The Mystery of Light - Walter Lewin - July 19, 2005

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  • čas přidán 15. 03. 2015
  • This was a talk for a very small group of high school students and science teachers. Prof. Lewin talked about the bizarre behavior of light and he did many demonstrations to show how bizarre light can be. He showed interference of light (also of sound). Everyone was given a diffraction grating (to keep) with which they could see spectral lines in helium and neon. He also demonstrated polarization of light.
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Komentáře • 690

  • @flxblflyr
    @flxblflyr Před 4 lety +196

    When I was about 10 years old, maybe 1970, my Dad saw a notice in the paper, of a visiting scientist at Furman University, near our home. We went see his public lecture on X-Ray astronomy, not knowing what to expect. The charming, enthusiastic young lecturer told a wild, absorbing tale of his adventures with balloon-borne telescopes in the Autralian outback- and what they had learned about X-Ray objects- neutron stars, black holes... It was thrilling; I was rapt. I never forgot the feeling of being at that lecture. I went on to become an electrical engineer, and never lost my love of the science.
    Forty five years later, I found Lewin on you tube, as I was preparing for teaching some high schoolers. I started watching his lectures- which are exemplary. After quite a few, I came to his last lecture- where he reminisced about his early research at MIT. X-Ray telescopes, ballons, Australia. Oddly familiar...When he showed the photos, I suddenly realized I'd seen those pictures before- when I was ten. The guest lecturer who inspired so much was the young Walter Lewin.
    Thanks, Dr Lewin.

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 4 lety +65

      hello Stan. I recall that I gave 5 lectures at Furman every January for 5 years in a row. The lecture that you attended may have been just one lecture before my January routine returns.

    • @jjtompson5914
      @jjtompson5914 Před 4 lety +7

      @@lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259 I have question if i may?
      How can both statements below be true?
      Knowledge of the Which Path collapses the Wave Function.....................(DCQE Experiment)
      Knowledge of the Which Path does Not collapse the Wave Function......(Observation of single
      slit diffraction)

    • @81giorikas
      @81giorikas Před 2 lety

      @@lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259 Didn't Einsteing himself actually hinted on the answer to the double slit experiment anyway? Not so much of a mystery the way he thinks of it.

    • @maxmax0
      @maxmax0 Před 2 lety +2

      Wow! Quite a story!

  • @Todenkopf09
    @Todenkopf09 Před 9 lety +42

    I wish my Physics professors had this kind of passion. I love seeing the methods for discovery on these topics, the reasoning behind why they attempted different experiments. One answer can lead to so many more interesting questions.

  • @Meninx87
    @Meninx87 Před 8 lety +50

    Professor Lewin you are truly an inspiration and i'm grateful to you for the work you've done.

  • @sosheeanand3537
    @sosheeanand3537 Před 8 lety +206

    Dear prof Lewin
    I am a researcher with PhD in Biotechnology. I ran out from Physics and Maths because it was so difficult to understand things.
    Ironically I landed in a Physics lab in Grenoble, France for my post doc (protein biophysics). I saw your "last lecture" first and my mind blowed as things were explained so simple. I started watching your lectures every weekend and now I am confident that I understand things. Extending this now I am also learning astrophysics and calculus. World (at least for those countries with poor education) need inspiring teachers, I blame my country for not giving this kind of basic education.
    It is more important not to destroy the interest by bad teaching but this is what going on everywhere.
    Now I can inspire my 7 year old son to study Physics and Maths..

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 8 lety +73

      +Soshee Ananda Thank you Soshee. I am delighted that my lectures have changed your life. I hope your son will also learn to appreciate them in time.

    • @aruntejamarakani6817
      @aruntejamarakani6817 Před 7 lety +22

      Lectures by Walter Lewin. They will make you ♥ Physics.

    • @animations3193
      @animations3193 Před 5 lety +4

      Man thats ur fault ,dont blame india

    • @mitochondria7321
      @mitochondria7321 Před 5 lety +11

      @@animations3193 yes ,not every indian physics or maths lecturers have ability to lecture like this

    • @animations3193
      @animations3193 Před 5 lety

      @@mitochondria7321 man don't think like that, there r so many proff's who can do teachings better those mit proff . Im not blaming mit but some concepts mit proff not explained better than my proff.

