Tag Archives: universe

Meet Miss Israel

In February 2013 Ethiopian-born Yiytish Aynaw became the first woman of African descent to be named Miss Israel.In February 2013 Ethiopian-born Yiytish Aynaw became the first woman of African descent to be named Miss Israel.

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Beauty queen Yityish Aynaw

Beauty queen Yityish Aynaw

Beauty queen Yityish Aynaw

Beauty queen Yityish Aynaw

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African Voices is a weekly show that highlights Africa’s most engaging personalities, exploring the lives and passions of people who rarely open themselves up to the camera. Follow the team on Twitter.

(CNN) — At just 21 years old, Yityish Aynaw has gone on a remarkable life journey from a little girl playing barefoot in an Ethiopian village to an Israeli beauty queen who’s ready to shine on the world stage.

Last February, the stunning 21-year-old grabbed international attention after becoming the first woman of African descent to be crowned Miss Israel at the country’s beauty pageant.

“To be first, you have all the attention focused on you and I have to represent my whole ethnic group because through me they see the models,” says Aynaw, who will represent Israel at the next Miss Universe contest. “Through me they see and discover our whole ethnic group.”

Read this: Darfur’s amazing street fashion

Aynaw was born in Chahawit, a small village in northern Ethiopia, near the city of Gondar. Her father died when she was young and when she was just 12 years old she lost her mother to a painful illness. Heartbroken, she arrived in Israel with her brother to live with their Ethiopian Jewish grandparents.

“The journey was, I think, what saved me,” she says. “Because I was deeply hurt and I wanted to escape from Ethiopia and forget everything that had happened and get on with it,” she adds. “I wanted to break away from everything and go on.”

While still a child, Aynaw was suddenly faced with a new language, a new culture and all the rest of challenges that come with starting a new life in a foreign country.

Like the estimated 125,000 Ethiopian Jews who have gone in waves over the years to Israel, Aynaw experienced the same struggle to assimilate into her new environment. But Aynaw threw herself at it, not shying away from all that her adopted country expected of her, including mastering Hebrew and serving in the Israeli army after school.

“It is three of the most significant years in my life,” says Aynaw about her time in the military. “There I learned a lot about myself; there I developed,” she adds. “I was a girl of 19 and the army gave me structure.”

Read this: The African beauty empowering women

After finishing her army service, Aynaw started working as a sales clerk in a clothing store. Tall and beautiful, she long had her eye on becoming a model but she never thought about taking part in a pageant. Instead, it was a friend of hers who entered her name into the Miss Israel competition.

“We were always laughing about it,” says Aynaw, who also goes by the nickname Titi. “I’d not registered during the time of my studies because I was really busy — the army is the army, I couldn’t. So when I ended she said to me ‘you have got no more excuses and I am going to register you.’”

I want to give my kids the experience I never had. That is my great dream.
Yityish Aynaw, Miss Israel

Her win in February changed her life instantly. Within a matter of weeks, her name and image were splashed across newspapers and websites, both in Israel and abroad.

The publicity also caught the attention of one of her heroes: Aynaw was invited to an exclusive state dinner for Barack Obama in honor of his first visit to Israel as U.S. president.

“This was an incredible moment,” she says. “He was a figure that I want to emulate. I did a project on him in school and I knew what he had been through and what he had done. He was like a mentor for me, so to meet him and say hello, it was like closing a circle.”

Aynaw says she had never expected something like this would happen to her.

“Suddenly I thought about the little girl who had suffered and the little girl whose only dream was to run and play the whole day. The pain I went through; I saw it all,” she says.

Read this: Designer takes African colors to America’s Deep South

As the first ever black Miss Israel, Aynaw is seen by some as a beacon of hope that racial prejudice is beginning to fade away in the country. Aynaw says that she’s never been the victim of racism but adds that there have been instances where friends of hers have been treated differently because of the color of their skin.

