Can a Particle Be Neither Matter Nor Force?

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  • Опубликовано: 26 июн 2024
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    All particles belong to two large groups: fermions like protons and electrons make everything we consider "matter", while bosons like photons and gluons transmit the fundamental forces. And that about covers the universe: matter moving through space and time under the action of forces. But what if we could create particles in between these two possibilities. Physics says these neither matter nor force anyons can exist, and they may have some pretty incredible uses. They’re called anyons.
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Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @pbsspacetime
    @pbsspacetime  2 дня назад +122

    Hey Space Timers! A few of you caught an little error on our part in the merch shoutout. And you are all technically correct, the best kind of correct! The Higgs UV shirt & hoodie will be available for sale at the Merch Store until July 4th, but we are currently past the date where we can guarantee delivery by July 4th. (shipping usually takes about two weeks). Hope that clears things up!

    • @GeorgeSmiley77
      @GeorgeSmiley77 2 дня назад +3

      Correction 2: Don't listen to Matt, the 2 types of particle are turnmeons and bozos.

    • @jamesladd977
      @jamesladd977 2 дня назад +1

      how do you feel about this argument through the lens of the planck length? does that have any bearing on the frame of reference argument as you see it?

    • @njlkerins
      @njlkerins 2 дня назад +5

      Thanks for the Futurama reference! Keep up the good work!

    • @zahirkhan778
      @zahirkhan778 2 дня назад +2

      Is this video sped up? Host is speaking faster than usual.

    • @christopherlocke
      @christopherlocke 2 дня назад +1

      16:51, the RHS should be 1 and -1, not 0 and -1

  • @dhaktizero4406
    @dhaktizero4406 2 дня назад +551

    summoning entities from lower dimensions
    again

    • @volkhen0
      @volkhen0 2 дня назад +31

      Don’t do it with entities from higher dimensions!

    • @StealthTheUnknown
      @StealthTheUnknown 2 дня назад +5

      @@volkhen0why not?

    • @dhaktizero4406
      @dhaktizero4406 2 дня назад +27

      @@volkhen0 no room at the inn!

    • @corujariousa
      @corujariousa 2 дня назад +1

      Witchcraft! 🙂

    • @ianharrison5758
      @ianharrison5758 2 дня назад +8

      Careful summoning them from dimension 0. 4D spacetime doesn’t like having a consciousness both infinite and pure oblivion existing in our finite reality

  • @DrNanoMele
    @DrNanoMele 2 дня назад +552

    What an exciting moment it was to be part of the research team that provided one of the first experimental evidence of anyons in 2019! I’m so happy for my colleagues that you’re finally discussing it

    • @falnica
      @falnica 2 дня назад +14

      Can you link us to your paper?

    • @Turnoutburndown
      @Turnoutburndown 2 дня назад +7

      Just out of curiosity, how is the spin measured on the anyons?

    • @Tara_Li
      @Tara_Li 2 дня назад +8

      So far, these anyon particles are not fundamental particles such as electrons, gluons, or such, right? They’re more like phonons?

    • @paulmichaelfreedman8334
      @paulmichaelfreedman8334 2 дня назад +10

      @@Tara_Li No , phonons are quasi-particles. And Matt has a video on those too. Quasi particles actually interact with normal matter, or their effect does.

    • @PetraKann
      @PetraKann 2 дня назад

      More reductionist trivia and nonsense by the Physics circus.
      This will not end well ladies and gentlemen

  • @NewMessage
    @NewMessage 2 дня назад +569

    "Ok, class... Who can tell me what an η = X particle is called?
    Anyone?
    Anyone?
    Anyone....?"

  • @parzh
    @parzh 2 дня назад +237

    I always thought of spin as "that meaningless quantum number". Meanwhile, Matt casually explains what it is, its origins, and the implications of it having other values.
    I don't think a lot of people can fully appreciate what happened here.
    Incredible work, hats off!

    • @Selieca
      @Selieca 2 дня назад +40

      I did my degree in Physics and Math, and can genuinely say that I've gained more understanding from PBS Space Time than I did in all that degree. Just goes to show the value in teaching to the subject rather than training for an exam.

    • @KeithCooper-Albuquerque
      @KeithCooper-Albuquerque 2 дня назад +5

      @@Selieca Excellent point!

    • @TheJollyRogerPirate
      @TheJollyRogerPirate 2 дня назад

      I thought spin is what nbc and cnn does to make democrats look good, even though they are obviously evil af

    • @paulmichaelfreedman8334
      @paulmichaelfreedman8334 2 дня назад +4

      @@Selieca Does this mean you crammed the matter and did an exam, without ever being tutored, or that you had a shitty math professor? And you passed, so it must have not been that bad.

