Vacuum polarization at the tip of a water drop
Rouslan Krechetnikov, Andrei Zelnikov

TL;DR
This paper discusses the observable effects of vacuum polarization, historically dismissed but now recognized as a common phenomenon in everyday life.
Contribution
It presents new insights into vacuum polarization effects at the tip of a water drop, challenging previous dismissals and highlighting its practical observability.
Findings
Vacuum polarization occurs at the tip of water drops.
The effect is more observable than previously thought.
Vacuum polarization influences everyday phenomena.
Abstract
First rejected by the Nobel prize laureate Wolfgang Pauli as non-sense, the effect of vacuum polarization proves to be commonly observable in everyday life.
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Taxonomy
TopicsExperimental and Theoretical Physics Studies · Fluid dynamics and aerodynamics studies · Computational Physics and Python Applications
