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Westy

the teste
Nov 22, 2002
54,394
20,185
Sleazattle


By definition a crystal is a solid.

A quartz crystal has a high natural frequency, and the rest of the above statement is pure new age bullshit.

In fact everything vibrates, it is what contributes to having a temperature.

It is when something has a very low temperature, and stops vibrating that shit gets weird. At extraordinarily low temperatures (low momentum) atoms start demonstrating some cool quantum phenomena based on Heisenberg's uncertainty principle. Instead of being somewhere, things tend to be everywhere.
 
By definition a crystal is a solid.

A quartz crystal has a high natural frequency, and the rest of the above statement is pure new age bullshit.

In fact everything vibrates, it is what contributes to having a temperature.

It is when something has a very low temperature, and stops vibrating that shit gets weird. At extraordinarily low temperatures (low momentum) atoms start demonstrating some cool quantum phenomena based on Heisenberg's uncertainty principle. Instead of being somewhere, things tend to be everywhere.
But, but, it's continuum moves faster than light! The Angels are speaking to me! Die, filthy engineer!
 

Mo(n)arch

Turbo Monkey
Dec 27, 2010
4,441
1,422
Italy/south Tyrol
By definition a crystal is a solid.

A quartz crystal has a high natural frequency, and the rest of the above statement is pure new age bullshit.

In fact everything vibrates, it is what contributes to having a temperature.

It is when something has a very low temperature, and stops vibrating that shit gets weird. At extraordinarily low temperatures (low momentum) atoms start demonstrating some cool quantum phenomena based on Heisenberg's uncertainty principle. Instead of being somewhere, things tend to be everywhere.
The other theory is, when reaching 0 Kelvin, time "stopps". In that scenario every movement, frequency etc. is zero, which leads to a "non aging condition".
 

Kevin

Turbo Monkey
By definition a crystal is a solid.

A quartz crystal has a high natural frequency, and the rest of the above statement is pure new age bullshit.

In fact everything vibrates, it is what contributes to having a temperature.

It is when something has a very low temperature, and stops vibrating that shit gets weird. At extraordinarily low temperatures (low momentum) atoms start demonstrating some cool quantum phenomena based on Heisenberg's uncertainty principle. Instead of being somewhere, things tend to be everywhere.
To be more specific, things are not everywhere but are only potentially everywhere untill they are "observed".