    • @Bob-of-Zoid
      @Bob-of-Zoid 2 дня назад +2

      I used to build ESR (Electron Spin Resonance) AKA ESR (Electro-Parametric Resonance) Spectrometers, and the latter is the more modern designation. Spin's just a word that sounded right at the time they needed a name, and was already iffy back then too.

  • @jackielinde7568
    @jackielinde7568 2 дня назад +173

    PBS Spacetime: "...that naming an electron is silly."
    Me: "Oh, not this again. Eric the 1/2 Electron is not going to be happy hearing them say this again."

    • @icetraigh
      @icetraigh 2 дня назад +8

      Singing.

    • @jackielinde7568
      @jackielinde7568 2 дня назад +5

      @@icetraigh Take it away... Eric the Orchestra Leader.

    • @xostler
      @xostler 2 дня назад

      Can we just call them the Tron Twins?

    • @barn_ninny
      @barn_ninny 2 дня назад +1

      Cyril Connolly.

    • @1112viggo
      @1112viggo День назад +1

      lmao now i imagine physics professors being fired for using the wrong pronoun for particles in class 🤣

  • @whateverwhenever8170
    @whateverwhenever8170 2 дня назад +175

    I've got to watch this 10 more times

    • @pandoraeeris7860
      @pandoraeeris7860 2 дня назад +24

      You're a fast learner! 😉

    • @fabkury
      @fabkury 2 дня назад +9

      You are about an order of magnitude (maybe two) ahead of me.

    • @k_a_bizzle
      @k_a_bizzle 2 дня назад +10

      Only 10? We have a genius on our hands. I’m at 59 on .25x speed.

    • @whateverwhenever8170
      @whateverwhenever8170 2 дня назад

      @@k_a_bizzle yeah I'm rapidly catching up with you here, I normally absorb stuff pretty quickly but this just did not hit

    • @stephanieparker1250
      @stephanieparker1250 2 дня назад

      Usually takes me a bit more than that to digest it all 😅

  • @cherubin7th
    @cherubin7th 2 дня назад +46

    Very cool how a more rigorous explains why only two types are observed.

  • @TheYeIIowDucK
    @TheYeIIowDucK 2 дня назад +89

    It's insane how such insane math underlies so much of our universe. This episode, more than any other, made me realize it really IS just maths all the way down. We are insane complex mathematical objects that somehow produce consciousness.

    • @silviavalentine3812
      @silviavalentine3812 2 дня назад +8

      e^iπθ (which is the same as cosθ + i*sinθ) is not that insane. This is especially true compared to the last 100 years of math.

    • @WtfYoutube_YouSuck
      @WtfYoutube_YouSuck 2 дня назад

      Sadly, Maths are also the reason science as gone so astray. To a bean counter, everything is a bean to be counted....even things that are not beans or countable. Many mathematicians out there have wasted their entire life on theories they can support with math that are pure fantasy, useless in predicting anything, and set back scientific advancement for a generation.

    • @fredrikbreivald388
      @fredrikbreivald388 2 дня назад +50

      Don’t confuse the map for the territory. The math describes the universe that does not mean it *is* the universe

    • @fredrikbreivald388
      @fredrikbreivald388 2 дня назад +10

      Ceci n’est pas l’univers

    • @DJCornelis
      @DJCornelis 2 дня назад

      @@fredrikbreivald388 nous sommes les champignons de l'universe!

  • @user-tc8dd4cd5u
    @user-tc8dd4cd5u 2 дня назад +52

    If the universe is holographic and can be represented as a 2D-surface on its infinite boundary, can anyons exist on that boundary?

    • @CyborusYT
      @CyborusYT 2 дня назад +18

      now THAT is an interesting question, i gotta know!

    • @thezipcreator
      @thezipcreator 2 дня назад +4

      don't trust me on this (I have no idea what I'm talking about) but I think no because the rules of the boundary would be completely different from the rules of the bulk

    • @GrahamClinthorne
      @GrahamClinthorne 2 дня назад

      Thank you! I had the same question. And if they do exist, how would their interactions play out in the bulk/ higher dimensional space?

    • @nicholasfigueiredo3171
      @nicholasfigueiredo3171 День назад +1

      Yes. But in that specific case 2 "non-connected" events in either space or time should be able to influence each other if they were connected at some point. I never heard of something like that(~~quantum entanglement~~)

    • @april5054
      @april5054 День назад

      if the universe is holographic, it'd still have 4 dimensions, it would just be a 4d surface on a 5d boundary (I think? correct me if I'm wrong.)

