Double Slit Experiment explained! by Jim Al-Khalili

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  • čas přidán 31. 01. 2013
  • "If you can explain this using common sense and logic, do let me know, because there is a Nobel Prize for you.."
    Professor Jim Al-Khalili explains the experiment that reveals the "central mystery of quantum mechanics" - the double slit experiment.
    Watch the full lecture here:
    • Jim Al-Khalili - Quant...
    For more info on all things quantum, you can buy Jim's book "Quantum: A Guide For The Perplexed" now - geni.us/32pvu
    Sometimes called the "two-slit" or "Young's" experiment, it demonstrates that matter and energy can display the characteristics of both waves and particles, establishing the principle known as wave-particle duality. Furthermore, it questions the role of the observer in the outcome of events and demonstrates the fundamental limitation of an observer to predict experimental results.
    For this reason, Richard Feynman called it "a phenomenon which is impossible ... to explain in any classical way, and which has in it the heart of quantum mechanics. In reality, it contains the only mystery [of quantum mechanics]," (see more at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double-s....
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 9K

  • @eltonmaiyo
    @eltonmaiyo Před 7 lety +3925

    As a game developer, I can tell you its for performance reasons. Why waste processing power rendering particle behavior when there is no observer to output to.

    • @eltonmaiyo
      @eltonmaiyo Před 7 lety +76

      Hahaha maybe so, I suspect upgrades maybe soon forthcoming.
      The question is whether these design artifacts & other physical constraints are necessary or intentionally?

    • @fkngeniuspappie
      @fkngeniuspappie Před 7 lety +53

      Elton Maiyo With the possibility of our physical observations being selectivly simulated depending on if we're physically observing them, it also seems possible that on "the other side" there may be beings living out several lives, each time starting with a new redeveloping consciousness that can't seem to grasp the double slit theory. I wonder if they're then able to remember each and every life when on the other side ("unplugged" from simulated reality). The social implications of your lives lived's quality can then be a factor when it comes to your footing in the community hierarchy on "that side". Not that I believe in this, but it is interesting that the Hindu idea of reincarnation and karma that basically says your life lived determines how you'll return can fit in that far out logic. This can obviously also explain other realms of _being consciousness_, like heaven and scary enough, hell. Hell, if these beings are only nearly as messed up as humans they'll send the oppressed or misbehaving to shitty simulations for possibly an infinite time period. The knowledge a civilization with this capability can produce when the data of many simulations are mined could make them infinitely knowledgeable. Another possibility could be that you are just a learning AI component. So many possibilities opened up by this gap (slit) in our knowledge. kooky

    • @eltonmaiyo
      @eltonmaiyo Před 7 lety +12

      Adriaan Serfontein
      Interesting ..observations :) The nature of base reality/"the other side" is an infinitely interesting subject to explore with equally infinite conceivable possibilities. Your theories makes sense.

    • @kalahariskydive
      @kalahariskydive Před 7 lety +51

      Well, as a developer your algorithm knows what area should be observable on the screen at any given moment and does the rendering accordingly. How can a 'dumb' particle 'know' when it has been observed?

    • @SunnyApples
      @SunnyApples Před 7 lety +16

      As a CG artist, what particle system is being used here?

  • @jimmydanger2223
    @jimmydanger2223 Před 5 měsíci +99

    Getting this kind of thing free and recommended for you is definitely a positive of modern life

    • @slangkam
      @slangkam Před 2 měsíci +2

      This comment can't be praised enough

  • @IIT24Aspirant
    @IIT24Aspirant Před rokem +1121

    The people are laughing but just the mere thought of it runs chills down my spine

    • @garrybarry4286
      @garrybarry4286 Před rokem +27

      exactly

    • @joxyjoxyjoxy1
      @joxyjoxyjoxy1 Před rokem +12

      Why?

    • @garrybarry4286
      @garrybarry4286 Před rokem +101

      @@joxyjoxyjoxy1 well maybe we live in a predetermined universe, that's the scariest outcome. or maybe we live within a simulation or a conciseness, but the chances that we live within the universe that is material by nature is probably untrue

    • @joxyjoxyjoxy1
      @joxyjoxyjoxy1 Před rokem +42

      @@garrybarry4286 or maybe God just likes messing with us.

    • @garrybarry4286
      @garrybarry4286 Před rokem +66

      @@joxyjoxyjoxy1 A bible god? Zero chance

  • @javiermachin1
    @javiermachin1 Před rokem +458

    I’d say one of the Best double-slit-experiment explanations on the internet.
    Fills you with awe and curiosity about this wonderful universe we get to experience.

    • @Oscaragious
      @Oscaragious Před rokem +21

      Can you explain how the detector detects? How can it detect the atom without touching it or shooting photons at it, potentially affecting its trajectory?

    • @skwervin1
      @skwervin1 Před rokem +3

      @@Oscaragious You can with X ray plates in the old days, now we have better detectors that pick up the tiny charge the atom/particle deposits on the screen.

    • @Red-Brick-Dream
      @Red-Brick-Dream Před rokem +4

      Given that it's a deliberately obfuscatory _non_-explanation, I have to disagree.

    • @marcocurrin8122
      @marcocurrin8122 Před rokem +3

      The same way we turn on three dimensional box inside out is the same thing that’s happening here we are the 1- looking down at the H2 on the periodic table. THE HUMAN SOUL IS THE FIRST ELEMENT

    • @adamnguyen4517
      @adamnguyen4517 Před rokem +11

      @@Oscaragious We can’t. At the quantum level to observe is to interact. This video was extremely oversimplified and feeds the popsci crowd (which isn’t bad since it gets people more interested in science). The popsci idea people seem to have is that observing (which means interacting) a photon causing change being the weird part, when its not. The weird part is the multiple questions and experiments that followed and are still continuing to this day.

  • @normjohnson4629
    @normjohnson4629 Před 8 lety +3988

    I tried the double slit experiment at home. The wife was not impressed.

  • @jucklowe
    @jucklowe Před 4 lety +880

    Seen this experiment described a dozen times,,,, this is about the best one. Bravo for helping my slow brain.

    • @axion4523
      @axion4523 Před 4 lety +7

      I hear ya!

    • @kyannos
      @kyannos Před 3 lety +12

      I'm with you as this is the first time I really "get it" !! wish this guy was my HS teacher back in the day !!!

    • @leecowell8165
      @leecowell8165 Před 2 lety +9

      this professor is amazing. What he is stating is that the atom somehow KNOWS that its being "measured" or sensed. and thus it ALWAYS becomes a "particle". it will NOT interact! but IF you turn the "detector" OFF.. it doesn't know! and thus it just becomes a part of a "wave". yeah how does that atom KNOW about the EXISTENCE or ABSENCE of that detector?? thus if there's only ONE slit present the atom has no choice but to pass through that one slit. thus every atom that does so hits the screen in basically the same place. its ONLY when you open the 2nd slit that things get a bi "hairy". But as long as nobody is measuring the atoms perform as interference waves. BUT if you turn on a detector for just ONE slit NOW ONLY TWO DISTINCT patterns on the screen are formed (one directly behind each of the slits). The atoms are communicating. hey if I go through slot # 1 YOU go through slot #2!

    • @dieseldanrr
      @dieseldanrr Před 2 lety

      @@leecowell8165 p

    • @eduardoaraujo8174
      @eduardoaraujo8174 Před 2 lety +3

      @@leecowell8165 The atoms knows its being measured or you know the atom is being measured or not? Im new to this but this observation behaviour seems to be related to knowing or not knowing. I wonder if there was a way to put a detector that beeps in a frequency we cant hear and that no one knows that it beeps for example. What would happen?

  • @skinfax
    @skinfax Před 11 měsíci +101

    Even though I struggled over this for the last 35 years I never stop to be amazed by this. And this explanation is simply clever AND cheerful. Cheers for that!

    • @nabuk3
      @nabuk3 Před 2 měsíci +2

      What explanation? No explanation for the inconsistent results were given at all. In fact we're told we'll get a Nobel prize if we come up with one. Did you even watch the whole video??

  • @penttiranta9730
    @penttiranta9730 Před 11 měsíci +84

    Even if we forget about thousands of other variations of this experiment with all the timetravel, causality breaking consequences, already the fact that a single atom behaves differently going through a single slit and double slit is enough to blow my mind.

