The Weird Experiment that Changes When Observed

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  • čas přidán 26. 04. 2023
  • The double-slit experiment is the strangest phenomenon in physics. Try brilliant.org/Newsthink/ for FREE for 30 days, and the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium subscription.
    Watch our vid on another experiment that defies logic: • The Weird Experiment T... (quantum entanglement)
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Komentáře • 2K

  • @Newsthink
    @Newsthink  Před rokem +70

    *What do you think the implications of the double-slit experiment are for our understanding of reality?*
    Try brilliant.org/Newsthink/ for FREE for 30 days, and the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium subscription

    • @mrtienphysics666
      @mrtienphysics666 Před rokem +11

      It means classical physics is actually naive.

    • @_Breakdown
      @_Breakdown Před rokem +10

      *Hi Cindy - - it means that CONSCIOUSNESS affects the natural world. GREAT video - - Cheers* 😊

    • @dtibor5903
      @dtibor5903 Před rokem +3

      I have a theory here: electromagnetism and electric field itself is not quantized, but the effects on particles it is, that's why you can observe single photons interferencing with itself. In reality there are electomagnetic waves emitted but they are too weak to trigger any measuring device. Prove me wrong.

    • @mrtienphysics666
      @mrtienphysics666 Před rokem +3

      @@dtibor5903 electromagnetism and electric field itself is quantized - QED, QFT

    • @_Breakdown
      @_Breakdown Před rokem +3

      @@dtibor5903 Dear D Tibor - - your statement needs to be refined and better articulated in order for anyone to understand what you’re trying to communicate. (i.e. - - what does “quantized” even mean? i.e. - - electromagnetic waves emitted ... by what?)

  • @TheRealLaughingGravy
    @TheRealLaughingGravy Před rokem +3098

    I can relate. I behave differently when I'm being watched, too.

    • @armando5601
      @armando5601 Před 11 měsíci +55

      Lmfaooo 😂

    • @mizukarate
      @mizukarate Před 11 měsíci +27

      In karate when your watched your kata gets better!!!!!

    • @aagaman1845
      @aagaman1845 Před 11 měsíci +10

      😂😂😂

    • @PrometheusRiser
      @PrometheusRiser Před 11 měsíci +10

      Read up on the Hawthorne Effect

    • @jgunther3398
      @jgunther3398 Před 11 měsíci +10

      @@PrometheusRiser it's the best counter-argument to "i don't mind, i've got nothing to hide"

  • @recessiv3
    @recessiv3 Před 11 měsíci +1397

    It's important to note that "observing" a particle is much more involved than what the word would imply. It's not a passive act, in order to observe a particle you have to hit it with another.
    In such a sense, every single particle in existence isn't "observed" until it interacts with another, so for nearly the entire life span of a particle it doesn't actually exist, it's simply a solitary wave.

    • @marcusofranz1102
      @marcusofranz1102 Před 11 měsíci +325

      Underrated comment. When they stay stuff like this they make people think that literally “looking” at it changes it’s behavior and it’s like… no hitting it with another particle to see if it’s there or not changes it’s behavior, sounds way less mysterious this way tho.

    • @SplatterPatternExpert
      @SplatterPatternExpert Před 11 měsíci +54

      What if information travels spherically outward from an event, then when an observer collects that information, it appears that the information exists only at the collection point?

    • @jorgealvarado7946
      @jorgealvarado7946 Před 11 měsíci +78

      @@marcusofranz1102 It’s still mysterious regardless. The act of observing, aka blasting photons to the particle so light can reflect back, changes it’s behavior for that specific time. When not blasted, the particle appears to be in two places at the same time. Still mysterious and more in the realm of quantum mechanics.

    • @matok2426
      @matok2426 Před 11 měsíci +62

      Yeah it seems just about every visual explanation of the dual behavior observed in the slit experiment depicts the observer as this passive eyeball or camera, and also uses the word "choose", as if the particle can somehow make a choice between passing through one slit or the other, or both, which is all extremely misleading.

    • @adreanmarantz2103
      @adreanmarantz2103 Před 11 měsíci +39

      Great comment, I've been waiting years for someone to bring this up. At the quantum level, how can the equip we use NOT interfere with matter?

  • @icevlad148
    @icevlad148 Před 11 měsíci +348

    It is impressive that these physicists managed to isolate a single photon

    • @emilcioran8873
      @emilcioran8873 Před 11 měsíci +56

      No one has ever explained how they did it. In other words: BS!

    • @YoungFlyz644
      @YoungFlyz644 Před 11 měsíci

      @@emilcioran8873 czcams.com/video/F1GaTizdcb8/video.html

    • @tristanmisja
      @tristanmisja Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@emilcioran8873 Yes, people have explained how they did it, you're just too lazy and/or stupid to check.

    • @arlert1638
      @arlert1638 Před 10 měsíci +105

      ​@emilcioran8873 just do some research, the equipment called "electron beam gun" the explained how its work

    • @eyeofsauron2812
      @eyeofsauron2812 Před 10 měsíci +6

      What even is a photon?

  • @V.II.
    @V.II. Před 8 měsíci +6

    we are living in a simulation. the properties are built into the building blocks of our simulation. so when we start observing, it loads in like how we load in the rendered assets in a video game

  • @anonymitious
    @anonymitious Před rokem +332

    Albert Einstein saying "God does not play dice" was not for the double slit experiment. It was actually for another Quantum phenomenon which he termed "Spooky action at a distance" (Quantum Entanglement).

    • @aaronjennings8385
      @aaronjennings8385 Před 11 měsíci +30

      Spooky action at a distance describes acausality. That means things happen for no reason.
      Einstein didn't like that entanglement was described as an acausal quantum effect. He preferred to describe it accurately with the Einstein-Rosen bridge. In this way, entanglement isn't supernatural magic.

    • @jgunther3398
      @jgunther3398 Před 11 měsíci

      @@aaronjennings8385 to the frame of reference of something moving at the speed of light there is no such thing as distance

    • @aaronjennings8385
      @aaronjennings8385 Před 11 měsíci +8

      @@jgunther3398 not sure what this is related to.

    • @pauls3075
      @pauls3075 Před 11 měsíci +13

      Indeed, it seems like 'Newsthink' just used chatgpt to write this article and as usual chatgpt got it wrong.

    • @aaronjennings8385
      @aaronjennings8385 Před 11 měsíci

      @Edmond White ask Leonard Susskind

  • @Borishal
    @Borishal Před 8 měsíci +8

    Measurement, rather than observation. This is very important. Changes the idea of consciousness being involved.

    • @steelersgoingfor7706
      @steelersgoingfor7706 Před 7 dny +2

      Does it? What is a measurement without a result? How does a result become defined? It all leads back to a conscious observation.

    • @NATHANSREBELLION-zx4mn
      @NATHANSREBELLION-zx4mn Před 5 dny +1

      @@steelersgoingfor7706 Correct. I wonder why that's so hard for people to understand. You can't have one without the other.

    • @steelersgoingfor7706
      @steelersgoingfor7706 Před 5 dny

      @@NATHANSREBELLION-zx4mn because people, whether aware or not, try to shape questions and answers in a way that at least leaves a possibility for understanding. Human fallacy.

  • @pslanez
    @pslanez Před 10 měsíci +128

    If physical reality manifests out of consciousness rather than the other way around then this makes complete sense. Everything is in a state of infinite possibility until the light of awareness shines on it at which point it manifests into existence

    • @charlespancamo9771
      @charlespancamo9771 Před 9 měsíci +12

      Ding ding ding. We have a winner. Also on that note everything is one and therefore we're all gods in a way as we can manifest whatever because all is us and vice versa anyway. Religion was made to take away our power and god was firmly placed outside of us to achieve that end. K byeeee

    • @owaisshaikh3067
      @owaisshaikh3067 Před 9 měsíci +2

      No
      Refuses to elaborate*

    • @SerenityCorner
      @SerenityCorner Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@charlespancamo9771 💯

    • @chrisbarbz9238
      @chrisbarbz9238 Před 8 měsíci

      I think this is it. Using a graphics engine as an illustration, this experiment shows how the assets are rendered rather than show that we live in a simulation.

    • @PsychologicalApparition
      @PsychologicalApparition Před 8 měsíci

      whose awareness, though? All organisms? or only humans?

  • @asianmanfromasia
    @asianmanfromasia Před 10 měsíci +40

    What if the universe doesn’t exist unless consciousness exists? Like how in a video game, nothing exists until you, the character you’re playing, observe the environment around you. Our brains are processors. Without a processor, a video game can’t exist. It’s just a bunch of information waiting to be interpreted

    • @kwesiferinioferiniokwesi8722
      @kwesiferinioferiniokwesi8722 Před 3 měsíci +4

      Was thinking the same thing, like rendering a videogame.
      Edit:
      So wait a minute...
      Rendering a video right? So that means you can think of the future just the way you want it to be, and feeling it. Our senses dont know the difference anyway.
      Does this mean we can control our future in real time ?