  • @jcarlile8279
    @jcarlile8279 2 дня назад +8

    Probably one of the best videos for me. Don’t know why but all of this made sense to me. Pretty sure all the years of watching Matt have finally started to sink in and click. Thank you.

  • @stephenspackman5573
    @stephenspackman5573 2 дня назад +70

    Wait wait. These researchers made anyons with spin _exactly_ 1/3, _roughly_ 1/3 or _indistinguishable_ from 1/3? These are algebraically very different.

    • @damonedrington3453
      @damonedrington3453 2 дня назад +8

      Genuine question, but how would “exactly 1/3” and “indistinguishable from 1/3” be different?

    • @stephenspackman5573
      @stephenspackman5573 2 дня назад +23

      @@damonedrington3453 By construction. I could do something with the inherent property that doing it three times comes back to the physically enforced integral 1 state, or I could do something approximate with sufficient precision that a test for 1/3 would pass. Something similar happens all the time in computing; rational 1/3 is just not the same as floating 1/3. In physics the rationals are apparently the same ones we use in maths and computing, but floats are replaced by distributions (which are different again from Reals, which are a special-surprisingly complicated-construction invented by mathematicians to make those two notions coincide). If that makes sense?

    • @JorgetePanete
      @JorgetePanete 2 дня назад +10

      Exactly, based on the abstract of this arxiv paper: /abs/2006.14115

    • @JorgetePanete
      @JorgetePanete 2 дня назад +8

      Assuming youtube doesn't like my comment, the paper is about fractional hall effect, from june 2020

    • @volbla
      @volbla 2 дня назад +7

      These are quotes from the 1990 paper "Theory of the fractional quantum Hall effect" abstract.
      _The main assertion is that new candidate incompressible states can be constructed by taking products of some known incompressible states, and all incompressible states can thus be generated starting from the states at integer filling factors._
      _Numerical results show that these trial states very accurately describe the transition from the 1/3 state to the 2/5 state for a four-electron system._
      _Even though the fractional quantum Hall effect is found to be possible at all rational filling factors in this approach, it is indicated why the odd-denominator fractions are in general more stable than the even-denominator ones._
      It sounds like they're supposed to be exact fractions, just like regular particles. The part about stability kind of sounds like there can be minute deviations, but maybe an unstable anyon just disintegrates or breaks confinement or immediately transitions to a different (but exact) flavor.

  • @tmrogers87
    @tmrogers87 2 дня назад +54

    Love videos like this. This is the first time I’ve ever heard about anyons and my mind is blown

    • @yu.niverse
      @yu.niverse 2 дня назад +2

      i know they cite their sources but this whole channel could be making it all up and we would never know

    • @DrDeuteron
      @DrDeuteron День назад

      @@yu.niverse naw, I heard of anyons in the late 80's.

  • @Khyranleander
    @Khyranleander 2 дня назад +19

    Ever notice how often Limited Time ads are at least partially misscheduled?
    Vid: "To get this merch, you have to order by June 23rd." Vid airs on the 27th.

    • @andrasbiro3007
      @andrasbiro3007 День назад +10

      No, this is clever marketing for their time machine. It's been available since 2026.

    • @Duiker36
      @Duiker36 День назад

      @@andrasbiro3007 Well, it will have been available, certainly.

  • @ordan787
    @ordan787 2 дня назад +19

    Fascinating!
    But I must say, really feels like you buried the lead here 😅
    "There’s this special, 3rd(infinity-th?) type of particle, that only exists mathematically, and only in lower dimensional spaces... except we can artificially make materials which behave like their in lower dimensions, and suddenly this particle behaviour emerges!"
    That's UTTERLY WILD
    And I totally get that we won't understand until you've walked us through the math... but still, come on! That's SO COOL, let us know up-top that the difficult math is heading to somewhere so interesting! 😍

  • @klikkolee
    @klikkolee 2 дня назад +62

    18:10 this conflicts with the reasoning used to disprove "real" anyons. The reasoning was that even when the particles were constrained to a 2d plane, the embedding of that plane within a 3d space precludes anyons since the plane can be viewed from either side. And that describes the physics experiment too -- the particles are confined to a 2d plane, but that plane is embedded in 3d space and can be viewed from either side

    • @niloymondal
      @niloymondal 2 дня назад

      Whatever these physicist are smoking, I want it too.

    • @iamdigory
      @iamdigory 2 дня назад

      This

    • @MNbenMN
      @MNbenMN 2 дня назад +15

      Maybe the configuration of the magnetic fields used to manipulate the spins is indicating a preferential perspective, resolving the "which side" ambiguity...?

