Let There Be Life The Secrets of Quantum Physics


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Welcome to a new and very strange world of nature.

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It's been taken over by the weird subatomic particles of

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quantum physics.

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CHURCH BELL RINGS

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As a physicist, I've spent my working life studying

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how these particles behave in the laboratory.

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But now I'm heading out into the natural world.

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I'm on a mission to prove that quantum physics can solve

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the greatest mysteries in biology.

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This is a real adventure for me.

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I'm very much out of my comfort zone trying to apply

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the very careful ideas I'm familiar with in a physics laboratory

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to the messy world of living things.

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I believe that quantum physics could hold many of life's secrets,

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that deep in the cells of animals,

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particles glide through walls like ghosts...

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..that when plants capture sunlight...

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..their cells are invaded by shimmering waves

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that can be everywhere at the same time.

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And that even our human senses

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are tuning in to strange quantum vibrations.

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In the fantastic world of quantum biology,

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life is a game of chance,

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played by quantum rules.

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This is what I hope to convince you of,

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to show you that quantum mechanics is essential in explaining

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many of the important processes in life, and potentially, that

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quantum mechanics may even underpin the very existence of life itself.

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My quest begins with one of the most majestic sights in nature.

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Migration.

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Every winter, barnacle geese arrive right on cue

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at the same Scottish river.

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The end of an epic 2,000-mile voyage from Svalbard,

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high above the Arctic Circle.

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Of course, many birds head south for winter

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then back home for summer.

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But for decades, exactly how birds navigated with such accuracy

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was one of the greatest mysteries in biology.

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So the most recent discovery has caused a sensation.

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In the past few years,

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one species of bird has helped

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create a scientific revolution.

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I was one of many physicists who was shocked to discover that it

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navigates using one of the strangest tricks in the whole of science.

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It utilises a quirk of quantum mechanics,

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one that bamboozled even the greatest of physicists,

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from Richard Feynman to Albert Einstein himself.

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So you might be surprised to discover the identity of this

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mysterious creature.

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Say hello to the Quantum Robin.

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This is the European robin.

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Every year, she migrates from northern Europe

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to the tip of Spain and back.

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In this laboratory in the woods,

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biologist Henrik Mouritsen is trying to solve the mystery

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of how she does it.

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But he's found himself in MY world,

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the strange world of quantum mechanics.

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Quantum mechanics describes the very weird behaviour of

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subatomic particles.

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Down in this realm of the very small,

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we have to abandon common sense and intuition.

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Instead, this is a world where objects can spread out like waves.

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Quantum particles can be in many places at once

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and send each other mysterious communications.

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I set out to understand how the bird finds its way,

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but it just turned out that the data

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more and more pointed towards this as

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the only explanation that could bring all the different results together.

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Henrik's investigating a longstanding theory -

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that robins navigate by the Earth's magnetic field.

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His laboratory is an ingenious magnetic bird cage.

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And these plastic cones lined with scratch-sensitive paper

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provide the key measurements.

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Henrik's artificial magnetic field is like the Earth's, except that

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HE can point it in any direction he likes.

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Inside their cones, the robins always respond to the field,

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leaving scratches in a single direction.

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The big mystery is HOW.

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The Earth's magnetic field is incredibly weak,

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far too weak for any living creature to detect.

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But Henrik has found an intriguing clue

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by giving the Quantum Robin a mask.

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We have a little leather hood similar to what you put on a falcon,

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you know, but just for a robin,

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and you have then a hole in front of one eye

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or a hole in front of the other eye.

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And what we can see is that if you cover up the right eye, you turn off

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their magnetic compass processing in the left part of the brain.

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If you cover up this eye,

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you turn the compass off in this part of the brain.

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The robin's magnetic compass seems to be in her eyes.

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I can show you what's going on using my own eye.

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Now, we use our eyes for vision,

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but we also have a second light-detecting mechanism.

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If I shine this torch into my eye,

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you can see that my pupil closes down.

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It's basically a defence mechanism to protect my eyes.

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My eye is responding to particles of light - or photons.

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The energy provided by the photons

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is clearly enough to activate chemical reactions.

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After all, that's what controls my eye muscles.

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Light must be causing similar chemical reactions

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in the robin's eyes.

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In fact, it's the power supply for a unique form of magnetic compass...

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..inside her cells...

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..in the weird world of subatomic particles...

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..a place where only quantum physics

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can explain what's going on.

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To see why, imagine the chemical reactions in the robin's eye

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taking place in mountains and valleys of energy.

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To get a reaction to start,

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you have to push molecules to the top of a mountain.

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Thanks to Henrik's experiments,

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we now know that light does most of the hard work.

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But when it reaches the very peak,

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the molecule becomes incredibly sensitive to the slightest touch.

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The key point here is that the robin's chemical compass is now

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balanced on an energy peak between two valleys.

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Going one way produces one set of chemical products -

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the other, a different set.

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Now, even a tiny change in the Earth's magnetic field can tip the

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molecule over the top, but the way this happens defies common sense.

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The final piece of the puzzle

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depends on one of the truly

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mind-boggling ideas in physics.

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But don't worry if you find it

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hard to understand -

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even Albert Einstein

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called it "spooky".

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The idea is called quantum entanglement.

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It involves particles that seem to communicate faster

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than the speed of light.

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In 1935, Einstein published a famous paper

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arguing that it was impossible.

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But Einstein was wrong.

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In recent years, extremely delicate experiments have shown that

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subatomic particles really are entangled.

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It means they can subtly

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and instantaneously influence each other across space.

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And now it seems the same thing is going on inside the robin's eye.

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When a photon enters the robin's eye,

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it creates what's called an entangled pair of electrons.

