What is Schrödinger's Cat? | Neil deGrasse Tyson Explains...

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 5. 05. 2024
  • What is Schrödinger's Cat? On this explainer, Neil deGrasse Tyson and comic co-host Chuck Nice explore Schrodinger's cat and quantum mechanics… Or do they?
    Learn about famous physicist Erwin Schrödinger and his work with quantum mechanics. What is the Observer Effect? We debunk some misconceptions about the Observer Effect and break down what starts to go wrong when doing experiments with the really really small. Discover quantum cats in boxes and quantum computing. What is superposition? Can something be two things at once? What is a Qbit? Explore the mystery of the quantum realm with us…
    Get the NEW Cosmic Queries book (5/5 ⭐s on Amazon!): amzn.to/3dYIEQF
    Support us on Patreon: / startalkradio
    FOLLOW or SUBSCRIBE to StarTalk:
    Twitter: / startalkradio
    Facebook: / startalk
    Instagram: / startalk
    About StarTalk:
    Science meets pop culture on StarTalk! Astrophysicist & Hayden Planetarium director Neil deGrasse Tyson, his comic co-hosts, guest celebrities & scientists discuss astronomy, physics, and everything else about life in the universe. Keep Looking Up!
    #StarTalk #neildegrassetyson
    0:00 - Introduction
    0:50 - Origins of Schrödinger's Cat
    1:25 - The Observer Effect
    3:00 - The Albedo Effect
    4:53 - Why Subatomic Particles ‘Change’ When Observed
    6:53 - Schrödinger's Cat
    8:33 - Cats on the Internet
    9:37 - Chuck’s Se7en Analogy
    10:54 - Quantum Computing
    12:07 - The Quantum Head
    14:23 - Quantum Probabilities
    14:36 - Quantum Tunneling
    15:08 - Quantum Entanglement
    15:24 - The Watershed Decade In Physics
    16:18 - Texas Instrument Calculators
    17:29 - Closing Notes
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 5K

  • @StarTalk
    @StarTalk  Před rokem +3153

    Should we do another episode on Quantum weirdness?

    • @kuwarsing43
      @kuwarsing43 Před rokem +51

      Yeah.... Since both of you guys explaining such things, I'm in ✌🏻😎

    • @sashsaeedi7963
      @sashsaeedi7963 Před rokem +43

      Yes please

    • @rushfan1970
      @rushfan1970 Před rokem +24

      Yeesss!!👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👍🏼

    • @DelfinoGarza77
      @DelfinoGarza77 Před rokem +22

      Maybe Gwyneth Paltrow's head is not in the box if Brad Pitt never looks inside. It is morbid and I hate it but I also know that movie SE7EN is just a story told by actors, and I could tell they did a good job because I didn't want to look in the box lol. Spacey was the evil villan, Freeman and Pitt are the good guys and Paltrow was Pitts wife. I saw it once and I will never see it again.

    • @Ndoda71
      @Ndoda71 Před rokem +7

      Yes please !!!

  • @root0062
    @root0062 Před 8 měsíci +267

    Tyson is a rare teacher. You can laugh in tears and learn about complex physics at the same time.

    • @quazar912
      @quazar912 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Michio Kaku is best

    • @teeellecee
      @teeellecee Před 17 dny

      Watching these videos makes me feel like Jeff Spicoli: "Learning about [Schrödinger's Cat], and having some food." And not understanding much more than Spicoli would.

    • @iyendeezont
      @iyendeezont Před 11 dny

      ⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠@@quazar912no you’re wrong. Tyson is better than Michio Kaku

  • @imnotmike
    @imnotmike Před 3 měsíci +187

    What I've discovered is that I exist in a state where I both understand, and do not understand the concept of Schrödinger's Cat, simultaneously.

    • @Larrymh07
      @Larrymh07 Před 29 dny +8

      I like your joke, but there's a lot of truth in it. I think we all have that experience in understanding.

    • @timapple6586
      @timapple6586 Před 29 dny +2

      Cats be damned, does a concept live or die? Sink or swim? What's the penalty for slaying an idea? [Ans: A job.]

    • @abuelojoven8633
      @abuelojoven8633 Před 15 dny +2

      😂 Yes buddy! I'm in that box too!

    • @shahzadrajabdeen3215
      @shahzadrajabdeen3215 Před 15 dny +2

      I really wanted to listen to this. But the other guy(Not ND Tyson) was wayyy too irritating to get through this.

    • @frankcoverjr.-jz3ne
      @frankcoverjr.-jz3ne Před 12 dny

      “I am Schrödinger’s cat!”- Spartacus 😂😊

  • @user-sz5dt9ih7f
    @user-sz5dt9ih7f Před 7 měsíci +294

    Chuck Nice has got to be one of the sharpest dudes on the planet. He just moves things along so seamlessly and with so much humor and insight. He's just wonderful!!!

    • @robw3984
      @robw3984 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Racist

    • @user-sz5dt9ih7f
      @user-sz5dt9ih7f Před 6 měsíci +13

      @@robw3984 Grow up. I'm Hawaiian/Chinese/Irish/English. I don't have a racist bone in my body.

    • @filoue2583
      @filoue2583 Před 6 měsíci +4

      ​@@user-sz5dt9ih7fyou have not been racist, until now, you say that you're not racist by racism, wtf

    • @user-sz5dt9ih7f
      @user-sz5dt9ih7f Před 6 měsíci

      @@filoue2583 You need to move out of your mother's basement and find a real job.

    • @MyBuddyMobile
      @MyBuddyMobile Před 4 měsíci +8

      ​@@filoue2583​ he never said bc he's of those racists he cannot be racist, he's just stating that he is a product of inter-racial relation... we need a word for ppl like u that try to falsely accuse racism by technicality (its not a sport call). His comment was not racist to me as a black man and Chuck Nice is brilliant to not be a scientist...

  • @notmr.niceguy216
    @notmr.niceguy216 Před rokem +1925

    If I had teachers like that growing up I would have definitely paid way more attention, keep it up guys!

