[0:21:54 - 0:22:02] So then another student raised his hand and said, Professor
Lowe, what would you actually do?
[0:28:50 - 0:29:10] And it's really frustrating because as far as I'm concerned, they're anti science, they just want to step on any f
lower that rises above the grass level because of jealousy because of I don't know what the point is that you can't innovate in science within such a climate.
[0:53:33 - 0:53:37] It's just a higher level of science and technology that al
lowed us to make it.
[1:16:54 - 1:17:02] There was a alleged whistleb
lower named Jake Barber who came out and talked about some type of telepathy.
[1:18:20 - 1:18:26] And so, you know, because I know my audience and I know a lot of people are going to say, well, what about all the whistleb
lowers?
[1:25:52 - 1:25:58] fol
lowed the same rules as recombination of electrons in protons in the laboratory is on Earth.
[1:36:04 - 1:36:23] That comes very close to earth would be detected by LIGO. But that's a very massive object, a hundred thousand tons. And it needs also to move close to the speed of light. Because if it moves much s
lower, then it doesn't match the frequency of signal to which LIGO is sensitive.
[1:36:49 - 1:37:09] It turns out that their mass density cannot be bigger than dark matter actually. But we would need a much more sensitive interferometers observatory than LIGO in order to detect things that are either lighter or moving much s
lower.
[1:37:09 - 1:37:24] In principle, you cannot avoid gravity. So eventually when we build, for example, there is a plan to build Lisa, which would be an interferometer in space. It would be sensitive to smaller objects moving s
lower.