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Here's how it works. Each electron has two possible states.

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For simplicity, I'm choosing to call them Red and Green.

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Now, here's the weird thing.

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Until I measure it, it's neither one nor the other,

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but both at the same time.

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Think of the electrons like spinning discs.

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They're simultaneously red AND green.

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But by firing a dart...

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..I can force the first electron to be one or the other.

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So far, it's just a game of chance.

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I don't know what I'll get until I try it.

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So I know my first electron is red.

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Suppose I now measure the second electron.

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You'd think I'd have a 50/50 chance of getting red or green.

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After all, that's what you'd expect in the normal, everyday world.

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But you'd be wrong.

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In quantum entanglement, the electrons are mysteriously linked.

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For example, if I get red on the first...

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..I ALWAYS get red on the second.

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It's not a game of chance any more.

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It's as if the first electron is telling the second one what to do.

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That's why Einstein called it spooky.

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The electrons seem to know that they should both have the same colour,

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no matter how far apart they are.

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The really important part is that

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the two electrons needn't be the same colour.

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They can be entangled in a different way,

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so that if the first electron is red...

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..the second one is always green.

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It seems that this mysterious connection is the ultimate secret

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of the Quantum Robin's compass...

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..because the direction of the Earth's magnetic field

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can influence the outcome.

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Near the equator, they may be more likely to be red-red.

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But near the pole, they may be more likely to be red-green.

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And that's the vital factor that finally tips the balance of

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the robin's chemical compass.

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Tiny variations in the Earth's magnetic field change the way

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electrons in the robin's eye are entangled,

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and that's just enough to trigger her compass.

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Now, finally, we can see how something as weak as the Earth's

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magnetic field can tip that balance one way or the other.

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If the message changes,

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the chemical reaction tips a different way...

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..changing the robin's compass reading.

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Suddenly it looks like it's a fundamentally quantum mechanical

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phenomenon in birds.

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It would be one of the first, if not THE first, in biology.

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Biologists better get used to the weirdness of physics.

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The robin is navigating by "spooky" quantum entanglement.

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To see subtle quantum effects,

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even in a controlled, austere environment of a physics lab,

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is really difficult.

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And yet here's the robin doing it with ease.

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These experiments are real and verifiable, and yet even though

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I'm seeing them with my own eyes, I still find it hard to believe.

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Bird navigation has brought physics

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and nature together as the science of quantum biology.

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There's a whole new world to explore.

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But its pioneers have found that it doesn't just affect birds.

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It affects every single one of us.

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Because the latest experiments say

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you're doing quantum physics right now.

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And believe it or not, you're doing it with your nose.

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Hello, Jem!

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Hello.

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Hello, little girl! Hello...

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Our sense of smell is remarkable,

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and quite different from our other senses of sight and hearing.

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Among the thousands of scents that we can recognise,

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many of them may well trigger very powerful memories and emotions.

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It's as though our sense of smell is

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wired directly to our inner consciousness.

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It's also different in another way.

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The other senses of sight and hearing rely on us detecting waves -

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light and sound.

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But our sense of smell involves detecting particles -

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chemical molecules.

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Recently, scientists have begun to realise that when it comes to

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our sense of smell, something very mysterious is going on.

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GUNSHOT

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For decades, biologists thought they knew exactly how our noses

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sniffed out different chemicals.

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But physicists like Jenny Brookes think there could be a new

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ingredient in the mix.

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And it smells like quantum mechanics.

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A lot of people speak of the sense of smell and olfaction,

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and the science of olfaction as being a problem that's been solved

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and we know all about it - and we do know a lot about it.

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We know about the ingredients,

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we know about the equipment that we use to smell.

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But I would argue that there's a little bit more to understand.

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To understand more, I need someone to help me with a smell test.

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And Jem is going to sniff him out.

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Every human being gives off a cocktail of chemicals.

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Jem's nose could detect a single gram of it

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dissolved over an entire city.

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So she has no trouble finding the man I'm looking for.

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Meet Colin the gardener, a man who's used to smelling the flowers.

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Right, then, Colin, I'm going to put your sniffing skills to the test.

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-Cool.

-I've got a selection of chemicals here,

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and I want you to tell me what they remind you of.

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OK.

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I'll start you off easily.

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COLIN SNIFFS

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Oh, that's...

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-like a minty, minty vapour rub...

-It is, yeah.

-..sort of thing.

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-Yeah, this is...

-Something what you'd rub...

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-This is men...menthol.

-Menthol.

-Yeah.

-But it's that essence.

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Right, here's the next one.

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Ah. You should be able to recognise this one.

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That's baking with my daughter.

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-Mm-hm.

-Erm, icing sugar sort of thing...

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-Vanilla.

-Vanilla, yeah.

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When our noses detect a chemical,

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they fire a nerve signal to our brains.

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But different chemicals create different sensations.

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The standard explanation for this is to do with

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the shape of the molecules.

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The conventional theory that goes back to the 1950s

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says that the scent molecule has a particular shape that allows it

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to fit in to the receptor molecules in our nose.

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If it has the right shape, it's like a hand in a glove,

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or a key in a lock. In fact, it's called the lock and key mechanism.

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With the wrong shape, it won't fit into the receptor.

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But with the right shape, it fits into the receptor,

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triggering that unique smell sensation.

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Different receptors are wired to different parts of our brains.

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So, when a menthol molecule locks into its specific receptor,

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it triggers that minty fresh sensation.

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But the lock and key theory has always had a problem...

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..and Colin's next test will show you why.

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OK, how about...

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this one?

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Quite a strong smell.

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Oh, that's...

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-Yeah.

-What does it remind you of? What does it conjure up?

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What memories?

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I think Christmas.

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-Christmas cake.