    • @No_suchthing_as_a_uniquehandle
      @No_suchthing_as_a_uniquehandle 2 дня назад +23

      If I understood correctly it was the constraining of the particles to a 2D plane within a 3D configuration space which was used to prove the impossibility of anyons, not real space. The real space restriction to 2D plane means the configuration space doesn't need to be 3D and restricted, the configuration space is simply 2D.

    • @castonyoung7514
      @castonyoung7514 2 дня назад +4

      @@MNbenMN In that case wouldn't any gradient or directional field in a 1D space, even if it doesn't interact with the particles at all, make anyons impossible, as left could be distinguished from right?
      Actually, the whole idea of not being able to put a 2D space into 3D, because you can look at it from different sides just isn't really making any sense to me.

  • @johnmichaelchase8530
    @johnmichaelchase8530 2 дня назад +39

    This is one of the few episodes where it's very difficult to parse even with the incredible effort and diagrams. That said! I had an awesome ah-ha moment with the clockwise flip demonstrations indicating why it's only possible to have multiples of pi as spin due to the mathematics behind that transformation with 3 spatial dimensions.
    Will be pretty neat if this results in 'Anyonic Quantum Super Computers' in the future, even it's hard to even understand what that would even look/behave like!

    • @hanque1
      @hanque1 2 дня назад

      Very well stated! 👏🏼

    • @drdca8263
      @drdca8263 2 дня назад

      I feel somewhat confident that there are some substantial errors in the diagrams shown.
      In the diagrams where two particles move in a 2D space on the left, and the right side is supposed to be showing the part of the configuration space other than the center of mass information,
      I don’t think the correspondence is as it should be.
      The two particles shouldn’t be passing through each-other. Rather, in order to make a loop on the image on the right, they should be going around in opposite directions such that they exchange positions without passing through each-other.
      It’s *possible* that what is shown does make sense, but is just shown in a way that is very different from how I would show it, and also not explained in a way that makes clear to me how the illustration is meant to work,
      but, I really think some of the people behind the show just misunderstood some things.
      So, you know how the anti-symmetry requires that the amplitude for two electrons having the same position, be zero, because that’s the only thing that is equal to its own negation?
      The same thing happens with anyons, except instead of “it’s own negation” it is “it multiplied by (some phase factor other than 1) “
      It isn’t when the anyons pass through each-other that the system picks up a phase factor, as, they never pass through each-other.
      It is when they switch places without passing through each-other .
      (Well, if they did pass through each-other, that would probably also kinda pick up a phase... but that’s not the relevant scenario.)
      What they should have, is on that cone, the two passing through each-other should be going through the tip of that cone.

    • @johnmichaelchase8530
      @johnmichaelchase8530 2 дня назад +1

      @@drdca8263 now obviously since I had a hard time parsing it I can't really speak on it's accuracy, but are you certain the information is incorrect and not merely skewed a bit due to the limitations of finding an approachable approximation of 6 dimensional space?

    • @drdca8263
      @drdca8263 2 дня назад

      @@johnmichaelchase8530 I was talking about the “2 particles in 2D” part, where the full configuration space is only 4D (and only 2 of them relevant).
      The broad strokes of what he said was right, as were many of the details. Actually, maybe all the things he *said* were right?
      It’s possible that I’m wrong.
      But I’m at least 70% sure that there’s an error in those diagrams.
      I would have explained the “why not in 3D?” part slightly differently, but it was still good.
      (not to mention the error of writing “e^(i pi eta) = 0 when eta is even” (should be 1, not 0))

  • @jajssblue
    @jajssblue 2 дня назад +4

    I applaud Spacetime for communicating these complex interactions so well.

  • @LanceMcCarthy
    @LanceMcCarthy 2 дня назад +11

    Congrats! This the first episode that blew completely over my head, lol.

  • @duprie37
    @duprie37 2 дня назад +3

    I remember reading about that experiment and not really understanding the significance of it at all. This video explains it brilliantly and now I also understand why there are bosons & fermions. Thanks!

  • @danielgrizzlus3950
    @danielgrizzlus3950 2 дня назад +61

    2:05 HE SAID THE THING!!!

    • @LuisSierra42
      @LuisSierra42 2 дня назад +1

      Came here to post this

    • @luudest
      @luudest 2 дня назад +6

      said what thing?

    • @LuisSierra42
      @LuisSierra42 2 дня назад +21

      @@luudest "Quantum mechanics forbids this", It's a meme

    • @halyoalex8942
      @halyoalex8942 2 дня назад +2

      @@LuisSierra42 to be specific, it originated from an earlier episode of this series, so he’s referencing it

    • @EebstertheGreat
      @EebstertheGreat 2 дня назад +3

      @@halyoalex8942 To be even more specific, Matt said it in the video "Why Quantum Information is Never Destroyed" (ca. 4:33) and the text is even written on screen, so a screenshot of that became a meme. I don't think this is the first time Matt has called back to it since it became a meme, but I can't quite remember.