“I am aware of the feeling, even if it did not happen to me,” she says. “I know it [racism] exists in the country and the whole world,” adds Aynaw. “It is something that has to be dispelled.”

A pained little girl who has turned into a strong young woman, Aynaw is now hoping to carve out a successful career in fashion and also serve as a role model for her community.

And although her future seems set to be filled with glamorous days, Aynaw says ultimately her formula for a happy life rests on one thing.

“I have always dreamed of having a big family, a big house and a lot of kids,” she says. “I want to give my kids the experience I never had. That is my great dream.”

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Meet Miss Israel

Yityish Aynaw: The first black Miss Israel

In February 2013 Ethiopian-born Yiytish Aynaw became the first woman of African descent to be named Miss Israel.In February 2013 Ethiopian-born Yiytish Aynaw became the first woman of African descent to be named Miss Israel.

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Beauty queen Yityish Aynaw

Beauty queen Yityish Aynaw

Beauty queen Yityish Aynaw

Beauty queen Yityish Aynaw

Beauty queen Yityish Aynaw

Beauty queen Yityish Aynaw

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African Voices is a weekly show that highlights Africa’s most engaging personalities, exploring the lives and passions of people who rarely open themselves up to the camera. Follow the team on Twitter.

(CNN) — At just 21 years old, Yityish Aynaw has gone on a remarkable life journey from a little girl playing barefoot in an Ethiopian village to an Israeli beauty queen who’s ready to shine on the world stage.

Last February, the stunning 21-year-old grabbed international attention after becoming the first woman of African descent to be crowned Miss Israel at the country’s beauty pageant.

“To be first, you have all the attention focused on you and I have to represent my whole ethnic group because through me they see the models,” says Aynaw, who will represent Israel at the next Miss Universe contest. “Through me they see and discover our whole ethnic group.”

Read this: Darfur’s amazing street fashion

Aynaw was born in Chahawit, a small village in northern Ethiopia, near the city of Gondar. Her father died when she was young and when she was just 12 years old she lost her mother to a painful illness. Heartbroken, she arrived in Israel with her brother to live with their Ethiopian Jewish grandparents.

“The journey was, I think, what saved me,” she says. “Because I was deeply hurt and I wanted to escape from Ethiopia and forget everything that had happened and get on with it,” she adds. “I wanted to break away from everything and go on.”

While still a child, Aynaw was suddenly faced with a new language, a new culture and all the rest of challenges that come with starting a new life in a foreign country.

Like the estimated 125,000 Ethiopian Jews who have gone in waves over the years to Israel, Aynaw experienced the same struggle to assimilate into her new environment. But Aynaw threw herself at it, not shying away from all that her adopted country expected of her, including mastering Hebrew and serving in the Israeli army after school.

“It is three of the most significant years in my life,” says Aynaw about her time in the military. “There I learned a lot about myself; there I developed,” she adds. “I was a girl of 19 and the army gave me structure.”

Read this: The African beauty empowering women

After finishing her army service, Aynaw started working as a sales clerk in a clothing store. Tall and beautiful, she long had her eye on becoming a model but she never thought about taking part in a pageant. Instead, it was a friend of hers who entered her name into the Miss Israel competition.

“We were always laughing about it,” says Aynaw, who also goes by the nickname Titi. “I’d not registered during the time of my studies because I was really busy — the army is the army, I couldn’t. So when I ended she said to me ‘you have got no more excuses and I am going to register you.’”

I want to give my kids the experience I never had. That is my great dream.
Yityish Aynaw, Miss Israel

Her win in February changed her life instantly. Within a matter of weeks, her name and image were splashed across newspapers and websites, both in Israel and abroad.

The publicity also caught the attention of one of her heroes: Aynaw was invited to an exclusive state dinner for Barack Obama in honor of his first visit to Israel as U.S. president.