  • @blackmage999
    @blackmage999 Před rokem +423

    Schrödinger's cat is not a quantum system itself but a normal cat that is affected by a quantum system. The original thought experiment places a toxin in the box that is released by the radioactive decay of a particle which is governed by the laws of quantum mechanics. In this setting you cannot know if the particle has decayed enough to release the toxin until you measure the particle (opening the box). This entangles the cat with the particle.

    • @spectreskeptic3493
      @spectreskeptic3493 Před rokem +98

      I looked specifically for a comment that made this correction...well done. I think it's an important distinction.

    • @juliocesar4442
      @juliocesar4442 Před rokem +81

      Yes. This whole video was in fact a bad description about Schrodinger's cat. There is a point where he basically says that the cat being alive and dead is a consequence of our lack of knowledge since we didn't open the box to make the measurement and that is nonsensical. In fact, Schrodinger's cat was elaborated by Erwin to elucidate what was, according to his thoughts, an incomplete description of reality provided by the quantum theory.

    • @irinotecanhcl
      @irinotecanhcl Před rokem +50

      Also, as to the "why a dead/alive cat" question, as opposed to say a coin toss, Schrödinger at the time didn't believe that this was possible, so he came up with the most absurd analogy he could to show how ridiculous the idea of quantum superposition is.

    • @Seeds-Of-The-Wayside
      @Seeds-Of-The-Wayside Před rokem +6

      That's what I thought but I was surprised when they didn't explain that in this video

    • @bluceree7312
      @bluceree7312 Před rokem +9

      You cannot argue one fact: Schrödinger was a major dork.

  • @GoogleUser-wf7bn
    @GoogleUser-wf7bn Před 3 měsíci +42

    Not enough has been said here about how good the chemistry is between Chuck and Neil - these two are so good together.

  • @3ricegr3at
    @3ricegr3at Před 4 měsíci +49

    Nice to have a straight to the point explanation. The particles are so small that the light we use to observe them changes their existence.

    • @backwardthoughts1022
      @backwardthoughts1022 Před 2 měsíci +8

      its a dishonest explanation to the point of being borderline psychotic.
      his answer assumes photons exist with preset characteristics eg. even being particle, let alone further functions. the entire point is they do not as is already incontrovertibly established experimentally by anton zeilinger etc

    • @3ricegr3at
      @3ricegr3at Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@backwardthoughts1022 wow thanks for giving me more to look into.

    • @timapple6586
      @timapple6586 Před 29 dny +2

      You totally misunderstood... because NDT totally soaked you with misinformation. As always.

  • @daniellugo3944
    @daniellugo3944 Před rokem +91

    I laughed so hard at Chuck's photon comment 😂 "Photons want to be part of this skin" 😂 I laughed so hard my nose bled.

    • @darrenjones9359
      @darrenjones9359 Před rokem +2

      I would worry, laughing should not cause epistaxis.

    • @iammar1159
      @iammar1159 Před měsícem

      @@darrenjones9359 Plus, it wasn’t even that funny lol

    • @conradsz
      @conradsz Před 18 dny

      No you don’t

  • @SheyD78
    @SheyD78 Před rokem +221

    My brain was not built to handle learning quantum physics, but Neil makes me wish it was, and Chuck could keep me laughing all the while. Great episode.

    • @daveg5857
      @daveg5857 Před rokem +9

      No brains were. And it's still a very incomplete description of what's going on.

    • @TomCruz54321
      @TomCruz54321 Před rokem +5

      @@daveg5857 It's actually the best explanation of the "observer" I've heard.

    • @daveg5857
      @daveg5857 Před rokem +2

      @@TomCruz54321 Maybe, but I'm left with a whole lot of questions, no fault of Neil. I'm not looking at this phenomenon and saying, "problem solved". Just like quantum entanglement. I get that it is, but I don't know what it implies. All points in space are somehow interconnected? Then I start thinking maybe we're in the Matrix...

    • @efkagamescomputers6886
      @efkagamescomputers6886 Před rokem

      @@daveg5857 you mean that Sci-Fi movie that debut 20+ years ago, that Matrix?

    • @triplez5393
      @triplez5393 Před rokem +1

      Few are chosen, sorry

  • @orca536
    @orca536 Před 5 měsíci +6

    I love listening to you and learning. You strike me as a very intelligent and not conceited man. I grew up with my stepfather always responding to me "you writing a book" after I asked a question and most of the time never answering the question. Thank you for whom you are.

  • @Mchinnock
    @Mchinnock Před 6 měsíci +8

    another episode on anything would be great. its just the perfect mix of you two with all the intellect and humor. absolutely great.

  • @nigeljohn6676
    @nigeljohn6676 Před rokem +248

    The man breaks down complicated subjects into pure simplicity. Wow wow.

    • @covid19alpha2variantturboc7
      @covid19alpha2variantturboc7 Před rokem

      Tyson is just an açtor paid to recite scripted lines. just as the existence of his IMDB page suggests

    • @alexh1524
      @alexh1524 Před rokem +3

      It's so simple that it is inaccurate and misleading.

    • @TomCruz54321
      @TomCruz54321 Před rokem +5

      @@alexh1524 Like you would know chump.

    • @alexh1524
      @alexh1524 Před rokem +3

      @@TomCruz54321 Well ignoring the ad hominem I would say it doesn't properly explain wave function collapse, and wave-particle duality. That's why its over simplistic and misleading.

    • @vincentjohnflorio
      @vincentjohnflorio Před rokem +1

      @@alexh1524 Baby steps

  • @jimr9499
    @jimr9499 Před rokem +365

    Man...i am so thankful for StarTalk. Whenever I'm feeling down, I know that I always can rely on Chuck to lift my spirits right back up. Dr. Tyson is _always_ fascinating and illuminating. But both Chuck's jokes, and his genuine delight at learning things, never fails to bring a smile to my face. Thank you both for everything you do!!