-Yeah. Marzipan.

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Marz...marz...yeah, that's it, yeah.

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-Almonds.

-Very, yeah.

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Colin identified the smell of marzipan or almonds.

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In fact, it's due to a scent molecule called benzaldehyde.

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What I didn't give him to smell was this other chemical - cyanide.

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Both benzaldehyde and cyanide have the same smell,

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they both smell of almonds,

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but these molecules are both very different shapes,

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so the lock and key mechanism,

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as an explanation for how we smell, can't be the whole story.

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So why would two molecules with different shapes smell the same?

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Quantum biology has a head-spinning explanation.

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It says our noses aren't smelling chemical molecules...

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..they're LISTENING to them.

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It's not just the shape of a scent molecule that matters.

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Let's take a closer look at this model of a cyanide molecule.

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The white ball here is a hydrogen atom,

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and the grey sticks are the bonds that hold it together

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with the carbon and nitrogen.

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But the reality isn't as simple as that.

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I can give you a better sense of what's going on

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if we look at this larger white ball.

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You see, atoms don't just sit still.

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The bonds that hold them together are like vibrating strings,

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and that gives us a whole new way of thinking about smell.

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The bizarre new quantum theory of smell is all about vibrating bonds.

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HE PLAYS HARMONICS ON GUITAR

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Chemical molecules are playing music for our noses.

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Imagine a receptor molecule in my nose is like my guitar.

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Before it can make a sound, a scent molecule has to enter my nose,

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and when that scent molecule is in place, its chemical bonds

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provide the strings, and it's ready to be played.

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The receptor molecules contain quantum particles -

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electrons.

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As they leap from one atom to another, they vibrate the bonds of

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the scent molecule,

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like my fingers plucking a guitar string.

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GUITAR NOTE CHIMES

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What's remarkable about this theory is that it tells us

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our sense of smell is about the vibrations of molecules,

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or wave-like behaviour,

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and not so much about the shape of a particular scent molecule.

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Our sense of smell may be much more like our sense of hearing.

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HE PLUCKS HIGH NOTE

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A particular molecule, say that of grass,

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will vibrate at a particular frequency.

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HE PLUCKS LOW NOTE

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But a different molecule, say, that of mint,

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will vibrate at a different frequency.

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HE PLUCKS MID-RANGE NOTE

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PLUCKED NOTE REVERBERATES

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HIGHER NOTE REVERBERATES

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This would explain why cyanide smells like almonds.

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The two molecules have different shapes,

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but their chemical bonds just happen to vibrate

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at the same frequency.

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The constant vibration in the odorant is almost

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literally like a particle of sound.

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So, yeah, we're saying that the process of smell could be

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exactly like an acoustic resonance event,

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it could be very analogous to, erm, hearing and seeing, actually.

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But can we really be listening with our noses?

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A bizarre theory needs a bizarre experiment to test it.

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Here's how it works.

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Scientists used a molecule that smells fruity, like orange blossom.

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But if the theory is right,

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then I should be able to change its smell by changing its vibrations.

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The molecule contains

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lots of hydrogen atoms like this,

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bonded to carbon atoms, but what if I were to replace all these atoms

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with a different form of hydrogen called deuterium?

0:23:470:23:51

Now, it won't change the shape of the molecule,

0:23:510:23:54

but it will change the way it vibrates.

0:23:540:23:57

And here's why - deuterium is twice as heavy as normal hydrogen,

0:23:570:24:02

and so it vibrates more slowly.

0:24:020:24:05

Now, different vibrations mean different smells,

0:24:050:24:09

so if I were to make a new form of this chemical,

0:24:090:24:12

all packed with deuterium atoms instead of normal hydrogen,

0:24:120:24:15

it should smell different.

0:24:150:24:17

Quantum biologists found a unique way to carry out this experiment.

0:24:200:24:25

A smell comparison,

0:24:280:24:29

using the real experts in fruity aromas.

0:24:290:24:33

INSECTS BUZZ

0:24:330:24:36

Fruit flies.

0:24:360:24:37

First, the flies were trained to avoid the modified version

0:24:380:24:41

of the fruity molecule.

0:24:410:24:44

To be honest,

0:24:440:24:46

I haven't got a clue how you go about training a fruit fly,

0:24:460:24:49

but apparently you can.

0:24:490:24:51

In the laboratory, the flies had to pass through a kind of maze.

0:24:530:24:58

They were then given a choice.

0:25:010:25:03

Go right for the nice, fruity smell,

0:25:070:25:10

or left, for the nasty, modified version.

0:25:100:25:14

HE STRUMS GENTLY

0:25:140:25:18

They could definitely smell the difference.

0:25:210:25:23

They always preferred the original and turned right.

0:25:270:25:31

The fruit fly experiment gives hard evidence

0:25:390:25:42

that quantum smell theory really works.

0:25:420:25:45

But ultimately, it works in harmony with the lock and key theory.

0:25:470:25:52

First, the scent molecule fits into the receptor...

0:25:530:25:57

..then those molecular vibrations take over.

0:25:590:26:02

Incredible as it seems, flies, humans

0:26:050:26:09

and dogs may be smelling the sound of quantum biology.

0:26:090:26:13

Our sense of smell is fascinating and mysterious as it is,

0:26:170:26:21

but to think that when I encounter a particular scent

0:26:210:26:24

and that sets off a whole wave of memories

0:26:240:26:28

and emotions in my mind, that it's underpinned,

0:26:280:26:32

that it's triggered by quantum mechanics,

0:26:320:26:34

I think makes it even more remarkable.

0:26:340:26:37

CROWS CAW

0:26:370:26:40

The mysterious influence of quantum physics

0:26:490:26:53

reaches into every corner of the natural world.

