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How something came from nothing? JR Studio

JR STUDIO Sci-Talk Malayalam 100,989 3 months ago
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എന്റെ വെബ്സൈറ്റ് വഴി ഞാനൊരു മെമ്പർഷിപ്പ് ഓപ്ഷൻ സ്റ്റാർട്ട് ചെയ്തിട്ടുണ്ട്. ഒട്ടനവധി ശാസ്ത്രസംബന്ധമായ വിവരങ്ങൾ ലഭ്യമാകുന്ന ആ ഒരു ഫീച്ചർ ലഭ്യമാകുന്നതിന് നിങ്ങൾക്കും പങ്കുചേരാം Detailed video - https://youtu.be/1Iz2gaNkjbE Join link - https://jrstudioedu.com/7650681e-5bae-40f6-9743-e905fb314d8e - സൗജന്യ സയൻസ് മാഗസിൻ - വീഡിയോ മുൻപേ കാണാനുള്ള അവസരം - വെബിനാറുകൾ - ക്വിസ്സ് - ബ്ലോഗ് പോസ്റ്റുകൾ -- The concept of "something coming from nothing" is explored in the realm of quantum physics through the phenomenon of quantum fluctuations. In the vacuum of space, which is often considered "nothing," there exists a dynamic and restless environment governed by quantum mechanics. Here, particles and antiparticles spontaneously emerge and annihilate in fleeting moments due to the uncertainty principle, which states that energy and time are fundamentally intertwined and can fluctuate at microscopic scales. These temporary appearances are called virtual particles, and while they exist for incredibly brief durations, they can have measurable effects, such as the Casimir effect, where tiny forces arise between objects in a vacuum. Cosmologists also hypothesize that the universe itself could have originated from such a quantum fluctuation in a primordial "nothingness," potentially supported by inflationary theory, which explains the rapid expansion of space-time from an almost infinitesimal point. While this explanation is still debated, it provides a fascinating framework for understanding how the universe might arise from what we perceive as "nothing," fundamentally challenging our intuitive notions of existence. quantum fluctuations, vacuum energy, quantum mechanics, uncertainty principle, virtual particles, Casimir effect, quantum physics, origin of the universe, inflationary theory, cosmology, space-time, particle physics, quantum vacuum, quantum field theory, Big Bang theory, nothingness, quantum foam, primordial fluctuations, energy-time uncertainty, spontaneous creation, vacuum fluctuation, quantum cosmology, Hawking radiation, quantum tunneling, universe origins.

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