Recent content by Tommy White
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Graduate Is Doubly Special Relativity Connected to Variable Light Speed?
It's a little bit weird imo saying "the speed of light" (without c) and "the Planck constant" (without h) and then just G, so a little advice it's better to be complete and clear, specially if you're going to write an article once upon a time .. so Gravitational constant, G. Yes, measurements...- Tommy White
- Post #12
- Forum: Beyond the Standard Models
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Graduate Is Doubly Special Relativity Connected to Variable Light Speed?
A "yes" for a change ;). All (fundamental) physical constants are 'invariant' as in observer independent. But the Planck’s constant or Boltzmann’s constant are not called 'Lorentz invariants'. (In GR, of course G=c=1 so it would be really weird if it wasn't.)- Tommy White
- Post #9
- Forum: Beyond the Standard Models
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Undergrad Bending of Light Along the Sun: Explaining Half w/ Equivalence Principle
I remember this. @HansH only actually, coz I know him a bit for a while. I see that you have also grabbed the two peaks of PP again, sigh 😉. But that's also just a diagram, not a representation of an actual geodesic. Those peaks have no physical meaning whatsoever, as explained by Prof...- Tommy White
- Post #16
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
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Insights I Know the Math Says so, but Is It Really True?
I meant this as a reaction to the article, I didn't knew there was a whole conversation about it where this comes from out of nowhere I image. (Thought I might had to clarify that just in case.)- Tommy White
- Post #89
- Forum: General Math
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High School Is Quantum Field Theory Understandable Without Advanced Mathematics?
Thanks. I saw the table of contents of it and for me to understand that I imagine would be quite a struggle mathematically. Not that I'm not capable of understanding the math, but I find it hard (unfortunately) to enjoy studying mathematics without it having any physical meaning. But I...- Tommy White
- Post #16
- Forum: Quantum Physics
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High School Is Quantum Field Theory Understandable Without Advanced Mathematics?
Ok, thanks very much! Got to take it all in slowly though. I thought inertial mass and gravitational mass were the same, because although inertial mass, passive gravitational mass and active gravitational mass are conceptually distinct, no experiment has ever unambiguously demonstrated any...- Tommy White
- Post #13
- Forum: Quantum Physics
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Insights I Know the Math Says so, but Is It Really True?
Makes me think of what Feynman sais here: (Of course there are theoretical physicists and mathematical physicists though. A lot of physics can be explained by using just words, but none to apply it.)- Tommy White
- Post #88
- Forum: General Math
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High School Is Quantum Field Theory Understandable Without Advanced Mathematics?
Well, yes. But inertial mass, gravitational mass, rest mass, effective mass etc. is all the same: just mass, right? (And historically there was also transversal mass and longitudinal mass, electromagnetic mass, relativistic mass which is still used sometimes though. Those are things of the past...- Tommy White
- Post #11
- Forum: Quantum Physics
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High School Is Quantum Field Theory Understandable Without Advanced Mathematics?
Ok, thank you.- Tommy White
- Post #9
- Forum: Quantum Physics
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High School Is Quantum Field Theory Understandable Without Advanced Mathematics?
Well I could write a lot about it. But I think understanding Einstein's paper "Does the inertia of a body depend on its energy content?" explains it quite well. Which in a nutshell tells that the inertial mass of a body increases (or decreases) by the amount m=E/c^2 if its energy content...- Tommy White
- Post #8
- Forum: Quantum Physics
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High School Is Quantum Field Theory Understandable Without Advanced Mathematics?
Yes, that's true. I'll have to look it up later though. What about Wikipedia by the way?- Tommy White
- Post #6
- Forum: Quantum Physics
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High School Is Quantum Field Theory Understandable Without Advanced Mathematics?
Yes, I understand that. As well as the mass-energy equivalence.- Tommy White
- Post #4
- Forum: Quantum Physics
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High School Is Quantum Field Theory Understandable Without Advanced Mathematics?
I'm not even sure whether it can be defined in QFT, but I got this from SE: Which I don't understand. I'm not mathematically sophisticated enough for that.- Tommy White
- Thread
- Qft
- Replies: 17
- Forum: Quantum Physics
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Mechanical engineer and scientific researcher.
Hi, I'm Dutch, not any kind of Quark ;-) (so excuse me for any bad English) and I'm very curious about "how the universe works". Cosmology/astrophysics and modern physics (quantum, relativity). I find it all mighty interesting. Actually all physics and also how it's all developed and "evolved"...- Tommy White
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- Astrophysics Cosmolgy Quantum Relaitivity
- Replies: 1
- Forum: New Member Introductions