Q23: What physicist stood on his head and peed in front of his peers, in order to prove you can pee in space?
Quantum theory is probably the most tested theory and so far has predicted correctly quite a few things
That requires that something has a velocity. That something must still exist. Only the velocity is zero. But you're thinking in the right direction.
Yep! I suppose it is given this title because so many different particle tracks are involved in experiments with particle accelerators, and so many collisions occur. But then all of modern electronics depends on quantum mechanics as well. Damn! I had another question in mind but now I forgot what it was!
Acceleration will cause increasing air density as measured from the front and toward the back of the car. The balloon will move toward the front of the car.
Quantum Entanglement is the cause and has been demonstrated experimentally. The actual mechanism, I'll leave that to God as Einstein did too
Neither Quantum Mechanics or General Relativity, or Newtonian physics for that matter, have ever been wrong within their domain of applicability.
The Theory of Evolution has predicted the order of pretty much every finding of living matter from the earliest evidence to today. That would seem to be a tough challenger at the least.
There are numerous tests of randomness that get incredibly serious. But, that's far from proof that any sequence is actually perfectly random. I'd suggest there is no such possibility.
Heisengberg's Uncertainty Principle is heavily involved until the wave function breaks down at time of measurement, or something like that
Yes. Very counter intuitive! Since helium is lighter than air, the balloon is pushed forward as the denser air in the car is pushed to the back.
Q24: What critical component of your computer hard drive depends on Brownian Motion, in order to work.
The read head on a electromagnetic hard drive surface has to "float" within an incredibly close distance - enough that particles such as smoke would be a big deal. That head is held close by mechanical force but then floats from there. Or, at least that's the way they used to work. I could believe that brownian motion could be involved in that float.
Quantum Mechanics is a good answer - I'm not complaining. I'm just thinking about how one would imagine the count working. There are a lot of life forms and evolution is used throughout all biology, from paleo to agriculture, to medicine.
That's certainly a good definition. There is Brownian motion in gasses, too, though. I'll have to think about where there are fluids in a hard drive. Uh, main bearing, uh, movement of the arm , uh I think any movement at the level of moving the R/W head would have to be careful at the level of Brownian motion. I don't have it yet!