    • @radicalaim
      @radicalaim Před 3 měsíci +8

      kind of relates to the old question "If a tree falls in an empty forest does it make a sound?

    • @kwesiferinioferiniokwesi8722
      @kwesiferinioferiniokwesi8722 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@radicalaim love the theory

    • @ypxgenuine
      @ypxgenuine Před 3 měsíci +2

      Our brain is only to express our thoughts. Let’s us express our energy and give form to our thoughts. We’re all one. Experiencing and re-experiencing. We are immortal. This is just the material dimension. Read up on it. This just gives me even more reason to not fear death.

    • @kwesiferinioferiniokwesi8722
      @kwesiferinioferiniokwesi8722 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@ypxgenuine thanks for the explanation

  • @ricardokowalski1579
    @ricardokowalski1579 Před rokem +111

    What effect does the "measuring device" have on the photon? 1:29
    What has been demonstrated is that this measurement device affects the photons, not that the photon knows it is being observed.

    • @tomich20
      @tomich20 Před rokem +28

      I think there is another exp were measurement got delayed and the system behaved like particles. So is not the measurement device, but the fact that it will eventually get measured, that make it behave like that 🤯

    • @kravlone7612
      @kravlone7612 Před rokem +13

      @@tomich20 yeah, before being measured it showed interference characteristics but after delay when it got measured, the characteristics instantaneously changed to photon

    • @danielrodrigues4903
      @danielrodrigues4903 Před rokem +1

      Yep iirc this is one of the main hypotheses put forward as an explanation for this phenomenon.

    • @sin3rgy
      @sin3rgy Před rokem +12

      I agree her definitions and loose use of words is a not describing the effects accurately.

    • @BennyNegroFromQueens
      @BennyNegroFromQueens Před rokem

      Wrong

  • @jumanji4037
    @jumanji4037 Před rokem +359

    This sounds exactly like Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle, in which a particle’s momentum and location in space cannot be determined at the same time, leading it to have multiple positions at once until observed. The same can be said about Schrödinger’s cat. In this thought experiment, a cat is in a black box with some poison. Next to the poison is a radioactive source. When the source reaches a certain count rate, the poison is released; the thing is the decay of the radioactive source is unpredictable, so cat at any point in time is both dead and alive until observed. Another analogy is if a tree falls and no one was there to hear or see it fall, did it really fall?
    Both theories have been used to question the possibility of a multiverse where every possible outcome generates a new universe.
    The idea of life being a “computer” program is logical, as almost all aspects of nature have mathematical attributes that are perfectly related to one another. Every possibility follows certain “coded” rules/axioms to carry out. In that case mathematics and physics is just the study of reverse engineering the program of the simulation. But when you reverse engineer a program and come across something that shouldn’t run, like photons arranging themselves when observed, you question whether this is intentional or an undefined natural error. It breaks the algorithm that we have documented for centuries.

    • @Hexnilium
      @Hexnilium Před 11 měsíci +32

      The Heisenberg principle and Schrodinger's cat are derivations of this precise phenomenon.

    • @maskon1724
      @maskon1724 Před 11 měsíci +11

      Is math something created or discovered, either by the simulator or simulated?

    • @191.
      @191. Před 11 měsíci +32

      We should be glad it hasn't been programmed by Microsoft or EA. HAHAHA

    • @renomtv
      @renomtv Před 11 měsíci +5

      Interesting tying this all together, schrodinger's cat makes sense in this context, used to think it was a logic thought experiment (rather than trying to understand a physical phenomena)

    • @robertwilliamson922
      @robertwilliamson922 Před 11 měsíci +9

      Yes, the tree fell. But did it make a sound if there was no one there to hear it?

  • @terrykeggereis2953
    @terrykeggereis2953 Před 10 měsíci +18

    This actually makes sense if the particle is in a different dimension than us, and when we measure it we are taking a slice of that dimension and basically assigning only that slice to the particle.

    • @kaseyboles30
      @kaseyboles30 Před měsícem

      This is sorta-kinda like many worlds.

  • @DecemberNames
    @DecemberNames Před 8 měsíci +7

    I just wanted to take a moment to say how amazing your video was! I was really impressed with the quality of the footage, the editing, and the overall presentation. You did a great job of explaining the topic in a clear and concise way, and I learned a lot from watching your video.
    I also really appreciated the way you made the video engaging and entertaining. You kept my attention throughout the entire video, and I never felt bored or lost. I would definitely recommend your video to anyone who is interested in learning more about the video.
    Thanks again for making such a great video! I look forward to watching more of your content in the future.
    PS: I outsourced this feedback to AI.

    • @Newsthink
      @Newsthink  Před 8 měsíci

      Thanks! Really appreciate it

  • @Dregun
    @Dregun Před 11 měsíci +89

    My theory:
    There's a good chance that we haven't discovered an unknown energy that is Emmitted from every partical and so does from a camera sensor and from electrons
    So the camera tries to observe
    Electrons and camera sensor's energy entangle and lead the electrons to behave like a partical

    • @krippaxxuseredarlordofthes9940
      @krippaxxuseredarlordofthes9940 Před 11 měsíci +11

      This makes more sense to me

    • @user-ht6ql1rn3w
      @user-ht6ql1rn3w Před 11 měsíci +55

      This is the greatest theory of all time for someone who spelled particle wrong

    • @kakhaval
      @kakhaval Před 11 měsíci +6

      Dark energy, dark matter, gray energy, grayish matter etc. already along the same escapism

    • @Dregun
      @Dregun Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@krippaxxuseredarlordofthes9940 thanks man! That means a lot

    • @Dregun
      @Dregun Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@user-ht6ql1rn3w lol! Thanks
      I was sleepy when I wrote that comment

  • @Viki-zo1bc
    @Viki-zo1bc Před 11 měsíci +46

    A non-living photon changing behaviour when observed is more horrifying than horror movies.

    • @devon1267
      @devon1267 Před 7 měsíci +9

      A photon being "observed" in this experiment means being detected/measured by a device, which must interact with the photon to "observe"/detect it.
      A detection device interacting with the photon is what causes it to behave differently, not someone "looking at it" or "consciousness"

    • @Ice.muffin
      @Ice.muffin Před 7 měsíci +6

      @@devon1267
      *Slow clap*
      Nobel prize for you... Why don't you go get it?

    • @devon1267
      @devon1267 Před 7 měsíci +3

      @@Ice.muffin You're too kind, but mistaken. This has been common knowledge for decades, so they won't award a nobel for it.

    • @Ice.muffin
      @Ice.muffin Před 6 měsíci

      @@devon1267 Funny, since that's not the version the world is talking about. Something's not right in your equation, oops.

    • @MaggieTheCat01
      @MaggieTheCat01 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@devon1267
      If a detector interferes with the trajectory of the particles, I’m amazed that it manages to marshall them into two relatively neat lines.

  • @Blackwingk
    @Blackwingk Před 11 měsíci +58

    I recently spent some time with a certain tribal, farming, backwoods community in India. Lovely, friendly people. And at a communal dinner one evening, I explained the double-slit experiment to the tribal elders. I was astonished at how quickly they grasped and understood the physics and the nature of the experiment and the baffling question that scientists faced. And these were people who had never attended school nor knew the English language. And within an hour, they were discussing among themselves the dual wave and particle properties of photons. They were drawing the diagrams in the dirt! Since that day, I've had a deeper respect for the remote, isolated tribal people of the world.

    • @dipanjanghosal1662
      @dipanjanghosal1662 Před 11 měsíci +15

      This sounds fake

    • @brandongonsalves3615
      @brandongonsalves3615 Před 11 měsíci +10

      Humans are smart. Without school trying to turn us into factory workers, we could be smarter. The key is education. These tribal people were educated and without schools command of obedience, they started thinking.
      I often run into this wall with religious people when discussing history. School blinds the mind like a religion. Kids are always asking why until we break them of the habit.

    • @nomadexplorer6682
      @nomadexplorer6682 Před 11 měsíci

      @ Blackwingk... Surely you have met a community of aliens lost in spacetime who were figuring out how to escape from the bondage of simulation into.....?

    • @firedplay
      @firedplay Před 11 měsíci +3

      Why? Because they knew intuitively what someone had to teach you? Lol.

    • @KinoNoTabi-gj6tm
      @KinoNoTabi-gj6tm Před 11 měsíci

      Hindus were the first to go to space to shit on the space

  • @FredoSantana90
    @FredoSantana90 Před 3 měsíci +2

    They make it seem like the photons are self aware when the actual reason behind it is simple.

