Browse content similar to Einstein's Nightmare. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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Beneath the complexities of everyday life, | 0:00:04 | 0:00:08 | |
the rules of our universe seem reassuringly simple. | 0:00:08 | 0:00:12 | |
This solid bridge supports my weight. | 0:00:14 | 0:00:17 | |
The water flowing underneath always goes downhill | 0:00:17 | 0:00:21 | |
and when I throw this stone... | 0:00:21 | 0:00:23 | |
..it always flies through the air following a predictable path. | 0:00:25 | 0:00:29 | |
But as scientists peered deep | 0:00:30 | 0:00:32 | |
into the tiny building blocks of matter... | 0:00:32 | 0:00:34 | |
..all such certainty vanished. | 0:00:37 | 0:00:39 | |
They found the weird world of quantum mechanics. | 0:00:42 | 0:00:46 | |
Deep down inside everything we see around us, | 0:00:46 | 0:00:50 | |
we found a universe completely unlike our own. | 0:00:50 | 0:00:54 | |
To paraphrase one of the founders of quantum mechanics, | 0:00:54 | 0:00:57 | |
everything we call real is made up of things | 0:00:57 | 0:01:01 | |
that cannot be themselves regarded as real. | 0:01:01 | 0:01:04 | |
Around 100 years ago, some of the world's greatest scientists | 0:01:08 | 0:01:11 | |
began a journey down the rabbit hole into the strange and the bizarre. | 0:01:11 | 0:01:16 | |
They found that in the realm of the very small, | 0:01:18 | 0:01:21 | |
things could be in two places at once... | 0:01:21 | 0:01:23 | |
..that their fates are dictated by chance... | 0:01:26 | 0:01:29 | |
..and that reality itself defies all common sense. | 0:01:31 | 0:01:35 | |
And at stake, that everything we thought | 0:01:38 | 0:01:40 | |
we knew about the world might turn out to be completely wrong. | 0:01:40 | 0:01:45 | |
The story of our descent into scientific madness | 0:01:48 | 0:01:52 | |
begins with the most unlikely object. | 0:01:52 | 0:01:55 | |
Berlin, 1890. | 0:01:58 | 0:02:01 | |
Germany is a new country, recently unified and hungry to industrialise. | 0:02:03 | 0:02:07 | |
In this newly-unified Germany, | 0:02:09 | 0:02:11 | |
a number of new engineering companies were founded. | 0:02:11 | 0:02:14 | |
They'd spent millions buying the European patent | 0:02:14 | 0:02:17 | |
for Edison's new invention, the light bulb. | 0:02:17 | 0:02:20 | |
The light bulb was the epitome of modern technology, | 0:02:23 | 0:02:26 | |
a great optimistic symbol of progress. | 0:02:26 | 0:02:29 | |
Engineering companies quickly realised there were fortunes | 0:02:33 | 0:02:36 | |
to be made building streetlights for the new German Empire. | 0:02:36 | 0:02:40 | |
But what they didn't realise was that they would also unleash | 0:02:43 | 0:02:46 | |
a scientific revolution. | 0:02:46 | 0:02:48 | |
Strangely enough, | 0:02:49 | 0:02:51 | |
this humble object is responsible for the birth | 0:02:51 | 0:02:54 | |
of the most important theory in the whole of science - | 0:02:54 | 0:02:57 | |
quantum mechanics, a theory that I've spent my life studying. | 0:02:57 | 0:03:01 | |
And that's because, back in 1900, | 0:03:03 | 0:03:06 | |
the light bulb presented a rather strange problem. | 0:03:06 | 0:03:09 | |
Engineers knew that if you heated the filament with electricity, | 0:03:10 | 0:03:14 | |
it glowed. | 0:03:14 | 0:03:15 | |
The physics that underpinned this, though, was completely unknown. | 0:03:17 | 0:03:21 | |
But something as basic as the relationship | 0:03:23 | 0:03:26 | |
between the temperature of the filament | 0:03:26 | 0:03:28 | |
and the colour of light it produces was still a complete mystery. | 0:03:28 | 0:03:31 | |
A mystery they were obviously keen to solve. | 0:03:33 | 0:03:36 | |
And, with the help of the new German state, | 0:03:37 | 0:03:39 | |
they saw how to steal a march on their competitors. | 0:03:39 | 0:03:42 | |
In 1887, the German government invested millions | 0:03:51 | 0:03:55 | |
in a new technical research institute here in Berlin, | 0:03:55 | 0:03:58 | |
The Physikalisch-Technische Reichsanstalt, or PTR. | 0:03:58 | 0:04:02 | |
Then, in 1900, they enlisted a bright | 0:04:02 | 0:04:05 | |
if somewhat straight-laced scientist to help work here. | 0:04:05 | 0:04:08 | |
His name was Max Planck. | 0:04:08 | 0:04:11 | |
Planck took on a deceptively simple problem - | 0:04:17 | 0:04:20 | |
why the colour of the light changes as the filament gets hotter. | 0:04:20 | 0:04:24 | |
To get a sense of the puzzle facing Planck, | 0:04:28 | 0:04:30 | |
I'm going to ride this bicycle with an old-fashioned lamp | 0:04:30 | 0:04:34 | |
powered by an old-fashioned dynamo. | 0:04:34 | 0:04:36 | |
Obviously the faster I go, the brighter the light. | 0:04:47 | 0:04:50 | |
The more I pedal, the more electricity the dynamo produces, | 0:04:50 | 0:04:54 | |
the hotter the filament in the lamp and the brighter the light. | 0:04:54 | 0:04:57 | |
But the light the bulb makes isn't just getting brighter, | 0:04:59 | 0:05:03 | |
it's changing colour, too. | 0:05:03 | 0:05:04 | |
As I speed up, the colour shifts from red to orange to yellow. | 0:05:07 | 0:05:12 | |
Right, now I'm going to really belt it. | 0:05:13 | 0:05:15 | |
Now the bulb's filament is getting even hotter, | 0:05:19 | 0:05:21 | |
but although it certainly gets brighter... | 0:05:21 | 0:05:23 | |
..the colour seems to stay the same - yellow-white. | 0:05:25 | 0:05:29 | |
Why doesn't the light get any bluer? | 0:05:33 | 0:05:36 | |
To investigate, Planck and his colleagues built this, | 0:05:40 | 0:05:44 | |
a black-body radiator. | 0:05:44 | 0:05:46 | |
It's a special tube they could heat to a very precise temperature | 0:05:46 | 0:05:50 | |
and a way to measure the colour or frequency | 0:05:50 | 0:05:53 | |
of the light it produced. | 0:05:53 | 0:05:55 | |
Nowadays, over 100 years later, the PTR still do exactly | 0:06:00 | 0:06:05 | |
this kind of measurement, just much more accurately. | 0:06:05 | 0:06:09 | |
The temperature inside here is 841 degrees centigrade. | 0:06:10 | 0:06:14 | |
I can feel the heat coming off and it's glowing | 0:06:17 | 0:06:20 | |
with a lovely orangey-red colour. | 0:06:20 | 0:06:22 | |
It's about the same colour as my bike light when I'm cycling slowly. | 0:06:27 | 0:06:31 | |
But I want to see something hotter still. | 0:06:33 | 0:06:37 | |
The temperature inside here is about 2,000 degrees centigrade... | 0:06:37 | 0:06:41 | |
..and it's glowing with a much brighter, whiter-coloured light. | 0:06:46 | 0:06:50 | |
To produce light of this intensity and colour | 0:06:50 | 0:06:52 | |
requires a power of about 40 kilowatts. | 0:06:52 | 0:06:55 | |
Now, that's equivalent to about 400 mes on a bike cycling very fast, | 0:06:55 | 0:07:00 | |
or the combined output of the entire Tour de France. | 0:07:00 | 0:07:04 | |
Although the light is whiter, it's red-white - | 0:07:06 | 0:07:09 | |
there's very little blue. | 0:07:09 | 0:07:12 | |
Why is blue so much harder to make than red? | 0:07:12 | 0:07:15 | |
And further up the spectrum, beyond blue, | 0:07:17 | 0:07:20 | |
the so-called ultraviolet, is hardly produced at all - | 0:07:20 | 0:07:24 | |
even when we look at things as hot as the sun. | 0:07:24 | 0:07:27 | |
Even the sun, at a temperature 5,500 degrees centigrade, | 0:07:31 | 0:07:36 | |
produces mostly white visible light | 0:07:36 | 0:07:39 | |
and makes remarkably little ultraviolet light, | 0:07:39 | 0:07:41 | |