0:26:530:26:55

In fact, it inhabits the walls

0:26:590:27:02

of every living cell on Earth.

0:27:020:27:04

Because the latest experiments suggest a magical solution

0:27:080:27:11

to one of the greatest mysteries of nature.

0:27:110:27:14

The miracle of metamorphosis.

0:27:180:27:21

The transformation of a tadpole into a frog

0:27:300:27:34

has never been fully explained.

0:27:340:27:37

In little more than six weeks, the tadpole breaks down,

0:27:370:27:41

then reassembles in its adult form.

0:27:410:27:44

But the big mystery is how it happens so fast.

0:27:440:27:49

When you think about it, there's nothing more extraordinary

0:27:490:27:52

than a tadpole turning into a frog.

0:27:520:27:54

Take its tail, for example.

0:27:540:27:56

Over a period of several weeks, it gets reabsorbed into the body

0:27:560:28:00

and the proteins and fibres that make up the flesh

0:28:000:28:04

get recycled to form the frog's new limbs.

0:28:040:28:08

But for this to happen,

0:28:080:28:10

trillions and trillions of chemical reactions work together,

0:28:100:28:13

breaking molecules, forming new ones in a carefully orchestrated dance.

0:28:130:28:18

But the fibres that hold flesh together are very, very strong.

0:28:180:28:22

They're a bit like these ropes holding my raft together.

0:28:220:28:26

In order to dismantle the raft, I'd have to undo these very tight knots.

0:28:260:28:31

You could think of it like this...

0:28:330:28:34

..a tadpole is held together by long ropes of proteins

0:28:360:28:40

knotted together by chemical bonds.

0:28:400:28:42

The bonds are so strong that they should last for years,

0:28:440:28:48

much longer than the tadpole's entire life span.

0:28:480:28:52

So how can it turn into a frog in just a few weeks?

0:28:520:28:57

The explanation involves one of the most important molecules of life.

0:28:570:29:01

Tiny widgets in all our cells called enzymes.

0:29:030:29:07

The enzymes are the actual machinery of the cell.

0:29:070:29:11

They are actually the little machines inside cells

0:29:110:29:15

that do the chemical transformations that are involved in everyday life.

0:29:150:29:19

They are absolutely crucial.

0:29:190:29:21

And the reason they're so crucial is because what they are able to do

0:29:210:29:24

is to accelerate chemical reactions by enormous amounts.

0:29:240:29:30

Let me show you just how quickly enzymes get to work.

0:29:300:29:34

Inside this bottle is a substance called hydrogen peroxide.

0:29:350:29:39

You're probably most familiar with it

0:29:390:29:41

as the chemical used to bleach hair.

0:29:410:29:43

In fact, I obtained this sample

0:29:430:29:45

from my local hairdressers.

0:29:450:29:47

Hydrogen peroxide is also produced in the body,

0:29:470:29:50

and it's the job of the liver to get rid of it.

0:29:500:29:53

The way it does that is using an enzyme

0:29:530:29:55

which breaks down hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen.

0:29:550:30:00

Now, to show you just how quickly this enzyme works,

0:30:000:30:04

I'm going to do a quick demonstration.

0:30:040:30:06

I've got some liver here which I've chopped up

0:30:060:30:08

in order to release the enzyme.

0:30:080:30:11

Now, watch what happens when I add this liver mixture

0:30:130:30:17

containing the enzyme to the hydrogen peroxide.

0:30:170:30:20

Watch how quickly the oxygen is released.

0:30:200:30:23

CROWS CAW

0:30:350:30:37

Just 100 grams of liver fired my rocket nearly 20 feet.

0:30:380:30:44

Liver enzymes make the breakdown of hydrogen peroxide

0:30:470:30:50

incredibly efficient.

0:30:500:30:52

It happens a trillion times faster.

0:30:520:30:55

That's a million, million times faster than it would otherwise.

0:30:550:30:58

In metamorphosis, it's enzymes

0:31:010:31:03

that dismantle the tadpole's tail.

0:31:030:31:06

And that means breaking down

0:31:070:31:09

an incredibly tough protein

0:31:090:31:11

called collagen.

0:31:110:31:12

Collagen is one of the most important proteins in the biological world.

0:31:140:31:18

It's the protein which actually gives that resilience, that elasticity

0:31:180:31:22

to tendons, to cartilage,

0:31:220:31:25

and of course to our skin, as well.

0:31:250:31:28

And in the tail of the tadpole, it provides the kind of scaffold

0:31:280:31:32

that supports that structure.

0:31:320:31:35

Now, when the tadpole is transformed into the frog,

0:31:350:31:38

what you need to do is to essentially have an enzyme,

0:31:380:31:42

collagenase, which will literally snip the collagen down

0:31:420:31:45

into small pieces and thereby take that scaffold apart.

0:31:450:31:49

But how do enzymes break chemical bonds apart so incredibly fast?

0:31:530:31:58

Let me show you why it's a problem only quantum biology can solve.

0:32:000:32:05

Think of it this way, all these different parts of the knot

0:32:070:32:11

are like subatomic particles - electrons, protons -

0:32:110:32:15

that hold the different parts of the molecule together.

0:32:150:32:18

Now, to untie the knot, enzymes have to move protons about.

0:32:180:32:23

But as you can see, this takes quite a bit of effort

0:32:230:32:27

and a lot of time if there are many knots to unpick.

0:32:270:32:31

Physicists have a fancy way of saying

0:32:320:32:34

"put in effort to get something done".

0:32:340:32:36

They say you have to overcome an energy barrier.

0:32:360:32:40

OK, here's my energy barrier.

0:32:460:32:49

And here's my proton.

