A night with the stars (Brian Cox on telly)

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In summary: Surely, if this were really the case, we should see a spectacular spectrum of light emission from all directions? Or perhaps some sort of interaction between the diamond and the electron?In summary, I thought Brian Cox's program on quantum mechanics last night was interesting but some of his explanations left me confused. I think his main aim was to show how entanglement follows from the Pauli exclusion principle, but I feel that it may have been an attempt to oversimplify the concept.
  • #71
Naty1 said:
1]What is the 'proof' that becox refers to in the film segment: That in 1967 a consequence of the Pauli exclusion principle was proved that no two electrons anywhere in the universe can be in precisely the same energy levels….
A small piece here, 3rd paragraph under 'Stability of matter': http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pauli_exclusion_principle#Stability_of_matter , but nothing said about universal reach.
2] Why should we believe the model referenced by becox actually applies to the universe? For example, does an infinite potential well correctly model our universe?
As pointed out in #66, an infinite potential well would kill universal linkage - the usual assumption is a finite potential well of infinite extent (but as per #58, ultra feeble at large r).
3] Someone said this is a non relativistic QM model? Is that important? How would a relativistic version differ?
Do you mean PEP itself? The above Wiki has something to say here under 'The Pauli principle in advanced quantum theory': http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pauli_...he_Pauli_principle_in_advanced_quantum_theory
4] I thought that there are problems with defining the energy of the gravitational field in general relativity, as one complicating factor [so many physicists prefer to say that energy is not globally conserved in GR]...given that, how can anyone conclude there is any likelihood of electrons being in the same energy state throughout the universe.
This article may be of interest: http://www.physorg.com/news200060488.html
 
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  • #72
Q-reeus said:
There is no way known such a claim/theory can ever be observationally confirmed to that level. Assuming though for the moment it is actually correct, the only half-way rational worldview I'm familiar with that then makes sense is the Cramer transactional interpretation.
I don't think CI would have any trouble with it, because CI asserts that the wave function is merely a calculational tool, so can change instantaneously as information about the system changes.
 
  • #73
In accord with many other postings, the extension of Pauli's exclusion principle form 'atom' to 'universe' was quite an alien concept to me in Brian Cox's TV 'show'. Although a scientist, I am not a theoritical physicist, but it strikes me that in none of the subsequent postings to this thread does it appear to be have been considered just what the consequences are/might be (from a quantum viewpoint) of: what if he is wrong? Would it imply total (instantaneous) collapse of the 'universe' to a 'singular' state, because everything, potentially, was equal? Conversely, might it be because no energy state of any conceivable 'particle' can be replicated absolutely within the universe, that the universe as we know/understand it does in fact exist? I think there are some fundamental issues here that might require theoretical considerations beyond my wit to comprehend!
 
  • #74
There is a post on the first page which clarifies the argument above quite clearly. Well it did for me anyway. The change in states are inmeasurable so no evidence can ever be gathered to prove it happens but the idea follows as a consequence of the exclusion principle. Read the article it might clarify the situation for you as well.
 
  • #75
There is a post on the first page which clarifies the argument above quite clearly. Well it did for me anyway. The change in states are inmeasurable so no evidence can ever be gathered to prove it happens but the idea follows as a consequence of the exclusion principle. Read the article it might clarify the situation for you as well.

Immeasurable to what degree? Within a single atom, can the change of electrons be measured? How about for the other atoms in near touching proximity?
 
  • #76
have you read the article?
 
  • #77
I think an important thing to clarify is the difference between statements like "this is true about the world" versus statements like "this follows from the most literal interpretation of theory X." I believe Brian Cox's statement about the effects on the states of all electrons when one rubs a diamond has the latter flavor, but can sound like it has the former flavor, and this may be the source of much of the difficulty here. Dr. Cox may himself even believe the former flavor, I wouldn't speak for him, but I think only the latter type can be correctly asserted.
 
  • #78
Q-reeus: thanks for the attemopt to clarify things in post #71..,
not very encouraging as far as becox claims are concerned...

...As pointed out in #66, an infinite potential well would kill universal linkage...

yes but as I understand things, that's an infinite potential between systems, not two systems within the same potential well...so it doesn't seem to apply to the becox scenario of one well for the entire universe.

I had already seen the wiki comment about "advanced quantum theory"...multiplying by 'i' fails to inspire as well when I went looking for anything on "relativistic quantum theory"...I know nothinmg about it...I still wonder what it means when we don't have a unified theory...
 
  • #79
The underlying idea is that close approach of an electron to the nucleus of the atom necessarily increases its kinetic energy, an application of the uncertainty principle of Heisenberg.[3] However, stability of large systems with many electrons and many nuclei is a different matter, and requires the Pauli exclusion principle.[4]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pauli_exclusion_principle#Stability_of_matter

I read the above a few days ago and did not stop to consider "uncertainty"...If the difference in energy states is an issue among electrons worrying about what energy they are allowed, how do they get beneath Heisenberg uncertainty? Seems rather moot.
 