  • @muhammadirfankhan997
    @muhammadirfankhan997 Před 8 lety +59

    Sir Walter Lewin, I have made a habit of watching at least one of your lecture a day and getting amazed by the beauty of Physics, thank you so much. Though I remained a regular student of Physics from schooling to university but understanding it to its core was never this simple. Wish I was able to take one of your lecture if not all. Also, I am buying your book "for the love of Physics" as a reminder of your great work in the field and in the meanwhile requesting the administrator of this page to upload every lecture of yours here on youtube. Thanks and stay healthy. :)

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 8 lety +26

      +Muhammad Irfan Khan Dear Muhammad. Thanks for your kind note. There are 284 videos on this site. That will keep you busy! Good Luck!

    • @ahsanrubel2869
      @ahsanrubel2869 Před 3 lety

      I was not a student of physics... We were so unlucky that we never had teachers like Walter Lewin. It’s surprising that I found myself learning physics because of this kind of teachers.. Long live sir Walter Lewin..

  • @cmetube
    @cmetube Před 6 lety +3

    Great lecture Professor Lewin. Beautifully organized and incredibly poetic

  • @tylershepard4269
    @tylershepard4269 Před 4 lety +3

    Hi Professor Lewin
    I’m an undergraduate in Electrical Engineering studying RF and Microwaves. Thank you for helping me to love light!

  • @christopherwoodcock8535
    @christopherwoodcock8535 Před 3 lety +1

    Second time I’ve watched this great lecture. Since the first time I have purchased a Linear Polarisation Filter of my own. Fascinating stuff. Thank you Professor Lewin. Inspirational as ever

  • @susansutton1712
    @susansutton1712 Před 6 lety +2

    thank you for making complex knowledge easy to understand and for making it easy to access your lectures. Much respect to you Sir Walter Lewin 🖖

  • @kenantahir
    @kenantahir Před 4 lety +1

    you are an awesome teacher. i only wish i had teachers like you back in school days (20yrs ago).. maybe then i would have passed my physics exams and would have had interest in them back then... see this teacher knows how to break it all down to the last bit.. he practically unravels it all for you to understand!

  • @directedbypuma
    @directedbypuma Před 5 lety +3

    You make it so understandable, thank you! I am a licensed ham radio enthusiast and this lecture puts it all in perspective for me. I think a particle is also a wave but at very high frequency that you might not see its wave effects in nature.

    • @sambastable513
      @sambastable513 Před rokem

      I concur, I think the frequency becomes so high that it becomes Circular producing matter

  • @mindscraped
    @mindscraped Před 7 lety +1

    i posted a question about one of his light demonstrations and asked a question about the light being a wave or particle and the observer effect . You guys gave me an amazing answer i have never heard before thanks. But i am commenting about it here about that post because i cannot find it anymore. I just know i got a response with my notification .
    The point is thank you so much for answering my post . the answer was amazing

  • @chekystar
    @chekystar Před 4 lety +2

    great teacher i am not student of physics but i watch your lectures anyway because you make it interesting and because i love to know how the world works. thank you :) i learned a lot from you. keep on the good work

  • @amisharawal3967
    @amisharawal3967 Před 3 lety +1

    Hats off Professor Walter Lewin !!!
    I m in 11th standard, taken PCM (science - A group), very interested in and fascinated by physics (especially quantum)....
    I clearly understood 95% of all your lectures...........
    Very inspiring, and in a nutshell, I can say, your lecture is like 'Physics Made Simple'...............
    Thank you sooooooooooooo much for sooo very much interesting and inspiring lectures............

  • @satyanaidu4
    @satyanaidu4 Před 7 lety +4

    A bad teacher complains, an average teacher teaches, a good teacher explains, a great teacher inspires! I'm writing this at 4am, you sir have made me decide to pick up my physics textbook again at age 36! Thank you!! :) p.s: I love it the way you say " this is an illegal question!"

  • @lalropuiachinzah3335
    @lalropuiachinzah3335 Před 4 lety

    Since i watch this lecture video, now everyday i watch at least one lecture during lockdown, I highly appreciate and love your teaching,Sir

  • @manishk45
    @manishk45 Před 5 lety +16

    I would like to meet this #Physicist once in life. I love his lectures.

  • @keithlillis7962
    @keithlillis7962 Před 4 lety +3

    Excellent stuff and so glad Prof Lewin mentioned in a little more detail the findings of Quantum Mechanics, as up to that point he had me convinced that light was just a wave :-)

  • @jessemontano6399
    @jessemontano6399 Před 4 lety +6

    Wow, it's so awesome that the professor answers so many questions/comments. That's legend!!!

