How Physicists Proved The Universe Isn't Locally Real - Nobel Prize in Physics 2022 EXPLAINED

2024 ж. 24 Сәу.
7 959 152 Рет қаралды

Alain Aspect, John Clauser and Anton Zeilinger conducted ground breaking experiments using entangled quantum states, where two particles behave like a single unit even when they are separated. Their results have cleared the way for new technology based upon quantum information.
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0:00 The 2022 Physics Nobel Prize
0:51 Is the Universe Real?
1:58 Einstein's Problem with Quantum Mechanics
5:09 The Hunt for Quantum Proof
7:37 The First Successful Experiment
11:06 So What?
#Einstein #nobelprize #entanglement
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  • I think Scientists are Rockstars 🤘so I made t-shirts to celebrate it. More links in description Einstein Rockstar Tee: www.drbenmiles.com/merch/p/rockstar-scientist-tee-einstein

    @DrBenMiles@DrBenMiles7 ай бұрын
    • ब्रह्म सत्यं जगन्मिथ्या जीवो ब्रह्मैव नापरः । अनेन वेद्यं सच्छास्त्रमिति वेदान्तडिण्डिमः ॥ ब्रह्म वास्तविक है, ब्रह्मांड मिथ्या है (इसे वास्तविक या असत्य के रूप में वर्गीकृत नहीं किया जा सकता है)। जीव ही ब्रह्म है और भिन्न नहीं। इसे सही शास्त्र के रूप में समझा जाना चाहिए। यह वेदांत द्वारा घोषित किया गया है। Brahman is real, the universe is mithya (it cannot be categorized as either real or unreal). The jiva is Brahman itself and not different. This should be understood as the correct Sastra. This is proclaimed by Vedanta. Source - ब्रह्मज्ञानावलीमाला I think u may know about Adi Shankaracharya (Vedanta)

      @bhardwajchandru9725@bhardwajchandru97257 ай бұрын
    • scientists are mostly liars that ride on the coattails of the real rockstars, the mathematicians. ultimately this ends in war. fair warning.

      @youarenotme01@youarenotme017 ай бұрын
    • How nonsense took over legitimate research is a better title. FYI - the wave state is real. The outcome is variable, like almost everything in nature. Growing up is the challenge for folks. It's time...

      @Christopher_Bachm@Christopher_Bachm7 ай бұрын
    • I wanna know though: Can I control my local un-realness within my brain's neurons, so that I can have ABSOLUTELY UNDOUBTFULY free will? Tell me that. Please I need to know! I don't know if I have free will or not. Maybe this term (free will) isn't much useful. If it isn't indeed useful, then tell me what the heck I have. Free-what? Free brain function? I need to know if I control my brain or determinism controls my faith. Or maybe determinism that looks like randomness controls myself. Tell me please. Does this experiment prove anything regarding free will? Also.... Libet's experiments proved nothing. He just spotted some brain activity. So what? He can't prove this brain activity supports the existence of free will. He also can't prove that this brain activity excludes the possibility that free will exists. Maybe this activity he spotted isn't relative to free will at any way. Maybe it was just parallel activity. What does science and neuroscience tell us about free will today? Please answer me! I have OCD and I believe there is no free will at all. So I live the same loops of daily life again and again and again. I am not a possibilist either. I think possibilism regarding free will, is just an excuse in order to avoid deep research in human nature. I think possibilists merely don't want to find out what really is the case there. Please read my comment and answer me!!!

      @dimkk605@dimkk6057 ай бұрын
    • Can you better explain the reasons why both curves shown in 09:35 should necessarily have the shapes shown between 0 and 90 angles, for both propositions? @DrBenMiles

      @marcelcukier@marcelcukier6 ай бұрын
  • I met a theoretical physicist the other day. I was surprised to learn they actually exist.

    @gumshoe2273@gumshoe2273 Жыл бұрын
    • go back to your ramer before they cut your pay again

      @nextlevelenglish5858@nextlevelenglish5858 Жыл бұрын
    • What else doesn't exist? For them it's the scientific method.

      @vthomas375@vthomas375 Жыл бұрын
    • I'll just have to take that on faith.

      @watamatafoyu@watamatafoyu Жыл бұрын
    • @@watamatafoyu You're way too trusting. Ask them to show practically.

      @vthomas375@vthomas375 Жыл бұрын
    • But are they locally real?

      @andrewday7799@andrewday7799 Жыл бұрын
  • I can confirm this with my daily observations. I can place an object on my table, countertop etc. It appears stable and should not fall over. The moment I turn my back, at a random interval of its choosing, the object will fall over, or end up on the floor. Initially, I believed it to be poltergeists, but I'm now convinced it's Matthew McConaughey

    @evokaiyo@evokaiyo Жыл бұрын
    • *quiet organs play in the background*

      @renitixz@renitixz Жыл бұрын
    • It was me and harpua, and we couldn’t care fewer, it happens all the time!

      @Madcatcon199@Madcatcon199 Жыл бұрын
    • I'm thinking it must be Shrodinger's Cat !

      @Donavery1@Donavery1 Жыл бұрын
    • @@renitixz "quiet"?

      @hcrawford@hcrawford Жыл бұрын
    • Are you sure it wasn't Patrick Swayze?

      @cesarsantellana1768@cesarsantellana1768 Жыл бұрын
  • I find these concepts a struggle, and I had to watch this twice, but I ultimately obtained a better understanding of local real-ness than I’ve previously been able to muster. Thank you for laying it out so well.

    @robbujold7711@robbujold77116 ай бұрын
    • the explanation is crystal clear

      @digguscience@digguscience5 ай бұрын
    • Lies are often hard to understand because they are the product of insanity. The reasoning collapses on itself. If nothing is real then the experiment that 'proves' that nothing is real is also not real as the experiment exists inside the so called illusion. This is a paradox. The experiment is contaminated by existing within the so called illusion. The experiment and it's findings would have to be illusory as well. Otherwise they are saying that everything is false but the experiment exists outside the illusion and so is true. This would literally make the experiment itself God and the scientists would be godmen able to move the experiment outside of the illusion. Welcome to your new religion. Though it is actually an ancient and false one called 'Gnosticism' just as 'evolution' was based on Hindu concept of Samsara. If you believe in evolution you are already a Hindu. If you believe in the simulation theory argument you are already a gnostic. What is creepy is that these 'scientists' are holding out on you and not telling you that they have been deeply religious people all along but only pretended to be atheists. They had us all fooled!

      @lastthingsbiblestudy@lastthingsbiblestudy5 ай бұрын
    • There are several ways to help understand it. While watching this screen you can see people doing things but your phone or pc is just recreating images from the past so although they look real it is similar to the world you see using your brain as a decoder. Next way is to realise that everything has been proven to be made up of the same ingredients ie. atoms sub atomic particles etc. etc. All variations are illusory just like a face that appears in a cloud would disappear if you got up closer to the cloud. Our brains hallucinate our realities..... I'd suggest watching a video of the same title but our brains evolved over time favouring survival over reality. Seeing reality is not a trait that will lead you to having lots of offspring. An aggressive caveman will get laid more often than a monk who meditates 24/7 lol The more you enjoy the dream called life and the more you are willing to sacrifice to preserve this wonderful daymare to more likely you are to survive and prosper and also suffer and still die just slower and with lots of grandchildren. Our eyes and brain create colour for example. That helped us become better killers so imagine what else our brain creates that isn't real........hint.... everything. Next up .. transience. Is an event real? Where is your 3rd birthday? What is the difference between your dreams and your 3rd birthday. Not much. Both are just vague memories and you and your world will become memories and eventually be forgotten. What isn't permanent, isn't real. Nothing is permanent. Some Hindu sages say that reality is attainable. It's very hard to describe. It can only be pointed to and although it is nothing it can be experienced but it's beyond words like experience yet to someone who has been to the state that millions of people meditate in an attempt to......not exist......it is far from dead. It's pure awareness and instead of emptiness it's immensely full. It feels like everyone you ever loved is in it but not separate from you. I glimpsed it once and the shock of it knocked me back to my dream or program that I have been ingraining into myself thanks to society and others since I was 2 years old. The idea that I'm a body in this hell hole is a troublesome concept but my destiny will fulfill itself as will yours. Hope it goes well for me/you as we are the same illusory being

      @TheSubpremeState@TheSubpremeState3 ай бұрын
    • think of it like rendering in a video game. stuff Is there when your not rendering it but it isn't physical; it's pure information, ones and zeros. but when observed, "rendered", it appears as tangible "real" stuff. but you know ultimately speaking it's still just a bunch of one's and zeros that when rendered a certain way, "observed", give one the appearance of "real" stuff

      @kdub9812@kdub98122 ай бұрын
    • ​any recommended books

      @itsonlyapapermoon61@itsonlyapapermoon612 ай бұрын
  • Put the information sources in the description. It will make the video much better.

    @stevedwa345@stevedwa3457 ай бұрын
    • I agree. But I simply searched for "Nobel Prize in Physics 2022" and the source came as the first search result on Nobel Prize website.

      @krysis6994@krysis699425 күн бұрын
  • As someone who pays attention to quantum theories, my feeling is that the universe has infinitely more details and twists the more we look. It’s basically making details up the more we look, keeping up with what we’re capable of measuring.

    @AncientEsper@AncientEsper Жыл бұрын
    • We can't even grasp the additional dimensions above our own, so that makes sense

      @ianokay@ianokay Жыл бұрын
    • we are building the complexity of the universe... We're are a training program for it and it for us. Perpetual amplification.

      @GeekyGizmo007@GeekyGizmo007 Жыл бұрын
    • @@GeekyGizmo007 ok dud sure thing

      @Edw9n@Edw9n Жыл бұрын
    • @@GeekyGizmo007 I somewhat believe we're alone in the universe but not sure I want to (historically, again) demand we're the center of the universe with which it all revolves around. More likely: We just don't understand, and maybe cannot.