given how hot it is. Why is this? | 0:07:41 | 0:07:44 | |
Why is ultraviolet light so hard to make? | 0:07:44 | 0:07:47 | |
This remarkable failure of common sense so perplexed scientists | 0:07:50 | 0:07:55 | |
of the late 19th century that they gave it a very dramatic name. | 0:07:55 | 0:07:59 | |
They called it the ultraviolet catastrophe. | 0:07:59 | 0:08:02 | |
Planck took a crucial first step to solving this. | 0:08:04 | 0:08:07 | |
He found the precise mathematical link | 0:08:07 | 0:08:10 | |
between the colour of light, its frequency and its energy. | 0:08:10 | 0:08:14 | |
But he didn't understand the connection. | 0:08:14 | 0:08:17 | |
However, it was another weird anomaly | 0:08:19 | 0:08:21 | |
that would really put the cat amongst the pigeons. | 0:08:21 | 0:08:24 | |
In the late 19th century, scientists were studying | 0:08:26 | 0:08:29 | |
the then newly-discovered radio waves and how they were transmitted. | 0:08:29 | 0:08:33 | |
And to do that, they were building experimental rigs | 0:08:33 | 0:08:36 | |
very similar to this one. Basically, by spinning this disc, | 0:08:36 | 0:08:39 | |
they could generate huge voltages that caused sparks | 0:08:39 | 0:08:43 | |
to jump across the gap between the two metal spheres. | 0:08:43 | 0:08:46 | |
But, in doing so, | 0:08:49 | 0:08:51 | |
they discovered something very unexpected to do with light. | 0:08:51 | 0:08:55 | |
They found that, by shining a powerful light source | 0:08:55 | 0:08:59 | |
on the spheres, they could make the sparks jump across more easily. | 0:08:59 | 0:09:04 | |
This suggested a mysterious and unexplained connection | 0:09:04 | 0:09:08 | |
between light and electricity. | 0:09:08 | 0:09:10 | |
To understand what was happening, scientists used this. | 0:09:16 | 0:09:20 | |
It's called a gold leaf electroscope. | 0:09:20 | 0:09:23 | |
It's basically a more sensitive version of the spark gap apparatus. | 0:09:23 | 0:09:28 | |
Now, first of all, I have to charge it up. | 0:09:28 | 0:09:30 | |
What I'm doing is adding an excess of electrons | 0:09:34 | 0:09:37 | |
that are pushing the two gold leaves apart. | 0:09:37 | 0:09:40 | |
Now, first I take red light | 0:09:40 | 0:09:42 | |
and shine it on the metal surface | 0:09:42 | 0:09:45 | |
and nothing happens. | 0:09:45 | 0:09:47 | |
Even if I increased the brightness of the light, | 0:09:47 | 0:09:49 | |
still the gold leaves aren't affected. | 0:09:49 | 0:09:51 | |
Now I'll try this special blue light, rich in ultraviolet. | 0:09:53 | 0:09:57 | |
Immediately, the gold leaves collapse. | 0:09:59 | 0:10:02 | |
Light can clearly remove static electric charge from the leaves. | 0:10:12 | 0:10:16 | |
It can somehow knock out the electrons I added to them. | 0:10:16 | 0:10:20 | |
But why is ultraviolet light so much better at doing this than red light? | 0:10:22 | 0:10:26 | |
This new puzzle became known as the photoelectric effect. | 0:10:29 | 0:10:34 | |
The ultraviolet catastrophe and the photoelectric effect | 0:10:36 | 0:10:40 | |
were big problems for physicists, | 0:10:40 | 0:10:43 | |
because neither could be understood using the best science of the time. | 0:10:43 | 0:10:47 | |
The science that said, quite unequivocally, | 0:10:48 | 0:10:52 | |
that light was a wave. | 0:10:52 | 0:10:54 | |
All around us, | 0:10:58 | 0:10:59 | |
we see light behaving in a perfectly common-sense wavy way. | 0:10:59 | 0:11:03 | |
Look at the shadow of my hand. It's fuzzy round the edges. | 0:11:03 | 0:11:07 | |
We understand this as the light hitting the side of my hand | 0:11:09 | 0:11:13 | |
and bending and smearing out slightly, | 0:11:13 | 0:11:16 | |
just like water waves around an obstruction. | 0:11:16 | 0:11:19 | |
Perfectly common-sense, wave-like behaviour. | 0:11:19 | 0:11:22 | |
And here's something else, something rather beautiful. | 0:11:25 | 0:11:29 | |
Look at these soap bubbles. | 0:11:29 | 0:11:31 | |
Shine a light on them, | 0:11:31 | 0:11:32 | |
and gorgeous coloured patterns emerge from nowhere. | 0:11:32 | 0:11:36 | |
And this was easily explained if you accept that light was a wave, | 0:11:36 | 0:11:41 | |
reflecting off the outer and inner layers of the thin soap film | 0:11:41 | 0:11:46 | |
and breaking up into the colours of the rainbow. | 0:11:46 | 0:11:48 | |
Rather like ripples on the surface of water, | 0:11:49 | 0:11:53 | |
light was simply ripples of energy spreading through space | 0:11:53 | 0:11:58 | |
and this was as firmly accepted as the fact that the earth was round. | 0:11:58 | 0:12:02 | |
But although this wave theory works perfectly well for shadows | 0:12:03 | 0:12:07 | |
and bubbles, when it came to the ultraviolet catastrophe | 0:12:07 | 0:12:11 | |
and photoelectric effect... | 0:12:11 | 0:12:13 | |
..the wheels started coming off. | 0:12:15 | 0:12:17 | |
The problem was this - how could light do this? | 0:12:17 | 0:12:21 | |
To truly grasp how absurd this phenomenon was, | 0:12:21 | 0:12:25 | |
it might be useful to consider how waves in water behave. | 0:12:25 | 0:12:29 | |
Hey! | 0:12:30 | 0:12:32 | |
This is the wave tank at the RNLI's headquarters in Dorset. | 0:12:36 | 0:12:41 | |
It's used to train lifeboat teams to deal with a range of different | 0:12:41 | 0:12:45 | |
kinds of water waves. First, small waves, just 30 centimetres high. | 0:12:45 | 0:12:51 | |
These waves don't have much energy, | 0:12:51 | 0:12:53 | |
hardly enough energy to knock this top can off the other. | 0:12:53 | 0:12:57 | |
But when the waves grow to over a metre and a half, | 0:13:00 | 0:13:04 | |
it's a very different proposition. | 0:13:04 | 0:13:07 | |
And they're really throwing me about. | 0:13:07 | 0:13:10 | |
There's no way I can keep this can balanced on the top. | 0:13:10 | 0:13:14 | |
It's clear what water waves are telling us - | 0:13:22 | 0:13:26 | |
bigger, more intense waves have more power. | 0:13:26 | 0:13:29 | |
They easily knocked me and the cans around. | 0:13:31 | 0:13:34 | |
So if light was a wave, | 0:13:39 | 0:13:41 | |
more intensity should knock out more electrons. | 0:13:41 | 0:13:46 | |
But that's not what happened. | 0:13:46 | 0:13:48 | |
Remember, no matter how intense the red light was, | 0:13:48 | 0:13:51 | |
it still didn't budge electrons from the metal. | 0:13:51 | 0:13:55 | |
But, weirdly, weak ultraviolet worked within seconds. | 0:13:55 | 0:14:00 | |
So thinking of light as a wave just wasn't adding up. | 0:14:00 | 0:14:04 | |
To resolve this, someone needed to think the unthinkable | 0:14:08 | 0:14:11 | |
and, in 1905, someone did. You may well have heard of them. | 0:14:11 | 0:14:15 | |
His name was Albert Einstein. | 0:14:15 | 0:14:17 | |
This is the Archenhold-Sternwarte Observatory in Berlin. | 0:14:28 | 0:14:32 | |
Perched on top is a strange, huge iron and steel construction, | 0:14:34 | 0:14:39 | |
but it's not a gun, it's actually a telescope. | 0:14:39 | 0:14:43 | |
Built in 1896, the telescope was one of the largest of its kind | 0:14:47 | 0:14:51 | |
in the world and made the observatory the go-to place | 0:14:51 | 0:14:55 | |
to engage and astound the public in new science. | 0:14:55 | 0:14:59 | |
Albert Einstein gave a very famous public lecture here | 0:15:00 | 0:15:04 | |
on his theory of relativity which is of course what he's most famous for. | 0:15:04 | 0:15:08 | |
But it's not the work that won him the Nobel Prize. | 0:15:08 | 0:15:11 | |
In 1905, he'd also come up with a new theory to explain | 0:15:18 | 0:15:23 | |