  • @bradjunes1610
    @bradjunes1610 Před 4 lety

    It was hard to turn off what I do at age 70 and get back into thinking, but enjoyed your thoughts. I've tout many with a simpler approach of more one on one. The masses won't understand at the speed you teach. But I loved it. Much thanks.

  • @seminolerick6845
    @seminolerick6845 Před 4 lety +5

    Just found this awesome presenter of info, yesterday. On top of everything else... never saw anyone else draw dotted lines on a chalkboard like him ! Silly, I know... but a great, effective tool in his tool box !

    • @suecondon1685
      @suecondon1685 Před 3 lety

      That's another mystery! 🤔 How does he do that!

  • @dalenassar9152
    @dalenassar9152 Před 7 lety +2

    Prof Lewin.
    Your presentation: "THE MYSTERY OF LIGHT" was fascinating--thank you.
    I think I have an explanation on why the small audience could NOT hear a VERY low volume with the destructive interference of the sound waves emanating from the speakers (while you did in private). PERHAPS THE SOUND IS REFLECTING OFF THE SWAYING, GROUP OF PEOPLE--THUS SCATTERING THE NODES SOMEWHAT!
    Thanks for everything--you will never know the enjoyment you have provided me.
    Dale Nassar,
    Amite, Louisiana.

  • @gopisingh1630
    @gopisingh1630 Před 4 lety +18

    love from india . i live in a village in punjab ,india . here , everyone wants to go to U.S , just to earn more money, by doing labour . but i would like to go there as a theoretical physicist . thank you sir ,for helping me lose my virginity in physics.

    • @soumenatha7288
      @soumenatha7288 Před 10 měsíci

      😂

    • @simonmasters3295
      @simonmasters3295 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@soumenatha7288I found the sentiment rather challenging...do you suppose she or he got to the US?

    • @joseg.matamoros2847
      @joseg.matamoros2847 Před 3 měsíci

      “Lose my virginity in physics” is wild

    • @vik2377
      @vik2377 Před 2 měsíci

      Kudos to you my friend.
      .keep it up and you would be successful

  • @swapnilsaha8143
    @swapnilsaha8143 Před 4 lety +2

    Dear Professor Lewin
    I am an Indian Engineering Student... From Childhood I 've always wanted to be a physics teacher..... Its really Hard in my country to Catch This type of dream....Here this system doesnot look How much you know rather it looks How much U have got marks....they will not see... Who has understood and who has only memorized the Whole page books... research...I've had So many questions...I've resolved...many...and still have some...Sir, U probably donot know.... Everytime I see your lectures and remember your picture.... I gain my motivation to get a Stable post in research....Even though I had to choose engineering...because of Our Education system....but Still If I have to go to particle research path...I have to take a very Very long path....And I will obviously succeed...one day....Your Lectures...changed my perceptions and helped me get my motivations back...everytime I've been pushed apart from physics..
    Thank You Sir♥♥♥♥♥♥🤣

  • @das250250
    @das250250 Před 6 lety

    Walter not only teaches at the highest possible level and professionalism but his black board layout is so organised , writing is legible and drawings are just so well drawn. In my opinion , he sets the bench mark for lecturers ..

  • @lbomcarvalho
    @lbomcarvalho Před 5 lety

    Prof Lewin, your performance I take as a standard performance of somebody that loves physics, science, teaching, ..., my sincere congratulations.

  • @MihaiBadicioiu
    @MihaiBadicioiu Před 9 lety

    Wow - a new "episode" I did not knew.... thank you!

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 9 lety +4

      Mihai Badicioiu This site contains ALL my lectures. My 94 course lectures are in much higher resolution than anywhere else. They also show problems and exams (and solutions) and Lecture Notes (pdf files below the videos). Not all my course lectures have Lecture notes. Notice the many non-course lectures including my 8 lectures that I gave for Japan TV (NHK) these are in HD!

  • @RaivoltG
    @RaivoltG Před 4 lety

    I wish you were one of my Professors! I don't understand much of what you discuss but you are so enjoyable to watch, and I do grasp some of what you say! You are pretty funny too! I liked it when you threw "photons" to your students! The egg on your shirt is funny as hell too! I wish more professors were like you! I'm sure that you are making more of an impact than you are aware of! You will definitely be directly responsible for many good things to come. Your students will be the ones to make discoveries, as I'm sure you have and will continue to. Thank you for the videos, I love watching them!

