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General Scattering and Resonance – Getting Started
General Scattering and Resonance – Getting Started

... possible solutions that were traveling waves in both regions. Like a classical wave (and unlike a classical particle) a quanta that undergoes an interaction (change in potential) has some probability of being reflected back the way it came – even if the potential energy is less than the total energy ...
Light - Edublogs
Light - Edublogs

... • It has a “dual nature”, behaving like a wave at times and behaving like particles (of NO mass) at times. ...
Effective Theory - Richard Jones
Effective Theory - Richard Jones

... mount, vibrations proved to be a significant issue.  These vibrations are believed to be translated through the tungsten wires to the diamond, originating in the environment surrounding the apparatus. This poses a significant problem—if the electron does not strike the diamond at a very precise an ...
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Slide1

... Spin is like angular momentum Recall m can have (2l+1) values between –l and l. For spin, since only 2 ...
Quantum computation communication theory
Quantum computation communication theory

... “Entropy-energy balance in noisy quantum computers,” QCMC’02 Proceedings, to appear. “Almost any quantum spin system with short-range interactions can support toric codes,” Phys. Lett. A 294, 153 (2002). ...
atoms and moles - Cherokee County Schools
atoms and moles - Cherokee County Schools

... By using an electroscope, Thomas’s experiments demonstrated that electrons have mass (they could turn the paddle wheel). b) Louis de Broglie also demonstrated by using Bohr’s model, that electrons have characteristics like waves because, when confined in space, light can have only discrete wavelengt ...
Elementary Particles and the Forces of Nature
Elementary Particles and the Forces of Nature

... nearly the same positions, they must have different velocities, which means that they will not stay in the same position for long. If the world had been created without the exclusion principle, quarks would not form separate, well-defined protons and neutrons. Nor would these, together with electron ...
5.1 Density and Buoyancy
5.1 Density and Buoyancy

Full text in PDF form
Full text in PDF form

... free wave packet with fairly well de…ned momentum. Our model gives an estimate for the minimal time it takes to measure the position of this particle at a distance bigger or equal to R: It turns out that, if R is big enough, we …nd an estimate for the minimal time needed which is proportionate to th ...
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... For every particle, there is an antiparticle ...
The Uncertainty Principle and Covalent Bonding
The Uncertainty Principle and Covalent Bonding

... That is, a concept has a physical meaning only if it can be measured in an experiment. These experiments don’t have to be practically feasible, but they must be physically possible in principle. For example, in order to measure the position of an electron, one can illuminate the electron and observe ...
Algebraic Aspects of Topological Quantum Computing
Algebraic Aspects of Topological Quantum Computing

... Algebraic Aspects of Topological Quantum Computing ...
ppt - University of Warwick
ppt - University of Warwick

... Type of the charged particle detected used to infer the type of incoming neutrino. ...
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From Last Time… Wavelength of 1 eV electron Question Can this be

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Probability, Expectation Values, and Uncertainties
Probability, Expectation Values, and Uncertainties

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... (the hierarchy problem) ? (iii) Properties of particles: electric charge quantisation Why do we never observe particles with charge, eg, 1.5234e ? If the ultimate aim is a theory of everything which predicts particles, forces and cosmological measurements from a single principle/equations then solut ...
Notes on wavefunctions II: momentum wave
Notes on wavefunctions II: momentum wave

PowerPoint 演示文稿
PowerPoint 演示文稿

... of those escaping atoms then pass through a second narrow slit,to form a narrow beam of atoms. The beam passes between the poles of an electromagnet and then lands on a glass detector plate where it forms a silver deposit. ...
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Lecture 8: The fractional quantum Hall effect The fractional quantum
Lecture 8: The fractional quantum Hall effect The fractional quantum

... The fractional QHE is evidently prima facie impossible to obtain within an independentelectron picture, since it would appear to require that the extended states be only partially occupied and this would immediately lead to a nonzero value of Σxx . What this suggests is that electron-electron intera ...
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... surface under incident radiation absorbs the radiation and gets warm. In the meantime, gas molecules ...
Fundamentals of quantum mechanics Quantum Theory of Light and Matter
Fundamentals of quantum mechanics Quantum Theory of Light and Matter

... σA2 = hψ|(Â − hAi)(Â − hA)|ψi = ha|ai σB2 ...
Lecture 10
Lecture 10

... infinity. Ionization energies are always positive quantities. What is the ionization energy in Ry of a hydrogen atom with an electron in the n = 1 orbit? For a hydrogen atom with an electron in the n = 2 orbit? Since the final state has a value of E = 0, the energy required to reach this state is th ...
Bose-Einstein spin condensates: revisiting the Einstein
Bose-Einstein spin condensates: revisiting the Einstein

... Alice that creates the transverse orientation observed by Bob. N.B: It is just the relative phase of the mathematical wave functions that is determined by measurements; the physical states themselves remain unchanged; it is not a matter of propagating of something physical along the condensates, for ...
Scientists create never-before-seen form of matter
Scientists create never-before-seen form of matter

... remember it his strong interaction ability for example in the H – atom where are only electromagnetic interactions among proton and electron. ...
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Double-slit experiment

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