Awards

Awards

Six things are impossible . . A book written by John Gribein, who joined the award library series, after he was able to reach the short list in the Royal Society for Science Award.
John Gracene says in the book “Six Impossible Things” strange quantum physics. It tells us that the particle can be in two places at the same time.

This particle is also a wave, and everything in the quantum world can be described completely in terms of waves, or completely in terms of particles, whichever is preferred.
All this was evident by the end of the 1920s, but due to the great ordeal of many physicists, not to mention ordinary humans, no one has never been able to reach a logical interpretation of what was going on. Physicists sought to obtain a “number of condolences” in a variety of some somewhat convincing interpretations.

This brief guide provides us with six theories trying to explain the huge quantum wonders. They are all crazy, some are crazy than others, but madness in this world does not necessarily mean error, and madness does not necessarily mean more error.
John Gracene studied physics and astronomy at Sussex and Cambridge universities before he became a full -time writer.

He worked in Nature and New Scientist, in addition to writing more than a hundred scientific books (many of which are in cooperation with his wife Mary), ten books of science fiction, and a biography of Buddy Holly. This was combined with research on climate change in the Scientific Policy Research Unit at the University of Sussex, and worked as a visiting colleague in astronomy at the University of Sussex..

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