August 4, 2013
Mohenjo
Science
alpha particle, amazon, austrian physicist, business, Business News, climate, Erwin Schrödinger, helium atom, Hotels, huffingtonpost, Physics, poison gas, Quantum Effects, quantum entanglement, quantum mechanics, Quantum Physics, Quantum Theory, radioactive metal, research, Schrodinger's Cat, Schrodinger's Cat Experiments, Science, Science News, Slideshow, Superposition, technology, Technology News, travel, vacation, Weird
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The strangeness of the world of the very small that allows a particle to be in two states at once may extend to larger scales, two new studies reveal. If the research proves true, that would bolster the validity of a thought experiment suggesting a cat can be both alive and dead at the same time.
The idea, called Schrödinger’s Cat after the physicist,Erwin Schrödinger, who proposed it in 1935, goes like this: Put a cat in a box with a vial of poison gas. The vial opens when a tiny piece of radioactive metal emits an alpha particle (the nucleus of a helium atom) as it decays. Emitting an alpha particle is a quantum-mechanical process, which means that whether it happens in any given stretch of time is basically random.
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Erwin Schrödinger, Austrian physicist. New research bolsters the validity of his thought experiment suggesting a cat can be both alive and dead at the same time.
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.Click link below for story and slideshow:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/23/schrodingers-cat-thought-experiment-physicists_n_3639077.html?ref=topbar
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July 9, 2013
Mohenjo
Science
amazon, “theory of everything, ”, business, climate, Einstein’s general relativity, fundamental particles, General Relativity, Hotels, imperial college london, mindbendingly large, particle accelerators, Physical Review Letters, quantum entanglement, quantum mechanics, research, Science, Science News, Stanford University, String Theory, technology, Technology News, theoretical physicist, travel, uantum mechanics, vacation, vanishingly small, vibrating strings, wired

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The theory has long been touted as the best hope for a unified “theory of everything,” bringing together the physics of the vanishingly small and the mindbendingly large. But it has also been criticized and even ridiculed for failing to make any predictions that could be checked experimentally. It’s not just that we don’t have big enough particle accelerators or powerful enough computers; string theory’s most vocal critics charge that no experiment could even be imagined that would prove it right or wrong, making the whole theory effectively useless.
Now, physicists at Imperial College London and Stanford University have found a way to make string theory useful, not for a theory of everything, but for quantum entanglement.
“We can use string theory to solve problems in a different area of physics,” said theoretical physicist Michael Duff of Imperial College London. “In that context it’s actually useful: We can make statements which you could in principle check by experiment.” Duff and his colleagues describe their findings in a paper in Physical Review Letters September 2.
String theory suggests that matter can be broken down beyond electrons and quarks into tiny loops of vibrating strings. Those strings move and vibrate at different frequencies, giving particles distinctive properties like mass and charge. This strange idea could unite all the fundamental forces, explain the origins of fundamental particles and connect Einstein’s general relativity to quantum mechanics. But to do so, the theory requires six extra dimensions of space and time curled up inside the four that we’re used to.
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.Click link below for article:
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2010/09/stringy-quantum/
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