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InertialObservr's profile
〈 Berger | Dillon 〉
〈 Berger | Dillon 〉
〈 Berger | Dillon 〉
@InertialObservr

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〈 Berger | Dillon 〉

@InertialObservr

PhD student of Theoretical Particle Physics @UCIrvine l @NSF Fellow l Physics & Math Animations l Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/inertialobserver …

DC → CA
youtube.com/c/InertialObse…
Joined August 2015

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    1. 〈 Berger | Dillon 〉‏ @InertialObservr Mar 3
      • Report Tweet
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      If electrons actually 'orbited' a nucleus, then no atoms could ever form The electron would radiate away all its energy and fall into the nucleus in about 10 𝑡𝑟𝑖𝑙𝑙𝑖𝑜𝑛𝑡𝘩𝑠 of a secondpic.twitter.com/5JvjrhpAGl

      79 replies 593 retweets 2,794 likes
    2. Gabriel Potter‏ @gabpott Mar 3
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      Replying to @InertialObservr

      why would the electron generate radiation while orbiting? also, if electrons don’t orbit the nucleus, but they also don’t ever collide with the nucleus, then what are they doing all the time?

      1 reply 0 retweets 8 likes
    3. Distant Dad (Just Like Real Life)‏ @CoachDadSays Mar 3
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      Replying to @gabpott @InertialObservr

      Because accelerating charged particles radiate. What they're actually doing is existing in a superposition of states that can be approximated to some extent (which breaks down fairly quickly) with a classical conception of orbits.

      2 replies 1 retweet 34 likes
    4. Gabriel Potter‏ @gabpott Mar 3
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      Replying to @CoachDadSays @InertialObservr

      if they’re not accelerating, does that mean they are staying still? if they were moving with a constant nonzero velocity, then they would eventually separate from the nucleus, right? So each electron’s velocity must be zero. Is that right?

      1 reply 0 retweets 4 likes
    5. Distant Dad (Just Like Real Life)‏ @CoachDadSays Mar 3
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      Replying to @gabpott @InertialObservr

      Classical conceptions of motion break down at the quantum level and it is not precisely useful to think of bound electrons as particles with classical position and momentum.

      1 reply 0 retweets 21 likes
    6. Jason Hise‏ @JasonHise64 Mar 3
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      Replying to @CoachDadSays @gabpott @InertialObservr

      Have we observed radiation generated as a result of acceleration due to gravity? Just wondering if following a spacetime geodesic is really acceleration relative to the underlying field.

      2 replies 0 retweets 7 likes
      〈 Berger | Dillon 〉‏ @InertialObservr Mar 3
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      Replying to @JasonHise64 @CoachDadSays @gabpott

      indeed that's what gravitational waves are!

      3:00 PM - 3 Mar 2020
      • 15 Likes
      • Memeboi Josh M.R. Allen I.G.I. Smalls Sebastian Schleussner Avio Mark Diaz Will
      1 reply 0 retweets 15 likes
        1. New conversation
        2. Merennulli‏ @Merennulli Mar 3
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          Replying to @InertialObservr @JasonHise64 and

          Am I correct in my understanding that gravitational waves are not electromagnetic radiation or particle radiation like we normally thing of, but gravitational energy radiation?

          1 reply 0 retweets 5 likes
        3. Distant Dad (Just Like Real Life)‏ @CoachDadSays Mar 3
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          Replying to @Merennulli @InertialObservr and

          Yes.

          1 reply 0 retweets 4 likes
        4. 2 more replies

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