• @Kyrgizion
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      391 year ago

      Psh, that’s nothing. Quarks have flavors

      • @petersr
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        171 year ago

        But what has feelings?

            • @Viking_Hippie
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              51 year ago

              Or, hold on to your hat because this is where it gets wild; MEN have feelings too and are on average made of even MORE atoms!

              • HotsauceHurricane
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                41 year ago

                Of course women only get 70% of the atoms that men do. ATOMIC PATRIARCHY BE DAMMED!

                • @Viking_Hippie
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                  61 year ago

                  “What do we want?”

                  “Atomic parity!”

                  “When do we want it?”

                  “On second thought, it’s probably a bad idea!”

                  • @Kyrgizion
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                    51 year ago

                    Bariogenesis: “Am I a joke to you?”

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Eh, I think it’s an hard clear Yes. The radiation released by an element when coming out of an excited state depends on the energy difference between N levels and it is generally consistent for that given element.

      How do they get excited? You give them energy. How? One way is by shinning a light.

      Is there a name for radiation of a specific frequency within the visible spectrum? Yes. A color.

      All rare gas lightbulbs even have a specific color.

      The only way for us to discount the emission specturm as a color is if we go philosophical about the nature of color. And that’s for literary nerds, not physics nerds, and I doubt people google the former as frequently as the latter.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        True, but a childish intuition about “having a color” would most likely imply that you can see a structure of the thing (like a ball) that is colored in (which you can’t with atoms). On the other hand if you consider an atom a tiny pointsource, like a star in the sky, then it makes sense again.