“This was an incredible moment,” she says. “He was a figure that I want to emulate. I did a project on him in school and I knew what he had been through and what he had done. He was like a mentor for me, so to meet him and say hello, it was like closing a circle.”

Aynaw says she had never expected something like this would happen to her.

“Suddenly I thought about the little girl who had suffered and the little girl whose only dream was to run and play the whole day. The pain I went through; I saw it all,” she says.

Read this: Designer takes African colors to America’s Deep South

As the first ever black Miss Israel, Aynaw is seen by some as a beacon of hope that racial prejudice is beginning to fade away in the country. Aynaw says that she’s never been the victim of racism but adds that there have been instances where friends of hers have been treated differently because of the color of their skin.

“I am aware of the feeling, even if it did not happen to me,” she says. “I know it [racism] exists in the country and the whole world,” adds Aynaw. “It is something that has to be dispelled.”

A pained little girl who has turned into a strong young woman, Aynaw is now hoping to carve out a successful career in fashion and also serve as a role model for her community.

And although her future seems set to be filled with glamorous days, Aynaw says ultimately her formula for a happy life rests on one thing.

“I have always dreamed of having a big family, a big house and a lot of kids,” she says. “I want to give my kids the experience I never had. That is my great dream.”

See original article here:  

Yityish Aynaw: The first black Miss Israel

Wemo Labs releases Superfugu, an iPad kids game to go with its online underwater universe

pufferfish 520x245 Wemo Labs releases Superfugu, an iPad kids game to go with its online underwater universe

Wemo Labs has released Superfugu, an iPad game for children that draws from theBlu, the massively multiplayer online underwater universe that it has been creating.

Superfugu follows a fugu pufferfish that has been tasked with helping save other sea creatures and protecting a reef. Players use the touchscreen to guide the fugu and will collect different species of sea creatures. The free game comes with an educational component as it teaches children about the different marine life. Parents can add on parental controls that include reports on kids’ performance and limits on in-app purchases and playing time.

 Wemo Labs releases Superfugu, an iPad kids game to go with its online underwater universe

While Superfugu might just seem like another semi-educational kids’ game, the interesting part is that it’s tied-in to theBlu’s universe.

According to CEO Neville Spiteri, WeMo created theBlu in 2011 as a proof of concept of the “next-generation immersive entertainment experiences” that the company had set out to build.

TheBlu has two parts to it: a story engine and a maker platform. The story engine draws from movies, story telling, game design and the social Web to create the “high-fidelity immersive experiences”. The maker platform crowdsources content by incentivizing designers to contribute to the universe.

WeMo started with an underwater theme, calling upon creators to develop marine species. ”Think of it as Wikipedia meets content creation,” Spiteri said.

Unlike other virtual worlds such as Second Life, WeMo focuses on “maker-generated” instead of user-generated content. That is to say, designing a species requires 3D artist and animation experience, so it’s not for everyone.

TheBlu, which Spiteri refers to as a “digital field trip,” is currently in live beta. In the future, the company could add new themes to the experience, such as space (theBlack?) and forests or jungles (theGreen?). Makers will have a say in deciding where the community heads to next.

While theBlu has attracted partnerships from educational institutions and the Smithsonian, its gameplay hasn’t exactly been kid-friendly up to this point. Superfugu for iPad fills the gap by creating a simple game experience for kids that pulls from theBlu’s crowdsourced content. The game is targeted a children aged 6-12 and has apparently tested quite well with focus groups.

superfugu 2 520x390 Wemo Labs releases Superfugu, an iPad kids game to go with its online underwater universe

The Superfugu characters are reminiscent of Pixar’s Finding Nemo world, but young players will probably view that as a plus.

In fact, Spiteri cited Second Life, Spore, Myst, Twitter and Pixar as influences for theBlu and SuperFugu.

However, he said he doesn’t expect the next Pixar to emerge from cities like Emeryville or Burbank. Instead, he believes it’ll form on the Web as makers around the world curate and crowdsource new content.

