Hmm, you took the bait and ran with it. My mouth is sore from such endeavors.
Honestly, it was kinda enjoyable for a lazy, slightly hungover Sunday morning! "Look, someone actually cares about what we do!"
Hmm, you took the bait and ran with it. My mouth is sore from such endeavors.
The pasta is made of protons and neutrons, held together by the extreme pressures. These oddball nuclei arrange themselves into weird configurations that Matt Caplan of Indiana University and his colleagues call “nuclear pasta.”1 The pasta layer lies in the inner crust, a transitional zone between a neutron star’s outer crust and core. In the top of this layer, the nuclei form blobs called “gnocchi.” Deeper down, they join together into cylindrical shapes called “spaghetti.” More pressure, and the spaghetti compresses into “lasagna”: flattish sheets of nuclear matter. Then the pasta transitions into “anti-pasta”: The sheets of lasagna form cylindrical hollows where neutrons begin leaking out, which Caplan calls “anti-spaghetti.” And finally, when the pressure is high enough, those hollows break into small bubbles, the “anti-gnocchi” phase.
That's probably the best explanation of the Uncertainty Principle I've ever heard. Thank you.We note the inconsistencies, and are thereby aware that we don't yet have a full understanding. We essentially always carry the uncertainty around with us for things that have unsettled bits. We expect that the description the we presently have (which well explains a given phenomenon) will be subsumed into a better theory later.
That's probably the best explanation of the Uncertainty Principle I've ever heard. Thank you.
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