From Wired – July 2004:
The universe comes in a box. It’s a big box, and you almost never see the walls, but its boundaries are immovable – thee speed of light, gravity, the way atoms interact,. Even if time and space are unlimited and illimitable, physics, chemistry, and biology dictate maxima and minima in the universe. Like the strict meter and structure of a sonnet, they make the final product all the more beautiful. – Adam Rogers
- 5 billion Years – Maximum time Earth has left.
- That when the sun goes red giant and expands past Earth’s orbit.
- 5.4×10-44 seconds – Shortest possible time.
- Any shorter and quantum mechanics can’t tell wheter events are simultaneous.
- 15 billion light-years – Maximum distance we can see.
- The universe is about 15 billion years old – this is light’s travel time.
- 6.4×10-34 inches – Shortest possible distance.
- Plank length: any shorter ad quantum mechanics can’t tell between here and there.
- 21.7 miles – Maximum height of a mountain on Earth.
- Uplift reaches equilibrium with pressure at the base.
- 1.2×10-5 inches – Minimum size ofan actively growing cell.
- Free-living cells need room for a full genome, proteins, and guts.
- 427 feet – Maximum height for a tree on Earth.
- Gravity overcomes surface tension in the plant’s circulatory system.
- 265 – Minimum number of protein-coding genes for life.
- As seen in the smallest known single-cell organism.
- 200 million years – Maximum age of sub-oceanic crust.
- Older than that it cools, becomes denser, and “subducts” back into magma.
- -459.67 degrees Fahrenheit – Minimum possible temperature.
- Heat is a function of molecular motion, which stops at absolute zero.
- 210 MPH – Maximum wind speed for an Earth hurrican.
- A storm can acquire only so much energy from the sea.
- 0.24 second – Minimum delay of a signal sent via geosynchronous satellite.
- It’s light speed up 22,300 miles, and back down.
- 430,000 megebits per second – Maximum speed to record data to magnetic media.
- Bits won’t flip reliably with a pulse under 2.3 picoseconds.
- 100 terabits per second – Maximum information over optical fiber.
- Higher power levels mash signals together.
- 1051 operations per second – Maximum computational power.
- Quantum rules won’t let the ideal 1-liter, 1-kilogram laptop crunch data any faster.
Contributors: Sunny Bains, Thomas Hayden, Greta Lorge, Michael Myser, and Boyce Rensberger.
Sources: Fire in the Mind: Scien, Faith, and the Search for Order (Knopf, 1995); Institure for Genomic Research; Lucent Technologies; MIT; NASA; National Institute of Standards and Technology; Nature; UC Berkeley; Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution; Yale
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