  • #80
Naty1 said:
Q-reeus...As pointed out in #66, an infinite potential well would kill universal linkage...

yes but as I understand things, that's an infinite potential between systems, not two systems within the same potential well...so it doesn't seem to apply to the becox scenario of one well for the entire universe.
Naty1 - I don't think he's talking about a single well though. The diamong is basically one system with it's own 'well' (with something like 3 million billion billion well levels as I recall the piece), and the rest of the universe is a conglomerate of everything with their own 'well complexes' - and much which is entirely free of a potential well in the usual sense (interstellar plasma etc).

The first link given in #20 is worth reading over again: http://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/18527/does-the-pauli-exclusion-principle-instantaneously-affect-distant-electrons There are enough points raised there, especially the 3rd last entry, to invalidate the notion of meaningfully discrete state shifts 'from afar' even assuming instantaneous influence. Further, on the theoretical justification for instantaneous connection, Lubos Motl has something interesting to say in entry 5 at: http://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/11003/what-causes-the-pauli-exclusion-principle-and-why-does-spin-1-2-fermion/11013#11013 - especially 3rd paragraph. Maybe some here will disagree with Motl, but those remarks seem clear enough.
 
  • #81
action at a distance

I was listening to the lecture by Brian Walsh on the BBC over the New Year and was taken aback by one of his statements.
Is this really true?

I think he was saying that ,if you have any object in a system, then it has a characteristic that is completely unique to it (can't recall the terminology...)
If one of these objects (an electron , for example) absorbs energy then every other object in the universe is affected instaneously because each object is required to be unique.

This means (in my mind ) that if we strike a match in Manchester that something happens simultaneously on the Moon.

Can anyone tell me if I have got the wrong end of the stick here?
I know Quantum Theory is meant to be ridiculous but does that go too far?
 
  • #82


geordief said:
I was listening to the lecture by Brian Walsh on the BBC over the New Year and was taken aback by one of his statements.
Is this really true?
Do you mean Brian Cox?

geordief said:
I think he was saying that ,if you have any object in a system, then it has a characteristic that is completely unique to it (can't recall the terminology...)
If one of these objects (an electron , for example) absorbs energy then every other object in the universe is affected instaneously because each object is required to be unique.

This means (in my mind ) that if we strike a match in Manchester that something happens simultaneously on the Moon.
I would guess that, wrt a god's eye view of things, that if you strike a match in Manchester that something happens simultaneously on the Moon, or the Sun, or Jupiter, etc. But I would suppose that none of it has anything to do with your stiking a match in Manchester.

geordief said:
Can anyone tell me if I have got the wrong end of the stick here?
I know Quantum Theory is meant to be ridiculous but does that go too far?
Yes, I think you've got the wrong end of the stick. Quantum theory isn't meant to be riduculous, but it can be made so by unwarranted interpretations. Brian Cox's stuff is meant to entertain, not inform. So don't take it literally.
 
  • #83


geordief said:
I was listening to the lecture by Brian Walsh on the BBC over the New Year and was taken aback by one of his statements.
Is this really true?

I think he was saying that ,if you have any object in a system, then it has a characteristic that is completely unique to it (can't recall the terminology...)
If one of these objects (an electron , for example) absorbs energy then every other object in the universe is affected instaneously because each object is required to be unique.

This means (in my mind ) that if we strike a match in Manchester that something happens simultaneously on the Moon.

Can anyone tell me if I have got the wrong end of the stick here?
I know Quantum Theory is meant to be ridiculous but does that go too far?

Yes. It is technically true. In technical terms, this simply reflects the requirement that the wavefunction of a system of fermions must be antisymmetric, and the assumption that there is at any particular time a single wavefunction that contains all fermions in the universe. However, of course when we write a wavefunction for a solid on the earth, we don't expect to have to take account of the fermions on the moon to get a really good approximation. I cannot remember the argument that the fermions on the moon can be neglected for all practical purposes, but it is found in Shankar's QM text http://books.google.com/books?id=2zypV5EbKuIC&source=gbs_navlinks_s (around p275, search for "moon"!).
 
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  • #84
Theads merged.
 
  • #85


ThomasT said:
Do you mean Brian Cox?

.
yes - that was a silly mistake.Brian Walsh is my local garage man.
I don't think there is any connection.:blushing:
 
  • #86
What's more, even technically we should probably avoid language like something "happening simultaneously" on the Moon. Relativistic quantum mechanics must respect the limit of causal effects to propagate at less than c, so it is only what we regard as happening on the Moon that is altered simultaneously to the change in what we regard as happening in Manchester. What is "actually" happening on the Moon is a matter for people on the Moon to decide authoritatively, given the local limitations on the act of doing observations. I guess you can call me a positivist!
 