    • @amihart9269
      @amihart9269 Před 4 měsíci

      There are no causality breaking consequences or time travel.

    • @goldnarms435
      @goldnarms435 Před 3 měsíci +10

      @@amihart9269 There have been tests that have resulted in "reverse causality" concerning the double split experiment. This requires entangling two particles, and one travels a further distance than the other. The one that travels the shortest distance is not measured. However, if you measure the particle that travels further, it will be reflected in the interference pattern (or not) of the one that traveled the shortest.
      It's as if it knew the other particle was going to be measured, and thus its behavior is altered prior to the actual observation taking place.

    • @amihart9269
      @amihart9269 Před 3 měsíci

      @@goldnarms435 Nope.

    • @isaacmendes1926
      @isaacmendes1926 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@amihart9269 care to elaborate?

    • @nabuk3
      @nabuk3 Před 2 měsíci +1

      No, that's not the major inconsistency. The rub is that the pattern seems to depend on whether the atoms or photos are being "observed". But I think there is an explanation, which is that the device doing the detecting is interacting with the atom. Why didn't he explain how the detector works, to rule this out, if he believes it is not the explanation?

  • @derpy._.josiah7985
    @derpy._.josiah7985 Před 3 lety +506

    Bruh I started from a physicist reacting to Attack on Titan and now I’m here😂

    • @DaveZeke
      @DaveZeke Před 3 lety +7

      Hahahaha same! Except it was him reacting to Rick and Morty and also referencing this.

    • @terencenjoroge463
      @terencenjoroge463 Před 3 lety +1

      me too but from rick & morty

    • @gabrielcornelia9995
      @gabrielcornelia9995 Před 3 lety

      Ha ha anime working wonders

    • @bro0ke_lyn794
      @bro0ke_lyn794 Před 3 lety

      I started from a tiktok where a woman criticized religion and now I’m here ;-;

    • @terencenjoroge463
      @terencenjoroge463 Před 3 lety +1

      @@bro0ke_lyn794 i do not even wanna know what happened in between lol

  • @grahamyodude
    @grahamyodude Před 5 lety +1226

    I can explain this easily but I don't want youtube people stealing my Nobel Prize

    • @yassineselmi7714
      @yassineselmi7714 Před 5 lety +19

      me too

    • @empty2110
      @empty2110 Před 5 lety +23

      grahamyodude it’s quite simple my good sir 🍷

    • @peteq1972
      @peteq1972 Před 4 lety +6

      Tom Campbell has it licked in his video The key to understanding our reality.

    • @Valorince
      @Valorince Před 4 lety +29

      watch him say God

    • @kenzomartini
      @kenzomartini Před 4 lety +1

      American Movement email meee im interested to know

  • @AlbinoMutant
    @AlbinoMutant Před rokem +132

    I'm not a physicist, so most of the time I'm just going about my life. But periodically, every few years, I remember this experiment, and I remember there is something about it that I find eerie. I can never remember exactly what it is, so periodically I review the experiment as I just did with this video. And once again, I'm left with the disturbing feeling that something is very wrong with our reality. It's almost like we are not supposed to be aware of certain things, we aren't supposed to be observing them, and when we do, they are altered to keep us from seeing what's really there. If I was running a simulation and didn't want my simulated agents to discover they are in a simulation and start trying to hack their way out, I would implement something to prevent discovery of the fundamental nature of their reality. Every time they tried to look at the substrate of their existence, I would show them something other than the processor they were running on. I don't know about anyone else, but this experiment has caused me to increase my estimate of the probability that we are living in a simulation.

    • @adamnguyen4517
      @adamnguyen4517 Před rokem +3

      This experiment isn’t the confusing part. Everything in this video can generally be explained. At least the “relevant” parts. The questions and experiments that followed are what really get whacky. So to relate it to you: if you think we’re living in a simulation, Quantum physics is so whacky the simulation is debating on whether its living in a simulation!

    • @IAyala1010
      @IAyala1010 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@adamnguyen4517 this is comforting 😂

    • @adamnguyen4517
      @adamnguyen4517 Před 11 měsíci +11

      @halligalli I'm just saying while quantum physics has some unanswered questions, its also a relatively new science. Just give us a century or two and I bet we'll have it down to a science, literally. Then we'll move on to the next weird phenomena of reality.

    • @steviesteve750
      @steviesteve750 Před 11 měsíci +11

      @@adamnguyen4517 You didn't mention the real elephant in the room: quantum gravity. The idea that time doesn't exist in the human sense of a sequenced order of life, everything exists simultaneously, and life is the process of sequencing those events into some perceived order. And if that is so, then just why?

    • @adamnguyen4517
      @adamnguyen4517 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@steviesteve750 Well thats just one train of thought, but if that does turn out to be the case, I'm not sure. Definitely not qualified enough to answer something that complex.

  • @TheRealestBubby
    @TheRealestBubby Před 9 měsíci +9

    This issue is what sparked my everlasting curiosity in physics and quantum mechanics, just to fall down a rabbithole of hundreds of weird and confusing data from experiments that classical laws of physics just cannot explain. there's just so much unknown, and so much to discover and learn. This specific problem in quantum mechanics not only gives plausibility to an observers universe, but also in certain specific scenarios, it fully implicates direct time travel of photons as a normal working part of the universe

  • @kviehdor
    @kviehdor Před 5 lety +377

    "Quick, the Sims are becoming self-aware!!!!"
    Expect a software patch shortly.

    • @Gcammo
      @Gcammo Před 5 lety

      Kurt V haha 😂

    • @grahamyodude
      @grahamyodude Před 5 lety +2

      They tried patching it last week but I remember this happening last week so looks like the patch update failed

    • @danpoole9016
      @danpoole9016 Před 4 lety

      @@grahamyodude I'm from future. What happened last week

    • @manawearblack
      @manawearblack Před 4 lety +1

      It will never be patched, because then we would all realise that we are definitely in a simulation/computer program

    • @ludik2312
      @ludik2312 Před 4 lety +8

      The COVID-19-restart-required patch?

  • @johnvarley4561
    @johnvarley4561 Před 3 lety +197

    I hope this analogy helps others to understand.
    When people say "observing" changed the result, they do not mean the physical act of watching the experiment - they mean the act of measurement changed the PROPERTY of the thing they were watching.
    My analogy; when you take your temperature, the thermometer you use SUCKS heat away from you (consider a metal teaspoon in a cup of tea, the spoon gets hot because heat energy is being transferred from the liquid to the spoon. The tea is actually getting cooler by transferring heat to the spoon) Therefore, the act of using an instrument to measure the temperature of something CHANGES the temperature of that very same thing.
    I believe this is the same thing (but of course, probably more complex) but am happy to be corrected. It's a layman's explanation which I feel stands up

    • @santos122122
      @santos122122 Před 3 lety +68

      But if they are watching only the upper slit, why the atoms that go trough the bottom slit don't still behave like waves since no one interferes with them?

    • @meganz020
      @meganz020 Před 3 lety +7

      This is actually incredibly helpful, dude. Thank you!!!

    • @davidfiler5414
      @davidfiler5414 Před 3 lety

      @Dirk Knight Almost 100% of people? What's that 99 and half % peeps? or 99 and three quarters% peeps? Be specific man, or don't you know your sums?

    • @davidfiler5414
      @davidfiler5414 Před 3 lety

      @Dirk Knight Were you missing me 100% or only 99.99%.

    • @davidfiler5414
      @davidfiler5414 Před 3 lety +1

      @Dirk Knight Oh well, that would make it 100%. Well done, there's a good boy.

  • @TheLochs
    @TheLochs Před rokem +1

    I've read about this experiment tons of times and it still amazes me. The visuals really help. Its F'n nuts

  • @tombrunila2695
    @tombrunila2695 Před rokem +39

    I have watched many of videos with Jim Al-Khalili, and I can say that he is very good at explaining complex things. Very much like Jacob Bronowski, James Burke and Carl Sagan.

  • @MrWookLoaf
    @MrWookLoaf Před 4 lety +750

    "According to quantum physics, you cannot "just" observe something. That is, quantum physics recognizes that to make a observation, you must interact with the object you are observing " - Stephen Hawking.

