Chinese man proposes marriage with offer of 33-tonne”meteorite’

The price of getting married in China is skyrocketing. 

This guy spent the price of a house for a rock!


Instead of selecting a precious stone to mount on a ring, a man in far western China has proposed to his girlfriend by unveiling a 33-tonne “meteorite” placed in a public square, a news website reported.

The proposal on Tuesday in Urumqi, the capital city of the Xinjiang autonomous region, was successful and attracted a large crowd, according to ChinaNews.com.

The report said the man bought the supposed space boulder for about 1 million yuan (US$144,645), which was originally meant to be a payment for a new flat.

A Weibo user poked fun at the couple and wrote: “One million yuan for a 33-tonne meteorite? What a bargain … You could cut it into small pieces and sell each for the price of a diamond … Girl, he’s a keeper!”

Another wrote: “Where are they going to put this rock at their home?” while another asked “are you not concerned about radiation?”

China has seen a number preposterous marriage proposals across the country in recent year. In 2015, a 24-year-old man in Xian proposed to his girlfriend by publically drawing an arrow and two hearts with lychees, while a university student asked his best friend to be his girlfriend by presenting her with 999 pomelos. Both offers were rejected.

Prof Robert Kelly is back & this time his wife & children are meant to be in shot!

Professor Robert E Kelly has returned to BBC News to talk about his unexpected viral fame last week, when his children crashed his live TV interview to the amusement of millions of people who later watched the clip. Prof Kelly, an expert on South Korea, was joined in the follow-up video with his wife, Jung-a Kim and children Marion and James.
He confirmed to the BBC’s James Menendez that he was, despite online speculation, wearing trousers during the interview.
This video was originally posted here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PLMSoD1riE0

Happy Birthday, Albert Einstein!

The famous German scientist Albert Einstein would have turned 138 years old today. Einstein, who passed away in 1955, is best known for his theory of general relativity and his mass-energy equivalence formula, E = mc^2. 

Coincidentally, Einstein’s birthday falls on Pi Day.  

Next month, the National Geographic Channel will premiere its new 10-part television series, “Genius,” which stars Geoffrey Rush and recounts Einstein’s personal life and professional accomplishments in juicy, dramatic detail. The first episode of the new global event series airs on April 25.
“Genius” airs April 25 on the National Geographic Channel.

This article originally appeared at: http://www.space.com/36047-albert-einstein-happy-168th-birthday.html.

This Woman Is Said to Rival Einstein, and She’s Only 23

At age 14, Sabrina Pasterski walked onto the MIT campus to request notarization of aircraft worthiness for her single-engine plane. She built it herself and had already flown the craft solo, so even within the bastion of brilliance that is MIT, people were interested. Nine years have passed, and now Pasterski is an MIT graduate and Harvard Ph.D. candidate in physics at age 23. (You can stay up to date with her many published papers and talks on her website, PhysicsGirl.com.)

Pasterski focuses on understanding quantum gravity, explaining gravity within the context of quantum mechanics. She is also interested in black holes and Spacetime. It’s probably no surprise that she’s known to the NASA scientists, and that she has a standing job offer from Jeff Bezos and Blue Origin.

Pasterski is exceptional in many ways, but she’s also part of a growing trend. In 1999, the number of people earning physics bachelor’s degrees  in the U.S. was at its lowest point in four decades, with only 3,178 awarded that year. However, in 2015 things looked much different, according to the American Institute of Physics. That year 8,081 bachelor’s degrees in physics were awarded — an all-time high. Physics doctorates also reached an all-time high of 1,860 in 2015. These numbers aren’t flukes or random spikes; the numbers for the previous two years were also high.

This trend is due in part to higher enrollment and less attrition among female students. These women remain a minority in physics and astronomy, and many are still having to face challenges with impostor syndrome and mentoring. However, more female students in physics means more graduates overall and a more active scientific community in the U.S.

Sabrina Pasterski and other women in science today have benefited from being part of a proud tradition of standout female scientists. Marie S. Curie, the mother of modern physics, was the first Nobel Prize winning woman in the history of science. She was the first European female to earn a doctorate degree for her scientific research, and she later became the first woman professor and lecturer at the Sorbonne University in Paris. Curie’s work with radiation — a term she invented — transformed our understanding of the natural world, and she remains one of the most notable minds in science, regardless of gender.

Less famous — but no less significant to science — was Ada Lovelace. Intrigued by Charles Babbage’s idea for an “Analytical Engine,” a machine for computing, Lovelace published an article on the machine and developed an algorithm that would allow it to calculate a sequence of Bernoulli numbers. She saw the potential of the device and predicted that it might use its algorithms in many different ways. Ada was the first person to articulate the concept of machines following rules in order to manipulate symbols and produce graphics for scientific and practical purposes. She was recognized as the world’s first programmer posthumously.

Rounding out this look back at female scientists, we look at Dian Fossey, a conservation biologist who fought passionately to save mountain gorillas. Fossey studied endangered gorilla species in the mountain forests of Rwanda and learned to mimic the actions, behaviors, and sounds of the gorillas in order to approach them. She strongly opposed poaching, financed patrols to destroy traps, and helped arrest several poachers. In 1977, Fossey’s favorite gorilla, Digit, was killed by poachers as he defended his group against poachers. Fossey became totally focused on preventing poaching, destroying gorilla traps, capturing and humiliating the poachers, and even burning their camps. In December 1985, Fossey was found murdered in her camp in Rwanda. The case was never solved, although she is believed to have been killed by poachers.

Female scientists like Sabrina Pasterski are joining an amazing group and a proud tradition. Their work will inspire the scientists of tomorrow and change our understanding of the world — just as the work of historical female scientists did for them.