  • #87


geordief said:
yes - that was a silly mistake.Brian Walsh is my local garage man.
I don't think there is any connection.:blushing:
:smile: Apparently, according to Brian Cox, your mistake might not (in some sense) really be a mistake. And anyway Brian Walsh is a lot closer to any of us than the moon (not that that matters). As atyy and others have pointed out, what Brian Cox said can be considered technically correct. But as Ken G and others have pointed out, it's important how formal QM is translated into ordinary language, because its precise relationship to nature is very much a matter of interpretation.

I'm still of the opinion that Brian Cox's popular presentations are meant to entertain, and not necessarily to inform or clarify -- and that it remains for each of us to learn enough of the technical theory to decide for ourselves when and if the mathematical formalism might be translated literally into ordinary language statements about nature.

So, there you have it. Brian Cox's (and anybody else's) popularizations can be taken to be correct statements about reality or nature ... or not, depending on how one chooses to interpret the mathematical formalism.
 
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  • #88
becox said:
Seems to be some confusion here about the Pauli Principle.

http://www.hep.manchester.ac.uk/u/forshaw/BoseFermi/Double Well.html

Brian

Seems to be some confusion here about far apart and isolated atoms. Personally, I think it was intentional, to push a new book.

When they are far apart and isolated, the atoms have identical energy levels. However, as the spacing between the two atoms becomes smaller, the electron wave functions begin to overlap. Antibonding orbital are repulsive and act to destabilize the molecule as a whole..”

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antibonding

Lec 14 | MIT 5.111 Principles of Chemical Science

Double Twit Experiment – What Brian Cox Gets Wrong
 
  • #89
In my opinion, that last link is unpleasant and unjustified. If framed as a list of constructive criticisms for Cox to consider in his next presentation, it would only have been presumptuous. As it is, it is a vitriolic diatribe with no apparent reason for existing other than to express a very large chip that the author seems to carry for Dr. Cox. It makes one wonder if Brian kicked sand in his face when they were kids! I only found it interesting for the nice clips it gives of other lecturers, but it is no kind of critique of Dr. Cox that people like Feynman give great lectures. They can all have their own style, and the audience can be allowed to decide their preferences.
 
  • #90
Ken G said:
In my opinion, that last link is unpleasant and unjustified. If framed as a list of constructive criticisms for Cox to consider in his next presentation, it would only have been presumptuous. As it is, it is a vitriolic diatribe with no apparent reason for existing other than to express a very large chip that the author seems to carry for Dr. Cox. It makes one wonder if Brian kicked sand in his face when they were kids! I only found it interesting for the nice clips it gives of other lecturers, but it is no kind of critique of Dr. Cox that people like Feynman give great lectures. They can all have their own style, and the audience can be allowed to decide their preferences.
Hello,

I am the author of the review "Double Twit Experiment – What Brian Cox Gets Wrong", as linked by others.

I came across this thread after Cox's BBC show and linked to it in the blog article. I was surprised to notice a few days later that someone on the forum had linked back to what I had written, and that many people are reading it via this thread.

For Ken G and others who may find my comments 'unjustified', allow me to elaborate a little.

I am a maths and physics graduate who has taught physics in secondary schools in the UK for around 6 years. During this time, I've thought quite carefully about which parts of scientific inquiry are worth teaching - which ideas and skills are valuable.

For classroom teaching, there is inevitably a conflict of interested when we consider how long a student might stay in science education. Some, who will go onto further study, need to be equipped with particular skills and informed of specific ideas. Those who will go on to do other things after high-school will likely find little benefit from these skills. I'm talking about learning how to use a micro-metre, or learning which of Newton Laws is which.

However, there is much of scientific inquiry that is valuable to everyone, regardless of specialisms. Most important of all, any citizen will benefit from understanding the process of scientific thinking. The role of evidence in falsification, what constitutes a scientific theory, how logic is utilized to determine consequences of a theory, the imaginative guesses that bring about new theories. All of this equips a person with thinking skills and understanding they can apply to enrich their lives, and their understanding of the latest research.

Values to extract from this include: anti-authoritarianism, fallibilism, logical analysis, philosophical reflection and courageous imaginations.

Let's suppose you think this is too abstract or challenging. Which parts of physical theory might be valuable knowledge to everyone? Some basic knowledge of Newtonian mechanics, descriptive optics, electrical circuits would be a good start. Sure, they approximations for theories we now know to be closer to the truth, but if taught well they will not impede possible future study.

So what to do with a 1 hour presentation? Now, I'm sure there will be much noise about how producers won't agree to programs that present these 'old' ideas. But Cox seems to command a lot of respect - they have already agreed to let him give a one hour lecture with a blackboard.