0:32:510:32:53

To break a bond apart,

0:32:550:32:56

it needs enough energy to get over the barrier.

0:32:560:32:59

The trouble is, when we work out how long this would take,

0:33:010:33:05

it's much too slow to break down a tadpole's tale.

0:33:050:33:08

But this is where protons turn into ghosts.

0:33:100:33:14

I wouldn't blame you for thinking that this is an idea

0:33:170:33:20

that a clever theoretician has come up with,

0:33:200:33:23

that it's just mere speculation - something that we have no proof of.

0:33:230:33:27

But we do. It takes place all the time.

0:33:270:33:31

In the quantum world,

0:33:330:33:34

protons don't have to go over barriers.

0:33:340:33:38

They can tunnel...

0:33:410:33:43

straight through.

0:33:430:33:45

Tunnelling strikes at the very heart of what is most strange

0:33:460:33:49

about quantum mechanics.

0:33:490:33:51

It's like nothing we see in our everyday world.

0:33:510:33:54

A quantum particle can tunnel from one place to another

0:33:540:33:58

even if it has to pass through an impenetrable barrier.

0:33:580:34:02

They are not solid objects like balls in our everyday world.

0:34:020:34:07

They have spread out, fuzzy,

0:34:070:34:10

wavelike behaviour that allows them to leak through an energy barrier.

0:34:100:34:15

A particle can disappear on one side of the barrier

0:34:150:34:18

and instantaneously reappear on the other.

0:34:180:34:21

In nuclear physics, this effect is a proven fact.

0:34:230:34:27

Without quantum tunnelling, the Sun simply wouldn't shine.

0:34:280:34:32

But I never thought I'd see it...

0:34:350:34:37

..in a tadpole.

0:34:390:34:41

It's hard to stress just how weird this process is.

0:34:410:34:45

It's as though I would approach a solid brick wall and,

0:34:450:34:48

like a phantom, disappear from one side and reappear on the other.

0:34:480:34:53

The most important advantage of tunnelling is its speed.

0:34:570:35:01

It happens incredibly quickly -

0:35:030:35:06

much faster than if protons go OVER the barrier.

0:35:060:35:09

As a nuclear physicist, quantum tunnelling is my bread and butter.

0:35:110:35:15

Subatomic particles like protons do it all the time.

0:35:150:35:18

But what has this got to do with biology?

0:35:180:35:21

The answer is that without quantum ghosts,

0:35:270:35:30

the metamorphosis of a tadpole would be impossible.

0:35:300:35:33

Remember, chemical bonds are basically knots.

0:35:350:35:38

Tunnelling unties them - fast.

0:35:410:35:45

Have a look at these two knots.

0:35:450:35:47

Now, on the face of it they look identical,

0:35:470:35:50

but there's a subtle difference.

0:35:500:35:52

This knot has the two short ends

0:35:520:35:55

of the rope on the same side.

0:35:550:35:57

Whereas this one

0:35:570:35:59

has the two short ends on opposite sides.

0:35:590:36:01

Now, you'd think that wouldn't make a difference, but it does.

0:36:020:36:06

You see, THIS knot...

0:36:060:36:08

..is very hard to break,

0:36:090:36:11

whereas THIS one...

0:36:110:36:13

..is easy.

0:36:140:36:16

Quantum tunnelling...

0:36:170:36:19

..turns strong knots into weak ones.

0:36:210:36:24

So in a tadpole,

0:36:270:36:28

the entire collagen scaffold breaks apart easily.

0:36:280:36:33

And finally, other enzymes rebuild it in the shape of a frog.

0:36:330:36:38

The quantum tunnelling of particles is one of those weird features

0:36:420:36:46

of the subatomic world

0:36:460:36:47

that a physicist like me is very familiar with.

0:36:470:36:50

After all, it's responsible for radioactive decay

0:36:500:36:53

and it goes on inside the Sun.

0:36:530:36:55

It's the reason why the Sun and all stars shine.

0:36:550:36:59

But to discover this going on inside every cell of every

0:36:590:37:02

living organism on the planet, because every cell contains enzymes,

0:37:020:37:07

now, THAT I find truly amazing.

0:37:070:37:09

Quantum biology casts its spell over every living creature.

0:37:130:37:17

We've seen that birds, mammals, insects

0:37:190:37:23

and amphibians are governed by the strangest laws in science.

0:37:230:37:28

But the most dramatic recent breakthrough concerns

0:37:300:37:32

the single vital process on which all these forms of life depend.

0:37:320:37:37

The conversion of air and sunlight

0:37:390:37:42

into plants.

0:37:420:37:43

This fine specimen is a Larix decidua, or European larch.

0:37:490:37:54

It's about 100 feet high and right at this moment,

0:37:540:37:57

passing just this side of the planet Venus,

0:37:570:38:00

is a bullet with this tree's name on it.

0:38:000:38:02

The bullet is a photon

0:38:050:38:06

nearing the end of its long journey from the Sun.

0:38:060:38:10

Its ultimate destiny is to kick-start

0:38:140:38:17

a series of chemical reactions that underpins all life on Earth...

0:38:170:38:21

..photosynthesis.

0:38:230:38:25

Every second of every day,

0:38:250:38:27

16,000 tonnes of new plant life are created on Earth.

0:38:270:38:32

And for me, it's incredible to think that our existence

0:38:320:38:35

on this planet depends on what happens

0:38:350:38:38

in the next trillionth of a second.

0:38:380:38:40

The crucial first stage of photosynthesis

0:38:510:38:54

is the capture of energy from the Sun.

0:38:540:38:56

It's nearly 100% efficient,

0:38:580:39:00

vastly superior to any human technology.

