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zakruti.com » Knowledge, science, education » TED-Ed
The uncertain location of electrons - George Zaidan and Charles Morton

The uncertain location of electrons - George Zaidan and Charles Morton

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Rating: 4.0; Vote: 1
specifically, their exact location outside the nucleus that particularly perplex scientists. George Zaidan and Charles Morton show how to make an educated guess of where those itty-bitty freewheeling electrons might be. Lesson by George Zaidan and Charles Morton
Date: 2020-08-22

Comments and reviews: 8


They just look like waves. Rippling out from the centre like a rain drop hitting water. I don't get why an electron would be a fixed point? Isn't the orbit just the crest of the wave? And the electron either a point we define at random or just a random high point of any given ripple(wave? It seems (given the double slit experiment) that its our models that say electrons exist. Not that they actually do in the first place? We could pick a point on a sound wave for example and call that a sound electron? Doesn't mean its actually there. Am I making any seance?
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A ball bouncing on earth is more often near the top of the bounce, I. e. probability cloud; same effect in an atom with the electron(s) bouncing off the proton/neutron. This is common knowledge since 2002/2010 The Final Theory: Rethinking Our Scientific Legacy Mark McCutcheon. No charge involved and all the other misunderstandings of the standard model need not apply, irrelevant to reality. Good luck!
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Usually people want to know what is the best pattern of light and the cosmic worlds. Tree and trunks and leaves and roots flowers etc. And what is the best pattern of infrared and microwave. Animals. And why because human behaviour and mind set is like that. And UV and gamma straight through and space Brownian. X is always X-rays.
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Interesting but too short for me.
I'm going to have to do some reading. I am aware of the dual particle nature, one which is being a wave. but I've recently read of the electron's capability of being in two places at the same point in time. That intrigues me beyond belief!
Cool video, thanks for sharing!

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Judt browsed by to do some fact checking. Great work, it looks like McCanney model of the solar system. How the sun acts as a capacitor sending out proton winds, attracting electrons and such. Jmccsci. com #mcanneysystems
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3: 29 By erroneously using the word determined this video completely disregarded the entire phenomenon of emergent property at different levels of organizations of matter. A more apt word would be influenced.
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the probability that a girl i'm fond of will ever like me is the same as of an electron being on the other side of the universe, not zero clearly but you got my point.
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I'm so triggered that the mood of the particles doesn't reflect their charge. Happy protons, sad electrons and meh neutrons please!
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