  • @suecondon1685
    @suecondon1685 Před 3 lety +2

    For me, light is the biggest mystery of all. Thank you, this was fascinating.

  • @joannadrozdz3848
    @joannadrozdz3848 Před 4 lety +4

    Wonderful lecture, thank you.

  • @alimukhtar4759
    @alimukhtar4759 Před rokem

    Hello professor
    Your lectures are helping me and many other physics lovers to understand the nature quite easily.
    I am lucky to be able to get your lectures online
    Wish you a healthy life

  • @edmundotu4602
    @edmundotu4602 Před 9 lety +2

    i really love you Walter Lewin, you make everything so easy to understand

  • @ajaykumarmaruvada9113
    @ajaykumarmaruvada9113 Před 4 lety

    Dear prof Lewin a very happy teachers day. We wish India should have a guru like you to explore our horizons and to know that science which hides truth is also curious and fun. Thank u once again . HAPPY TEACHERS DAY. !!!!!!

  • @fransb8543
    @fransb8543 Před 4 lety

    Geweldige lezing, zeer boeiend en leerzaam. Blij dat ik uw kanaal heb gevonden.

  • @fireboymsd7456
    @fireboymsd7456 Před 4 lety

    Always delivering explicit lectures

  • @nobodyyouknow9839
    @nobodyyouknow9839 Před 4 lety +2

    My father give me telescope at age 15 on my birthday 😅..... As I asked him for that later he asked why I am so addicted towards science and physics specially then I answered you don't meet the legend Walter lewin that's why you are talking like I meet him daliy on his CZcams channel and get inspired . Your every lecture is a masterpiece .... I am glad that camera and internet make your lectures alive forever . Wish that I can also witness the great Richard fyemen 😢😳. Love from India sir

  • @rajeshkaushik5223
    @rajeshkaushik5223 Před 7 lety +4

    I loves Ur all lectures, it's very adorable.u r my best teacher of physics

  • @hewhenthehe3722
    @hewhenthehe3722 Před 3 lety

    Professor Lewin, can i just say the wave you drew at 6:02 was beautiful

  • @aaronkellner620
    @aaronkellner620 Před 4 lety

    Very well put together lecture. What I have always had trouble with is the claim that light is some sort of EM wave. The implications of that simply don't clearly manifest as one would expect. My opinion is that there are clues that light is more than that. Much more.

  • @clayz1
    @clayz1 Před 4 lety

    He’s given this lecture hundreds of times. Probably. Very good, I have seen it a couple of times.

  • @glen-draketoolworks7186
    @glen-draketoolworks7186 Před 4 lety +2

    The "orders" appear to fade as they move away from the zero order. Is that really happening and if so, then why?

  • @em_universal
    @em_universal Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome explanation!

  • @shadowmedow4028
    @shadowmedow4028 Před 3 lety

    sir ur lectures are damn inspiring.....whenever i wtch them i find a great diff in my teachers saying and urs...#inspiring they don't give tht chance of questioning topics....they say either ur oversmart or dumbo....and i got depressed due to this reason still i couldn't stop it ....u r a living inspiraations topics r well revised here thnks sir !!

  • @drdeak
    @drdeak Před 7 lety +2

    Particles or waves, hey professor Lewin what about David Bohm's theories on the argument?

  • @luckynewman
    @luckynewman Před 8 lety +1

    Dr. Lewin thank you for the videos! Awesome delivery. I have been trying to find an answer to the question how much uv light penetrates water (say pool water) I see a lot of sites saying that 100% of uv is reflected and others contradicting this. If you could shed some light on this question or maybe point me in the direction where i can learn more for myself that would be really cool. Thank you Professor Lewin and my girlfriend and i loved your book btw we got the audio version!

  • @faisalkhatri1813
    @faisalkhatri1813 Před 7 lety +2

    awesome.. Thank you sir.. very well explanation.

  • @kss4282
    @kss4282 Před 3 lety +3

    Please answer me Sir. I am from India. I'm crazy about physics. I have a doubt.
    If I turn on two lasers (say A and B)facing each other simultaneously in vacuum. Then the velocity of 1st photon thrown from A with respect to the first photon from B shouldn't be half of c. How is it constant?

