Not sure what you mean by "Collapsing Atom Paradox," but I'll explain what I THINK you're asking about.
If the popular view of the atom -- electrons circling a nucleus like planets around a star -- were the correct view, the electrons would give off electro-magnetic energy (due to their acceleration) so rapidly that their orbit would decay in less than a billionth of a second. The quantum mechanics that rules our Universe makes this impossible, but it also destroys the popular view I noted earlier. Electrons are NOT circling a nucleus; indeed, it is meaningless to speak of what they actually ARE doing. Instead, electrons are in energy states -- called "orbitals" -- around a nucleus. Different orbitals have different probabilities for the locations of the electrons depending on radius and angle. However, it is NOT correct to think of the electrons as moving in an orbit.
Fermi statistics prevent it from happening. Thus no paradox.
actually einstein developed one of the earliest parts of quantum mechanics: the theory of the photoelectric effect. he worked directly with many of the scientists that later developed the complete theory of quantum mechanics and the mathematics to solve its apparent paradoxes to get usable predictions from the theory. later he rejected it due to it being nondeterministic, not because he didn't understand quantum mechanics but because he did understand quantum mechanics. he then tried to combine quantum mechanics and general relativity, hoping the resulting unified field theory would resolve the nondeterminism of quantum mechanics, resulting in a single fully deterministic theory of everything.
The popular theory to resolve the time travel paradoxes is quantum realities; basically, it says that everything that can happen does happen in another quantum reality. Also, when you time travel, you don't go into the past of your timeline; you go into the past of another reality and affect it instead.
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This was because of laws of conservation of: momentum, angular momentum, and energy. In certain reactions, these were apparently not conserved; a hypothetical particle would resolve the observed discrepancy.This was because of laws of conservation of: momentum, angular momentum, and energy. In certain reactions, these were apparently not conserved; a hypothetical particle would resolve the observed discrepancy.This was because of laws of conservation of: momentum, angular momentum, and energy. In certain reactions, these were apparently not conserved; a hypothetical particle would resolve the observed discrepancy.This was because of laws of conservation of: momentum, angular momentum, and energy. In certain reactions, these were apparently not conserved; a hypothetical particle would resolve the observed discrepancy.
actually einstein developed one of the earliest parts of quantum mechanics: the theory of the photoelectric effect. he worked directly with many of the scientists that later developed the complete theory of quantum mechanics and the mathematics to solve its apparent paradoxes to get usable predictions from the theory. later he rejected it due to it being nondeterministic, not because he didn't understand quantum mechanics but because he did understand quantum mechanics. he then tried to combine quantum mechanics and general relativity, hoping the resulting unified field theory would resolve the nondeterminism of quantum mechanics, resulting in a single fully deterministic theory of everything.
It doesn't. In fact, the US is a prime example of the paradox's main idea.
The popular theory to resolve the time travel paradoxes is quantum realities; basically, it says that everything that can happen does happen in another quantum reality. Also, when you time travel, you don't go into the past of your timeline; you go into the past of another reality and affect it instead.
Resolve can be a verb or a noun. As a verb: Please resolve the problem by the end of this month. As a noun: The information, instead of stopping her, strengthened her resolve.
Resolve is a noun. It describes an action.
Resolve the question on the board.
The past tense of resolve is resolved.
The Resolve was created on 1915-05-31.
Lights Resolve was created in 2006.
I resolve to get an A on this test!He had no resolve to quit smoking.The group discussed but could not resolve the problem.
You've only strengthened my resolve to provide a good example. Let's resolve this issue congenially.
It is an office document intended to point out and resolve issues.