    • @rodney8078
      @rodney8078 Před rokem +10

      So true! Both of these Men are so so extremely interesting in their personal thoughts and free thoughtful liberations on what they think and admonish that it leaves a more hensile train of thought on the modern thesis of discovery! - Of course for only those who want to step a little further than the aforementioned typical way of standing above the goal, or train of thought!! Fascinating!!! Please keep up the enticing work!

    • @ToniSkit
      @ToniSkit Před rokem

      Agree

    • @rickevans3959
      @rickevans3959 Před 11 měsíci +1

      You will find that Schodinger didn't really like cats. Think about it.

    • @alexlearningspace5644
      @alexlearningspace5644 Před 11 měsíci

      Same here ❤

    • @imthebadguy3225
      @imthebadguy3225 Před 11 měsíci +1

      When a "scientist" thinks there are dozens of genders, NDT is an NPC!

  • @GallifreyanGunner
    @GallifreyanGunner Před 4 měsíci +2

    Other comments have added information and context NDT left out of the description of the experiment. Most people forget, however, that the thought experiment was actually Schrödinger's critique of quantum theory and not an explanation of it.

  • @thatsinteresting3415
    @thatsinteresting3415 Před 12 dny +1

    I never understood Schrodinger's Cat when it was brought up before. But when you explain that you have a cat in a box, but the cat is not a cat; the cat is a quantum particle, the idea of Schrodinger's cat makes much more sense.

  • @markstone2138
    @markstone2138 Před 11 měsíci +104

    The ability to convey information while simultaneously entertaining in order to keep the students' attention is the mark of a real teacher. It's unfortunate that it is so rare.

  • @Rhekon
    @Rhekon Před rokem +48

    Chuck, that scene literally always made me think of the cat. You're not alone.

  • @entropie138
    @entropie138 Před 4 měsíci +5

    I’ve watched and read myriad pieces and videos trying to teach me Schrödinger’s Cat, and this is the very first time I’ve understood! Well done, guys!

  • @LionFo21
    @LionFo21 Před 8 měsíci +9

    This is by far the easiest and more insightful explanation about the principle of uncertainty, and without the use of any animations at all! Also we could say that chuck and Neil are like quantum entanglement souls maaaan 😂

  • @AlexandarHullRichter
    @AlexandarHullRichter Před rokem +137

    I want to take a moment to appreciate how easily and how deeply Neil laughs. That willingness to be so joyful is a significant part of why I enjoy watching him.

    • @GOLVEL
      @GOLVEL Před rokem

      Ok. Take it.

    • @davepeterschmidt5818
      @davepeterschmidt5818 Před rokem

      @@HopDavid You don't know that. What did he get wrong?

    • @bobbyblank6916
      @bobbyblank6916 Před rokem +4

      I appreciate how he has the ability to laugh at "jokes" with negative humor value...nothing that dude said was remotely humorous.

    • @Earthad23
      @Earthad23 Před rokem +2

      It’s easy to be joyful when you’ve made an entire career pretending to be a genius.

    • @Earthad23
      @Earthad23 Před rokem

      @@HopDavid agreed, he simply thinks he’s smarter than everyone and he doesn’t know what he’s talking about. Disappointing

  • @mysticalMELODY
    @mysticalMELODY Před rokem +118

    This was one of my favorites for myriad reasons but Chuck struggling to remember Brad Pitt’s name was classic, but his impersonation of Brad saying, what’s in the box was spot on. Thank you both for providing this amazing and fun way of learning.

    • @jonathanmcadams-nx5zp
      @jonathanmcadams-nx5zp Před 11 měsíci

      A myriad of meanings...

    • @teeellecee
      @teeellecee Před 17 dny

      Our family quotes "What's in the box!?!" all the time whenever we don't know what's in a box or Amazon package, so Chuck using that example really worked better than a quantum cat for me 😸

  • @renanpiva
    @renanpiva Před 5 měsíci +2

    It's intriguing what he says at 1:40 about the scientific illiterate who thinks consciousness affects what is observed, as if he wasn't the one who made us think that way when he starred in the Cosmos documentary

    • @sun_n_moon
      @sun_n_moon Před 5 měsíci +1

      Good catch. Contradiction and hubris don't apply to him. So he says. There are all kinds of cult leaders.

  • @anjelcastro9756
    @anjelcastro9756 Před 4 měsíci +8

    The “white people all in one place” had me crying 🤣

  • @PanchoPanteraUSC
    @PanchoPanteraUSC Před rokem +76

    “I’m a tangent man myself…”
    Hilarious and educational! Thank you both for making thing accessible and entertaining.
    All love.

    • @VoltisArt
      @VoltisArt Před 11 měsíci +2

      These guys are both tangent men, which is a big part of what makes this channel so fun.

  • @PlagueDoctorscp049
    @PlagueDoctorscp049 Před rokem +255

    I love these two, I wish they had this kind of education in school. We never had any of this! Great show guys truly love it

    • @StarTalk
      @StarTalk  Před rokem +23

      Glad you enjoy it!

    • @PlagueDoctorscp049
      @PlagueDoctorscp049 Před rokem +2

      @@StarTalk enjoying every single episode! Become a big fan of the show overtime

    • @dreamer8973
      @dreamer8973 Před rokem +3

      we can enjoy this kind of education now ;)

    • @Earthad23
      @Earthad23 Před rokem +2

      There’s was nothing educational in this video.

    • @davefx7949
      @davefx7949 Před rokem +1

      Learning can't always be fun and games. Sure when dealing with surface level stuff. But there is work involved when going deeper. But that's life...

  • @MelissaTimea
    @MelissaTimea Před 21 dnem +4

    Everyone always asks what is Schrödinger's Cat, but no one ever asks HOW is Schrödinger's Cat.

