Originally posted by MonsieurM
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The qualities of a high-temperature superconductor a compound in which electrons obey the spooky laws of quantum physics, and flow in perfect synchrony, without friction appear linked to the fractal arrangements of seemingly random oxygen atoms....
...Those atoms werent thought to matter, especially not in relation to the behavior of individual electrons, which exist at a scale thousands of times smaller. The findings, published Aug. 12 in Nature, are a physics equivalent of discovering a link between two utterly separate dimensions. (obviously they know nothing about the Fractal Universe Theory pfff.... )
...Those atoms werent thought to matter, especially not in relation to the behavior of individual electrons, which exist at a scale thousands of times smaller. The findings, published Aug. 12 in Nature, are a physics equivalent of discovering a link between two utterly separate dimensions. (obviously they know nothing about the Fractal Universe Theory pfff.... )
Such fractals are ubiquitous elsewhere in nature, wrote Leiden University theoretical physicist Jan Zaanen in an accompanying commentary, but it comes as a complete surprise that crystal defects can accomplish this feat.
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