1. dia
... and by the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, the uncertainty in simultaneously determining proton velocity and position is given as follows: ...
... and by the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, the uncertainty in simultaneously determining proton velocity and position is given as follows: ...
arXiv:1501.01373v2 [physics.hist
... theories are fundamentally different from classical theories. No-one should dare to compare a simple computer model such as a cellular automaton based on the integers, with a fully quantized field theory. Yet here we find a quantum field system and an automaton that are based on states that neatly c ...
... theories are fundamentally different from classical theories. No-one should dare to compare a simple computer model such as a cellular automaton based on the integers, with a fully quantized field theory. Yet here we find a quantum field system and an automaton that are based on states that neatly c ...
orbital quantum number
... It is true that any positive energy may lead to a solution to Schrödinger's equation… …but a positive energy means the electron is not bound, so we don't have a electron in the hydrogen atom. The only possible negative (bound electron) energies are those given by the equation above. None of this inf ...
... It is true that any positive energy may lead to a solution to Schrödinger's equation… …but a positive energy means the electron is not bound, so we don't have a electron in the hydrogen atom. The only possible negative (bound electron) energies are those given by the equation above. None of this inf ...
powerpoint
... your superpower?". Everyone has superpowers, even if their individual beliefs may hinder their development. This talk is for you, whether you disbelieve in superpowers because "science says it impossible" or you already know one of your superpowers. We will discuss the science behind how the mind ca ...
... your superpower?". Everyone has superpowers, even if their individual beliefs may hinder their development. This talk is for you, whether you disbelieve in superpowers because "science says it impossible" or you already know one of your superpowers. We will discuss the science behind how the mind ca ...
Observing Radiation Pressure Shot Noise on a Solid Object
... Konrad Lehnert Group, JILA Ray Simmonds Group, NIST ...
... Konrad Lehnert Group, JILA Ray Simmonds Group, NIST ...
Good and Evil at the Planck Scale
... agree on this. If you have a quantum wave function – a quantum superposition of multiple possibilities for example – which interacts with environment it is said to decohere, a type of collapse. But if a quantum system avoids environmental decoherence, then what? Roger Penrose’s idea is that it will ...
... agree on this. If you have a quantum wave function – a quantum superposition of multiple possibilities for example – which interacts with environment it is said to decohere, a type of collapse. But if a quantum system avoids environmental decoherence, then what? Roger Penrose’s idea is that it will ...
Nonlinear wave mechanics of complex material systems
... in the kinematic wave theory, and the quantity DX Dt is also a material velocity. The Hamilton–Jacobi equations (16) and (23) are obviously analogous to one another. The richest comment, however, comes from a comparison of Eq. (25)1 and a possible generalization of Eq. (11)2. First of all, Eq. (25)1 ...
... in the kinematic wave theory, and the quantity DX Dt is also a material velocity. The Hamilton–Jacobi equations (16) and (23) are obviously analogous to one another. The richest comment, however, comes from a comparison of Eq. (25)1 and a possible generalization of Eq. (11)2. First of all, Eq. (25)1 ...
Properties, Statistics and the Identity of Quantum Particles
... QM statistics+violation of PIIReceived View? Properties, statistics and the identity of quantum particles ...
... QM statistics+violation of PIIReceived View? Properties, statistics and the identity of quantum particles ...
Slide 1
... example, a photon of blue light of wavelength 450 nm will always have 2.76 eV of energy. It occurs in quantized chunks of 2.76 eV, and you can't have half a photon of blue light - it always occurs in precisely the same sized energy chunks. But the frequency available is continuous and has no upper o ...
... example, a photon of blue light of wavelength 450 nm will always have 2.76 eV of energy. It occurs in quantized chunks of 2.76 eV, and you can't have half a photon of blue light - it always occurs in precisely the same sized energy chunks. But the frequency available is continuous and has no upper o ...