  • @deathcore420
    @deathcore420 Před rokem +42

    so what does observing/watching actually mean?
    to see something you need a photon to reflect from a thing you want to observe and land on the observing device (i.e. eye)
    so when you are watching photons, you are hitting the observed photons with another photons - and that just changes the observable photons directions

    • @straighttalk2069
      @straighttalk2069 Před rokem +1

      No

    • @quantisedspace7047
      @quantisedspace7047 Před 11 měsíci +18

      @@straighttalk2069 'No' ? That's it ? That's your answer. Kindly explain if you want to be taken seriously

    • @Natethesandman1
      @Natethesandman1 Před 11 měsíci +5

      Yes, for most interactions, but photons do not directly interact. To observe which way, special crystals that split the photon in two can be used so that if the photon travels through one side, one photon can hit the screen and the other can hit a detector. All of these interactions still impart momentum which affect the outcome. MIT OpenCourseware has a great lecture series on this that actually gets into the math but also explain it clearly.

    • @Hitchpster
      @Hitchpster Před 11 měsíci +6

      Yours is the first comment I see in this video that challenges the asenine solipsistic rubbish this channel is pushing. Bravo

    • @christopherclewlow6634
      @christopherclewlow6634 Před 11 měsíci +1

      I dont understand why awareness is ignored by science

  • @MarcusAgrippa390
    @MarcusAgrippa390 Před rokem +52

    When Einstein said his famous quote that "God does not play dice with the universe"
    Bohr replied by telling Einstein
    "Stop telling God what to do"
    This on the surface, may seem to have somewhat supernatural undertones but I think it shows just how perplexing quantum mechanics really is even to two of the most brilliant and influential minds that humanity has ever produced, and we have produced many over the years.
    Sadly, I'm not one of them...
    Not even close...

    • @danielrodrigues4903
      @danielrodrigues4903 Před rokem +4

      Well, when AI reaches and surpasses human-level, then we'll need to redefine whom the most brilliant minds that could ever be produced are. Can't wait to see what it makes of the universe!

    • @yuukoito_
      @yuukoito_ Před rokem +1

      ​@@danielrodrigues4903 that'd be far into the future. and i hope it's not just the AI that improves but also humans. we could possibly alter our genome and improve ourselves on the cellular level. making ourselves as good or even better than computers. if that time came, we'd have far more people and instruments capable of understanding the universe

    • @piman9280
      @piman9280 Před 10 měsíci +1

      I would say that I am *happily* not one of them - therefore I don't drive myself crazy.

    • @ivaerz4977
      @ivaerz4977 Před 10 měsíci

      I'm not one of them yes but I have 200 wins in Cod warzone which they don't.

    • @fjb4932
      @fjb4932 Před 4 měsíci

      MarcusAgrippa,
      To say "Be happy in who you are" is useless. It's up to You to learn that.
      Having known a very smart man, i'd say the less one knows ( within limits ) the happier one is.
      The smarter one is, the more one finds themselves surrounded by infantiles and morons on an intellectual level. Imagine dealing with 5 year olds continually. Always passing on knowledge and wisdom, seeing it ignored, and never learning anything from them. Strictly one way knowledge. Maddening . . .

  • @ajspice
    @ajspice Před 8 měsíci +2

    Can you imagine how confused they were trying to figure this out?

  • @snowkracker
    @snowkracker Před 11 měsíci +10

    The thing that gets me is how the photons create an interference pattern even when shot one at a time.

    • @tabby73
      @tabby73 Před 11 měsíci

      They're like little magicians 😀

    • @JayDeeShorts
      @JayDeeShorts Před 3 měsíci +1

      Because they are in whats called a superposition which they are acting like a wave and particle both at once so the particle could be anywhere within said wave

  • @Mike-lh1rq
    @Mike-lh1rq Před rokem +12

    Thanks Cindy for always doing very interesting subjects that include a mixture of scientific theories explained in a easy-to-understand way. It's a great Channel keep it up!

    • @kennybraverman9719
      @kennybraverman9719 Před 11 měsíci

      read some of the replies as they make point on criticism.

  • @ArcWelder588
    @ArcWelder588 Před rokem +82

    Was hoping for a bit more in-depth explanation;
    Does the method of observation interfere with the light photons?
    How was the picture taken?
    Does the slits themselves have an effect on the photons?
    AT what frequency is the photons fired?
    What was that about time having an effect on the experiment ?
    I'm no physicist, but I think by now we should have more experiments where the variables are changed to have a better understanding.

    • @danielrodrigues4903
      @danielrodrigues4903 Před rokem +21

      There are a ton actually, and the method of observation affecting things is one of the main explanations. After all, observing the universe at that miniscule scale requires special devices and techniques, so the act of observing them itself may introduce external interference from the observer.

    • @sagarjamwal6182
      @sagarjamwal6182 Před 11 měsíci +20

      Yes, the detector or measuring device used in the double slit experiment interacts with the photon and alters its behavior, causing it to act like a particle. This is because the act of measurement or observation involves the exchange of energy and information between the photon and the measuring device, which disturbs the photon's wavefunction and collapses it.
      The type of detector used in the experiment is important. For example, a photon passing through a slit may be absorbed and re-emitted by a detector, which can cause a change in the photon's energy and momentum. This disturbance can alter the photon's path and cause it to behave as a particle, rather than a wave that undergoes interference.
      Additionally, the act of measurement introduces uncertainty into the system, which can further disturb the photon's behavior. The position of the photon is uncertain until it is measured, and this uncertainty can propagate through the system and disrupt the interference pattern.
      In summary, the presence of a detector or measuring device in the double slit experiment interferes with the photon by altering its wavefunction and introducing uncertainty into the system. These effects cause the photon to behave like a particle rather than a wave, and the interference pattern disappears.

    • @DarkSpice84
      @DarkSpice84 Před 11 měsíci +7

      @@sagarjamwal6182I have been intrigued in this topic for years and ironically a guy in a CZcams comment section describes it in the best way I’ve heard.
      So in reality, what does the destruction of this wave function mean? Does it really mean that un-observed objects appear differently?

    • @franciscobrunodias7526
      @franciscobrunodias7526 Před 11 měsíci +7

      @@DarkSpice84 The wave function of a particle (or more generally a system) contains all the information about the state of that particle. It can be used, for example, to calculate the probability of the particle being in a particular position.
      Let’s say you want to know which slit a electron went through without interfering with its current state (that is, you want to make a measurement and not change the wave function, so it keeps the cool wave pattern, as if it was not measured). Measuring some quantum state of a particle is basically applying a transformation to its wave function and reading the output, so you can’t directly measure something out of a particle and expect it to behave like you did nothing.
      So the best approach here would be to copy the wave function, perform a measurement on the copy and the original keeps unchanged. Sadly, we can’t do that (search for no-cloning theorem for further clarification).
      In short, you have a wave function 𝛙 upon which you can take measurements by applying some transformations to it, but whenever you do so, it changes to another wave function 𝛙’. You may try to clone this wave function, but the best you may get are imperfect copies. I hope this sums it up, cheers.

    • @bloodymary__
      @bloodymary__ Před 11 měsíci +9

      @@sagarjamwal6182this was AI generated, but good response.

  • @jonathandawson3091
    @jonathandawson3091 Před 11 měsíci +7

    Very nice and concise video on the subject, with clear explanations and just enough mystery left for viewers to be curious.
    I've been exploring this and related phenomenon for over a decade, and still your presentation captures my interest - makes me remember how I felt when I knew about it the first time.
    I might follow.

  • @MyComedyStore
    @MyComedyStore Před 7 měsíci +1

    The detector absorbs the extra photons or atoms. Please send me my Nobel Prize. Thank you.

  • @paryanindoeur
    @paryanindoeur Před 11 měsíci +59

    First time I've heard a source mention the similarity to zone-loading in video games explicitly. I've long thought of that when considering this subject. It's a good analogy, with so many gamers out there these days.

    • @TheGothGaming
      @TheGothGaming Před 11 měsíci +9

      That was my first thought too when I heard this experiment the first time.
      I dont know if we are living in a simulation or not, but the more I read about quantum physics the more Im convinced our universe behaves like a computer (im a software engineer myself).