  • @squarehead6c1
    @squarehead6c1 Před 8 měsíci +6

    Schrödinger's cat seems to have become a meme in pop culture, quite detached from its original meaning and purpose. It is very rare that I hear a profound and meaningful explanation of the Schrödinger's cat thought experiment, which is frustrating as it seems meaningful and useful, rather than just a corny depiction of quantum properties.
    As far as I understand, the purpose of the thought experiment is to challenge the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics, that is the idea that a quantum state is inherently uncertain until it has been observed, very much different from our everyday experience, and the Cat experiment emphasizes this.
    I think the approach of speaking of the cat as not a real cat but a "quantum cat" distorts the thought experiment. The point, I think, is that it is a very familiar object, that is a real cat, that gets entangled with a quantum event, and hence forces the cat into a superposition state. Although not being a researcher of physics, it seems to me that the cat experiment actually does manage to scale up quantum level phenomena to the macro scale. And it is a very interesting challenge to the Copenhagen interpretation, and discussing responses to the thought experiment should be more or less necessary for the thought experiment to make sense.

    • @shawnredmond8402
      @shawnredmond8402 Před měsícem +1

      Stop being pretentious.

    • @squarehead6c1
      @squarehead6c1 Před měsícem

      I am serious, I am kind of fed up of this thought experiement analogy being misrepresented over and over again instead of actually being allowed to teach us something@@shawnredmond8402

  • @Kantus42
    @Kantus42 Před rokem +62

    "Photons wanna be a part of this, baby." I grew up loving Neil, but honestly-how could you not love Chuck? Perfect informational science/comedy duo right here!

  • @ZootSuitJZ
    @ZootSuitJZ Před rokem +96

    Chuck's reference to the movie SE7EN actually made the explanation much clearer. Well done!

    • @2011e92M3
      @2011e92M3 Před rokem +1

      It’s funny because I’ve watch countless videos explaining this paradox and although I thought I understood it, I could never explain it. Finally after watching their explanations and examples I finally get it. These guys really have a way of simplifying things for us non scientists.

    • @Music--ng8cd
      @Music--ng8cd Před rokem +5

      @Pᴀᴡɴ S𝜏ᴀʀ𝕤 ✯🇫​ᴀɴ It was until Morgan opened the box

    • @TheRealSkeletor
      @TheRealSkeletor Před rokem +1

      @Pᴀᴡɴ S𝜏ᴀʀ𝕤 ✯🇫​ᴀɴ The box could have been empty, or it could have been anything else in the box. They didn't know until they opened it.

    • @Music--ng8cd
      @Music--ng8cd Před rokem +1

      @Pᴀᴡɴ S𝜏ᴀʀ𝕤 ✯🇫​ᴀɴ We'll never know because they opened the box

    • @Music--ng8cd
      @Music--ng8cd Před rokem

      @Pᴀᴡɴ S𝜏ᴀʀ𝕤 ✯🇫​ᴀɴ But if you watch it that will end the superposition

  • @SuleymanAkhundov
    @SuleymanAkhundov Před 2 měsíci +2

    That was the funniest and least confusing explainer of quantum physics concepts. Good job, guys!

  • @jbs1992
    @jbs1992 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Neil is the best. My 7 yr old and I watch all these videos together. He loves to learn and he breaks it down so good for ppl

  • @kikogarcia5136
    @kikogarcia5136 Před rokem +137

    I was amazed that my 9 yold came to me telling that he wonders how a straight line is actually not straight if seen through a microscope, or that a table edge is not plane. I showed him your talk right away about the measurements and he loved it. Love watching you, thank you so much!

    • @Paislywalls4767
      @Paislywalls4767 Před rokem +12

      You are a very cool parent!

    • @kikogarcia5136
      @kikogarcia5136 Před rokem +8

      @@Paislywalls4767 hahaha thank you, I try 😂

    • @Hollyweed1
      @Hollyweed1 Před rokem +12

      You got a bright kid. Tell him the way to astrophysics.

    • @stabgan
      @stabgan Před rokem +3

      Give him all the resources show him everything from computer science to physics to chemistry to maths. And then let him choose what he wants to pursue. Don't force astrophysics or any subject on him. He's a genius, he will find his own way in life. Just keep him on track

    • @DumKump
      @DumKump Před rokem +1

      That's a genius in the making!
      BUT don't tell him that. Telling your child they're special sounds like a good idea but from personal experience, it can absolutely ruin their life

  • @plutoplanet825
    @plutoplanet825 Před rokem +201

    Neil and Chuck you guys are my favorite teachers....everyday I understand more and more about our existence and experiences

    • @buggjohnson1648
      @buggjohnson1648 Před rokem

      Fr. I'm 35 and this is the first time I've heard this and it made any sense at all. Tbf, Oklahoma's education system is absolute garbage. It benefits those in power to keep us dumb.

  • @user-wf7pe3zb8q
    @user-wf7pe3zb8q Před 3 měsíci +5

    "What is Schrödinger's Cat?" The cat that belongs to Schrödinger.....easy...

  • @tudiecampagna5793
    @tudiecampagna5793 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I absolutely love, love, both of these guys!! So informative, and always funny!!!❤

  • @officialjerm9122
    @officialjerm9122 Před rokem +101

    Im in disbelief right now! I saw a video yesterday that mentioned the term "Schrodinger's cat". I thought to myself I've never heard that before, i should look it up. And of course i never did 🙄 lol. Yet here you are today to teach me all about it! You hit the nail on the head today guys! Thanks 🤙

    • @StarTalk
      @StarTalk  Před rokem +17

      Glad we're able to answer those burning questions!

    • @JimmyKnax
      @JimmyKnax Před rokem +10

      You watch the video about Schrodinger's cat? And then another video about Schrodinger's cat shows up? Coincidence? I think not. Just another victim of tracking cookies I'm afraid. I once did a search for tickets for a rock concert and immediately started getting advertisements for drug rehab.

    • @reallymysterious4520
      @reallymysterious4520 Před rokem +4

      I take it you didn't watch the comedy show Big Bang Theory where Sheldon explained Schrodingers cat to Penny ?

    • @jnmwtkns
      @jnmwtkns Před rokem +1

      Oh the CZcams algorithm !

