Sir_Crocodile
Member
they can't move because senpai noticed them
God needs to patch this ASAP
Atoms are these guys:
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I am not a smart person, so the only way I can understand it is in it's simplest cheesy scifi-way, which can't be true, can it?
Can somebody explain this to a stupid guy like me? What do they mean by 'observe'? Atoms obviously can't be aware they're being watched. Doesn't it simply mean that we can't observe the change even though it is happening? Or...wait what?
If you think you understand Quantum Mechanics, you do not understand Quantum Mechanics. -- My Quantum Mechanics professor
Seriously cool research. Didn't know of this effect but it seems to follow naturally from collapsing the wave form. Awesome stuff.
Cool, didn't know he stole it.Richard Feynman.
without reading the articles, this would be more like suspending an unstable particle from degrading, due it being held by its interaction (magnetic field or similar) with the measurement equipment. Suggesting the particle gets a say in it is absurd.
To measure something you must interact with it.
Not always right? I mean not all measurements involve an interaction with the source e.g. Astronomy.
Not always right? I mean not all measurements involve an interaction with the source e.g. Astronomy.
Not always right? I mean not all measurements involve an interaction with the source e.g. Astronomy.
Everytime I hear about this it makes me feel like we're in The Matrix and we've discovered a glitch in the system. They're going to reset us, yo.
Is there any sort of speculation as to maybe why this happens?
In quantum mechanics, if you know the state a particle is in, its state at a different time is e^(i H t) x initial state. So if t is very small, the exponential is about one, and it will still be in it's initial state. Measure enough times close enough together, and the state doesn't change.Is there any sort of speculation as to maybe why this happens?
Is there any sort of speculation as to maybe why this happens?
the method of the observation is enough to induce stabilization for the atom
like.. hmmm.. imagine there's a ball rolling across the field, being moved by the wind. To measure it's size, you have to walk up and put a string around it. The string will stop the ball from moving. the ball doesn't "know" it has a string around it and stopped, your measurement method stopped it.
Can anyone clarify what "Emergent Classicality" is? From what I've been piecing together, frequently measuring an atom causes that atom (I guess, in this case, an unstable atom) to react in a classical manner i.e. as classical, non-quantum macro objects would. Is that accurate?
Edit: some great questions, and some great answers in this thread. I should clarify that I am a 4th year physics major, not a PhD or anything, but I'll do my best to explain a little further. The larger a system gets, the more it's constituent particles interact, and you get into something called the semi-classical or classic limit. The particles are constricted more and more to smaller and smaller areas by the interactions with neighbours, so exhibit less and less wave properties. This is why you don't diffract when you go through a door. This principle applies when you throw enough photons at a particle to know where it is. As soon as you know approximately where it is (by detecting where the photons go) it's been restricted to some small region by the photon interactions, and so cannot display the wave characteristics that lead to diffraction and tunnelling, because the waveform is too local. This is called collapsing the waveform. Apologies for any formatting errors, I'm on mobile.
https://www.reddit.com/r/science/comments/3pw7xy/one_of_the_oddest_predictions_of_quantum/cw9yjf2
So I think yeah, the waveform collapses and starts acting classically.
Can anyone clarify what "Emergent Classicality" is? From what I've been piecing together, frequently measuring an atom causes that atom (I guess, in this case, an unstable atom) to react in a classical manner i.e. as classical, non-quantum macro objects would. Is that accurate?
As I understand the article:
Structure, not atom. They've created a supercooled matrix structure where normally there would occur quantum tunnelling within the structure, making the atoms shift positions in an unpredictable manner. Meaning you wouldn't know the complex state (relative positions within the matrix) of the structure until you measure it.
By pulsing / measuring it continuously at a greater intensity, you can start to keep the atoms in the structure in the same positions and start to make regular (classical) predictions on where they will be next, whereas normally quantum measurement are too small and too quick to be predictable in that manner (which is not the same as inherently unpredictable, but we could never measure that state of complexity).
'Emergent' is a quality of complex systems to create a 'higher' (more complex) phenomenon when it gains a critical mass of sorts. A hundred ants are just ants, a hundred thousand becomes an ant hill / colony.
This quantum structure becomes a more regular matrix structure under the experimental conditions, which is what they mean. "Pseudo-classical" might have been a better name though.
Ding ding ding. Now to do the same experiment from a further distance. So....we need stronger lens?But from what I read and understand(I really don't know much about this), aren't the tests not necessarily hindering "the movement" much like a string around a ball would?
For lack of a better way of phrasing this, does this mean these atoms are affected by conscious interaction? I don't mean conscious in the sense of awareness, as if this happens because of minds, but more like resonance; something interacting with it through an action.
Very interesting happening, if that's it.