Yes, there will most likely be another James Bond game, on the XBOX 360 and all other consoles. The franchise makes so much money that Activision, the current holders of the James Bond license (and publisher of Treyarch's 2008 Bond movie tie in Quantum of Solace), would be silly not to. It has long been rumored that British developer Bizzare Creations (Project Gotham Racing series, The Club), now owned by Activision, have been working on a James Bond racing game. However, nothing has been announced yet by either Activision or Bizzare. If the rumours were true, a Fall 2009/Early 2010 release would be most likely.
True, a photon is a quantum of energy, E=hf.
A quantum leap is the smallest possible change that an electron can make in an atom. It involves a discrete jump in energy levels when an electron transitions from one orbit to another. The size of a quantum leap is determined by the difference in energy levels between the initial and final states of the electron.
Quantum Mechanics "replaced" Classical Mechanics in particle physics in mid-1930s.
Einstein's work on the Photoelectric effect, which won him the Nobel prize in 1921 was a bulwark of Quantum Mechanics. Einstein went off in another direction because of his inate suspicion that Quantum Mechanics has severe internal difficulties. Quantum Mechanics and Relativity have not yet been reconciled--but they are moving together slowly. Quantum Gravity seems to be key to the issue and may be resolved by String Theory.
Yes OR true
The American ornithologist James Bond .
bond
Coordinate bond is a true primary bond while hydrogen bond is secondary bond (only attraction between opposite poles) so hydrogen bond is weaker.
The distinction is sometimes made to distinguish normal quantum mechanics (which does not incorporate special relativity) and quantum field theory (relativistic quantum mechanics). Since we know special relativity is correct it is the relativistic form of quantum mechanics which is true, but non-relativistic quantum mechanics is still used, because it is a good approximation at low energies and it is much simpler. Physics students typically study regular quantum mechanics before moving on to quantum field theory.
Yes it is a true movie
a coordinate covalent bond