Why Quantum Physics is Cool Pt 2 (Updated with pt 3 URL)
Continuation of http://quantamiscool1.ytmnd.com Part 3 at http://yqpic3.ytmnd.com/

Add a comment

Please login or register to comment.
<< 1 2 >>
September 24th, 2006
(0)
Actually, think of it this way. If you are at a baseball game, you can watch a baseball cross home plate without changing it. But what if you're blind? What if you have no way of "visually" observing a baseball? The only way to understand it's movement is to touch it somehow, but by doing so, you would change the path of the baseball. Subatomic particles never "touch" they interact through electromagnetic energies, but the point still holds that "visual" observing would have a different result that
September 24th, 2006
(0)
than* detection observing.
September 24th, 2006
(0)
lol, electrons being alive, lol
September 24th, 2006
(0)
The electron leaves untouched after it is fired. If there is no path detector, it hits the final detector in such a way that can only be described by the particle traveling both paths at the same time, however, if the path detector is placed on one path and turned on after the electon is already fired, the electron acts like matter and only goes one path. So how did the electron know to collapse and act like matter leaving the accelerator when the detector was not even on at the time? By theory, it arrives at both slits every single time. But when the detector is there, it disappears from one. The only explanation is that once there is evidence of a definite location of the particle, all the other probability waves cease to exist. If the detectors where placed on both slits, exactly the same distance from the accelerator what determines which probability wave sets off which detector, thereby exterminating the other particle wave's existence?
September 25th, 2006
(0)
lame, good presentation but it doesn't add up. 1st one was great btw.
September 25th, 2006
(0)
It makes sense when you think on a quantum level and probability, but to actually picture that happening is mind-boggling.
September 25th, 2006
(0)
cant wait till humanity thinks the concept of phisics we have is stupid, like we think that people that thought the world was flat were idiots
September 25th, 2006
(0)
not enough doom music
September 25th, 2006
(0)
Ya the whole it changes when you observe it is the cat in the box idea.
September 25th, 2006
(0)
This reminds me.... i swear the sun is revolving around the earth, but whenever i get a telescope out... it seems like the earth is doing the revolving... the Sun must know i'm watching it.
September 26th, 2006
(0)
hot pockets ftw!!!11
September 26th, 2006
(0)
What bothers me themost is every *ssh*l*e who said something like "1'd 4 makn me read" or "makn me lern" or "fuk you, teacher" Jesus christ, if it bothers you that much to find out something new, you ignorant hicks, and you'd rather be surrounded by idiotic f*cking stupid entertainment for retards all day, go attend church, and if you're american, you can praise George Bush some more. F*cktards. 5 for bring some intelligence, te good, interesting kind, to YTMND. Counter-Points/Criticism would be nice, tho
September 26th, 2006
(0)
"No fair, you changed the outcome by measuring it!"
September 26th, 2006
(0)
-1 for that stupid hot-pocket crap. That was more dumb than the Poland fad.
September 26th, 2006
(0)
could it be possible that the detection equipment could somehow be interfering with them on a gravitational level?
September 26th, 2006
(0)
hot pockets/slits its all the same putang to me
September 26th, 2006
(0)
make more make more!
September 26th, 2006
(0)
-2 for misleading information. Detection involves modifying the thing you are observing. In order to "see" a small object, like an electron or photon, you would have to set up your detector in such a manner as to affect the thing you are observing- and this modification collapses the probability waveform of said object- unlike with seeing large objects, photons aren't bouncing off of it. If you could "see" your object without interfering with it, you would see diffraction again, but this isn't possible.
September 26th, 2006
(0)
5 for aggie.
September 26th, 2006
(0)
Part 3 http://yqpic3.ytmnd.com/
September 26th, 2006
(0)
Legendary Win
September 26th, 2006
(0)
Quantum Man, you get an A+.
September 27th, 2006
(0)
3 words: Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle. -1 for hotpockets
September 27th, 2006
(0)
Heisenberg uncertainty principle ftw
September 28th, 2006
(0)
those shy hotpockets-I mean electrons
September 28th, 2006
(0)
Doesn't the detection tools affect them in some physcial way? I mean, you can't take a photo of an electron, so whatever technique they're using for tracing the electrons most be disturbing them.
September 28th, 2006
(0)
That's what part 3 is for. Go watch :P
September 28th, 2006
(0)
If a tree falls in the forest, and no one is around, does it act like waves? =p
September 28th, 2006
(0)
Audio could be compressed much more.
September 28th, 2006
(0)
No. No it can not. It must be heard in all its full glory.
September 29th, 2006
(0)
Oookay...I finally can grasp the idea. You blew my goddamn mind
September 29th, 2006
(0)
I Loved your site http://quantamiscool2.ytmnd.com 5'ed, check out my page votecoder5.ytmnd.com when you have time!
September 29th, 2006
(0)
Secret nazi hotpockets.
September 29th, 2006
(0)
5 for hot pockets.
September 29th, 2006
(0)
also, extremely small big brother much? also brings to mind "if a tree fals in the forest, and noone's there to hear it, does it make a sound"
October 3rd, 2006
(0)
way too fast, but interesting
October 3rd, 2006
(0)
hot pockits
October 4th, 2006
(0)
the very fact that they chose to build such an experiment is a result of particle movement in their brains, and can not be disconnected from the experiment itself. just like the fact that i am reading about it now.
