Bernard Carr
Academic
Jack Sarfatti...and other interested parties - a group that included Arthur C. Clarke, Arthur Koestler, David Bohm, John G. Taylor, Bernard Carr, and John Hasted - who conducted observations of Uri Geller while the latter displayed what he said was... In this article: Jack Sarfatti, Physics, Uri Geller, David Bohm, Fred Alan Wolf, Fred Cummings, Timothy Leary, Time travel, Gravitation, and General relativity |
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Wikipedia | October 08, 2009
Curley (1947 film)
...running only 53 minutes, and was designed as a b-movie. Like most of Roach's latter-day output, Curley was shot in Cinecolor. Bernard Carr was the film's director, and the film released to theatres on August 23, 1947 by United Artists. It...
In this article: Curley, Hal Roach, Our Gang, United Artists, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Who Killed Doc Robbin, Matthew "Stymie" Beard, Robert F. McGowan, and The Little Rascals
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Wikipedia | October 01, 2009
Carr (name)
...(born 1948), American NBA basketball player, guard Austin Carr (cricketer) (1898-1946), English cricketer - Worcestershire Bernard Carr, British professor of mathematics & astronomy at Queen Mary, University of London (QMUL) Bill Carr...
In this article: Tony Carr, Arthur Wesley Carr, James Carr, Queen Mary, University of London, Austin Carr, U. S. House of Representatives, John Dickson Carr, and Massachusetts
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Wikipedia | September 15, 2009
Bernard Carr
Bernard J. Carr is a professor of mathematics and astronomy at Queen Mary, University of London (QMUL). His research interests include the early universe, dark matter, general relativity, primordial black holes, and the anthropic...
In this article: Bernard J. Carr, Queen Mary, University of London, Institute of Astronomy, Mathematics, Trinity College, Cambridge, Anthropic principle, Cosmology, General relativity, and Kyoto University
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Wikipedia | August 09, 2009
Who Killed Doc Robbin
...a b-movie. Like most of Roach's latter-day output, Who Killed Doc Robbin, the sequel to 1947's ''Curley '', was shot in Cinecolor. Bernard Carr was the film's director, and the film was released to theatres on April 9, 1948 by United...
In this article: Hal Roach, Who Killed Doc Robbin, Our Gang, Curley, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, United Artists, Matthew "Stymie" Beard, and Robert F. McGowan
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Independent.co.uk - Commentators | December 10, 2008
Bernard Carr: Fifth dimensions, space bubbles and other facets of the multiverse
...for a creator, others regard the idea as equally metaphysical. What is really at stake is the nature of science itself. Bernard Carr, Professor of Astronomy and Mathematics at Queen Mary, University of London, spoke at The Royal...
In this article: Big Bang, God, IP Address, Cosmology, Queen Mary, University of London, and Royal Astronomical Society
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Guardian Unlimited | February 28, 2008
Master of his universe: Stephen Hawking Science The Observer
...to dine at high table with Professor Hawking, what with all his dribbling. After I visit Hawking, I go to see his friend Bernard Carr, the professor of mathematics and astronomy at Queen Mary, the University of London. Carr has known...
In this article: Stephen Hawking, Lucy Hawking, A Brief History of Time, Physics, and Motor neurone disease
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Description from Wikipedia:
Bernard J. Carr is a professor of mathematics and astronomy at Queen Mary, University of London (QMUL).
His research interests include the early universe, dark matter, general relativity, primordial black holes, and the anthropic principle.
He completed his BA in mathematics in 1972 at Trinity College, Cambridge. For his doctorate, obtained in 1976, he studied relativity and cosmology under Stephen Hawking at the Institute of Astronomy in Cambridge and the California Institute of Technology. In 1976 he was elected to a Fellowship at Trinity and he also became an advanced SERC fellow at the Institute of Astronomy. In 1979 he was awarded a Lindemann Fellowship for post-doctoral research in America and spent a year working in various universities there. In 1980 he took up a Senior Research Fellowship at the Institute of Astronomy in Cambridge. In 1985 he moved to the then Queen Mary College, University of London, where he is now Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy.
He has held visiting professorships at Kyoto University, Tokyo University and the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, and is a frequent visitor to other institutes in America and Canada. He is the author of more than two hundred scientific papers and his monograph, Cosmological Gravitational Waves, won the 1985 Adams Essay Prize.
He has interests outside physics, including psychic research. He has been a member of the Society for Psychical Research (SPR) for thirty years, serving as its Education Officer and the Chairman of its Research Activities Committee for various periods. He was President of the SPR from 2000 to 2004. He is also a Director of Scientific and Medical Network (SMN) in the UK.
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