      @ianokay@ianokay Жыл бұрын
    • Yes l had the idea a particle only comes into existence when it's postulated by a physicist.

      @leonardgibney2997@leonardgibney2997 Жыл бұрын
  • I couldn't imagine a bigger flex than having gotten the Nobel Prize for keepin' it real.

    @OllyWood688@OllyWood688 Жыл бұрын
    • Damn underrated joke right there. Dave chappelle would be proud

      @MrRinre@MrRinre Жыл бұрын
    • thanks for keeping this joke real

      @supernana7263@supernana7263 Жыл бұрын
    • Getting kicked out of Feynman’s office. When keeping it real, goes wrong.

      @jonathanwright5338@jonathanwright5338 Жыл бұрын
    • Realest shit you ever wrote.

      @beastemeauxde7029@beastemeauxde7029 Жыл бұрын
    • Word.

      @Krystalmyth@Krystalmyth Жыл бұрын
  • Awesome video. So clearly explained and much easier to follow than many other videos I've watched on quantum physics. I'll be checking out your other videos. Thanks and keep up the good work.

    @dominicmorgan1983@dominicmorgan19837 ай бұрын
    • lmk where the good quantum physics videos are

      @KaylaGellert@KaylaGellert7 ай бұрын
    • World news

      @chandrasomarajapakse9487@chandrasomarajapakse94873 ай бұрын
  • Remember Science isn’t about appeasing Einstein, it’s about truth.

    @stop8738@stop873810 ай бұрын
  • Man Alice and Bob have had a lifetime of stories together.... they should make a scifi tv show at this point jeez lol

    @takedonick101@takedonick101 Жыл бұрын
    • Alice and Bob? Oh no! Not that again!

      @porridgeandprunes@porridgeandprunes Жыл бұрын
    • @@porridgeandprunes Welcome to Einstein's Nightmare.

      @violet.senderhauf2187@violet.senderhauf2187 Жыл бұрын
    • Well, I am Bob and I have never met an Alice as far as I can remember so like the man says I haven't and will never know whether we agree or not. Still have to go with Einstein.

      @bobbyb9712@bobbyb9712 Жыл бұрын
    • alice and bob vs the evil claire

      @cvspvr@cvspvr Жыл бұрын
    • When They can't solve the problem They say the math is incorrect

      @abedan1258@abedan1258 Жыл бұрын
  • Great! So, next time I'm faced with a situation I don't want to deal with in life I can say it's not real and run away! Thanks Quantum Physics!

    @butterfacemcgillicutty@butterfacemcgillicutty Жыл бұрын
    • Universe may be unreal but so are we...so for us everything is real ...

      @Arcticdawn1093@Arcticdawn1093 Жыл бұрын
    • But you can't run away. You face it and see if the situation can run away from you. 👍

      @zanussidish8144@zanussidish8144 Жыл бұрын
    • Wish I could tell that to a traffic cop !😂

      @chrisbrown8640@chrisbrown8640 Жыл бұрын
    • Not real like I'm right here come on man..... Some people are so smart they outsmarted themselves

      @jimberry5318@jimberry5318 Жыл бұрын
    • And you will omit reality disastrously with all its consequences that can be much worse and bitter for you later on. If you had taken it real, you could have destroyed all bad consequences at once that now you need to face in the future.

      @azizkurtoglu6243@azizkurtoglu6243 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you. I love this. I appreciate how you simplified this for people like but I didn’t feel that I was missing anything either. 💯 % 👏

    @tallewinger@tallewinger6 ай бұрын
  • I was actually happy when I heard Alain Aspect won a Nobel prize. It's well deserved.

    @jojolafrite90@jojolafrite907 ай бұрын
  • Thank goodness this had a "So what?" chapter. Whenever I read or watch items concerning quantum theory I often end up wondering if it's significance is "locally real".

    @SJKPJR007@SJKPJR007 Жыл бұрын
    • How I felt when I was reading, then skimming, an article on this for the "so what?" Bit. Bc I'm pretty sure philosophers already touched on this existential crisis 💀🤣

      @allieharmon3926@allieharmon3926 Жыл бұрын
    • @m_train1 never let what out?

      @GameTimeWhy@GameTimeWhy Жыл бұрын
    • Well, if nothing is real then we might as well go ahead & blow ourselves up then. It’s going to happen eventually anyways.

      @royalbloodedledgend@royalbloodedledgend Жыл бұрын
    • @m_train1 I did.

      @GameTimeWhy@GameTimeWhy Жыл бұрын
    • Apart from the fact that it drives the modern world (like the computer you wrote this on) quantum theory is completely irrelevant.

      @donaldduck4888@donaldduck4888 Жыл бұрын
  • They way I had "understood" so far, was that according to quantum physics, the property of a particle is random until it is measured. However, if I am getting this right, whenever we measure again the same particles, the value of the property will change again, to a previously unknown value (so that it's value sometimes is or isn't 180-Δθ) . If that is the case, the value of the particles' property could be changing randomly all the time and we just get a snapshot of it's value at the precise moment that we measured it.

    @periclestoukiloglou1196@periclestoukiloglou1196 Жыл бұрын
    • Yes..or, rather than "changing randomly" maybe they are all possible properties at the same time, or no properties at all, ..are they just simply "undefined" ... But now we're back to a cat in a box lol

      @MaxWinner@MaxWinner Жыл бұрын
    • It’s more like we don’t know the properties, like with the cat. Doesn’t mean everything is truly random until you look.

      @lxlumen_music@lxlumen_music Жыл бұрын
    • Perhaps we hav no measure for All that exists.

      @mariakutschera3087@mariakutschera3087 Жыл бұрын
    • I'm pretty sure what you're describing is Heisenberg's uncertainty principle and also superposition but I think the difference here is that the two particles are in a state of entanglement I believe they're still in superposition but upon measurement a wave function collapse occurs so as to not violate conservation of momentum by having the particles spin in opposite directions, which is what was apparently proven.

      @TheDarkblue57@TheDarkblue57 Жыл бұрын
    • I'm not fully educated in some of this. Giving a Nobel prize for saying something changes properties when measured differently. That doesn't sound like a award winning break through.

      @420SupaK@420SupaK Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for another great video, look forward to many more!

    @PlanetXMysteries-pj9nm@PlanetXMysteries-pj9nm4 ай бұрын
  • Your explaining skills are amazing! Subscribed.

    @hayk.galstyan@hayk.galstyanАй бұрын
  • if the universe isn't real, i'm not paying my bills anymore

    @sertulariae8294@sertulariae8294 Жыл бұрын
    • What does paying your bills have to do with the universe. The bible says render unto Ceasar. You don't need a universe if you believe the Bible. You just have to pay your taxes.

      @larrydommer9109@larrydommer9109 Жыл бұрын
    • Bruh it was a joke lol

      @hiiamjustacoolrandomuser168@hiiamjustacoolrandomuser168 Жыл бұрын
  • Questions of science suddenly become questions of philosophy and psychology the deeper we move into them, science and philosophy essentially look like brothers.

    @parasharsomprabh4970@parasharsomprabh4970 Жыл бұрын
    • Science has made philosophy irrelevant

      @AbandonedVoid@AbandonedVoid Жыл бұрын
    • @@AbandonedVoid only to people devoid of any heart who would rather sound like robots instead of freakin human beings

      @cassandragemini_@cassandragemini_ Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@AbandonedVoid You say that because like most people, you dont understand the purpose of philosophy and mistake it for some sort of attempt at pseudo science. Physics student btw, so not a philosophy fanboy by any means, but philosophy doesnt just deal with stuff like "what is reality anyways lol", same way not all of phsyics is about solving highschool pulley problems.

      @AlFredo-sx2yy@AlFredo-sx2yy Жыл бұрын
    • @@AbandonedVoid Philosophy creates science essentially. Must come up with an idea and test them. Quite simple.

      @doml998@doml998 Жыл бұрын
    • Natural philosophy

      @ayee4363@ayee4363 Жыл бұрын
  • Here's a question I have. Quantum entanglement... let say one particle is in the room with me and the other(half of the pair) is at the edge of the observable universe. Does the fixed point in time where the particles exist have any meaning? So the particle in my room is actually just one that is apart of a random object. At the edge of the universe, does that particle need to also be apart of a similar random object? Can two particles that are entangled have completely different uses within the universe as long as their spin stays same.

    @davidlevy6418@davidlevy64187 ай бұрын
    • Are you trying to say "a part" of an object, as in part of one object or did you mean to use the word "apart," which means separate from an object?

      @throgwarhammer7162@throgwarhammer71627 ай бұрын
    • Once you collapse the field then all connection is lost.

      @James-ri3fd@James-ri3fd18 күн бұрын
    • @@throgwarhammer7162 My apologies. (a part). Do both entangled particles have to exist in the same manner?

      @davidlevy6418@davidlevy641817 күн бұрын
  • Fabulously presented. Thanks. It seems to indicate that there is/are more to a particle and/or the universe than the variables being examined. Riding on the surface of space-time is going the long way around the mountain. There must obviously be another path.

    @offidano9587@offidano95876 ай бұрын
  • In fairness, I’m not very smart. But I’ve tried so many times to understand quantum entanglement and you single-handedly explained it to me in just a few simple sentences. I am eternally grateful. I can finally impress my grandmother.

    @DanielPeaster@DanielPeaster Жыл бұрын
    • Never use the word against your self. You are super intelligent.

      @waldwassermann@waldwassermann Жыл бұрын
    • I think it's fair to say that even the smartest people have trouble understanding entanglement - that's why they all propose theories.

      @draganbacmaga8981@draganbacmaga8981 Жыл бұрын
    • @@waldwassermann we can't all be intelligent, some of us (like myself) are unable to grasp mathematics and physics

      @mercx007@mercx007 Жыл бұрын
    • Quantum mechanics is something you can't really understand fully, and anyone claiming they do are lying.