“We’re looking at [theBlu] more as a talent pool,” he added.

Makers are rewarded for their efforts with 25 percent of the sale when players purchase their creations.

Beyond money, Spiteri highlighted three reasons that artists have taken to the platform. The strongest has been discovery, meaning the opportunity for artists to share their work. Makers have also enjoyed the peer community that has arisen as designers post tips and tricks on forums. In addition, WeMo Labs has several Academy Award winners on board that serve as a curation board to provide valuable direct feedback to creators.

theblu 730x410 Wemo Labs releases Superfugu, an iPad kids game to go with its online underwater universe

“We have a group of makers who are convinced that this is going to be a viable [financial] option for them,” Spiteri said. “It’s not there today because we’re still in beta, but we feel that we’re at the tip of the iceberg.”

The social aspect of theBlu has spawned a range of different connections between people. Spiteri says artists have teamed up with scientists to create biologically accurate species, and users have requested specific sea creatures from the community. Schools have even had students participate, earning college credits to create species.

The LA-based startup has raised a total of $4.5 million across two angel rounds. Investors include Leo Spiegel and Digital Garage. The company recently brought Anthony Batt, the founder of Buzz Media, on board as a co-founder.

I spent a few minutes trying out theBlu and found it to be a calming experience. I’ve been waiting a while for more immersive experiences that take advantage of all the new technology that’s coming out. If you’re reading this, Superfugu probably wasn’t created for you, but rest assured that they’ve got something downriver that is bound to float your boat.

Superfugu | App Store

Header image credit: iStockphoto

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Wemo Labs releases Superfugu, an iPad kids game to go with its online underwater universe

Google Play gets 500+ issues of Archie, Sonic, and Mega Man comics in the US, $0.99 each for a limited time

Google on Monday announced a nice addition to the US version of Google Play: over 500 issues, digests, and digital exclusives of Archie Comics. For those who don’t know, that encompasses more than just the Archie family; it also includes the Sonic Universe and Mega Man.

To celebrate the launch and promote the new additions, Google has decided to offer each and every one of the comics for just $0.99. The deal is only available “for a limited time,” so if you want to expand your digital collection, there’s no time like the present:

archie Google Play gets 500+ issues of Archie, Sonic, and Mega Man comics in the US, $0.99 each for a limited time

As all of Google Play’s content, these issues will work whether you’re access them from the Web, or your Android device (phones or tablets supported). Unfortunately, the US-limitation means most users won’t be able to access them.

Google has not revealed when it plans to offer the comics to those outside the US. In fact, the company also didn’t say how much these comics would be going for at their regular price (though some could go as high as $15 if this Marvel Comics issue is any indication).

More to follow.

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Google Play gets 500+ issues of Archie, Sonic, and Mega Man comics in the US, $0.99 each for a limited time

Big Bang snap tells us about evolution

This map shows the light from 380,000 years after the Big Bang in our universe, called the cosmic microwave background, detected by the Planck mission with the greatest precision yet. This map shows the light from 380,000 years after the Big Bang in our universe, called the cosmic microwave background, detected by the Planck mission with the greatest precision yet.

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The universe’s first light

The universe’s first light

The universe’s first light

The universe’s first light

The universe’s first light

The universe’s first light

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Editor’s note: Follow @CNNLightYears on Twitter

(CNN) — How cute was our universe as a baby? We now know better than ever: The picture of our early universe just got sharper and tells scientists with greater precision many important facts about how the universe evolved.

This new photogenic moment, released Thursday, comes courtesy of the European Space Agency’s Planck space telescope, which detects cosmic microwave background radiation — the light left over from the Big Bang. Scientists used data from Planck to create an artificially colored map of temperature variations across the sky in the early universe, in more detail than ever before.

