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#finestructureconstant — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #finestructureconstant, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Why 137? A hydrogen atom spans 137 Compton wavelengths -- one electron orbit contains 18,800 Compton "ticks." Are these brute facts or signatures of a cosmic Central Limit Theorem converting quantum noise into classical atoms? The cosmological constant is an even stronger candidate: 10^122 horizon pixels produce the observed dark energy. Honest about gaps. doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20182909

    #Physics #Math #QuantumMechanics #FineStructureConstant #StatisticalMechanics #Science #Research

  2. Why 137? A hydrogen atom spans 137 Compton wavelengths -- one electron orbit contains 18,800 Compton "ticks." Are these brute facts or signatures of a cosmic Central Limit Theorem converting quantum noise into classical atoms? The cosmological constant is an even stronger candidate: 10^122 horizon pixels produce the observed dark energy. Honest about gaps. doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20182909

    #Physics #Math #QuantumMechanics #FineStructureConstant #StatisticalMechanics #Science #Research

  3. Why 137? A hydrogen atom spans 137 Compton wavelengths -- one electron orbit contains 18,800 Compton "ticks." Are these brute facts or signatures of a cosmic Central Limit Theorem converting quantum noise into classical atoms? The cosmological constant is an even stronger candidate: 10^122 horizon pixels produce the observed dark energy. Honest about gaps. doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20182909

    #Physics #Math #QuantumMechanics #FineStructureConstant #StatisticalMechanics #Science #Research

  4. Why 137? A hydrogen atom spans 137 Compton wavelengths -- one electron orbit contains 18,800 Compton "ticks." Are these brute facts or signatures of a cosmic Central Limit Theorem converting quantum noise into classical atoms? The cosmological constant is an even stronger candidate: 10^122 horizon pixels produce the observed dark energy. Honest about gaps. doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20182909

    #Physics #Math #QuantumMechanics #FineStructureConstant #StatisticalMechanics #Science #Research

  5. Why 137? A hydrogen atom spans 137 Compton wavelengths -- one electron orbit contains 18,800 Compton "ticks." Are these brute facts or signatures of a cosmic Central Limit Theorem converting quantum noise into classical atoms? The cosmological constant is an even stronger candidate: 10^122 horizon pixels produce the observed dark energy. Honest about gaps. doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20182909

    #Physics #Math #QuantumMechanics #FineStructureConstant #StatisticalMechanics #Science #Research