0:39:000:39:04

But the way that every plant on Earth achieves this

0:39:060:39:10

is one of the great puzzles in biology.

0:39:100:39:12

When it turned out that quantum weirdness might hold the answer,

0:39:130:39:16

physicists could hardly believe it.

0:39:160:39:19

It was like a revelation.

0:39:210:39:23

It was very exciting, because I was

0:39:230:39:25

used to working on problems

0:39:250:39:26

that were quite abstract experiments.

0:39:260:39:29

I am a theoretician, but I always related my theory

0:39:290:39:33

to experiments that were very clean in the lab,

0:39:330:39:35

things that you can control.

0:39:350:39:36

But now, finding out that the things that I knew can help me

0:39:360:39:39

to understand better how nature works,

0:39:390:39:42

really, scientifically, it was like a...

0:39:420:39:46

a new inspiration to my life,

0:39:460:39:48

so I would say I fell in love with this field.

0:39:480:39:53

Textbook biology says the colour of green plants

0:39:550:39:59

comes from chlorophyll molecules.

0:39:590:40:01

Inside the living cells, they absorb light from the Sun.

0:40:020:40:06

This energy is then transferred incredibly quickly

0:40:090:40:12

to the food-making factory at the heart of the cell.

0:40:120:40:15

The entire event takes

0:40:190:40:21

just a millionth of a millionth of a second.

0:40:210:40:24

When the photon hits the cell,

0:40:240:40:26

it knocks an electron out of the middle of a chlorophyll molecule.

0:40:260:40:30

This creates a tiny packet of energy called an exciton.

0:40:300:40:35

The exciton then bounces its way

0:40:350:40:36

through a forest of chlorophyll molecules

0:40:360:40:39

until it reaches what is called the reaction centre.

0:40:390:40:43

Now, that is where its energy is used to drive chemical processes

0:40:430:40:46

that create the all-important biomolecules of life.

0:40:460:40:51

The problem is, the exciton needs to find its way to the reaction centre

0:40:510:40:54

in the first place.

0:40:540:40:56

Textbook biology can't explain how the exciton does this.

0:41:020:41:06

Because, of course, it doesn't know where it's going.

0:41:090:41:12

It just bounces around like a pinball

0:41:150:41:17

in a process called a random walk.

0:41:170:41:20

Sooner or later,

0:41:240:41:26

it will pass through every single part of the cell.

0:41:260:41:28

But this isn't the most efficient way to get around.

0:41:310:41:35

Because when the exciton eventually does reach the reaction centre...

0:41:380:41:42

..it's by pure chance.

0:41:430:41:45

If the exciton just blindly and randomly

0:41:500:41:53

hops between the chlorophyll molecules,

0:41:530:41:55

it would take too long to reach the reaction centre

0:41:550:41:58

and would have lost its energy as waste heat.

0:41:580:42:01

But it doesn't. Something very different must be going on.

0:42:010:42:05

The vital clue comes from recent experiments

0:42:070:42:10

that stunned the world of science.

0:42:100:42:12

Chemists fired lasers at plant cells

0:42:150:42:18

to simulate the capture of light from the Sun.

0:42:180:42:21

They confirmed the exciton wasn't bouncing along a haphazard route

0:42:230:42:27

through the cell.

0:42:270:42:28

This original understanding didn't explain what

0:42:300:42:32

we were observing in the lab.

0:42:320:42:34

So the mystery lies in, OK,

0:42:340:42:36

so then, what is the explanation for what we are observing in the lab?

0:42:360:42:40

The solution is that plants obey the most famous law

0:42:420:42:46

in all of quantum mechanics...

0:42:460:42:48

..the uncertainty principle.

0:42:500:42:52

It says it you can never be certain

0:42:560:42:58

that the exciton is in one specific place.

0:42:580:43:01

Instead, it behaves like a quantum wave,

0:43:040:43:07

smearing itself out across the cell.

0:43:070:43:10

The exciton doesn't simply move from A to B.

0:43:150:43:18

In a bizarre but very real sense,

0:43:200:43:23

it's heading in every direction at the same time.

0:43:230:43:28

It's spreading itself out as a wave

0:43:280:43:30

so that it can explore all possible routes simultaneously.

0:43:300:43:34

This strikes at the very heart

0:43:340:43:36

of what's so strange about quantum mechanics.

0:43:360:43:38

The exciton wave isn't just going this way or that way,

0:43:380:43:42

it's following all paths at the same time.

0:43:420:43:45

That's what gives it such incredible efficiency.

0:43:450:43:48

The beauty of it is...

0:44:020:44:03

..if the exciton is trying every route

0:44:050:44:07

to the reaction centre at once...

0:44:070:44:09

..it's bound to find the fastest possible way to deliver its energy.

0:44:110:44:15

It's hard to express how incredible this discovery seems

0:44:190:44:22

to physicists like me.

0:44:220:44:24

Biological cells are full of the random jiggling

0:44:250:44:28

of billions of atoms and molecules.

0:44:280:44:31

But somehow, excitons maintain their form

0:44:320:44:36

as beautiful, perfect quantum waves,

0:44:360:44:40

transporting the energy that guarantees life on Earth.

0:44:400:44:45

It opened a whole new scientific path for me.

0:44:490:44:53

And I really enjoy the fact that

0:44:530:44:55

to be able to understand fully what is happening there or in the plants,

0:44:550:44:59

you have to interact with scientists

0:44:590:45:00

that have completely different approaches,

0:45:000:45:03

like biologists and chemists.

0:45:030:45:06

But we all have to come together

0:45:060:45:08

to actually understand what is the relevant of this,

0:45:080:45:11

the relevance of this.

0:45:110:45:12

So, for me, this is one of the most exciting parts of this field.

