• Double slit experiment
    79 replies, posted
[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DfPeprQ7oGc[/media] this proves that if your not looking at something, its everywhere at once.
Fuck yes Dr. Quantum, his videos make complicated things so much simpler.
Quite interesting.
That was fucking badass
this was on garry's blog awhile ago
I love quantum mechanics. The complexity is completely mind boggling, and the fact that matter is both a wave and a particle is crazy in itself.
[img]http://www.facepunch.com/fp/rating/information.png[/img] think [img]http://www.facepunch.com/fp/rating/information.png[/img] know how to d[img]http://www.facepunch.com/fp/rating/information.png[/img]v[img]http://www.facepunch.com/fp/rating/information.png[/img]de by zero now!
[QUOTE=Edthefirst;19949775]I love quantum mechanics. The complexity is completely mind boggling, and the fact that matter is both a wave and a particle is crazy in itself.[/QUOTE] I have to agree - got any more?
[img]http://zhost.tk/u/tz/explodinghead.gif[/img]
I was hoping this was involving 2 chicks or something
Oh god, mindfuckery of scientific proportions.
I don't think the electron was physically aware that it was being observed, so how the fuc- *head explodes*
whoaa
I remember seeing this a year or two ago but now I understand it more an- :psyboom:
quantum mechanics is easy to understand
[QUOTE=DSG;19951916]quantum mechanics is easy to understand[/QUOTE] Really now... Mind explaining the phenomenon for all the puzzled physicists then?
[QUOTE=DSG;19951916]quantum mechanics is easy to understand[/QUOTE] Hahahahaha Then Explan this vid..Mhh?
That was pretty damn cool.
If you enjoyed this you should read "A Brief History of Time" by Stephen Hawking, it has a lot of things like this.
How does an inanimate object know it's being observed? Crazy shit. :psyboom:
[QUOTE=Pilotclan9404;19951997]Hahahahaha Then Explan this vid..Mhh?[/QUOTE] it's too complex for a simpleton like you
Quantum Entanglement... [media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jh8uZUzuRhk[/media] It's what the illusive man In mass effects 2 Communication device made use of, Or at least that's what EDI said...
[img]http://www.filmschoolrejects.com/images/jackiechan_confused1.jpg[/img] That's just so... :bang:
So people tripping on acid are right?! WHAT?!
[QUOTE=Syphen;19952089]Quantum Entanglement... [media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jh8uZUzuRhk[/media] It's what the illusive man In mass effects 2 Communication device made use of, Or at least that's what EDI said...[/QUOTE] heh, bioware did there research.
[QUOTE=Syphen;19952089]Quantum Entanglement... [media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jh8uZUzuRhk[/media] [/QUOTE] My mind = :psyboom:
[QUOTE=lorden;19952064]How does an inanimate object know it's being observed? Crazy shit. :psyboom:[/QUOTE] It's not the objects that knows. It's you that knows.
[QUOTE=Kastralis;19952682]It's not the objects that knows. It's you that knows.[/QUOTE] :ohdear:
What's also cool is that, if you walked into a wall for almost eternity, you would eventually go through, because there is a chance of the electrostatic forces holding your atoms together breaking. On a quantum level, this happens at the same time as all the other possibilities, so you get stuff flying THROUGH other stuff.
I heard of thing called "quantum tunneling". It says that an electron can move anywhere on one side of an object, but, it can "tunnel" through, but once it does, it can't go back to the other side.
Sorry, you need to Log In to post a reply to this thread.