I’m David Fullerton, Stack Overflow’s CTO, responsible for the product, engineering, and community teams.
I joined Stack Overflow in 2010 because I believed in the vision and mission of Stack Overflow. I wanted to be a part of building a community where programmers come together to help one anot...
@AbhasKumarSinha why would I? I'm fine with being called 'he', though given my profile picture I can't take really exception to people calling me otherwise at first
@JohanLiebert no, it's just what happens. Every year the default ad for the Twitter account gets posted, and every year it gets downvoted because no one really likes that twitter feed
> Magnetohydrodynamics combines the intuitive nature of Maxwell's equations with the easy solvability of the Navier-Stokes equations. It's so straightforward physicists add "relativistic" or "quantum" just to keep it from getting boring.
there is new cutting edge research/ experiments measuring electron transitions that have mainstream physicists agreeing that bohr didnt have the complete story, and that new revisions to the theory are here. see eg quantamagazine.org/… — vzn40 secs ago
@SarveshAhuja Resonance structures are needed in chemistry, because the electrons can be everywhere!, even at your hands, but there are different probabilities of having it at different places. When we draw resonance structures, we keep in mind to draw structures where electrons have most chances of being there (for example near electro negative elements)
← (coincidentally) recently emailed 5 top physicists leading/ investigating the area about an experiment that may reveal electron jumping dynamics using classical fluid dynamics, havent heard back from any yet... "the search goes on..." :(
@SarveshAhuja Our classical ideas about trajectories don't apply very well to electrons. However, we can say that electrons move smoothly, they don't jump around in a discontinuous fashion. Please see knzhou's excellent answer:
Do electrons change orbitals as per QM instantaneously?
In every reasonable interpretation of this question, the answer is no. But there are historical and sociological reasons why a lot of people say the answer is yes.
Consider an electron in a hydrogen atom which falls from the $2p$ state...
In in case of rather instantaneous or extremely quick motion,the curvature in space time due to the electron’s mass would relax(where it was present initially,and then cause curvature at the final place it has moved to...
Thanks , I will read it and check back..
@PM2Ring
It makes kind of sense..but I don’t know what these symbols mean... |𝜓(𝑡)⟩=𝑐1(𝑡)|2𝑝⟩+𝑐2(𝑡)|1𝑠⟩.
Practically speaking, we can generally ignore the changes to spacetime curvature due to the movement of electrons. The electromagnetic effects are far greater, by around 40 orders of magnitude. So unless your experiments can measure stuff with 40 significant figures you won't even see those gravitational effects.
then I was just wondering, if we are able to replicate the motion of the electron, is it possible to create more significant effects in space time and perhaps create such resonating depressions to tear space time(to create a temporary black hole)
@SarveshAhuja Ok. That equation just says that at the start of the transition the electron is in the 2p orbital, and at the end of the transition the electron is in the 1s orbital. During the transition the electron is in a superposition of the 2s and 1s states. If you try to observe the electron during the transition you will always observe it in either the 2p or 1s state, never in some other state.
And the equation tells you the probability of measuring it in each state. So near the start of the transition, the probability is close to 100% that you'll see it in the 2p state, near the end of the transition, the probability is close to 100% that you see it in the 1s state. And in the middle of the transition the probability is 50% that you see it in 2p, and 50% that you see it in 1s. This is fundamentally the way that probability works for any quantum transition.
@SarveshAhuja Quantum theory and general relativity are both very good models, but we don't know (yet) how to combine them into a united quantum gravity theory. But that's mostly ok, since we only need quantum gravity to model very extreme situations, like at the core of a black hole, or conditions during the very early phases of the Big Bang, when the universe was less than 1 nanosecond old.
I am making an analogy between the history of arts and physics and wanted to make sure that the physics side is correct. As such, the question is probably not a good fit for this site, but maybe it can be salvaged by rephrasing? Or maybe someone can answer it here?
We can try and see the prog...
If yes, please elucidate what must be the case such that we can make the statement : "We imagine the World".
If no (or if the question is meaningless/absurd) please demonstrate using logical arguments that it cannot be said that "We imagine the World".
Looking at the this (👆) question it seems to me that it is quite hard to close question on the basis of meaningless-ness on Philosophy.SE (the OP might ask what does it mean to be meaningless?)!
The brand name bathroom cleaner Scrubbing Bubbles has a mascot, that is a bubble with a rotating bush on the bottom.
Please view this video to see an example of the motion.
I would like to know what this kind of propulsion is called, and or what it would take for a real life device to move arou...
This question appeared on Bangladesh physics Olympiad 2014, Sylhet, Bangladesh for students of class 9 and 10.
I really tried to solve this but i failed. Please help.
Suppose that, while lying on the beach near the equator watching the sun set over a calm ocean, you start a stopwatch just as...
@FakeMod i don't think it's spam, but i don't think it's on topic either (mostly because it relies on one to either watch enough TV to be familiar with the product & commercial or jump off-site to watch a commercial)
@AaronStevens I'm really disappointed how many upvotes have been given for those answers... It's just "I tried to solve this but can't help please", like a super blatant homework question.