that a person who expects the physical world to behave in the manner
predicted by physical laws is an «alarmist.»
Not exact matches
The study, published in
Physical Review Letters
by researchers from UCL, the Russian Academy of Sciences (Russia), National Institute of Standards and Technology (USA) and Nicolaus Copernicus University (Poland), shows how the fundamental
laws of quantum mechanics can be used to
predict precisely how light of different colours is absorbed
by CO2.
In an article published in Science Advances, an international team led
by Prof. Nathan Goldman — Faculty of Science, Université libre de Bruxelles —
predicts a novel form of quantization
law, which involves a distinct type of
physical observable: the heating rate of a quantum system upon external shaking.
The basic fact that rising concentrations of greenhouse gases result in global warming has been understood since it was
predicted from
physical laws over a century ago; specification of the magnitude and geographical distribution of the warming are elucidated
by the twentieth century observations and calculations.
The basic fact that rising concentrations of greenhouse gases result in global warming has been understood since it was
predicted from
physical laws over a century ago; specification of the magnitude and geographical distribution of the warming are elucidated
by the twentieth century observations and calculations.