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Showing-up the Extra-Dimensions of Electron
Showing-up the Extra-Dimensions of Electron

... adopting only one of the two its projections on a given space axis, as its space-polarization. Consequently: To get the Dirac-like equations of electron, we now apply the equation (8) containing explicitly the spin-term a long with the proper mass to implement the Dirac factorization. Recalling that ...
CHAPTER 11: Through the Looking Glass
CHAPTER 11: Through the Looking Glass

... A troubling inconsistency had escaped the attention of most classical physicists: physics described Nature as “schizophrenic.” Newtonian mechanics dealt with particles. Maxwellian electromagnetics dealt with waves. But particles and waves are mutually exclusive. Whereas particles are localized in s ...
Dispersion Relation of Longitudinal Waves in
Dispersion Relation of Longitudinal Waves in

... generally accepted to be connected with BEC (Bose-Einstein Condensation). The dispersion relation of pressure waves in superfluid He-4 has been determined at 1.1 °K by Yarnell et al., and exhibits a non monotonic behavior - with a maximum and a minimum - usually explained in terms of excitations cal ...
references - StealthSkater
references - StealthSkater

... with Planck's hypothesis of the quantum. And one can only speculate as to the direction that physics would have taken then. The list of topics successfully analyzed within the SED formulation (i.e., yielding precise quantitative agreement with QED treatments) has now been extended to include the har ...
Representation Theory, Symmetry, and Quantum
Representation Theory, Symmetry, and Quantum

... In the early 20th century, it had become apparent to physicists that many phenomena, from the orbiting of electrons in atoms to the emission and absorption of light waves, did not occur on a continuous spectrum, as classical theories would predict. Einstein’s 1905 discovery of the photoelectic effec ...
here. - psychicQuesting.com
here. - psychicQuesting.com

... existence. They offer things to you, saying "Look at this! Look at this!" and as your attention goes towards these objects you realise that what you’re being shown is impossible. It’s not simply intricate, beautiful and hard to manufacture, it’s impossible to make these things. The nearest analogy w ...
Atom: Program 3 - Educational Resource Guide
Atom: Program 3 - Educational Resource Guide

... breathtakingly revolutionary about it. He later said his equation knew more than he did. In essence Dirac's equation was telling him that there is another universe that we've never noticed before. That's because instead of his equation having one answer, it has two. The first describes the universe ...
Quantum control for open quantum systems - GdR-IQFA
Quantum control for open quantum systems - GdR-IQFA

... and H.‐S. Goan, “Global control and fast solid‐state donor electron spin  quantum computing”, Phys. Rev. B 72, 045350 (2005). ...
pdf
pdf

... interpretive themes in quantum mechanics are based on classroom observations, an analysis of course materials, and interviews with instructors, and have been described in prior work; [6] these approaches can be best illustrated by how each instructor addressed the double-slit experiment. Realist/Sta ...
PDF
PDF

... 1. Church-Turing thesis: This states that any computational model is as powerful as the Turing machine. In other words, given any computational model, we can simulate computations on that model using the Turing machine. The simulation may of course involve a blow-up in time taken as well as in spac ...
Kelvin C. ABRAHAM
Kelvin C. ABRAHAM

... 4ntetrahedral standing waves of EM energy, and it can be asserted that it is the tetrahedral topology of Tetryons that forms the foundation for all large scale Matter in the Universe (not spherical point particles). It is geometric quantum EM charge interactions that allows equilateral 2D mass-ene ...
Schrödinger - UF Physics
Schrödinger - UF Physics

... wave. The latter belief was supported, for instance, by the observation of interference: If we shine light on a single slit placed in front of a scintillating screen, we observe a pattern of darker and brighter fringes or rings. But what happens if Einstein’s light particles, let us call them photon ...
THE ATOM
THE ATOM

