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49 results for "hydrogen atom" — page 1 of 3
ZA_5_07 — Atomic Structure: Electrons, Orbitals, and the Quantum Atom
Atomic structure — the arrangement of electrons around the nucleus of an atom, governed by the laws of quantum mechanics — provides the foundation for all of chemistry, spectroscopy, and much of condensed matter physics.
X_5_02 — Medical Illustration and Anatomical Art
Medical illustration and anatomical art — the visual representation of the human body for scientific and educational purposes — is a discipline where art and science converge with extraordinary results. The ability to ac
ZA_5_08 — Atomic Clocks: The Most Precise Instruments Ever Built
Atomic clocks — timekeeping devices that use the invariant frequencies of atomic transitions as their oscillation reference — are the most precise measuring instruments ever constructed, achieving fractional frequency un
ZA_4_12 — Bose-Einstein Condensates and Ultracold Atoms
A Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) is a state of matter formed when a dilute gas of bosons (particles with integer spin) is cooled to temperatures near absolute zero (~nanokelvin), causing a macroscopic fraction of the ato
X_5_11 — Medical Illustration: Visualizing the Body Across Centuries
Medical illustration — the art and science of creating visual representations of the human body, diseases, surgical procedures, and biological processes for education, research, and clinical communication — is a discipli
Q_4_26 — Bose-Einstein Condensates: Physics and Applications
A Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) is a state of matter formed when a gas of bosons (particles with integer spin) is cooled to temperatures near absolute zero — typically below 1 microkelvin ($10^{-6}$ K) — causing a macro
S_1_21 — Quantum Sensors and Metrology
Quantum sensors exploit the extreme sensitivity of quantum systems — atoms, ions, photons, superconducting circuits, and spin defects — to measure physical quantities (time, frequency, magnetic and electric fields, gravi
ZA_5_09 — Quantum Simulation: Programming Nature to Model Nature
Quantum simulation — using one controllable quantum system to emulate the behavior of another, less tractable quantum system — was proposed by Richard Feynman in 1982 as a natural solution to the fundamental difficulty o
ZA_4_24 — Bose-Einstein Condensates
A Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) is a state of matter in which a dilute gas of bosons is cooled to temperatures near absolute zero (~100 nanokelvin), causing a macroscopic fraction of the particles to occupy the lowest q
X_1_01 — History of Medicine: From Trepanation to Modern Surgery
The history of medicine spans from Neolithic trepanation (the oldest documented surgical procedure, ~7,000 BCE, with survival rates exceeding 70% in some populations) through the classical traditions of Hippocrates, Gale
X_1_15 — Greek and Roman Medicine: Hippocrates, Galen, and Western Medical Foundations
Greek and Roman medicine constitutes the foundational tradition of Western medical science, spanning from the 5th century BCE to the 3rd century CE and dominating medical thought for over 1,500 years. Hippocrates of Kos
ZH_2_15 — Astronomical Time: Defining Days, Years, Hours, and the Second
The measurement and definition of time is humanity's oldest astronomical enterprise — and one that has undergone a radical transformation from celestial observation to atomic precision. The fundamental units derive from
C_3_10 — Sacrifice and Offering Across Civilizations
Sacrifice — the ritual destruction or relinquishment of something valuable to establish, maintain, or restore a relationship with sacred powers — is arguably the most universal and foundational religious act in human his
ZF_2_17 — Chemosynthetic Ecosystem Evolution: Life Without Sunlight
Chemosynthetic ecosystems — communities of organisms that derive energy from chemical reactions (primarily the oxidation of hydrogen sulfide, methane, or hydrogen) rather than photosynthesis — represent one of the most t
ZF_2_21 — Sargassum Bloom Crisis
The Great Atlantic Sargassum Belt (GASB) — an unprecedented, continent-spanning mass of floating Sargassum macroalgae stretching from West Africa to the Gulf of Mexico — has emerged since 2011 as one of the most dramatic
ZF_2_07 — Marine Microbiology and Plankton
Marine microorganisms — bacteria, archaea, protists, viruses, and microscopic algae — constitute the invisible foundation of ocean life, driving global biogeochemical cycles, producing roughly half of the world's oxygen,
ZF_4_14 — Harmful Algal Blooms: Red Tides, Toxins, and Eutrophication
Harmful algal blooms (HABs) — rapid proliferations of microscopic algae (phytoplankton) or cyanobacteria that produce toxins, deplete oxygen, or otherwise damage marine ecosystems, fisheries, and human health — are incre
Z_3_12 — Genetics of Alcohol Metabolism
The genetics of alcohol metabolism provides one of the clearest examples of how specific genetic variants influence behavior and disease risk at a population scale. Ethanol is metabolized primarily through a two-step oxi
Q_4_31 — Water Memory, Anomalous Properties, and Homeopathy Critique
The "water memory" hypothesis — the claim that water retains a structural or informational imprint of substances previously dissolved in it, even after dilution past Avogadro's number — sits at the center of one of 20th-
Q_4_06 — Baryon Asymmetry and Matter-Antimatter
One of the deepest unsolved problems in physics is the baryon asymmetry of the universe — the observed predominance of matter over antimatter. For every ~10⁹ photons in the cosmic microwave background, there is approxima
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