Most Mind Blowing Physics statements

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SUMMARY

This discussion centers on the most mind-blowing concepts in physics, highlighting phenomena such as the uncertainty principle, quantum entanglement, and string theory. Participants express awe at the implications of these theories, including the dual nature of matter and waves, the existence of multiple dimensions, and the interconnectedness of forces as described by Maxwell's equations. Key statements include "F = ma" as a foundational equation in physics and the philosophical implications of time dilation and the nature of reality.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of quantum mechanics, particularly the uncertainty principle and quantum entanglement.
  • Familiarity with string theory, including concepts like Calabi-Yau manifolds and M-theory.
  • Knowledge of classical mechanics, specifically Newton's laws and the equation F = ma.
  • Basic grasp of electromagnetism and Maxwell's equations.
NEXT STEPS
  • Research the implications of quantum entanglement and its effects on information transfer.
  • Study string theory and its dimensions, focusing on the role of Calabi-Yau manifolds.
  • Explore the philosophical implications of time dilation and its effects on perception of time.
  • Investigate Maxwell's equations and their unification of electricity and magnetism.
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Students, educators, and enthusiasts in physics, particularly those interested in advanced concepts such as quantum mechanics, string theory, and the philosophical implications of physical laws.

um0123
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What is the most mind blowing thing you have ever seen that's physics related. I want to hear things that i never ever thought was true. things like "Because of the uncertainty principle, when you try to prove something is made of matter, it is true, but when you try to prove something is a wave, it is also true." and things like "Quantum entanglement shows that two things can transfer information at faster than light speeds." and "Until we observe the spin of an electron, it has no definite spin, the act of observing it actually forces it to choose a spin, which also forces its entagled partner to choose the opposite spin."

I want to hear things that i never thought were possible.
 
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the most mind-blowing physics idea I've heard of is string theory, in all of its aspects. the idea of 11 dimensions, 3 dimensions of our space, one of time, and a 7-dimensional calabi-yau manifold thing, is so crazy. and inside these calabi-yau manifolds exist tiny rubber bands, strings, whose properties (frequency, primarily, and energy) define it to behave like a particle of the standard model. like, an electron is really a string that vibrates like this and a down-quark is really a string that vibrates like that. i am amazed by the idea of messenger particles, and branes, and how there are open-ended strings that are, as if, "strapped" to the fabric of the universe we live in, where are "closed" strings float freely among everywhere. it is hypothesized that gravity's particles, gravitons, are represented by closed strings, which explains why gravity is so weak - its force-action is not solely restricted to our universe alone. i also love how there were 5 versions of string theory, and then ed witten put them all together as "different mirror reflections of the one same grand unified thing" which was m theory.

i hope the actual string theorists here do not regard me as spewing nonsense :) my knowledge of string theory is just the result of my readings of brian greene, lisa randall, and leonard susskind.
 


supersolids
 


Either the declaration that at least one inertial frames exists.

Or the Clausius and Kelvin statements leading to notion of a state function called entropy, which is given by dq/T under some conditions.
 


well, take this new statement from me -
"matter and wave are the same thing."
i bet, one day you'll read or hear of it somewhere else too.
 


From BC do not now what year.

All matter is formed out of tiny parts, and if we would ever be able to destroy those parts we would have the power to destroy the world.

It is a bit philosophical but reminds me of the ongoing atomic age.
 


the fact that nothing can move faster than light
and that the faster you move the slower time moves for you.
 


There are billions of neutrinos passing through your fingernail every second.
 


F = ma

Everything is derived from this one equation. It is the most powerful equaiton in all of physics, and it's absolutely non-intutive. I challenge you to find a physics book without this equation in it.
 
  • #10


Cyrus said:
F = ma

Everything is derived from this one equation. It is the most powerful equaiton in all of physics, and it's absolutely non-intutive. I challenge you to find a physics book without this equation in it.

Didn't mulligan use that in his oil drop experiment to figure out the charge of an electron?For me: Time dilation, Length Contraction, the uncertainty principle,
 
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  • #11


Ghost803 said:
Didn't mulligan use that in his oil drop experiment to figure out the charge of an electron?

Mulligan kept messing up his first shot at St. Andrews and would ask to take it again. Millikan did the oil drop experiment.
 
  • #12
You can move through time.

To the extent that if you travel fast enough, you could return to find the Earth extinct, or perhaps even the entire universe. Travelling at light speed you would experience zero time and so presumably you can travel to the end of the universe!

I don't study physics but the idea of time being relative to movement has got to be the absolutely most mind blowing statement ever.
 
  • #13
Can you please explain why such and such is so?
Certainly, but to be honest I haven't got a clue.
 
  • #14
"the electron interferes with itself"
 
  • #15
I've decided on one.

A single photon of light, which would have a small probability of reflecting off the top surface of a thin film, will sometimes change to zero probability of reflection depending on the thickness of the film on the underside of the surface.

After that, anything else to do with photons is a close tie for "second-most-mind-blowing."
 
  • #16
When I first read it it blew my mind away... it was awhile ago mind you.

That no objects actually touch each other. If I bounce a basketball off the ground the molecules of the ball never touch the floor.
 
  • #17


Chi Meson said:
Mulligan kept messing up his first shot at St. Andrews and would ask to take it again. Millikan did the oil drop experiment.

And Millikan kept messing up the oil drop experiment, but he ignored those measurements.

You're right about the effervescent wave - I always thought it was just a maths trick to get momentum to balance, then my wife did her PhD on sensors made from it.
 