    • @studyingchannel2328
      @studyingchannel2328 Před 3 lety +1

      I also want to know
      .please like my comment when teacher give you the answer. So I can be notified.

  • @amisharawal3967
    @amisharawal3967 Před 3 lety +1

    And yaa also I have a question......,
    In some of the many versions of the double slit experiments performed by many physicists, many used electrons, and some of them used single electrons.....
    But according to the uncertainty principle, we cannot measure both the position, and the momentum of any particle at the same time, accuretely......
    So how can we manage to produce (eject) only single electrons of specific momentum, without first locating them in an atom, and in turn ruining the certainty in its momentum ( which is what we actually wanna be very certain about, especially in the quantum eraser version of the double slit experiment)
    Pls answer and plsssss correctme if I m wrong........
    And once again thank you Professor for the lecture........

  • @fjs1111
    @fjs1111 Před 2 lety

    Not a typical professor, this is a different scale of talent right here.

  • @JimCarver
    @JimCarver Před 8 lety

    Oh good, this one I haven't seen yet. I've watched all the lectures from the three courses, many multiple times. I always catch something I didn't notice the first time around.
    I just watched your farewell lecture at MIT again. That was kind of sad. I bought your book and am going to give it to my grandson when he gets old enough. That may be pretty soon. He loves science.

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 8 lety +4

      +Jim Carver Hello Jim - If you have seen all my course lectures you should also consider to watch my 8 lectures I gave for TV (NHK) in Japan. The version I have posted on this channel is in English. It's very nice that you will give my book to your grandson. If you send it to me I will sign it and return it to you.

    • @JimCarver
      @JimCarver Před 8 lety

      Wow, that's great, Walter. I'll do both!
      You know, to tell the truth, I had already loved physics...but you made it a lot more fun. :)
      Thank you and I wish you good health!

  • @anuragmishra2245
    @anuragmishra2245 Před 6 lety +1

    Sir, Why do we use constant of proportionality ?

  • @ramonchan9732
    @ramonchan9732 Před 4 lety +1

    I like the fact that professor Lewin tried to explain high school physics to those kids.

  • @Eztoez
    @Eztoez Před 4 lety +1

    Professor Lewin, you remind me of Richard Feynman: both superlative communicators and deeply passionate about Newtonian physics & QM. Thank you.

  • @羽衣甘藍奧頓
    @羽衣甘藍奧頓 Před rokem

    Immaculate educator. Thank you sir. 🙏👍

  • @aashik9625
    @aashik9625 Před rokem

    New to your channel professor Lewin ❤️. Take care of your health professor .

  • @yogitadhakad5193
    @yogitadhakad5193 Před 3 lety

    All ur videos helps alot ....

  • @segalindoa
    @segalindoa Před 2 lety

    The guy sleeping at 27:27 is priceless (also the way the professor draws the dotted lines. That's chalkboard mastery).

  • @lemont2005
    @lemont2005 Před 7 lety +11

    Hello! Sorry for this inocent/strange question that I´ll ask: Did anybody have ever try to collide one eletron against one proton? What happened so?

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 7 lety +25

      Good question. In principle this can be done, but you would learn very little from just one such such an interaction. Experiments are therefore always done with large amounts of electrons and protons, not just 1.The results vary greatly depending on the energy of the electron. .
      "1) Elastic electron-proton scattering: the electron and proton just "bounce" off each other under some angle theta. By observing the cross section of the scattering versus the theta angle it was shown that proton is not a point particle, but an extended object.
      2) Deep inelastic scattering: the incoming high energy electron "destroys" the proton into a bunch of outgoing hadrons (mostly pions). By observing the cross section of this interaction it can be shown that proton is composed of pointlike particles. The electrons collide elastically with a parton"

    • @kovanovsky2233
      @kovanovsky2233 Před 6 lety

      Just to add from what I know, there is a research going on where scientists basically smash 2 protons (if I remember correctly) together and analyze what happens. And that's how they found subatomic particles (quarks, etc).
      Please correct me if I'm wrong.

    • @prakharmathur9453
      @prakharmathur9453 Před 6 lety

      I have 3 questions:-
      1) Since proton and electron attract each other, then how will they bounce off each other?
      2) What are partons?
      3) Is the energy of electron in first case lower than that in second case?

