They are very noncommittal about BICEP - or at least, one has to read between the lines
user54412
Also, well over 200 authors worked for years on this paper, and it's replete with typos - you would think one extraneous person in the author list would feel morally obliged to at least read the paper they're getting credit for
@Danu Sort of - I don't play D&D much, rather its German counterpart DSA and some more freeform systems based off FATE (and I apologize for that being likely nonsense to you ;) )
My experience with D&D is mostly playing the computer games using the system
I spent so much time on these things already (easily more than 5000 hours in about 2-3 years during my teenage years) that by now I just feel mehh when I spend a lot of time on it
@Danu Oh, I have. I'm not sentimental much otherwise, but when I look, for example, at the warrior figures (from lego and others) I used to play with for hours, epic stories playing out in my head, I wish I could, for some time, go back to that wealth of imagination. Nowadays, they're just plastic figures to me, but back then, they were much more.
I noticed some approved edits http://physics.stackexchange.com/review/suggested-edits/56088 , the edits dont seem to make the question clear, such as " I had a left over a coffee cup this morning, " actually made the grammar worse. Am I missing something or do people randomly accept edits ?
I'm not entirely sure what the edit restrictions are. I know that I am never able to deny an edit. Perhaps I am missing the button, but I don't believe I have the option to say"no".
@user1938107 People do randomly approve edits, the "robo-reviewer" problem is well-known and unsolved. Also, there seem to be wildly differing ideas about what constitutes a too minor edit (though that reject option is now gone)
@user1938107 Certainly the latter, regrettably. I try to be slightly critical, but as long as the post is improved somehow I tend to approve. That said, I feel it was a bad decision by the SE-higher-ups to get rid of Too minor
@user1938107 ..and I'm sorry that I slipped up in this case (I was one of the approvers of that edit), I remember seeing the few adjustments he made in the middle of hte post and thinking '...meh, but okay'. Clearly I was wrong ;)
@Danu Supposedly the system denies too minor edits itself, and apparently, if you are editing more than 15 or something characters, we should not deny that edit as too minor (which is a reason the invalid edit and custom options have seen a bit more use by me in the last days)
And what the hell am I supposed to do with an edit that claims to add a missing term from an equation in a book I don't have? I guess that's what Skip was made for...
I think I'll just pass on this one, I'm still not sure what my exact close reason would be - somehow, that just seems like an unholy-but-not-quite combination of no question detected and check my work.
Oh by the way people, very strange question (perhaps), but I've been dying to know: Who is the mysterious Italian theoretician that promised to cut off one of his balls if LHC did not find any SUSY?
By trading photons? I'm not sure if I missed something everybody else knows, but an electron(-) stays near a proton(+) because opposites attract.
Unless you meant, the photon emitted by an electron moving into a lower energy shell, interacting with the electrons of another atom.
To answer some ...
You'll have to forgive me if this question is too wrapped up in "classical" thinking.
I've read that electrons and protons interact by trading photons, but this only raises more questions. What determines the energy and direction of the emitted photon? How often can a particle emit a photon? How...
@CoilKid It is not your fault, but anyone familiar with the popularisation of the concept of (EM) interaction in QFTs can tell that the OP is confused about the (often carelessly thrown about) statement Charged particles interact by exchanging (virtual) photons
Edward Witten (/ˈwɪtən/; born August 26, 1951) is an American theoretical physicist and professor of mathematical physics at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey.
Witten is a researcher in string theory, quantum gravity, supersymmetric quantum field theories, and other areas of mathematical physics.
In addition to his contributions to physics, Witten's work has significantly impacted pure mathematics. In 1990 he became the first and so far only physicist to be awarded a Fields Medal by the International Mathematical Union. In 2004, Time magazine stated that Witten was widely...
Trying to answer GR questions is stressful, mostly because I know that by the time I've written an answer, at least 3 other answers will have been posted and I'll have nothing worth adding.