    • @Morpheux1
      @Morpheux1 Před rokem +2

      @@JimmyKnax well, this video was uploaded 5 hours ago, didn't exist when she saw the other one, and suddenly came into existence 🤣🤣🤣

  • @emines01
    @emines01 Před rokem +32

    Chuck is actually super more intelligent than he gets credit for or put out himself. He is the essential piece to making science digestible to the general public

    • @CHRIS-tg5cn
      @CHRIS-tg5cn Před 6 měsíci +3

      At least he doesn't use the phrase "super more intelligent."

    • @oftenlucid
      @oftenlucid Před 6 měsíci

      Is he????

  • @iandwyer6658
    @iandwyer6658 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I believe we were taught this concept using the double-slit test where observation causes decoherence of the quantum state for binary encoding. The quantum tech course at my school used optics and wave-phasing to manipulate the state before the observer causes decoherence. Im hoping I get a chance to build a FDTD numerical approximation for Schrodingers wave equations to get simulation of the embedded states. Super cool stuff with wave theory perspective that electircal engineers get, but also cool to get more of a quantum persepctive

  • @valeriebolejack5957
    @valeriebolejack5957 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I would love more on quantum show. Im sad, im 63 and i can't become a quantum physics major.. but still am fascinated. I was just born too late. But i still enjoy learning.

  • @kurtkyre
    @kurtkyre Před rokem +9

    Fun fact: Even though it was never shown, there was a special effects prop head of Gwyneth Paltrow in the box. That special effects prop was the same prop made for and used onscreen in the film Contagion.

  • @Eremon1
    @Eremon1 Před rokem +14

    This is why Cats are obsessed with boxes. They've been trying to figure this super position stuff out since they first heard about it.

  • @jeffreybreitbart8578
    @jeffreybreitbart8578 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I can't tell you how much I enjoy every time NDT speaks. I really want to learn more about quantum mechanics.. Of course, I will never be able to understand it as well as he, but these interviews, commentaries, lectures are helping me get through a very dark period and I am not sure why. But please keep doing these. Thank you.

  • @MusikIsUniversal
    @MusikIsUniversal Před 8 měsíci

    I think the reason why a cat was chosen versus a coin is because once in the Box, the coin's movement is theoretically static, however, a cat's movement is theoretically variable, at least for some time until the cat expires. So there is a an assumption of a contribution of additional randomness once the unobserved cat is in the Box versus the coin which is assumed to be predetermined once in.
    You could also say you don't need a box to run the experiment. If a tree falls in the forest and nobody is there to hear it, does it make a sound? The observation theory and simulation Theory answers that question for me. Conservation and efficiency of resources dictate not only does the tree not make a sound, it hasn't fallen until the moment I observe it. That begs the question, if we are in a simulation, are we in it together or is everybody else simply a simulated projection? And if that is the case, why would the individual Observer of those projections be special? Would it be more likely that each projection, including our selves, are artificial intelligence Co-existing in the same simulation? Okay, I'm going into an existential wormhole so I better stop for now 😂

  • @patrickfulford3460
    @patrickfulford3460 Před rokem +134

    I love this show, I truly appreciate you all, including the behind the scenes folks.

    • @ricardodealmeida27
      @ricardodealmeida27 Před rokem +16

      A behind the scenes video, would be awesome

    • @StarTalk
      @StarTalk  Před rokem +30

      We truly appreciate fans like you!

    • @Dannosuke25
      @Dannosuke25 Před rokem

      @@StarTalk is that you Sam?

    • @chayanbosu3293
      @chayanbosu3293 Před rokem

      Still they can not explain what is conciousness ?

    • @gatopardos19
      @gatopardos19 Před rokem +2

      @@StarTalk Speaking of that,could we have a blooper reel?

  • @oscarmp80
    @oscarmp80 Před 7 měsíci +1

    How do you measure the particle states, then? If not with light, can you observe or trace their changes via measuring the electro magnetic fields around them or something ?

  • @ronaldtorbert133
    @ronaldtorbert133 Před rokem +50

    Such a huge fan, Dr. Tyson!! Physicists like yourself has brought my love for math and science back, in turm changing my career path to pursue my Masters in Science. Thank you for all the knowledge!!

  • @dutchray8880
    @dutchray8880 Před rokem +56

    I remember when the first Bowmar calculator came out in the early to mid 1970s. It had only the 4 basic functions and cost $180, the monthly rent for my 3-bedroom apartment (split 3 ways). I was taking physics at the time, and I was jealous of those who could afford a calculator because I had to use a lousy slide rule. Today, I have a basic calculator sitting in front of me that cost less than $5, and it does square roots.

    • @jenniferpatterson4964
      @jenniferpatterson4964 Před rokem +4

      Cheers to the endless march of time and the progression of technology. Cin cin!

    • @mcdonaldization
      @mcdonaldization Před rokem

      @@jenniferpatterson4964 no there’s a reason civilians thousands of years old kept away from technology

    • @jenniferpatterson4964
      @jenniferpatterson4964 Před rokem

      @@mcdonaldization Um, what? What are you even talking about?

    • @cymanca
      @cymanca Před rokem +1

      Ah yes, the Bowmar Brain

    • @johnpetrakis379
      @johnpetrakis379 Před rokem +3

      Was it a 15" Pickett or a 12 incher, or even a "cheeper" one like I had, plastic, and not aluminum. Computer geeks at Purdue extension learning Cobol and Fortran withe their 15" yellow Pickets dangling from their belts like Excalibur in leather scabbards Sneered at them, and they ended up running things

  • @EskoBomb
    @EskoBomb Před 8 měsíci +17

    You two make a fantastic duo. Thank you for making these videos together

  • @user-it8vd2wk1c
    @user-it8vd2wk1c Před 11 dny

    I'm an avid consumer of all Neil deGrasse Tyson videos, but in this one I loved not only the way he teaches us but also the fact that there is a Lego space shuttle in the back! He is a genius, but also have the nerd little kid inside that some of us still have.

