Skip to player
Skip to main content
Skip to footer
Search
Connect
Watch fullscreen
Like
Comments
Bookmark
Share
Add to Playlist
Report
What is Quantum Mechanics?
Live Science
Follow
yesterday
Astrophysicist Paul Sutter explains Quantum Mechanics - the body of scientific laws that describe the wacky behavior of photons, electrons and the other particles that make up the universe.
Category
🤖
Tech
Transcript
Display full video transcript
00:00
Quantum mechanics is our fundamental framework for understanding the physics, the behavior
00:07
of the very, very small.
00:09
I'm talking like atoms, molecules, and subatomic particles.
00:15
I'm Paul Sutter and this is Paul Explains, the show where I, you know, explain.
00:23
There's three big pieces to quantum mechanics.
00:27
One of the pieces is in the name itself, this idea of quantization, that certain properties
00:36
of subatomic systems like energy or angular momentum come in discrete levels or packets
00:45
or what we call quanta, hence the name quantization.
00:49
For example, an electron in an atom can't have any old energy that it feels like.
00:57
No.
00:58
It can have only certain energy levels.
01:01
That's because the energy levels in an atom are quantized.
01:04
This is a fundamental core tenant of quantum mechanics and it's very different than the
01:10
physics of the macroscopic world.
01:13
Another key component of quantum mechanics is something we call wave particle duality,
01:18
where tiny things sometimes act like particles, like tiny little bullets, tiny little billiard
01:25
balls, tiny little ping pong balls bouncing around doing everything that particles do and
01:31
sometimes also act like waves where they're more sloshing around or they interfere with each
01:38
other.
01:39
So depending on what you're looking for and how you're looking for it, sometimes, sometimes
01:45
it might act like a little bit of both.
01:48
And the last bit is that quantum mechanics and subatomic systems are ruled by probabilities
01:55
and uncertainty.
01:56
Up here in the macroscopic world, if you can know exactly where something is and exactly
02:02
how fast it's moving, and you can predict, using the laws of physics, exactly where it's
02:08
going to be, exactly where it's going to go.
02:10
But you don't get that kind of precise knowledge in the subatomic world.
02:17
You don't always know exactly where something is, like an electron.
02:20
You don't always know where an electron is or how fast it's going.
02:25
And once you do know where it is, or at least have some idea, you don't know exactly where
02:31
it's going to go.
02:32
Instead it's going to be a range of probabilities.
02:36
Our understanding of quantum mechanics underlies so many things.
02:43
Atomic and nuclear power, all of that is thanks to our understanding of quantum mechanics.
02:48
Microchips, semiconductors, lasers and LED, and even biology.
02:54
So a bunch of physicists playing around in the early 20th century gave us this major cornerstone
03:01
of many fields of science.
Recommended
3:10
|
Up next
Chandra X-Ray Observatory At 25
Space.com
today
0:44
OTD In Space - July 16: Apollo 11 Launches To The Moon
Space.com
yesterday
3:59
Listen To NASA Accidentally Broadcasting The Space Station Medical Emergency Drill
Space.com
yesterday
2:25
Advice On Large Money Inheritance
Kiplinger
yesterday
2:16
How Retirees Can Reduce Their Car Insurance Costs
Kiplinger
yesterday
2:03
How Do You Define Wealth - The Answer May Surprise You
Kiplinger
yesterday
7:51
Chipsynth MD Sound Demo
Music Radar
yesterday
2:02
5 Led Zeppelin Songs Guitarists Need To Hear
Music Radar
3 days ago
1:23
The Thermohaline Circulation - The Great Ocean Conveyor Belt
Live Science
yesterday
1:32
Knowledge: In Quantum Physics, More Than One Reality Exists
Live Science
yesterday
1:51
Whale With No Tail Swimming Off The Coast Of Washington State
Live Science
yesterday
2:14
German Steamship Wreck May Hold Looted Treasures From Russian Palace
Live Science
yesterday
1:40
Strange Ancient Fish Had Front And Back Legs
Live Science
yesterday
1:12
Footage Of Hayabusa2 Spacecraft Touchdown On Asteroid Ryugu
Live Science
yesterday
1:58
13 Mummies Coffins Unearthed In Egypt
Live Science
yesterday
5:20
The James Webb Telescope Images Explained
Live Science
yesterday
7:03
China's Artificial Sun
Live Science
yesterday
1:11
Creatures That Look The Same As They Did Millions Of Years Ago
Live Science
yesterday
2:54
Looking Beyond Voyager 1 And 2
Live Science
yesterday
0:50
Mars Gets Solar Eclipses Too
Live Science
yesterday
0:33
Video Captures Underwater Volcano Spewing Mud And Methane In The Barents Sea
Live Science
yesterday
1:03
Why Do Octopuses Tear Themselves Apart After Mating?
Live Science
yesterday
2:44
Ice Age Horse Not What We Thought
Live Science
yesterday
1:16
Rescued Python Covered In Hundreds Of Ticks
Live Science
yesterday
2:18
What Makes a Cannibal Coronal Mass Ejection
Live Science
yesterday