      @julianemery718@julianemery718 Жыл бұрын
    • Ditto! 🤩

      @tubehepa@tubehepa Жыл бұрын
  • Einstein (Podolsky and Rosen) weren't proven wrong. They proposed a question as a response. It just took a long time for subsequent theoretical physicist to respond. The question was so good it deserved a Nobel prize worthy answer.

    @jasnarmstrng@jasnarmstrng Жыл бұрын
    • I was thinking how does this prove it isn’t real it just proves to me we don’t understand everything yet

      @slipcaseslitpace@slipcaseslitpace Жыл бұрын
    • That is true. These sharlatans still trying to sell us their mysticism crap by attacking determinism. To have the audacity...

      @davidabdollahi7906@davidabdollahi7906 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@slipcaseslitpace Any good answer poses new questions ;) Correct answers can be simple of course, but usually those are only answers to the most simple of questions... Really good answers change how we understand something.. so we always end up with more questions ;)

      @a_diamond@a_diamond Жыл бұрын
    • @@a_diamond ok? This doesn’t prove that the universe isn’t real tho.

      @slipcaseslitpace@slipcaseslitpace Жыл бұрын
    • No one is saying it isn’t real. Something is here.

      @cammack07@cammack07 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for the great explanation! I have learned a lot because of you. What I'm wondering is, how come the winners of the Nobel Prize in 2022 only won it then when the experiment was already conducted in 1972 and John Clauser wrote a paper about it and already proved back then that the universe isn't locally real? Does somebody know what I'm missing here?

    @strawberrymilkshakewithastraw@strawberrymilkshakewithastraw6 ай бұрын
    • i think it was something like: they proved that it was the final frontier of quantum mechanics

      @yankeeshoota@yankeeshoota4 ай бұрын
  • one question though. So from the fact that 2 distance entangled particles can instantly communicate with each other, the conclusion is that the universe isn't locally real. But couldn't the other conclusion be that the universe is locally real, just that sometimes it actually is possible to communicate faster than light? what if they are conencted in a 4th dimension that allows instant transmission?

    @JuliusUnique@JuliusUnique7 ай бұрын
    • yes

      @kevinfisher466@kevinfisher4665 күн бұрын
  • I agree with Einstein that randomness is not a fundamental feature of nature. Just because the behaviour of some particles appears to be random, it doesn’t mean that it is. Every particle’s behaviour must have an explanation - there must always be A REASON to explain why a particle moves this way or that way. .just because we don’t know that explanation yet, this doesn’t mean that we can or should attribute it to randomness.

    @gr637@gr63711 ай бұрын
    • Seems intuitive, but apparently it's not correct.

      @sliglusamelius8578@sliglusamelius85783 ай бұрын
    • Sometimes

      @DuckDodgers69@DuckDodgers693 ай бұрын
    • Problem is, there have been tests done on the "hidden variable" hypothesis, and the randomness really does seem baked into the universe.

      @MrClickity@MrClickity3 ай бұрын
    • Determinism or randomness is not primarily a problem of physics but of the epistemology of the observer. Man's abilities are limited because man is not an absolute creature. He will never be able to trace all the causes - down to the last root or all the consequences - through determinism. One can never be certain of detecting causality or correlation in all its entirety because there will always be something that he does not see, does not know at that moment and that affects the object of observation. Therefore, it cannot verify the validity of determinism, because either determinism applies absolutely or it does not apply at all.

      @stipostipo2051@stipostipo20513 ай бұрын
    • It all sounds logical until it's proven wrong, then it makes sense.

      @charlesmiller8107@charlesmiller81072 ай бұрын
  • Niels Bohr, one of the pioneers of quantum mechanics, did not believe that the universe is not real. In fact, he believed that the universe is real, but that our understanding of it is limited by the way we observe and measure it. Bohr believed that the physical world is real, but that our understanding of it is limited by the constraints of our measurements and observations. He argued that we should focus on the pragmatic and experimental aspects of quantum mechanics, rather than trying to understand the underlying reality behind it.

    @GHOST-331@GHOST-331 Жыл бұрын
    • Who told you what Niels Bohr" believed" , and why do you believe them?

      @vhawk1951kl@vhawk1951kl10 ай бұрын
    • If only you had some idea of what you mean by or could even begine to define, " the universe". Apart from imaginary what is the universe? You have absolutely no idea?-No surprises there

      @vhawk1951kl@vhawk1951kl10 ай бұрын
    • Hey you know, Bohr was on to something there.....for all his theoretical prowess, he was the most pragmatic of them all, it seems.

      @alals6794@alals67949 ай бұрын
    • @@vhawk1951kl Another desperate "simulation" theorist.

      @liquidmagma@liquidmagma9 ай бұрын
    • Quantum Physics does not exist, it is a evil that will be driven out of this world.

      @madhatter3492@madhatter34928 ай бұрын
  • The content is crazily good. How come youtube never suggest u to me until now

    @ZJProductionHK@ZJProductionHK5 ай бұрын
  • The best explanation I heard!

    @wplg@wplg8 ай бұрын
  • So if the universe is not real, could u just kindly transfer me all your money since its all not real anyway

    @trucyaurelia2410@trucyaurelia2410 Жыл бұрын
  • I started reading quantum physics books when i was too young to understand them, about 1982 13 years old, now I'm 53 years old, and still feel i don't understand it much, but this video made me feel like i learned something over 40 years, because some of this was familiar. I have always been drawn to this, even though I'm mostly a trained engineer, and now an old man hanging out in a home mancave building a humanoid robot at a slow pace. Cool video, thanks.

    @ZenHulk@ZenHulk Жыл бұрын
    • Try DMT/5g of Mushrooms. It will make more sense.

      @ravenragnar@ravenragnar Жыл бұрын
    • @@ravenragnar Yeah no. If it was, then scientists would have done it and achieved a massive breakthrough in regards to quantum physics but reality is often disappointing.

      @user-mp3eh1vb9w@user-mp3eh1vb9w Жыл бұрын
    • @@user-mp3eh1vb9w Yeah no. You are wrong. Look up where the birth of the internet came from. It was a massive breakthrough.

      @ravenragnar@ravenragnar Жыл бұрын
    • @@ravenragnar 😂 My guy is comparing the internet and quantum physics lmao

      @user-mp3eh1vb9w@user-mp3eh1vb9w Жыл бұрын
    • Not a sex bot is it?

      @draganbacmaga8981@draganbacmaga8981 Жыл бұрын
  • Food for thought… It wasn’t Schrödinger’s cat, but it was his box.

    @axil157@axil1576 ай бұрын
  • Adding polarizing filters collapses the wave function except those exactly aligned with the filter...but there is always leakage no matter.

    @Zorlof@Zorlof2 ай бұрын
  • Really well explained. I found this easier to follow than the PBS spacetime episode 👍

    @fifetojo@fifetojo Жыл бұрын
    • I think he should be super radical and rename Alice and Bob.

      @BeckBeckGo@BeckBeckGo Жыл бұрын
    • Link to the PBS Episode, please. ??

      @wrestleswithangels@wrestleswithangels Жыл бұрын
    • This is all bs nonsense. Science is based on OBSERVATION. If nothing we experience is real, then science doesn't exist and neither do these goofballs. For all intents and purposes, everything we experience is REAL. There is no way to define a state of being "not real" based on scientific principles, because, again, science is based on OBSERVATION.

      @USFISTER@USFISTER Жыл бұрын
    • @@infinity2394 🙅‍♂️

      @josephwhittaker442@josephwhittaker442 Жыл бұрын
    • @@infinity2394 You can know what pain and suffering is without knowing goodness. Therefore you can know evil without knowing goodness. Case closed.

      @firstaidsack@firstaidsack Жыл бұрын
  • So the universe isn't real because it turn out the way we thought the universe worked is not how it actually work ? It's somewhat amazing how little of the universe and physics as a whole we actually know

    @tartipouss@tartipouss Жыл бұрын
    • Gravity isn't real ??? If that is True take you cat and drop them off a 40 story bundling? Ill be waiting for your response?? 😁

      @roboparks@roboparks Жыл бұрын
    • "Real" is a technical term, just like "local" is. It essentially means the choice of whether you measure something does not affect the thing you're measuring. In this case, the idea is that the polarization (etc) are already determined whether you measure them or not, which turns out to not be true. "Real" is unrelated to "true" or "actual" in physics-speak.

      @darrennew8211@darrennew8211 Жыл бұрын
    • And yet day after day, dogmatic science is rammed down people's throats as definitive and undebatable -

      @MattRoadhouse@MattRoadhouse Жыл бұрын
    • @@MattRoadhouse Huh? There's no such thing as "dogmatic science." You might have some dogmatic scientists, but dogmatic is the opposite of science. If you're complaining that government claims that science says something it doesn't to assert control over you, that isn't science, that's government. None of which has anything to do with the technical definition of "real". (And if I could remember where I saw the physicist define it, I'd post it.)

      @darrennew8211@darrennew8211 Жыл бұрын
    • @@darrennew8211 you are correct, and yet look at the state of the world and tell me I am actually wrong

      @MattRoadhouse@MattRoadhouse Жыл бұрын
  • As long as relativity and quantum mechanics are proved experimentally, probably there will be a explanation for their different conclusions,; how far are we ? Could string theory help? Very good video. Thank you.

    @marcoventura9451@marcoventura94519 ай бұрын
    • Yep. A theory that explains both relativity and quantum mechanics (the standard model) would be called a theory of everything and I think it’s safe to say string theory is the best candidate so far.

      @Samfhire@Samfhire7 ай бұрын
  • "They asked me if I had a degree in theoretical physics, I said I have a theoretical degree in physics."