    • @WAKMM
      @WAKMM Před 4 lety +14

      Im not sure if this was stated before the delayed choice experiment was done in 2007

    • @crystald3346
      @crystald3346 Před 4 lety +52

      That’s not true just because Stephen Hawking says so. There are thousands of experiments on this, delayed choice is a perfect example.

    • @redcell9248
      @redcell9248 Před 4 lety +14

      That has more to do with the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle than it has to do with this experiment.

    • @alahjandrodagrate1611
      @alahjandrodagrate1611 Před 3 lety +34

      Observing is interacting

    • @ONEMindCoaching
      @ONEMindCoaching Před 3 lety +2

      Could you tell me the source of this quote pls?

  • @greggh
    @greggh Před 4 lety +89

    I learned about the double slit experiment in high school and then again in college. I never understood it as well as from your presentation. Thank you.

    • @digitallair3425
      @digitallair3425 Před 2 lety +1

      I was thinking the same thing. High school, then college .... errrr.. ok...huh? Now this video -- Ah I've got it!

    • @haydnrogan6789
      @haydnrogan6789 Před 2 lety +1

      I was just remembering doing this experiment at uni, I remember the girl I was doing it with and that's about it lol

    • @schrodingerscat8391
      @schrodingerscat8391 Před rokem

      Same here i study this in highschool when i was 16 yrs old and now i m 28 a doctor but still haven’t understand this

    • @tony_1980
      @tony_1980 Před rokem +2

      @@schrodingerscat8391 You covered quantum mechanics and the double split experiment in high school? Some high school you went to. I went to high school in Norway, and when I studied in the US at University, the math class my year at University in the US was high school level in Norway. So color me impressed of your high school.

    • @skulqerX
      @skulqerX Před 7 měsíci

      Also learned the young double slit experiment at highschool. At the time it was only referring the wavelike pattern so no biggie. 10 years after that the same experimet cropt up on my feed and said it was one of the explainations of quantum theory .# My whole life is a lie

  • @mynameismaciek
    @mynameismaciek Před rokem +66

    My layman's theory: Photons generate very subtle gravitational waves in which they themselves travel. To prove this, one can try to disturb this wave with another device. The photon detector might actually interfere with this wave, which is why the result of the experiment is surprising.

    • @qaesarx
      @qaesarx Před 11 měsíci +49

      No, still doesnt make sense, the detector is looking at only ONE slit, still the second slit is affected too. Also the detector is passive. And even if you unplug it, it will receive the energy but dont record it. Also ALL the atoms are shot one after another... The only explanation would be that space has a structure that guides the atoms. And that structure is becoming deactivated by the detector... the question is, WHEN. When WE look at the result or when the detector looks at it... If its about US (way later..) this would mean that the space has somehow temporal determinism or the atoms do... its weird anyway...

    • @steviesteve750
      @steviesteve750 Před 11 měsíci +4

      You might think that the universal laws of thermodynamics apply here, after all to detect an atom, or "see" it, that requires an interaction with a photon, this changing it's energy level; a bit like using a contacft thermometer, which immediately changes the temperature of the surface once it's in contact, as the thermal energy rebalances locally. The issue is how does this interaction change the slit pattern?

    • @TheRetroGamerReese
      @TheRetroGamerReese Před 10 měsíci +2

      I agree with this and was going to post but was hopeful there was another person who saw it this way. Bravo go collect your nobel prize 🎉

    • @darkesco
      @darkesco Před 9 měsíci

      This is absolutely how it works. The observation device disrupts and, therefore collapses the patern. If we could detect a photon or electron without altering its state, we could theoretically have instantaneous communications between devices from one galaxy to another. The atoms do not "know they are being observed," like many experts say or allude to. It's just them witnessing to you about their silly simulation religion.

    • @RichardWebb-do6cw
      @RichardWebb-do6cw Před 9 měsíci +5

      Nice glitch in the matrix if you ask me. Humans 1 creator 9999999999999😂😂

  • @stevenantalics31
    @stevenantalics31 Před 7 měsíci +15

    As commented by some, I think what we perceive as atoms (just like electrons) may exist in a quantum cloud that's governed by higher-dimensional laws than we can detect. However, our detecting equipment may cause some tiny variations in those dimensions that account for this behavior. Figuring that out is obviously non-trivial, but imo that's where the answer lies.

    • @sentientbean1
      @sentientbean1 Před 3 měsíci +1

      If the tree falls in the woods and no one is there to see it, has it really fallen?

    • @MsTringan
      @MsTringan Před 3 měsíci +1

      Does the world exist before you Open the Door?

    • @nabuk3
      @nabuk3 Před 2 měsíci

      Yes, that seems obvious, so why didn't Kalilli address it??

  • @daviddahl83
    @daviddahl83 Před 4 lety +820

    How do you detect an atom without interacting with it?

    • @im4485
      @im4485 Před 4 lety +148

      this is an underrated comment

    • @David-bc4rh
      @David-bc4rh Před 4 lety +49

      Entanglement.

    • @marin7615
      @marin7615 Před 4 lety +93

      You don't. If I got it right, nobody has ever really detected these particles in an experiment, it's simply not feasible. It's just a theoretical thing to explain how QF works, based on the Uncertainty Principle stating you cannot measure both wave and particle behaviour. If you detect the particle it will act as a particle (two bands), if you detect the wave it will act as a wave (interference).

    • @David-bc4rh
      @David-bc4rh Před 4 lety +85

      @@marin7615 You contradict yourself saying particles can't be detected, and then they do detect particles and waves. We observe particles by measuring their interactions and vectoring. This experiment demonstrates the Observer Effect on the quantum level, the act of quantifying the particles collapses their wave function.
      This experiment also demonstrates that particles only exist in waveform when there is no observation, evidenced by the interference pattern that can only occur from waves. Using detection equipment collapses the wave function thereby causing particles to behave like solids.

    • @marin7615
      @marin7615 Před 4 lety +27

      @@David-bc4rh I fully agree. I just meant the particles cannot be detected both at the screen and in between at the same time. If we were able to do that, we could probably solve the mistery, similarly as we understood the micro-world in biology after the invention of the microscope.

  • @cvikastube
    @cvikastube Před 3 lety +188

    0:57 - with light
    2:08 - with sand
    5:48 - without camera
    7:34 - with camera

    • @denisa7090
      @denisa7090 Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks!

    • @Parshvamehta1991
      @Parshvamehta1991 Před 3 lety +3

      Thanks but CZcams ads ruined it!

    • @ernestamoore4385
      @ernestamoore4385 Před 2 lety +3

      It's the photons of the camera recording them that affects their behaviour. It's not a mysterious effect.

    • @David-jy7vh
      @David-jy7vh Před 2 lety +3

      @@ernestamoore4385 lol sure Mr einstein, you should be a scientist. 🤧

    • @obtheserverdmt
      @obtheserverdmt Před 2 lety +1

      @@ernestamoore4385 I thought cameras contained sensors capturing photons rather than projecting them. However, you may be on to something, because it might be true that when the photon hits the material making up the camera sensor it is absorbed and an electron is released. Could these electrons being released from the camera sensor as the detector observes the atoms moving through the slit have an impact on where the atoms travel to as they pass through the slits?

  • @bab008
    @bab008 Před rokem +58

    I've heard this explanation: So long as quantum particles do not interact with anything in the universe at all they act as waves. But as soon as they do interact with anything they take on particle like behavior. Every detector necessarily relies on some type of interaction with what is shot through the double slit in order to detect it. So, in this example unplugging turns off that interaction.

    • @manoj81478
      @manoj81478 Před rokem +7

      Have you heard of "delayed choice quantum eraser double slit experiment"??? If not Please checkout and explain to me with logic..

    • @takisk.7698
      @takisk.7698 Před rokem +10

      ppl buy into the "spookiness" of quantum physics so easily.. while there are perfectly reasonable and simple explanations out there.. makes me pretty disappointed on my fellow human beings.. we are smarter than this if we just try a little bit.. come on now.

    • @popcorn2466
      @popcorn2466 Před rokem +8

      @@takisk.7698 obviously everyone there know there's an explanation.... the point is with our current knowledge we are so far from understanding it that it ''currently'' is magic for us

    • @takisk.7698
      @takisk.7698 Před rokem +6

      @@popcorn2466 there's way too much that we don't know and that's okay but when you get some unexpected results and you default to supernatural nonsense like "the human conscience affects the quantum world?!" instead of going with logical explanations.. it's just disappointing to see.