  • @h7opolo
    @h7opolo 2 дня назад +55

    21:00 funny to mention a deadline in video uploaded after it

    • @zrath67
      @zrath67 2 дня назад +14

      A video posted an hour ago having a deadline for merch orders 4 days ago. I thought I was having a stroke.

    • @scribblescrabble3185
      @scribblescrabble3185 2 дня назад +4

      wibbly wobbly, timey wimey

    • @sebastiandierks7919
      @sebastiandierks7919 2 дня назад +4

      They recorded that merch ad already for the last video and probably didn't bother to re-record. They still wanted to have the ad in there and the information regarding the deadline is not wrong and also still relevant for people to know they won't receive it before July 4.

    • @black-snow
      @black-snow День назад +3

      They are just in a different frame of reference. They go fast.

  • @alexdamman6805
    @alexdamman6805 2 дня назад +3

    Wait . . . what? You explained the Pauli exclusion principle in under a minute? This is what I have been looking for!

  • @jonathancrowder3424
    @jonathancrowder3424 2 дня назад +35

    Fermions: Minecraft entity cramming limit reached

    • @marckiezeender
      @marckiezeender 2 дня назад +20

      Degeneracy pressure defeated by placing vines

  • @CallOfCutie69
    @CallOfCutie69 2 дня назад +13

    1:32
    Something about dirac belt, su(3), spin 1/2 and covering spaces. There’s a great video by NoahExplainsPhysics

  • @yaroslav7458
    @yaroslav7458 2 дня назад +6

    small error at 17:00, the exponential for an even Eta should equal 1, not 0

  • @admiral_franz_von_hipper5436
    @admiral_franz_von_hipper5436 2 дня назад +9

    Get home, open up RUclips, new episode right there. Nice

  • @ZoonCrypticon
    @ZoonCrypticon 2 дня назад +6

    My most favourite astronomy and physics presenter! Thank you !

  • @ManglingMinis
    @ManglingMinis 2 дня назад +7

    What happens if you keep going up the dimensions? What happens to this concept in a 4D universe? Or a 5D universe? Does it tell us if we can't have particular particles in higher dimensions?

    • @zmgehlke
      @zmgehlke 2 дня назад +5

      You can always have anyon-like objects, but as you increase dimensions, you need to braid more complicated things to create them.
      In 2+1D (confined to a plane), you can braid particles. In 3+1D, you can braid rings. In higher dimensions, you braid higher dimension analogs.

    • @drdca8263
      @drdca8263 2 дня назад +6

      The kind of considerations that forbid anyonic particles in 3D don’t forbid bosons or fermions in higher than 3D if that’s what you mean.

  • @ANoDYNUSjosh
    @ANoDYNUSjosh 2 дня назад +6

    Excellent!

  • @homerodysseus4203
    @homerodysseus4203 2 дня назад +1

    Thank you SpaceTime for doing your part to educate the masses, but also putting your sponors at the end of the video. It tells me how much you respect your audience.

  • @TheKlaun9
    @TheKlaun9 2 дня назад +2

    I'm just as fascinated by most of the topics as I am with this show breaking down pretty complex physics in a way basically anyone can follow.

  • @abiofficial-ws7pn
    @abiofficial-ws7pn 2 дня назад +4

    PBS Space Time:
    Fermions, Bosons, Anyons
    Meanwhile over at Star Talk:
    Onions

  • @jounik
    @jounik 2 дня назад +3

    16:50 Unfortunate misprint there, for even η e^(iπη) = 1 as stated, not 0.

  • @davidcarroll2911
    @davidcarroll2911 День назад +1

    Probably one of the best yet! Excellent presentation.

  • @sheepwshotguns42
    @sheepwshotguns42 2 дня назад +2

    such a beautiful explanation, this channel is a gift

  • @MrLewooz
    @MrLewooz 2 дня назад +15

    I have no clues about what's goin' on yet I watch it every time.... am I normal????

    • @GhostMop
      @GhostMop 2 дня назад +4

      I just ride the wave function through PBS Space Time.

    • @the.spriggan
      @the.spriggan 2 дня назад

      Watch their standard model and standard model lagrangian playlists(in that order) and then watch whatever interests you. If you get through that, you'll catch on soon enough

    • @gabor6259
      @gabor6259 2 дня назад +1

      Are you normal? Yes and no.

    • @MrLewooz
      @MrLewooz 2 дня назад

      @@GhostMop surfing it....

