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Anonymous at Sun, 24 Nov 2024 08:29:30 UTC No. 16491412
is there an antithesis to special relativity where phenomena moving incredibly slow exhibit different laws that aren't normally present?
Anonymous at Sun, 24 Nov 2024 08:36:26 UTC No. 16491414
>>16491412
weird shit happens at zero molecular movement (aka absolute zero).
Anonymous at Sun, 24 Nov 2024 08:38:38 UTC No. 16491417
>>16491414
but does it make sense to attribute it to special relativity? does thermodynamics care about relativistic frames of reference?
Anonymous at Sun, 24 Nov 2024 08:40:09 UTC No. 16491420
>>16491417
my fault i phrased this badly. when i said antithesis, i meant like on the opposite end of a sliding scale, where on the farthest right you have special relativity, and on the other absolute zero/condensed matter physics phenomena, but they're both simple different sides of the same coin.
Anonymous at Sun, 24 Nov 2024 13:14:47 UTC No. 16491563
>>16491412
Read up on Heisenbergs Uncertainty Principle.
If you KNOW that something is moving incredibly slowly, then you also know the momentum with great certainty, which means you have no idea where the phenomena actually is.
Anonymous at Sun, 24 Nov 2024 13:22:02 UTC No. 16491566
>>16491563
It's just wave mechanics.
All interactions we experience (and measure) are mediated by wave-like mediums.
Phenomenon generates waves of lower frequency = lower resolution of your measurements as there's only so much bandwidth available.
Anonymous at Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:09:11 UTC No. 16492472
>>16491412
classical mechanics