Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q7186189> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 33 of
33
with 100 triples per page.
- Q7186189 subject Q7014405.
- Q7186189 subject Q7783893.
- Q7186189 subject Q8362602.
- Q7186189 subject Q8362816.
- Q7186189 subject Q8375432.
- Q7186189 subject Q8431803.
- Q7186189 subject Q8551790.
- Q7186189 abstract "Classical Newtonian physics has, formally, been replaced by quantum mechanics on the small scale and relativity on the large scale. Because most humans continue to think in terms of the kind of events we perceive in the human scale of daily life, it became necessary to provide a new philosophical interpretation of classical physics. Classical mechanics worked extremely well within its domain of observation but made inaccurate predictions at very small scale - atomic scale systems - and when objects moved very fast or were very massive. Viewed through the lens of quantum mechanics or relativity, we can now see that classical physics, imported from the world of our everyday experience, includes notions for which there is no actual evidence. For example, one commonly held idea is that there exists one absolute time shared by all observers. Another is the idea that electrons are discrete entities like miniature planets that circle the nucleus in definite orbits..The correspondence principle says that classical accounts are approximations to quantum mechanics that are for all practical purposes equivalent to quantum mechanics when dealing with macro-scale events.Various problems occur if classical mechanics is used to describe quantum systems, such as the ultraviolet catastrophe in black body radiation, the Gibbs paradox, and the lack of a zero point for entropy.Since classical physics corresponds more closely to ordinary language than modern physics does, this subject is also a part of the philosophical interpretation of ordinary language, which has other aspects, as well.".
- Q7186189 wikiPageExternalLink broida_herbert.html.
- Q7186189 wikiPageExternalLink www.bohmian-mechanics.net.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q1136644.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q1165883.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q1207416.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q1399710.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q40904.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q43514.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q45003.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q484761.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q5701033.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q691387.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q7014405.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q7783893.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q83021.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q8362602.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q8362816.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q8375432.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q8431803.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q8551790.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q900097.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q907385.
- Q7186189 wikiPageWikiLink Q944.
- Q7186189 comment "Classical Newtonian physics has, formally, been replaced by quantum mechanics on the small scale and relativity on the large scale. Because most humans continue to think in terms of the kind of events we perceive in the human scale of daily life, it became necessary to provide a new philosophical interpretation of classical physics.".
- Q7186189 label "Philosophical interpretation of classical physics".