OTOH, "Star Trek: Quantum" would be a most fitting title.
![Wink :wink:](./images/smilies/icon_wink.gif)
That's all he needs; just something. I also love the title, in context.GrahamKennedy wrote:...My read on it is that Bond is getting revenge for what happened to Vespa... but that it gives him only the tiniest bit of solace to do so...
It's certainly used for energy in physics, but it's become applied to other things as well. I couldn't tell you if they invented the word for the physics-energy application and then used it elsewhere, or if the word itself just means something like "very tiny" in latin or whatever.Mikey wrote:I thought it referred to such a description for energy specifically, as in "A photon is a quantum of visible light."GrahamKennedy wrote:In real physics, a quantum is the smallest possible amount of something.
Literally "quantum" as in "quantum physics" doesn't necessarily have to mean a very small amount (though naturally the amounts in quantum physics ARE in fact, very small) but simply a discrete amount. The revelation that kicked off quantum physics was that the energy levels an electron could occupy in atomic orbitals could only take on discrete values, i.e., they were "quantized." "Quantum" in quantum physics, then, simply states that a value is quantized rather than continuous - that it can only take on certain values and not any fractional value possible. The science that followed from this rejiggering of atomic orbitals became very weird indeed (but at the same time became one of the most successful scientific theories ever developed), leading to the connotation ofGrahamKennedy wrote:Yeah. Originally it probably refers to any amounts. With physics and Einstein's explanation of the photoelectric effect it came to have the meaning about energy coming in very small amounts.