ITT: We ask questions of science that are extremely hard to explain (but completely explainable)

ITT: We ask questions of science that are extremely hard to explain (but completely explainable).

Other urls found in this thread:

youtube.com/watch?v=q1riFCCsUU4
twitter.com/AnonBabble

If a fly didn't have wings, would it be called a 'walk?'

ELI5 what is a limit?

if the #2 pencil is the most popular pencil, why is it still #2?

No, it would have a categorical latin name.

Fuck off retard this isn't reddit.

Why does the moon appear larger near the horizon?

You would rather it be a piss pencil?

If a lot of mass together forms a black hole, then why during the big bang the universe didn't immediately collapse into one?

It wouldn't be called the big bang. It would be called the big crunch instead.

>hits blunt

because of space expansion and mass not existing immediately after the big bang

You want a shit pencil?

It's the opposite user

Because even if it tried it would not be able to coalesce into a black hole for the space in between was expanding faster than light.

Quantum fucking spin. And I'm talking about approaching it from a group-theoretic Lie algebra perspective by examining symmetries of Lorentz transformations. This shit STILL ties my head in knots.

Also some good lectures I found on the subject:
youtube.com/watch?v=q1riFCCsUU4

I don't know if it counts
but simple to state unsolved math problems are waht comes into my mind
like the goldbach conjecture (which has been checked to be true up to 4*10^8)
how can each even positive integer be written as a sum of 2 primes?

because the force of the expansion was bigger than the gravitational force of the mass

how is the uncertainty principle derived?

Heisenberg was asked 'what's going on with that quantum shit' and he was like 'i dunno lol'

and that was history

>has never heard of the moon illusion
why even reply