October 4th, 2006
(0)
Wait- this is retarded. We're altering the photons because we're messing them up. There's a difference between passive and active observation. Becasue of limitations in technology, we can't detect photos without complelty altering their trajectory. The current technology is like standing next to a road and the only way you can tell if there's car is if one hits you. How can you claim anything concrete about the state of the particles?
October 4th, 2006
(0)
Hence Profffesor Farnsworth's complaint regarding the "quantum finish" at the horse races in Futurama: "No fair! You changed the results by measuring them!"
October 4th, 2006
(0)
This stuff is absolutely amazing, 5'd and fav'd!
October 4th, 2006
(0)
Actually, it's -alot- more like when you observe the particles themselves, you need to use a force. That force is going to change their ballistic pattern in a nearly random way.
(0)
you think it could possibly be that the use of devices that let us observe this cause an interference that causes the particles to all go one direction?
October 4th, 2006
(0)
Watch 3 and 4.
October 5th, 2006
(0)
Amazing to think what goes on in our world when no one is watching. Would it be possible for things to be very different when completely unobserved? perhaps a forest? Do animals effect probability? And insects?
October 5th, 2006
(0)
Actually, you're a little less-than-accurate. If the windows were small enough, then the tennis ball WOULD interfere with itself. You'd be faced with the problem of getting a tennis ball through windows that were that small, but you never actually specified the size of the window. I KNEW there was something wrong with an Aggie talking about physics.
October 5th, 2006
(0)
Even though I explain it in the slide show as if the particles "know" we are observing them, to make it more accurate, I would say that our comprehension of reality alters its very state, for by seeing and knowing the location of a particle, you then also know that it is nowhere else, therefor the probability wave cannot exist at that instant.
October 5th, 2006
(0)
5 for Jim Gaffigan. And for being really cool. You win the series of tubes.
October 5th, 2006
(0)
Because I don't know the mechanics of the detectors, I can't tell... but is that the Heisenburg Uncertainty Principle hard at work?
October 7th, 2006
(0)
More particle-wave duality stuff, AND the whole act-of-observation-collapsing-the-wave-function thing. I like.
October 8th, 2006
(0)
Enough probability to AFFECT the outcome.
October 8th, 2006
(0)
Ya I make that mistake all the time.
October 10th, 2006
(0)
BRILLIANT!
October 23rd, 2006
(0)
This one is actually completely incorrect. The mechanism for path detection has been proven to interfere. Molecules aren't conscious.
October 23rd, 2006
(0)
Someone isn't aware of the Delayed Choice experiment eh?
October 29th, 2006
(0)
I finally got around to watching part 2. You made fewer mistakes this time, but there are still some misconceptions. Most notably, your Mach-Zehnder interferometer has some mysterious plane labelled "detector". With the way you've drawn it, there would be no interference and therefore, no interesting results. Half the photons would travel one path, half would travel the other. (Continued)
October 29th, 2006
(0)
Since your title is "Quantum Physics is Cool", don't you think it would be cooler if you (correctly) explained that you can force the photons down one path while blocking them from the other just by shifting a mirror? Also, if what you labelled the "detector" is actually another beam splitter (as it should be), it should be aligned at the same angle as the rest of the mirrors.
November 4th, 2006
(0)
WAHT?"
November 10th, 2006
(0)
Holy Hot Pockets I'm getting a headache? Is this sh*t real? I really wish I was high right now.
November 19th, 2006
(0)
always good stuff from you
February 28th, 2007
(0)
The looking part: Its because, from what I've heard, we are actually sending information and wavelengths to the object we look at. Just looking at something is like blasting a stream into it, so I can see why it affected the photons.
April 1st, 2007
(0)
Yep I've read about that too
May 10th, 2007
(0)
This is why I love science.
May 10th, 2007
(0)
these sites have great music, thanks for opening me up to a new techno artist
May 10th, 2007
(0)
You make it sound as if our sentience is affecting the outcome but that's obviously false. The observation equipment exerts some as-of-yet not understood force on the particles.
May 10th, 2007
(1)
at least not understood by you, and also me
May 10th, 2007
(1)
horsedick
May 10th, 2007
(0)
Ew. Yeah, they don't "know" if they are being watched. Idiot propagandaTMND? Try again.
May 10th, 2007
(0)
Proffate's got it covered.
May 10th, 2007
(2)
This are awesome, do one on Shrodingers cat.
May 13th, 2007
(-1)
hot pocket this
June 23rd, 2007
(0)
July 4th, 2007
(0)
I was waiting for the funny. Still waiting...
July 5th, 2007
(0)
-4 for lack of ZZZ
August 10th, 2007
(0)
I thought the whole "Consciousness Causes Collapse" thing was a very marginal line of thinking these days.
August 11th, 2007
(0)
I would say most physicists just adhere to the Copenhagen Interpretation. It still doesn't explain what causes the collapse. It merely keeps scientists out of theology. And many scientists will deny conscious entanglement due to the fact that either they don't truly understand the results, or they are too scared to think about it.
August 10th, 2007
(0)
Oh, and I had an idea a few years back for a story where Schrödinger's cat turned into a zombie. There was also something in there about Dirac blasting people with positrons, I can't remember. I should get back to that.
February 4th, 2008
(0)
yea, i learned alot of this high school cuz my teacthrr was aweosme. thanks for posting... DAMMIT WHY DIDNT I TIHNK OF THIS??? lol
January 30th, 2011
(0)
tell me something I don't know
<< 1 2 >>