  • @henrickrw
    @henrickrw Před rokem +15

    As a Mechanical Engineer with 25 years experience I can attest you're totally correct in saying that a black surface absorbs photons and electromagnetic waves without irradiating back out. Excellent heat transfer topic.... Following up on the Stefan-Boltzmann LAW.
    KEEP THIS CONTENT FLOWING...

    • @robertlee4809
      @robertlee4809 Před rokem

      Black also radiates heat more quickly than white...

    • @albirtarsha5370
      @albirtarsha5370 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@robertlee4809How does that work?

  • @jaycee7774
    @jaycee7774 Před rokem +32

    I love the level of humor involved in these talks! Thank you for reducing the seriousness involved with the facts and truths revealed! I wish there were teachers like you guys in school growing up. Please keep the format the same!

  • @wmstuckey
    @wmstuckey Před 5 dny

    These guys are hilarious! Anyway, I liked that Neil talked about the difference between a classical bit of information (like a computer bit being on or off) and a quantum bit of information (a qubit) when introducing Schrodinger’s Cat. Both bits produce one of two outcomes when queried (measured), but a classical bit has only one measurement possible while a qubit can be measured in many different ways (infinitely many, actually), each with two possible outcomes. Neil mentioned that, but let me give an example so you can appreciate what it means physically.
    When you pass an electron through an inhomogeneous magnetic field, the electron is either deflected towards the North magnetic pole ("up") or towards the South magnetic pole ("down"). You can orient the N-S magnetic field in any direction you like and the electrons will still give one of those two outcomes, so electron spin is a qubit with two outcomes of spin "up" and spin "down" relative the the N-S magnetic field. Now suppose you pass electrons through a N-S magnetic field oriented vertically and then send those that were deflected "up" (literally up in this case) to a N-S magnetic field oriented horizontally. What do you expect to find?
    Well since the electrons have vertical spin up and spin is a vector (picture an arrow pointing upward here), then you probably expect the electron to pass straight through the horizontal magnetic field, i.e., they won't be deflected left or right at all ("up" or "down" relative to the horizontal N-S field). That's because the electron's spin vector (arrow) points up which means it doesn't point side-to-side (left of right) at all, so your horizontal spin measurement of a vertical spin up electron should seemingly yield a result of zero horizontal spin. But what you find instead is that 50% of the vertical spin up electrons are deflected left ("up" towards North pole) and 50% are deflected right ("down" towards South pole). True, 50% left plus 50% right *averages* to zero, but that's not what you expect from the measurement of a vector quantity in ordinary classical mechanics. [Aside: Quantum mechanics gives the classically expected results on average over the discrete or quantum measurement outcomes.] This is quantum superposition, a vertical spin up electron is a quantum superposition of 50% horizontal spin left and 50% horizontal spin right and we write that as |V+> = |H+> + |H-> (divided by root 2 for normalization, but I don't need that to make my point).
    The point here is the horizontal spin measurement of the quantum state |V+> produces each of its two "up"-"down" (left-right) results in 50-50 fashion. This is exactly what you hear people say about Schrodinger's Cat, i.e., you open the box and find the cat is dead with 50% probability or find the cat is alive with 50% probability. With that information alone, Schrodinger's Cat could be a classical bit or a qubit. If Schrodinger's Cat is a qubit, then there must be a measurement of the cat-box system like the vertical spin measurement of the state |V+> that produces |V+>, i.e., |H+> + |H->, with 100% certainty. We know the measurement "open the box" producing "Live Cat"-"Dead Cat" results in 50-50 fashion is analogous to the horizontal spin measurement of |V+>, so what is the measurement of the cat-box system giving |Live Cat> + |Dead Cat> with 100% certainty in analogy with the vertical spin measurement of the state |V+> that produces |V+> with 100% certainty? And what does its outcome mean physically? If you can't articulate that measurement and outcome of the cat-box system, and every possible measurement between that measurement and the "open the box" measurement, then the cat-box system is just a classical bit ... like flipping a coin to find heads or tails. No quantum superposition there 🙂
    To read more about the quantum information approach to entanglement for the "general reader," see "Einstein's Entanglement: Bell Inequalities, Relativity, and the Qubit" due out in June 2024 with Oxford UP.

  • @wayneasiam65
    @wayneasiam65 Před 4 měsíci +2

    If all our physical components can be back tracked to atoms and beyond, then where is the transition point between the micro and macro? The Precise Point where it changes... I need a response in order to have any chance of inventing my Super Position Tracker Thingamajig.

  • @raycruel1
    @raycruel1 Před rokem +47

    I love how the chemistry you guys have makes the subject of Quantum mechanics so much more palatable and fun!!!

    • @johannesnoneoftheabove9957
      @johannesnoneoftheabove9957 Před 8 měsíci +1

      On the subject of Quantum mechanics; does this mean to imply that a Volkswagen Quantum can exist as a fully operational unit or operate at some percentage of ability, or even not run at all. This sounds like a job for a Quantum mechanic.

    • @johannesnoneoftheabove9957
      @johannesnoneoftheabove9957 Před 8 měsíci

      As regards tunneling, that would explain why things go missing unexpectedly and reappear unexpectedly. Super-positioning would explain why things are some-wheres else. (Take an opening where you find it. Aut non. Thank you.)

  • @PlasmaCoolantLeak
    @PlasmaCoolantLeak Před rokem +41

    I had a classmate in my physics class get upset over the cat. She was convinced a real cat was involved.

  • @woodstoney
    @woodstoney Před 2 měsíci +1

    Chuck definitely got his 15 minutes of fame in this video!! He nailed it! ;) Word was that Schrödinger took his sick cat to the Vet. After examination, the Vet to him, "I've got some good news and some bad news..."

  • @nickmag6142
    @nickmag6142 Před 12 dny

    Man you’ve hit the jackpot on this guy Niel, I don’t know if he’s been your good friend for decades or not but he provides such a good comedic effect and works so well with you

  • @sonofkami
    @sonofkami Před rokem +56

    Neil was just born to teach. I wish my science teachers would have taught like he does my life would have takin a different path if they did

  • @holygroove2
    @holygroove2 Před 10 měsíci +74

    Sometimes Chuck hits his stride and is more than just silly. This episode was excellent because Chuck was on fire and Tyson was his usual self. Very helpful, very informative! Thanks for this!

