Quantum physics
(sometimes called quantum mechanics), is the branch of physics that explains
how the invisible particles that
make up matter behave and the forces with which they interact.
Accordingly, its
venue is in the realm of sub-atomic particles which cannot be seen with the
naked eye. Quantum physics is the modern explanation for how atoms work, and why
chemistry and biology function as they do. From quantum mechanics we learn how electrons
move through a computer chip, how photons of light get turned into electrical
current in a solar panel, or amplify themselves in a laser, or how the
sun keeps burning.
Although modern
scientists can learn a great deal from quantum physics, it can also—and often
does—give them huge headaches. For instance, there is no single quantum theory,
which means scientists have had to innovate and adapt in order to alleviate their
headaches.
In the 1920s, Niels
Bohr, Werner Heisenberg, Erwin Schrödinger, and others developed quantum mechanics,
the basic mathematical framework that underpins (theoretical) quantum physics. It
characterizes simple things such as how the position or momentum of a single
particle or group of few particles changes over time. But to understand how
things actually work in what I prefer to call the “apparent world”—in
opposition to what others might call the “real world”—quantum mechanics must be
combined with Albert Einstein’s special theory of relativity.
Einstein’s theory explains
what happens when things move very rapidly, and it is his special theory of
relatively, combined with quantum physics, that give quantum physicists the
ability to create quantum field theories that alleviate at least some of their
headaches.
There are actually
five fundamental forces that govern everything in the universe: 1) Spirit; 2) gravity;
3) the weak force; 4) electromagnetism; and 5) the strong force. Physical sciences
are concerned with the last four of these, while three quantum field theories
have been able to grapple only with three of these.
Three different quantum field theories have
carved out three of the five fundamental forces by which matter interacts: electro-magnetism
(which explains how atoms hold together); the strong nuclear force (which
explains the stability of the nucleus at the heart of the atom); and the weak
nuclear force (which explains why some atoms undergo radioactive decay).
No comments:
Post a Comment