In our everyday World we’re used to Absolute deterministic predictions. Throw a ball in the air and it’ll fall along in the trajectory. Leave your umbrella parked on the street. And when you come back, it’s still there. Just one umbrella quantum physics is not like this because quantum mechanics doesn’t allow us to makeContinue reading “Quantum probability: underlying classical variables”
Tag Archives: chemistry
Quarks
When you’re a kid, you’re told that all the stuff around you is made of atoms and that atoms are made of protons and neutrons and electrons. And if you’re lucky you’re told what protons and neutrons are made of they’re made of three quarks eat, but if they’re both made of quarks, how areContinue reading “Quarks”
Brownian motion
One thing that’s astounding about Einstein’s Publications in 1905 is that they spanned a such a large range of physics after Illuminating the quantum nature of Light by explaining the photoelectric effect in March April saw Einstein turn to something apparently more mundane particles suspended in fluids in particular. If you look at tiny particlesContinue reading “Brownian motion”
Gravitational Efficiency: The outrageous efficiency of Blackhole
E=MC², the most famous equation in the world describes the fact that anything with mass possesses a huge amount of energy in principle like a 5-kilogram cat has enough energy in its mass to power the entire country of Norway for a year. If only the energy could somehow be fully extracted from the cat,Continue reading “Gravitational Efficiency: The outrageous efficiency of Blackhole”
Brown Dwarf: Star aspirant
The international astronomical Union defines Brown dwarfs as balls of gas in space that are too small to be bona fide hydrogen burning stars, but large enough to burn deuterium which anything bigger than about 13 times. The mass of Jupiter can do because of this brown dwarfs are often called failed stars or superContinue reading “Brown Dwarf: Star aspirant”