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08:46
That is such a neat experiment. Dating the last flip in the magnetic field right down to the year! Well, given some assumptions about the relationship between C14 levels and the magnetic field.
 
2 hours later…
10:51
Hi guys . Does the equation $PV^{\gamma} = constant$ hold for irreversible adiabatic process?
11:32
@Qmechanic re: this
I’m voting to close this question because SE cannot offer reliable lab security advices. — Qmechanic ♦ 3 mins ago
presumably you mean "safety" instead of "security" :-)
11:45
well, we don't offer security advice, either :P
Will any orange-tinted window offer protection against theft of my 450 nm laser?
12:00
@EmilioPisanty : Corrected.
@FadedGiant where did it go? I can't find it anymore
12:26
I saw it on HNQ but didn't get a chance to read it
12:56
0
Q: Classical and Quantum Correlations

Oti DiotiI am just now trying to get started with the idea of classical and quantum correlations in physics. Could anyone provide me with the reference of some introductory material(books/publications/articles/videos) to Classical and Quantum Correlations?

has this question been deleted and re-asked?
Does anyone know if the $i$ in the denominator is the imaginary number or is it related to the initial state, also denoted with an $i$? Thanks!
The Kramers–Heisenberg dispersion formula is an expression for the cross section for scattering of a photon by an atomic electron. It was derived before the advent of quantum mechanics by Hendrik Kramers and Werner Heisenberg in 1925, based on the correspondence principle applied to the classical dispersion formula for light. The quantum mechanical derivation was given by Paul Dirac in 1927.The Kramers–Heisenberg formula was an important achievement when it was published, explaining the notion of "negative absorption" (stimulated emission), the Thomas–Reiche–Kuhn sum rule, and inelastic scattering...
@schn it's the imaginary unit
@NiharKarve yeah, it would seem so
@schn when $i$ precedes a decay width in e.g. a propagator for an unstable resonance, you can give $i\Gamma$ the interpretation of the imaginary part of the mass, might be interesting to read
@NiharKarve Thanks for the insight
 
3 hours later…
15:51
@Nobodyrecognizeable no
 
3 hours later…
18:49
What does the 2 in a $M_2$ shell refer to? I'm familiar with $K,L,M...$ notation for the shells, but not the subscript.
X-ray notation is a method of labeling atomic orbitals that grew out of X-ray science. Also known as IUPAC notation, it was adopted by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry in 1991 as a simplification of the older Siegbahn notation. In X-ray notation, every principal quantum number is given a letter associated with it. In many areas of physics and chemistry, atomic orbitals are described with spectroscopic notation (1s, 2s, 2p, 3s, 3p, etc.), but the more traditional X-ray notation is still used with most X-ray spectroscopy techniques including AES and XPS. == Conversion == �...
 
2 hours later…
20:24
What is meant by a "one-electron" picture?
In relation to spectroscopy mostly.
 
2 hours later…
22:05
Does anyone know what it means for a company on a job listing website to have the salary listed as: "£26,000 (tax free)"?
This is the link: prospects.ac.uk/employer-profiles/bcs-4677/jobs/…, right at the bottom is says that. I'm not necessarily looking at applying for it, I was just surprised to see it.
Specifically the "tax free" part, I haven't seen that anywhere before
22:17
maybe it's an intentionally ambiguous way to say "before taxes"? :P
Well I guess it's more creative than "competitive" which seems to be on every listing

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