    • @daviderossi9597
      @daviderossi9597 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@TheGothGaming same

    • @seandidsomething
      @seandidsomething Před 11 měsíci

      You a fed bro 🤨

    • @slackamacgaming6721
      @slackamacgaming6721 Před 11 měsíci

      👍

    • @darlenesmith5690
      @darlenesmith5690 Před 10 měsíci

      @@TheGothGaming Computers follow the programming rules and do not deviate. Any issue is caused by a mistake in programming (shy of a hardware or firmware glitch).
      The universe follows the rules of physics and to our knowledge, does not deviate. Hence the similarity.
      We just do not yet understand all of the rules of physics.
      The problem with the "simulation theory" is that the creators of the simulation created a massive number of rules, and also had massive amounts of energy.
      For what purpose? To observe? To have billionaire avatars?
      The stage is too big for the play.

  • @MyName-vg8yu
    @MyName-vg8yu Před 11 měsíci +21

    How are we still proliferating this misconception? The behavior of particles change when we "observe" them because "observing" something so small means we have to bump something else into it (like the way electron microscopes work).
    The trippy part is the superposition of particles (which allows for the photons to interact with themselves).

    • @CutleryChips
      @CutleryChips Před 11 měsíci +4

      What do you expect of a video that is claiming we are living in a simulation?
      Might as well title as “Proof that super advanced aliens exist that collapse electron wave function”

    • @explicitreverberation9826
      @explicitreverberation9826 Před 11 měsíci +1

      ​@gp I can see you don't know much about your cosmic history or neighbors and yet here you are fumbling quantum topics?

    • @CutleryChips
      @CutleryChips Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@explicitreverberation9826 so I am supposed to fully accept that everything behind my head disappears to save simulation computing power?

    • @explicitreverberation9826
      @explicitreverberation9826 Před 11 měsíci

      @gp you tell me. It's a carbon copy of a rick and morty episode for God sakes. Though....."they live" and marvels "secret wars" are both documentaries, who knows at this point. Forgive me. 🙄😪 you may be as right as rain

    • @LiteShaper1
      @LiteShaper1 Před 11 měsíci +2

      How do you explain the version of the experiment where they scrambled the results of which way knowledge after the light hit the detector with the “observing mechanism” (polarized filters) operating and in place - and the wave function reestablished every time the scrambler was turned on? The only variable appears to be knowledge in the mind of the observer.

  • @VoidraMusic
    @VoidraMusic Před 11 měsíci +3

    Server admin: oooh they are observing, yo zuckerberg, change the code!

  • @wolf222555
    @wolf222555 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Interesting....thanks for this. There is also the water experiment which consistently shows an interaction between the water molecules and the mind of the observer.

  • @jc-tu6pg
    @jc-tu6pg Před rokem +55

    The best explanation and animation of the double slit experiment that I've ever seen! Kudos!

    • @kennybraverman9719
      @kennybraverman9719 Před 11 měsíci +3

      read some of the replies as they make point on criticism.

    • @seantrevathan3041
      @seantrevathan3041 Před 11 měsíci

      Watch the one by PBS Spacetime Delayed Choice version.
      That version of the experiment is unsettling.

    • @tristanmisja
      @tristanmisja Před 11 měsíci +1

      This is an okay explanation, but not a good conclusion.

  • @danielhenrique3642
    @danielhenrique3642 Před 10 měsíci +12

    Undestand that the term "observe" in this video means "interfer".
    To "observe" the eletron they must use a photon.
    Thats why its change from waves to particles

  • @stargazeronesixseven
    @stargazeronesixseven Před 20 dny +1

    😊🙏 Light behaves like Waves when they're not being observed & behaves like Particles when being observed! Thank You So Much Newsthink for explaining this phenomena to us using simple to understand layman term! 🕯🌷🌿🌏✌💜🕊

  • @kalismols606
    @kalismols606 Před 10 hodinami

    Aliens: guys they're onto us
    Alien overloads: KNOCK DOWN SOME TREES RIGHT NOW

  • @jeljojose
    @jeljojose Před 11 měsíci +33

    .....finally at the end of the experiment, the photon sued the creepy scientists for invasion of privacy, anxiety , mental trauma and character assassination 😄

  • @DonEskil
    @DonEskil Před 5 měsíci +26

    Hi!
    For a long time I have wondered what exactly we mean by saying "when the photons are observed" and I encountered this video when I tried to look it up. I'm a chemist and have learned from analytical chemistry that we can't measure anything without it interacting with the material of the detector. I was of course curious in how we exactly can "observe" something halfway through an experiment without fundamentally changing the experiment and therefore likely the result. So when I heard that "scientists used a measuring device to observe the slit that each photon passed through" it obviously peaked my interest. From my understanding, and please correct me if I'm wrong or misinterprets the experiment, the so-called measuring device or slit-detector is actually polarizing filters which do not perform any kind of measurement or detection themselves. By only filtrating forth polarized light from each slit (which I think are perpendicular to each other), it would presumably be possible to identify which photons passed through each slit later on. If this is the case, I think it is an extreme stretch of the definition detector or measuring device if no observations, measurements or analysis were performed by this so-called device. I realise that this is likely an extreme simplification made in order to illustrate other points, and while it is false (at least from my interpretation of what a measuring device is), there might be a valid argument that "we might as well view it as a detector for the sake of simplicity". So there is no magical detector. Darn it, another childhood dream squashed.
    I still have some issues with general statements I've encountered such as "the photons change their behaviour because we observe them", which likely are simplifications of "in an experiment in which we tried to observe the path of the photons, they behaved like particles instead of waves". While I don't think either statements are necessarily false, they both seems a bit misleading if left on their own. From my perspective, the experiment when using the filters is, at least to some degree, fundamentally different from the one without filters. We can observe "that perpendicular polarized light behaves like particles instead of waves when passing through the slits", and don't get me wrong, it is definitely a interesting and wierd result that clearly illustrates the wave-partical duality of photons. However, to draw the conclusion/interpretation that "they behave differently **because** we try to observe their paths" sounds rather backwards to me. While it is true that we set up the experiment in order to determine their path, a less misleading way to express the result could be "they behave differently because we fundamentally changed the experimental conditions, i.e. we removed all photons that didn't exhibit certain properties (i.e. a certain polarization)". While this might be obvious for physicists and chemists alike (that we can't measure anything without interacting with it), I don't think it is as obvious to people with other backgrounds. The slit-detector is often breezed over in explanations of the experiment and is therefore more or less implied to be a passive observer. A reasonable explanation for this is that we can't explain everything in a 6 minute video. We would need to explain what polarized light is and why that is significant. Easily understood explanations are without a doubt important, and can be justified even if they oversimplify things (such as the slit-detector). However, when doing an over-simplification and just saying "we just observe the photons" it would be easy, and I think very reasonable, to add a large shining caveat saying "the detector is not a passive observer and that it by its very nature may influence the outcome of the experiment".
    While this likely would result in some confusion, it would more importantly raise questions which are the bread-and-butter of curiosity. I genuinely think that Newsthink and physicists in general only have the best intentions in mind, but I find this sort of explanation (without any caveats) unnecessarily misleading nonetheless. While interpretations such as "photons change their behaviours/properties **because** we observe them" are alright to make, I personally find them missing the mark of what the actual experiment was about and what the results really showed (i.e. if I understand things correctly). Is it possible that the photons behaviour changed **because** we tried to observe their path? Yes anything is possible, but I find it rather speculative (to put it mildly) if this is the only data that they base it on.
    In general, while it is easy to say "You should stay sceptical even when experts explain something" or "Of course the experiment is more complex than it seems, we're talking about physics and the video is 6 minutes long", I don't think that's something we should expect people from outside the scientific community to always take into consideration. And that is why i wrote this post (also because I wanted to know if I've misunderstood something). I would also be very interested for any information regarding other real experiments (i.e. not thought experiments) that deal with "whether photons behave differently if "observed"".
    Have a nice day!

    • @infamouszephon
      @infamouszephon Před 4 měsíci +1

      Wow

    • @SpencerfromEarth
      @SpencerfromEarth Před 4 měsíci +2

      You're correct about the polarizing filters. Each filter blocks out a certain direction of the wave, x y or z. By combining two different polarizing filters you should be able to block out the x and y directions of the wave, for example, leaving only the z direction. It's true that these filters aren't "measuring" or "observing" anything in the more common way that we understand those words, but I think they do "observe" the light in a more quantum/abstract way than we probably understand. I'm a biologist though so definitely not my field of study.