    @candlestyx8517@candlestyx8517Ай бұрын
  • I have a bad feeling that in the future, we will discover that distance doesn't mean what we think it means.

    @moremileyplease4387@moremileyplease4387 Жыл бұрын
    • Agreed. I feel that how we think and understand 'time' will also be transformed.

      @369universal4@369universal4 Жыл бұрын
    • This is already a thing. In string theory a universe that is smaller than a Planck length is physically identical to a universe bigger than a Planck length, and distance is completely redefined. I believe “The Elegant Universe” by Brian Greene goes more into detail if you’re interested.

      @ericssonlin7114@ericssonlin7114 Жыл бұрын
    • @@IM-ef7nf my uncle Fred says that the secret of bigfoot episode of The Six million Dollar Man was infact a test run for the secret ai android army being built by Elon Musk and the military industrial complex which will be disguised as Bigfoots (so as not to arouse suspicion) and dropped into our enemies China and Russia

      @3dguy839@3dguy839 Жыл бұрын
    • Maybe distance is irrelevant in other dimensions?

      @SiegDuPreez@SiegDuPreez Жыл бұрын
    • I think every thing is interconnected as a drop of water deeply connected with ocean as whole both are one

      @sadhiktm2141@sadhiktm2141 Жыл бұрын
  • This was really good. As an expert PhD in the field of theoretical physics, I am glad to see such explanations. Just kidding, I failed pre-al in high school... but I did stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night

    @indigatorveritatis219@indigatorveritatis219 Жыл бұрын
    • What's the relevance of the Holiday Inn please? :/

      @JonathanGillies@JonathanGillies Жыл бұрын
    • @@JonathanGillies The Holiday Inn Express used to have really funny commercials.. like where a guy is doing a surgery pretending to be an actual surgeon. When he messed things up, they asked him if he was a doctor, and he said, "no, but I did stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night". They had a few similar ones :)

      @indigatorveritatis219@indigatorveritatis219 Жыл бұрын
    • Just as funny as an obscure reference that I get, is the confused people who don't get it lol

      @adraedin@adraedin Жыл бұрын
    • @@indigatorveritatis219 Ok thanks for the explanation lol!!!!!! :D

      @JonathanGillies@JonathanGillies Жыл бұрын
    • Somebody give this man the key to Detroit!

      @brettsmith5903@brettsmith5903 Жыл бұрын
  • how to reconcile the speed of light squared when most say the speed of light cannot be exceeded?

    @smhumble2574@smhumble25747 ай бұрын
  • I’ve been saying reality is an illusion for years and people call me mad for it,I’m glad I stumbled on this because it definitely makes me want to calculate more towards that theory.

    @pablomacias7393@pablomacias7393Ай бұрын
  • 12:44 damn bro got the outro

    @sharifzareeai8954@sharifzareeai8954 Жыл бұрын
  • As an individual who miserably failed Algebra 1 in high school (and still can't do long division) and is effectively math challenged, you did a great job at making this easily digestible, and understandable. 👍👍👍

    @scout3058@scout3058 Жыл бұрын
    • there is no spoon!!!

      @bobancikic7458@bobancikic7458 Жыл бұрын
    • @@bobancikic7458 😃😃

      @scout3058@scout3058 Жыл бұрын
    • Don't worry homie, I'm in a college math degree and none of my friends can do long division at all haha. On another note, I'm glad you understood the video :)

      @ammardian@ammardian Жыл бұрын
    • @@ammardian Thank you for letting me know that I'm not the only dunce/dumbass left in the world. 😆😆😆

      @scout3058@scout3058 Жыл бұрын
    • @@scout3058 Even in college we still find addition and subtraction the largest area we make mistakes in on exams. Believe me, we are all dumbasses in this world haha

      @ammardian@ammardian Жыл бұрын
  • Very interesting. I have never learnt physics, but am interested by it since a long time. I love space since the go together, I found myself interested in space and physics. Great video.

    @davidcolombier5673@davidcolombier56732 ай бұрын
  • If you take two polarized filters and place them on top of each other, and have them sitting on a light source, you will notice as you rotate one of the filters in a linear fashion, that the change in light intensity passing through, is not linear. One may calculate the outcome by using a Malus Law Calculator.

    @helifynoe1034@helifynoe1034Ай бұрын
  • The Universe is not stranger than Einstein ever imagined; it is stranger than he wished it to be. He was perfectly capable of entertaining the same ideas as everyone else, but decided they didn't fit the tone of the Author he imagined.

    @Barnaclebeard@Barnaclebeard Жыл бұрын
    • The Universe is not strange. Our mind is strange, with its claim to know how the Universe should behave to be "normal".

      @andsalomoni@andsalomoni Жыл бұрын
    • @@andsalomoni Well life itself is strange. The fact that we are intelligent and self aware is itself strange when you compare it to billions of other species that have walked the earth yet we are the only one to attain intelligence that surpasses others. As they said about quantum physics "the more you know, the less you know".

      @user-mp3eh1vb9w@user-mp3eh1vb9w Жыл бұрын
    • Plato thought it first

      @machinmon.@machinmon. Жыл бұрын
    • Very well said. I suppose we all like to be right, especially when thinking about the fundamentals of reality. It is mind-blowing to me how many folks still hold so tightly to the story of Adam and Eve, refusing to update the biblical story one bit, even in the face of overwhelming evidence of a different creation story on a very different timeline.

      @SuperManning11@SuperManning11 Жыл бұрын
    • @@SuperManning11 You know why? Because people cannot let go of culture. Religion is so deeply rooted just like how we want to protect and preserve historical objects, arts, cultures etc... Also, religion has become mainstream that it is simply hard to erase it. It is also a good thing since religion makes humans afraid of consequences.

      @user-mp3eh1vb9w@user-mp3eh1vb9w Жыл бұрын
  • My complaint about this stuff is the use of "real" or "realism." I much prefer your use of "deterministic," as I think it helps convey the reality of what is going on and how the models capture it. Not to say it invalidates any of this, but I know it does create a barrier to understanding the concept for people like my wife who responded by touching a table and saying: "So... This table isn't real?"

    @eriquedobson7523@eriquedobson7523 Жыл бұрын
    • Haha 😄

      @1994mrmysteryman@1994mrmysteryman Жыл бұрын
    • I very much agree. It may have been long forgotten, but realism and anti-realism are terms that do already exist in Philosophy as well. This form of loading onto the term does not help someone avoid misunderstandings upon first hearing these theories. That being said, it is worth pointing out that almost all of modern science is founded upon anti-realist foundations and motivations while accepting realist foundations for carrying out the scientific methodology. So if one were a scientist who strictly adheres to the anti-realist motivations, they would answer your wife's question that "they can never be sure the table is actually there, let alone know what is truly meant by a table". This is because since Hume, principle of causality has been rejected as doubtful, which in turn means that our sensory information cannot be trusted.

      @eufrosniad994@eufrosniad994 Жыл бұрын
    • Agreed, I think often these complex scientific theories get muddled by poor communication.

      @ILoveGrilledCheese@ILoveGrilledCheese Жыл бұрын
    • @@ILoveGrilledCheesesome people keep it that way to gate keep and flex as if they’re smarter than everyone else. In fact, they’re fools if they can’t rationally explain their thesis to the world in such a way that others can infer their stance and agree on it based on the communication methods used

      @aqualust5016@aqualust5016 Жыл бұрын
    • But doesn't also the philosophical term "realism" gets used to describe a objective world which isn't affected by our doings and our mind? Hume says we cannot know this, but didn't this quantum measurements "disprove" (as far as this is possible) the possibility of a inherent realistic world, also in terms of philosophical realism?

      @triaswinter296@triaswinter296 Жыл бұрын
  • In the CHSH proof, how exactly do you produce 2 entangled photons? Everything about quantum mechanics and entanglement is pretty solid, but how exactly are we producing 2 particles that are entangled with each other? I thought that was the thing stopping us from practically harnessing this concept?

    @spacewalker619@spacewalker6195 ай бұрын
    • Spontaneous parametric down conversion, with non-linear crystals, BBO, PPTKP types, with these terms you can search for experiments, if you have enough money (for a car) you can buy a kit and do it yourself!

      @car103d@car103d4 ай бұрын
    • Quantum computers use entanglement, it’s definitely being harnessed

      @brock985@brock985Ай бұрын
  • Hi Dr Miles where can I get into a forum about with other scientists?

    @myviews469@myviews4697 ай бұрын
  • I love how I clicked on this as if I would understand any of it 👍😂

    @karat-s7330@karat-s7330 Жыл бұрын
    • Gotta start somewhere . If you keep watching similar content, eventually everything will slowly make more sense

      @Jeanyuhzz@Jeanyuhzz Жыл бұрын
    • I love how I watched it through and then discussed it with my friend as if we can understand any of it

      @sooniecantalk@sooniecantalk Жыл бұрын
    • They don’t even understand it … but they’ll try telling you there is no GOD. 🤣🤣

      @Johnny2Feathers@Johnny2Feathers Жыл бұрын
    • @@Johnny2Feathers Aw yeah because there's so much evidence of a god ever existing.

      @Jono_93@Jono_93 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Jono_93 well yea there is.. we’re alive

      @Johnny2Feathers@Johnny2Feathers Жыл бұрын
  • Regarding particle spin, with one particle splitting into two, there is a theoretical way they can both have the same spin, versus opposite, which is if they split along the axis of spin, versus perpendicular to it. Like in the video example, you have the two particle split away along the "equator", from which logic would dictate that they should not maintain identical spins. But if they instead split apart separating from the north/south pole, it would be intuitive for them to have the same spin, and counterintuitive for them to have opposing spins.

