Random happenings? (trying to figure out what it was)

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The discussion revolves around a phenomenon related to randomness and quantum theory, recalling examples from a physics class. One example suggests that if enough people push against a wall, one might eventually pass through it, reflecting the concept of quantum tunneling. This idea is linked to the probability wavefunction in quantum physics, where particles can theoretically transition through barriers, albeit with extremely low likelihood. The conversation also references a notion similar to the "monkey theory," where random actions could eventually yield coherent results, like finding a TV show in space. The original poster is trying to identify the educational show that explained these concepts, possibly linked to Nova's "Elegant Universe."
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Took physics in 11th grade.. ssoooo many years ago.

I remember my teacher showed us this one educational show about this one phenominon or something.. was trying to figure out what it was called..

the 2 examples that i remember in the movie were

-If you lined everyone up against a wall and everyone pushed on it for LONG ENOUGH, eventually randomly one person would go THROUGH the wall.

-If you tuned a tv on somewhere in space, youd EVENTUALLY find an anomolie.. then eventually a picture.. and then even a whole episode of *some random tv show*

I duno it was something explaining about how RANDOM things can happen..
not sure if it was 100% real + proven.. or a theory..


anyone know what I am talkin about? been buggin me. :/

Thanks! ^^
 
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Welcome to PF, Cait.
Although I'm unfamiliar with the references that you posted, it's quite reminiscent of the old 'monkey' theory. Turn a bunch of chimps loose with typewriters. Given enough time, they'll reproduce the works of Shakespeare.
 
The reference to someone going through the wall is almost certainly a (misleading) truth about quantum theory. Basically (and WAY over-simply), in quantum physics, a particle's position is determined by a probability wavefunction. In other words, you can imagine a particle on one side of a wall that would have a VEEEERY low probability of suddenly, randomly, jumping to the other side of the wall (an effect known as quantum tunneling). If you can imagine it happening with a single particle, you could (kind of) imagine it happening to all of the particles in your body, all at once.

Needless to say, the chances are silly small. "Long enough" would definitely be billions and billions of times longer than the age of the universe. But hey, it could happen!
 
I think you might be thinking of Nova's Elegant Universe...
 
comparing a flat solar panel of area 2π r² and a hemisphere of the same area, the hemispherical solar panel would only occupy the area π r² of while the flat panel would occupy an entire 2π r² of land. wouldn't the hemispherical version have the same area of panel exposed to the sun, occupy less land space and can therefore increase the number of panels one land can have fitted? this would increase the power output proportionally as well. when I searched it up I wasn't satisfied with...
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