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 6 lety +2

      1. learn about QM
      2. use google
      3. question unclear

    • @gh0stgl1tch
      @gh0stgl1tch Před 5 lety

      @@lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259 if so then how light passes through glass. Just curious , I think of a lot but everything ends in a stand still

  • @sahilkumar-jn8vb
    @sahilkumar-jn8vb Před 6 lety

    Excellent lecture with clear explanation sir u r great
    Watching your lecture I m inspired how to make physics more and more interesting before this physics was just a discription of heavy maths and digest them anyhow to pass to clear the exam
    Nice sir

  • @TheZooman22
    @TheZooman22 Před 7 lety

    These lectures are quite enjoyable.

  • @santhosh.thatikayala7479
    @santhosh.thatikayala7479 Před 5 lety +1

    Thanku very much sir...u make me love physics yjrough ur lectures

  • @dalenassar9152
    @dalenassar9152 Před 7 lety

    Prof Lewin, I have just watched your lecture on the uncertainty principle with the demo of the light spreading as you narrowed the vertical slit. I have been wondering: What would happen if, instead of a shrinking linear slit, there was a shrinking circular opening (such as an iris) that could shrink all the way shut. What would the light pattern look like as the uncertainty spreading began???

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 7 lety

      >>>What would the light pattern look like as the uncertainty spreading began???>>>
      yes, of course UP always holds.

  • @UtraVioletDreams
    @UtraVioletDreams Před 4 lety

    Physics I love it. Bedankt Prof. Lewin

  • @kiprutojunior9826
    @kiprutojunior9826 Před 4 lety

    The best physics lecturer of all time

  • @dgtamil492
    @dgtamil492 Před 7 lety +1

    sir,i like ur all the lectures ,it is very awesome ...............................i love so much ur art of teaching..........

  • @MrRichygm
    @MrRichygm Před 8 lety

    Another brilliant lecture.

  • @chazguthrieful
    @chazguthrieful Před 4 lety +1

    Is the double slit experiment interference due to partical entanglement?

  • @MojeAdeyemo
    @MojeAdeyemo Před 12 dny

    Well done Prof lewin 👋👋
    You're one of the best physicist I've ever seen in this century

  • @jacobmerz2803
    @jacobmerz2803 Před 9 lety

    I wish your lectures were captioned for Deaf folks like me.. I watched your last lecture and I was blown away.

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 9 lety +1

      +Lectures by Walter Lewin. They will make you ♥ Physics. Jacob all 8.01x lectures have subtitles. We are also working on 8.02 subtitles (it's time consuming).

  • @davidwilkie9551
    @davidwilkie9551 Před 4 lety +5

    Life is Quantum Mechanics, but that is a statement about function, not a description about the lifeforms.

  • @malvikaawasthi2457
    @malvikaawasthi2457 Před 3 lety +1

    Does heat+heat also can give no heat if destructive interference is applied please like this as much as so that prof walter lewin can answer this question

  • @sangitasinghal3249
    @sangitasinghal3249 Před 5 lety +10

    I can literally hear the destructive interfere on my smartphone. At ..
    57:09 and constructive at 57:13
    Thanks Professor Lewin, you really made me to ❤️ Physics.

    • @miz2k188
      @miz2k188 Před 3 lety

      Ye bro me to o
      Thanks for this

  • @vigneshkumar9378
    @vigneshkumar9378 Před 4 lety

    Sir i am from India, in my college classes seems to be so boring and sleepy, faculties expel what they get from textbooks, it doesnt really take student into his imagination or unveil the mystery of the subject. Your classes are really fantastic sir.

  • @princeacez5905
    @princeacez5905 Před 5 lety

    Can someone please explain how you derive the expression for roughly the number of nodal lines(2d/(wavelength))-39:17

    • @dhakshan
      @dhakshan Před 4 lety

      That would be in class 11 or 12 text book right?

  • @bulelanigongxeka4468
    @bulelanigongxeka4468 Před 4 lety

    No words but wow, I don't even do physics but yeah you're a wiz and I appreciate your zest for physics, you have lived your human life to the fullest.

  • @mavis2701
    @mavis2701 Před 7 lety

    i've always loved physics, and Mr. Lewin is a great example of why

  • @system.machine
    @system.machine Před 4 lety

    An amusing note. During the "find the dead spot" section, you could hear it as the camera panned across.

