| bio | website | ultracold.uchicago.edu/people |
|---|---|---|
| location | University of Chicago, IL | |
| age | 21 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year |
| seen | yesterday | |
| stats | profile views | 140 |
Physics, University of Chicago, James Franck Institute, 3rd Year Undergraduate.
Interests in experimental condensed matter [preferably hard condensed matter], statistical mechanics and mathematical physics.
http://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=233197957&trk=tab_pro
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Feb 12 |
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Additional mass of block on inclined plane Brother, theta is spelled wrong. Further, friction does not alter the fundamental components of mass and the forces of gravity |
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Jan 30 |
awarded | Informed |
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Jan 28 |
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Question about Classical Transport Theory awesome, thanks Joe! |
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Jan 28 |
accepted | Question about Classical Transport Theory |
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Jan 27 |
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Question about Classical Transport Theory You are correct in both regard. The B field is indeed assumed directed along $\hat{z}$ and the $\omega_{c}$ is the cyclotron frequency. |
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Jan 27 |
asked | Question about Classical Transport Theory |
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Jan 27 |
answered | Factors of $c$ in the Hamiltonian for a charged particle in electromagnetic field |
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Dec 8 |
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Is there a small enough planet or asteroid you can orbit by jumping? THIS PICTURE. +1 |
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Dec 8 |
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On using old fuel rods to generate energy good answer! very short and clear |
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Dec 8 |
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On using old fuel rods to generate energy Fair enough at @ChrisWhite, perhaps I was a bit quick to pick up on the tone. |
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Dec 8 |
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On using old fuel rods to generate energy I encourage you to do the yield calculation on the energy you could generate with this using a typical water turbine design similar to a nuclear power plant. Its quite easy. Mr. Shekhar is quite right. We don't need to prove it to you, we are not here to prove things for your connivence. Please look in a modern physics book and read up on nuclear power plant operation; you will clearly see why this is not profitable at all. Further, this isn't really a question that can be answered in the SE format, I think. |
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Dec 7 |
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Two photons of different frequencies collide to create electron and positron fair enough! +1 |
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Dec 7 |
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Origin of exchage interactions Thank you, I appreciate it! This is great. |
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Dec 7 |
accepted | Origin of exchage interactions |
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Dec 7 |
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Two photons of different frequencies collide to create electron and positron How does this help to determine what $f$ is? It is still indeterminate through what you described, right? |
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Dec 7 |
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Unrolling electrolytic capacitors It is mostly for isolation purposes. Also it keeps the liquid in pretty well. If it is electrolytic, it also has a cross cut into the top. It the capacitor is overloaded, it will bulge out before blowing spectacularly. The aluminum casing is strong enough to usually hold from blowing in a case of overload. |
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Dec 7 |
asked | Origin of exchage interactions |
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Dec 7 |
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Temporal part of Quantum Wavefunction And I was thinking it was simply a normalization and convergence issue... |
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Dec 7 |
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Unrolling electrolytic capacitors if this answers your question, please hit the check next to the left of this post. If not, leave it alone or ask more questions in the comments. This is the way of SE. |
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Dec 7 |
answered | Unrolling electrolytic capacitors |