0:45:120:45:15

Real scientific experiments leave no doubt.

0:45:180:45:22

The strange hand of quantum mechanics has shaped

0:45:240:45:27

the entire living world.

0:45:270:45:29

It's not a surprise that you should find quantum tricks being used

0:45:310:45:36

in biological systems.

0:45:360:45:37

The reason is, because they're better.

0:45:370:45:40

Quantum entanglement is normally seen

0:45:440:45:46

in the tightly-controlled conditions of the physics lab.

0:45:460:45:50

But now, we know that robins use it

0:45:510:45:53

to navigate with extraordinary precision.

0:45:530:45:56

Quantum vibrations mean our noses LISTEN to chemicals...

0:46:000:46:04

..enhancing our perception of the world around us.

0:46:050:46:08

The living cells of all animals depend on protons

0:46:120:46:16

that vanish and reappear like ghosts...

0:46:160:46:19

..speeding up the vital processes of life.

0:46:210:46:24

And photosynthesis reveals the big picture.

0:46:300:46:32

A shimmering world

0:46:340:46:36

where quantum waves capture the Sun's energy in an instant.

0:46:360:46:40

Sometimes, people say, "Ah, but physicists have been

0:46:420:46:44

"looking for this for decades."

0:46:440:46:47

Well, biology has had millions of years.

0:46:470:46:49

The ultramodern science of quantum mechanics

0:46:510:46:54

is an ancient fact of life.

0:46:540:46:56

For the end of my journey,

0:46:580:47:00

I want to take these ideas to their logical conclusion.

0:47:000:47:03

Of course, as a scientist,

0:47:030:47:04

any speculations I have have to be backed up by careful experiments.

0:47:040:47:09

So I want to concoct a thought experiment that helps me

0:47:090:47:12

to answer the biggest biological question I can think of.

0:47:120:47:16

Does quantum physics play any role

0:47:160:47:19

in the mechanism of evolution itself?

0:47:190:47:22

In 1859, Charles Darwin stunned the world

0:47:280:47:32

with his Theory Of Evolution By Natural Selection.

0:47:320:47:35

He went on to explain the differences

0:47:360:47:39

between humans and other apes.

0:47:390:47:41

150 years later, there's no doubt that Darwin's theory

0:47:430:47:46

accounts for every living organism

0:47:460:47:48

on land and sea.

0:47:480:47:50

But I'd like to explore the latest,

0:47:530:47:55

extraordinary interpretation of his ideas.

0:47:550:47:58

STIRRING STRINGS

0:47:580:48:00

Could there be a quantum theory of evolution?

0:48:030:48:08

MUSIC: Adagio of Spartacus and Phrygia from Spartacus Suite No.2 by Aram Khachaturian

0:48:080:48:13

Can quantum evolution explain how the snail got its shell?

0:48:350:48:39

The snails I'm used to seeing in my back garden

0:48:430:48:45

tend to have rather bland, boring shells.

0:48:450:48:48

So have a look at this beauty.

0:48:480:48:50

The patterns on its shell very perfectly match

0:48:520:48:55

the lines on the stem.

0:48:550:48:57

It's called a banded snail. Cepaea nemoralis.

0:48:590:49:03

And the pattern isn't there by accident.

0:49:040:49:07

Come and have a look at this.

0:49:110:49:13

Less well adapted snails

0:49:170:49:19

are more likely to be found here.

0:49:190:49:21

This stone is called a thrush's anvil.

0:49:210:49:25

The song thrush is the snail's main predator.

0:49:250:49:27

It catches the snail

0:49:270:49:29

and smashes its shell against the stone to get to the snail.

0:49:290:49:32

Now, what I can see here

0:49:320:49:33

is that there aren't many banded snail shells,

0:49:330:49:36

suggesting that its colours camouflage it very well,

0:49:360:49:40

hiding it from the bird.

0:49:400:49:41

Darwin's theory says

0:49:450:49:47

that evolution depends on variation within a species.

0:49:470:49:51

Snails with camouflage are more likely to survive and reproduce...

0:49:530:49:57

..passing on their shells to the next generation

0:50:000:50:02

so that the species as a whole becomes better adapted.

0:50:020:50:06

So, variation - the random differences between snails -

0:50:090:50:13

is the driving force behind their evolution.

0:50:130:50:16

Now, all species evolve and adapt to their environment.

0:50:180:50:22

But the question I'd like to explore is

0:50:220:50:24

whether quantum mechanics plays a role in this.

0:50:240:50:27

The only way to find out

0:50:310:50:33

is by scientific experiments.

0:50:330:50:35

So, my adventures in quantum biology finally bring me home...

0:50:370:50:41

..to the University of Surrey.

0:50:430:50:45

Here, in the laboratories,

0:50:480:50:49

I'm planning a new analysis of the most celebrated molecule in science.

0:50:490:50:54

Deoxyribonucleic acid, or DNA.

0:50:570:51:01

Its double helix holds the genetic code for every living organism.

0:51:040:51:09

It's a remarkable fact that Darwin himself had no idea

0:51:120:51:15

what created variation in the species.

0:51:150:51:18

The structure of DNA wasn't discovered until 1953

0:51:180:51:22

by Francis Crick and James Watson.

0:51:220:51:25

The most famous feature of DNA is of course

0:51:250:51:28

its beautiful double helix structure.

0:51:280:51:30

But that's just scaffolding.

0:51:300:51:32

The real genetic secret lies in between.

0:51:320:51:35

The four different-coloured molecules are called bases.

0:51:380:51:42

The colour code on one side - say blue, red, blue -

0:51:440:51:48

forms a gene that parents pass on to their offspring.

0:51:480:51:52

A gene is a bit like a jigsaw puzzle.