the photoelectric effect and what he suggested was revolutionary | 0:15:23 | 0:15:28 | |
and even heretical. | 0:15:28 | 0:15:30 | |
He argued that we have to forget all about the idea that light is a wave | 0:15:35 | 0:15:39 | |
and think of it instead as a stream of tiny, bullet-like particles. | 0:15:39 | 0:15:44 | |
The term he used to describe a particle of light was a quantum. | 0:15:44 | 0:15:49 | |
To Einstein, a quantum was a tiny lump of energy | 0:15:51 | 0:15:55 | |
and although in 1905 the word wasn't new, | 0:15:55 | 0:15:59 | |
the idea that light could be a quantum seemed crazy. | 0:15:59 | 0:16:03 | |
And yet following Einstein's heretical line of thought | 0:16:06 | 0:16:09 | |
to its logical conclusion | 0:16:09 | 0:16:11 | |
solved all the problems with light at a single stroke. | 0:16:11 | 0:16:15 | |
I'll try to explain how this helps using a rough analogy. | 0:16:22 | 0:16:26 | |
Of course, like all analogies, it's far from perfect | 0:16:26 | 0:16:29 | |
but hopefully it'll give you a sense of the physics | 0:16:29 | 0:16:32 | |
to help you understand why thinking of light as a stream of particles | 0:16:32 | 0:16:37 | |
solves the mystery of the photoelectric effect. | 0:16:37 | 0:16:39 | |
In this analogy, these red balls represent Einstein's light quanta. | 0:16:44 | 0:16:49 | |
'And those cans over there are the electricity held in the metal.' | 0:16:50 | 0:16:54 | |
Now, in the original experiment, | 0:16:54 | 0:16:56 | |
they made electricity flow from the surface of the metal | 0:16:56 | 0:16:59 | |
by shining light on it. In my analogy, I'm going to try | 0:16:59 | 0:17:02 | |
and knock those tin cans over using these red balls. | 0:17:02 | 0:17:06 | |
'Absolutely no effect. | 0:17:17 | 0:17:20 | |
'That's just like red light.' | 0:17:23 | 0:17:25 | |
According to Einstein, | 0:17:27 | 0:17:29 | |
each particle of red light carries very little energy | 0:17:29 | 0:17:33 | |
because red light has a low frequency. | 0:17:33 | 0:17:36 | |
'So even a very bright red light with many red light particles | 0:17:36 | 0:17:41 | |
'can't dislodge any electrons from the metal plates, | 0:17:41 | 0:17:45 | |
'just like the red balls.' | 0:17:45 | 0:17:48 | |
Now I'm going to use heavier balls like these blue golf balls | 0:17:48 | 0:17:52 | |
and I'm going to try and knock off the tin cans with these. | 0:17:52 | 0:17:55 | |
'They're like the ultraviolet light in the experiment. | 0:18:00 | 0:18:03 | |
'Now, each individual light particle carries more energy | 0:18:06 | 0:18:12 | |
'because ultraviolet light is higher frequency.' | 0:18:12 | 0:18:15 | |
Just a few of them, like a dim ultraviolet light, | 0:18:22 | 0:18:25 | |
are enough to knock the electrons out of the metal plate | 0:18:25 | 0:18:28 | |
and collapse the gold leaf. | 0:18:28 | 0:18:31 | |
So Einstein's idea that light is made up of tiny particles or quanta | 0:18:33 | 0:18:38 | |
is a wonderful explanation of the photoelectric effect. | 0:18:38 | 0:18:41 | |
I remember when I first learnt about this, | 0:18:41 | 0:18:43 | |
being blown away by its sheer elegance and simplicity. | 0:18:43 | 0:18:47 | |
But what's more, Einstein's nifty idea also helped solve | 0:18:50 | 0:18:54 | |
Planck's mystery of the light bulb. | 0:18:54 | 0:18:57 | |
There was more red than ultraviolet | 0:18:57 | 0:18:59 | |
because ultraviolet quanta took so much more energy to make, | 0:18:59 | 0:19:04 | |
about 100 times more energy. | 0:19:04 | 0:19:07 | |
No wonder there are so few of them. | 0:19:07 | 0:19:09 | |
That moment at the beginning of the 20th century | 0:19:11 | 0:19:14 | |
signalled a genuine revolution | 0:19:14 | 0:19:17 | |
because it demonstrated that the kind of physical science | 0:19:17 | 0:19:21 | |
that people were doing right back to Newton and Laplace, | 0:19:21 | 0:19:24 | |
and people like that, that you needed a completely new approach. | 0:19:24 | 0:19:27 | |
Physics has never recovered from that moment | 0:19:30 | 0:19:32 | |
in the sense that it's built on that moment, | 0:19:32 | 0:19:35 | |
that's where modern physics really began. | 0:19:35 | 0:19:37 | |
But Einstein's theory also left physicists with a dizzying paradox | 0:19:40 | 0:19:44 | |
defying all common sense. | 0:19:44 | 0:19:47 | |
Light was definitely a wave which explained shadows and bubbles. | 0:19:47 | 0:19:51 | |
And now it was definitely a particle too - | 0:19:53 | 0:19:56 | |
Einstein's quanta explaining the photoelectric effect | 0:19:56 | 0:20:00 | |
and the ultraviolet catastrophe. | 0:20:00 | 0:20:02 | |
Then just a few years after Einstein's brilliant, crazy idea, | 0:20:03 | 0:20:09 | |
the paradox got a lot deeper and a whole lot weirder. | 0:20:09 | 0:20:13 | |
Because what seemed to be a curious mystery about light | 0:20:15 | 0:20:19 | |
was about to become a battleground about the nature of reality itself. | 0:20:19 | 0:20:24 | |
1922. | 0:20:34 | 0:20:36 | |
The Western world was in the grip of a revolution, a cultural revolution. | 0:20:36 | 0:20:40 | |
James Joyce's Ulysses is published, | 0:20:41 | 0:20:44 | |
Stravinsky is at the height of his powers | 0:20:44 | 0:20:47 | |
and Chaplin has just released his first serious movie. | 0:20:47 | 0:20:50 | |
The Ottoman Empire collapses. | 0:20:50 | 0:20:53 | |
Europe is still recovering from the war to end all wars | 0:20:53 | 0:20:57 | |
in which millions of men lost their lives. | 0:20:57 | 0:20:59 | |
Russia is newly communist. | 0:20:59 | 0:21:02 | |
Meanwhile, America is exporting jazz to the world. | 0:21:02 | 0:21:06 | |
-Thank you. -MUSIC PLAYS | 0:21:06 | 0:21:08 | |
'In arts, politics, literature, economics, | 0:21:14 | 0:21:18 | |
'there was an insatiable appetite for change. | 0:21:18 | 0:21:21 | |
'This was the birth of modernism.' | 0:21:21 | 0:21:24 | |
# You've got a heart that there's no way of knowing | 0:21:24 | 0:21:28 | |
# Can see where you are but can't see where you're going | 0:21:28 | 0:21:32 | |
# And I'm stuck here still | 0:21:32 | 0:21:35 | |
# I'm tangled up with you | 0:21:35 | 0:21:39 | |
# This whole world can be so uncertain... # | 0:21:42 | 0:21:47 | |
But, and I might get into trouble for saying this, | 0:21:47 | 0:21:51 | |
I would argue that the upheaval that took place in physics | 0:21:51 | 0:21:54 | |
at this time would eclipse them all | 0:21:54 | 0:21:57 | |
and have far longer lasting consequences. | 0:21:57 | 0:22:01 | |
It had begun with the discovery of the weird | 0:22:01 | 0:22:04 | |
and contradictory wave/particle nature of light, | 0:22:04 | 0:22:07 | |
it ended up as an epic battle fought between the greatest minds | 0:22:07 | 0:22:11 | |
in science for the highest possible stakes - | 0:22:11 | 0:22:15 | |
the nature of reality itself. | 0:22:15 | 0:22:17 | |
# I know I deserve you, I know you're my saviour | 0:22:18 | 0:22:23 | |
# But when I observe you, you change your behaviour... # | 0:22:23 | 0:22:27 | |
'On one side, a new wave of modernist revolutionary scientists | 0:22:27 | 0:22:31 | |
'and their leader, the brilliant Danish physicist, Niels Bohr. | 0:22:31 | 0:22:36 | |
'On the other side, the voice of reason, Albert Einstein, | 0:22:37 | 0:22:41 | |
'at the height of his powers and now world-famous, | 0:22:41 | 0:22:45 | |
'a formidable adversary.' | 0:22:45 | 0:22:47 | |
# Tangled up with you... # | 0:22:47 | 0:22:50 | |
The battle raged for decades. | 0:22:52 | 0:22:54 | |