    • @popcorn2466
      @popcorn2466 Před rokem +1

      @@takisk.7698 true

  • @c.s.hayden3022
    @c.s.hayden3022 Před rokem +8

    It’s often given a sort of magical interpretation where just looking at something can alter the outcome. More like coming into contact with anything will always distort it to some degree.

    • @takisk.7698
      @takisk.7698 Před rokem +3

      Bingo.. there's no way to "gently observe" as the presenter puts it.

    • @nmarbletoe8210
      @nmarbletoe8210 Před rokem +1

      @@takisk.7698 Gently doesn't mean without influence

    • @takisk.7698
      @takisk.7698 Před rokem +1

      @@nmarbletoe8210 it's a misleading word to use.. the detector interferes with the result so there's nothing "gentle" about it

    • @esfbse8347
      @esfbse8347 Před měsícem

      @@takisk.7698why would a wave function collapse when it is measured

  • @christopherscallio2539
    @christopherscallio2539 Před 5 lety +463

    Eureka! So that's why a watched pot never boils!

    • @kalebrand
      @kalebrand Před 5 lety +91

      I actually debunked this in 6th grade for a science fair. Watching the pot takes the same amount of time, but it generates boredom as a byproduct

    • @doktormcnasty
      @doktormcnasty Před 5 lety +14

      I make a point of watching every pot of every liquid change to the boiling state just to feel the satisfaction of putting it to everyone's face who repeats this nonsense.

    • @jitheto551
      @jitheto551 Před 4 lety +5

      Boils but very slowly

    • @manawearblack
      @manawearblack Před 4 lety +11

      @@doktormcnasty You're taking too seriously fella, the phrase means that things seem to take longer when you watch it, kinda like how if you watch a clock for 5 minutes it will seem to take much longer than if you just watch a 5 minute video on CZcams or distract yourself some way

    • @doktormcnasty
      @doktormcnasty Před 4 lety +3

      @@manawearblack You know what, if you don't mean it then don't say it. Why not just say "It seems to take water longer to boil when I'm watching it"? Why's that so hard? Why do people feel the need to get all hyperbolic with words like 'never' which are obviously completely untrue to the situation?

  • @vasile.effect
    @vasile.effect Před 2 lety +379

    First of all, I would like to thank Jim Al Kapone for making this Nobel prize possible. Second, I would like to thank the atoms for being so confusing. I also have a split personality and thats why I can get in their mind. Its not easy to be an atom. You dont even know if you're a particle or a wave. Sometimes you behave like a particle, but sometimes you behave like a wave.
    And last but not least, I would like to thank me for being made of these particles waves.
    *Waves at atoms. Atoms wave back.*

  • @sharongaza1194
    @sharongaza1194 Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you. This is the clearest explanation I have come across.

  • @caboosej8749
    @caboosej8749 Před 5 měsíci +4

    so if anyone ever asks you if supernatural things exist just point them to this experiment.

  • @simonfintzstein5199
    @simonfintzstein5199 Před rokem +63

    I don't know much about science, it wasn't my easiest subject growing up. I am just beginning to learn about quantum physics. Some videos I have watched on this experiment, and I couldn't quite comprehend what was going on. This explains it so very well in an easier to comprehend way. Thank you for this video.

    • @dr_jaymz
      @dr_jaymz Před rokem +6

      in a way, quantum physics isn't very good at science either - because anyone who thinks they understands it, doesn't understand it. And by definition, quantum physics is very much not classical physics, and therefore not being good at that to start with isn't a barrier. Quantum physics in essence is anything that logically doesn't fit with any everyday knowledge and experience.

    • @3brenm
      @3brenm Před rokem +1

      ​@dr_jaymz it's good at stats, but bad at theoretical physics. But everytime i watch the double slit experiment again i just get blown away again and again by it.

    • @ayezz2811
      @ayezz2811 Před 14 dny

      Stay curious Simon!! 🙂

  • @sazennonumber
    @sazennonumber Před 3 lety +17

    Love Jim Al-Khalili. This was a great video, cannot believe I never discovered it before.

  • @CarlWinter-oy8uf
    @CarlWinter-oy8uf Před 2 měsíci +1

    Have been avoiding this freak show for 40 odd years --but Mr Al Khalili has a brilliant method of getting this phenomena across to dodos like me --thankyou Jim !

  • @davidbristoll195
    @davidbristoll195 Před 8 měsíci +15

    It'd be interesting to know more about this. How did the sensor work? Did it emit any waves or particles itself? What different detection methods have been used and what were the results? This was 10 years ago, is it still considered that the atoms somehow change their mind?

    • @XENONEZZ2
      @XENONEZZ2 Před 7 měsíci +3

      I was thinking the same....it could be the detector interacting with the atoms that produces the results seen.

    • @Morethanamethod.
      @Morethanamethod. Před 7 měsíci +7

      Wouldn’t all these genius researchers also pose that question?

    • @davidbristoll195
      @davidbristoll195 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@Morethanamethod. I'd have thought so, but, I'd also expect them to talk about those questions too and they haven't.

    • @rc6115
      @rc6115 Před 7 měsíci +1

      That's a very very good point. Didn't think about it....

    • @willhamilton2467
      @willhamilton2467 Před 7 měsíci

      I believe that this is stiill the most accepted interpretation. I believe that cameras work by light wave/particles affecting the the recording part of the camera.

  • @fo1k1ore
    @fo1k1ore Před 4 lety +44

    "No fair! You changed the outcome by measuring it!"

  • @TheRoyalInstitution
    @TheRoyalInstitution  Před 6 lety +228

    You can now enjoy this mind bender in Spanish, thanks to a kind person who donated their time to provide us with Spanish subtitles. Gracias!

    • @griffinfloyd
      @griffinfloyd Před 6 lety +3

      The Royal Institution is it possible that the device used to sense the particles was interfering in some way... magnetically or electrically? and that that caused them to behave differently

    • @NinjaWarriorDude416
      @NinjaWarriorDude416 Před 5 lety +2

      Witchcraft.

    • @HG-Pilot
      @HG-Pilot Před 5 lety +1

      You are on the right path my friend!
      So now The Mental Institution can mislead and confuse Spanish viewers as well!
      Watch The Primer Fields Theory 1 - 3 he goes into a great details about why all this is a new age BS. We are not allowed to go into higher energy physics and thanks to above bs is not going to happen any time soon.

    • @notdaveschannel9843
      @notdaveschannel9843 Před 4 lety

      Lo siento, no entiendo. ¿Cómo se dice en español?

    • @promoteamutube
      @promoteamutube Před rokem +2

      Please remember that this is not a mind binder. I can give myself the Noble prize if you want but the explanation is so simple. The problem of course here is that scientists still think n term of electricity and magnetism as either wave or particle. They have not yet put feet n the other forms of energies that compose this duality of electricity and magnetism. If only they understood that thoughts are the creators of this duality, they would understand their own experiment. They still fail to understand how consciousness impact its own creations. They still don't understand the two impulses that manage this manifested expression. Time will come. I explained this mind binding illusion in simple terms but look into how consciousness create reality via its 2 impulses and you will understand why the camera impact on this experiment. No need to be a scientist, you see.

  • @duckydaycare7756
    @duckydaycare7756 Před měsícem

    Best double split explanation out there. Bravo.

  • @shilohaapala284
    @shilohaapala284 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Best explanation out there. Made me finally visualize the two slit experiment. Unplugging the detector boggles the mind. My thoughts. When you take a measurement. You are making a call on energy much like a computer operating system to generate physical reality. When you unplug the measuring device whether you like it or not you have made your intention clear you no longer intend to take a measurement and reality corresponds accordingly.

    • @ronanmcw
      @ronanmcw Před 3 měsíci +1

      More boggling for me is that when the detector is plugged in it's only observing the top slit, not both, and atoms are only being fired out one at a time with a gap in between. This means atoms passing the bottom slit are both not being observed and not being influenced by a previous atom - why would these ones not form a wave distribution pattern? In those instances, the act of observing *literally something else and not the atoms in question* is causing a change in behaviour, which is just whacky.