... 2. Helium-neon lasers use an electric discharge to bring the atoms of the gas mixture to metastable levels. D. The metastable atoms, as they return to their ground states, create photons all of the same frequency and all of whose waves are coherent or exactly in step. 8-12. Quantum Mechanics A. The ...
Why there is Something rather than Nothing (from
Why there is Something rather than Nothing (from

... boson could serve as the inflaton for a scenario with ns» 0.93 and T/S» 0.0004 The mechanism is very different from F.Bezrukov and M.Shaposhnikov, Phys.Lett. 659B (2008) 703 because it is dominated by the quantum effects: CMB data probe quantum anomalous scaling induced by all heavy massive particle ...
Doctoral Programmes in Physics at IMSc
Doctoral Programmes in Physics at IMSc

... The breakdown of classical physics, the polarization of photons, Wave-particle duality: Particle properties of photons and wave properties of electrons, Schrodinger evolution, Hamiltonian, examples: free particle, one-dimensional potential well, potential barrier, harmonic oscillator, etc., Hilbert ...
NEWTON`S SECOND LAW FROM QUANTUM PHYSICS
NEWTON`S SECOND LAW FROM QUANTUM PHYSICS

... successes in the domains of atomic, molecular, nuclear, and solid state physics, and in chemistry, it cannot describe systems which change with time; it cannot deal with transition rates, spectral line intensities, tunneling, or scattering. For such cases we need the equation which tells us how wave ...
The Learnability of Quantum States
The Learnability of Quantum States

... computing, we need brief detour Then it could adversarially choose to beawrong about that into particle physics (!) be a good one, exponentially-small amplitude and still sampler We’ll have to work harder … but as a bonus, ...
Hierarchy of Planck Constants
Hierarchy of Planck Constants

... We can distinguish various kind of theories in physics. Most of them are constructive. They attempt to build up a picture of the more complex phenomena out of the materials of a relatively simple formal scheme from which they start out. Thus the kinetic theory of gases seeks to reduce mechanical, th ...
Shou-Cheng Zhang, , 823 (2001); DOI: 10.1126/science.294.5543.823
Shou-Cheng Zhang, , 823 (2001); DOI: 10.1126/science.294.5543.823

... University, Beijing, China. ...
Wolfgang Pauli - Nobel Lecture
Wolfgang Pauli - Nobel Lecture

... called a « two-valuedness not describable classically »3. At this time a paper of the English physicist, Stoner, appeared4 which contained, besides improvements in the classification of electrons in subgroups, the following essential remark: For a given value of the principal quantum number is the n ...
PHY 107 Class 2
PHY 107 Class 2

... solar system for NASA missions – mechanics, general relativity ...
dark energy stars - at www.arxiv.org.
dark energy stars - at www.arxiv.org.

... quantum mechanics and GR is the lack of a universal time in GR. A number of arguments can be advanced as to why quantum mechanics requires a universal time. The simplest argument is what time does one mean when one writes down Schrodinger's equation? More subtle arguments involve the existence of no ...
One Hundred Years of Quantum Physics
One Hundred Years of Quantum Physics

... positively and negatively charged particles. But oppositely charged particles attract. According to electromagnetic theory, therefore, they should spiral into each other, radiating light in a broad spectrum until they collapse. Once again, the door to progress was opened by a novice: Niels Bohr. In ...
Glueballs
Glueballs

... Isospin and SU(2) symmetry • Isospin (I) indicates different states for a particle with the same mass and the same interaction strength • The projection on the z-axis is Iz • u and d quarks are 2 different states of a particle with I= ½, but with different Iz. Resp. ½ and - ½ • c.p. electron with S ...
Lecture 3 Operator methods in quantum mechanics
Lecture 3 Operator methods in quantum mechanics

... particular basis, e.g. for Ĥ = 2m , we can represent p̂ in spatial coordinate basis, p̂ = −i!∂x , or in the momentum basis, p̂ = p. Equally, it would be useful to work with a basis for the wavefunction, ψ, which is coordinate-independent. ...
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Quantum mechanics

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