David Crookes
David Crookes
Journalist @BBC @Futureplc @DennisUK @independent @raspberry_pi Specialising in technology, videogames, science, history, travel and sport.Source
Manchester, England
CRITIC
img-contested
N/A
1 reviews
PUBLIC
img-contested
N/A
0 reviews

RECENT ARTICLES

Sort by:
No Rating
Can our brains help prove the universe is conscious?

Can our brains help prove the universe is conscious?

Space is supported by its audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. .As humans, we know we are conscious because we experience and feel things. But we are still unable to explain exactly what consciousness is or where it comes from."Consciousness — or better, conscious experience — is obviously a part of reality," Johannes Kleiner, a mathematician and theoretical physicist at the Munich Center For Mathematical Philosophy, Germany, shared in an interview. "We're all having it but without understanding how it relates to the known physics, our...

April 25, 2021
Share
Save
Review
No Rating
Where Do Black Holes Lead?

Where Do Black Holes Lead?

Live Science is supported by its audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. .So there you are, about to leap into a . What could possibly await should — against all odds — you somehow survive? Where would you end up and what tantalizing tales would you be able to regale if you managed to clamor your way back?The simple answer to all of these questions is, as Professor Richard Massey explains, "Who knows?" As a Royal Society research fellow at the Institute for Computational Cosmology at Durham University, Massey is fully aware that the...

September 21, 2019
Share
Save
Review
No Rating
Space roar: NASA detected the loudest sound in the universe, but what is it?

Space roar: NASA detected the loudest sound in the universe, but what is it?

Space is supported by its audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. .In space, nobody can hear you scream, but with the right equipment, it is possible to detect a roar. That's what scientists when they began to look for distant signals in the universe using a complex instrument fixed to a huge balloon that was sent to space. The instrument was able to pick up radio waves from the heat of distant stars, but what came through that year was nothing short of astounding.As the instrument listened from a height of about 23 miles (37 kilometers),...

August 5, 2020
Share
Save
Review
  • Total 3 items
  • 1
OUTLETS
livescience.com

livescience.com

CRITIC
img-trusted
100%
PUBLIC
img-trusted
78%
space.com

space.com

CRITIC
img-contested
N/A
PUBLIC
img-trusted
97%