  • @robertlang4955
    @robertlang4955 Před 15 dny

    I would absolutely love to sit and discuss things with these two gentlemen.
    Listening to them makes me want to learn.

  • @Keith80027
    @Keith80027 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I got my master degrees in quantum physics in 1976 and you guys got it right about Schrodinger's wave equations. Thank God for the equations. I remember those calculators. I had to buy a HP35 to past my final in 4th year electrical circuits class. I still have my HP35. Love you guys in making things simpler.

    • @stevenvanhulle7242
      @stevenvanhulle7242 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I had the TI-57 in 1977, which IIRC was the first programmable pocket calculator.
      (I never understood what got in HP for choosing RPN; nobody writes their equations in that order!)

  • @iansargent196
    @iansargent196 Před rokem +41

    I think the funniest part of the show is just how tickled Neil is at ALL of Chuck's jokes.

    • @alexro2482
      @alexro2482 Před rokem +3

      Chuck a little too 🌽. Love NDT

  • @likebutton11
    @likebutton11 Před rokem +51

    This was a delightful quantum psychic lesson

    • @samapade5645
      @samapade5645 Před rokem +3

      I would say, more like a PSYCHOTIC on!😷🤤🙂😅🤣😷😉🙃🥺😊😂👍
      😎

    • @apapz3245
      @apapz3245 Před rokem

      I don’t believe it, the cat is dying regardless it anyone is watching, use your brain

  • @leonmanthey4512
    @leonmanthey4512 Před 2 měsíci +4

    I got Schrödingers credit card, you don´t have no money when you don´t watch your bank account

  • @leahmarieezra877
    @leahmarieezra877 Před 4 měsíci +1

    PS - If you have not explained why atoms spin in opposite directions, even when separated by a wall, please do. Great videos. Thanks!

  • @DurbanFlyboi
    @DurbanFlyboi Před rokem +17

    I've been listening to this show ( and looking up! ) for 10 years now. Neil - you are singularly responsible for expediting my curiosity and love of the cosmos. I consider you my generation's Carl Sagan. Chuck - you are the perfect wingman for Neil, and bring so much to the show, kudos brother. Thank you to all involved in StarTalk

  • @OtayBuckwheat
    @OtayBuckwheat Před rokem +10

    "Go have another bowl and get back to me" Neil deGrasse Tyson.
    A quote that gave me inner peace

  • @antialluvion5118
    @antialluvion5118 Před 7 měsíci

    The detail about the measurement effect provides significant clarification. Layperson information about things like the double slit experiment mislead by not being nuanced enough to clarify a passive observation outcome versus a measurement-based outcome where the measurement occurs by introducing new energy to the system.
    I'm guessing that with the double slit experiment, if a passive observation, The particles will remain as a wave as you look at the screen because you're not interacting with the particles other than passively seeing their reflection off of the screen.
    I have always been confused by demonstrations of this because they use the terminology that makes it appear that the act of just seeing it changes it. But the detail of passive viewing versus introducing energy to view is a very significant detail
    Is it possible to do these experiments where the "cat" is something giving off energy so that you don't have to introduce energy to get a measurement?

  • @magentapierrot8409
    @magentapierrot8409 Před 16 dny

    These guys are a perfect pairing. I think I understand Schroidenger’s cat a bit better. I love the idea of any number of possibilities at the same time. “Fun part of quantum.”

  • @BIGREDDOG09
    @BIGREDDOG09 Před rokem +31

    You guys always have a way of making me think of things from a totally different angle than I have before! Thanks guys!

  • @jeffreyhunter4115
    @jeffreyhunter4115 Před rokem +24

    Without question, this is my favorite of you two! Making science look easy AND a new movie to add to my playlist. Seriously though, thank you for sharing.

  • @sheester21
    @sheester21 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Delayed choice quantum eraser suggests that it's linking light to being above the linear flow of time, and our consciousness effects the choice it makes. To me at least.
    Would love to hear how Neil explains this one

  • @roblena7977
    @roblena7977 Před měsícem

    I really love watching Chuck grow in this. Kind of curious to how he would do now with an aptitude test vs when he first started.

  • @tboythomas
    @tboythomas Před rokem +4

    Out of all the StarTalk I have watched, Chuck’s energy with Neil easily tops all of the people that I’ve seen on StarTalk with Neil.

  • @TheOpinionatedYouTuber
    @TheOpinionatedYouTuber Před rokem +4

    I am a sign language interpreter, and I LOVE learning about STEM topics from you, NDT! You help me understand the topics at a much more comprehensible level, which translates into improving my ability to interpret between complex scientific topics in English and American Sign Language (ASL).

  • @joshodonnell2270
    @joshodonnell2270 Před měsícem +4

    casually spoiling one of the best endings of a movie ever 😂

  • @darianthompson5975
    @darianthompson5975 Před 5 měsíci

    Such a good team 👏 👍🏾 I love it when they just let chuck be himself and "learning"

  • @JohnnyLeuthard
    @JohnnyLeuthard Před rokem +11

    I love these talks. I find all kinds of science fascinating. How things work, what makes them tick, all of it. I live how you break it up into a simpler way to think about it. The problem is I often listen to them on my personal laptop while I'm working on my work laptop and I focus too much on the video and now what i'm doing at work and I have to keep starting over with what i am doing. LOL

  • @muzzammilpervaiz5296
    @muzzammilpervaiz5296 Před rokem +37

    Truly, Neil Tyson is like a diamond of modern physics.

  • @jasonshaw4230
    @jasonshaw4230 Před 2 měsíci

    Flaws in Schroedinger's experiment.
    1. I can shake the box and feel for movement or listen for noise.
    2. I can smell the box.( an airtight box ensures the death of the cat ).
    Even if I'm only allowed to look at the box to make my determination, putting the box on a small balance point would detect movement the second it fell.