0:51:520:51:55

It fits together like this.

0:51:550:51:57

A full strand of the double helix forms a coloured pattern.

0:51:590:52:04

But the other strand always pairs up the same way.

0:52:060:52:09

A blue base always goes with yellow

0:52:120:52:15

and green always goes with red...

0:52:150:52:18

..because only those colours have the right shape to fit together.

0:52:190:52:24

What Crick and Watson realised was that this provides

0:52:240:52:27

a mechanism for passing on the genetic code.

0:52:270:52:30

When cells reproduce, the two strands of DNA separate,

0:52:320:52:36

ready to be copied.

0:52:360:52:38

But red still goes with green...

0:52:400:52:42

..and yellow still goes with blue.

0:52:440:52:47

So bit by bit,

0:52:480:52:50

the cell creates two new strands.

0:52:500:52:52

Two perfect copies of the entire genetic code.

0:52:540:52:57

So far, there's no genetic variation.

0:52:590:53:01

This new copy is identical to the original.

0:53:010:53:05

But here's the interesting bit.

0:53:050:53:07

During the copying process, something very important can happen.

0:53:070:53:11

Sometimes, mistakes creep in.

0:53:110:53:13

They're called mutations.

0:53:160:53:18

Let's have a look at these two bases here.

0:53:190:53:23

The two prongs that hold them together are subatomic particles.

0:53:240:53:29

They're protons.

0:53:290:53:31

They're basically the bonds between the strands of DNA.

0:53:310:53:34

These protons can jump across to the other side.

0:53:340:53:38

If the strands split when the protons have jumped across,

0:53:400:53:44

they find themselves in the wrong position.

0:53:440:53:47

Now, this red base will no longer bind to a green base.

0:53:490:53:54

Instead, it has to bond to a yellow base.

0:53:540:53:59

Slotting this back in,

0:54:000:54:02

we see that now this copy is no longer identical to the original

0:54:030:54:07

because I have a yellow base here instead of a green one.

0:54:070:54:11

We've brought in a genetic mutation.

0:54:110:54:13

Jumping protons would change the snail's DNA.

0:54:150:54:20

It could make a new gene for camouflaged shells.

0:54:200:54:23

The question is, how do protons jump?

0:54:240:54:27

It's my belief that quantum's spookiness can take over.

0:54:300:54:34

Now, for these mutations to take place,

0:54:350:54:38

the protons have to overcome an energy barrier.

0:54:380:54:41

And if you remember what happened with enzymes,

0:54:410:54:44

well, you can probably guess what's coming next.

0:54:440:54:47

Protons can behave as if barriers don't exist.

0:54:500:54:54

They tunnel straight through.

0:54:560:54:59

But does this ghostly effect really happen?

0:55:000:55:03

My colleagues in biology are already looking

0:55:070:55:10

for the very first evidence of quantum mutations.

0:55:100:55:13

Biologists didn't really even know about quantum mechanics,

0:55:160:55:19

so when you tell them that particles can be in two places at once,

0:55:190:55:23

they kind of say, "Well, not in my cells, they can't!"

0:55:230:55:25

Our experiment involves samples of bacteria.

0:55:260:55:30

The first sample is prepared in normal water,

0:55:310:55:34

containing hydrogen nuclei, or protons.

0:55:340:55:37

When the bacteria reproduce, we simply count the mutations.

0:55:390:55:43

But if our theory is correct,

0:55:440:55:46

then we should be able to change the rate at which mutations occur.

0:55:460:55:50

Remember how we tested the quantum theory of smell?

0:55:510:55:55

What if I replaced the proton with its big brother, the deuteron?

0:55:550:56:00

This is the nucleus of an atom of deuterium.

0:56:000:56:03

Now, crucially, a deuteron is twice as heavy as a proton

0:56:030:56:06

and this should influence how easy it is for

0:56:060:56:09

the deuteron to quantum tunnel.

0:56:090:56:12

Quantum mechanics is full of surprises.

0:56:120:56:15

Protons tunnel easily.

0:56:160:56:18

Deuterons...don't.

0:56:200:56:22

These heavier particles are much more likely to bounce straight back.

0:56:280:56:32

So the second sample of bacteria is prepared in heavy water,

0:56:350:56:39

which is full of deuterons.

0:56:390:56:41

Our theory says you should get far fewer mutations.

0:56:430:56:47

And, so far, the results are extremely encouraging.

0:56:480:56:52

The preliminary experiments that we've done gives us a hint

0:56:520:56:56

that the mutation rate is indeed depressed in deuterated water.

0:56:560:57:00

We find that it is lower. So my hunch is that we're right,

0:57:000:57:04

but we'll have to wait a little while before we're sure.

0:57:040:57:08

Final proof lies in the future.

0:57:110:57:12

Even if we're right,

0:57:140:57:15

quantum tunnelling is a rare form of mutation.

0:57:150:57:18

But our results promise hard evidence

0:57:200:57:23

for a new explanation of one of the most fundamental processes of life.

0:57:230:57:27

Even the merest possibility of a new quantum mechanism

0:57:290:57:33

for evolution itself is tremendously exciting.

0:57:330:57:37

In fact, the story of quantum biology is only just beginning.

0:57:370:57:41

What the frog, the robin, the fruit fly and the tree have shown us

0:57:410:57:45

is that real quantum effects are going on in nature all the time.

0:57:450:57:50

And if there's anything we've learnt

0:57:500:57:52

from the history of quantum mechanics, it's this -

0:57:520:57:54

we can never be certain where new discoveries will take us next.

0:57:540:57:59

Quantum biology is a revolution in science.

0:58:080:58:11

But it's time I got back to the physics department.

0:58:120:58:15

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