4.6 • 7.3K Ratings
🗓️ 4 April 2019
⏱️ 71 minutes
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In this episode of Bulletproof Radio, astrophysicist and cosmologist Brian Keating, Ph.D., talks about the high-pressure world of science. He knows that world well and gives a firsthand account of his experience of loss, failure, resiliency and humility in his book, “Losing the Nobel Prize: A Story of Cosmology, Ambition, and the Perils of Science's Highest Honor.”
Brian’s childhood fascination with the night sky has led him to build and deploy some of the world’s most advanced and powerful telescopes and detectors. He does this so he can search for the literal edge of our universe and cosmic origins. His work takes him to some of the most extreme environments on the planet. You’ll learn about the high-performance hacks he and his team use to manage these conditions.
Today’s episode covers topics designed to fire up your thinking. Here are a few teasers from Brian:
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0:00.0 | A BULLET PROPH RADU, A STATE OF HIGH PERFORMANCE |
0:13.0 | You're listening to BULLET PROPH RADU with Dave Asprey. |
0:16.6 | Today's cool fact of the day has two parts. |
0:19.8 | I'm recording this episode today, March 14, which is Albert Einstein's birthday. |
0:24.7 | He was born on this date 140 years ago in 1879. |
0:30.5 | And if he wasn't so lazy, he would still be alive. |
0:33.6 | He was going to live 180. |
0:34.9 | I'm just saying. |
0:36.0 | Right. |
0:37.0 | Aside from that, he was just proven right again by two ultra-precise clocks. |
0:45.6 | They made a pair of atomic clocks from single ions of, you know, this is a word, |
0:52.6 | Eterbium, which never sounds right when I say it, but I know I said it right because |
0:57.8 | I actually did study physics and chemistry in college. |
1:01.4 | Anyhow, these two single ion clocks kept pace with each other for six months. |
1:07.6 | And they're studying something called Lauren's Cemetery, which says that the rules of physics |
1:11.5 | should remain the same, whether you're standing still, moving at breakneck speed, and no |
1:15.4 | matter what direction you're facing. |
1:16.9 | This is all classic Einstein stuff. |
1:19.3 | The current cemetery is the foundation for Einstein's special theory of relativity, |
1:24.3 | which is talking about what happens when we're going at nearly the speed of light. |
1:28.7 | What was cool is that these two positively charged atoms absorbed any minute light at a |
1:32.8 | particular frequency exactly like the ticking of a clock hand. |
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