The 9 Experiments That Will Change Your View of Light (And Blow Your Mind)

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Published 2023-12-21
A supercut of all our weird light episodes. A look at the double-slit experiment, the Bell experiment, quantum eraser, the delayed choice experiment, the photoelectric effect, the three-polariser paradox, and more! Prepare for your world to be turned upside down.
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#astrum #astronomy #astrophysics #quantum #quantumphysics #quantummechanics #quantumentanglement #quantumtheory #physics

0:00 Prologue
1:18 Intro
2:55 #1 Young’s Double Slit Experiment
5:12 #2 The Photoelectric Effect
7:18 Single-Photon Double Slit Experiment
11:14 #3 Three Polarizer Paradox
14:35 Harmonics & the Probabilistic Nature of Reality
18:15 The Speed of Light?
22:12 #4 & #5 Hau’s Light Speed Experiments
22:45 #6 NEC’s Light Speed Experiments
25:42 #7 Temporal Double Split Experiment
31:14 Startling Implications
33:44 Can Information Travel Backwards in Time?
35:20 Quantum Entanglement
37:28 Fuzzy Properties
38:22 #8 The Bell Experiment
45:52 #9 Delayed Choice Quantum Eraser
50:58 Outro

All Comments (21)
  • @astrumspace
    This is a supercut of my Weird Light series, so you may have seen some of this content before, however it is now in sequence, with sponsors removed, and all the episodes tied together seemlessly. Enjoy!
  • @mensrea1251
    The Young double slit light experiment got me hooked on physics and taught me not to completely dismiss things in life that seemed unintuitive.
  • @pandoraeeris7860
    I think light is like elastic, but instead of stretching in space, it stretches in time. Every photon is tethered at one end at the beginning of time, and at the other end the end of time, and is stretched, like a rubber band, between these two points, but it simultaneously exists along the entire timeline.
  • @CBG2895
    I woke up at 2am to use the bathroom and go back to sleep. randomly decided to watch a few YT shorts and now here I am, wide awake and fully intrigued in your video. This is the kind of rabbit holes I don’t mind jumping down. 😂😂
  • @ZZ-by9zk
    Viewing all the fundamental particles and light as each being it’s own field takes out all the strangeness honestly. There is non”spooky action” at a distance when it’s just one entire field connected to itself.
  • @SerratedPVP
    My brother and I don't get to see each other a lot anymore. And our lives have changed a bit so it's harder to find things to talk about/relate too. However, it's often that one of us will watch an episode and find it so interesting we have to call/text and have a conversation about the video and topic.
  • @MountainFisher
    I did a small study on light for my reef aquarium and the symbiotic zooxanthellae algae many corals need to feed on. Coral bleaching is not caused by too warm water, it is caused by lack of light that starves the algae and it doesn't take much light blocking pollution to do it. But the wavelengths of light that was needed for corals tended more towards the blue range as blue light has the most energy. This was before the availability of full spectrum LEDs and we used a blue actinic fluorescent bulb. You look at colors underwater and the first light to go is red as it has the least energy. Have you ever seen water off a boat that looked green, but when you put your hand in the water it was clear? That can tell you the depth of the water you're in is about 30 feet and the light reflected back to you is green as well. 60 feet is about as deep as green goes, then it's all blue and purple is the last color you see. You see the same effect looking at the side of a thick pane of glass. All this about light and yet there are no green stars, but their light is a result of temperature. All those bleached out corals have recovered by the way and are doing fine.
  • @kilianjames1116
    Incredibly made video, you have explained in simple terms concepts I never thought I could understand. That lightning explanation is such a beautiful analogy for the time slit experiment!
  • @JaquesNaurice
    Just wow, this video completely blew my mind. The temporal double slit baffled me entirely and left me with the question if light has his own velocity.
  • @deus_ex_machina_
