No, it is not. Murphy's Law states that if something can go wrong, it will. (There are variants and corollaries.) And if by the fourth dimension connection in quantum physics you mean the dimension of time in spacetime, things happen there according to probability and statistics, or get caught up in uncertainty, à la Schrödinger. The consequences of these things (the quantum mechanical one) with regard to Murphy include the idea that sometimes something must happen, and at other times it can or might happen. And if the latter is true, it might happen or might not happen. Murphy says if it is possible (for something to go wrong), it will happen. Additionally, in the world of quantum mechanics there is a question of when things will happen, and time is relative. Time is not relative to Murphy except in the version of Murphy's law which says that if something can go wrong, it will go wrong, and at the worst possible time and having the worst consequences. That's pretty specific and not something that is timed with a clock. You can't get that kind of specificity in quantum mechanics because of relativity, if for no other reason.
Pretty much all of them, if your physics is sophisticated enough.
In physics the 4th dimension is time. So an object has 3 physical dimensions (height, width, length) but it also has a position in time.
The 7th dimension in physics is the 6th dimension (infinite possibilities) x the start of the event. In other words, infinite possibilities all start at the exact same time. But I don't think this is right. I still haven't figured it out yet.
The 5th dimension is the area between two universes, joined by a black hole. I call it hyper depth.
[ Power ] = [ Energy/Time ] = [ Force x Length/Time ] = [ Mass x Length2/T3 ]
Pretty much all of them, if your physics is sophisticated enough.
Albert Einstein
Albert Einstein
In physics the 4th dimension is time. So an object has 3 physical dimensions (height, width, length) but it also has a position in time.
The 7th dimension in physics is the 6th dimension (infinite possibilities) x the start of the event. In other words, infinite possibilities all start at the exact same time. But I don't think this is right. I still haven't figured it out yet.
No. Not at all. A person who is good at mathematics has an advantage when studying physics as much of physics is explained (or can be explained) in mathematical terms. It is no guarantee to excelling in physics as there are difficult concepts to grasp, but it is certainly not a disadvantage and so the premise of this question is without foundation.
i hate you physics, especially ma'am limayo
1. Game Theory (popular in the game industry) 2. Mythology (by observing myths and facts then put to the online dimension) 3. Physics (by applying physics in real life to the online dimension)
The 5th dimension is the area between two universes, joined by a black hole. I call it hyper depth.
Physics.
nurses
Classical physics was based upon how the things we deal with every day move when we deal with them in everyday situations. As we started to discover new things (protons, electrons, redshift, etc) classical physics failed to completely explain what we observed. Modern physics explained time-and-space related quandries while quantum physics explained wave-and-particle dualities.