Actually, in some ways, it still does. | 0:22:54 | 0:22:57 | |
It was fought across the world in universities, at conferences, | 0:22:57 | 0:23:01 | |
in bars and cafes, it would reduce grown men to tears | 0:23:01 | 0:23:05 | |
and it began with a deceptively simple experiment. | 0:23:05 | 0:23:10 | |
# This whole world can be so uncertain... # | 0:23:10 | 0:23:15 | |
'But weirdly, it was an experiment that wasn't even about light, | 0:23:15 | 0:23:19 | |
'it was about the particles that make electricity.' | 0:23:19 | 0:23:23 | |
# To somebody else... # | 0:23:23 | 0:23:28 | |
In the mid-1920s, an experiment was carried out | 0:23:28 | 0:23:32 | |
at Bell Laboratories in New Jersey in America | 0:23:32 | 0:23:34 | |
which uncovered something entirely unexpected about electrons. | 0:23:34 | 0:23:39 | |
Now, at the time it was accepted without question | 0:23:39 | 0:23:41 | |
that electrons were these tiny lumps of matter, | 0:23:41 | 0:23:44 | |
small but solid particles, like miniature billiard balls. | 0:23:44 | 0:23:49 | |
In the experiment, they fired a beam of electrons at a crystal | 0:23:49 | 0:23:52 | |
and watched how they scattered. | 0:23:52 | 0:23:54 | |
Now, that's entirely equivalent to taking a beam of electrons, | 0:23:54 | 0:23:59 | |
say from an electron gun, | 0:23:59 | 0:24:01 | |
and firing it at a screen with two slits in it | 0:24:01 | 0:24:06 | |
so that the electrons pass through the slits | 0:24:06 | 0:24:10 | |
and hit another screen at the back. | 0:24:10 | 0:24:12 | |
What the Bell scientists found | 0:24:15 | 0:24:17 | |
shocked the physics world to the core. | 0:24:17 | 0:24:19 | |
To understand why, consider a similar experiment with water waves. | 0:24:22 | 0:24:26 | |
I've set up a simple experiment. | 0:24:27 | 0:24:30 | |
I have a water ripple tank placed on top of an overhead projector, | 0:24:30 | 0:24:34 | |
I have a generator producing waves that pass through two narrow gaps. | 0:24:34 | 0:24:39 | |
The projector beams the image of the waves onto the back wall. | 0:24:39 | 0:24:44 | |
You can see as the waves come in from the left | 0:24:44 | 0:24:47 | |
and squeeze through the two gaps, | 0:24:47 | 0:24:49 | |
they spread out on the other side and interfere with each other. | 0:24:49 | 0:24:53 | |
What this means is that when you get the crest from one wave | 0:24:53 | 0:24:56 | |
meeting the crest from another, they add up to make a higher wave. | 0:24:56 | 0:25:00 | |
But when the crest from one meets a trough, they cancel out. | 0:25:00 | 0:25:04 | |
This gives rise to these characteristic lines | 0:25:07 | 0:25:10 | |
leading to the signature wave pattern. | 0:25:10 | 0:25:13 | |
Bands of light and dark. | 0:25:15 | 0:25:17 | |
Whenever you see these light and dark bands, | 0:25:20 | 0:25:22 | |
the signature wave pattern, | 0:25:22 | 0:25:23 | |
you know without doubt that you've got wave-like behaviour. | 0:25:23 | 0:25:27 | |
So guess what they saw in New Jersey. | 0:25:36 | 0:25:39 | |
Now it seemed that firing electrons, tiny solid particles, | 0:25:39 | 0:25:44 | |
through the two gaps produced exactly the same kind of pattern, | 0:25:44 | 0:25:48 | |
bands of light and dark. | 0:25:48 | 0:25:51 | |
First, light, for a long time believed to be a wave, | 0:25:53 | 0:25:56 | |
was found to sometimes behave like particles | 0:25:56 | 0:25:59 | |
and now electrons, for a long time believed to be particles, | 0:25:59 | 0:26:02 | |
were behaving like waves. | 0:26:02 | 0:26:04 | |
But it was actually stranger than that. | 0:26:04 | 0:26:07 | |
The wave pattern wasn't merely some result | 0:26:07 | 0:26:10 | |
of the entire beam of electrons. | 0:26:10 | 0:26:13 | |
More recently this experiment has been repeated | 0:26:13 | 0:26:15 | |
in labs around the world by firing one electron at a time | 0:26:15 | 0:26:21 | |
through the slits onto the screen. | 0:26:21 | 0:26:23 | |
At first, each electron seems to land randomly on the screen. | 0:26:26 | 0:26:31 | |
But gradually a pattern forms, the signature wave pattern. | 0:26:33 | 0:26:39 | |
Let me be quite clear about just how weird this is. | 0:26:39 | 0:26:43 | |
Remember from the wave tank experiment | 0:26:43 | 0:26:45 | |
where the signature wave pattern only exists | 0:26:45 | 0:26:49 | |
because each wave passes through both slits | 0:26:49 | 0:26:52 | |
and then its two pieces interfere with each other. | 0:26:52 | 0:26:56 | |
But here, every individual electron, | 0:26:56 | 0:26:59 | |
each single particle is passing alone through the slits | 0:26:59 | 0:27:02 | |
before it hits the screen. | 0:27:02 | 0:27:05 | |
And yet, each single electron is still contributing | 0:27:05 | 0:27:08 | |
to the signature wave pattern. | 0:27:08 | 0:27:10 | |
Each electron has to be behaving like a wave. | 0:27:12 | 0:27:16 | |
To explain this strange result, | 0:27:20 | 0:27:23 | |
Niels Bohr and his colleagues created quantum mechanics, | 0:27:23 | 0:27:27 | |
a crazy theory of light and matter that embraced contradiction | 0:27:27 | 0:27:32 | |
and didn't care that it was almost impossible to understand. | 0:27:32 | 0:27:35 | |
As Niels Bohr himself said, | 0:27:35 | 0:27:37 | |
anyone who isn't shocked by quantum theory hasn't understood it. | 0:27:37 | 0:27:41 | |
So, viewers, I'm going to take our tiny electron | 0:27:41 | 0:27:44 | |
and use it to delve deep into the heart of reality. | 0:27:44 | 0:27:47 | |
And, yes, prepared to be shocked | 0:27:48 | 0:27:51 | |
because this is the only way to explain what we observe | 0:27:51 | 0:27:54 | |
when a single electron travels through the slits | 0:27:54 | 0:27:57 | |
and hits the screen. | 0:27:57 | 0:27:59 | |
Quantum mechanics says this... | 0:27:59 | 0:28:01 | |
..we can't describe what's travelling as a physical object. | 0:28:02 | 0:28:06 | |
All we can talk about | 0:28:08 | 0:28:09 | |
are the chances of where the electron might be. | 0:28:09 | 0:28:12 | |
This wave of chance somehow travels through both slits | 0:28:14 | 0:28:19 | |
producing interference just like the water wave. | 0:28:19 | 0:28:23 | |
Then when it hits the screen, | 0:28:24 | 0:28:26 | |
what was just the ghostly possibility of an electron | 0:28:26 | 0:28:30 | |
mysteriously becomes real. | 0:28:30 | 0:28:33 | |
Let me try and capture just how weird this is with an analogy. | 0:28:35 | 0:28:39 | |
If I spin this coin... | 0:28:39 | 0:28:41 | |
Then all the time it's spinning, it's a blur, | 0:28:46 | 0:28:48 | |
I can't tell if it's heads or tails | 0:28:48 | 0:28:51 | |
but if I stop it, I force it to decide and it's heads. | 0:28:51 | 0:28:56 | |
So before it was sort of not heads or tails but a mixture of both | 0:28:56 | 0:29:01 | |
but as soon as I've stopped it, I've forced it to make up its mind. | 0:29:01 | 0:29:05 | |
This is what Bohr and his supporters | 0:29:05 | 0:29:07 | |
claimed was happening with our electrons. | 0:29:07 | 0:29:10 | |
In a sense, as it spins, the coin is both heads and tails. | 0:29:14 | 0:29:20 | |
Similarly, the electrons' wave of chance | 0:29:20 | 0:29:24 | |
passes through both slits, two paths at the same time. | 0:29:24 | 0:29:29 | |
Our coin then stops at heads. | 0:29:30 | 0:29:33 | |
The ethereal wave of probability hits the screen | 0:29:35 | 0:29:39 | |
and only then becomes a particle. | 0:29:39 | 0:29:42 | |
The quantum world was unlike anything ever seen before. | 0:29:42 | 0:29:47 | |