  • @PHOTOGRASPER
    @PHOTOGRASPER Před 5 lety +79

    "Nothing is exactly as it appears, but everything is exactly as it is.. " - B. Bonzai

    • @greggrobinson5116
      @greggrobinson5116 Před 4 lety

      Or, as President Eisenhower once observed: "Things are more like they are now than they every have been before."

    • @vinojoshua841
      @vinojoshua841 Před 16 dny

      And God saw the light, that it was good...
      Genesis 1:4
      Jonah 3
      10 Then God saw their works, that they turned from their evil way...

  • @timothytumwine670
    @timothytumwine670 Před 5 lety +57

    An explanation of how the observing apparatus works would be helpful

    • @sickduck9865
      @sickduck9865 Před 4 lety

      thank you

    • @David-bc4rh
      @David-bc4rh Před 4 lety +1

      it's all very small of course, but it's just an electrode that's tuned to detect the micro current of electrons or photons. There's other ways to get particles to move a needle, but to count single photons passing through a slit, this is all that's needed. old tech.

    • @benitocamela6336
      @benitocamela6336 Před 4 lety +1

      Does it really need an explanation though? It's based off of emitting a certain frequency that will detect the atom or some individual particles that compose it. I'd like to know what you think about the comment I made recently in this video. Sorry I can't provide you with a specific link though.

    • @bokchoiman
      @bokchoiman Před 4 lety +3

      @@benitocamela6336 Not everybody understands everything without having scientific background.

  • @dirkslifeadvice5339
    @dirkslifeadvice5339 Před 2 měsíci

    I'm glad to have seen this before the program gets updated.

  • @cyberpunkchloe9
    @cyberpunkchloe9 Před 2 měsíci

    This is the BEST!! Explanation ever! I also never thought this would be funny.

  • @mirrorimage5423
    @mirrorimage5423 Před 5 lety +943

    "Described" rather than "explained".

    • @ayingchanda
      @ayingchanda Před 4 lety +4

      Both are the same tbh but i agree with you

    • @danpoole9016
      @danpoole9016 Před 4 lety +54

      Because it's a mystery, we can't explain why it happens.

    • @sickduck9865
      @sickduck9865 Před 4 lety +85

      He explained the EXPERIMENT not the phenomenon.. smh..

    • @widjadija
      @widjadija Před 4 lety +8

      I think you read it as “the results of the double slit experiment explained” when all the title implies is an explanation of the experiment itself, which it did.

    • @johnc3403
      @johnc3403 Před 4 lety +11

      Duh! ....explain it and the Nobel prize is yours!

  • @sagarsharma3653
    @sagarsharma3653 Před 3 lety +66

    Jim Al khalili is my favourite when it comes to quantum mechanics. I just love how easily he explains such complex things.

  • @happyatticus2966
    @happyatticus2966 Před rokem +6

    Thank you very much. About a decade ago I read an article on this subject and was baffled. You presented this in such a clear pleb-friendly manner. I almost feel that I understand.

  • @jill_fisher
    @jill_fisher Před 8 měsíci +1

    Are you sending atoms or photons thru? Edit: presumably it's photons as you mentioned "mono-chromatic" at the beginning. What happens with a stream of atoms, or oxygen molecules (O2)? At what size molecule do you get the "sand" effect?

  • @curtismaize
    @curtismaize Před 3 lety +31

    The atoms are having a party and we're not invited, so when we call them to see what they're doing they tell us they're just chilling at home. I think we just need to understand that we're not cool enough to hang out with atoms.

    • @princemateosparta5882
      @princemateosparta5882 Před 2 lety

      Like UFOs. They are more free and open when we are unaware of them but once we prepare the detector equipments they are gone

  • @misstaniamaryam
    @misstaniamaryam Před 3 lety +38

    Thank you Sushant Singh.. Learnt something new today

  • @timmyjones1921
    @timmyjones1921 Před rokem

    I've heard these mysteries , never took the time to watch in detail very interesting .

  • @himanshutyagi4970
    @himanshutyagi4970 Před rokem

    This was mindboggling...breaks your understanding

  • @ujLion
    @ujLion Před 5 lety +10

    I wish this challenge and admission that "we don't know it all" was written in my text books when I was studying..

  • @111sushant
    @111sushant Před 5 lety +31

    As far as I am concerned, it was difficult to work in the same relaxed way in the office when the boss was standing at the back of my seat and observing what I was doing compared to the moments when no one was observing.

    • @sampsontendaimutsago1935
      @sampsontendaimutsago1935 Před 4 lety +3

      True

    • @Jagamy
      @Jagamy Před rokem

      That’s because when he was there you were working and when he he was gone you were on the internet watching clips like this.

    • @vinojoshua841
      @vinojoshua841 Před 16 dny

      And God saw the light, that it was good...
      Genesis 1:4
      Jonah 3
      10 Then God saw their works, that they turned from their evil way...

  • @DUDEMIKE8
    @DUDEMIKE8 Před 2 měsíci +2

    This gave me chills!

  • @CharlesCharles-bb6qx
    @CharlesCharles-bb6qx Před 4 měsíci

    Excellent video and presentation. Thank you.

  • @Treefrogging
    @Treefrogging Před rokem +7

    My god, that is unbelievable. Stunning explanation

  • @jaydonnolan6023
    @jaydonnolan6023 Před 9 lety +406

    Explanation: Atoms are actually aliens in tiny spaceships who like to confuse humans. Noble prize please!!

    • @br7078
      @br7078 Před 8 lety +3

      +Avi K LEL

    • @gurjantgill8681
      @gurjantgill8681 Před 8 lety +4

      +Avi K You sir have just wrecked this kid hard. I guess you deserve the Nobel prize...

    • @hunterwillis7283
      @hunterwillis7283 Před 7 lety +2

      Jaydon Nolan i was just thinking something along these lines! lmfao
      or! or! or!... reality is trying to keep us from realizing thr truth, that truth being that all of reality doesn't truly exist, and reality conceals this secret with superposition. ;)

    • @LordSaboLP
      @LordSaboLP Před 7 lety +1

      i refuse to believe this isnt the right answer, for me...thats how it is now thank you.

    • @brentlio5578
      @brentlio5578 Před 7 lety +2

      Why so complicated? They are just trolls.

  • @ThankYouESM
    @ThankYouESM Před 7 měsíci +2

    The double-slit observer effect is simply a matter of other interferences, such as electromagnetic fields and the "rush" of light at any amount in the attempt to view the action from any device whereas no such "rush" of light is in total darkness. To me, that seems to be common sense as usual which was at the instant I heard of this discovery over 5 years ago.

    • @Ceruleannn
      @Ceruleannn Před 3 měsíci

      Okay so I can conclude that you are smarter than all these top tier scientists who have no explanation for this. I look forward to celebrating your Nobel prize!

    • @ThankYouESM
      @ThankYouESM Před 3 měsíci

      @@Ceruleannn That does not mean I'm smarter than any of them, even if the first to realize. Also... sometimes I would stumble on a new solution just by chance from trying various approaches as Thomas Edison did. Also... there are many non-scientists in this modern era who made some of the greatest scientific discoveries simply by chance. On top of that... there are a whole lot of scientific geniuses of this era who did not get a Nobel Prize until long after they died. Then again... I almost got a perfect score given an actual 4-hour vocational and boosted the sales of many businesses because a friend of mine told them I'm a genius in her honest opinion from witnessing quite a variety, whereas I don't believe myself to be a genius. On top of that... I don't want to be famous... far too many people were asking for my autograph which got very annoying fast.

  • @randomme6954
    @randomme6954 Před rokem +7

    has there been an experiment set up for the double slit, where there a sensors at each level. And if each sensor (2 gaps, 1 wall) receives a ping over time, could we attribute the wave appearance to the gravitational influence on that photon at time of observation?

  • @feverkane
    @feverkane Před 2 lety +28

    Love prof. Jim. His 3 part series 'Atom' was life changing for me.

  • @max20817
    @max20817 Před 7 lety +46

    can the detector when switched on be causing some sort of involuntary interference with the atoms

    • @SurreptitiouSurprise
      @SurreptitiouSurprise Před 7 lety +1

      I'm certainly not proficient with physics, so I'm probably about to sound really dumb. So a photon is a wave particle, but because it travels at constant velocity, it has a zero resting mass, yeah? But we know atoms do have resting mass. First question is: do researchers get the same effects if they send just one photon at a time through the two slits as they do when they send one atom? Second, can the difference then mass between the two contribute to the differences in the outcomes?

