Physics 2 - Westmount High School
... Galaxies are massive groups of stars, gas and dust spread throughout the Universe and held together by gravity. We live in a galaxy called the Milky Way. The Solar System, all the stars in the sky and all the nebulae you can see are all inside the Milky Way, just as we are. All the other galaxies th ...
... Galaxies are massive groups of stars, gas and dust spread throughout the Universe and held together by gravity. We live in a galaxy called the Milky Way. The Solar System, all the stars in the sky and all the nebulae you can see are all inside the Milky Way, just as we are. All the other galaxies th ...
The EPR Paradox
... very interesting features. Wavereveals packet • Each component leaks, even components that don’t have enough energy classically. They don’t “borrow” energy. • The wave packet is altered by dispersion and interference. The shape of the wave packet (in position and momentum space) is not the same as t ...
... very interesting features. Wavereveals packet • Each component leaks, even components that don’t have enough energy classically. They don’t “borrow” energy. • The wave packet is altered by dispersion and interference. The shape of the wave packet (in position and momentum space) is not the same as t ...
2.5 notes - TeacherWeb
... Zelda sold her wet suit to a friend for $156. She sold her tank, mask, and snorkel for $85 less than she sold her wet suit. She bought a used wet suit for $80 and a used tank, mask, and snorkel for $36. If she started with $0, how much money does she have left? ...
... Zelda sold her wet suit to a friend for $156. She sold her tank, mask, and snorkel for $85 less than she sold her wet suit. She bought a used wet suit for $80 and a used tank, mask, and snorkel for $36. If she started with $0, how much money does she have left? ...
The HYDROGEN BOND
... one electron here, and they want to think of the orbit as a cloud. This prevents you from asking normal questions of them and their theories. They spend half of every day screaming that quantum mechanics doesn't make sense, that it is inherently mysterious, that it can't be visualized, and so on. W ...
... one electron here, and they want to think of the orbit as a cloud. This prevents you from asking normal questions of them and their theories. They spend half of every day screaming that quantum mechanics doesn't make sense, that it is inherently mysterious, that it can't be visualized, and so on. W ...
Problem Set 1 Solutions
... respect to. Hence C/O is intended to mean the velocity of point C with respect to the Oxyz inertial frame of reference. Note: the velocity of a point is always defined with respect to a frame of reference. However, it is correct to compute the relative velocity between two points with respect to a r ...
... respect to. Hence C/O is intended to mean the velocity of point C with respect to the Oxyz inertial frame of reference. Note: the velocity of a point is always defined with respect to a frame of reference. However, it is correct to compute the relative velocity between two points with respect to a r ...
Individuality and Indiscernibility
... indiscernible (in the traditional sense) yet distinct relata to be possible. Should we think of the sphere’s being two miles apart as the ground of their numerical diversity? (For further discussion of the proposal that relations can individuate in this way, and of other proposals, see Cover & O’Lea ...
... indiscernible (in the traditional sense) yet distinct relata to be possible. Should we think of the sphere’s being two miles apart as the ground of their numerical diversity? (For further discussion of the proposal that relations can individuate in this way, and of other proposals, see Cover & O’Lea ...