It's hard to overstate just how crazy this is. | 0:29:49 | 0:29:53 | |
Bohr was effectively claiming that one can never know | 0:29:53 | 0:29:56 | |
where the electron actually is at all until you measure it | 0:29:56 | 0:30:00 | |
and it's not just that you don't know where the electron is, | 0:30:00 | 0:30:04 | |
it's weirdly as though the electron itself is everywhere at once. | 0:30:04 | 0:30:08 | |
Bear in mind that electrons are among the commonest | 0:30:11 | 0:30:14 | |
and most basic building blocks of reality | 0:30:14 | 0:30:17 | |
and yet here's Bohr saying that only by looking | 0:30:17 | 0:30:20 | |
do we actually conjure their position into existence. | 0:30:20 | 0:30:24 | |
It's like there's a curtain between us and the quantum world | 0:30:25 | 0:30:29 | |
and behind it there is no solid reality... | 0:30:29 | 0:30:33 | |
..just the potential for reality. | 0:30:35 | 0:30:38 | |
Things only become real when we pull back the curtain and look. | 0:30:40 | 0:30:45 | |
And this view, ladies and gentlemen, | 0:30:45 | 0:30:47 | |
became known as the Copenhagen interpretation. | 0:30:47 | 0:30:51 | |
APPLAUSE | 0:30:51 | 0:30:53 | |
Persuasive as it might seem, | 0:30:58 | 0:31:00 | |
many people couldn't stomach Niels Bohr's outlandish ideas. | 0:31:00 | 0:31:05 | |
And they found a natural leader in the most powerful man in science. | 0:31:05 | 0:31:09 | |
Albert Einstein hated this interpretation | 0:31:11 | 0:31:13 | |
with every fibre of his being. | 0:31:13 | 0:31:16 | |
He famously said, | 0:31:16 | 0:31:17 | |
"Does the moon cease to exist when I don't look at it?" | 0:31:17 | 0:31:21 | |
He was very unhappy because it gave limits to knowledge | 0:31:22 | 0:31:26 | |
that he didn't think should be final. | 0:31:26 | 0:31:28 | |
He thought there should be a better underlying theory. | 0:31:28 | 0:31:32 | |
Over the next ten years, Einstein and Bohr would argue passionately | 0:31:36 | 0:31:40 | |
about whether quantum mechanics meant giving up on reality or not. | 0:31:40 | 0:31:44 | |
Then, with two other scientists, Nathan Rosen and Boris Podolsky, | 0:31:48 | 0:31:53 | |
Einstein thought they'd found a way to win the argument. | 0:31:53 | 0:31:57 | |
He was convinced he'd found a fatal flaw | 0:31:57 | 0:32:00 | |
in the Copenhagen interpretation and it's claim that reality | 0:32:00 | 0:32:04 | |
was summoned into existence by the act of looking at it. | 0:32:04 | 0:32:08 | |
At the heart of Einstein's argument | 0:32:08 | 0:32:10 | |
was an aspect of quantum mechanics called entanglement. | 0:32:10 | 0:32:13 | |
Now, entanglement is this special, incredibly close relationship | 0:32:13 | 0:32:18 | |
between a pair of quantum particles whose fates are intertwined. | 0:32:18 | 0:32:22 | |
For example, if they were created in the same event. | 0:32:22 | 0:32:25 | |
Let me try and explain this | 0:32:30 | 0:32:32 | |
by imagining the two particles are spinning coins. | 0:32:32 | 0:32:35 | |
Imagine these coins are two electrons | 0:32:40 | 0:32:43 | |
created from the same event and then moved apart from each other. | 0:32:43 | 0:32:49 | |
Quantum mechanics says that, because they're created together, | 0:32:49 | 0:32:52 | |
they're entangled. | 0:32:52 | 0:32:54 | |
And now many of their properties are for ever linked, | 0:32:54 | 0:32:57 | |
wherever they are. | 0:32:57 | 0:32:59 | |
Remember, the Copenhagen interpretation says that | 0:32:59 | 0:33:02 | |
until you measure one of the coins, neither of them is heads or tails. | 0:33:02 | 0:33:06 | |
In fact, heads and tails don't even exist. | 0:33:06 | 0:33:09 | |
And here's where entanglement makes this weird situation even weirder. | 0:33:09 | 0:33:13 | |
When we stop the first coin and it becomes heads... | 0:33:15 | 0:33:18 | |
..because the coins are linked through entanglement, | 0:33:20 | 0:33:23 | |
the second coin will simultaneously become tails. | 0:33:23 | 0:33:27 | |
And here's the crucial thing. | 0:33:29 | 0:33:30 | |
I can't predict what the outcome of my measurement will be, | 0:33:30 | 0:33:34 | |
only that they will always be opposite. | 0:33:34 | 0:33:37 | |
Einstein seized on this. | 0:33:37 | 0:33:38 | |
Because it meant that something was happening between the two coins | 0:33:40 | 0:33:44 | |
that was almost too crazy to imagine. | 0:33:44 | 0:33:46 | |
It's as if the two coins are secretly communicating. | 0:33:48 | 0:33:52 | |
Communicating instantaneously across space and time. | 0:33:52 | 0:33:56 | |
Even if the first coin was on Earth and the other was on Pluto. | 0:33:56 | 0:34:00 | |
Einstein refused to believe | 0:34:01 | 0:34:03 | |
this instantaneous, faster-than-light communication. | 0:34:03 | 0:34:07 | |
His theory of relativity said that nothing could travel that fast. | 0:34:07 | 0:34:11 | |
Not even information. | 0:34:11 | 0:34:12 | |
So, how could one coin instantaneously know | 0:34:13 | 0:34:17 | |
how the other would land? | 0:34:17 | 0:34:20 | |
He disparagingly called it "spooky action at a distance" | 0:34:20 | 0:34:24 | |
and claimed it was a fatal flaw in the Copenhagen interpretation. | 0:34:24 | 0:34:29 | |
What's more, he had a better idea. | 0:34:29 | 0:34:31 | |
Einstein believed there was a simpler interpretation. | 0:34:33 | 0:34:37 | |
That somehow the destiny of the two coins, whether or not they | 0:34:37 | 0:34:40 | |
ended up heads or tails, was already fixed long before we observed them. | 0:34:40 | 0:34:45 | |
He said that although it seemed the coin | 0:34:47 | 0:34:49 | |
was deciding to be, say, heads, at the moment of observation, | 0:34:49 | 0:34:54 | |
actually, that decision was taken long before. | 0:34:54 | 0:34:57 | |
It was just hidden from us. | 0:34:58 | 0:35:00 | |
In Einstein's mind, | 0:35:03 | 0:35:04 | |
quantum particles were nothing like spinning coins. | 0:35:04 | 0:35:08 | |
They were more like, say, a pair of gloves, left and right, | 0:35:08 | 0:35:12 | |
separated into boxes. | 0:35:12 | 0:35:15 | |
We don't know which box contains which glove until we open one, | 0:35:15 | 0:35:20 | |
but when we do, and find, say, a right-handed glove, | 0:35:20 | 0:35:24 | |
immediately, we know that the other box contains the left-handed glove. | 0:35:24 | 0:35:28 | |
But, crucially, this requires no spooky action at a distance. | 0:35:28 | 0:35:33 | |
Neither glove has been altered by the act of observation. | 0:35:33 | 0:35:36 | |
Both of them were either | 0:35:36 | 0:35:38 | |
left or right-handed glove from the beginning. | 0:35:38 | 0:35:40 | |
And the only thing that has changed is our knowledge. | 0:35:40 | 0:35:43 | |
So, which is the true description of reality? | 0:35:45 | 0:35:49 | |
Bohr's coins, which only become real when we look at them... | 0:35:49 | 0:35:53 | |
..and then magically communicate to each other, | 0:35:56 | 0:35:59 | |
or Einstein's gloves, which are hidden from us, | 0:35:59 | 0:36:02 | |
but are definitely left or right from the beginning? | 0:36:02 | 0:36:06 | |
In other words, is there an objective reality, | 0:36:06 | 0:36:09 | |
as Einstein believed, or not, as Bohr maintained? | 0:36:09 | 0:36:12 | |
In the late 1930s, as the world plunged into war, | 0:36:13 | 0:36:17 | |
there was no way to answer this question. | 0:36:17 | 0:36:19 | |
The battle to understand the nature of reality was deadlocked. | 0:36:19 | 0:36:23 | |
The war rolled across Europe | 0:36:30 | 0:36:32 | |