    @CamraMaan@CamraMaan11 ай бұрын
  • Observation only tells you WHICH universe you are in. (The cat is alive or dead for Schrodinger. Opening the box does not affect the cat, it only tells you if you are in a universe in which the cat is dead or alive)

    @donelson52@donelson52Ай бұрын
  • I like the video, but for someone completely ignorant to the topic, I still can’t understand by saying that “the universe isn’t real”? Clearly a title very much intended for clickbait, at least he should’ve offered a better explanation for us ignorant people that are not familiar with physics, as to what does that mean?

    @rafaelcorredor4071@rafaelcorredor40714 ай бұрын
  • Excellent explanation. Thanks for putting complex concepts available to “normal” people. I am an engineer and I like these topics, but it is really hard to find someone who can explain with simplicity and with beauty like this video did.

    @tivenspqr@tivenspqr Жыл бұрын
    • Time is like the measuring of distance between events spawning from a sigularity and consciousness is the recording of the disorder as it flows. Entropy must continue so the record is stored in the universe by dark energy and the information is then evolved so that the samething does not infinity repeat. My perspective on the reality of the universe for everyone is different and subjective to that organism\being ,for an example. Scientist states that viruses, bacterias or cells are examples of living organisms that even live in our bodies and they carry out functions. Human beings also carry out functions; but we look at cells and viruses as a lesser life form of life. If there are advance or higher forms of life, they can also measure us human beings and state also that we are a lower form of life just as human beings may observe an ant as a lower form of life. However, because of this an ant may not be important to us, but if you try to squash an insect it will try to flee and preserve it's life thus means it's life must mean something to itself; but not to us. Even blood cells defend themselves when under a threat just as we do, but is the life of one blood cell important to us? Is the life of a human being urgent to a tree which is also a living organism. Human beings are the main cost for the destruction of trees whichin they've been here before we we're in existence. So are trees a higher life form than us? A more advance and higher life form may look at a tree and say this tree is much more important than a human being because it sustains life on this planet but human beings destroy the planet with human helping technology (depending on their perspective). All of this said humans may not be as prominent as we think If we remember the laws of physics breaks down on a quantum level. There are lengths like the plank length that are so small that it can be compared to the scale of the universe. So doesn't this mean that being that small you are in a universe of its own , within another observable universe but only observable by our knowledge by humans. If this is so then there must be other places the laws of physics break down also. If it does for the extremely small why not for the extremely big? Who is big and small anyways? We are small to our planet but our planet is small to our sun. This can go on and on. We are the size of a universe to an atom in our body ,thus means also we are big. However, this happens to everything everywhere. If there is space that has particles, those particles may be within an atom, trillions of atoms are in a cell (more than stars in our galaxy) whichin cells are IN our blood ( 37 trillion cells). Our blood in our organs and muscles which is within our bodies. Our bodies may be within a house which is within a constituency, which is within a town, which is within a city/state/island which is within a country which is in a continent which is within a planet, which is within a solar system, within a galaxy, within A super cluster, which is within Galactic walls which is within the Cosmic web . "Everything is 'WITHIN' " which The Cosmic web itself is 'within' The Universe WHICH is 'within' a bubble or phenomenon that we cannot see. "Everything is within" something. Hold just a minute here though! We cannot see someone waving at us from an airplane. We only see the construct of the landscape, not the entities within them. Or an ant from the top of a sky scrapper, neither can we see blood cells attacking viruses n vice versa. Which is evidence just because we cannot see oxygen or detect an atom WITHIN does not mean its not there. The human eye cannot see U V rays or even oxygen and we are surrounded by it. So this means the Laws of physics as we KNOW it only applies to our subjective and objective reality. If u step back and look at the universe . We will only see the Cosmic Web of everything. Which seems to be all touching and connecting. Not until we zoom In does things seem to seperate. Just like a cell that make up our skin. Or a dog standing on an island. From far we only see the landscape , but as we zoom in other entities become observable. Inturn becoming a noticeable part of your reality. Things like Dark matter plays not with Morden physics and we cannot see it but it must exist because of the forces that pulls galaxies together and dark energy pushing entropy without the universe collapsing. However back to the Cosmic web. From a far everything is connected, but if u go close or zoom more is revealed within. The universe itself may be 'within' a muti-verse , another unverse, a blackhole, a quantum computer simulation or even apart of another living organism body that seems infinity large. But as we are universal size to an atom the universe can be a drop in the ocean or space to a greater being which most earthly beings cannot fathom or even believe because it is beyond preposterous. Even if your human eyes can go in front of it is to large or small to amke out. You cant see a mountain top from the exact bottom. It is to high in the clouds. Thus u cannot see the universe from one end to the other. The universe legs may be to long (just a joke ) .Somewhat though these are very much what it seems for the great reality. As laws of physics break down at quantum levels, entanglments, singularities and so on. There are dimensions that we cannot see and cannot detect things like :(earthly terms, but they seem to have more meanings) Super positions, past , future, the unconscious, concious thought, different colors of light , pure and dark energy etc. Please excuse my long reply , but this is just a brief explanation of not an objective or subjective reality. Which is infallible, but of the asubjective existence which seems verisimilitude.

      @bosstradingpro1910@bosstradingpro191010 ай бұрын
    • @@bosstradingpro1910 was a good read

      @poetryofcinema6957@poetryofcinema695710 ай бұрын
    • @@poetryofcinema6957 Thank you. Well appreciated.

      @bosstradingpro1910@bosstradingpro191010 ай бұрын
    • @@bosstradingpro1910could be Jack the Ripper.. or someone “ripping” wind around you 🌬️ 💩💨

      @TonyTheClitSnippingTigar@TonyTheClitSnippingTigar9 ай бұрын
    • @@TonyTheClitSnippingTigar lol, do you mean that person, or me?

      @bosstradingpro1910@bosstradingpro19109 ай бұрын
  • What really confuses me when talking about quantum measurement is the assumption that we somehow exist outside the system and can measure it. But that can't be, since ultimately we're describing the universe.

    @lazyeclipse@lazyeclipse Жыл бұрын
    • True. Each of our actions should affect the universe in some way.

      @jaideepshekhar4621@jaideepshekhar4621 Жыл бұрын
    • True

      @jatinkholiya6644@jatinkholiya6644 Жыл бұрын
    • The fact that one can go back and see data from other civilzations that plotted the sun ,moon and other stars says something is real.

      @ruthnovena40@ruthnovena40 Жыл бұрын
    • No, that's just it. We AREN'T outside the system, and we aren't the only things considered observers. The idea is that it's impossible to measure/observe quantum interactions without interacting with them, and therefore altering the state of the particles at the moment of observation. As far as I understand all atoms are quantum observers at the the moment of interaction. So if the universe is not locally real, then either interactions can happen regardless of distance in space-time, or that the fundamental stuff of reality does not have inherent definite measurable properties and instead only manifests properties at the point of interaction with an observer.

      @googol990@googol990 Жыл бұрын
    • The soul is pure consciousness. It is outside the universe. The universe is a projection of consciousness.

      @brianhyde5900@brianhyde5900 Жыл бұрын
  • So is this along the lines of proving the going-ons of Acausality? The properties of the universe which function outside of Cause-and-Effect?

    @trufnessism@trufnessism7 ай бұрын
  • Great video! Although I am a little confused about the ending. The whole point of the experiment was to prove the universe is not locally real and therefor these particles ARE communicating faster than the speed of light, but in the end you said we are limited because the speed of light IS as fast as anything travels?

    @riverhoellwarth6410@riverhoellwarth64104 ай бұрын
    • Because you can't transmit information faster than light, even with this. The particles have some internal property that makes both wave functions collapse when you read one particle. However, you can't use this to transmit information readable faster than light. When you read a particle, you change the results, and therefore the entanglement states between both particles can't be observed in a way that could be used to communicate.

      @thefran901@thefran901Ай бұрын
    • He explains that it is not locally real not because particles appear to communicate FTL. It is not locally real because there is no defined state if an observer does not seek for a defined state. He explained what real-ness means in the video.

      @giannismentz3570@giannismentz3570Ай бұрын
    • @@thefran901 yeah... now what would that be...? LOL

      @giannismentz3570@giannismentz3570Ай бұрын
  • I suppose this would be a great way to preserve processing power in a simulated universe. I mean, why compute anything if nothing is around to observe it? It would be better to have those resources available to be used for something else if the need should arise.

    @TheStatisticalPizza@TheStatisticalPizza Жыл бұрын
    • I like to think of it the way graphics in video games work to conserve computer resources.

      @TheEndude@TheEndude Жыл бұрын
    • If I am in a simulated reality...they better upgrade me. This VR program sucks. 🤣

      @bluerider9204@bluerider9204 Жыл бұрын
    • That’s why far away galaxies look so blurry in Hubble images. The universe is obviously just using the low res models because there’s no reason to fully load them in high detail being so far away.

      @obscurity3027@obscurity3027 Жыл бұрын
    • @@obscurity3027 Wouldn't that be a great premise for a Matrix movie? That they're going to crash the Matrix by loading too much data into memory by somehow 'observing' and thus loading everything? let it overflow

      @Maho6137@Maho6137 Жыл бұрын
    • God said that when Christ c9mes back, heaven and earth will be merged and that the old earth will be gone. This universe will disappear juat like that.

      @ibashcommunists6847@ibashcommunists6847 Жыл бұрын
  • I think it will be a very long time before anyone can explain what this video is trying to explain in a manner that actually does explain.

    @mauette2000@mauette2000 Жыл бұрын
    • LAYMANS TERMS U MEAN

      @freedom4life123@freedom4life123 Жыл бұрын
    • Sac le blur

      @angaleejones@angaleejones Жыл бұрын
    • There's basically an inherent connection between two photons that transfers information faster than speed of light, controversing modern physics worldview.

      @vasvas8914@vasvas8914 Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah he didn't explain it to me. Still don't understand why non-determinism equals not real.