    • @DonEskil
      @DonEskil Před 4 měsíci

      @@SpencerfromEarth hi, thanks for your response.
      It’s good to have confirmation about the filter blocks, so thanks again! After I wrote this comment, I spoke to a physicist friend of mine and thought a bit more about the experiments. Most of my criticism stands about how the concept was described in the video but today I wouldn’t have added the comment about that “I find it very speculative to say that the photons behavior changed because we tried to observe them”. I still find it misleading and very easy to make far-drawn conclusions from it, but I was also a bit too focused on the experiment where many photons were sent in and not the experiment where one photon was sent at a time. There is, as you say, clearly a quantum mechanical phenomenon happening at the filters as shown by the latter experiment. So it’s very likely that it also happened in the first mentioned experiment (where many photons were sent), so it’s not only that polarized light interacts differently than unpolarized light which effected the result. It’s therefore really a question of semantics, and while it could be interesting to delve into a deep philosophical discussion about what “observing” really is, I don’t really think it’s worth it. As I’ve mentioned, I personally don’t like the word *observing* to describe the phenomenon, but I don’t really expect people to care much about my stickler tendencies.
      Hope you have a nice day!

    • @johnteki
      @johnteki Před 4 měsíci

      wow, I had GPT to make it simpler for me to understand :p

    • @asdfg19923
      @asdfg19923 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I agree. In fact it's so misleading that you get people coming on the comment section talking about how this proves the universe is conscious... People love a good fairy tale.

  • @carlosvasquez1545
    @carlosvasquez1545 Před 3 měsíci +1

    That's probably why you can always tell when someone is looking at you

  • @666lucanator
    @666lucanator Před 6 dny

    One of the best explanations of this ive seen, great visuals

  • @sarenmohil396
    @sarenmohil396 Před rokem +14

    Very informative and makes us curious about physics

    • @jokerlucifer4904
      @jokerlucifer4904 Před rokem +1

      True bro

    • @dj-rocketman8545
      @dj-rocketman8545 Před 10 měsíci

      As the Scriptures say, “I will destroy the wisdom of the wise and discard the intelligence of the intelligent.”

  • @patrickbennett439
    @patrickbennett439 Před 8 měsíci +3

    We must flip on/off the observer camera like a strobe light and do it faster than the speed of light so that the light particles cannot keep up with the observer camera and be able to react fast enough, then we can see what up. However this might cause the light partical to go backwards as if time is being reveresed. We need mirrors to bounce it back the right direction as the camera is now observing light going backwards in time, i think. lol

    • @deviantshade
      @deviantshade Před 2 měsíci

      Do you remember mirrors reflect light?so electrons would just pass through it too.a reflection is just light bent by the mirror

    • @patrickbennett439
      @patrickbennett439 Před 2 měsíci

      @tshade Electrons that make the light?. So, what now? It passes through a mirror or something. I dont know lol

  • @roodick85
    @roodick85 Před 3 měsíci +2

    It would be so crazy to find theyre actually sentient beings

    • @MrDogonjon
      @MrDogonjon Před 27 dny

      Then energy is consciousness?... E=mc2?... c= consciousness= wrong. c is a number.

  • @Langkowski
    @Langkowski Před 2 měsíci

    The experiment doesn't changed because it is "observed", it changes because the measuring device interacts with the particles and an energy transference occurs.

  • @AKpilations
    @AKpilations Před 11 měsíci +3

    This confirms that the universe is against me

  • @KEW-pd1jn
    @KEW-pd1jn Před 11 měsíci +17

    Isn’t a simulation considered to be a designed creation? (: The Developer really knocked it out of the park with the whole perfect ratio and the Higgs Boson.

    • @infernalsorcery7923
      @infernalsorcery7923 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Some people believe that the universe we live in has many more dimensions to space, and as the universe has cooled, these dimensions curled tightly around each other. Now to 3D observers, we are convinced there is no more dimensions than 4 to our universe. 3 of space, 1 of time. The ratio these dimensions curled around each other is the golden ratio.

    • @infernalsorcery7923
      @infernalsorcery7923 Před 10 měsíci

      And the Higgs field. Which is an active massive universal field, which all other energies permutate within. The Higgs boson is an exotic particle that was theorized to exist toward the beginning of this universe and which split off into and collapsed into everything else.

  • @KevinMurphy0403
    @KevinMurphy0403 Před 8 měsíci

    I'll never interfere with myself again after watching this

  • @8alakai8
    @8alakai8 Před 7 měsíci +1

    for me this is proof we live in a symulation as a gamer its just like a game engine

  • @pangman77
    @pangman77 Před 11 měsíci +3

    That's why time slows down for an observer who approaches the speed of light or is near an extremely massive object (i.e., high gravity)...the universe needs time to process all the information.

  • @ralfp8844
    @ralfp8844 Před 11 měsíci +3

    The problem begins with thinking of particles.

    • @energydriver46
      @energydriver46 Před 10 měsíci +1

      That’s interesting, are you loosely suggesting that, since we humans have theorized and done the math to believe they are particles, that’s what the wave ultimately displays…? Because it is a wave of probability after all.. I have thought about this before as well. I wonder if there’s another intelligent specie on another planet who went through a similar process as us, but instead of them theorizing about particles they theorized and did the math for something completely different, and what if that’s what they detect when measuring their versions of “particles”. idk, hope I made enough sense for you to understand me lol.

    • @ralfp8844
      @ralfp8844 Před 10 měsíci

      @@energydriver46 I wanted to say, that if you go into a theory with preconceptions that are too strong, you always will miss some important traits. So if you are tuned to see particles, you will see particles. It's like looking at clouds with pictures of animals in your head. But the same thing will happen, if you look at the former particles with an idea of probability waves. Both are concepts, that work quite well under certain circumstances. And both will fail under others.
      Most people think, physics is about finding out how exactly reality looks like. But the first hard lesson is, that you can't. But you can find out, how reality behaves. The models and theories are made to understand that good enough to make smart predictions. And the analogies, like "photons behave like particles" (IF observed in certain conditions!), are made to get familiar with that stuff.
      Let me mention one last point, if you're still sticking to a it"s one or the other idea.
      Ask yourself, what a real particle would be like. A solid orb? Made out of what? Which diameter? Homogenious or not?
      And how the heck would a complex probability function look like in reality? Etherial Numbers floating in space and time with real and imaginary parts?
      So don't ask, what it is, but how it could be described best to make the maths consistent with the measurements.
      Sorry to say that, but studying somehow demystifies the whole stuff, and i could have known.

  • @roberttorres4893
    @roberttorres4893 Před měsícem +1

    I have a theory that this is what Stanly Kubrick was basing his movie on Space Odyssey 2001. The light sequence at the very end as being observed by the pilot (Boman i think) traveling through space after entering a monolith which looks exactly like a slit. The slit is solid black but after he enters he then observes a light show of colors that couldnt have been seen before.
    Also , everyone knows how perfect kubrick directed his movie shots are, theres never an error meaning the continuation of the story is never out of sequence, except for 1 time i noticed and this could refer to the delay and observation of a particle correcting itself. The jacket appearing on a chair then disappearing in the next shot was thought to be an error which is unlikely, theres a lost and found alert is being said in the following screenshots, meaning that it corrected itself after the viewers observation.
    A majority of the movie is presented with black and white backgrounds (duality) for example the ceiling is made of white light in the U.S. Spaceship just as the floor in Bowmans room is lit up in white light. We see this again in the meeting room ,black ceilings and corners with white light walls. The white light is also in the center of the ship thats rotating with Hal. Im suggesting theres an inside world and an outside world that exist simultaneously but not observable , its seperated by the light. The absense of light is the the monolith, solid black darkness and going through it brings you to the other side. Bowman went through it twice. 1st time as a pilot and 2nd time at his death bed where he becomes a star child made of light.
    I cant explain all of it here but i think you can see where im going with this, im very interested to here what you guys think of this.

  • @mrslake7096
    @mrslake7096 Před 11 měsíci +2

    1. no achievement pop ups
    2. no background music
    3. no physics glitches, no falling through the ground, no invisible walls
    4. no repetitive NPCs
    5. no fetch 100 rats quests
    life is definitely not a simulation

    • @stimberry
      @stimberry Před 11 měsíci

      5. exists in new york

  • @annalarose5392
    @annalarose5392 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Our world is amazing! The concept that the particles could change when being observed seems like a small change in variables but the consciousness awareness effects it in such a way that had plenty of people stunned! Even to this day people are amazed by this experiment!

    • @chetsenior7253
      @chetsenior7253 Před 17 dny

      It’s asinine. We don’t know what I observed ones do, because….

    • @annalarose5392
      @annalarose5392 Před 17 dny

      @@chetsenior7253 let's pretend your English was grammatical; are you saying it's asinine because you yourself was not present for the demonstration of the experiment and therefore how can you know for sure? Or that you can't trust what you seen?! And what's with (...) Are you planning on adding to your thought process or are you using ellipses for some sort of effect? Honestly you may want to revise your comment😪😂💁

  • @shuddupeyaface
    @shuddupeyaface Před 11 měsíci +7

    From how many angles can the head of a pin be observed?
    Then, from how many angles could our own milky way be observed?
    And does a mirror reflect a finite or infinate number of reflections at all times?
    I love this stuff.