“It’s a big deal,” said Charles Lawrence, Planck project scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, in a news briefing. He added, “We can tie together a whole range of phenomena that couldn’t be tied together so well before, and the sum total of that, the impact, is felt in many, many ways.”

The light is technically from 380,000 years after the Big Bang, but that’s still infancy when you consider that, according to the new data, the age of the universe is about 13.8 billion years.

“By the matching observations from Planck to predictions from models, we can assemble a surprisingly detailed picture of the universe as it was one nano-nano-nano-nanosecond after the Big Bang,” said Marc Kamionkowski, professor of physics and astronomy at John Hopkins University.

Kamionkowski compared the Planck map to the Human Genome Project in terms of its importance for cosmology.

After analyzing the new data, scientists now believe that the universe is about 100 million years older than they thought.

The universe’s light started out as a white hot glow and would have been blindingly bright if anyone had been around to see it, Lawrence said.

But since the Big Bang, that hot light has cooled significantly, and the universe itself has expanded by a factor of 1,100. The light has cooled so much that we can’t see it, but Planck can detect subtle variations in temperature, which give scientists a wealth of information. By subtle, we mean about one-hundred-millionth of a degree.

The colors in the temperature map image that scientists released Thursday were arbitrarily chosen to show these intensity variations, Lawrence said. Red means a little bit warmer than average, blue means cooler than average, and white is average.

Planck data also suggest that our universe has more dark matter than previously thought. A full 26.8% appears to be dark matter, an invisible phenomenon that scientists have only been able to detect indirectly; experiments both in space and at the Large Hadron Collider are hoping to pin it down.

How particle smasher and space telescopes relate

It appears that ordinary matter — all of the stuff that we can see, such as planets and stars — makes up only 4.9% of all the universe.

The rest of the universe is an even more mysterious phenomenon called dark energy, which has also never been detected and appears to be in less abundance than researchers thought.

Scientists said the rate at which the universe is expanding, based on these observations, is 67.15 kilometers per second per megaparsec, a unit of vast distance in space (1 megaparsec = 3.3 million light years). That’s significantly less than what had been calculated previously (73.8 km/sec/Mpc). This number, known as the Hubble constant, describes the acceleration of the stretching of spacetime.

The discrepancy between these Hubble constants will likely attract a lot of attention in the scientific community and is one of the most exciting parts of the new data, said Martin White, a scientist with the Planck mission based at the University of California, Berkeley.

“The hope would be that this is actually pointing toward some deficiency in the models, or some extra physics that we’re not aware of, and maybe spark a whole new research direction,” White said.

One theory that could be explored is that the nature of dark energy, which scientists think is causing the accelerated expansion of the universe, is different from the simplest human-calculated models. Is dark energy increasing with time over some volume of space? That’s a radical theory, though, White said, and there are other possibilities.

Another anomaly of these results is that temperature fluctuations are not uniform across the sky map. There are more variations in one direction than in another.

“Perhaps we could say that our universe has thrown us a curve ball, and it rarely fails to surprise us,” said Krzysztof Gorski, Planck scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

Scientists ran 10 million computer simulations and chose from among them the best match to the new data, White said. Out of those, they found a good match describing important statistics about the universe.

The Planck telescope is aboard a spacecraft that launched in May 2009. It is not circling the Earth but orbits a point in the Sun-Earth system called the second Lagrange point.

The Planck mission helps to nail down many of the parameters that other experiments must know to explore aspects of the universe, such as its expansion history, White said.

New analyses are based on the first 15.5 months of data from this mission, which is run principally by the European Space Agency. NASA is a partner of the project.

Planck represents the third generation of attempts to map the cosmic microwave background. The first was COBE, launched in 1989, followed by WMAP, launched in 2001. Comparing the resulting maps shows just how much better the maps have gotten with each successive satellite.

“This is a beautiful illustration of how science works,” Lawrence said. “Make a measurement, learn from it, make a better measurement, learn from it.”