    • @handlesarecringe957
      @handlesarecringe957 2 дня назад +1

      something something particles

  • @HolyBlowhole
    @HolyBlowhole 2 дня назад +3

    This melts my brain. I think I need a lie down.

  • @oromhal
    @oromhal День назад +1

    I love your channel to an enormous degree, thank you so so much for making videos!

  • @yyyy-uv3po
    @yyyy-uv3po 20 часов назад

    What a fascinating episode, well done PBS!

  • @greg4367
    @greg4367 2 дня назад +11

    Why are you telling us, in a film released on June 27th, that we must order the merch by June 23rd?

    • @schokolade1735
      @schokolade1735 2 дня назад +2

      It is the 20th though. Your date settings must be off, or I just found a loophole for playing the lottery...

    • @alexd3851
      @alexd3851 2 дня назад +1

      Its a test to see if anyone has figured out time travel yet

    • @winstonknowitall4181
      @winstonknowitall4181 День назад

      Because time is relative.

  • @Rubrickety
    @Rubrickety 2 дня назад +17

    All electrons are actually named Dennis.

    • @lukedoesbutter
      @lukedoesbutter 2 дня назад

      It would be nice if astrophysics had common names like that.

    • @WiscoDrinks
      @WiscoDrinks 2 дня назад +5

      That's because there is only one electron, and his name is Dennis.

    • @haloboy777
      @haloboy777 2 дня назад +1

      That's true, I met them yesterday on bus.

    • @jdrobertson42
      @jdrobertson42 2 дня назад +1

      Not Ellie?

    • @lukedoesbutter
      @lukedoesbutter 2 дня назад +1

      @@jdrobertson42 No i'm dating Ellie they are a proton

  • @DGskwinch
    @DGskwinch День назад +1

    This is an absolutely incredible episode. I'm amazed and so grateful for the incredible free learning resource that is Spacetime

  • @saturnblue
    @saturnblue День назад

    Fascinating episode! This is the kind of stuff that makes me return to this channel over and over again! ❤

  • @Lallezor
    @Lallezor 2 дня назад +4

    How can we create any-ons in our 3D universe, if the math show that it is not enough to simply restrain the 3D particles movement to a 2D plane. Won’t the mirrored observation effect still make them impossible in some “trapped in 2D” setup in a 3D universe?

    • @falnica
      @falnica 2 дня назад +2

      Let's consider semiconductors. These are crystals in which an electron can absorb energy, leave its atom, and wander through the crystal
      This leaves an "electron-hole" where the electron was, and this hole also wanders through the crystal, and it behaves just like particle with positive charge
      Of course from outside the crystal we can see the hole is not a particle and we can describe its effects by talking about the electrons around the hole
      Anyons are similar, if we create them they behave as if they had different spin, but from outside this surface we can see that these are just electrons with spin 1/2, and we can describe everything that happens by just talking about electrons
      In a sense electron-holes and anyons are "illusions" but the effect they have is real
      Mesons are another kind of quasiparticle with the very real effect of keeping protons and neutrons together, and Cooper Pairs are quasiparticles that can transport electric current without resistance

  • @EdwinWiles
    @EdwinWiles 2 дня назад +5

    My head hurts.

    • @EconAtheist
      @EconAtheist 2 дня назад

      I read this in Monty Python

  • @ThoughtsAreReal
    @ThoughtsAreReal 2 дня назад +2

    Going to have to watch this one again. And again. No worries, I've watched pretty much all of the Space Time episodes at least a half dozen times. 😁

  • @kylebowles9820
    @kylebowles9820 2 дня назад

    When I saw the title I knew this was gonna be an instant classic Spacetime episode, thanks Matt and PBS team!

  • @rickbhattacharya2334
    @rickbhattacharya2334 2 дня назад +3

    Me trying to understand what's being said in this video : *YES*

  • @qovro
    @qovro 2 дня назад +7

    I thought the main reason I didn't fall through the floor was electromagnetic repulsion between electron shells, which I would think would have longer range than degeneracy pressure. Am I just confused?

    • @potaatobaked7013
      @potaatobaked7013 2 дня назад +15

      you are right, but if electrons could exist in the same state, then they would all fall to the lowest energy and there would be no electron shells. So the electromagnetic repulsion is the direct reason, but it can only happen because electrons are fermions

    • @mikebresnahan8682
      @mikebresnahan8682 2 дня назад

      I had the same confusion.

    • @garethdean6382
      @garethdean6382 День назад

      Consider the fact that electrons within atoms are very tightly packed compared to interatomic distances.If repulsion were the only issue then you could fit around 100 hydrogen atoms inside one uranium atom while in reality only a few will fit.
      Charge is powerful; just look at how small of a magnet can fight the gravity of the Earth, but the near-neutrality of matter significantly dilutes it.