Quantum discreteness is an illusion
... gle-particle problems, thus giving the impression that the wave function was kind of a spatial field (see the remark concerning the “second quantization” in Sect. 2). So it may not be surprising that many scientists still believe that there is a wave function for each electron in an atom, or that t ...
... gle-particle problems, thus giving the impression that the wave function was kind of a spatial field (see the remark concerning the “second quantization” in Sect. 2). So it may not be surprising that many scientists still believe that there is a wave function for each electron in an atom, or that t ...
Document
... Key words Quantum Blackbody Radiation Planck’s hypothesis The photoelectric effect The particle theory or light X-rays Diffraction Photons Electromagnetic ...
... Key words Quantum Blackbody Radiation Planck’s hypothesis The photoelectric effect The particle theory or light X-rays Diffraction Photons Electromagnetic ...
- Lorentz Center
... Everyday life is built upon a separation of length and time scales – it revolves around objects that have the essential property of stability towards internal & external perturbations. Similarly, science relies on a separation of scales: e.g. 1. Thermodynamics is independent of the existence of atom ...
... Everyday life is built upon a separation of length and time scales – it revolves around objects that have the essential property of stability towards internal & external perturbations. Similarly, science relies on a separation of scales: e.g. 1. Thermodynamics is independent of the existence of atom ...
people.ysu.edu
... of that same observable to again give But this means that the subsequent probability of measuring the observable and finding is one. That in turn by the Copenhagen interpretation means that as a result of the measurement process itself there can no longer be any superposition of states with differen ...
... of that same observable to again give But this means that the subsequent probability of measuring the observable and finding is one. That in turn by the Copenhagen interpretation means that as a result of the measurement process itself there can no longer be any superposition of states with differen ...
Scientific Papers
... between life and necrosis in a sort of purgatory; it just does not seem right. Metaphysically, states of existence supersede this and can make things exist in two places at once. There is a 50% chance the atom will decay and the cat will die, but the other 50% is that it will not decay in the time a ...
... between life and necrosis in a sort of purgatory; it just does not seem right. Metaphysically, states of existence supersede this and can make things exist in two places at once. There is a 50% chance the atom will decay and the cat will die, but the other 50% is that it will not decay in the time a ...
PPT - WordPress.com
... These concepts are intended to correspond with the objective reality, and by means of these concepts we picture this reality to ourselves. In attempting to judge the success of a physical theory, we may ask ourselves two questions: (1) “Is the theory correct?” and (2) “Is the description given by th ...
... These concepts are intended to correspond with the objective reality, and by means of these concepts we picture this reality to ourselves. In attempting to judge the success of a physical theory, we may ask ourselves two questions: (1) “Is the theory correct?” and (2) “Is the description given by th ...
are WAVES. PARTICLES!
... unthinkable. But what end?” “There is the great standing perennial problem to which human reason is as far from an answer as ever.” ...
... unthinkable. But what end?” “There is the great standing perennial problem to which human reason is as far from an answer as ever.” ...
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... This physical quantum gravity state has a good classical limit (i.e.,. a DeSitter spacetime for small cosmological constant, hence large k). So when Smolin talks of spinet-based physical states, their classical limit are the beable geometries. How do we interpret this in terms of Bohm's pilot-wave ...
... This physical quantum gravity state has a good classical limit (i.e.,. a DeSitter spacetime for small cosmological constant, hence large k). So when Smolin talks of spinet-based physical states, their classical limit are the beable geometries. How do we interpret this in terms of Bohm's pilot-wave ...
A. Is the wave function a description of the physical world?
... One might hold that the human failure to achieve established metaphysical results is due to some special quirk of the human mind, a quirk that could be absent from the minds of Martians or intelligent dolphins. Evolutionary biology suggests that human beings possess a very specific set of mental ta ...
... One might hold that the human failure to achieve established metaphysical results is due to some special quirk of the human mind, a quirk that could be absent from the minds of Martians or intelligent dolphins. Evolutionary biology suggests that human beings possess a very specific set of mental ta ...