Quantcast
  • Register
PhysicsOverflow is a next-generation academic platform for physicists and astronomers, including a community peer review system and a postgraduate-level discussion forum analogous to MathOverflow.

Welcome to PhysicsOverflow! PhysicsOverflow is an open platform for community peer review and graduate-level Physics discussion.

Please help promote PhysicsOverflow ads elsewhere if you like it.

News

PO is now at the Physics Department of Bielefeld University!

New printer friendly PO pages!

Migration to Bielefeld University was successful!

Please vote for this year's PhysicsOverflow ads!

Please do help out in categorising submissions. Submit a paper to PhysicsOverflow!

... see more

Tools for paper authors

Submit paper
Claim Paper Authorship

Tools for SE users

Search User
Reclaim SE Account
Request Account Merger
Nativise imported posts
Claim post (deleted users)
Import SE post

Users whose questions have been imported from Physics Stack Exchange, Theoretical Physics Stack Exchange, or any other Stack Exchange site are kindly requested to reclaim their account and not to register as a new user.

Public \(\beta\) tools

Report a bug with a feature
Request a new functionality
404 page design
Send feedback

Attributions

(propose a free ad)

Site Statistics

205 submissions , 163 unreviewed
5,082 questions , 2,232 unanswered
5,353 answers , 22,789 comments
1,470 users with positive rep
820 active unimported users
More ...

  A fun experiment about Maxwell s Cat

+ 0 like - 3 dislike
1261 views

What happened if we tie 2 cats and we drop them from high building? Another falling cat problems. Does it provide a violation of angular momentum?

Closed as per community consensus as the post is not graduate-level
asked Jan 24, 2018 in Closed Questions by One Eyed King (-30 points) [ no revision ]
recategorized Jan 26, 2018 by Dilaton

Interesting thought experiment.

You should try it. :->

This is not graduate-level, voting to close. 500rep users please upvote the closevote here, if you agree.

@Dilaton it's not string-quantum gravity question but nontheless interesting.

I read the wiki entry on the cat's problem, seems that this question is still intractable, even though it was assumed to be answered in the 20th century.

@MathematicalPhysicist ok you might be right and there are probably still interesting and non-trivial things to discuss about the falling cats problem.

But as the question is currently formulated, it is almost indistinguishable from the query of a curious layman as they are often posed in physics discussions elsewhere in the internet.

So @OneEyedKing or somewhone else should modify the question (which has 3 closevotes by now) to highlight the interesting and non-trivial aspects of the problem





user contributions licensed under cc by-sa 3.0 with attribution required

Your rights
...