Qn.1. Would plasma waves exist in a) the Sun; b) a neutron star? The concept of plasma waves refers to the idea of any gaseous substance that comprises of a free charged particle such as proton, electron or other ions greatly respond to powerful electromagnetic fields (Maoz, 2016). By virtue of their free charge, plasma waves have the inherent ability to conduct electric current effectively and at the same time generate magnetic fields. This results to the emission of a wide range of radiations. The formation of plasma waves entails heating and ionizing of a gas. This is whereby electrons are gouged out of atoms thus enabling the separation of charges both positive and negative. It makes them exist freely with negligible bond strength. This …show more content…
Does curiosity kill Schrodinger’s cat? Describe the main arguments that apply to this system. One of the biggest mysteries in Quantum physics is the idea of having certain uncertainties. This was best exemplified in the concept of the Schrodinger’s Cat thought experiment (Maoz, 2016). In this experiment, a cat is thought to be in a closed box with a poisonous gas. The idea of the experiment is that the cat has equal probabilities of being dead and alive depending on the observer. It is best used to explain the concept of superposition of quantum physics. This part looks at whether the curiosity of the observer killed the cat or not. According to the experiment, the chances of the cat being alive and dead are equal as viewed by an outsider (Maoz, 2016). Upon making the observation and viewing that the cat is dead, it can be concluded that since the cat was both alive and dead before it was observed, the curiosity of the observer can be thought to have killed the cat. This shows that the aspect of curiosity was responsible for the elimination of the idea that the cat was alive and dead and only appeared dead after observation. Observation in this case is an aspect of curiosity which can be attributed as the main cause of the death of the cat which had a fifty-fifty chance of surviving and dying before te
Radiation- the emission of energy as electromagnetic waves or as moving subatomic particles, especially high-energy particles that cause ionization. 13. Sunlight is a form of radiation that is radiated through space to our planet without the aid of fluids. 14. The sun transfers heat through radiation of space.
Part A: The professor was driving to work one day, and another driver ran a red light, then hitting him. After this incident, whether the situation was harmless or not does not matter; as we saw with Watson's study, with little Albert and the white rat/rabbit. (Reference: Watson exposed a child to a series of stimuli with a white rat and a rabbit, then observing the child's reactions. The child initially showed no fear response on either animal. The next time Albert was exposed to the white rat, Watson made a loud noise by hitting a metal pipe with a hammer.
However, whenever the cat in fact wants to go outside, they have no interest whatsoever in staying inside. What is in their interests is whatever they happen to desire at that moment of time (Varner 94). Therefore, the cat's interest is to not get any diseases, and desires cannot be the only thing that contributes to interest. The psycho-biological theory of individual welfare avoids this implication because it supports the intuition that the cat has some interest in staying inside, since doing so would serve their biologically based needs by preventing exposure to diseases (Varner
The reason this experiment was conducted because, in 1964 a woman named Kitty Genovese was walking down a street, and right as she was crossing the street to go into her home she was stabbed by an unknown attacker, while she was being stabbed many people watched but did nothing. A man yelled out his window at the attacker and he left, kitty retreated to an apartment to get help. The person that lived at the apartment opened it right as the attacker back, the attacker kept stabbing and killed her as no one did anything. So John Darley conducted an experiment where he took a person into a room, and made them take a test, as they took the test smoke started to fill the room and the person taking test got up and told someone. When Darley put three people into a room the smoke would start to fill the room but no one would do
However, once Howard got his hands on the creature, he claimed that he felt a sudden chill shoot through his fingers, only to settle as a stony lump in his throat. He tried to ignore it, dismissing the feeling as his rheumatism acting up again, yet the sickness only grew the longer he spent with the cat. As his carriage hobbled along the street and back to his home on the Fox River, he could feel the cat’s lifeless, unblinking eyes burning into him, even through the wooden box that the creature was kept in. He rushed inside his house, as it began to rain, and used his coat to cover the
In this experiment, the question that was asked was, are elephants afraid of mice? The hypothesis is if a mouse is placed near an elephant, then the elephant will be frightened. The experimenters traveled to an African safari to perform the experiment with their test subjects (an African elephant and a white mouse). They hid the mouse in elephant dung and rolled over the dung whenever elephants passed by. At first there was speculation that the elephants might have been startled by the moving dung.
For experiments 14, the authority was the victim. The same procedures followed as experiment 5. The experimenter demanded to be let out at 150 volts while the “ordinary man” insisted on continuing. The subject 100% of the subjects obeyed the experimenter.
The Little Albert experiment was a case study showing empirical evidence of classical conditioning in humans. The study also provides an example of stimulus generalization. It was carried out by John B. Watson and his graduate student, Rosalie Rayner, at Johns Hopkins University. The results were first published in the February 1920 issue of the Journal of Experimental Psychology. After observing children in the field, Watson hypothesized that the fearful response of children to loud noises is an innate unconditioned response.
No the puppy is not likely to urinate on the couch again, because after the puppy did urinate you put it outside and said "no bad dog" and then it had negative feedback. 5b. When the puppy urinated on the couch it was a response. When you said "no bad dog" it was a stimulus. 5c.
However, this phenomenon only happens when the electron is free and photon has high energy or X-ray because the energy of the photon need to exceed a certain
we can visibly see ultra violet rays via sun tanning beds, black lights, and welders. another form of light is light that we can see eg, sun light, is one type
Curiosity killed the cat, in Victor Frankenstein’s case his unrelenting desire to pursue new knowledge led to his demise. In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, due to all
This light emitted is from all over the spectrum, but in many cases, we see stars who peak in visible light, like our own
Having gone ahead and agreed with Parfaits dismissal of the “I do not survive” argument and accepting “How could a double success be a failure?” as a sound statement,(pg.354) the experiment continues! During your endeavors, the thought flashes through your mind, “Where will I continue to exist?” I believe you don’t. If it were to be me, and they had me strapped down to the metal operation table, in the unlikely event that I would stop screaming