Author Archives: The Physicist

Q: If you were on the inside of the Sun falling in, the matter closer to the surface doesn’t affect your acceleration, but the matter closer to the core does. Why is that?

The original question was: Plait talks about the “physics of solid bodies” and why, specifically, if you were on the inside of the Sun falling in, the matter “behind” you- closer to the surface- doesn’t affect your acceleration at all, … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Astronomy, Math, Physics | 14 Comments

Q: How do surge protectors work?

Physicist: To control power in a house or an outlet you’d generally use a fuse.  But fuses are slow, they need time to heat up.  A surge (or the faster “spike”) happen too fast, so reacting to a surge is … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Engineering, Physics | 2 Comments

Relativity and Quantum Mechanics: the elevator pitch

Physicist: A woman on the subway, about two stations away from her stop, asked us “what are relativity and quantum mechanics?” So, this is a two-stop elevator pitch for the two most pivotal sciences since slicedbreadology. Relativity: Speed is just … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Quantum Theory, Relativity | 3 Comments

Q: Why are orbits elliptical? Why is the Sun in one focus, and what’s in the other?

Physicist: This question always bothered me too.  The short answer is: it falls out of the math.  Specifically, the math of first year physics and second year calculus.  The fact that the Sun is in one focus is just one … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Astronomy, Physics | 55 Comments

Q: What would happen if everyone in the world jumped at the same time?

Physicist: Sounds like a party! It would create a spherical wave that would descend through the Earth, focus at the core, and then expand again hitting the entire surface again, at more or less the same time, a little under … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Physics | 8 Comments

Q: How can electrons “jump” between places without covering the intervening distance?

Physicist: Frequently in quantum mechanics you’ll find that particles are restricted to only a certain set of states or locations, and yet somehow they can move from one to the next. It’s like moving between islands without crossing any water. … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Physics, Quantum Theory | 20 Comments