Who Explained the Atom [Video] The Future
of Cosmology [Video] The Upgraded LHC and the Search for the Higgs Boson [Video] String
Theory LEGOs for Black Holes [Video]
Observations
of these new
radioactivities have illuminated
theories of nuclear dynamics
In it they would seek the elusive «dark matter» whose gravity binds the galaxies, a type
of radioactivity that would blur the line between matter and antimatter, and protons falling apart as predicted by some particle
theories.
The current evolutionary
theory for earth's
radioactivity, first proposed in 1952, has the big bang producing only hydrogen, helium, and a trace
of lithium.