Category Archives: Physics

Q: If God were all-seeing and all-knowing, the double-slit experiment wouldn’t work, would it? Wouldn’t God’s observation of the location of the photon collapse its probability wave function?

Physicist: Deep… It depends on how entangled God is with the rest of us. If He can make the observation, and then keep a completely straight face forever (never leak any information about the result in any way), then His … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Philosophical, Quantum Theory | 23 Comments

Q: How do those “executive ball clicker” things work?

The original question was: With the game for executives, consisting of several metal balls hanging in a straight, horizontal row (a “Newton’s cradle”), when one ball is lifted and let loose to hit the rest of the row, only one … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Math, Physics | 18 Comments

Q: Why is cold fusion so difficult?

Physicist: In a nutshell, fusion is about fusing small atoms, specifically hydrogen, together to form larger atoms, specifically helium.  In the processes a lot of energy is released.  However, pressing hydrogen together hard enough to fuse it is very difficult, … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Particle Physics, Physics | 6 Comments

Q: Why does light choose the “path of least time”?

Physicist: Light travels at different speeds in different materials.  When you shine a beam of light from one material into another (like from air to water) it bends in such a way that the path it takes from one point … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Equations, Geometry, Logic, Physics | 27 Comments

Q: Does light experience time?

The original question was: Given that light is moving at light speed, and time slows down as a massive object approaches the speed of light, does light travel through time?  Does the whole time slowing down thing just not apply … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Philosophical, Physics, Relativity | 120 Comments

Q: Would it be possible for humans to terraform mars?

Physicist: In terms of feasibility: no.  In terms of being remotely possible: yes, but probably not permanently. Mars is much colder than Earth, has no water, and effectively no air.  On the up side, unlike many planets, you can stand … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Astronomy, Biology, Physics | 31 Comments