theprestige
Penultimate Amazing
Model independent measuresment gives 74.
Lambda-CDM predicts 67.
I think it's pretty obvious which one to doubt.
Yes, but we know that your thinking is founded in willful ignorance.
Model independent measuresment gives 74.
Lambda-CDM predicts 67.
I think it's pretty obvious which one to doubt.
Yeah, but there's really no time a photon is "halfway in" an electron.
Schro's cat is either dead or alive, but half dead isn't an option, afaik.
If you're standing in a body of water, a wave can come towards you. At some point the crest of the wave can be at you, and then the trough.
Does that apply to quantum particles?
A particle absorption could take a non-zero, non-infinitesimal, finite amount of time, but it's still a single event, is it not?
When does the photo multiplier go off?
When a photon has completed its interaction?
How do we know when the interaction begins?
Model independent measuresment gives 74.
Lambda-CDM predicts 67.
I think it's pretty obvious which one to doubt.
I don't think it's obvious at all, but I put more credence in the 67, personally.
Huh.
Why is that?
If the model predicts one thing, and measurements show another, why go with the model?
Seems like if you said you believe Newton's gravity over the observed orbit of Mercury.
Both are measurements. Both measurements require a model. One of them seems to me to be a more difficult measurement to do and has more confounding factors, so while astronomers have taken those factors into account it seems reasonable to me that they may be making a mistake somewhere.
But maybe not! I'd be very excited if it did turn out that this wasn't just measurement error and really did lead to some new physics. I think that's less likely, but not enormously so.
The most statistically significant tension is the 4−6σ disagreement between predictions of the Hubble constant H0 by early time probes with ΛCDM model, and a number of late time, model-independent determinations of H0 from local measurements of distances and redshifts.
Why not study physics and see if you can actually progress it once you understand the principles, rather than investing so much time in something that will in the end by pointless?
Yeah, the opinion of Mike who knows nothing trumps the consensus of the professionals (which is that we don't yet know where the discrepancy lies). Since you think the "direct measurement" is oh-so easy and bang-on, I point you again to this: http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=13414050&postcount=2677Model independent measuresment gives 74.
Lambda-CDM predicts 67.
I think it's pretty obvious which one to doubt.
Since you think the "direct measurement" is oh-so easy and bang-on
and it wouldn’t make him feel special.
You have no capacity to understand formal physics papers. How do I know? If you don't understand basic concepts, how can you possibly understand reports of research at the cutting edge?I said the CMB prediction was less direct and relies more on extrapolation, because that's what the articles say.
And just let me add that there is no shame in being ignorant. We are all ignorant in all sorts of ways. What is shameful is invincible ignorance and a belief that you somehow know better than all the people who have studied the subject for decades. We see it over and over on this forum, and in this thread; in general, we see it with the anti-vaxxers and the homeopathy promoters and the geocentrists and the scientific crackpots of every ilk.
The scientific commumnity says that there is a tension between the CMB based measurement and the standard candle and other local methods. And you can't resist turning that into a claim that the CMB-based method is wrong (and that therefore we have to throw out lamda-CDM and the whole space expansion thing). It's at best a mistaken reading of what the community is saying and at worst a deliberate misrepresentation.Here's what I think is shameful.
The scientific community says the CMB predictions don't match the local measurements.
On the evidence of this thread, you are always wrong. Always.And you can't resist from beating me up over any claim, not because I'm wrong, but because you can.
Here's what I think is shameful.
The scientific community says the CMB predictions don't match the local measurements.
And you can't resist from beating me up over any claim, not because I'm wrong, but because you can.
Your zeal and personal attacks tip your hand.
Here's what I think is shameful.
The scientific community says the CMB predictions don't match the local measurements.
And you can't resist from beating me up over any claim, not because I'm wrong, but because you can.
Your zeal and personal attacks tip your hand.
Here's what I think is shameful.
The scientific community says the CMB predictions don't match the local measurements.
And you can't resist from beating me up over any claim, not because I'm wrong, but because you can.
Your zeal and personal attacks tip your hand.
And you can't resist from beating me up over any claim, not because I'm wrong, but because you can.