It is disappointing that he has decided to present something so esoteric, yet mostly rely on intellectual intimidation and argument from authority to establish the results. Sure, he tried some underrehearsed explanations and demonstration, but the material was far too broad for even the greatest of educators to do a good job.

So what is the result? We have people who think they are interested in science, credulously parroting the latest scientific ideas to each other at the dinner table.

Most dangerous of all, it encourages already arrogant students to presume they have understood an idea, when they have merely remembered some impressive words. I have met many students who have tried to explain black holes to me, or something about string theory. I always fell a sympathy that these curious minds have been duped by yet another shallow presentation of scientific inquiry.

Or, there are the adults I meet who tell me they are 'really interested in science' and then ask me about m-theory, or black-holes.

"Why do some object float in water?" I ask them. Most of them have nothing to say about this. Now I ask you, if a person cannot connect the perceptions of their experience with scientific patterns, what is the possible value in describing the theoretical intricacies of the latest research?

In short, I think presentations like Cox's contributes to a social game that people play, to impress and stupefy. But not to understand.
 
  • #91


atyy said:
Yes. It is technically true. In technical terms, this simply reflects the requirement that the wavefunction of a system of fermions must be antisymmetric, and the assumption that there is at any particular time a single wavefunction that contains all fermions in the universe. However, of course when we write a wavefunction for a solid on the earth, we don't expect to have to take account of the fermions on the moon to get a really good approximation. I cannot remember the argument that the fermions on the moon can be neglected for all practical purposes, but it is found in Shankar's QM text http://books.google.com/books?id=2zypV5EbKuIC&source=gbs_navlinks_s (around p275, search for "moon"!).

unfortunately the relevant pages 274,275 are not available in my google books preview. But if you have a (free) amazon account you can just search for the word 'moon' in the 'Look Inside!' view




(The relevant section starts on p 273 called 'When Can We Ignore Symmetrization and AntiSymmetrization?')

The point is that the the type of effect Cox tried to popularize, is in fact completely negligible in practice, even if quantum mechanics, as we currently formulate it, is exactly theoretically correct. But he did link to lecture notes where this point was made explicit to ~50 decimal places in his first post on the thread (several weeks ago)
 
  • #92
James_Sheils said:
Hello,

I am the author of the review "Double Twit Experiment – What Brian Cox Gets Wrong", as linked by others.

In short, I think presentations like Cox's contributes to a social game that people play, to impress and stupefy. But not to understand.

Bravo, well said. I enjoyed your review. The internet is plagued with so-called wisdom. For those of us who are interested in science, but wish to avoid the pseudo-junk altogether, can you tell us how to find trusted sources?

Wikipedia can be a good starting point, right? From there you can check all the references to see if the authors are from a university, research facility, or published in a reputable journal. Peer reviewed is more reliable and clearly, arXiv is not peer reviewed. It can contain some dubious e-prints but most of the authors care about what they write. If the website ends with .gov or .edu it’s probably a good source, right? Can you think of anything thing else to add?

List of Scientific Journals

How the Scientific Peer Review Process works

Misconceptions about science

What is Science?

P.S. If you’re such a stickler, here’s a suggestion for your next write up.

Why does a photon slow down in a medium?

There are tons of explanations out there. Here is ZapperZ’s explanation from in here and another from yahoo. Is either of these explanations accurate? If not, then perhaps you could provide a better one on your blog.

https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=899393&postcount=4 [Broken]

http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090918084206AALZBC5
 
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  • #94
SecularSanity said:
Bravo, well said. I enjoyed your review. The internet is plagued with so-called wisdom. For those of us who are interested in science, but wish to avoid the pseudo-junk altogether, can you tell us how to find trusted sources?

Thanks for your kind words.

I agree that Wikipedia is a good starting point. Contrary to popular opinion, Wikipedia has a very high fidelity, in physics at least. I hear from specialists in other fields, such as art history, that the pages do not generate enough interest from editors to be reliable. However, in physics there seems to be a good supply of specialist contributors. The only disadvantage I have found is that for a non-specialist, the pages can be difficult to understand. But Wikipedia is a reference source, not an educational program.

I agree with what you say about the other sources, but would always read them with a skeptical mind. As I mentioned in the article, I think the best source for basic physics comes from Walter Lewin's MIT course.

As for the photon question, that's a pretty difficult one to answer, and I can't claim to fully comprehend all the details of modern theory!

I think the explanation you linked was right to avoid single atom explanations, but did not address the faulty assumptions in the question.

As the Double Slit Experiment aims to elucidate, we are not able to measure what happens between a photons emission and its arrival without changing the conditions sufficiently to alter the experiment. And the double slit experiment summarized the very counter-intuitive results concerning detection of photons. They arrive as particles, but do not seem to behave as particles on their journeys.

Encapsulated in the Copenhagen Interpretation of QM is a policy of not trying to speculate about 'where the photon goes' from source to detector.

