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Sergio [31]
4 years ago
13

What did scops help to preserve? Entertainment English Tradition Poetry

English
2 answers:
Sidana [21]4 years ago
5 0

Answer: tradition

Explanation:

SSSSS [86.1K]4 years ago
3 0
The answer is tradition
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Pls help me! I’m stuck on this problem! I will give points to whoever make this clear! Thank you!
lions [1.4K]

Answer: he went through a lot (c)

Explanation: Conventional quantum field theories work well in describing the results of experiments at high-energy particle smashers such as CERN’s Large Hadron Collider, where the Higgs was discovered, which probe matter at its smallest scales. But if you want to understand how things work in many less esoteric situations – how electrons move or don’t move through a solid material and so make a material a metal, an insulator or a semiconductor, for example – things get even more complex.

The billions upon billions of interactions in these crowded environments require the development of “effective field theories” that gloss over some of the gory details. The difficulty in constructing such theories is why many important questions in solid-state physics remain unresolved – for instance why at low temperatures some materials are superconductors that allow current without electrical resistance, and why we can’t get this trick to work at room temperature.

But beneath all these practical problems lies a huge quantum mystery. At a basic level, quantum physics predicts very strange things about how matter works that are completely at odds with how things seem to work in the real world. Quantum particles can behave like particles, located in a single place; or they can act like waves, distributed all over space or in several places at once. How they appear seems to depend on how we choose to measure them, and before we measure they seem to have no definite properties at all – leading us to a fundamental conundrum about the nature of basic reality.

This fuzziness leads to apparent paradoxes such as Schrödinger’s cat, in which thanks to an uncertain quantum process a cat is left dead and alive at the same time. But that’s not all. Quantum particles also seem to be able to affect each other instantaneously even when they are far away from each other. This truly bamboozling phenomenon is known as entanglement, or, in a phrase coined by Einstein (a great critic of quantum theory), “spooky action at a distance”. Such quantum powers are completely foreign to us, yet are the basis of emerging technologies such as ultra-secure quantum cryptography and ultra-powerful quantum computing.

But as to what it all means, no one knows. Some people think we must just accept that quantum physics explains the material world in terms we find impossible to square with our experience in the larger, “classical” world. Others think there must be some better, more intuitive theory out there that we’ve yet to discover.

In all this, there are several elephants in the room. For a start, there’s a fourth fundamental force of nature that so far quantum theory has been unable to explain. Gravity remains the territory of Einstein’s general theory of relativity, a firmly non-quantum theory that doesn’t even involve particles. Intensive efforts over decades to bring gravity under the quantum umbrella and so explain all of fundamental physics within one “theory of everything” have come to nothing.

Meanwhile cosmological measurements indicate that over 95 per cent of the universe consists of dark matter and dark energy, stuffs for which we currently have no explanation within the standard model, and conundrums such as the extent of the role of quantum physics in the messy workings of life remain unexplained. The world is at some level quantum – but whether quantum physics is the last word about the world remains an open question.

Read more: https://www.newscientist.com/definition/quantum-physics/#ixzz6v8lQ13km

6 0
3 years ago
Can someone find me a Personification quote chapter 2 of the book night, hurry though
tia_tia [17]
"But it was all in vain. Our terror could no longer be contained. Our nerves reached a breaking point. Our very skin was aching. It was as though madness had infected us all." (Page 26). This is personification because madness is being described as though it has living traits, so as to infect people like a virus.
7 0
3 years ago
Which sentence uses the word "run" as a noun? A.) Are you going to run for office? b.) I run faster in the morning. c.) Just let
Y_Kistochka [10]

D

lol just for the extra points im answering your second question

thanks!

3 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Hi Lisa, How are you? My family and I 0 were (be) on holiday in Italy last month. We 1 were__went(go) there by plane – we 2 ____
eimsori [14]

Answer:

Hi Lisa, How are you? My family and I were (be) on holiday in Italy last month. We __went(go) there by plane – we did not take_____ (not take) the train. My sister and I swam_(swim) in the sea every day. We ___visited__(visit) some museums too. In the evenings, we  __didn't stay__ (not stay) in our hotel. We had (have) dinner in small Italian restaurants. The food  was_ (be) fantastic. See you soon. Matt

Explanation:

The above informal letter was written by Matt to Lisa.  It described some events that took place the previous month.  For this reason, the verb form used is past simple.  It is the form of the verb that reports past events without indicating the duration of the event.

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3 years ago
Which sentence completes the idea web?
Bingel [31]
D- Louis Horst wasn’t the musical director at denishawn
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3 years ago
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