    • @bme7491
      @bme7491 Před 7 lety +8

      The detectors are actually photo-multipliers, they don't "shoot" light/photons onto the particle.The more sophisticated "delayed" two-slit experiment shows that if you know the path of the photon (by which detector it hits), it will act as a particle. If the path is not known (possible two paths), it behaves like a wave. Really weird.

    • @bme7491
      @bme7491 Před 7 lety +7

      They've sent everything from photons to Bucky Balls and the results are the same.

    • @bradleyearl7257
      @bradleyearl7257 Před 7 lety

      Interesting! Truly mind boggling stuff. How do the photo-multipliers work?

    • @bme7491
      @bme7491 Před 7 lety +1

      ConsciousConversation They are basically multi-stage amplifiers, converting the photon into an electrical signal large enough to be analyzed and processed.

  • @captpicard100
    @captpicard100 Před 5 měsíci +1

    It’s perfectly easy to explain:- The contra-di-fabulating trans-denominating upper and lower oodle Flori-murdle-bunds are all explurjigating in an anti-clockwise Oodle Splunge cloud. I thought everyone knew that.

  • @ronanmcw
    @ronanmcw Před 3 měsíci +1

    I think this is one of the biggest arguments to say we're in a simulated reality - the simulation only does accurate calculations when required to due to observation in order to save resources.

  • @mangaranwow2543
    @mangaranwow2543 Před 5 lety +503

    Atoms are the same as humans, when they know that they are being watched, they act different. :D

  • @owninghappiness2284
    @owninghappiness2284 Před 2 lety +85

    This was such a GOOD video. Understanding this experiment was very difficult, & you nailed it in one shot !

    • @johnnyc.31
      @johnnyc.31 Před rokem +8

      You only think that he nailed it in one shot, because you were observing! If you didn’t watch this video, it definitely would’ve been two shots.

    • @kanalbenenner7830
      @kanalbenenner7830 Před rokem +2

      So, how does one creat a particle pattern, if I want to do it at home, how would I do that?

    • @jimbrewer5048
      @jimbrewer5048 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Ur comment deserves more love. Very clever

  • @LocalMotif
    @LocalMotif Před 6 měsíci +1

    I am 33, and just showed this to my 67-year-old university-educated, bible-following father. At the end of the video, he was speechless with raised eyebrows. My hope is that he will watch more of these with me in the future.

    • @kylekitzman
      @kylekitzman Před 3 měsíci

      Dont you think showing your dad things that are beyond his capability to understand is going to make him believe in the Bible even more so

    • @lawrence1318
      @lawrence1318 Před 2 měsíci

      You'd better think a bit more about your own beliefs.
      That light is both a wave and a particle mimicks Christian theology: the Trinity is both 3 (which speaks to particles) and yet 1 (which speaks to waves). Commensurately, the bible says that "God is light".
      So the material world speaks to spiritual realities. God is light and God is 3 and 1 at the same time. This is an exact parallel of what has been shown here about light's behaviour. Couldn't be more exact.

  • @hprfire
    @hprfire Před rokem +2

    what role does light play on the test with the atoms? is it 100% dark when the atoms are shot through or is light also present during the test? Does the detector use light in a way that cancels out the normal light wave pattern?

  • @kivvx4134
    @kivvx4134 Před 3 lety +142

    he's wearing a bowtie which helps me focus more by about 5%

  • @TheAcolossus
    @TheAcolossus Před 6 lety +216

    All future Nobel Laureates in the comment section

    • @ranichoudhary1989
      @ranichoudhary1989 Před 5 lety +1

      Hahaha

    • @mudza92
      @mudza92 Před 4 lety +6

      But jut what, just imagine, what if one of those commenters is the one capable of solving this mistery, and is dehumanized by ordinary youtube commenters disgusting behavior, and actually never look back at this double slit experiment again.
      Yeah we humans deserve to be wiped out of egzistence

    • @techdesigner9741
      @techdesigner9741 Před 4 lety +3

      Solved it: our thoughts create waves (brain activity can be measured through frequency) therefore when we're observing we're emitting waves and the particles are simply riding them 🏄‍♂️

    • @0i0l0o
      @0i0l0o Před 4 lety +1

      @@mudza92 relax dude. your resintment for humans has nothing to do with his briliant comment.

    • @mudza92
      @mudza92 Před 4 lety

      @@0i0l0o That's briliant to you? You are very easily amazed lol

  • @drewarnold6741
    @drewarnold6741 Před rokem +1

    The double slit experiment is amazing and truly bizarre. That said, I will leave this little nugget: there is no observation without interaction.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před rokem

      What's bizarre about two slits minus one slit makes one slit? That's kindergarten arithmetic. Don't tell me you stopped paying attention in kindergarten. ;-)

  • @arisskarpetis
    @arisskarpetis Před 5 měsíci

    Many lovely explanations of the experiment and its importance. However, I have still not found a video of an experiment demonstrating the two bars of photons when the detector is looking at the slit. Anyone has a link?

  • @CarolanneIAMTHEQUANTUM
    @CarolanneIAMTHEQUANTUM Před 3 lety +39

    I love telling everyone know about this experiment. I have for years. Mindblowing. I love quantum mechanics.

    • @SYNTAX_ERA
      @SYNTAX_ERA Před rokem +3

      Its like we create our own reality. The universe behaves normally when we are watching it. Glitch in the matrix there 😃

    • @donaldkasper8346
      @donaldkasper8346 Před rokem +2

      @@SYNTAX_ERA Yeah, other than the particles have electric fields, interacting with matter with a slit in it, with electric fields, observed by a detector that has an electric field. These are not particle experiments, they are field on field experiments.

  • @justlikethatnowadays8454
    @justlikethatnowadays8454 Před 4 lety +9

    Finally a clear video on quantum physics that directory tackles the subject without rambling

  • @Dragondave17real
    @Dragondave17real Před 11 měsíci +1

    1. The behaviour of atoms going through the slits is the same as the behaviour of light, for whatever reason (e.g. maybe something is altering the behaviour of the atoms, or maybe some assumption about the behaviour is incorrect).
    2. The detector interferes with the results. E.g. a detector could cause the photons to go through each slit with a 50% chance, whereas the absence of a detector could cause them to go through both(somehow).
    3. The detector being activated or deactivated is a determinant in whether or not the results get changed. Even if that doesn't appear to make any sense. Maybe it changes it in a way we just don't know about yet.
    To me that's the most rational explanation even if we don't know how or why.
    Haven't they done an experiment where they put a filter on one slot as a method of detection and the thickness of the filter effected the result of the spread?

  • @j.k24
    @j.k24 Před rokem

    has this test been improved on 'when' its observed? is it when its stored digitally, or when we see with our eyes the digital stored data on a different screen? did this observation got disected? cus some say its our consious that is the observer

  • @rakeshshah5032
    @rakeshshah5032 Před 3 lety +23

    My kitten behaves in the same way. He stops playing as soon as I start filming him !

    • @harisnh1366
      @harisnh1366 Před 2 lety

      Does your cat happen to be a member of Atom Cats?

    • @philippizza1
      @philippizza1 Před 2 lety +2

      Show him what happens to schrodinger's cat, and let's see if he still acts that way

  • @Drummerdude998
    @Drummerdude998 Před 8 lety +243

    Maybe the detector gives out an interference of its own which changes the way that the electrons act?

    • @2222badger2222
      @2222badger2222 Před 8 lety +34

      what about when the electron goes though the bottom slit ? the detector isn't required

    • @Drummerdude998
      @Drummerdude998 Před 8 lety +4

      ***** chill out, i'm just making suggestions xD

    • @ThatOneScienceGuy
      @ThatOneScienceGuy Před 8 lety +38

      I was wondering the same exact thing. This is the only logical explanation. I can only assume this has been ruled out as a possibility, and if so, I'd like to know why.