    • @fredneecher1746
      @fredneecher1746 Před 10 měsíci

      There's one reflection but an infinite number of angles from which it can be viewed. Same as with the original.

  • @orver1
    @orver1 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Not proof we are in a simulation. Only that our understanding is incomplete.

  • @rrrohan2288
    @rrrohan2288 Před 7 měsíci +1

    imagine being so smooth brained u have to run experiments to realize your in a simulation

  • @overkillblackjack2910
    @overkillblackjack2910 Před 26 dny +3

    What was the rationale for conducting the double slit experiment in the first place? I mean, did someone correctly hypothesize the results of the double-slit experiment?

  • @SamSam-mw7hq
    @SamSam-mw7hq Před 9 měsíci +23

    I’ve seen a lot of people saying it’s the physical interaction of the observing device that interferes with the photon, by “bumping” into the photon and causing it to change. To reiterate, if the device is turned off, the photons return to being waves. So once turned on the observing device must be emitting waves or particles that interferes with the photons and causes it to act like a particle.
    This makes the most logical sense to me as well. A photon behaving like it “knows” or has “consciousness” seems less likely to me.
    So my question is, what if we put more than one observing device in the experiment? For example, one device pointed down (eagle view), another pointed to a horizontal view, and one behind the photon machine. All devices turned on. Would this change the outcome of the pattern the photons make? Would different amount of devices and angles yield different results? I’m not sure if this experiment has been done. I’d love to do it myself but I figure it’ll be difficult to get your hands on a photon shooting machine.
    Thoughts?

    • @rsport2053
      @rsport2053 Před 8 měsíci +8

      The quantum eraser, delayed choice experiment disproves your theory.

    • @pasonveronica2370
      @pasonveronica2370 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I’m sure they have tried that and it’s the same….. even you will act differently when observed

    • @ligerwulf
      @ligerwulf Před 4 měsíci +1

      Yeah you got point but i think theyve done it with the knowledge they have compared to Us they would be dumb to release such experiment without answering a simple doubt that an ordinary people like Us could imagine.

    • @Blurro
      @Blurro Před 3 měsíci

      @@ligerwulf ordinary people simply don't have access to the expensive equipment to test their questions out. Ain't make them more stupid

    • @dudd4171
      @dudd4171 Před 3 měsíci

      agreed

  • @thundershadow
    @thundershadow Před 7 měsíci

    I've been aware of the double slit experiment for some time but I have not studied it in depth. So, I'm unsure if it was variated between pre and post slit observation. I wonder if that makes a difference?

  • @RayMak
    @RayMak Před 8 měsíci +1

    When we observe, the observing machine interferes

  • @zidang4143
    @zidang4143 Před 8 měsíci +8

    This truly is one of the experiments of all time.

  • @Electric_Wizard999
    @Electric_Wizard999 Před 4 měsíci +3

    This test needs to be conducted with several animal observers. If this effect is only observed whether or not a person views it, or whether a person has the potential to view it via a camera. This would prove that humanity is of a higher priority in existence and would suggest that there is a deeper meaning behind this experiment.

  • @betsydonato6817
    @betsydonato6817 Před 8 měsíci

    Evolution of the Eye Ball begins in the translucent environment , before it discovered the transparent environment. Atmosphere obviously plays on light density and refraction. The slits are shown on a flat stencil against a flat wall representing a stop in space time continuum. I think results would be different if the stencil was curved against an opposite curved wall . Using black paper against black paper is different from using transparent or translucent emulsion against a solid wall .

  • @SlndrBoi99
    @SlndrBoi99 Před 4 měsíci +2

    HELP ! There's something I can't get my head around this experiment. How do we know how photons behave when they are not being observed?

  • @the.haque.family
    @the.haque.family Před rokem +5

    Bro!!! 😮😮😮 I'm loving Physics.

  • @igors1234
    @igors1234 Před 10 měsíci +37

    I bet this is somehow related to the physical interaction between the observing device and the photon. As a rough example, imagine there is a bowling ball moving on the bowling path, and you throw another bowling ball that should hit the first bowling ball, bounce from it and go back to you to tell you that there was a moving bowling ball, from which your bowling ball bounced. And of course, after the hit not only your bowling ball bounced, but also the initial ball changed it's course. Something like that could be happening on a level of particles, in my assumption. The current explanation that the photons change their abilities because of some conscious spectator sounds like magical thinking, similar to that lightning is being thrown by Zeus etc.

    • @dsego84
      @dsego84 Před 10 měsíci +4

      But even still, why would firing individual photons through slits over time produce an interference pattern?

    • @palkys.
      @palkys. Před 10 měsíci

      @@dsego84 you believe that part?
      Cause without it, the whole thing is just a very well performed ruse.
      Think about it.

    • @dsego84
      @dsego84 Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@palkys. why not believe experimental results? do you think this is conspiracy? I think you can do the experiment at home, there are videos on yt where people recreate it with a pointer laser.

    • @venerablearcanum
      @venerablearcanum Před 10 měsíci +6

      The "current explanation" as you put it is nonsense. You won't find any actual physicists explaining it that way. Your intuition is correct. There is nothing spooky going on and "observation" is a technical term that basically means "poking the thing to measure it". The "poke" affects the thing being measured. It's really that simple (well, it's not actually that simple, but that's the basic idea).

    • @matthewtilley7175
      @matthewtilley7175 Před 10 měsíci +1

      ​@@dsego84exactly

  • @shahilgupta1690
    @shahilgupta1690 Před 11 měsíci +1

    By far the best explanation on Double Slit Experiment ❤

  • @Axol5077
    @Axol5077 Před 5 měsíci +2

    A possible reason is the way that light bounces off an object into our eyes if some sort of thing is reversed or bounces back, it could be interfering with the particle, hence changing its state this would have to be something to do with new set of physics laws, which we currently have no way to prove

  • @johnmay9699
    @johnmay9699 Před 11 měsíci +5

    The real mystery is left out: if the observation is made AFTER the light passed through the slits, ie if observed in the future, the future event changes the behavior of the particles as they go through the slit in the past. Thus, a future event becomes the cause of the past.

  • @briannolan7818
    @briannolan7818 Před 11 měsíci +2

    So, if you did the experiment with 3 slits, would the outer 2 slits cancel the inner slit and make just 2 bright bands? The wave pattern should cancel the inner line.

  • @tylerdurden7869
    @tylerdurden7869 Před 3 měsíci

    The fact that they made a proton gun with single fire is crazy enough

  • @tahersamosawala1904
    @tahersamosawala1904 Před 8 měsíci

    We just have the art watching and storing things and how our brain reacts to light

  • @grokwhy
    @grokwhy Před 11 měsíci +3

    How do you, or a detector, 'observe' a tiny particle without some way interacting with it, and impacting its behavior. In our macro world, we can see a baseball without interfering with it. But when you are trying to detect a single photon or electron, how do you do that without interfering with it in some way?

  • @christianlewis7055
    @christianlewis7055 Před 11 měsíci +3

    What I'm yet to understand is how the experiment measures the interference pattern without counting as 'observing' it.

    • @energydriver46
      @energydriver46 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Literally lol

    • @dsego84
      @dsego84 Před 10 měsíci +2

      But you are not observing through which slit the particle is moving. If you don't observe, you get an interference pattern, even though they're firing individual photons through one or the other slit. It's like without observing, the photon/electron doesn't have to give you the information about the slit, sort of like lazy loading in games.

    • @victorfernandes83
      @victorfernandes83 Před 9 měsíci

      @@dsego84but how do you not observe it? How would you know? If you do not observe it you can’t know. My point is. Whatever is used to observe it is affecting the photon.

  • @mrnobodytheuser2950
    @mrnobodytheuser2950 Před 7 měsíci

    Professor Dave completely glossed over this aspect of the double slit experiment, I wonder why.

  • @dougmurray3692
    @dougmurray3692 Před 7 měsíci +1

    There are a few surprises coming for science. No spoilers - you'll know it when it occurs.

  • @aaronjennings8385
    @aaronjennings8385 Před 11 měsíci +8

    Simulation is not the word. Synthesis is. If it were simulated, it would be violating physics. It doesn't.
    A synthesis doesn't violate physics. It's too perfect to be real, and it's highly statistically improbable, but it doesn't break laws.
    The double slit experiment describes the nature of consciousness as an input. As an input, it changes experimental outcomes and directs our actions.
    It does, in fact, suggest that there is a God.

    • @A1Kira
      @A1Kira Před 9 měsíci +1

      Simulation doesn’t mean “violating physics”… synthesis isn’t even a word to describe what’s going on here lmao. Learn what definitions mean. All this suggests is that there is a creator or creators, not necessarily a god.

