How long is a piece of string?
How long is a piece of string?
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Discussion

ben_h100

Original Poster:

1,548 posts

200 months

Tuesday 17th November 2009
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Horizon bbc2 nOw. Quite interesting with alan davies.

Adrian W

15,030 posts

249 months

Tuesday 17th November 2009
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Brilliant...............can someone tell me what they're going on about!

dave_s13

13,968 posts

290 months

Tuesday 17th November 2009
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Interesting that.

Always fascinated by physics based telly....is it normal to have no farkin idea how quantum mechanics works, or is it just me?

saleen836

12,125 posts

230 months

Tuesday 17th November 2009
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Isn't it just twice the distance from the middle to one end?

Westy Pre-Lit

5,088 posts

224 months

Tuesday 17th November 2009
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saleen836 said:
Isn't it just twice the distance from the middle to one end?
No idea, I got lost so turned over to look at Bikini clad bints on ITV.

Spacekadet

860 posts

203 months

Tuesday 17th November 2009
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I always thought it was twice as long as half its length

T89 Callan

8,422 posts

214 months

Tuesday 17th November 2009
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A decent show, if you liked it get on 4oD and watch "Stephen Hawking Master of the Universe" (2 nepisodes) takes the explanation and detail of the quantum mechanics two the next level.

Salgar

3,285 posts

205 months

Tuesday 17th November 2009
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T89 Callan said:
A decent show, if you liked it get on 4oD and watch "Stephen Hawking Master of the Universe" (2 nepisodes) takes the explanation and detail of the quantum mechanics two the next level.
Quantum Mechanics Two?! I don't even understand the first one, and they've already made a sequel frown

EDLT

15,421 posts

227 months

Wednesday 18th November 2009
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Comb-over-pony-tail had the most annoying laugh I've ever heard.

A few of this series of Horizon have been about Quantum physics and its starting to get a bit repetitive as they are all talking about it at the same level.

T89 Callan

8,422 posts

214 months

Wednesday 18th November 2009
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Salgar said:
T89 Callan said:
A decent show, if you liked it get on 4oD and watch "Stephen Hawking Master of the Universe" (2 nepisodes) takes the explanation and detail of the quantum mechanics two the next level.
Quantum Mechanics Two?! I don't even understand the first one, and they've already made a sequel frown
QM 2: This time it's personal!!!!!!!!!!

Zad

12,934 posts

257 months

Wednesday 18th November 2009
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So far as I can tell, the thing about quantum mechanics is that it is based on not knowing things. If you could get "inside" the mechanism, it would be explainable, but we can't, so we have to explain it at the next level up, which makes no sense but does produce workable mathematical models.

I get the feeling that in umpty years time, some new Einstein is going to come along and point out a fundamental incorrect assumption, find the correct one and it will all go "aaaah that makes sense now" because to me quantum mechanics just seems like a stop-gap until they actually work out the proper coherent system. But, just as finding the Higgs Boson will get scientists saying "yes, but what is it made of", as soon as quantum mechanics is explained, it will reveal another layer which appears even more unfathomable. I hope that, before then, the governments of the world will stop throwing huge amounts of cash at it and concentrate a bit more on problems that matter now.

To anyone saying "Ah yes but CERN gave us the web browser" a good deal of this web browser technology existed already. Like many discoveries/developments/inventions, it was just a matter of where it happened first.

varsas

4,071 posts

223 months

Wednesday 18th November 2009
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What's more important?

At the end of the day nothing humans do matters at all, certainly while we're stuck in this tiny, insignificant part of the universe. At the very least it would be nice if the description of the sum total of humanities existence resulted in us being able to say 'we cracked it, we understand how the universe works' Besides it might, just might, lead to time/super light travel...then we can actually get somewhere. The chances are low but without those things nothing matters so we might as well give it a shot.

Charlie Foxtrot

3,160 posts

236 months

Wednesday 18th November 2009
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I had an interesting train of thought and I'll try and put it accross.

Based on the schrodinger's cat theory I can answer this famous riddle. "If a tree falls in the woods and nobody is about to hear it, does it make a noise?" I conclude that there is no tree.

And also by the end of the show I have decided that my dog is better at Quantum tunnelling than I am, but only when I am observing her.

silly

Dangerous stuff this educationally tv.

varsas

4,071 posts

223 months

Wednesday 18th November 2009
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Makes sense...if something that happens has no observable effect it doesn't happen. Works for me!

Of course that means there were no neutrinos/other galaxies etc in the stone age because no one knew about them and they couldn't be observed...I think that's consistent with quantum physics though. kinda.

I like the copenhagen theory, which says that all quantum phyiscs does is encode what we know about the galaxy. It's a bit of a cop out but your tree falling explanation works well inside it.

him_over_there

970 posts

227 months

Wednesday 18th November 2009
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varsas said:
Makes sense...if something that happens has no observable effect it doesn't happen. Works for me!

Of course that means there were no neutrinos/other galaxies etc in the stone age because no one knew about them and they couldn't be observed...I think that's consistent with quantum physics though. kinda.
Not quite. The observer doesn't have to be a conscious entity, the photons etc don't know they are being observed.

Charlie Foxtrot

3,160 posts

236 months

Wednesday 18th November 2009
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him_over_there said:
varsas said:
Makes sense...if something that happens has no observable effect it doesn't happen. Works for me!

Of course that means there were no neutrinos/other galaxies etc in the stone age because no one knew about them and they couldn't be observed...I think that's consistent with quantum physics though. kinda.
Not quite. The observer doesn't have to be a conscious entity, the photons etc don't know they are being observed.
but they also don't know they're not being observed. they don't know anything, they're photons.

him_over_there

970 posts

227 months

Wednesday 18th November 2009
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Charlie Foxtrot said:
him_over_there said:
varsas said:
Makes sense...if something that happens has no observable effect it doesn't happen. Works for me!

Of course that means there were no neutrinos/other galaxies etc in the stone age because no one knew about them and they couldn't be observed...I think that's consistent with quantum physics though. kinda.
Not quite. The observer doesn't have to be a conscious entity, the photons etc don't know they are being observed.
but they also don't know they're not being observed. they don't know anything, they're photons.
Which was my point. smile

People seem to think the term observer implies physically 'seeing' something happen. It doesn't.

Charlie Foxtrot

3,160 posts

236 months

Wednesday 18th November 2009
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and of course the tree was both upright and fallen at the same time anyway.

skoff

1,387 posts

255 months

Wednesday 18th November 2009
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him_over_there said:
Charlie Foxtrot said:
him_over_there said:
varsas said:
Makes sense...if something that happens has no observable effect it doesn't happen. Works for me!

Of course that means there were no neutrinos/other galaxies etc in the stone age because no one knew about them and they couldn't be observed...I think that's consistent with quantum physics though. kinda.
Not quite. The observer doesn't have to be a conscious entity, the photons etc don't know they are being observed.
but they also don't know they're not being observed. they don't know anything, they're photons.
Which was my point. smile

People seem to think the term observer implies physically 'seeing' something happen. It doesn't.
Indeed, an event only has to take place in an environment upon which it has an effect - that's the 'observation' bit...

Incredible Sulk

5,425 posts

216 months

Wednesday 18th November 2009
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EDLT said:
Comb-over-pony-tail had the most annoying laugh I've ever heard.
How True. When I heard him I thought it was Dr. Evil..................