    • @Drummerdude998
      @Drummerdude998 Před 8 lety +2

      ***** oh soz mate

    • @PR0Z0MBIE9877
      @PR0Z0MBIE9877 Před 8 lety +1

      it actually does seem like that lmao

  • @the_grand_tourer
    @the_grand_tourer Před rokem

    Good try Jim, I love the way you communicate, I keep trying to get it, I’ve watched many descriptions of the double slit experiment, but even your very clear description still leaves me confused.

    • @promoteamutube
      @promoteamutube Před rokem

      Time will heal your confusion my friend. Remember, a mere 400 years ago, the Earth was believed to be flat. And it would have been absurd to tell those people that we will go to Mars. What is Mars? would have been the question. Today, we see the same thing happening. The universe is either particle or wave and is matter, they tell us. In 400 years from now, people will have a splitting laugh under the table, with contortions hearing this. How would you feel if someone tells you that the Earth is flat when you know that it's not? That is the same feeling I get when I see the descriptions of our universe in all scientific books at the moment and probably for another 400 years. But I stay away from the contortions and splitting laugh. Instead I give a bit of insights in forums like this one.

  • @mohtashami740
    @mohtashami740 Před rokem +1

    I have one simple explanation for that: The equipment you use to check the behavior of atoms, affects the behavior of atoms.
    simply use another method.
    There are lot of bad measurement devices that affect the measurement process. for example a bad voltmeter can itself drain current and show less voltage. A bad thermometer can itself changes the temperature of item under examination.

  • @jk1776yt
    @jk1776yt Před 4 lety +26

    Every time I hear about this experiment it blows my mind! Every time. This was a good simple explanation of the "mystery"!

    • @adamreecepiano
      @adamreecepiano Před 3 lety

      but see comment by Jako above with possible explanation

    • @promoteamutube
      @promoteamutube Před rokem

      There is no mystery my friend. “the observer is a part of the experiment, and the results will conform to the expectations of the observer”. By viewing the double slit experiment as not just an experiment, but as a reflection of the observer’s own experience, we see how our own expectations and beliefs can influence our reality. The "particle" itself is just information and has nothing solid. If you can find an individual capable of focusing so much as to see the picture of mona lisa in his mind, the "particle" will draw mona lisa on the detecting screen.

    • @Nothingness000
      @Nothingness000 Před 9 měsíci

      @@promoteamutube Perfect! This is what enlightened sages have said too.

  • @ASMRByAnkita
    @ASMRByAnkita Před 2 lety +12

    Thanks for the explanation. Finally understood what this experiment is. 🙂

    • @ianp3112
      @ianp3112 Před 2 lety +1

      2 channels you may like are, 'David Butler' and 'closer to the truth'
      Cheers

    • @CeRz
      @CeRz Před 8 měsíci +1

      Yes, and that's about as much as we can really understand haha what the experiment is, what's actually happening is just ridiculous.

  • @RoscoPColetraneIII
    @RoscoPColetraneIII Před 9 měsíci

    His comment of unplugging the atom detector? 100% reasonable and very much needed.

  • @dr.satishsharma1362
    @dr.satishsharma1362 Před rokem

    Excellent presentation... thanks.

  • @kadalijo2806
    @kadalijo2806 Před 4 lety +75

    'Do you really believe the moon is not there when you are not looking at it?'
    - - - Einstein

    • @Dailyplanit
      @Dailyplanit Před 3 lety +10

      according to this science its always there just sometimes as an energy wave and sometimes as a solid mass. But when is the moon EVER not looked at with millions of species crawling about the planet?

    • @game_developer_7382
      @game_developer_7382 Před 3 lety +1

      This is a theory. There is not proofs about it. This theory uses in the games for optimizing the game. Just render where you look at. We do not need to render the back view scene in the game for optimizing the game. The world is not video game and then there could not be such as this theory.

    • @doji-san
      @doji-san Před 3 lety

      @Fida Muhammad When you asked your friend you effectively transferred the vision to him so you ARE EFFECTIVELY looking at the moon. Now if he is also not looking at the moon and he tells you it's there, then he is lying to you :D

    • @johnmoore4523
      @johnmoore4523 Před 3 lety

      Prove this to yourself, sit quietly,clear your mind, close your eyes, close your mouth, close your nostrils, give it half an hour and then ask your self what really exists. Then try this for 3 hours!!!

    • @erbalumkan369
      @erbalumkan369 Před 3 lety

      I am looking at the moon where it was about a second ago.

  • @Brandezi84
    @Brandezi84 Před 2 lety +38

    This is so fascinating! I could learn this stuff all day!

  • @the_lone_rider_9298
    @the_lone_rider_9298 Před 8 měsíci

    I have seen several videos and here you're talking about atoms shooted. I other videos people speak about shooting and measure electrons or photons. I'm wondering how to measure photons by its for another day. Could someone pls answer what particles we shot and measured during this experiment? Atoms, electrons or photons?

  • @katzunjammer
    @katzunjammer Před 7 měsíci +1

    i used to think that the particles might be accompanied by some kind of electromagnetic field (which acts like waves) and the field goes through both slits and interferes with itself, but the particle only goes through one slit. So the interfered field guides the particle into an interference pattern, even one at a time. But I didnt know that the pattern changed when the device was switched off.

    • @xfinity9397
      @xfinity9397 Před 7 měsíci

      This has to do with the device which is being used. How are we detecting the small particle without interference that's the question.

  • @coolbeans5911
    @coolbeans5911 Před 3 lety +15

    I don't know anything physics and have tried reading up on this experiment but could never really understand it and why it's so famous, but now i have a much better idea!!! Wonderfully explained and thank you so much!! It's so cool and weird😂😂 atoms are sneaky

    • @SunShine-kd6td
      @SunShine-kd6td Před 2 lety

      Veritasium did a much better video.

    • @tony_1980
      @tony_1980 Před rokem

      @@SunShine-kd6td If you think that. you don't understand the problem

    • @promoteamutube
      @promoteamutube Před rokem

      Not really sneaky my friend.
      The atoms and molecules themselves possess kinds of consciousness impossible for you to analyze, because the scales of your activities are so different. They are information-gathering processes, however, containing codified electromagnetic properties that slip between all of your devices. The atoms and molecules and all of the seemingly smaller "particles" within them are, again, information carrying processes, and upon them depends your entire interpretation of the nature of events.

    • @j.p.5617
      @j.p.5617 Před rokem

      @@promoteamutube gathering information for reality?

  • @MrSamBowers
    @MrSamBowers Před 10 lety +13

    Having watched the video again & again I stand by my original statement. If you unplug the detector & the wave pattern goes back to the multi-pattern then you are interfering with the atoms when you have the detector turn on. Exactly how does this detector in this experiment work?

  • @paulcrossen2039
    @paulcrossen2039 Před 4 měsíci

    Sir I have an idea and love to discuss it but like to know how to contact U personally

  • @CarlWinter-oy8uf
    @CarlWinter-oy8uf Před 2 měsíci

    ONLY NOW -DO I BEGIN to see how this double slit experiment becomes normal --then very weird ---thankyou Jim --your explanation is eye opening !

  • @cheriereiner
    @cheriereiner Před 5 lety +227

    Make it 3 slits to confuse them 🤣

    • @David-bc4rh
      @David-bc4rh Před 4 lety +49

      block all the slits
      turn out the lights
      exit lab promptly

    • @davelordy
      @davelordy Před 4 lety +14

      @@David-bc4rh Don't forget to lock up the atoms first, you really don't want to leave them loose in the lab, I use a shoe box.

    • @Mysixofnine
      @Mysixofnine Před 3 lety +1

      Or remove the slit and place a hair.

    • @Mysixofnine
      @Mysixofnine Před 3 lety

      @Tanaphar Plus Masks what’s waving? Aether?
      I don’t use the same mechanism everyone else’s uses for light. I use another assumption.

    • @Mysixofnine
      @Mysixofnine Před 3 lety +2

      @Tanaphar Plus Masks so the question is, why to we see fringe pattern on the wall? We have two hypothesis, on a “wave” two a particle. Can we assume of a third hypothesis that mediates light?

  • @aga1nst
    @aga1nst Před 2 lety +8

    I remember 20 years ago my elementary physics teacher mentioned this experiment and said "and this is where our physics ends".
    I didn't remember anything about the physics, just that phrase. Now as an older guy i decided to google it and see what that was and if they figured it out. I'm so glad i did, this has to be the coolest bug in the matrix that I've heard so far :D

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před 2 lety

      So you met an idiot with Dunning-Kruger. So what? There are thousands of them in this comment section alone.

