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WINGED WORDS, PHRASEOLOGICAL UNITS
Directory / Winged words, phraseological units / Let's live in peace!

Winged words, phraseological units. Meaning, history of origin, examples of use

Winged words, phraseological units

Directory / Winged words, phraseological units

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Let's live in peace!

Khait A.I.
Khait A.I.

Phraseologism: Let's live in peace!

Meaning: The call to leave the quarrel, calmly consider the conflict situation (jokingly).

Origin: The phrase of the cat Leopold from the cartoon "The Adventures of the Cat Leopold" (1975), filmed by director A. Reznikov according to the script by Arkady Iosifovich Khait (1938-2000).

Random phraseology:

The mind goes beyond the mind.

Meaning:

About the state in which someone cannot reasonably reason, act.

Origin:

The original meaning is that the spiritual principle is subject to the rationalistic. Some scholars associate the Russian word mind with the spiritual abilities of a person (cf. the Church Slavonic adjective clever - "incorporeal, spiritual"), and mind - with rational thinking. This expression was originally attributed to people who relied entirely on logical thinking, including those who tried to understand the world with the help of reason.

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The existence of a fifth force has not been confirmed 15.09.2019

The fact that the universe is constantly expanding its boundaries has been known to scientists for a long time, but data from the Hubble space telescope, obtained back in the 1990s, indicate that the expansion of the universe is now happening much faster than in the distant past. This fact made a lot of noise at the time, forcing scientists to revise and rebuild all models of the universe. Calculations of the updated models suggested to physicists about the existence of some unknown energy in space, which is precisely responsible for accelerating the expansion of the Universe. This energy was called "dark energy" and now, several decades later, we have only a vague idea of ​​its true nature.

One of the possible explanations for the phenomenon of dark energy is the assumption that this energy is some fifth fundamental force acting on matter along with the forces of gravity, electromagnetism, strong and weak nuclear interactions. And recently, a group of researchers at Imperial College London decided to test this theory thoroughly using a single-atom experiment.

The purpose of this experiment was to investigate the question, does this fifth force weaken with an increase in the amount of matter involved in its formation? This is the exact opposite of the force of gravity, which increases with the mass of matter. If this were the case, then one would expect strong manifestations of the fifth force in the cosmic vacuum and its weakening near even not very large accumulations of matter, such as planets.

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However, in the data collected during the experiment, nothing was found regarding the change in the trajectory of the fall of atoms and other evidence of the existence of the fifth fundamental force. This means that physicists can eliminate a whole class of fifth-force models of dark energy and focus on other more promising models that explain this phenomenon.

One of the strengths of this experiment is its simplicity. "It's quite unusual that we're able to learn something new about the structure of the universe using a setup that sits on a table in one of London's cellars," says Ed Hinds, professor in the Department of Physics at Imperial College London.

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