Dalek,Dalek Prime wrote:Nothing is supposed to happen at absolute zero.Philosophy Explorer wrote:So many questions that are yet to be answered. How extensive is it in space and time. What is the nature of the Big Bang and for that matter, what is the first cause of our universe (if that exists)? Why is gravity relatively a weak force? What is the true nature of light? Is our universe, electrically speaking, neutral, positive or negative? What actually happens at absolute zero?
What do you think?
PhilX
To know what the overall charge is in the universe is simple addition, and I don't have time to do the math.
Light is energy.
Good thing gravity is a weak force. It would play havoc with all other forces on the planet.
Bugger if I know the rest.
Nothing will happen at absolute zero without a counterforce to the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics.
The math is irrelevant, given the physics. The overall charge is zero Coulombs.
Light (electromagnetic radiation that extends to the level of particle forms) is a form of energy, a space-time phenomenon constrained by a dynamic geometry that exhibits stable resonance.
Gravity is an incidental force, not a weak force. It is poorly understood by physicists. For example, a proton-proton collision in the LHC requires a pair of protons coming very close to one another-- so close that there is no space between them. At that point the gravitational force of attraction between them becomes infinite.
Physicists pretend that at subatomic scales, gravity is irrelevant. The truth is that atomic physicists are irrelevant.
Greylorn