More space and science news from CNN Light Years

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Big Bang snap tells us about evolution

Ancient afterglow of Big Bang shows older universe

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(AP) — New results from a look into the split second after the Big Bang indicate the universe is a bit older than previously thought but the core concepts of the cosmos — how it began, what it’s made of and where it’s going — seem to be on the right track.

The findings bolster a key theory called inflation, which says the universe burst from subatomic size to its now-observable expanse in a fraction of a second.

George Esfthathiou, an astrophysicist who announced the Planck satellite mapping on Thursday, says the findings also offer new specificity of the universe’s composition. He says it is made up of slightly more ordinary matter and less of the mysterious dark matter and dark energy.

Associated Press

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Ancient afterglow of Big Bang shows older universe

Universe ages 80M years; Big Bang gets clearer

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(AP) — New results from a look into the split second after the Big Bang indicate the universe is 80 million years older than previously thought but the core concepts of the cosmos — how it began, what it’s made of and where it’s going — seem to be on the right track.

The findings released Thursday bolster a key theory called inflation, which says the universe burst from subatomic size to its now-observable expanse in a fraction of a second.

The Big Bang is the most comprehensive theory of the universe’s beginning. According to it, the visible portion of the universe was smaller than an atom and in a split second it exploded, cooled and expanded rapidly, much faster than the speed of light.

The European Space Agency’s Planck space probe looked back at the afterglow of the Big Bang, and those results have now added about 80 million years to the universe’s age, putting it 13.81 billion years old.

The probe also found that the cosmos is expanding a bit slower than originally thought, has a little less of that mysterious dark energy than astronomers figured, and a tad more normal matter. But scientists say those are small changes in calculations about the cosmos, nothing dramatic when dealing with numbers so massive.

“We’ve uncovered a fundamental truth of the universe,” said George Esfthathiou, director of the Kavli Institute for Cosmology at the University of Cambridge who announced the Planck satellite mapping. “There’s less stuff that we don’t understand by a tiny amount.”

The $900 million Planck space telescope was launched in 2009. It has spent 15 1/2 months mapping the sky, examining light fossils and sound echoes from the Big Bang by looking at the background radiation in the cosmos. The device is expected to keep transmitting data until late 2013, when it runs out of cooling fluid.

Outside scientists said this result confirms on a universal scale what the announcement earlier this month by a different European group confirmed on a subatomic scale — that they had found the Higgs boson particle which explains mass in the universe.

“What a wonderful triumph of the mathematical approach to describing nature,” said Brian Greene, a Columbia University physicist who was not part of the new research. “It’s an amazing story of discovery.”

Associated Press

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Universe ages 80M years; Big Bang gets clearer

Serials Solutions kündigt Summon 2.0 an

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Serials Solutions kündigt Summon 2.0 an

‘God particle’

A proton-proton collision produced in the Large Hadron Collider shows characteristics in line with the decay of a Higgs boson particle.A proton-proton collision produced in the Large Hadron Collider shows characteristics in line with the decay of a Higgs boson particle.

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Searching for the ‘God particle’

Searching for the ‘God particle’

Searching for the ‘God particle’

Searching for the ‘God particle’

Searching for the ‘God particle’

Searching for the ‘God particle’

Searching for the ‘God particle’

Searching for the ‘God particle’

Searching for the ‘God particle’

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(CNN) — Just in time for Albert Einstein’s birthday Thursday, scientists delivered exciting news about how the universe works.

Last summer, physicists announced that they had identified a particle with characteristics of the elusive Higgs boson, the so-called “God particle.” But, as often the case in science, they needed to do more research to be more certain.

On Thursday, scientists announced that the particle, detected at the Large Hadron Collider, the world’s most powerful particle-smasher, looks even more like the Higgs boson.

The news came at the Moriond Conference in La Thuile, Italy, from scientists at the Large Hadron Collider’s ATLAS and Compact Muon Solenoid experiments. These two detectors are looking for unusual particles that slip into existence when subatomic particles crash into one another at high energies.

