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A Ring Around a Dying Star

In November 2002, sky watchers were viewing the glow of meteors from the Leonid meteor shower burning up in Earth's atmosphere. They had been anticipating this celestial light show for months, expecting to see hundreds, possibly thousands, of meteors from a wayward comet light up the night sky. Engineers controlling NASA's Hubble Space Telescope ...

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ARingAroundaDyingStar
Medicine

My Aching Back

The back is an intricate structure of bones, muscles, and other tissues that form the posterior part of the body’s trunk, from the neck to the pelvis. The centerpiece is the spinal column, which not ... Continue reading

MyAchingBack
Geology

Haleakala Crater

Modern geology indicates that the Hawaiian Islands are situated near the middle of the Pacific Plate, one of a dozen thin, rigid structures covering our planet like the cracked shell of an egg. Though ... Continue reading

HaleakalaCrater
Astronomy

Nursery of Giants Captured in New Spitzer Image

Typically, the bigger something is the easier it is to find. Elephants, for example, are not hard to spot. But when it comes to the massive stars making up the stellar nursery called DR21, size does ... Continue reading

GiantsSpitzerImage
Astronomy

Sibling Rivalry: A Mars/Earth Comparison

Scientific understanding is often a matter of making the right comparisons. In terms of studying the Earth, one of the best comparative laboratories exists one planet over--on Mars. In many ways, the ... Continue reading

MarsEarthComparison

Kepler's Conjecture

KeplersConjectureTake a bunch of oranges that are similar in size and try to pack them into a cardboard box. What is the most efficient orange arrangement so that you fit the most oranges into the box? Should you stack them into identical layers so that you have the same number of oranges in each layer; or should you have each alternate layer have fewer oranges which fit into 'valleys' of the layer below; or should you just pile them irregularly into the box?

This problem may seem simple enough to you, however many of the best mathematicians, including Harriot, Kepler and Hilbert, have thought about this problem throughout history. It was Kepler who first conjectured that the densest packing arrangement for identical spheres in a container is the one where each alternate layer has fewer spheres which fit into 'valleys' of the layer below. This arrangement is the same as the one you will most commonly see on fruit stands. The mathematical term for this arrangement is: 'face-centered cubic packing'. His conjecture was most probably based on simple experiments like the one you can do at home, however no one was able to mathematically prove it for almost 400 years!

In 1998, Dr. Thomas C. Hales, now a professor of mathematics at the University of Pittsburg, proposed his proof of Kepler's Conjecture. His proof is far from elegant. It involves over 250 pages of calculations and numerous computer calculations. The verdict is still not in as to whether he has 'really' proved Kepler's Conjecture, however so far, no opposition with a counter-proof has stepped forward.