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[–]TheBuddha0 points
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It's a quasi-particle that is just plain weird.
Remember graphing in math class? You had the X and Y axes (yeah, that's the correct pluralization of axis) and, if you went far enough, you added a third axis and could represent three dimensional figures (not really important except in planar geometry and when you hit the Euclidean geometry).
On that graph, one axis stood for length and the other stood for height (depending on how you used it, of course, as graphing has other purposes). That's a 2 dimensional space.
To represent the third dimension, you add the Z axis.
If there's a Z axis, this quasiparticle can't exist. It only exists in the 2D space. It only exists on the X and Y axes.
It's a bit like the moononites from Aqua Teen Hunger Force. Only even weirder than they are.
I took calculus in high school. I know what 2d is. I still don't grasp a 2d particle. Is it entirely theoretical, or what? Is it necessary. I clicked a few of the links but the info was a bit dense for me to understand what they're saying or why I should or anyone should care about it. What's the application?
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[–] BoraxTheFungarian ago
I read it, but I don't grasp it...
[–] TheBuddha ago
It's a quasi-particle that is just plain weird.
Remember graphing in math class? You had the X and Y axes (yeah, that's the correct pluralization of axis) and, if you went far enough, you added a third axis and could represent three dimensional figures (not really important except in planar geometry and when you hit the Euclidean geometry).
On that graph, one axis stood for length and the other stood for height (depending on how you used it, of course, as graphing has other purposes). That's a 2 dimensional space.
To represent the third dimension, you add the Z axis.
If there's a Z axis, this quasiparticle can't exist. It only exists in the 2D space. It only exists on the X and Y axes.
It's a bit like the moononites from Aqua Teen Hunger Force. Only even weirder than they are.
[–] BoraxTheFungarian ago (edited ago)
I took calculus in high school. I know what 2d is. I still don't grasp a 2d particle. Is it entirely theoretical, or what? Is it necessary. I clicked a few of the links but the info was a bit dense for me to understand what they're saying or why I should or anyone should care about it. What's the application?