And the standard model defines basically all particles implied in three of the 4 known fundamental interactions: electromagnetism, weak nuclear force, strong nuclear force
The quantum gauge theory helped theorize, and then find, the force mediators of the weak and strong nuclear forces -- W+, W-, Z0 (weak), gluons (strong)
tis said that when someone asked Einstein what it felt like to be the most intelligent man in the world, he supposedly answered "I don't know, you'd have to ask Nicholas Tesla"
So, what is commonly called as the "electromagnetic force" is in fact also responsible for heat out of radiators etc
And the mediator of this force is the photon
Now, the quantum gauge theory had also theoricized the mediators for the weak (W+, W-, Z0) and strong (gluons) nuclear forces
(for a practical point of view: the weak nuclear force is how nuclear reactors produce energy)
However, there was a problem
Physics theorists noticed that if the gauge theory was right (and it was, since experiments uncovered all "mediators", which are called "bosons"), then all mediators were to have a mass of 0
Which is not what was experimentally found; for instance, the W* and Z0 bosons have a huge mass (compared to a proton for instance)
And here, there were two possibilities to solve the dilemma; as Étienne Klein beautifully puts it, the two possibilities were an ontologic one ("the laws are right; it is just that we don't interpret xx correctly") or a legislative on ("the laws are wrong; it needs to be changed")
And note that when it comes to "the higgs", the "xx" in the sentence above refers to the concept of mass itself
And among these fundamental particles there is the photon (OK, we know the mass is 0), the electron (not 0!), the quarks (fundamental constituents of neutrons and protons -- not 0!), etc
Well, do ask
I believe I now have a good enough knowledge to be able to answer ;)
I love science, but my scope is different from fge's in that I love and pursue every aspect of it, while fge looks at interesting parts. That's why I'm not participating in their monologues.
And the Higgs boson is a perfect example of what is called a "negative philosoĥic discovery"
Precisely because it redefines what mass is; that is, mass is not a fundamental property of matter
My tentative explanation was cut off for lack of interest, but this was the beginning of why it is so, and why the Higgs led to that very fundamental conclusion
The model for them is purely mathematic, and it defies our common, "layman" human knowledge -- there are no pictural representations of quantum physics, there cannot be
... I was forced to attend a stupid event all day and I hate having my day wasted like that so I coded all the night, and I forgot to make meal so I microwaved ramen noodles, and it's not like anyone would help me out with that
When I was younger, I possessed a talent in mathematics. I didn't tell anyone about it because they wouldn't understand me, but my parents got me to a contest for the Olympian Maths sessions anyway because I told them I was interested in it.
I slept 4h tonight because a) we went to bed at 4:30 and b) neighbor had a lovely drilling in the wall with powertools session at 8:30, then we spent 3h walking through heavy forest then 2h on a meeting. I'm so tired I don't know what to do :')
But I wouldn't admit to failing, so I started rationalizing the concept. I spent an entire day grasping a new concept from scratch, of which I have no experience prior. Part of it was imagining things, then I stopped. I put down my pen and stared at the ceiling.
In the public examination, I was doing just that; Suddenly, I had a realization. Of which I am an insignificant part of everything, and that what I understand is not enough to grasp anything. The rest of the competition blurred away. The rest of the entire day blurred away. But I never attended public examinations since. It was remarkable, the thoughts, like finally understanding a piece of an impossible puzzle.
Oh, and by the way, I eventually solved that problem by myself, thanks to the Internet.
It's hard to explain. Like seeing huge soldiers all lined up with no end, but so huge that what you can see from any perspective are not enough to see any part more than details.
@ItachiUchiha It's just gonna be a very simple app that calculates distance in various traffic situations; like if you travel at x km/h and you look at your phone for 2 seconds, you will have traveled y meters without seeing what's going on in front of you, and if you're driving on an icy road and paying full attention, about how far will you go from registering the danger and coming to a full stop?
You are in a system with many individual entities, let's say, n; therefore the calculation of the behavior of each individual entity according to the behavior of the n-1 other entities becomes "too big to compute" (maybe quantum computing will bring a solution to that, just not now)
Hey, i trying to write a client for some social network, and this social network allows only 3 requests per second. If requests > 3 it giving "Too much requests per second". Can anybody help me?
I'm sorry but that's not relevant at all to my app. There are no statistics and there's no room for that large a variety. There are already data on average math equations to use for this
It's a simple app, I don't know if you know what simple means, but it does not involve doing scientific tests on what traction the rubber on a goodyear tire vs all the other brands are.
@Mr.777 I have no idea what he's going off about while making things more complicated.
I'm not even gonna pretend I do.
To me, it's as if I said "I'm gonna build a snowman!" and he starts talking about the density and velocity of snowflakes as they fall depending on a fractal pattern deciding the snowflakes unique shape and I need to find the equation for how snowflakes form.
And I imagine rolling three balls of snow together, put some rocks and a carrot as a face, maybe some twigs for arms....