      @randomgrinn@randomgrinn Жыл бұрын
    • Imagine if your body occupied two different points in space simultaneously. One is in New York city, and the other is in Paris. If you are observing Paris, that is local. If you were pinched in Paris, the pinch is locally real. You were pinched in Paris, and felt it in Paris. However, if your body was pinched in New York, you feel it in Paris. Despite feeling it in Paris, nobody pinched you there, so forces acting on you from the universe doesn't have to be locally real to be observed. Now, the value of this is thus. Imagine if we created a computer that existed on our planet, and on an alien planet a billion light years away. If time was relatively the same in both places, whatever is typed on one computer screen would appear simultaneously in both places at once. No signals required. If you've seen the matrix movies, they show this phenomenon by the injuries in the matrix affecting your body in the real world. The idea is that our body is always a projection of the mind, so if in the mind the projection of ourselves is damaged, so is the body. It's not just a science fiction phenomenon either. When medications are tested, they do blind tests because of the placebo effect. The placebo effect is literally your body is healed in the mind, and the mind projects your healed body in reality. You show physical improvement literally because your mental projection is improved.

      @FullCircleTravis@FullCircleTravis Жыл бұрын
  • 10:22 Isn't it incorrect though to conclude that the photonic property after the wave function collapse is *random*? Couldn't the wave function result from underlying physics -- analogous to macro properties of gases -- hidden from us in this spacetime?

    @extropian314@extropian3142 ай бұрын
  • When you showed those sheets in layers over light, it kind of sparked an idea. So, I’m no genius, but I have an idea of how energy interacts, and magnetic/polarity etc kind of works. What if, like in your visual of the two orbs spinning in opposing directions, could actually be a magnetic function of the cores within each orb, and their individual magnetic interaction in opposition to each other, creating a polar barrier and the spin of the planet…. I don’t think that a regulated communication beacon is the syncing mechanism…. But, it could be. I have no idea. Really. What I’m saying really is, maybe it’s a gradual cooperation. Like, opposing magnets create a vibration or ripples causing spin. And stuff like that.

    @Sudovi_720@Sudovi_7208 ай бұрын
  • What impresses me so much about Einstein, is his hand in so many foundational discoveries of the 20th century. It was Einstein (along with Rosen and Podolsky) who discovered entanglement -- although, as Miles points out here, Einstein thought of it as a fatal flaw in quantum mechanics. Still, it was Einstein (not trying to diminish the contributions of Rosen & Podolsky) who made this critical realization, that entanglement arises out of quantum theory. This is something which Bohr, Schrodinger, Heisenberg, Dirac, Pauli, Fermi (all of whom I admire greatly), for all their contributions and their support of quantum theory, evidently hadn't realized.

    @robertsarracino9349@robertsarracino9349 Жыл бұрын
    • Einstein admitted Tesla was the most intelligent person of his time. His words.

      @TheMrmartind40@TheMrmartind408 ай бұрын
    • Einstein was a bad actor who actually did nothing except promote stupid stories for dummies

      @Stuart.Branson.@Stuart.Branson.8 ай бұрын
    • ​@@TheMrmartind40he probably would have said his wife if she was a guy lmao

      @-godsspeed-9159@-godsspeed-91598 ай бұрын
    • When you say theory, do you mean to say that in practicality it is not really a thign that happens?

      @Noctoletsgo@Noctoletsgo3 ай бұрын
    • Just the opposite. Something becomes a "theory" once it's fully established.

      @robertsarracino9349@robertsarracino93493 ай бұрын
  • The Universe while sending asteroids our way: “We will see who isn’t real”

    @mrsadness9179@mrsadness9179 Жыл бұрын
  • Entanglement just need an additional dimension (like in string theory or similar), to still include locality..distance and speed of light would not be relevant, if the information of entangled particles would be somewhat connected on a higher dimension..

    @MrEmotional33@MrEmotional337 ай бұрын
  • One friend of mine once said” i don’t believe in theories because they’re changing al the time”Remember when the Earth was the center of the universe? The Earth was flat? Pluto was a planet?

    @newyorktours8496@newyorktours849626 күн бұрын
  • I love that the most replayed point of the video is the when he starts to explain the experiment and you just know it's because people had to go back and watch it again to really wrap their heads around it.

    @KnownotProductions@KnownotProductions Жыл бұрын
    • I think it was the men in costumes and the explosion, lol. Neanderthals.

      @hikesystem7721@hikesystem7721 Жыл бұрын
    • @@hikesystem7721 you mean the Monty Python scene? And are you calling people Neanderthals?

      @Ozone946@Ozone946 Жыл бұрын
    • Coincidentally I replayed the experiment because my sister started to talk to me randomly

      @carlosleonelli1139@carlosleonelli1139 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Ozone946 it's called humor

      @hikesystem7721@hikesystem7721 Жыл бұрын
    • How do you know it's the most replayed part? Is there a way to see these statistics?

      @DannyTillotson@DannyTillotson Жыл бұрын
  • Listening to Robert Edward Grant earlier and he posits that the speed of light is just our current perceptual boundary and not the final measure for what's possible in terms of (quantum teleportation?) He's really doing some fascinating work on using mathematics to redefine what we know as reality. Thank you for explaining this so well for us arm chair physicists Dr!

    @klh1133@klh1133 Жыл бұрын
    • Yes I believe so to! I think bc we are material physical beings we can only get to light speed bc anything more than that we physically cannot achieve due to the plane of existence we are on (physical/material) But there are more quantum levels of traveling as you mentioned in the higher dimensions:)

      @Starsky222@Starsky22210 ай бұрын
    • "Our" being you and which identifiable immediate interlocutor?

      @vhawk1951kl@vhawk1951kl10 ай бұрын
    • These experiments all require an observer, without an observer, nothing can exist, it would all be a wave function.

      @richardwebb9532@richardwebb95327 ай бұрын
    • There IS no final nor complete nature of events known. That's his philosophical idealism mistake. There are no abosolutes nor realities. That is our brain delusion. And einstein said and physics has shown. Measurements and descriptions are NOT absolute. The length of th4 shoreline depends upon how you measure it. By 10 cm. intervals. By 100 m. lengths. By whether you drive alone it, or sail along it or walk along it. It all depends upon HOW you measure it nd that is arbitrary. Sorry, there is NO ab solute coast line figure. Because yhou cannot measure the postin of each grain of sand to each greain of sand, either. & the nature of coastlines to change over time with weather, currents, temps, and many other ways. There is NO absolute sea level, either. Because the factors which make sea level are changeable, adn when more than 3 factors, and those are real, it eomces complex system and thus not amenable to final understandings. Harbour shape, ships in port, temps as water expands and congract, winds, and currents; and the pull of the lunar and solar tides Also change the sea levels. And the land levels, too. Complex systems are also ignored by this article. and that is a major, major conceptual fail, as well.

      @johnchesh3486@johnchesh34865 ай бұрын
    • Walter russell, The Secret of Light There is Nothing Outside Yourself Nothing moves not even Light

      @itsonlyapapermoon61@itsonlyapapermoon612 ай бұрын
  • What song is in your outro? I used to listen to that song all the time and I can't think of what it's called.

    @michaelfreeman3189@michaelfreeman318918 күн бұрын
  • Same kind of question as, What was the man doing when he jumped off the cliff ?

    @morgunstyles7253@morgunstyles72538 ай бұрын
  • This was my first video watched on this channel (following a KZhead recommendation), but what an excellent well-paced explanation!

    @klaasbil8459@klaasbil8459 Жыл бұрын
    • same here! this guy is special

      @guerreromendieta@guerreromendieta Жыл бұрын
  • I have watched a lot of videos on quantum physics, this is the first that has actually explained how entangled particles become entangled, how they are created at all. And upon actually being explained it seems so simple, it makes me wonder why other channels didn't bother. So, thanks for actually taking the time to explain how it's related to conservation.

    @s.c.6113@s.c.6113 Жыл бұрын
    • Duh

      @cappiece3786@cappiece3786 Жыл бұрын
    • Uh

      @mohinderkumar7298@mohinderkumar7298 Жыл бұрын
    • Except they don't really explain "how" they're created at all! They've theorized that they must exist simply because all these experiments require them to exist in order for the results to make sense. At least until they have a better explanation anyway.

      @vinceplatt8468@vinceplatt8468 Жыл бұрын
    • I read your comment and now I'm going to actually watch this because I always get "lost."

      @valeriewilliams6576@valeriewilliams6576 Жыл бұрын
    • because the channels are obviously made for a different audience? if you’re teaching advanced english, you won’t start with A1 level phrases either…💀

      @KikiTheHobbit@KikiTheHobbit Жыл бұрын
  • There are three points on the graph where you can compare state, at the crossover you can send information.

    @glych002@glych0022 ай бұрын
  • The exploration of quantum phenomena pushes the boundaries of our understanding, reminding us that the universe is full of mysteries yet to be unravelled. As we delve deeper into the quantum realm, we are confronted with a reality that defies our classical intuitions, urging us to question and redefine our notions of what is possible.

    @RexMundiFL@RexMundiFL10 ай бұрын
  • Maybe in another multi-verse I understand, but in this one the concept went right over my head. I will revisit this again in some other time and place.

    @jeffcurrey8765@jeffcurrey8765 Жыл бұрын
    • Same. I'm trying.

      @Robo311Star@Robo311Star Жыл бұрын
    • I'm still trying to wrap my head around the theory that the universe doesn't exist and therefore we don't exist.

