What is a string in chemistry?
Answers
Answered by
1
As far as I practiced it, theoretical chemistry or in its generality, computational chemistry is the use of physical chemistry principles to understand chemical reactions and molecular structure-function relation. It heavily involves use of Quantum and Statistical mechanics. So in its roots it is using physics. What makes it distinguishable from this basis is that its subject matter is mainly concerned with explaining molecular phenomena, while QM and SM are more general.
Thus, the accurate answer to your question would be that there is little fundamental knowledge in it to lead to something as basic as string theory. It has its own rules of thumbs though.
I would argue that finally all real theoretical natural science boils down to physics and mathematics. Chemistry is more of an application in all its forms. You can call theoretical chemistry applied physics of molecular phenomena and be perfectly accurate.
I hope my answer help to u and right but the answer is long but fully explaination.
Thus, the accurate answer to your question would be that there is little fundamental knowledge in it to lead to something as basic as string theory. It has its own rules of thumbs though.
I would argue that finally all real theoretical natural science boils down to physics and mathematics. Chemistry is more of an application in all its forms. You can call theoretical chemistry applied physics of molecular phenomena and be perfectly accurate.
I hope my answer help to u and right but the answer is long but fully explaination.
Similar questions