  • @user-po5le7fz6n
    @user-po5le7fz6n Před 5 měsíci +1

    Great episode.
    You guys are perfect together.
    Thank you.

  • @Jay-cj7xu
    @Jay-cj7xu Před rokem +9

    Chuck's imitation of Brad pit asking what's in the box was deaf on! Well done Sir!

  • @nofarDcohen
    @nofarDcohen Před rokem +26

    Yessss this is such a trippy concept, I'm so happy you did an explainer video on it! Love this! I can listen to Neil explain stuff like this forever 🤣🤩
    Thank you🙏🏼🙏🏼

  • @darylgholson4481
    @darylgholson4481 Před 2 měsíci

    The brief moment mentioning earth having reflective surfaces is so awesome. I wonder what happens at a solar panel farm. do we need to have more surface area collecting energy? Or reflecting it?

  • @vincentdurant954
    @vincentdurant954 Před 4 měsíci +4

    I read somewhere that Schrodinger's daughter said her father didn't like cats, and she thought that maybe that was why it wasn't a dog in the box🙂.
    Great clip, and gives better insight and explanation than when I studied it in university so many years ago.

  • @123sokker123
    @123sokker123 Před rokem +34

    Chuck is the only podcast host that genuinely has me laughing out loud along with him

  • @siezethebidet
    @siezethebidet Před rokem +17

    I suspect there are many who don't know that before calculators came along, the power tool was the slide rule. Analog calculator.

    • @rtflone
      @rtflone Před rokem +1

      I learned to do computations on a slide rule - no calculators yet. It was slow and tedious but in the end, I understood the process that led me to the answer in a way I never would have done pushing buttons on a calculator..

  • @IndependentKnight
    @IndependentKnight Před 8 měsíci

    Somebody wrote that in the wikipedia but it is not what "the cat" is about- the Psychological principal was to illustrate the state of mind that "some cat is in a box, we don't know whether it's alive or dead, we'll find out when we open it" because it encompasses the state where someone like a CEO is in charge of a company but can only delegate responsibilities hoping for the best they end up getting high blood pressure and if you just acknowledge that you have no control over what's going on in the box the CEO can relax...

  • @slipperysteev
    @slipperysteev Před 8 měsíci +10

    Chuck is HILARIOUS!! I thoroughly enjoy every episode he is in.

  • @coralie9469
    @coralie9469 Před rokem +12

    These guys are the "Bomb", I so relate and appreciate their humor in these discussions. It's fun and somewhat easy to learn, as they say it's never too late to learn something new!! So enjoy this, keep up the great work!! Thanks so much!! Love you guys!!

  • @RixMusings
    @RixMusings Před 16 dny +1

    Chuck Nice is completely in the way! I would like to learn! Don't need comedy or tangents!!!!

  • @bleedinghandshughes
    @bleedinghandshughes Před 4 měsíci +1

    Schrödinger was never really sure whether his cat was alive when he shut it in the box, but Schrödinger's dog on the other hand, he always knew because, he could hear it barking each time he shut it in the box
    it had a sixth sense for "paws"itivity and refused to be in a state of uncertainty!

  • @PaulSinnema
    @PaulSinnema Před 26 dny

    I wish I had seen this explainer earlier. Now finally I understand a lot more about quantum science. Thank you Neil.

  • @sarnol8973
    @sarnol8973 Před rokem +6

    Chuck trying to explain “what’s in the box” to NDT is my favorite thing so far this week

  • @matta9316
    @matta9316 Před rokem +6

    Man Tyson is brilliant. Amazing how he can explain incredibly complex topics in a manner that is so easy to understand. Guy is a national treasure.

  • @hollyhartwick3832
    @hollyhartwick3832 Před měsícem

    Quantum entanglement is one of my favourite parts of Quantum Theory, mainly because of it's application in science fiction. Using quantum entanglement for faster-than-light communication with no discernable limit to range in distance is a really fascinating and practical application of the concept. Among other media, this has been featured in the video game series Mass Effect, which I absolutely adore. So much so that I have the trilogy on two consoles (PS3 and PS4).

  • @CharlesCharles-bb6qx
    @CharlesCharles-bb6qx Před 4 měsíci +1

    One of the best videos on this topic, and entertaining as well.

  • @isaiahdarby123
    @isaiahdarby123 Před rokem +4

    My school would have put this on for us to watch, they were very fun and loved to make teaching fun and I truly feel like that's the only reason I still find myself fascinated by new things I don't know much about. Thank you guys!

  • @aaronpincus6095
    @aaronpincus6095 Před rokem +59

    Many years ago I read an article penned by one of Schrodinger's peers, (I forget his name) that basically said that the cat problem was first created as a joke by Schrodinger to mess with his grad students. Kind of like the Sound of One Hand Clapping, or a Tree Falling in a Forest makes no Sound. Then it just took on a life of it's own and became what ii is today.

    • @philipblythe6535
      @philipblythe6535 Před rokem +5

      The Buddhist Koan has been badly misquoted. The actual Koan asks: "When you clap your hands what sound does one of the hands make."

    • @istantinoplebullconsta642
      @istantinoplebullconsta642 Před rokem +2

      I heard that physicists found Schrodinger's cat! Yeah, apparently it just walked home to his old office, just down the road from the pet cemetery where Schrodinger buried him.

    • @philipblythe6535
      @philipblythe6535 Před rokem +8

      The tree falling in the forest is actually 2 separate issues:
      1. Do the laws of physics operate equally throughout the universe even without an observer? &
      2. Is sound the physical vibration, or is it the perception of it? #2 is a matter of definition, not a question about reality.

    • @aaronpincus6095
      @aaronpincus6095 Před rokem

      @@philipblythe6535 Well said!

    • @phillip4684
      @phillip4684 Před rokem +1

      @@philipblythe6535 I think number 2 is physical vibration because we only can hear a sound if the nerve endings are stimulated in the inner ear.