      @MichaelClark-uw7ex@MichaelClark-uw7ex Жыл бұрын
    • same dude :D maybe if im reincarnated as a phycisit

      @PineappleOnPizza69@PineappleOnPizza69 Жыл бұрын
    • Same bro

      @nayanpardeshi5955@nayanpardeshi5955 Жыл бұрын
    • Comment that i was looking for 😃

      @nayanpardeshi5955@nayanpardeshi5955 Жыл бұрын
  • This is the kind of situation that occurs when someone starts overthinking a subject and becoming so lost within it, that they are no longer able to recognize reality…

    @magnanimousmartyr421@magnanimousmartyr421 Жыл бұрын
    • me when I'm high AF

      @hekeptdying1428@hekeptdying1428 Жыл бұрын
    • Yes these pompous ass hats got us to believe were monkeys spinning on a ball six times the speed of sound.

      @kw5021@kw5021 Жыл бұрын
    • @@hekeptdying1428 me right now brother

      @gandalf_thegrey@gandalf_thegrey Жыл бұрын
    • Its called subjective thinking the very nature of social reality is based on collective agreement humans put meaning to things that don't reflect a function based on how it is physically but on how or what function it has. So a human will usually impose meaning onto the universe in term relative to benefits or conditions that serve humanity

      @publicopinion3596@publicopinion3596 Жыл бұрын
    • @@publicopinion3596 Umm.....okay???

      @magnanimousmartyr421@magnanimousmartyr421 Жыл бұрын
  • "That classically is the problem with theoreticians. If you look at them from a distance, it just looks like a wizard trying to have an argument with you" lol If this isn't a common saying, it needs to be. Very accurate. The Monty Python cut to confused King Arthur was flawlessly done.

    @Tosslehoff@Tosslehoff5 ай бұрын
  • I’m still surprised when people say “the most famous example of this is…” and instead of “double slit experiment” they say “schroedinger’s cat”

    @Cowface@Cowface2 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for this! Clears up, for me, a lot of misrepresented popularized interpretations of laypeople with major "Tartuffe"-like confirmation biases. And, yet, you explained such technical information in a very accessible way for those of us with limited knowledge of the subject. Much appreciation!

    @cynthiabotsko2449@cynthiabotsko2449 Жыл бұрын
    • Are you Religious?

      @ilicdjo@ilicdjo Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@ilicdjo religious or just self-righteous, or maybe even both?!

      @mohnjarx7801@mohnjarx7801 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ilicdjo I would not mock Religious people, but he sure does sound like the Jack Arse in the Parable floating around of the Tiger, Jack Arse and Lion.

      @noneanywhere7600@noneanywhere760011 ай бұрын
    • idk why everyone is being so hostile in your replies, keep doing you !

      @explodingchickpeas7408@explodingchickpeas74086 ай бұрын
  • Somebody on my channel linked to this video and said "far superior explanation" I really like what you did, and I can relate to the struggle of what to leave out and what to explain and how, especially with this topic. Always interesting to see what other people come up with, great video.

    @physicsbutawesome@physicsbutawesome Жыл бұрын
    • 😂 you keep going. I'll sub you, love

      @notathletic4171@notathletic4171 Жыл бұрын
  • According to Vedanta, thoughts are faster than speed of light. We can send a thought to another person in another galaxy and that person would know it instantaneously.

    @SatyaSanathani@SatyaSanathani7 ай бұрын
  • How to reconcile the speed of light squared when the speed of light cannot be exceeded?

    @smhumble2574@smhumble25747 ай бұрын
  • Well, things have been unreal for quite sometime now.

    @roberttormey4312@roberttormey4312 Жыл бұрын
    • oh please robert you are KILLING me, Hey, you should come to my barbecue on wednesday 🙂.

      @smsushfksk@smsushfksk Жыл бұрын
  • 4:16 The entanglement paradox should take into account the transit time of seperating the particles after the entanglement event. An uncomfortable result is whether the measurement determines the result when you are using deduction and not simultaneous detection on both of the entangled particles.

    @Lobsta-kw9pb@Lobsta-kw9pb Жыл бұрын
    • Their differences could be irreconcilable. Divorce lawyer would the best option.

      @derrickcox7761@derrickcox77617 ай бұрын
  • Regarding the tree conundrum - when a tree falls in a forest, it only ever makes a 'noise' if there is an 'experiencer' present to hear it (an ear plus a brain; either human, animal, bug, or whatever). Otherwise, it falls and produces regular natural sound waves, but zero 'noise', because nothing sentient was there to experience it. I hope that made sense.

    @billythebass2007@billythebass20079 ай бұрын
    • Yes that makes sense except although “ I” was not there but something - a cricket perhaps that “ hears” sound waves heard it. But the cricket doesn’t matter, doesn’t communicate that experience so we missed it. Doesn’t mean The thing ( sound) did not happen. We weren’t around to observe or record it. To Measure what happens if anything , use an instrument rather like a stand in for you and I the absent. Polarization state! Maybe but all we can access is locality without the instruments. Impossible to know until it is measured and we do have the finite to ground us, literally. Fortunately I am a multi particle agent.

      @jeanettesdaughter@jeanettesdaughter9 ай бұрын
    • You explained it beautifully. With no Eyes or Ears or the Brain, we cannot experience nothing. Yet for the emotions we feel you do not require the Three. How will Quantum explain that?

      @Nektaria11000@Nektaria110008 ай бұрын
    • Everything is mind, the tree exists, there doesn't need to be an individual observer since the universe itself is the activity of the only one true observer or medium of mind (as bernardo kastrup says). This is my interpretation. There's also a lot of evidence to show that there's intelligence in the universe and reality itself and that could be called god. I think this will be the mainstream framework of reality once science opens up and starts thinking outside the box

      @simonsanchezkumrich8489@simonsanchezkumrich84898 ай бұрын
    • @@simonsanchezkumrich8489 If you accept the existence of the Mind all else follows “How the Mind came into being” we cannot assume that the Mind is the Powerful Medium. imagination is an attribute of the Mind and it varies by Age and other influencers. The Mind can perceive a whole scenario or a single object and has the ability to infuse life like motion as demonstrated in Dreams.but it is not reality. You can perceive it but cannot touch it, just like the Atoms. So all the marvels we can see, touch, taste and hear are a preferred variety in comparison to Perceived phantoms.

      @Nektaria11000@Nektaria110008 ай бұрын
    • @@Nektaria11000 i dont think anyone can explain or even know how god/mind/reality came into being, we just can know that it is reality, but idk maybe in some higher plane or dimension or with an all powerful and higher perspective we may be able to know how reality came into being and how it works exactly

      @simonsanchezkumrich8489@simonsanchezkumrich84898 ай бұрын
  • i wouldn't be so sure with that last conclusion. I bet this could lead to faster than light communication in some form.

    @MrTL3wis@MrTL3wis7 ай бұрын
  • Great explanation of complex concepts for the rest of us mere mortals, not physicist, but enchanted with the strange universe we are living in. Thank you very much!

    @agmc77@agmc77 Жыл бұрын
    • @F.u.c.k You people like you do too much of this 🗣 and not enough of this👂

      @JourneyDestination@JourneyDestination Жыл бұрын
    • Can a physicist explain to anyone where the physical laws of the universe existed prior to the big bang?…If the laws of physics deny the creation of matter in a closed system, where did the initial ingredients (matter) come from? I think physicists need to be more comfortable with uncertainty and focus more on practical applications of the ideas of physics….Physicists very often come across as literal idiots if they venture too far away from reality…

      @BoomBustProfits@BoomBustProfits Жыл бұрын
    • @F.u.c.k You Have you not watched the video till the end? Information still cannot be sent faster than light as far as we still know even with quantum entanglement.

      @mekingtiger9095@mekingtiger9095 Жыл бұрын
    • Physicists are mortals (hairless apes) with a very limited understanding of reality. Almost everything we think we know is likely incomplete or outright wrong.

      @mada1241@mada1241 Жыл бұрын
    • @@BoomBustProfits look for Roger Penrose. He has a theory about what was before the Big Bang, and he also won the Physics' Nobel Prize.

      @lluiscornet9020@lluiscornet9020 Жыл бұрын
  • Are we not gonna talk about how bro has an outro? 12:38

    @jesuschristwithwifi8181@jesuschristwithwifi8181 Жыл бұрын
  • so because the particles meets the expectations of relation when inversely relating the polarizers we can tell that the particles have an inverse relationship between eachother? how does this prove that both wave functions have collapsed or are communicating with eachother? it feels like you would need another polarizer to measure the other entagled particle and show that it is still in the form expected according to the measurement of the first measured particle and not oscillating anymore. i still dont really understand

    @jackrangaiah4236@jackrangaiah42363 ай бұрын
  • What if you use a 3 polarizers on one of the entangled pairs. And polarize it to 90° -> 45° -> 0°, Does that mean that the other pair will spontaneously polarize to the opposite at each polarization stage?

    @rashiro7262@rashiro726210 ай бұрын
    • I always was taught that as soon as any particle in the universe that changes it polarity another particle will also change its polarity but that is just basics and this video is beyond my comprehension as I am just a electrical worker and not a physicist 👩‍🔬 ☮️🎸🎶

      @donaldconfalone2410@donaldconfalone24107 ай бұрын
  • The closer we look at things the more complexity will be generated - this process has no end.

    @thewizardssleeve119@thewizardssleeve119 Жыл бұрын
    • If complexity has no end then it had no beginning.

      @jessegentry9699@jessegentry9699 Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah the beginning would be defined by where we started looking and the ending by where we will stop. It‘s basically a „do whatever you want with it as long as it‘s still fun.“ Situation.

      @No_Name_2604@No_Name_2604 Жыл бұрын
    • Not sure that's true. We can't look at anything on a smaller scale than Planck units, right?

      @adithyavraajkumar5923@adithyavraajkumar5923 Жыл бұрын
    • @@adithyavraajkumar5923 not yet

      @tabby73@tabby73 Жыл бұрын
    • I turned to religion and realised what it say is correct and science is proving it now

      @imdeexpert5828@imdeexpert5828 Жыл бұрын
  • This would help explain my multi-verse within our physically infinite universe theory. There's infinite everything, but you can't have the exact same thing twice. Entanglement keeps things mixed up. I'm not a physicist, just someone who used to do too much drugs.

