It is a form of computing that taps into the power of atoms and
subatomic phenomena to perform calculations significantly faster than current computers and could potentially lead to advances in drug development and other complex systems.
In this image, patterns captured at attosecond intervals have been superimposed, thus revealing, in real time, the kind of electron motions that underlie atomic and
subatomic phenomena.
The uniquely geometric nature of gravity has made it frustratingly difficult to contain within the same framework as the laws governing
subatomic phenomena, namely quantum mechanics.
Perhaps the most surprising scientific evidence for the soul comes from quantum mechanics — specifically, from investigations of
the subatomic phenomena that produce consciousness.
Not exact matches
Best known is the collapse of the traditional model when confronted by the
phenomena of the
subatomic world.
The simplest example of contrast under identity is the
phenomenon of vibration that characterizes
subatomic occasions (wave - particles).
They really have a strong reluctance to mingle with other particles, which makes them antisocial and difficult to pin down, but they are connected to such a wide range of
phenomenon from the
subatomic to the cosmic that they could tell us a lot about many different things, many different mysteries about the nature of matter, about what triggers exploding stars, to what's going on in the heart of the sun, to what the universe might have been like, the conditions within seconds after the big bang.
Ray Jayawardhana: They are connected to such a wide range of
phenomenon from the
subatomic to the cosmic that they could tell us a lot about the nature of matter, about what triggers exploding stars, to what the universe might have been like, the conditions within seconds after the big bang.
But these clear relationships disappear when we enter the quantum world, the world of
subatomic particles that are the building blocks of the universe — and encounter the
phenomenon of entanglement.
One of these non-intuitive behaviors is that
subatomic particles actually behave more like waves than like discrete particles — a
phenomenon called wave - particle duality.