We might have some mathematical equipment to calculate the probabilities of where the photon might end up, but we don't (or can't) know which path it took. Indeed, QED calculations assumed you need to consider every permissible path to determine the probabilities. So we can't appeal to the mathematical calculations for a satisfactory answer.

Thus, to as 'why' and expect a deterministic 'then the photon does this...' type of narrative asks too much of quantum mechanics.

But, the question could be answered by describing why the extra calculations for the material seems to delay the probability of a photon's arrival, compared with it traveling through empty space. I don't have sufficient quantum mechanical answer for this!
 
  • #95
James_Sheils said:
I am a maths and physics graduate who has taught physics in secondary schools in the UK for around 6 years. During this time, I've thought quite carefully about which parts of scientific inquiry are worth teaching - which ideas and skills are valuable.
So have many of us. Do you recognize that this practice generates in you a number of opinions, that can be expressed without automatically assuming yours is the complete and final truth of the matter? The most important element of the art of advancing an opinion is the high regard for decorum, civility, and the right to respectfully disagree. Polemic diatribes are both easy, and tempting, but often limit their impact to a relatively small set of die-hard afficionados.
Most important of all, any citizen will benefit from understanding the process of scientific thinking. The role of evidence in falsification, what constitutes a scientific theory, how logic is utilized to determine consequences of a theory, the imaginative guesses that bring about new theories. All of this equips a person with thinking skills and understanding they can apply to enrich their lives, and their understanding of the latest research.
Absolutely, essentially any science educator would agree with that. The issue is, does each person who gets on the internet for a half hour or hour presentation need to feel responsible for all that, or is this more logically the mission of the science educator in the classroom setting?
Values to extract from this include: anti-authoritarianism, fallibilism, logical analysis, philosophical reflection and courageous imaginations.
I agree completely, and indeed from your comments on Dr. Cox I formed the opinion that you are most likely both very capable, and very dedicated, in your science education mission. You probably teach very well, and linked to others who do also. But none of those facts actually justify that vitriolic critique. Not everyone needs to adopt the same mission that you would, in order to be considered of value to science in some objective or demonstrable way. In short, they do not necessarily need to submit to your judgement of their performance. The question is, what audience is your criticism intended for? If you want Brian Cox to pay heed, the tone would rule that out-- I doubt he would read past the first few paragraphs. If your goal is to get people who like to listen to him to boycott him and listen to others that meet with your approval, I doubt you'll have much success-- those inclined to agree with you have probably already formed a similar opinion and don't seek out Dr. Cox's presentations, and those who like them will most likely not be dissuaded, because they simply won't agree with you. If you want to reach that crowd, I think you'd do better with your own presentation-- enlighten and entertain in your own way, achieving those goals that you value, and reach that clientele in that manner. That would accomplish the same goal, but more effectively than a largely unfocused critique-- it's easier to teach than to unteach.
So what to do with a 1 hour presentation? Now, I'm sure there will be much noise about how producers won't agree to programs that present these 'old' ideas. But Cox seems to command a lot of respect - they have already agreed to let him give a one hour lecture with a blackboard.
And this is the fundamental flaw in your position. Here you suggest that your goal is to convince Brian Cox to use his hour differently. Do you really think the way you presented your position is likely to accomplish that? Your comments are not even directed to Dr. Cox, they are directed to people who would listen to him. So your goal is clearly not to get Dr. Cox to use his hour more effectively, which would be a constructive goal (though presumptuous), it is to get those who would listen to his hour to avoid it or join in the Brian-bashing. How is that going to teach people Newton's laws?

