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15-1. principle of linear impulse and momentum
15-1. principle of linear impulse and momentum

Slide 1
Slide 1

"Particles or waves"()
"Particles or waves"()

... than the maximum energy. An important physical concept that is employed here is the law of conservation of energy. Richard Feynman called it the cornerstone of physics. It means that the total energy of a system is always the same. If some alpha particles, emitted by exactly the same kind of nuclei, ...
lecture 2
lecture 2

... • waves are collective bulk disturbances, whereby the motion at one position is a delayed response to the motion at neighbouring points • propagation is defined by differential equations, determined by the physics of the system, relating derivatives with respect to time and position ...
lecture 2
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Atomic and Molecular Physics for Physicists Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
Atomic and Molecular Physics for Physicists Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

... Speed in material v=c/n ...
Bohr model of hydrogen
Bohr model of hydrogen

... no long be treated as continuously propagating waves, but instead as discrete energy packets (as articulated by Planck and Einstein), why should the classical Newtonian mechanics on which Thomson’s model was based hold true? It seemed to Bohr that the atomic model should be modified in a similar way ...
Quantum numbers
Quantum numbers

... “Orbitals with the same potential energy get singly occupied first” • Angular momentum conservation is valid for electrons in atoms and molecules • The photon has a spin of 1 ...
SpectraPart2
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Basic_Equations

Exercises #1 - Berkeley City College
Exercises #1 - Berkeley City College

... the x-, y-, and z- coordinates. Within each sublevel, ml is allowed values from -l through 0 to +l. For example, if l = 0, ml = 0; if l = 1, ml = -1, 0, or +1; if l = 2, ml = -2, -1, 0, +1, and +2, and so on…The possible allowed values for ml also indicate the number of degenerate orbitals within ea ...
WEEK 2: 16 J
WEEK 2: 16 J

T3F2008
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... C. In the figure below, two blocks, of masses m1 and m2, are connected by a massless cord that is wrapped around a uniform disk of rotational inertia, I and radius R. The disk can rotate without friction about a fixed horizontal axis through its center; the cord cannot slip on the disk. The system i ...
Newton`s Laws powerpoint
Newton`s Laws powerpoint

... Law of Conservation of Energy • Energy can change forms, but is never created nor destroyed • Loss in one form = gain in an another form • A falling object speeds up as it falls to the ground; PE decreases as KE increases. The KE it has at impact = the PE it had before it fell. ...
Electronic Structure of Atoms
Electronic Structure of Atoms

... •Line spectra of many electron atoms show each line as a closely spaced pair of lines. •Stern and Gerlach designed an experiment to determine why. •A beam of atoms was passed through a slit and into a magnetic field and the atoms were then detected. •Two spots were found: one with the electrons spin ...
Light and Photons - Continuum Center
Light and Photons - Continuum Center

Pt-Symmetric Scarf-II Potential :an Update
Pt-Symmetric Scarf-II Potential :an Update

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Scissors Mode

... Above c, apparition of singular lines on which the density is zero and around which the circulation of the velocity is quantized ...
Ch. 13 notes
Ch. 13 notes

physics phenomena accompanied streamlining of a body by the gas
physics phenomena accompanied streamlining of a body by the gas

Lecture 2 Physics Classifications: Classical and Quantum
Lecture 2 Physics Classifications: Classical and Quantum

Can we build individual molecules atom by atom?
Can we build individual molecules atom by atom?

... to obtain coupled equations for ...
On the Shoulders of Giants”
On the Shoulders of Giants”

neutrino_trans1
neutrino_trans1

... enough to resolve the oscillations, this guarantees that the wavepackets of the different i still overlap (barely). On the other hand, if the detector energy resolution is poor, and the oscillations can’t be resolved in the energy spectrum, the quantum description of this is that the i have “decoh ...
Quantum Notes - MIT OpenCourseWare
Quantum Notes - MIT OpenCourseWare

< 1 ... 921 922 923 924 925 926 927 928 929 ... 1073 >

Theoretical and experimental justification for the Schrödinger equation

The theoretical and experimental justification for the Schrödinger equation motivates the discovery of the Schrödinger equation, the equation that describes the dynamics of nonrelativistic particles. The motivation uses photons, which are relativistic particles with dynamics determined by Maxwell's equations, as an analogue for all types of particles.This article is at a postgraduate level. For a more general introduction to the topic see Introduction to quantum mechanics.
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