and many of the leading scientists fled to the United States. | 0:36:32 | 0:36:36 | |
Then, as the Second World War led inextricably to the Cold War... | 0:36:38 | 0:36:42 | |
..American science, backed by dollar bills | 0:36:44 | 0:36:47 | |
and a new vision of the future, boomed. | 0:36:47 | 0:36:49 | |
Remember, after the war, physicists came back raring to go | 0:36:51 | 0:36:55 | |
and tried to apply the ideas of quantum theory to atoms, | 0:36:55 | 0:37:00 | |
the interaction between electrons and light and what have you, | 0:37:00 | 0:37:03 | |
you didn't need to worry about the philosophical side of things | 0:37:03 | 0:37:06 | |
to make progress with that. | 0:37:06 | 0:37:08 | |
So, as you say, it really took a back seat. | 0:37:08 | 0:37:11 | |
Quantum mechanics led to a profound understanding of semiconductors, | 0:37:13 | 0:37:18 | |
which helped create the modern electronic age. | 0:37:18 | 0:37:21 | |
It produced lasers, revolutionising communications, | 0:37:23 | 0:37:26 | |
breathtaking new medical advances. | 0:37:26 | 0:37:28 | |
And breakthroughs in nuclear power. | 0:37:32 | 0:37:35 | |
Quantum mechanics was so successful that most working physicists | 0:37:39 | 0:37:43 | |
deliberately chose to ignore Einstein's objections. | 0:37:43 | 0:37:48 | |
It simply didn't matter to them because it worked. | 0:37:48 | 0:37:52 | |
They even coined a phrase for it, "Shut up and calculate." | 0:37:52 | 0:37:56 | |
And the price for this success was that Bohr and Einstein's debate | 0:38:00 | 0:38:04 | |
on the reality of the quantum world was simply brushed under the carpet. | 0:38:04 | 0:38:08 | |
And amidst all this success and pragmatism, | 0:38:12 | 0:38:15 | |
there were few who still worried what it all meant. | 0:38:15 | 0:38:18 | |
But as the '50s rolled headlong into the '60s, one lone dissenter | 0:38:19 | 0:38:23 | |
worked out how to settle the argument once and for all. | 0:38:23 | 0:38:27 | |
John Bell, I think it's fair to say, | 0:38:39 | 0:38:41 | |
isn't well known to the general public. | 0:38:41 | 0:38:44 | |
But to physicists like me, he's, well, an hero. | 0:38:44 | 0:38:48 | |
He was an original thinker with real courage in his convictions. | 0:38:48 | 0:38:52 | |
And the story of his rise to become one of the greats of physics | 0:38:52 | 0:38:57 | |
is made even more remarkable when you consider how he started. | 0:38:57 | 0:39:01 | |
He was born in Belfast in the 1920s into a poor, working-class family. | 0:39:01 | 0:39:06 | |
His father was a horse dealer. | 0:39:06 | 0:39:08 | |
And they really struggled to get him | 0:39:08 | 0:39:10 | |
into Queen's University Belfast to study physics. | 0:39:10 | 0:39:13 | |
He was the only one in his family to even finish school. | 0:39:13 | 0:39:17 | |
This, I believe, made him insatiably curious, fiery and stubborn. | 0:39:17 | 0:39:22 | |
I remember meeting John Bell in 1989, a year before he died. | 0:39:28 | 0:39:32 | |
We were both at a conference in America | 0:39:32 | 0:39:35 | |
and we happened to be sharing a lift just after both attending | 0:39:35 | 0:39:38 | |
a talk on quantum mechanics. | 0:39:38 | 0:39:41 | |
Keen to say something to the great John Bell, I said I thought | 0:39:41 | 0:39:45 | |
that the speaker's conclusions were completely crazy. | 0:39:45 | 0:39:49 | |
He stared at me with his piercing blue eyes and, for a moment, | 0:39:49 | 0:39:53 | |
I thought my fledgling physics career was going down the drain. | 0:39:53 | 0:39:56 | |
But as the lift doors opened and he was about to leave, he said, | 0:39:56 | 0:40:00 | |
"Yes, I completely agree with you. | 0:40:00 | 0:40:02 | |
"Haven't they heard of the helium problem?" | 0:40:02 | 0:40:05 | |
To this day, I'm not quite sure what the helium problem is, | 0:40:05 | 0:40:08 | |
but I was just so relieved that John Bell and I agreed. | 0:40:08 | 0:40:11 | |
For many years, he worked here, | 0:40:23 | 0:40:25 | |
at Britain's atomic energy research centre, Harwell, | 0:40:25 | 0:40:28 | |
who built this early experimental nuclear reactor called DIDO. | 0:40:28 | 0:40:32 | |
It was here that he started pondering the deep | 0:40:36 | 0:40:39 | |
and worrying questions quantum mechanics raised. | 0:40:39 | 0:40:43 | |
Did the quantum world only exist when it was observed? | 0:40:43 | 0:40:47 | |
Or was there a deeper truth out there, waiting to be discovered? | 0:40:47 | 0:40:51 | |
In fact, he was so troubled, he began to wonder | 0:40:52 | 0:40:55 | |
if there was a problem at the heart of quantum mechanics. | 0:40:55 | 0:40:59 | |
He famously said, "I hesitate to think it might be wrong, | 0:41:01 | 0:41:05 | |
"but I know it is rotten." | 0:41:05 | 0:41:08 | |
And so, in the early 1960s, Bell decided to try | 0:41:08 | 0:41:11 | |
and resolve the crisis at the heart of quantum physics. | 0:41:11 | 0:41:14 | |
It was an epic challenge. | 0:41:14 | 0:41:16 | |
After all, how do you check if something is real, | 0:41:16 | 0:41:19 | |
if something is or isn't there, all without looking? | 0:41:19 | 0:41:24 | |
How do you look behind the curtain without pulling it open? | 0:41:24 | 0:41:27 | |
But John Bell came up with a brilliant way of doing exactly that. | 0:41:28 | 0:41:34 | |
I think this is one of THE most ingenious ideas | 0:41:36 | 0:41:39 | |
in the whole of physics. | 0:41:39 | 0:41:41 | |
It's certainly one of the most difficult to understand and explain. | 0:41:41 | 0:41:44 | |
But I'm going to try and have a go and, yes, | 0:41:44 | 0:41:47 | |
I'm afraid I'm going to use another analogy. | 0:41:47 | 0:41:49 | |
This time, I'm going to play a game of cards. | 0:41:49 | 0:41:53 | |
But it's one for the highest possible stakes, | 0:41:53 | 0:41:56 | |
the nature of reality itself. | 0:41:56 | 0:41:58 | |
The card game is against a mysterious quantum dealer. | 0:42:00 | 0:42:05 | |
The cards he deals represent any subatomic particles, | 0:42:05 | 0:42:09 | |
or even quanta of light, photons. | 0:42:09 | 0:42:11 | |
And the game we'll play will ultimately tell us | 0:42:13 | 0:42:16 | |
whether Einstein or Bohr was right. | 0:42:16 | 0:42:19 | |
Now, the rules of the game are deceptively simple. | 0:42:20 | 0:42:23 | |
The dealer's going to deal two cards face down. | 0:42:23 | 0:42:27 | |
If they're the same colour, I win. | 0:42:27 | 0:42:30 | |
If they're different colours, I lose. | 0:42:30 | 0:42:33 | |
So I have a red, so I need another red to win. | 0:42:39 | 0:42:44 | |
That's black. I lose. | 0:42:44 | 0:42:47 | |
Again, opposite colours. I've lost both those. | 0:42:50 | 0:42:53 | |
That's four in a row. | 0:43:01 | 0:43:03 | |
That's six pairs in a row that I've lost. OK. | 0:43:08 | 0:43:13 | |
I think I know what the dealer's doing here. | 0:43:13 | 0:43:15 | |
Clearly, the deck has been rigged in advance | 0:43:15 | 0:43:18 | |
so that every pair came out as opposite colours. | 0:43:18 | 0:43:22 | |
But there's a simple way to catch the dealer out. | 0:43:22 | 0:43:26 | |
So what we can do now is change the rules of the game. | 0:43:26 | 0:43:30 | |
This time, if they are the opposite colour, I win. | 0:43:30 | 0:43:35 | |
But once again, every time, my evil quantum opponent beats me. | 0:43:40 | 0:43:45 | |
But again, I can see what the crafty dealer could have done. | 0:43:54 | 0:43:57 | |
Maybe while I wasn't looking, he's switched the pack | 0:43:57 | 0:44:00 | |
