Act II sees Rita becoming an "educated" woman and achieving what she has set out to achieve: she now understands literary criticism, is able to write essays that rank her equivalent to the "proper students" and talk confidently with people from the high-class society. etc
I've read some notes on...
It's said that the experiment of Davisson and Germer in which electrons are accelerated and fired at the surface of a nickel crystal demonstrates a wave property of the electrons.
However, I can't really see how the scattering of the electrons in the experiment displays what we term...
Can any please explain the differences between those two?
As far as I know, 'diffraction' means bending or spreading out of waves around an obstacle-but is "diffraction" simply a change in direction of waves through a specific angle? If so, is it also "refraction"?
@Pwnage101: I'm just a little bit confused. Do you think that word "energy level" can be used when talking about classical physics? Because, as you stated, according to classical physics- energy is not quantised- So since "energy is not quantised", how come the concept of "energy levels" could...