  • @hanifzahidin2036
    @hanifzahidin2036 Před 9 lety +3

    I love how the way you teach... I hope you could teach me how to teach as amazing as yours. :)

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 9 lety +9

      Hanif Zahidin Watch my lectures. They will tell you how I teach. What you cannot see is the 60 hr preparation for each lecture and the 3 dry runs I do for each lecture in an empty class room. The 1st dry run is 2 weeks before the day of the lecture, the last dry run is at about 6 AM of the day of the lecture. To create an inspiring lecture you need a lot of imagination. You have to Love Physics and your enthusiasm has to be contagious.

    • @hanifzahidin2036
      @hanifzahidin2036 Před 9 lety

      Lectures by Walter Lewin. They will make you ♥ Physics. wow.... so long preparation that's why you got a wonderful teaching. I'll try to do that.
      is your interesting pin on your chest also your technique? is it for getting student attention?

  • @Siddigfadul
    @Siddigfadul Před 4 lety

    I am a physician, Surgeon General, but for very unknown reason I am addicted to these lectures, can any one explain??

  • @utuberaj60
    @utuberaj60 Před 4 lety

    The part of this lecture stating that it is Heisenberg's Uncertainity Principle is behind the fact that electrons, atoms,molecules move continuously and have energy. The same applies to the billiard ball too with an assumed uncertainity limit i.e. h/2*piset as 1, as seen by "Mr. Tomkins in Wonderland"- an entertaining science popularising book by astrophysicist George Gamow. The fact that billiard balls or similar macrocscopic objects don not wiggle around spontaneously again due to the insignificant effect of Heisenberg's Pricnciple on large objects which we encounter in everyday life. I want a bit more of how this Priniciple was derived from De-Broglie Principle and Schrodinger's Wave equation. Hope the professor can show us this too sometime.

  • @ashutosh-ql3gm
    @ashutosh-ql3gm Před 4 lety

    Hello sir i'am from india ,, sir u r a great teacher ,, a real teacher who teaches students from his heart ,, sir in my locality teacher feel shame to teach these basic definition and concepts ,, and if any student ask these type of things they think that this child is dumb n insult him. That child will not able to ask question from next time. Aslo sir u r such a great physicist , even u taught students all concept like student is starting from zero. U r great sir ,, plssss plssss plsss launch a course on physics of 11 & 12 standard b/c sir class 11 & 12 are the pillars of our study career ,, but indian education system not prepare this pillar to stay strong for future ...thank u sir
    We love u sir 😍😍😍

  • @animations3193
    @animations3193 Před 5 lety +1

    Sir do u know about jest exam for physics

  • @khanyusuf09
    @khanyusuf09 Před 7 lety

    Sir you make physics look so interesting and beautiful exactly the way it is...your way of teaching gives me an insight of how the nature works rather than scratching my head on all that dumb dead physics equations spread all over my physics notebook..you taught me the beauty of those equations...so thank you sir...stay healthy...😊

  • @misaonthefly
    @misaonthefly Před 6 lety +3

    i would love to personally be in one of your lectures...

  • @JohnSmith-jw4wn
    @JohnSmith-jw4wn Před 4 lety +1

    💚❤I absolutely love this❤💚

  • @SriramVad
    @SriramVad Před 6 lety

    Sir,
    I am really grateful to have come across your videos. They really inspire me. I always liked physics and loved how it manages to develop a counter intuition for a thought. I would like to ask you a question,
    what are quantum fluctuations exactly?

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 6 lety +1

      use google

    • @SriramVad
      @SriramVad Před 6 lety

      this is so far the best reply I've had. XD

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 6 lety +1

      In quantum physics, a quantum fluctuation (or vacuum state fluctuation or vacuum fluctuation) is the temporary change in the amount of energy in a point in space, as explained in Werner Heisenberg's uncertainty principle. This allows the creation of particle-antiparticle pairs of virtual particles.

    • @SriramVad
      @SriramVad Před 6 lety

      Lectures by Walter Lewin. They will make you ♥ Physics. thank you very much sir :)

  • @chillhopnation7635
    @chillhopnation7635 Před 3 lety

    I think why the amplitude doesn't have affect on velocity of wave of sound?