  • #18
My favorite statement in classical physics is that light is an electromagnetic wave whose speed we can predict from experiments with charged pithballs and current carrying wires!

My favorite statement in relativity is that a static electric field will also have a magetic component when viewed by a moving observer!

Quantum physics has so much predictive power that I cannot possibly choose just one prediction, but the most mind blowing result for me is that because of quantum mechanics the universe violates Bell's inequalities!


I really like the positive spirit of this thread, buy I found Cyrus' post to be so disagreeable that I have to spoil the thread with the following argument:
Everything is derived from this one equation [F = ma].

Hmm, how do you go from Newton's 2nd to Maxwell's equations?

In relativistic quantum mechanics the maxwell fields pop right out of the principle of locality together with the U(1) gauge symmetry of the wavefunction (i.e. the statement that quantum states are only determined up to a phase). In this sense, the quantum version of Hamilton's equations (i.e. Dirac's equation) does allow you to derive E&M.

It is the most powerful equaiton in all of physics, and it's absolutely non-intutive.

The logical basis for F = ma is almost never presented, although it is in fact quite simple. If the current state of the universe, the collection of all positions and velocities of all particles, is sufficient to determine the universe's state at a later time, then in particular the second derivative must be determine by those positions and velocities:

x'' = F(x,x')

The concept of "force' is superfluous; the empirical task in mechanics is to determine the form of F(x,x'), e.g. Hooke's law F(x,x') = -k x . Obviously the theoretical task is to determine the motion given knowledge of F(x,x').

I challenge you to find a physics book without this equation in it.

How about Howard Georgi's "Lie Algebras in Particle Physics." Heck, there are entire books about classical mechanics at an advanced level that do not mention Newton's law e.g. http://www.worldscibooks.com/physics/3905.html".
 
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  • #19


Einstein's equation, G = 8 \pi T, of general relativity.

One side of Einstein's equation, G,is geometrical and is related to the curvature of spacetime, and the other side, T, is related to the distribution of energy/mass/momentum. Since this is an equation, it is impossible to change just one side: change the geometry side and this means that distribution of energy/mass/momentum must also be changed; change the distribution of energy/mass/momentum, and this means geometry must also be changed.

According to John Wheeler, "... (spacetime) geometry tell matter how to move, and matter tells (spacetime) geometry how to curve ..."
 
  • #20


mgb_phys said:
And Millikan kept messing up the oil drop experiment, but he ignored those measurements.

So Millikan took a Mulligan, big deal!
 
  • #21
Sorry! said:
When I first read it it blew my mind away... it was awhile ago mind you.

That no objects actually touch each other. If I bounce a basketball off the ground the molecules of the ball never touch the floor.

Do you have a link or any follow up for this, would be interested to have a look :bugeye:
 
  • #22
the existence of anti matter which is identical to regular matter but will annihilate it on contact

also the ability for light rays to be tied in knots

magnetic vortices are pretty wacky

so are bubbles of spacetime that could transport matter faster than light

entanglement, that's messed up..

super conductivity

non-determinism

electric and magnetic forces are really the same thing
 
  • #23
For me the most mind blowing physics statements,

Energy cannot be created, Energy cannot be destroyed.
No system can exceed 100%

Perpetual motion is impossible. Somehow that does not compute in my brain, it's like saying
2+2= 3.something.

I'm trying to get past this, but the only Einstein quality I seem to possesses is my vivid imagination, which he said is better than knowledge. Why would a man as brilliant as he was make such a statement?

P.S. I should have said "more important than knowledge"
 
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  • #24
um0123 said:
What is the most mind blowing thing you have ever seen that's physics related.
..

Crackpottery.

I want to hear things that i never thought were possible.

Almost everything in quantum or electromagnetism.
 
  • #25
Bell's theorem.
 
  • #26
to me, the fact that materials at certain low temperature change its electrical characteristics and convert to super conductors..is huge
 
  • #27
these are all really interesting, i have taken time to read each one and do a little bit of research on everything said. Except for a few obvious ones, and some i have already looked into previously. I really enjoy talking about this stuff.

Thanks, and keep it up!
 
  • #28
It is my opinion that the most mind blowing statement in physics was something like : "the laws governing the trajectories of projectiles down on Earth are the same as those ruling Heavenly bodies".

It's hard for us to realize now, because we take it for granted. But it we can merely try to repeat the revolution. Electricity and magnetism are ruled by the same Maxwell's equation(s). Particles and waves are really the same quantities, all around us. Nuclear decay, binding, and electromagnetism are all consequences of the same (gauge invariance) principle.

Finally, if supersymmetry turned out to be true, forces and matter would be two faces of the same coin. The keyword driving fundamental progress in understanding Nature is : Unity.
 
  • #29
"There was a big bang."
"We can only observe what is within our event horizon."
"Light cannot escape a black hole."
"Schrödinger's cat can be dead and alive."
Entanglement
Quantum foam
Quantum computing
"Tunnel to China" would act as a pendulum.
"A space elevator would carry itself."
The hypothesis that gravity is acceleration.
 
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  • #30
EnumaElish said:
"There was a big bang."
"We can only observe what is within our event horizon."
"Light cannot escape a black hole."
"Schrödinger's cat can be dead and alive."
Entanglement
Quantum foam
Quantum computing
"Tunnel to China" would act as a pendulum.
"A space elevator would carry itself."
The hypothesis that gravity is acceleration.

How does a space elevator carry itself?
 

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