“The preliminary results with the full 2012 data set are magnificent and to me it is clear that we are dealing with a Higgs boson though we still have a long way to go to know what kind of Higgs boson it is,” Joe Incandela, spokesperson for the Compact Muon Solenoid experiment, said in a statement.

Scientists have analyzed two and a half times more data than they had when the first announced the Higgs boson results last July 4.

The Higgs boson is associated with the reason that everything in the universe — from humans to planets to galaxies — have mass. The particle is a component of something called the Higgs field, which permeates our universe. It’s not a perfect analogy, but Brian Greene, theoretical physicist at Columbia University and “NOVA” host, offered this comparison when I spoke with him last year:

“You can think of it as a kind of molasses-like bath that’s invisible, but yet we’re all immersed within it,” Greene said. “And as particles like electrons try to move through the molasses-like bath, they experience a resistance. And that resistance is what we, in our big everyday world, think of as the mass of the electron.”

The electron would have no mass if it were not for this “substance,” the field made of Higgs particles. So, without the Higgs boson, we would not be here at all.

How particle smasher and telescopes relate

Many physicists hate the term “God particle” because it did not originate in the way you might think. Nobel Prize-winning physicist Leon Lederman wrote a book with “God Particle” in the title, but reportedly said he’d actually wanted to call it the “Goddamn Particle.”

Having evidence that the Higgs boson really exists is important for the current understanding of how the universe works.

An amazing fact about the Higgs boson is that scientists predicted its existence and then detected it (or something that strongly resembles it), rather than the other way around. They didn’t see an abnormality and wonder what it was. The particle confirms notions about the universe that had only been calculated, but not directly observed.

But scientists do not know if the particle they’ve found is truly the one predicted by the Standard Model of particle physics. That model is the best explanation out there for what happens at scales smaller than the atom, but still has a lot of holes in it, and there are other theories out there that go beyond that model.

It is possible that the Higgs boson found at the Large Hadron Collider could fit into those other theories. To figure that out, scientists must look at how fast the boson decays into other particles, and see how the decay rate stacks up against predictions.

The Large Hadron Collider is located in a 17-mile tunnel near the French-Swiss border, and is operated by CERN, the European Organization of Nuclear Research.

The $10 billion particle-smasher set a record in 2012 for the amount of energy achieved in particle collisions: 8 trillion electron volts (TeV). The LHC shut down last month for a long staycation full of maintenance and upgrades. After about two years, it will come back online with 13 TeV.

Detecting the Higgs boson takes a lot of particle collisions — there’s only one observed event in every trillion proton-proton collisions, CERN said.

The Higgs boson news coincides not only with Einstein’s birthday, but also with Pi Day, March 14. These events are not entirely unrelated: Incandela told CNN last year that the number pi comes up in Large Hadron Collider calculations. For instance, scientists need to use pi when calculating how “loops” — particles that transform themselves into other particles, and then come back together to make the original particle again — contribute to a particle’s mass.

More space and science news from CNN Light Years

VisibleNation Takes A Different Tack On Social Data — Can You Compare The Content Of Your Character?

The arena of social data comparison has become a hot space over the last, say, three years. With the rise of Facebook and Twitter we have concurrently seen the rise of platforms like Klout and PeerIndex, startups which have pushed the envelope on rating both the content of individuals’ expertise and their influence across a wider social circle. If you want a historical perspective, we no longer judge people by the color of their skin but by the content of their character (with apologies to MLK). But I will leave it to you to decided whether this brave new world is the fulfilment of his wishes. Suffice it to say, companies like Reasearch Now, TNS, AC Neilson, Experian and IPSOS Mori are now, as we speak, furiously building out their own platforms to deal with this universe

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VisibleNation Takes A Different Tack On Social Data — Can You Compare The Content Of Your Character?