  • @modolief
    @modolief День назад

    Thanks! I'd heard of anyons, now I have a much firmer basis for thinking about them.

  • @substantiaalba
    @substantiaalba День назад

    Absolutely wonderful explanation, great episode!

  • @windsorek
    @windsorek 2 дня назад +3

    7:46 wat?

  • @user-yy9hk9od9u
    @user-yy9hk9od9u 2 дня назад +3

    Dark 'matter' may be this particle.

    • @drdca8263
      @drdca8263 2 дня назад

      Unless the dark matter is constrained to be on some flat surfaces,
      No.

    • @Duiker36
      @Duiker36 День назад

      It was more fun when y'all were string theorists.

  • @brodydante8767
    @brodydante8767 2 дня назад

    This! This is the answer i wanted everytime ive ever asked about spin. Thanks guys

  • @thomasdjonesn
    @thomasdjonesn 2 дня назад

    Really well explained, this is the kind of stuff that keeps me going.

  • @philipmurphy2
    @philipmurphy2 2 дня назад +3

    Space Time as soon it's available gang

  • @NewMessage
    @NewMessage 2 дня назад +15

    I feel like maybe we shouldn't force matters...

  • @scottdrake5159
    @scottdrake5159 2 дня назад

    Wow. Those visualizations were mind-blowing. How beautiful.

  • @user-fc8xw4fi5v
    @user-fc8xw4fi5v 14 часов назад

    I am familiar with the basis of the Standard Model, so I don't say this very often, but, damn: this video REALLY blew my mind. Never thought about the cases where particles pass through each other versus deflect as being experimentally identical. Makes perfect sense! Since "particle" is just synonymous with "fundamental unit of energy," a value of, say, 5 particles is identical to every other value of 5 particlea, in the same manner that 5 meters is always 5 meters, by definition. Very cool the kinds of philosophical implications this has on the most fundamental scales, which, as always, is the greatest wisdom and joy one always achieves by studying quantum theory.
    Great work, PBS.

  • @douglasharley2440
    @douglasharley2440 2 дня назад +138

    haven't gotten even a minute into the video but i had to comment...over the last couple videos, your voice has subtly changed, getting more "growly". i don't know if you are sick, and the videos are all shot close-together in time, but if not i highly recommend seeing a doctor to get fully checked out. voice changes are an early indicator of serious health problems related to the lungs and/or throat.

    • @rogertoaster9385
      @rogertoaster9385 2 дня назад +27

      Ok, Dr. RUclips.

    • @douglasharley2440
      @douglasharley2440 2 дня назад +52

      @@rogertoaster9385 lol, you are probably too young to know who he was, but peter jennings, a news anchor back when there were only a few channels, experienced similar voice changes before he was diagnosed with lung cancer. *always best to know.*

    • @2030games
      @2030games 2 дня назад +13

      Could also just be different recording equipment, audio EQ/mixing etc.

    • @TheShawnMower
      @TheShawnMower 2 дня назад +10

      I literally thought he might be sick and came to comments immediately after starting

    • @Aleonore22
      @Aleonore22 2 дня назад +11

      It sounds like he has a cold, don't freak out

  • @halyoalex8942
    @halyoalex8942 2 дня назад +7

    2:10 he said the line, chat! 😂

  • @BikianaBiswas
    @BikianaBiswas День назад +1

    Real good explanation! Thsnks❤

  • @heaslyben
    @heaslyben День назад

    Thank you for including just enough math to force the contradiction! What a beautiful line of reasoning! I enjoyed following your explanation!

  • @wolpumba4099
    @wolpumba4099 2 дня назад +5

    *Summary*
    *The Standard Model:*
    * *(**0:11**)* The universe is made of fermions (matter, like protons and electrons) and bosons (force carriers, like photons and gluons).
    * *(**1:00**)* Fermions can't occupy the same quantum state, leading to quantum pressure.
    * *(**1:19**)* Bosons can occupy the same state.
    *Problems with the Traditional Explanation:*
    * *(**3:22**)* Saying fermions "swap places" is ambiguous due to quantum uncertainty.
    * *(**3:36**)* We can't truly label indistinguishable particles like electrons.
    *Introducing Anyons:*
    * *(**3:59**)* Anyons are a theoretical particle type, neither fermion nor boson.
    * *(**4:19**)* They arise from considering particle movement and interactions in 1D and 2D spaces.
    * *(**7:02**)* Anyons have unusual phase shifts when they "exchange" positions, unlike fermions or bosons.
    *Anyons in Different Dimensions:*
    * *(**10:15**)* Anyons are possible in 1D and 2D universes.
    * *(**13:05**)* In 3D (like ours), anyons are usually impossible because rotations would lead to contradictions in their behavior.
    *Creating Anyons in Our 3D World:*
    * *(**17:58**)* Scientists have created anyon-like behavior by trapping electrons between special materials and using magnetic fields.
    * *(**18:24**)* This allows for the study of their unique properties, such as fractional spin.
    *Potential Applications:*
    * *(**18:39**)* Anyons could revolutionize quantum computing by:
    * Allowing for more complex algorithms.
    * Enabling more stable storage of quantum information.
    *Conclusion:*
    * *(**19:11**)* Anyons expand our understanding of particles beyond the standard model.
    * While usually restricted to lower dimensions, we're learning to create and manipulate them in our 3D world, with potentially groundbreaking applications.
    i used gemini 1.5 pro to summarize the transcript