    Chapter Timestamps: 0:00 Prologue 1:18 Intro 2:55 #1 Young’s Double Slit Experiment 5:12 #2 The Photoelectric Effect 7:18 Single-Photon Double Slit Experiment 11:14 #3 Three Polarizer Paradox 14:35 Harmonics & the Probabilistic Nature of Reality 18:15 The Speed of Light? 22:12 #4 & #5 Hau’s Light Speed Experiments 22:45 #6 NEC’s Light Speed Experiments 25:42 #7 Temporal Double Split Experiment 31:14 Startling Implications 33:44 Can Information Travel Backwards in Time? 35:20 Quantum Entanglement 37:28 Fuzzy Properties 38:22 #8 The Bell Experiment 45:52 #9 Delayed Choice Quantum Eraser 50:58 Outro Alex, you can paste these timestamps into the description to create Chapters in the seek bar.
  • @simonreeves2017
    Hi Alex, greetings from Oxford. I’m 58, I am fascinated by physics. The duality of particles is mind boggling. Anyone who says they understand quantum physics/mechanics is lying, either they have a superficial understanding, or none at all! Great minds have pondered this perplexing behaviour for decades. Then there is superposition and entanglement. What we do know is that the mechanisms that run our universe are currently incomprehensible to the human mind.
  • This video is truly a gift. I wasn't expecting to watch until the end but got so hooked that didn't want it to finish even after one hour. I learned so much in concepts that I never thought would be able to grasp and were made so comprehensive. Appreciate the effort in doing it!
  • @PaulsPubAndBrew
    I almost didn't watch it because i foolishly didn't think I'd learn something and didn't want to spend almost an hour to find out. I had not heard of 2 of these experiments, but more important than that, the ones i have heard of were explained here better than I've seen before and i felt i learned something from all of them. Incredibly well presented! Bravo
  • @syiunshi
    Re-watching reference: Warning 0:00 Preface - 1:04 Double Slit Experiment - 3:22 Photoelectric Effect - 5:26 Hey, I can still see the letters :) - 12:51 Interlude - 17:36 Light Speed is not Constant 18:30 Three-Polarizer Paradox - 11:22 Hau Light Speed Experiments - 22:17 NEC Light Speed Experiment - 22:53 Break Time - 33:00 Time Slits Experiment - 26:03 (someone should transcribe the results of this experiment into the visible light range so we can see how the frequency is affected before our eyes) Bell Experiment - 38:26 Delayed Choice Test - 46:14 Btw light might just be the result of EM waves interfering with itself as well as the waves involved with the observance of it, and at these heightened moments of energy the overlapping is perceived by us as light being a particle. Or perhaps it's analogous to a reflection, like when the sun catches you off a car's windshield Is this a reupload? :)
  • @ramuk1933
    Officer: "Do you know how fast you were going?" Electron: "Just a moment, let me check..." Electron: "3,141Km/Hr." Officer: "You just made that up, didn't you." Electron: "So?" Officer: ...
  • @MrFanservice
    I'm usually pretty decent at grasping some of these larger physics concepts, especially considering it's not like I've gone to college and actively studied it. But man that Delayed Choice segment was truly the "No f**king shot!" moment for me. Like nah, throw away everything I thought I knew after that
  • @alexi077
    Keep in mind that while we observe the Photon to travel at the speed of causality, from the Photons perspective the "speed" is Infinite. no time passes for the photon itself. the photon cant mesure any time between its departure and arrival. departure and arival happen at the same time therefore if you send 2 photons at different points in time that are close enough to each other they can interfere and seem to interefere with the past because WE experience time.
  • @NefariousTV
    Dude I swear to God, it is 3:37am at the time of writing this, and I just picked up a burrito from a place I go every now and again. I was just about to take a bite of it at the 33:54 mark of the video and I legit stopped and put it down. I'm not eating it. That literally exploded my already exploded brain. That was the most synchroninistic thing I've ever experienced in my life... 😂😂
  • @anthonywood7420
    I've got to watch this a few times, and sleep on it before I've got a chance of getting to grips with the problem. A great post, mind blowing.
  • @Dennistube001
    i used to work with cement. its obviously quadrillions of particles. but it also acts like water when theres a large amount of it. it can produce waves when severely disturbed. you can even drown in it if you fell into a silo of it. so perhaps massive amounts of very very small particles can act as waves. that would make photon particles in bulk act as waves. so perhaps light is waves of particles