What's more, you are overlooking the fact that there may be a reason that Dr. Cox is getting this hour (and a blackboard!), and neither you nor I are-- he has proven the ability to entertain and energize his viewers. Personally I think I could put together something that would be entertaining and enlightening also, which you might find less occasion to criticize if we share similar educational values, but I'm not going to get the opportunity to reach such a huge audience. I'm just not, the issue is moot. So I can see value in a certain trade-off there-- yes, perhaps there is an overemphasis on what is titillating rather than what is good basic science, but it's not such a bad exchange to get these ideas out there to people, to help them see that scientists are not just in ivory towers discovering arcane looking equations that somehow helps us build better iPads. Instead, we are getting glimpses deep into the workings of our reality, and getting quite amazed in the process, and we are inclined to want to share some of that experience with a larger audience.
It is disappointing that he has decided to present something so esoteric, yet mostly rely on intellectual intimidation and argument from authority to establish the results. Sure, he tried some underrehearsed explanations and demonstration, but the material was far too broad for even the greatest of educators to do a good job.
OK, so maybe not everything he did worked as well as it could have, and maybe he can learn some lessons for next time. He probably knows that, or if he doesn't, a simple constructive comment might be all that would be needed. What's the purpose behind all the bashing? That's what I really think you should look at more closely, what is really pushing your buttons here? For example, why do you think that his primary motivation is to make himself feel smart? I think it's pretty clear what his primary motivation is, it is to share with others some of the amazing glimpses he feels he has gotten into our reality. Of course it's also fun to feel smart, and of course it's also a rush to be able to entertain, I hardly think we can criticize the comedian for liking to hear a house full of laughter!
Most dangerous of all, it encourages already arrogant students to presume they have understood an idea, when they have merely remembered some impressive words. I have met many students who have tried to explain black holes to me, or something about string theory. I always fell a sympathy that these curious minds have been duped by yet another shallow presentation of scientific inquiry.
But this is unavoidable. Do you really think this never happens to your students? At least the people in question are interested in something that connects with science-- the alternative may be the absence of any of that.
Or, there are the adults I meet who tell me they are 'really interested in science' and then ask me about m-theory, or black-holes.
OK, but the point is, maybe they would not have said they were interested in science and then talked about Newton's laws! That's what you have to include in your calculations. I have had some small success getting people jazzed about Newton's laws, but the fact is, it's just a lot harder-- the number of people who are going to feel that way is just less than it is for the wilder stuff. That I believe is Dr. Cox's primary motivation for his subject selection, not the desire to feel smart.
"Why do some object float in water?" I ask them. Most of them have nothing to say about this. Now I ask you, if a person cannot connect the perceptions of their experience with scientific patterns, what is the possible value in describing the theoretical intricacies of the latest research?
It is simply not an either/or propositon.
In short, I think presentations like Cox's contributes to a social game that people play, to impress and stupefy. But not to understand.
And there's certainly some truth to that. This is a valid criticism that can be raised, but it doesn't make what Dr. Cox is doing worthless or damaging to people's minds, they come to it because it gives them something they like, and it is certainly connected with science. I think it does a lot more good than harm, and if it could be improved in some way, who among us could escape that criticism? None of this justifies that vitriol, even though there are valid aspects to the points you raise.
 
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  • #96
James_Sheils said:
Thanks for your kind words.

And thank you for the reply.

Sorry, but I couldn’t resist. However, I’ll refrain from linking the video. :biggrin:

You’re young, handsome, and your accent makes you sound intelligent, but here’s some womanly advice. Critics should cover their own butt and stick to the bare necessities, don’t cha think? What’s up with the banana? :eek:

Thanks again.

Cheers!
 
  • #97
There are several science programs on bbc tv and radio, some more populist than others. Brian Cox's are more at the entertainment end of the scale, but I for one quite enjoyed the four episodes in The Wonders of The Universe series, for example (even with the ott music in the first series of broadcasts).

The target audience is certainly not elitist types, and you should probably avoid these programs if you have 'a stick up your bottom' attitude to such populist science.

There're always the online lectures of Susskind for example if you want a dry Diracesque introduction to QM. Feynman's style can be seen in the Messenger Lectures http://www.microsoft.com/education/...es/articledetails.aspx?cid=1936&c1=en-us&c2=0 (requires silverlight - microsoft compatible only) , I personally doubt his double-slit lecture (lecture 6) will enlighten the uninitiated any more than Cox's attempts.
 
  • #98
I am still surprised by what was said about the consequences for electrons throughout the Universe of warming a diamond in one's hand. For a start, diamond is an electrical insulator with a large energy gap of more than 5 electron volts whereas the average thermal energy of an electron at room temperature (3/2 kT) is only 0.04 eV. Increasing this by at most 5% falls far short of the minimum needed to cause any electrons to jump into higher energy levels (assuming the "box of carbon atoms" contains no impurities); it will just cause the atomic lattice to vibrate a bit more.

Ignoring anomalies (if any?) caused by relativistic effects such as electron creation and annihilation or the lack of any FTL signals, the Pauli Exclusion Principle does of course hold for all electrons everywhere, regardless of whether they are pictured as bound to nuclei, zipping along on their own at almost the speed of light or just drifting about in a plasma.

The double-well example is fine as far as it goes, but only bound states corresponding to fixed separations of the wells are considered. In a gas, unless two nuclei are part of the same molecule, they will not usually remain a fixed distance apart and therefore will not give rise to a set of stationary states with exact electron energy levels.

I think I'm right in saying that at present, the conventional view of astronomers is that a good 90% of ordinary (baryonic) matter (nearly all H) is in the plasma state. If this is correct, then around 90% of all electrons are not bound to any nuclei at all!

When two of these "free" electrons are in relative motion, there could always be some inertial observers for whom their energies are equal alongside others for whom they are unequal. Therefore, I do not see how it is possible in general to substitute rules about electron energies for the basic requirement of antisymmetry of the electron component of the total wave-function, a property which is both observer-independent and permanent.

