Elementary Questions on Quantum Physics for 15-18 Year Olds

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Hi, I'm currently writting an article for people my age (15-18) about Quantum Physics, it's complexity, it's vast uncertainty and it's applications. However, being only young and just halfway through John Gribbin's 'In Search of Schrodinger's Cat', there are several points I would like to raise, but am unnable to explain. I am aware that this may belong in a homeowrk help thread, but I thought I would find the most passionnate and most qualified here. Simple answers please, this is only a simple article! Thanks in advance, PipBoy

Q: In what way does a particle exhibit both wave like and particle like behaviour? What makes it like a wave, what makes it like a particle?
Q: Does Quantum Theory agree with Relativity, and what is the definition of Relativity Theory?

These as a start, thanks.
 
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For the second question:
As far as I can tell, quantum mechanics has been successfully combined with special relativity the result being quantum electrodynamics. However, there is to date no widely accepted theory of quantum gravity, which combines quantum mechanics with general relativity, Einstein theory of gravitation. I reccomend you do a quick wikipedia search on these theories to read more.
 
Thank you, that's resolved nicely ^^
 
For the first question, watching this youtube video may help:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DfPeprQ7oGc

On the observer part, you can't take "observer" too literlly. Observer just means a measuring device, whether intelligence is involved or not. It involves interacting the particles being observered, not just passively watching them pass by. Interaction free measurements exist, but probably get deeper than what you need to go.

Here is a video demonstration of the Uncertainty Principle at work, showing actual effects in that case:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KT7xJ0tjB4A
 
espen180 said:
As far as I can tell, quantum mechanics has been successfully combined with special relativity the result being quantum electrodynamics.

Well, I'd count relativistic quantum mechanics as the Klein-Gordon and Dirac equations, whereas QED is really quantum mechanics applied to the electromagnetic field.
There does exist non-relativistic QED, as well as relativistic QM without using a quantized field.

So in atomic/molecular physics we tend to distinguish between 'relativistic effects' (such as relativistic momentum corrections, spin-orbit coupling, and Breit-Pauli interactions) and 'QED effects' (such as the Lamb shift).
 
I am not sure if this belongs in the biology section, but it appears more of a quantum physics question. Mike Wiest, Associate Professor of Neuroscience at Wellesley College in the US. In 2024 he published the results of an experiment on anaesthesia which purported to point to a role of quantum processes in consciousness; here is a popular exposition: https://neurosciencenews.com/quantum-process-consciousness-27624/ As my expertise in neuroscience doesn't reach up to an ant's ear...
Insights auto threads is broken atm, so I'm manually creating these for new Insight articles. Towards the end of the first lecture for the Qiskit Global Summer School 2025, Foundations of Quantum Mechanics, Olivia Lanes (Global Lead, Content and Education IBM) stated... Source: https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/quantum-entanglement-is-a-kinematic-fact-not-a-dynamical-effect/ by @RUTA
I am reading WHAT IS A QUANTUM FIELD THEORY?" A First Introduction for Mathematicians. The author states (2.4 Finite versus Continuous Models) that the use of continuity causes the infinities in QFT: 'Mathematicians are trained to think of physical space as R3. But our continuous model of physical space as R3 is of course an idealization, both at the scale of the very large and at the scale of the very small. This idealization has proved to be very powerful, but in the case of Quantum...

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