  • @SimoneIovane
    @SimoneIovane Před 8 lety

    I don't know why but when I follow your lessons everything seems so easy.
    are there any lessons about quantum mechanics?
    Thanks :)

  • @FeigerNazi
    @FeigerNazi Před 4 lety

    How do waves anyway know in what measures they have to bounce up and down again, the so called frequency? And what force keeps waves, or them being a particle, not exceeding the upper and the lower border of that frequency? They are not inside of a tunnel, or are they?

  • @kylecarlolasala6869
    @kylecarlolasala6869 Před 4 lety

    i hope i can see and hear personally prof Lewin 😇

  • @AnuragMishra-fq4nm
    @AnuragMishra-fq4nm Před 6 lety

    Sir,
    Why does mass increase with velocity as an object approaches the speed of light? How can I prove it mathematically?

  • @simranagrawal8441
    @simranagrawal8441 Před 5 lety +2

    Thank u sir for making physics so intresting😊❤

  • @truebeliever174
    @truebeliever174 Před 5 lety +6

    That's the lecture when I was 2 years old. And I am seeing the lecture in 2019.
    Thanks to CZcams.

  • @siddharthkedia7584
    @siddharthkedia7584 Před 5 lety

    Sir, can u explain how particle nature of light is possible if according to Einstein's mass velocity equation the mass of particle moving with speed of light will tend to infinity!?

  • @arjuns2078
    @arjuns2078 Před 5 lety

    Happy birthday prof. walter lewin !!

  • @Dr10Jeeps
    @Dr10Jeeps Před 4 lety

    Excellent! Simply excellent.

  • @bicnarok
    @bicnarok Před 7 lety

    Excellent video, I´m not a student just interested in the subject so I apologise in advance for what could be a daft question I´m about to throw out there. I couldn´t help notice the obvious key difference between the water, sound and light wave experiments is that two (or more) oscillators are used in the water and sound experiments but with the light, two (or more) slits, thus changing the experiment. Not only that but surely the experiment has to take place in a vacuum environment with no time dilation to get a valid result seeing as mass can effect light. Which brings me to my question, considering the amount of movement we are experiencing, earth rotation, orbit around the sun, suns orbit around the galaxy centre and the galaxy itself hurtling through space, how much time dilation are we experiencing, and would that bending of space time make us experience light in a total different way than if we were in a "stopped" state, if that is even possible?

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 7 lety +2

      time dilation (when applicable) is always gamma= sqrt(1/(1- v^2/c^2).
      This In our own frame of reference it is ZERO for our clocks.

    • @kovanovsky2233
      @kovanovsky2233 Před 7 lety

      As far as I know, time dilation can only be seen by 'outsider' view which is moving relative to us or seen by us when we observe something moving relative to us. Because we (obviously) don't move relative to us, so we don't see the effect of time dilation on ourselves.
      Correct me if I'm wrong though..

    • @stargazer7644
      @stargazer7644 Před 5 lety

      He explained in the video that it is nearly impossible to synchronize the frequency and phase of two lights, so you use one light and you split the beam. Relativity says there is no one “stopped” state. You can only say how one object moves compared to another.

  • @oerangoetan
    @oerangoetan Před 4 lety

    De ideale leraar. Geweldig meneer Lewin. Groeten uit Schchchcheveningen

  • @drsanjeevgandhi5365
    @drsanjeevgandhi5365 Před 3 lety

    Can we see objects only because light rays reflected from object enter our eyes?.Also if every object reflects light then why can they form images like mirror do .Hope you answer this .Thanks

  • @ananta2990
    @ananta2990 Před 7 lety +1

    Hi professor, how are you?...i have a little doubt, as you say in this lecture that water waves are 2 dimensional, but if we consider surface of water as X and Z plane and Y axis line which is perpendicular to XZ plane...in case of water waves water do moves up and down also then why we are calling it 2D? why not 3 dimensional?..correct me sir if i am wrong....thank you.. : -)

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 7 lety +1

      waves of a plate in resonance are 2 dimensional (like chladni plates) as we refer to the surface. Waves on a string are therefore 1 dimensional. Of course, if you prefer to call them all 3D, be my guest

    • @ananta2990
      @ananta2990 Před 7 lety

      Thank you sir.... : -)..
      sir i am a mechanical engineering graduate from india,.. now i have a crush on physics so i started teaching physics for 1 year can u recommend me some good physics book? for good understanding of concepts and linking with real world phenomenon..

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Před 7 lety +2

      It all depends on your level which I do not know. Maybe a good start would be a college physics book for freshman. Use the web. There are many.