The strange jittery dance that particles perform when immersed in water could be used to identify the best time to trade on the stock market. First noticed by Victorian scientist Robert Brown, Brownian motion is the jerking movement exhibited by particles, such as dust or pollen, suspended in liquid or gas. Molecules in the surrounding substance collide with the larger particles, causing them to move along random paths. Didier Sornette at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich and his colleagues found that equations for Brownian motion can also be used to describe stock price fluctuations
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