G punto. G, punto. punto g
In physics, "dot G" describes how G changes with time. In the German language (and Mark Twain had already complained about its word rearrangements), "dot G" is translated into a synonim of "G-spot". For this reason, nonphysicists might think that researchers are taking great interest in female anatomy, when the discourse is actually about the temporal change of G - which is pretty sexy to physicists, if not to anyone else. Puritans among the theoreticians are rather straight-laced about the idea that "big G" changes over time, while others are convinced that it does, just because of the pleasure they get from looking for it. da A. Unzicker, S. Jones, Bankrupting physics. How today's top scientists are gambling away their credibility













