Activity for Anyonâ€
Type | On... | Excerpt | Status | Date |
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Edit | Post #288290 |
Post edited: Fixed duplicate word. |
— | 6 months ago |
Edit | Post #288291 | Initial revision | — | over 1 year ago |
Answer | — |
A: Magnetization as a function of temperature in ferromagnets The most famous formula of this kind is Bloch's $T^{3/2}$ law: $$M(T)=M0 \left( 1-\left(\frac{T}{Tc}\right)^{3/2}\right)$$ It is a low-order approximation for the spontaneous magnetization in isotropic ferromagnets at low temperatures. It works well for systems like gadolinium, but is not accurate ... (more) |
— | over 1 year ago |
Edit | Post #288290 | Initial revision | — | over 1 year ago |
Answer | — |
A: SI Units of wavefunction There is no one answer. The dimensions are inferred from the fact that $\left| \psi\right|^2$ represents a probability density. Perhaps the most straight-forward way is to consider the normalization condition, i.e. that the integral of the probability density over the state space equals a probability... (more) |
— | over 1 year ago |