I agree of course that quantum mechanics does imply that "everything is connected to everything else" through entanglement, but I don't think the scenarios chosen to illustrate this amazing idea were at all convincing.
 
  • #99
becox said:
Seems to be some confusion here about the Pauli Principle. Jeff Forshaw and myself write about it in detail in our book The Quantum Universe, chapter 8. The essential point is that two widely separated hydrogen atoms should not be treated as isolated systems. If you'd like to see how we teach this to undergraduates in Manchester, have a read of this:

http://www.hep.manchester.ac.uk/u/forshaw/BoseFermi/Double Well.html

But I do also recommend our book, because the argument is extended to explain semiconductors.

doodyone - in particular, I suggest you pay close attention, especially if you're an undergraduate. You might up your degree classification!

Brian

If it is the case that electrons occupy slightly different energy levels, then wouldn't it follow then the spectra would show similar subtle variations? In Chapter 11 of the Quantum Universe, it mentions the "Lamb Shift" and this is accounted for by factoring in particle interactions within the atom. Wouldn't this Lamb Shift be undetectable if there is also a certain "arbitrariness" about the actual energy levels? Or is it a question of scale? Or maybe, I haven't understood!
 
  • #100
dgwsoft said:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b018nn7l

I did enjoy Brian Cox's program on quantum mechanics last night, but one bit left me thinking "no, that's not right!".

The gist of it was that all the electrons in the universe have to be in constant communication to ensure that no two of them are ever in the same state. If he changed the energies of electrons in a diamond, by heating it in his hand, all the other electrons in the world would have to adjust their energies too.

I think this may have been an attempt to show that entanglement follows from the Pauli exclusion principle, but was it a simplification too far?

The Pauli principle confused me when I first heard it at school: did it mean that no two hydrogen atoms in the universe could be in their ground states simultaneously? I have always understood, since then, that it doesn't mean that, because which proton the electron is bound to is part of its state. So "in the first energy level around this proton" is a different state from "in the first energy level around that proton".

The exclusion principle states that no two electrons can be in the same *state* not, as Cox seemed to be implying, that they may not have numerically the same energies. That is not forbidden as far as I know. We would not see nice spectral lines from billions of hydrogen atoms all making the same state transition at the same time, if it was.

I now know there is a deeper explanation of the exclusion principle, namely that the multi-particle wave-function of a half-integral spin particle is antisymmetric, and that means the probability of finding two of them in the same place is zero. So OK, Pauli and entanglement are connected. But I always like a simple explanation if one is available. What does the panel think? Did what Cox said amount to a good explanation for a general audience, or does it risk perpetuating a misunderstanding?

If all the electrons in the universe have to be in constant communication to ensure that no two of them are ever in the same state, then this may contradict the principle of conservation of energy. If we control a material in such a way that it's electrons would occupy most of the lowest possible energy states - this would indicate according to Cox explanation that all the other electrons in the universe would have a lower probability to occupy these lowest energy states and a higher probability to exist in higher energy states. This cannot be correct.
 
  • #101
I'm sure Dr. Cox understands conservation of energy. His viewpoint is simply that if there is a probability that an electron will be in an energy state, this affects the accessibility of the state, so if I remove energy from an electron such that it would have a higher probability of moving into some state, and there is already some probability of an electron being in that state, the fact that all electrons are entangled (by their indistinguishability) implies that they are all "affected" in some sense. I think the real problem here is that Dr. Cox's words are being overinterpreted-- the key point is that electrons are identical, and thus entangled. Hence, any counterargument that first pretends the electrons have separate identities is already missing the point. Perhaps he was not careful to make this distinction-- it is crucial that all language like "this electron" or "that electron" be avoided when one is discussing Pauli exclusion.
 
  • #102
"I think the real problem here is that Dr. Cox's words are being overinterpreted."

I agree; the real problem is to try to find the right words to describe the situation in terms of a layman's frame of reference while minimizing the possibility of misleading them.
 
  • #103
Exactly. I'm sympathetic of that problem-- we might not all agree with how Dr. Cox negotiates it, but we're all in glass houses on that score. If one person thinks Cox is doing more harm than good by stressing the more mystical elements, another can say he is doing more good than harm by simply getting people interested in some of the more fascinating new elements of what we have discovered. The fact is it might take centuries before we really understand what all this means, remember Feynman's wonderful words about quantum mechanics:
"We have always had a great deal of difficulty understanding the world view that quantum mechanics represents. At least I do, because I'm an old enough man that I haven't got to the point that this stuff is obvious to me. Okay, I still get nervous with it... You know how it always is, every new idea, it takes a generation or two until it becomes obvious that there's no real problem. I cannot define the real problem, therefore I suspect there's no real problem, but I'm not sure there's no real problem."
 