    @SnootchieBootchies27@SnootchieBootchies27 Жыл бұрын
    • Actually infinity demands that you have an infinite number of the exact same thing. Question. Were any of those drugs psychedelic?

      @2000sborton@2000sborton Жыл бұрын
    • @@2000sborton so... are you saying that an infinite physical universe would demand that there be infinite identical objects out there somewhere? Because that's what I think, I don't really even know what my previous comment was about tbh.

      @SnootchieBootchies27@SnootchieBootchies27 Жыл бұрын
  • Schrödinger’s Cat - Schrödinger did NOT propose the experiment as a genuine test of quantum mechanics but rather as a thought experiment to highlight the absurdity of the observer-driven interpretation.

    @LiveFreeOrDie2A@LiveFreeOrDie2A2 ай бұрын
  • I love how the lead singer of system of the down is now hardcore into science. I hope they get back together and make a new album.

    @Own-shop@Own-shop20 күн бұрын
    • Wake up! Your reality needs a lil shake up

      @Own-shop@Own-shop20 күн бұрын
  • Absolutely fascinating! I just found your channel for the first time and I love it! I just subscribed. I cannot wait to see what else you produce 😊🙌📚

    @djvelocity@djvelocity Жыл бұрын
    • Einstein is proven wrong yay that means faster then light travel is possible we simply have not figured out how to do it yet that's all😊

      @raven4k998@raven4k998 Жыл бұрын
    • @@raven4k998 personally I don’t think it’s possible, I think we might have to deal with fatalism to explain quantum non-locality 🤔

      @djvelocity@djvelocity Жыл бұрын
    • @@djvelocity ssshhh or I'll show you Fatal kid🤣

      @raven4k998@raven4k998 Жыл бұрын
    • @@raven4k998 I don’t understand, can you explain?

      @djvelocity@djvelocity Жыл бұрын
    • evil only exists if goodness exists since you wouldn't know evil without first knowing goodness. Think of it like this. you cannot have shadows without light, but you can have light without shadows. So how is it that we know why good is good? if you're an atheist you don't know why it's wrong to kill a person you just know it's wrong though you don't know the reason. You see we know the universe had a beginning based on The Cosmic Microwave Background, which is "the cooled remnant of the first light that could ever travel freely throughout the Universe" it is a 'fossil' radiation, the furthest that any telescope can see, it was released soon after the 'Big Bang'. Scientists consider it as an echo or 'shockwave' of the Big Bang. this paired with the 2nd law of thermodynamics shows us that the universe had a beginning and is expanding while also winding down. Not only did the matter in the universe have a beginning, but also the forces such as space, and gravity, and quantum forces, and time we know this from general relativity which shows that you cannot have space without time and you cannot have time without space and you cannot have matter without space or time! meaning that what could have caused the big bang would have to be outside of the realm of time and space meaning it's nonmaterial ! because nothing cannot happen to create something because there is nothing to occur to create something... So how does this go back to morality you ask? well would you believe it if I told you I just proved GOD's existence? You see GOD is outside of space and time! he is the one that was the cause of the universe he was the beginning, and since he is outside space and time. He is eternal meaning there was nothing before him he was always there and always will be. Now onto morality the reason we know it's wrong to kill someone is because GOD created us with a conscience con meaning with science meaning knowledge so when we kill someone we do it with knowledge that you just killed someone. The thing about your conscience is that it is GOD given society shaped. YOU can also shape your conscience the more you do things against it the quieter you make it it's like removing the batteries from your fire detector especially if you're loving the thing your conscience is warning you against.

      @infinity2394@infinity2394 Жыл бұрын
  • This was so well done, so clear and easy to follow. Thanks!

    @HistoryoftheUniverse@HistoryoftheUniverse Жыл бұрын
    • Easy to follow? I was lost at Photon...

      @kapoorh@kapoorh Жыл бұрын
    • What’s a photon?

      @InTonalHarmony@InTonalHarmony Жыл бұрын
    • @@InTonalHarmony A photon is a particle of light.

      @gabejohnson4535@gabejohnson4535 Жыл бұрын
    • Dislike. They proved it wasn’t locally real - don’t support clickbait titles

      @jaaaake@jaaaake Жыл бұрын
    • evil only exists if goodness exists since you wouldn't know evil without first knowing goodness. Think of it like this. you cannot have shadows without light, but you can have light without shadows. So how is it that we know why good is good? if you're an atheist you don't know why it's wrong to kill a person you just know it's wrong though you don't know the reason. You see we know the universe had a beginning based on The Cosmic Microwave Background, which is "the cooled remnant of the first light that could ever travel freely throughout the Universe" it is a 'fossil' radiation, the furthest that any telescope can see, it was released soon after the 'Big Bang'. Scientists consider it as an echo or 'shockwave' of the Big Bang. this paired with the 2nd law of thermodynamics shows us that the universe had a beginning and is expanding while also winding down. Not only did the matter in the universe have a beginning, but also the forces such as space, and gravity, and quantum forces, and time we know this from general relativity which shows that you cannot have space without time and you cannot have time without space and you cannot have matter without space or time! meaning that what could have caused the big bang would have to be outside of the realm of time and space meaning it's nonmaterial ! because nothing cannot happen to create something because there is nothing to occur to create something... So how does this go back to morality you ask? well would you believe it if I told you I just proved GOD's existence? You see GOD is outside of space and time! he is the one that was the cause of the universe he was the beginning, and since he is outside space and time. He is eternal meaning there was nothing before him he was always there and always will be. Now onto morality the reason we know it's wrong to kill someone is because GOD created us with a conscience con meaning with science meaning knowledge so when we kill someone we do it with knowledge that you just killed someone. The thing about your conscience is that it is GOD given society shaped. YOU can also shape your conscience the more you do things against it the quieter you make it it's like removing the batteries from your fire detector especially if you're loving the thing your conscience is warning you against.

      @infinity2394@infinity2394 Жыл бұрын
  • Particles study alone makes reality feel weird,the deeper I go into understanding particles the less sense reality makes,I seriously don’t know how I should feel about that.

    @pablomacias7393@pablomacias7393Ай бұрын
  • So, a quick correction. Einstein wasn't "wrong," he was the first to point out that entanglement was THE differentiating aspect of quantum mechanics and Schrodinger, Heisenberg, Born, Dirac, Pauli etc DID NOT understand how significant the EPR paper was (and it was kind of ignored): Einstein UNDERSTOOD before everybody else that IF quantum entanglement was true, either locality or "realism" had to be abandoned, and if that was the case, what does that do to the primacy of special relativity? Kuhn argues, convincingly, that Einstein, not Planck, launched quantum theory in earnest (and he was able to derive Planck's equation using only Wien's law, not to mention the fact he independently derived the Rayleigh-Jeans Law). It was ultimately Einstein that INSPIRED John Bell (who was told by several peers not to even waste his time with experiments now known as Bell's theorem) to do the very experimental work that ultimately led to the Nobel Prize won by Clauser and co. Einstein, contrary to popular opinion (and this isn't my opinion, this is the opinion of several science historians, contemporaries, and physicists like Sean Carrol), understood quantum mechanics better than anybody. Without his insights Schrodinger never derives his famous wave equation; without his insights, Born never comes up with Probability waves/distributions; without his insights De Broglie never comes up with matter waves. Douglas Stone's "Einstein and The Quantum: The Quest of the Valiant Swabian" is an excellent synthetic history of this corner of scientific lore. I'd argue that Einstein was THE most influential figure in the establishment of quantum mechanics (and he also happens to be the de facto father of condensed matter physics according to Cardona and others).

    @feynmanschwingere_mc2270@feynmanschwingere_mc22702 ай бұрын
  • I work with fluorescence anisotropy looking at proteins binding DNA so I really appreciated your polarizer demo- very cool! I wonder if you have made a video on double slit experiment and it's many variations esp. quantum eraser and delayed choice?

    @donatsu8@donatsu8 Жыл бұрын
    • Why are you telling us that you an an unemployed guy who didn't pay attention in high school science class? ;-)

      @schmetterling4477@schmetterling4477 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@schmetterling4477Why are you telling us that you an an bitter angry douche with too much time on their hands? ;-)

      @mathematicalmodelz@mathematicalmodelz Жыл бұрын
    • double slit. photons

      @grummbunger@grummbunger2 ай бұрын
  • I was reading an article earlier today about how the used a series of laser set up to match the fibinoci sequence for a quantum computer and it was able to help reduce the amount of randomness the quantum computer had... I obviously don't perfectly understand the whole thing but its interesting how this technology is developing.

    @andrewkelleher2415@andrewkelleher2415 Жыл бұрын
    • @@infinity2394 It's not ALWAYS wrong to kill a person.

      @jimreynolds2399@jimreynolds2399 Жыл бұрын
    • That experiment is a breakthrough in having the information stored on Quantum Computers not be so sensitive to outside perturbations. Currently a change in temperature can easily erase all information.

      @cbreezy@cbreezy Жыл бұрын
    • Any mathematical pattern will reduce the amount of randomness a quantum computer has.. It’s statistical.

      @vinniehuish3987@vinniehuish3987 Жыл бұрын
    • Mathematical patterns that are theoretically correct in their assumptions ofc.

      @vinniehuish3987@vinniehuish3987 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jimreynolds2399 I've tried asking people what if their best friend was horrifically injured, in unbearable pain, with no help available such that eventual death is inevitable, begging you to kill him. "Their" answer: in today's modern world that would never happen. (Edited to clarify confusing language)

      @judyd1@judyd1 Жыл бұрын
  • Don’t still fully understand. But I think the effort is marvelous. Thank you. Maybe I will understand it one of these days.

    @verindersyal9126@verindersyal912610 күн бұрын
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