    • @aaronjennings8385
      @aaronjennings8385 Před 9 měsíci

      @@A1Kira Simulation is the act of creating a computer or physical model that mimics real-life situations. It helps us understand and predict how complex systems behave in different scenarios. Simulations are used in many fields to study, test, and train people.

    • @aaronjennings8385
      @aaronjennings8385 Před 9 měsíci

      @@A1Kira Synthesis is the process of combining different elements or components to create something new or complex.

    • @aaronjennings8385
      @aaronjennings8385 Před 9 měsíci

      @dark-uu3fy simulations and simulated or simulants aren't real. They are artificial. Carrying only vestigial semblance of reality.
      Synthetics are real yet not natural. Not everything in the world around us occurred via random chance. Some things are synthetic.
      I.e. Synthetic vs. Simulated diamond.

    • @A1Kira
      @A1Kira Před 9 měsíci

      @@aaronjennings8385 noun: synthesis; plural noun: syntheses
      1.
      the combination of ideas to form a theory or system.
      "the synthesis of intellect and emotion in his work"
      You used “synthesis” wrongly in a sentence. It’s not used to describe Simulation theory because it’s the wrong word to use. There’s a reason Musk and other geniuses use the word simulation and not synthesis theory lol.

  • @josy28xo
    @josy28xo Před 10 měsíci +5

    no matter how often i watch this experiment i will always be stunned be the result. this is so awesome. also it shows that all choices that we make is one out of endless possibilities.

  • @iosoi3145
    @iosoi3145 Před 6 měsíci

    Could the observation device be emitting energy that interferes with how the paritcles behave?

  • @RandyMachoSavage
    @RandyMachoSavage Před 10 hodinami

    I guess the tree that fell in the woods that no one was there to see, was never heard and may not have even happened.

  • @yanke3s1
    @yanke3s1 Před 11 měsíci +7

    I think it's more obvious that there's an error in their equipment than there is in a reality

    • @benjamindees
      @benjamindees Před 11 měsíci

      That's a perfectly reasonable assumption. Unfortunately, it's been proven wrong.

  • @clownworld33
    @clownworld33 Před 11 měsíci +3

    The bigger question is if there was no person or thing in the forest to see or hear the tree fall did it fall?

    • @MichaelHickey2003
      @MichaelHickey2003 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Yes

    • @energydriver46
      @energydriver46 Před 10 měsíci +1

      We’ll never know lol

    • @gavinjames8749
      @gavinjames8749 Před 7 měsíci

      If a tree fell in a forest with no-one around except a blind,deaf man,directly under the tree,would he be killed by the tree that may or may not have fell after all?

    • @gavinjames8749
      @gavinjames8749 Před 7 měsíci

      If a tree fell in a forest with no-one around except a blind,deaf man,directly under the tree,would he be killed by the tree that may or may not have fell after all?

  • @colinpope368
    @colinpope368 Před 13 dny

    "The mere act of observing"
    Mere is doing a lot of rhetorical legwork here to make this seem wooshier than it really is. The instruments which observe the photons do so by *interacting* with them.
    "The mere act of interacting with a particle in order to observe it causes it's behavior to change" sounds a lot less spooky, doesn't it ;)

  • @sreejithnair4261
    @sreejithnair4261 Před 7 měsíci +1

    What is the max distance between the 2 slits that we can observe this dual nature

  • @fiddlestickzmuzik
    @fiddlestickzmuzik Před 10 měsíci +15

    I am absolutely sure there are some weird invisible ( to our eyes ) beings all around us laughing at us and causing endless misery for their enjoyment. Everything being recorded as if in some alternate reality. Well maybe not that basic, it's hard to express in words, but I get the impression that most humans get a feeling at one time or another/ or many times, that you are being watched by something unknown. One time when in Europe I accidentally took a large amount of a unknown psychedelic ( long story ) it keep me up for 4 days and I had thought I went mad. During this time a weird world revealed itself to me, there were these red balls like eyes everywhere constantly watching and monitoring every movements we humans make, you know the red eyes in the matrix sentinels, well I was seeing those things literally everywhere all around us, you moved and it followed your movements like a lens in a camera. There were millions of these things everywhere I looked. I hadn't seen the Matrix film back then as this was in 1993 and the Matrix wasn't released until 1999. You have no idea how terrified I was when I saw the film for the first time and those red eyed sentinels were in the film. Its not a coincidence that most people feel weird when looking into camera and asked questions or told to say something..

    • @JJsWithJesus
      @JJsWithJesus Před 9 měsíci

      Those weird invisible beings you speak of are demons. Psychedelics cause humans to see into the spiritual realm. The truth is that demons do watch us, but so do god and his angels. If you believe in Jesus, demons secrets are revealed and they no longer pose a threat.

    • @___Sevak___
      @___Sevak___ Před 8 měsíci +1

      i dont think they watch us to cause misery, if that is then the whole purpose of universe is defeated

    • @3b0d1999
      @3b0d1999 Před 8 měsíci +1

      What is there to even laugh at? we repeat our mistakes repeatedly. If anything, it calls for disappointment. Our actions are very predictable even for us, let alone to our god.

    • @___Sevak___
      @___Sevak___ Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@3b0d1999 its written in Bhagwad Gita when a devotee asks God why he observes when we commit wrong acts why doesnt he interfere? God says "first pay attention to your words if u know i am observing why wil u commit wrong acts & second free will is to be provided that is God's Dharma/duty"

    • @cecilebraillie4471
      @cecilebraillie4471 Před 5 měsíci +1

      you shouldn't watch videos like this, it obviously messes with your head

  • @280zjammer
    @280zjammer Před rokem +3

    The double slit experiment doesn't say as much about light as it does about consciousness being a physical thing.

    • @devon1267
      @devon1267 Před 7 měsíci

      No.
      A photon being "observed" in this experiment means being detected/measured by a device, which MUST interact with the photon in order to detect/measure it.
      A detection/measurement device interacting with a photon is what triggers the change, not someone "looking at it" or "consciousness".

  • @crazycanuckerrant
    @crazycanuckerrant Před měsícem

    One of the problems I have with this experiment is that it seems to me that when we are saying it is "observed" with the detectors it causes confusion as it is actually observed al the time but the detectors, the big difference, are actually recording or measuring.

  • @alexrandall8557
    @alexrandall8557 Před rokem +28

    This is ridiculous. It's not the "mere act of observation" that causes the superposition of a quantum particle to collapse. You cannot "merely" observe a quantum particle. You can't just whip out a microscope and have a look. To observe a quantum particle, it must interact with another particle, and it is the interaction, not the observation, that causes the collapse of quantum superpositions.

    • @kayakexcursions5570
      @kayakexcursions5570 Před rokem +1

      Exactly. She doesn't know anything about videogames either. They are not related in any way, a game is predetermined from the start, bound by rules even if its random. It culls objects out of view because its a waste of time drawing them, but they are there. The wave function algorithim itself follows rules based off the input. You cannot predict where a photon will hit, only the probability.

    • @jkturtle
      @jkturtle Před 11 měsíci +6

      Nope. Based on experiments, even if the observation is done AFTER the photon has passed either of the slits, the photons will still behave as particles. With no observation, the photon will behave as a wave.

    • @josemonge4604
      @josemonge4604 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@jkturtle So the observation retroactively changes the photon from wave to particle, so it's time traveling?

    • @wiggles666
      @wiggles666 Před 11 měsíci +3

      ​@@josemonge4604 yes. And it's wild.

    • @blacktigershearthstoneadve6905
      @blacktigershearthstoneadve6905 Před 10 měsíci +1

      You are wrong. Clever people managed to do it without direct interaction long ago.

  • @Gyfrctgtdbhf
    @Gyfrctgtdbhf Před 11 měsíci +8

    Could the speed of light limit be the result of the “clock speed” of the simulation for updating the position of particles in addition to determining their observed state?

    • @Rollmops94
      @Rollmops94 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I am a programmer and I thought about the idea, that the world might be programmed a lot. From this perspective the idea, that light behaves like a function whenever not observed closely seems like a typical optimisation. Why simulate a myriad of photons, when you really only need a macroscopic light/shadow texture.
      I have many ideas about time, but it is very hard to order them. Time goes slower in proximity to large masses and obviously where there is a large mass there is a lot of matter and where there is a lot of matter a lot is happening and where a lot is happening a lot has to be computed - so it makes sense that the program needs a lot of time to calculate each frame in these regions and therefore time in these regions runs slower. This is obviously not a commonly used programming strategy since in basically all programs time is a global variable and not depending on space or anything else. Time also goes slower when moving very fast and this makes sense since an object that moves very fast potentially experiences a lot of different things in a very short time, which again is computationally expensive.
      In the end I really can't wrap my head around all this though. It is an intriguing idea at the least and I'd really like to explore these topics deeper and gain a real understanding of it all.

