Quantum probability: underlying classical variables

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”

Quantum tunneling

Suppose you drop a ball down the side of the valley, Classical wisdom tells us that when the ball rolls up the hill on the other side. It can’t go any higher than the height from which you dropped it that’s conservation of energy. Even if there’s a nice big long slope to roll downContinue reading “Quantum tunneling”

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”

Muons:Life example of the theory of relativity

Every second thousand of cosmic rays mostly hydrogen and helium nuclei strike every square meter of the Earth’s upper atmosphere. We don’t really know where they come from. But we do know that when cosmic rays crash into air molecules in the atmosphere. They create a shower of other fundamental particles pions crayons positrons, electronsContinue reading “Muons:Life example of the theory of relativity”

The Universe: constant Conflict

The universe. How big is it? Does it have a center? Does it have an edge? Is it getting bigger? And if so, why well, we know that there are two different meanings for Universe first. The observable universe is everything that we’ve been able to see or observe thus far and second the universeContinue reading “The Universe: constant Conflict”

Galaxies:The Birth, the manoeuvre

Most things in the universe happened to slowly for us to see them happening stars, like the sun take tens of millions of years to form and hundreds of millions of years to orbit there galaxies and colliding galaxies take billions of years to merge and yet we have a pretty decent understanding of howContinue reading “Galaxies:The Birth, the manoeuvre”

Perspective: A truth game of shifted view frame

When Galileo pointed his telescope at Jupiter in 1610, he was the first person to see the giant orbs attached to it by Springs. In his actual drawings compared night after night show these bright spots moving back and forth past Jupiter exactly the same as if they were balls hanging off of Springs. IContinue reading “Perspective: A truth game of shifted view frame”

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”

The Origin of Quantum Mechanics

Where did Quantum Theory come from it started not as a crazy idea, but with a light bulb in the early 1890’s the German Bureau of Standards asked Max Planck how to make light bulbs more efficient so that they would give out the maximum light for the least electrical power. The first task PlankContinue reading “The Origin of Quantum Mechanics”

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