UltraProAnti
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I didn't realise until I read this article -
http://prospectmagazine.co.uk/article_details.php.6701.html
- that a lot of the physics-related stuff the characters blather on about is taken from real physics:
Remember Judith Mossman going on about something that sounded (to me anyway) like the "Kaladiyah Model"? I guess that's actually the "Calabi-Yau manifold" mentioned here, just badly pronounced. She also talks about Combine portals being "string-based", and "factoring in the dark energy equations", both of which are also mentioned in the article.
Now I'm even more impressed that someone made a kickass game out of the nerdiest of sciences. :E
http://prospectmagazine.co.uk/article_details.php.6701.html
- that a lot of the physics-related stuff the characters blather on about is taken from real physics:
In the older string picture, one had to "curl" or wrap up six of the ten original dimensions, leaving the four-dimensional universe of today. These unwanted dimensions were squeezed into a tiny ball (called a Calabi-Yau manifold) too small to be seen. But M-theory adds a new twist to this: some of these higher dimensions can be large, or even infinite, in size. Imagine two parallel sheets of paper. If an ant lived on each sheet, each would think that its sheet was the entire universe, unaware that there was another universe close by. In fact, the other universe would be invisible. Each ant would live out its life oblivious to the fact that another universe was only a few inches away. Similarly, our universe may be a membrane floating in 11-dimensional hyperspace, while we remain oblivious of the parallel universes hovering nearby.
Remember Judith Mossman going on about something that sounded (to me anyway) like the "Kaladiyah Model"? I guess that's actually the "Calabi-Yau manifold" mentioned here, just badly pronounced. She also talks about Combine portals being "string-based", and "factoring in the dark energy equations", both of which are also mentioned in the article.
Now I'm even more impressed that someone made a kickass game out of the nerdiest of sciences. :E