and rigged it so that it always lands in his favour. | 0:44:00 | 0:44:04 | |
Now every pair is the same colour. | 0:44:04 | 0:44:06 | |
Rigged decks, remember, were what Einstein thought | 0:44:10 | 0:44:13 | |
was really happening in the entanglement experiment. | 0:44:13 | 0:44:17 | |
He said that, just like the gloves were already placed in the box, | 0:44:17 | 0:44:21 | |
so the evil dealer stacked the cards before we played. | 0:44:21 | 0:44:26 | |
But Niels Bohr's idea was very different. | 0:44:27 | 0:44:30 | |
He said red and black don't even exist until you turn them over. | 0:44:30 | 0:44:36 | |
Bell's genius was that he came up with a way of deciding once | 0:44:36 | 0:44:40 | |
and for all who was right - Einstein or Bohr. | 0:44:40 | 0:44:45 | |
This is how he did it. | 0:44:45 | 0:44:46 | |
I'm now not going to tell the dealer which game I want to play, | 0:44:46 | 0:44:50 | |
same colours wins, or different colour wins, | 0:44:50 | 0:44:53 | |
until after he's dealt the cards. | 0:44:53 | 0:44:56 | |
Now, because he can never predict which rules I'm going to play by, | 0:45:00 | 0:45:05 | |
he can never stack the deck correctly. | 0:45:05 | 0:45:08 | |
Now he can't win...or can he? | 0:45:09 | 0:45:13 | |
So now the rules are, different wins. | 0:45:14 | 0:45:18 | |
They're the same. OK. | 0:45:21 | 0:45:23 | |
Same colour wins. | 0:45:24 | 0:45:26 | |
This gets to the very heart of Bell's idea. | 0:45:29 | 0:45:32 | |
If we now start playing and I win as many as I lose, | 0:45:32 | 0:45:36 | |
then Einstein was right. | 0:45:36 | 0:45:38 | |
The dealer is just a trickster with a gift for slight of hand. | 0:45:38 | 0:45:42 | |
Reality may be tricky, but it does have an objective existence. | 0:45:43 | 0:45:48 | |
But what if I lose? | 0:45:51 | 0:45:53 | |
Well, then I'm forced to admit that there is no sensible explanation. | 0:45:53 | 0:45:58 | |
Each card must be sending secret signals to the other | 0:46:01 | 0:46:05 | |
across space and time, in defiance of everything we know. | 0:46:05 | 0:46:10 | |
I'm forced to accept that, at the fundamental quantum level, | 0:46:10 | 0:46:14 | |
reality is truly unknowable. | 0:46:14 | 0:46:17 | |
Bell reduced this idea into a single mathematical equation | 0:46:22 | 0:46:27 | |
that tells us once and for all what seemed unanswerable. | 0:46:27 | 0:46:33 | |
How reality really is. | 0:46:33 | 0:46:35 | |
John Bell published his idea in 1964 and the extraordinary thing is, | 0:46:36 | 0:46:41 | |
at the time, the entire physics community ignored him. | 0:46:41 | 0:46:45 | |
Total silence. It seems the world simply wasn't ready. | 0:46:45 | 0:46:50 | |
Perhaps it was because his equation seemed untestable, | 0:46:52 | 0:46:56 | |
or just because nobody thought it was worth investigating. | 0:46:56 | 0:47:00 | |
But that was about to change. | 0:47:00 | 0:47:03 | |
And the change would come from a very unexpected place. | 0:47:03 | 0:47:07 | |
# This is the dawning of the age of Aquarius | 0:47:10 | 0:47:15 | |
# Age of Aquarius | 0:47:15 | 0:47:19 | |
# Aquarius | 0:47:19 | 0:47:25 | |
# Aquarius. # | 0:47:25 | 0:47:30 | |
America was in crisis over Vietnam, | 0:47:31 | 0:47:34 | |
Watergate, feminism, the Black Panthers. | 0:47:34 | 0:47:37 | |
And while all this was going on, a small group of hippy physicists | 0:47:37 | 0:47:40 | |
were working at the University of Berkeley in California. | 0:47:40 | 0:47:43 | |
They did all the hippy things - | 0:47:43 | 0:47:45 | |
they smoked dope, they popped LSD, | 0:47:45 | 0:47:47 | |
they debated things like Buddhism and telepathy. | 0:47:47 | 0:47:51 | |
# When the moon | 0:47:51 | 0:47:53 | |
# Is in the Seventh House... # | 0:47:53 | 0:47:57 | |
And they loved quantum mechanics. | 0:47:57 | 0:47:59 | |
In its weird version of reality, | 0:47:59 | 0:48:01 | |
they saw parallels with their own esoteric beliefs. | 0:48:01 | 0:48:04 | |
# And love will steer the stars | 0:48:07 | 0:48:11 | |
# This is the dawning of...# | 0:48:11 | 0:48:13 | |
Their hippy, New Age-style physics | 0:48:16 | 0:48:18 | |
also caught the attention of the public, | 0:48:18 | 0:48:20 | |
who read their crazy hippy books | 0:48:20 | 0:48:23 | |
that mixed quantum mechanics with Eastern mysticism. | 0:48:23 | 0:48:26 | |
Books like The Tao Of Physics, | 0:48:26 | 0:48:29 | |
The Dancing Wu Li Masters | 0:48:29 | 0:48:32 | |
and my personal favourite, Space-Time And Beyond - | 0:48:32 | 0:48:36 | |
Towards An Explanation Of The Unexplainable. | 0:48:36 | 0:48:38 | |
But more importantly for our story, | 0:48:40 | 0:48:42 | |
the story of quantum mechanics, | 0:48:42 | 0:48:44 | |
these hippy physicists also turned their attention | 0:48:44 | 0:48:47 | |
to Einstein's now-famous thought experiment | 0:48:47 | 0:48:50 | |
and what it told us about the nature of reality. | 0:48:50 | 0:48:53 | |
They saw Niels Bohr's secret signalling | 0:48:55 | 0:48:58 | |
as proof that physics supported their own ideas. | 0:48:58 | 0:49:01 | |
Because if two particles could spookily communicate across space, | 0:49:01 | 0:49:06 | |
then ESP, telepathy and clairvoyance were probably true as well. | 0:49:06 | 0:49:12 | |
If only they could prove it really existed. | 0:49:12 | 0:49:15 | |
Then, in 1972, they realised that, | 0:49:15 | 0:49:17 | |
with a bit of mathematical slight of hand, | 0:49:17 | 0:49:21 | |
they could take Bell's equation and experimentally test it. | 0:49:21 | 0:49:26 | |
One of their group, John Clauser, | 0:49:26 | 0:49:29 | |
borrowed some equipment from the lab he was working in | 0:49:29 | 0:49:31 | |
and set up the first genuine and ultimate test of quantum mechanics. | 0:49:31 | 0:49:36 | |
This is a picture of that first experiment, | 0:49:39 | 0:49:42 | |
built of leftovers and stolen equipment. | 0:49:42 | 0:49:45 | |
Over the next few years, it was improved by a team | 0:49:45 | 0:49:49 | |
led by Alain Aspect in Paris, making its results more reliable. | 0:49:49 | 0:49:53 | |
Over ten years after Bell first proposed his equation, | 0:49:55 | 0:49:59 | |
finally, it could be put to the test. | 0:49:59 | 0:50:02 | |
This is a modern version of the experiment | 0:50:02 | 0:50:04 | |
first carried out by John Clauser and then Alain Aspect. | 0:50:04 | 0:50:08 | |
Here, a crystal converts laser light | 0:50:12 | 0:50:15 | |
into pairs of entangled light quanta, photons, | 0:50:15 | 0:50:18 | |
making two very precise beams. | 0:50:18 | 0:50:21 | |
These photons are passed around and bent back again | 0:50:27 | 0:50:30 | |
until they pass through these detectors. | 0:50:30 | 0:50:33 | |
The two photons are like the two cards | 0:50:33 | 0:50:35 | |
the evil dealer places in front of me. | 0:50:35 | 0:50:37 | |
We'll measure a property of the photons called polarisation, | 0:50:40 | 0:50:43 | |
which is equivalent to the colour of the playing cards in my game. | 0:50:43 | 0:50:47 | |
So, for instance, winning with two matching red cards might be the same | 0:50:47 | 0:50:52 | |
as two photons with matching polarisation. | 0:50:52 | 0:50:56 | |
But because this is quantum mechanics, | 0:50:56 | 0:50:57 | |
it's more complicated than my simple card game. | 0:50:57 | 0:51:00 | |
And these dials here allow me | 0:51:00 | 0:51:03 | |
to measure a second property of the photons as well. | 0:51:03 | 0:51:06 | |
Now that's equivalent to me | 0:51:06 | 0:51:07 | |
not only trying to guess the colour of the face of the cards, | 0:51:07 | 0:51:10 | |
