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0 votes
0 answers
45 views

Absolutism of speed [closed]

If we know that any photon emission travels with light of speed in vacuum, what theoretically stops us to create big enough detecting machine, where photons (lasers probably) are emitted in different ...
Влад Дедков's user avatar
0 votes
3 answers
71 views

Are there universes where "symmetry breaking" went differently? [closed]

What have happened with other possible variants of asymmetry? Are there other universes being run in parallel to our universe where the ball is not at C, but at B? Stephen Wolfram told I have found ...
srghma's user avatar
  • 129
0 votes
0 answers
37 views

How can baryonic CP violation contribute to the explanation of the large matter-antimatter asymmetry in our universe?

I have been doing baryonic CPV experimental search in the past few years. However, I never really get a good clue on this fundamental question. The thing is that CPV has only been found in the meson ...
RedQuark's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
81 views

If a laser is bounced off two mirrors repeatedly for several years, will it g et red-shifted?

I understand that red shift is what shows how far away the star light came from, or how far back in time the light was emitted? If so, should we not see red-shift if a laser is bounced repeatedly off ...
Ajit Haridas's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
47 views

Electrons keeping dynamical quantum fluctuations?

I was thinking about this paper (https://arxiv.org/abs/1405.0298) where the authors argue that there wouldn't be dynamical quantum fluctuations in a De Sitter space as fluctuations would be static ...
vengaq's user avatar
  • 2,466
0 votes
3 answers
125 views

Does science have evidence that the simulation hypothesis is true? [closed]

It is often written that the simulation hypothesis cannot be proven or disproved. There is also a lot of talk about the fact that the simulation hypothesis is not science. But the people also write ...
Arnold's user avatar
  • 109
1 vote
1 answer
103 views

How fast would a hypothetical microscopic quantum black hole evaporate with an effective mass of two protons?

According to the analysis shown in this research here, see link the evaporation time can be calculated in seconds using this equation: $$ \begin{array}{l} t_{\text {evap }}=\left(\frac{5120 \pi G^2}{\...
Markoul11's user avatar
  • 4,170
0 votes
0 answers
40 views

How would have electron and muon fields been identified as distinct in the electroweak era?

During the Electroweak era, the Higgs mechanism had not yet distinguished particles such as electrons and muons by mass. Is there a conceivable experiment, or a hypothetical cosmological observation ...
Will's user avatar
  • 1
3 votes
1 answer
132 views

How was the universe once small enough to be subject to quantum mechanical effects?

I have often read that our universe was once small enough to be subjected to quantum mechanical effects, potentially altering how our universe turned out. This is a large theme in Laura Mersini-...
cosmicpawn's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
121 views

Quantum fluctuations and symmetries?

While reading this piece about symmetry breaking, in section 3 I came across the term "anomalous symmetry breaking", which happens when a symmetry is broken by quantum fluctuations: Let us ...
vengaq's user avatar
  • 2,466
0 votes
2 answers
102 views

What is the role of an observer in "consciousness causes collapse"? [duplicate]

If a "conscious observer" is part of a theory of physics (e.g. some versions of QM, cosmology), then how (according to what theories) did the universe evolve before the existence of ...
Tom Collinge's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
110 views

Toy example of superdeterminism using Rule 30

From what I understand of Bell's Theorem, it requires giving up local realism or embracing superdeterminism. I still haven't been able to understand why superdeterminism gets such a bad rap, so I've ...
Trev's user avatar
  • 204
3 votes
1 answer
131 views

Cosmological perturbations and energy in an expanding universe?

I was reading an interesting book from cosmomogist Viatcheslav Mukhanov Physical Foundations of Cosmology and I had a specific question about it: It is usually said that energy conservation is ...
vengaq's user avatar
  • 2,466
-5 votes
2 answers
224 views

If entropy increases with time, are humans' thoughts becoming more random as time increases? [closed]

If entropy increases with time, are humans' thoughts becoming more random as time increases? What effect would entropy have on the brain over generations from the absolute space-time coordinate? Are ...
Jae H's user avatar
  • 1
3 votes
2 answers
112 views

Can there be some kind of photon emission caused by cosmological expansion?

Are there any kind of observed and experimentally verified processes or mechanisms where photon emission occurs and which are directly cause by spacetime expansion in some way?
vengaq's user avatar
  • 2,466

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