It seems that I have missed something, but I wanted to exemplify my ideas with one of my posts, I do not know how such comments and links can be illegitimate or offensive. Good afternoon.
I think it might be something like this: White Tea, Rose Hips, Hibiscus, Apple Pieces, Rose Petals, Cranberries, Mango Pieces, Pineapple Pieces, Natural Pineapple Flavor, Natural Mango Flavor, and Blueberries
To my understanding “tea” => leaves of some family of plants or something. And then white, green, oolong, and black are varying levels of oxidizings of said tea leaves
Interesting, I thought that usually red infusions like Hibiscus aren't mixed with the green tea style ones
Well yes, but there is a certain amount of inherent confusion there because tea is both a specific plant family and what people often call tea includes all kinds of infusions that don't necessarily involve it
Tea is in the camellia family. You can make tea from the leaves of many members of the family, but the results may be an acquired taste... en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camellia
it is a normal ENM course, but I just didn't learn one of the topics from self-studying the text (the radiation part), so I am still taking the course. it would also probably have been too messy to replace this course with something else
interesting, we had SR at the end of physics 1, and physics 2 was just EM, no baby lol
I can give you a pro tip, which is probably not a pro tip at all: when I get slightly bored with a subject, I go back and watch the Susskind lectures on it :) when such exist of course...
Probably the same is true for reading the Feynman lectures on certain subjects
@SillyGoose Speedy recovery to you... $v\approx c$ ! :)
also if you like making up random stuff these days cond-mat might be better, you come up with some weird hamiltonian and people actually build it in the lab
@fqq Maybe Faraday is a good example for what you're trying to say, if I am understanding you correctly, he was more well known as an inventor even but I'm quite sure that it is very related to the fact he also had groundbreaking "fundamental" ideas