Category Archives: — By the Physicist

Q: Why is the integral/antiderivative the area under a function?

Physicist: If you’ve taken calculus, then at some point you learned that to find the area under a function (generally written ) you need to find the anti-derivative of that function.  The most natural response to these types of theorems … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Equations, Math | 59 Comments

Thank you!

Dear reader, we are excited to announce that, for the first time in the history of the universe, AskAMathematician.com has broken 100,000 page views in a single month! This is significant because it is approximately the number of fingers that … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Mathematician, -- By the Physicist | 8 Comments

Mathematical proof of the existence of God.

Physicist: This derivation isn’t particularly easy, but bear with me.  It’s essentially a re-phrasing of a joint work by Descartes, Godel, and Hawking. Beginning with the unitarity of quantum probability you find the non-vanishing deism coefficient manifest. The set of … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, April Fools | 50 Comments

Q: What is going on in a nuclear reactor, and what happens during a meltdown?

Physicist: Nuclear reactors are very 19th century in a way. The nuclear fuel is basically a bunch of very hot metal, and the more of it you get together in one place, the hotter it gets.  That heat is used … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Engineering, Particle Physics, Physics | 10 Comments

Q: Are all atoms radioactive?

The original question was: Some elementary particles spontaneously break apart at a given rate. Can the same be said about normally stable atoms and molecules? That is, even though they are stable, does their natural internal activity lead to a … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Particle Physics, Physics, Quantum Theory | 5 Comments

Q: How do you talk about the size of infinity? How can one infinity be bigger than another?

Physicist: When you have two finite sets it’s easy to say which one has more things in it.  You count up the number of things in each, compare the numbers, and which ever is more… is more.  However, with an … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Mathematician, -- By the Physicist, Logic, Math | 16 Comments