Quizzes & Puzzles14 mins ago
One For Our Resident Cambridge Physicist - Jim360
29 Answers
Q: Why are Cambridge Uni quantum physicists bad lovers?
A: Because when they find the position, they can't find the momentum, and when they have the momentum, they can't find the position.
A: Because when they find the position, they can't find the momentum, and when they have the momentum, they can't find the position.
Answers
Professor Werner Heisenberg is speeding down the autobahn, when the polizei pull him over. The cop walks up to his car and asks, "Excuse me sir, do you know how fast you were going?" Heisenberg responds, "No...but I know exactly where I am!"
20:03 Thu 30th May 2013
One for the Ed:
Sir Hamilton - One day in class, Richard Feynman was talking about angular momentum. He described rotation matrices and mentioned that they did not commute.
He said that Sir William Hamilton discovered noncommutivity one night when he was taking a walk in his garden with Lady Hamilton.
As they sat down on a bench, there was a moment of passion.
It was then that he discovered that AB did not equal BA.
Now really we could have told him that.
Sir Hamilton - One day in class, Richard Feynman was talking about angular momentum. He described rotation matrices and mentioned that they did not commute.
He said that Sir William Hamilton discovered noncommutivity one night when he was taking a walk in his garden with Lady Hamilton.
As they sat down on a bench, there was a moment of passion.
It was then that he discovered that AB did not equal BA.
Now really we could have told him that.
On a less funny note, I won't be resident in Cambridge too much longer.
During a lecture on Black Holes, Gary Gibbons (one of Stephen Hawking's colleagues) was describing what happens when two Black holes meet. They get closer and closer, and then touch, and the picture:
"looks like the pair of trousers I am wearing now. Normal up the legs, and then some sort of funny business going on around where they meet..."
During a lecture on Black Holes, Gary Gibbons (one of Stephen Hawking's colleagues) was describing what happens when two Black holes meet. They get closer and closer, and then touch, and the picture:
"looks like the pair of trousers I am wearing now. Normal up the legs, and then some sort of funny business going on around where they meet..."
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