but also trying to guess the colour of the back of the cards. | 0:51:10 | 0:51:14 | |
OK, so we're now going to switch on the laser and start the experiment. | 0:51:14 | 0:51:18 | |
So this number here gives me | 0:51:23 | 0:51:26 | |
the number of photon pairs coming through the experiment. | 0:51:26 | 0:51:29 | |
That's equivalent to the pairs of cards in my game. | 0:51:29 | 0:51:32 | |
The graph here, dropping down, | 0:51:32 | 0:51:34 | |
gives me the probability that I can win, that I'm guessing right. | 0:51:34 | 0:51:38 | |
The more photons, the more accurate it becomes. | 0:51:38 | 0:51:41 | |
I'll stop at an uncertainty of about 1%. | 0:51:41 | 0:51:44 | |
And the final answer is 0.56, so if I... | 0:51:45 | 0:51:50 | |
..put that into my equation, | 0:51:51 | 0:51:53 | |
I now need to run the experiment three more times, | 0:51:53 | 0:51:56 | |
corresponding to the four different settings of these dials. | 0:51:56 | 0:52:01 | |
Each run is now like a different set of rules for the quantum dealer. | 0:52:01 | 0:52:06 | |
And when I add them up and get the answer, | 0:52:06 | 0:52:09 | |
if it's less than two, then Einstein was right. | 0:52:09 | 0:52:12 | |
If it's greater than two, then Bohr was right. | 0:52:12 | 0:52:15 | |
OK, so now for the second setting. | 0:52:15 | 0:52:18 | |
Just remember what the experiment will show. | 0:52:18 | 0:52:20 | |
If the numbers come out less than two, | 0:52:22 | 0:52:25 | |
then it's proof the dealer has been stacking the deck. | 0:52:25 | 0:52:28 | |
This was Einstein's view. | 0:52:28 | 0:52:30 | |
OK, so the number I get this time is 0.82. | 0:52:30 | 0:52:34 | |
Now, reset for run three. | 0:52:39 | 0:52:42 | |
But if the result is greater than two, | 0:52:45 | 0:52:47 | |
then the deck cannot be stacked and something else is at work. | 0:52:47 | 0:52:52 | |
OK, so the run three result is -0.59. | 0:52:52 | 0:52:56 | |
And finally, run four. | 0:52:56 | 0:52:59 | |
This last number will finally reveal | 0:53:02 | 0:53:05 | |
if the world follows common sense, or something much more bizarre. | 0:53:05 | 0:53:10 | |
OK, so our final result is in and it's 0.56. | 0:53:10 | 0:53:14 | |
So if we turn the laser off... | 0:53:14 | 0:53:16 | |
Right, I'd better just work out the answer. | 0:53:18 | 0:53:21 | |
And there we have it, 2.53. | 0:53:27 | 0:53:30 | |
It's a number greater than two. | 0:53:31 | 0:53:33 | |
Absolute proof that Albert Einstein was wrong | 0:53:33 | 0:53:36 | |
and Niels Bohr was right. | 0:53:36 | 0:53:39 | |
The significance of this result is simply enormous. | 0:53:48 | 0:53:52 | |
Just remember what it means. | 0:53:52 | 0:53:53 | |
Einstein's version of reality cannot be true. | 0:53:53 | 0:53:57 | |
No amount of clever jiggery-pokery with our experiment | 0:53:57 | 0:54:00 | |
can cheat nature. | 0:54:00 | 0:54:02 | |
The two entangled photons' properties | 0:54:02 | 0:54:04 | |
couldn't have been set from the beginning, | 0:54:04 | 0:54:07 | |
but are summoned into existence only when we measure them. | 0:54:07 | 0:54:11 | |
Something strange is linking them across space. | 0:54:14 | 0:54:17 | |
Something we can't explain or even imagine | 0:54:17 | 0:54:20 | |
other than by using mathematics. | 0:54:20 | 0:54:23 | |
And weirder, photons do only become real when we observe them. | 0:54:23 | 0:54:28 | |
In some strange sense, it really does suggest | 0:54:30 | 0:54:32 | |
the moon doesn't exist when we're not looking. | 0:54:32 | 0:54:35 | |
It truly defies common sense. | 0:54:37 | 0:54:39 | |
No wonder towards the end of his life, Einstein wrote... | 0:54:41 | 0:54:45 | |
The experiment only confirms this. | 0:54:58 | 0:55:01 | |
Whatever is happening, we just don't understand it. | 0:55:01 | 0:55:05 | |
But it doesn't mean we should stop looking. | 0:55:07 | 0:55:10 | |
While it's true that Einstein's dream of finding | 0:55:11 | 0:55:15 | |
a reasonable, common-sense explanation was shattered for good, | 0:55:15 | 0:55:19 | |
my own personal view is that this | 0:55:19 | 0:55:21 | |
doesn't necessarily banish physical reality. | 0:55:21 | 0:55:24 | |
Like Einstein, I still believe there might be a more palatable | 0:55:24 | 0:55:29 | |
explanation underlying the weird results of quantum mechanics. | 0:55:29 | 0:55:33 | |
One thing is clear, whether there are physical, spooky connections, | 0:55:33 | 0:55:38 | |
whether there are parallel universes, | 0:55:38 | 0:55:40 | |
whether we bring reality into existence by looking, | 0:55:40 | 0:55:44 | |
whatever the truth is, | 0:55:44 | 0:55:46 | |
the weirdness of the quantum world won't go away. | 0:55:46 | 0:55:50 | |
It'll rear its ugly head somewhere. | 0:55:50 | 0:55:53 | |
120 years ago, the greatest scientific revolution ever | 0:55:56 | 0:56:00 | |
was brought about by a light bulb. | 0:56:00 | 0:56:03 | |
And scientists are still using powerful light sources | 0:56:06 | 0:56:09 | |
like x-rays to unlock nature's mysteries. | 0:56:09 | 0:56:13 | |
This is the Diamond Light Source. | 0:56:18 | 0:56:20 | |
It's Britain's single largest science facility. | 0:56:20 | 0:56:24 | |
The x-rays produced here are ten billion times more powerful | 0:56:24 | 0:56:28 | |
than a hospital x-ray. | 0:56:28 | 0:56:30 | |
With that's sort of power, scientists can slice into matter | 0:56:30 | 0:56:34 | |
and glimpse those quantum secrets inside. | 0:56:34 | 0:56:36 | |
Researchers here are using this powerful light beam | 0:56:45 | 0:56:49 | |
to investigate new materials which may have the potential | 0:56:49 | 0:56:52 | |
to bring about an electronics breakthrough as great as any before. | 0:56:52 | 0:56:57 | |
Just as the quantum pioneers of the '20s and '30s | 0:57:01 | 0:57:05 | |
ended up bringing about a scientific and technological revolution, | 0:57:05 | 0:57:09 | |
so this generation of physicists are set to usher in a new quantum era. | 0:57:09 | 0:57:14 | |
An era where Einstein's hated quantum entanglement | 0:57:16 | 0:57:19 | |
now produces unbreakable computer security. | 0:57:19 | 0:57:23 | |
New kinds of communication systems, superfast computers | 0:57:23 | 0:57:27 | |
and other advances we can't yet even imagine. | 0:57:27 | 0:57:30 | |
And this is why quantum mechanics thrills and frustrates me. | 0:57:40 | 0:57:45 | |
It's capricious, it's counterintuitive, | 0:57:45 | 0:57:47 | |
it even sometimes feels just plain wrong. | 0:57:47 | 0:57:50 | |
And yet it still surprises us every day. | 0:57:50 | 0:57:55 | |
And I, for one, believe that our knowledge of the quantum world | 0:57:55 | 0:57:58 | |
is still far from complete. | 0:57:58 | 0:58:01 | |
That there are greater truths about nature yet to be discovered. | 0:58:01 | 0:58:05 | |
And that's still what keeps me awake at night. | 0:58:05 | 0:58:09 | |
Next week, join me as my journey into the quantum world | 0:58:13 | 0:58:17 | |
gets even more surprising. | 0:58:17 | 0:58:19 | |
I investigate how its weird rules are crucial for life | 0:58:19 | 0:58:23 | |
and how the bizarre behaviour of subatomic particles | 0:58:23 | 0:58:26 | |
might even influence evolution itself. | 0:58:26 | 0:58:30 | |
# I know I deserve you I know you're my saviour | 0:58:38 | 0:58:43 | |
# But when I observe you | 0:58:43 | 0:58:45 | |
# You change your behaviour | 0:58:45 | 0:58:47 | |
# So I'm stuck here still | 0:58:47 | 0:58:50 | |
# I'm tangled up with you. # | 0:58:50 | 0:58:55 |