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  • #104
mc^2 said:
If all the electrons in the universe have to be in constant communication to ensure that no two of them are ever in the same state, then this may contradict the principle of conservation of energy. If we control a material in such a way that it's electrons would occupy most of the lowest possible energy states - this would indicate according to Cox explanation that all the other electrons in the universe would have a lower probability to occupy these lowest energy states and a higher probability to exist in higher energy states. This cannot be correct.

It's only a problem if our ability to "control" the material is inconsistent with global unitary evolution. ie is Brian's Cox's choice to rub the diamond any different from a diamond being shifted around underground by a natural process such as an earthquake?

When a supernova explodes it undoubtedly has a significant effect on the state vector of the universe, but it ought to be consistent with unitary evolution according to the Schrödinger Eqn.

Of course, this isn't an issue if you don't believe in macroscopic wavefunctions, especially one describing the entire universe, but in that case you need corrections to the current standard formulation of QM.

The no-communication theorem says a measurement in one place cannot change the probability distribution of any observable outside the future light-cone of the first measurement.

But science has no consensus on the nature of free-will, and such theorems may not apply. However, if free-will does break unitarity in a deterministic way then we may also need a reformulation of relativity since we would otherwise have the possibility of causal paradoxes.
 
  • #105
unusualname said:
Of course, this isn't an issue if you don't believe in macroscopic wavefunctions, especially one describing the entire universe, but in that case you need corrections to the current standard formulation of QM.
Yet that's a pretty small "but". It is a "but" that is more or less the defining quality of science!
The no-communication theorem says a measurement in one place cannot change the probability distribution of any observable outside the future light-cone of the first measurement.
Actually, I don't think the theorem can quite say that. A probability distribution is always contingent upon what you already regard as known, versus what unknowns you are simply averaging over. So changes in knowledge, here, can change probability distributions about distant events, reckoned here, without any causality violations (as in EPR type experiments). Hence, you can reckon that the probability distribution somewhere else, outside your light cone, can be changed by your measurement-- it is just the physicists outside your light cone that cannot know that. It's a question of what any probability distribution is contingent on.
 
<h2>1. What is "A night with the stars (Brian Cox on telly)"?</h2><p>"A night with the stars (Brian Cox on telly)" is a television program hosted by renowned physicist and science communicator, Brian Cox. It features discussions and demonstrations about various topics in astronomy and astrophysics.</p><h2>2. Who is Brian Cox?</h2><p>Brian Cox is a physicist, professor, and science communicator from England. He is known for his work in particle physics and for his popular science programs, including "A night with the stars (Brian Cox on telly)".</p><h2>3. What can I expect to learn from "A night with the stars (Brian Cox on telly)"?</h2><p>The program covers a wide range of topics in astronomy and astrophysics, from the origins of the universe to the search for extraterrestrial life. Viewers can expect to learn about the latest discoveries and theories in these fields, presented in an engaging and accessible manner by Brian Cox.</p><h2>4. Is "A night with the stars (Brian Cox on telly)" suitable for all ages?</h2><p>Yes, the program is suitable for all ages. Brian Cox has a talent for making complex scientific concepts easy to understand for people of all backgrounds and ages. The program is also visually stunning, with high-quality graphics and footage of space.</p><h2>5. Can I watch "A night with the stars (Brian Cox on telly)" if I am not familiar with astronomy or astrophysics?</h2><p>Yes, you can still enjoy and learn from the program even if you are not familiar with these subjects. Brian Cox's explanations and demonstrations are designed to be accessible to a general audience, and the program aims to spark curiosity and interest in these fascinating fields of science.</p>

1. What is "A night with the stars (Brian Cox on telly)"?

"A night with the stars (Brian Cox on telly)" is a television program hosted by renowned physicist and science communicator, Brian Cox. It features discussions and demonstrations about various topics in astronomy and astrophysics.

2. Who is Brian Cox?

Brian Cox is a physicist, professor, and science communicator from England. He is known for his work in particle physics and for his popular science programs, including "A night with the stars (Brian Cox on telly)".

3. What can I expect to learn from "A night with the stars (Brian Cox on telly)"?

The program covers a wide range of topics in astronomy and astrophysics, from the origins of the universe to the search for extraterrestrial life. Viewers can expect to learn about the latest discoveries and theories in these fields, presented in an engaging and accessible manner by Brian Cox.

4. Is "A night with the stars (Brian Cox on telly)" suitable for all ages?

Yes, the program is suitable for all ages. Brian Cox has a talent for making complex scientific concepts easy to understand for people of all backgrounds and ages. The program is also visually stunning, with high-quality graphics and footage of space.

5. Can I watch "A night with the stars (Brian Cox on telly)" if I am not familiar with astronomy or astrophysics?

Yes, you can still enjoy and learn from the program even if you are not familiar with these subjects. Brian Cox's explanations and demonstrations are designed to be accessible to a general audience, and the program aims to spark curiosity and interest in these fascinating fields of science.

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