Questions tagged [conservation-laws]
The statement that a property of a system does not change if the system is isolated.
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Why does Newton's Third Law actually work?
My father explained to me how rockets work and he told me that Newton's Third Law of motion worked here. I asked him why it works and he didn't answer. I have wasted over a week thinking about this ...
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Why do electrons, according to my textbook, exist forever?
Does that mean that electrons are infinitely stable? The neutrinos of the three leptons are also listed as having a mean lifespan of infinity.
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What conservation law corresponds to Lorentz boosts?
Noether's Theorem is used to relate the invariance of the action under certain continuous transformations to conserved currents. A common example is that translations in spacetime correspond to the ...
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Why does a billiard ball stop when it hits another billiard ball head on?
(I'm repeating myself a lot here, but it's because I want to make my confusion clear.)
If 2 billiard balls are the same exact mass, and one hits another stationary one head on, I have heard that the ...
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Why do travelling waves continue after amplitude sum = 0?
My professor asked an interesting question at the end of the last class, but I can't figure out the answer. The question is this (recalled from memory):
There are two travelling wave pulses moving in ...
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Does throwing a penny at a train stop the train?
If I stand in front of a train and throw a penny at it, the penny will bounce back at me.
For the penny to reverse its direction, at some point its velocity must go to zero. This is the point it hits ...
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Is the converse of Noether's first theorem true: Every conservation law has a symmetry?
Noether's (first) theorem states that any differentiable symmetry of the action of a physical system has a corresponding conservation law.
Is the converse true: Any conservation law of a physical ...
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Is there a way for an astronaut to rotate?
We know that if an imaginary astronaut is in the intergalactic (no external forces) and has an initial velocity zero, then he has is no way to change the position of his center of mass. The law of ...
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Why does everything spin?
The origin of spin is some what a puzzle to me, everything spin from galaxies to planets to weather to electrons.
Where has all the angular momentum come from? Why is it so natural?
I was also ...
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How can momentum but not energy be conserved in an inelastic collision?
In inelastic collisions, kinetic energy changes, so the velocities of the objects also change.
So how is momentum conserved in inelastic collisions?
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In substances where light is slowed down, is its momentum lessened and if so, how does it speed up again when emerging from that substance? [duplicate]
I think in some media, light can be significantly slowed down; but even if only slightly, where would the momentum go when the light slows down and where does it get the extra momentum when it leaves ...
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Why can't energy be created or destroyed?
My physics instructor told the class, when lecturing about energy, that it can't be created or destroyed. Why is that? Is there a theory or scientific evidence that proves his statement true or ...
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What's the interpretation of Feynman's picture proof of Noether's Theorem?
On pp 103 - 105 of The Character of Physical Law, Feynman draws this diagram to demonstrate that invariance under spatial translation leads to conservation of momentum:
To paraphrase Feynman's ...
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Why does the speed of a ping pong ball increase when the space in which it can bounce decreases?
I was playing table tennis the other day when I my ball fell off the table. I placed my paddle above it in order to slow it down, and then I brought the paddle to the ground so that the ball would ...
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Can Noether's theorem be understood intuitively?
Noether's theorem is one of those surprisingly clear results of mathematical calculations, for which I am inclined to think that some kind of intuitive understanding should or must be possible. ...