    • @aga1nst
      @aga1nst Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@schmetterling4477 whoa, what does Dunning-Kruger have to do with what I said? You're high or what?

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před 2 lety

      @@aga1nst A physics teacher who says that "this is where our physics ends" is displaying Dunning-Kruger. (S)he doesn't know what (s)he doesn't know.

    • @aga1nst
      @aga1nst Před 2 lety +1

      @@schmetterling4477 you mean she should have said "this is where *our understanding of* physics ends"? That's what she said actually, but it got lost in translation.
      Really big deal, if you get triggered by things like that, you have issues.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před 2 lety

      @@aga1nst No, she should have said "This is where MY understanding of physics ends.". That she didn't is where her Dunning-Kruger starts. You are not very far away from displaying it, either.

  • @PA-gc6qj
    @PA-gc6qj Před 8 měsíci

    I would like to request a Nobel prize with my finding below:
    I can explain why light and matter can satisfy the seemingly-incongruous classical definitions for both waves and particles in double-slit experiment.
    Light is an electromagnetic radiation with magnetic field. When it spreads out in particle with magnetic field as wave, it forms several bands on screen.
    However, the magnetic field is affected and disappeared with an observer aside so that only two bands are shown.

  • @SenoirDude
    @SenoirDude Před rokem

    Sorry for being dim, but is the result not simply caused by the detector interfering with the cause of the interference?
    eg the waves (of something) causing atom interference pattern are nullified by detector being on, so it reverts to grains of sand effect. Like somebody turning a fan on/off. Has the experiment been conducted with different types of detector? Going to have to look this up now :). Thank you for the video.

  • @severe28
    @severe28 Před 10 lety +7

    Great lecture. Probably the best explaining the Double Slit Experiment..

  • @Chrizzlyy88
    @Chrizzlyy88 Před 2 lety +3

    this is the best explained video about the double slit i've seen! thank you

  • @binkkytube
    @binkkytube Před rokem +2

    could the elecrtical feild in the counter be affecting the atoms?

  • @Ellie-jw3mr
    @Ellie-jw3mr Před 3 lety +18

    I just read Rovelli and have some thoughts about this. According to loop theory there is no such thing as a global time but the "mark" of events/processes.
    What does this do to the double slit experiment? Could it be that the probability wave is not collapsing because of the “record”/ obvervation, but rather that there is no particle, just a sequence of an event? That the future and past is indistiguishible if there is no “record” ie no “foot print” of the photon traveling towards the slits?
    So in other words there isnt a wave that collapses into a particle, but rather a series of probable events which are all leaving a mark and dont exist as eigher particles or waves.
    The particle is the event. When we mesure it, it doesnt collapse, but we just measure a point in this event sequence?
    When it has leaft a mark/footprint/has been measured it stops behaving like a “wave” because it gets a past and therefore its future is limited.
    What do you think of these thoughts? Is it just an uninformed thought of a non phycisist or am I just saying the same thing but in other words? ^^

    • @todoelmundoapesta
      @todoelmundoapesta Před 2 lety +3

      Sounds like not recording allows for us to have a small glimpse of multiverse posibilities as if the experiment moves through 5th dimension but shows different paths, once we record, the gate allowing us to observe multiverse through 5th dimension closes, hence no more interference pattern

    • @generalruler
      @generalruler Před rokem

      I I think your thoughts are nice, I think they may have been informed by several physicists, because who else would make seemingly normal words become an abstract concept that is by human standards relatively inconceivable.
      I think it depends on how many slits were open when you sent the thought particles in to the comment field, but now that I've waved them through they might get a new future ripple into the slits that I may/may not be recording;/observing despite the inherit pretense of the wave's literal unobservability (adds triple word score) Perhaps you could experiment by saying the same thing but through other slits and the see if the result results on the "mark" but in actual words, I hope they do, not theoretically, with actual processable words though.
      What do they think do you think?
      thanks in advance.
      Ham.

    • @r.gelmers6580
      @r.gelmers6580 Před měsícem

      Very similar to my thoughts on this effect. I think it's a natural mechanism to guard the laws of causality. Both interaction and information collapse the wave function because at that point, the particle becomes part of the chain of events.

  • @badlydrawnturtle8484
    @badlydrawnturtle8484 Před 8 lety +87

    It bothers me how when describing the double slit experiment, they nearly always gloss over the inner workings of the detector. Since we're dealing with individual particles, it's kind of important to know what the detection method is so we can know how they are or are not interfered with. In this video, for instance, it is utterly un-awing to me that the interference pattern comes back when you turn off the detector. If it is in any way an active detector rather than a passive one (think bouncing a second ball off of a first ball to figure out where it is, vs looking at the track left behind as it rolls), then turning it off is essentially backtracking to the experimental conditions that produced the prior interference pattern, so of course you get the same result.

    • @badlydrawnturtle8484
      @badlydrawnturtle8484 Před 8 lety +17

      ohemgee
      That's the problem, isn't it? An instrument effect is the most logical conclusion to draw from the double-slit experiment, but videos like this (and indeed whole communities, including seemingly many physicists) are trying to argue the exact opposite: That it isn't an instrument effect; that the “observer effect” is a separate concept that involves some sort of knowledge transfer rather than an interaction of physical states.
      You can see that this is what they are trying to do when they put in the detector and the interference goes away; and then they turn off the detector without removing it and say “Look, the interference comes back! It must not be because of the detector!” If they thought it was an instrument effect, the final round of oohs and awws wouldn't happen. Hence my comment about active vs passive detection; the way videos like this treat the experiment only makes sense if it is a passive detector, since turning off an active detector is effectively removing it. (It becomes even more troublesome when you know that passive detectors at the quantum scale are pretty much impossible.)
      I guess I'm less confused about the experiment than I am about people's reactions to it. Why do they think this is impressive, let alone a world-shattering paradox? I feel like I'm missing something by not finding it as baffling as all of these scientists make it out to be.

    • @badlydrawnturtle8484
      @badlydrawnturtle8484 Před 8 lety +6

      ohemgee
      I think this guy honestly believes that there is something other than instrument interaction going on. I don't have any direct evidence of a large number of physicists thinking that way, but I get an impression of it from the phrasing that goes with this sort of experiment, even if the person talking is otherwise competent.

    • @Goohuman
      @Goohuman Před 8 lety +13

      Badly Drawn Turtle The reason we don't hear scientists refer to the detector is because it had the same effect on the experiment in both cases. Without changing a thing, the experiment was done recording and not recording the information. Believe me, this experiment has been repeated many times and by much smarter people than you and I. Detector interference was the very first thing they tested for. We are beyond that now.
      But there is a logical answer. It just doesn't apply to a strictly material world.

    • @badlydrawnturtle8484
      @badlydrawnturtle8484 Před 8 lety +7

      Goohuman
      Yet, I have yet to find any reliable source that describes such an experiment with adequate attention to the detector. In other words, I don't believe you. Not without sources.
      A strictly material world is all we have evidence for. Postulating non-material answers would require a lot more than one type of experiment; it is an extraordinary claim that would need an extraordinary reason to consider it.

    • @Goohuman
      @Goohuman Před 8 lety +3

      Badly Drawn Turtle I get it. You are not willing to consider non-material causes. I put it to you that the results of this test are pretty extraordinary.
      If you are seriously questioning the detector, then you owe it to yourself to look into the actual research that was done.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double-slit_experiment
      You may also be interested in an even newer version where the observation is made after the photons have passed through one of the slits and before they land. Quite fascinating:
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double-slit_experiment#Delayed_choice_and_quantum_eraser_variations

  • @Endevide
    @Endevide Před 6 měsíci

    Could it be interference from the electricity that powered the detector? Is there another way of redoing the experiment with another type of verifying they cross the slits instead of using the detector?

  • @4or871
    @4or871 Před rokem

    Does the position of the detector/observer influence the double slit experiment? At what distance is the result an interference pattern again?
    I’m asking this because the detector/observer influences the result of the double slit experiment.

  • @nemo17923
    @nemo17923 Před 5 lety +27

    My brain hurts in the best of ways