A century after Albert Einstein said we would never be able to observe the instantaneous velocity of tiny particles as they randomly shake and shimmy (in so-called Brownian motion), physicist Mark ...
Edited by the faculty of the Sage School of Philosophy at Cornell University, The Philosophical Review has been in continuous publication since 1892. Volume I, edited by Jacob Gould Schurman ...
Brownian motion of particles affects many branches of science. We report on the Brownian motion of micrometer-sized beads of glass held in air by an optical tweezer, over a wide range of pressures, ...
An international team of scientists, which included researchers from Nanjing Tech University, used a simple but powerful technique called luminescence spectroscopy to measure the velocities of tiny ...
Equipment: A tennis ball on a string. What it does: Swing the ball on the string to show circular motion. Release the ball to show the instantaneous velocity of the ball. Concepts Demonstrated: ...