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Quantom physics
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SoulSupply
yes, it may seem boring, but having read michaels crichtons book timeline, ive been fairly interested in the whole thing. wots everyones own opinions on it?
Orbax
you spelled quantum wrong. Not the best way to get an intellectual topic started :P
Photo_bot_2k1
quote:
Originally posted by Orbax
you spelled quantum wrong. Not the best way to get an intellectual topic started :P


i was just gonna say that
eye_03
yeah, i read that when i was like 14. good book..
u4ea:[soulstar]
I believe QP is outdated. Quantum Mechanics is the updated version. String theory and M-string theory expands into dimensions and god knows what.

Stephen Hawkings' latest book will explain the current physics.
NomadaNare
cool topic but i dont know much about it. Anyone mind explaining?
Orbax
light is merely the effect of the vibrations of the strings in the 5th dimension.

any other questions?
udham
quote:
Originally posted by Orbax
light is merely the effect of the vibrations of the strings in the 5th dimension.

any other questions?



:stongue: :stongue: :stongue: :stongue:
NomadaNare
thought it had something to do with strings and stuff. And supposedly when one vibrates or moves, all places of the string vibrate at the exact same time right?They were trying to find some way of duplicating it to induce time travel right? I also heard it has something to do with a flip universe to everything and that in order to travel through time, u would have to cross this "barrier" into the flip universe which you would approach while going very close tot he speed of light. Ever heard of that one?
Cobalt
Quantum mechanics are fairly well understood these days. There are classes on the subject at most technical schools (I'm not taking mine until the spring semester). The basic idea is that every interaction of particles with eachother (quarks, electrons, etc) is simply the manifestation of an intermediate particle. This, understandably, leads to many, many different kinds of particles, because there's one for every kind of subatomic interaction. But it's not just hypothetical. Most of the categorized (and predicted) particles have been physically detected in particle accelerators and a variety of other (often costly) experimental setups. We know that the subatomic world works the odd way quantum mechanics describes it to. There's also the fuzzy quality of "probablity" associated with particles in the quantum world (Heisenberg Uncertainly Principle for starters), meaning that there's never really a particle at a discrete point, only a field of probablity where the particle might be. It's extremely counterintuitive to think this way, in terms of mere probabilities instead of certainties, which is why quantum is nearly impossible to completely wrap your head around. Probability fields also matche up with a wave description of particles (that particles are just wave packets of probablity, not really discrete things). It's, well, really complicated. I can hardly get it, and I suspect a full-blown class will help my comprehension a lot.

As for String Theory, dude, I'm a physics major and I can barely understand the basics of the stuff. You can't really get a grasp of it until some serious graduate studies. The basic idea is that all different particles (electrons, quarks, muons, etc) are just vibrations of the same little loops, or "superstrings," much the same way that different vibrations of a musical string produce different notes (frequencies). But beyond simple analogies like that it gets waaaaaay out of my league.

There are tons of books written by physicists who boil down complicated physics concepts into simple explanations, but you can only go so far without mathematical accompaniment.

tor8024
quote:
Originally posted by Cobalt
As for String Theory, dude, I'm a physics major and I can barely understand the basics of the stuff. You can't really get a grasp of it until some serious graduate studies. The basic idea is that all different particles (electrons, quarks, muons, etc) are just vibrations of the same little loops, or "superstrings," much the same way that different vibrations of a musical string produce different notes (frequencies). But beyond simple analogies like that it gets waaaaaay out of my league.


i see what you mean.. i once saw a bbc documentary on string theory and i wanted to get more into it, but it was very hard to understand.. perhaps i should purchase that stephen hawkings book indeed!
afastest
yes, the book is easy reading.
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