ELECTROGRAVITATION AS A UNIFIED FIELD
... but is a terminated field. (The field vector is connected to a conjugate vector field.) This would include neutrons, bosons, and particles exhibiting zero charge in general. Mass would then be the result of standing wave fields. The source for all this energy would come from the same place as the en ...
... but is a terminated field. (The field vector is connected to a conjugate vector field.) This would include neutrons, bosons, and particles exhibiting zero charge in general. Mass would then be the result of standing wave fields. The source for all this energy would come from the same place as the en ...
Spontaneous breaking of continuous symmetries
... there is no gauge group singlet contained in any of the products; it is not possible to write any mass term! ...
... there is no gauge group singlet contained in any of the products; it is not possible to write any mass term! ...
new physics and the mind paster
... was presented to these humans as auditory hallucinations, originating in one of the brain’s hemispheres during novel or stressful situations. Wolf identifies a specific pair of hydrogen atoms in a molecule at the tail end of an enzyme that operates a protein gate that opens or closes channels that c ...
... was presented to these humans as auditory hallucinations, originating in one of the brain’s hemispheres during novel or stressful situations. Wolf identifies a specific pair of hydrogen atoms in a molecule at the tail end of an enzyme that operates a protein gate that opens or closes channels that c ...
What you always wanted to know about Bohmian mechanics but
... philosophy we may learn something from a similar debate there. Chapter 15 of Bertrand Russell's little book The Problems of Philosophy (1912) is titled The Value of Philosophy and starts with a remark which applies just as well to the interpretation of quantum mechanics: [W]hat is the value of phil ...
... philosophy we may learn something from a similar debate there. Chapter 15 of Bertrand Russell's little book The Problems of Philosophy (1912) is titled The Value of Philosophy and starts with a remark which applies just as well to the interpretation of quantum mechanics: [W]hat is the value of phil ...
6. Quantum Electrodynamics
... So what are we to make of this? We have a theory with an infinite number of symmetries, one for each function λ(x). Previously we only encountered symmetries which act the same at all points in spacetime, for example ψ → eiα ψ for a complex scalar field. Noether’s theorem told us that these symmetr ...
... So what are we to make of this? We have a theory with an infinite number of symmetries, one for each function λ(x). Previously we only encountered symmetries which act the same at all points in spacetime, for example ψ → eiα ψ for a complex scalar field. Noether’s theorem told us that these symmetr ...
Light Control using Organometallic Chromophores Johan Henriksson Link¨
... 2.1 Self-consistent Field Theory . . . . . . . 2.1.1 Wave Function Methods . . . . . 2.1.2 Density Functional Theory . . . 2.2 Response Theory . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...
... 2.1 Self-consistent Field Theory . . . . . . . 2.1.1 Wave Function Methods . . . . . 2.1.2 Density Functional Theory . . . 2.2 Response Theory . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...
Indistinguishable particles in quantum mechanics
... that is at the basis of current fundamental Physics and gives us such an accurate description of Nature at the atomic scale. Yet, if the theory was only based on these postulates (or properties), its descriptive power would be almost zero and its interest, if any, would be mainly mathematical. As so ...
... that is at the basis of current fundamental Physics and gives us such an accurate description of Nature at the atomic scale. Yet, if the theory was only based on these postulates (or properties), its descriptive power would be almost zero and its interest, if any, would be mainly mathematical. As so ...