Thanks for that guys... but is it possible that we just haven't discovered what causes the particle to move north/south/etc.? Could there really be a cause behind this 'randomness' that we're not yet aware of? Or am I simplifying things?
I came across the term 'Quantum Randomness' in another online discussion and was wondering what it actually was? :bugeye: Could anyone explain it to someone with a very sketchy knowledge of physics, if at all possible? Thanks! :smile:
I was working through the following problem:
The negative termincal of a 12V car battery is connected to the car frame which can be regarded as 'ground', at a potential of 0V. What is the potential of the other terminal?
The answer is +12V, but I cannot understand why. Could someone give...
I'm trying to work out the number of disjunctions that occur during meiosis. I think during anaphase 2 there are 23 X 2 (where the chromatids disjunction) but... I don't know if the sex chromosomes disjunction, because this is how my textbook defines disjunction:
in meiosis, separation of...
Hello, I'm doing some work for school and have a question about glucose regulation in the human body (I hope this is the right place to post this, I apologise if it isn't!)
In glucose regulation, what are the receptors that detect the change in glucose levels? I have read some worksheets...