    • @Rollmops94
      @Rollmops94 Před 5 měsíci

      I don't really understand how you want to connect the clock speed and the speed of light though?! It could definitely have something to do with it, but why would these two things be dependent?

    • @andreizelchenko934
      @andreizelchenko934 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@Rollmops94So, dark matter and dark energy are remote servers then. And what we see is the interface 😊.
      But! Characters inside SIMs game will never understand and feel real world and creators, even if you give them some feeling properties and concience.

    • @Rollmops94
      @Rollmops94 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@andreizelchenko934
      How do you want to know, what characters in a game can and what not? There is not a single experiment to truly test consciousness. Ultimately you can‘t know wether I or anyone else is a conscious being or not.

  • @radinelaj3932
    @radinelaj3932 Před 7 měsíci

    I think if that experiment would be replaced with a canon sand( not laser canon) would happen the same thing. It means : the experiment doesn't show anything because sand is particle, that( same thing ) would happen with all things as : sugar grain,salt grain, sand grain etc...

  • @LuvHrtZ
    @LuvHrtZ Před 11 měsíci

    Time has no meaning for photons, hence the reason the interference pattern builds up regardless of how we project them through the slits.

  • @jennyxie5382
    @jennyxie5382 Před rokem +15

    I think Arvin explained it perfectly in one video.

    • @tebogo743
      @tebogo743 Před rokem +3

      You know Arvin Ash 🔥🔥🔥

    • @dianamorgan9668
      @dianamorgan9668 Před rokem +3

      He is good

    • @localmartian9047
      @localmartian9047 Před rokem +1

      Arvin is best

    • @jennyxie5382
      @jennyxie5382 Před rokem +1

      Yes, he make exactly the same video as this but explain it way better, and make it less spooky.
      It just that he make too many video I forgot the title. Or else I will link it here.

    • @sharingan1490
      @sharingan1490 Před rokem

      @@jennyxie5382 here you go...czcams.com/video/h75DGO3GrF4/video.html

  • @StonegaardForge
    @StonegaardForge Před 10 měsíci +2

    Particles change their behavior when observed because of consciousness. When the consciousness of an observer connects to the consciousness of a particle there is an energetic and magnetic-like reaction. Much like blowing wind on a leaf, although that is still more random. Many of the big brains out there still have a problem with grasping the concept of consciousness related impact.

    • @kingdoge69
      @kingdoge69 Před 9 měsíci +1

      I’m gonna need a source on this one bud

    • @StonegaardForge
      @StonegaardForge Před 9 měsíci

      @@kingdoge69 I did my homework. You can do yours.

    • @devon1267
      @devon1267 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Totally wrong.
      A photon being "observed" in this experiment means being detected/measured by a device, which MUST interact with the photon in order to detect/measure it.
      A detection/measurement device interacting with a photon is what triggers the change, not someone "looking at it" or "consciousness".
      This has been understood, you're just spreading misinformation.

    • @StonegaardForge
      @StonegaardForge Před 7 měsíci

      @@devon1267 or information of which you are just simply unaware. Just because you don't believe it doesn't make it not true.

    • @devon1267
      @devon1267 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@StonegaardForge This video is about the double slit experiment, and the photons involved. In the experiment, the photons react to a measurement/detection device, not conciousness, it's what the word "observer" refers to as defined by the experiment/those who set it up.
      It's not a matter of "belief", it's what the description of the experiment refers to, so you either know what the experiment is describing or you don't. You don't. Consciousness/a human directly "observing" the photons doesn't play a role in the experiment, regardless of what you believe. The only reason to think that it does is if you misunderstood what the term "observer" as used in the experiment is referring to.
      The experiment shows that light appears to act like a wave and a particle, and it's open to interpretation whether it's both a wave and particle, or if it's still really always a wave, or always a particle.

  • @MsTinkerbelle87
    @MsTinkerbelle87 Před 8 měsíci +1

    You guys are so smart lol I have such admiration for people who can get this stuff because there’s me the whole time 🦗🦗

  • @glennhubbard5008
    @glennhubbard5008 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I think it is the foundation of free will itself.

  • @xbxb
    @xbxb Před rokem +3

    This is why I think a person won't take much computing energy if we are in a simulation, because I don't think everything, I don't know everything, we have little range of eyes to observe things.

  • @omnikevlar2338
    @omnikevlar2338 Před rokem +7

    This is the first time I’m hearing about this experiment. And my mind is literally thinking this has to be a conspiracy. But how do you explain the electrons behaving that way!? 😂

    • @robertwilliamson922
      @robertwilliamson922 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Like she stated, no one can explain electrons or photons behaving that way. It’s a mystery. Quantum Entanglement is another great mystery. Look it up.

    • @azeemuddinkhan923
      @azeemuddinkhan923 Před 11 měsíci

      The apparatus to detect which slit the particle went through, was flawed.

    • @tristanmisja
      @tristanmisja Před 11 měsíci

      @@robertwilliamson922 Sure, it's a mystery in the same way "why does gravity work" or "why do virtual particles exist". Those phenomena sort've just exist. There's a property of the universe. There isn't a reason, it just sort've does.

    • @victorfernandes83
      @victorfernandes83 Před 9 měsíci

      @@tristanmisjanot a good analogy. Those things do exist and we know they exist. None of that changes based on if someone’s watching or not.

    • @tristanmisja
      @tristanmisja Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@victorfernandes83 Yup, and neither Quantum Entanglement nor Wave-particle Duality are affected by whether or not someone is watching.

  • @thomasshakelton
    @thomasshakelton Před 7 měsíci +1

    What Observation methods are we using, because clearly just watching it or recording it does not interfere. I’m sure people try different ways of observing it, but could it just be observation the waves? Obvious stupid question but I need answers

  • @Jansen33
    @Jansen33 Před 2 měsíci

    This is why I lose and win bets.
    If I don’t pay attention, my bet usually wins. If I pay attention, I lose way more often.

  • @johnhardy3430
    @johnhardy3430 Před rokem +4

    I thought electrons were fired at the double slit (or crystals that accomplish the same diffraction phenomenon) and what was crazy was that the electrons (which were particles) actually created the interference pattern. And furthermore, firing one electron at a time, instead of one photon at a time, still created the interference pattern. An illustration of this was done awhile back with a cartoon character named Dr. Quantum: czcams.com/video/NvzSLByrw4Q/video.html. I might be totally wrong here, but I thought the it was electrons that went back to behaving like particles when they were being observed, not photons. Regardless, this video is great for visualizing the interference pattern created by waves and particles. I enjoy Cindy Pom's Newsthink videos!

    • @jeramym9506
      @jeramym9506 Před 11 měsíci +3

      They have now observed wave-particle duality at the scale of multiple atoms. All matter has this property apparently. Insane to think about.

    • @andrewg3196
      @andrewg3196 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Everything is waves. Classical Newtonian physics is just happening at a scale where the boundaries of those waves are very well defined relative to their scale so they can just be thought of as masses.

    • @meetontheledge1380
      @meetontheledge1380 Před 11 měsíci +1

      When I was at university (back in the Stone Age!) the experiment was presented as done with electrons. I recall this, because (I guess I was a bit behind the other students), I first had to have the nature of a ''gun'' that shoots SINGLE electrons explained to me. The set up was as beyond my understanding as the incredible results of the experiment. To answer your question, the results of the Double Slit experiment have been replicated with photons, electrons, neutrons, atoms and even large molecules! Incredible.

  • @user-zf8ev5ej2f
    @user-zf8ev5ej2f Před 7 měsíci +4

    This isn't proof that we're in a simulation. This is proof of consciousness and that it is far more important than what we think we know.

  • @ChrisContin
    @ChrisContin Před 10 měsíci +1

    One explanation for ordinary light and lightspeed is that light is prismed from a higher dimension. This means where light is can only be measured using probability, explaining why it never follows patterns like a hard, precise object yet is one.

  • @aranchilingar9086
    @aranchilingar9086 Před 7 měsíci +1

    True, that is a hypothesis that it could mean. Something is observing us in controlling the trajectory, or it could mean that we are emanating ionic force with our eyes, and with our concentration, and that we can change the direction of ionic movement with a thought think about that.

    • @alansaucedo6416
      @alansaucedo6416 Před 6 měsíci

      Read about jacobo grinberg syntergic theory. He was a mexican neurophysicist that studied both science and mystic world of tibetan yoguis and shamans, and came to develop a theory which included all áreas of knowledge to humans. But short answer the human brain conscience affects directly reality