    • @cagri5886
      @cagri5886 2 дня назад +1

      That’s awesome! Thanks a lot!

  • @c3kkos
    @c3kkos 2 дня назад +3

    Pole position!

  • @helloim3j
    @helloim3j День назад

    This was pretty mind-blowing. One of the most profound conclusions in just about any Spacetime video.

  • @KeithCooper-Albuquerque
    @KeithCooper-Albuquerque 2 дня назад

    Excellent video! Wow, the things we are learning!

  • @atklm1
    @atklm1 2 дня назад +6

    He can be neither matter nor force if he wants to. He can leave his friends behind.

  • @djayjp
    @djayjp 2 дня назад +5

    Anyone else feel like those ppl in Idiocracy...? 🙋 😅

  • @alevans51
    @alevans51 День назад

    Incredible insight. Hoping many jump on this.

  • @PERECil
    @PERECil День назад

    I must say that was amazing. I don't know if it was due to the help of my background in 3D computer science, but I almost understood everything this time. Thanks.

  • @binbots
    @binbots 2 дня назад +6

    Unobserved particles are in a future state. Because causality has a speed limit (c) every point in space where one observes it from will be the closest to the present moment. When one looks out into the universe they see the past which is made of particles (GR). When one tries to measure the position of a particle they are observing smaller distances and getting closer to the present moment (QM). The wave property of particles appears when we start trying to predict the future of that particle. A particle that has not had an interaction exists in a future state. It is a probability wave because the future is probabilistic. Wave function collapse is what we perceive as the present moment and is what divides the past from the future. GR is making measurements in the observed past and therefore, predictable. It can predict the future but only from information collected from the past. QM is attempting to make measurements of the unobserved future and therefore, unpredictable. Only once a particle interacts with the present moment does it become predictable. This is an observational interpretation of the mathematics we currently use based on the limited perspective we have with the experiments we choose to observe the universe with.

  • @rflair
    @rflair 2 дня назад +5

    Can a Particle Be Neither Matter Nor Force?
    Every time I fart I ask this same question.

    • @MegaFonebone
      @MegaFonebone 2 дня назад +3

      Ah, the hypothetical fartyon, a strong candidate particle for the elusive and controversial "Brown Matter".

  • @bloodyorphan
    @bloodyorphan 2 дня назад

    Great vid Thanks Matt.

  • @bluequbits7693
    @bluequbits7693 День назад

    Really thanks for sharing this information and ideas

  • @Debugger2000
    @Debugger2000 2 дня назад +169

    Meow! I’m a cat

  • @NicholasNerios
    @NicholasNerios День назад

    Had to watch it twice it was great.

  • @Micetticat
    @Micetticat День назад

    I love when you say "frankly awesome video!"

  • @taschenfilme1573
    @taschenfilme1573 2 дня назад

    this is a really good video... its kind of insane that we can even produce anyons

  • @paulmdevenney
    @paulmdevenney 3 часа назад

    man, I really lost you in the middle, but glad I stayed for the punchline! This sounds like the most genuine version of us hacking the universe through our mathematical knowledge I've heard yet!

  • @thecsslife
    @thecsslife 2 дня назад

    I absolutely loved this video, thank you so much

  • @NeonVisual
    @NeonVisual 2 дня назад +2

    We're like Mario trying to figure out what pixels are made of.

  • @tretolien1195
    @tretolien1195 День назад

    Wow this is so cool and really simple! I will definitely use this explanation next time someone asks me why we only have bosons and fermions!

  • @anonymusmuggle
    @anonymusmuggle 2 дня назад +2

    Damn. That felt like a geometry-based LSD trip, and I think it was beautiful. ❤
    I always suspected Roger Penrose was your visual designer, got you! :D
    Brilliant deduction.

  • @the_eternal_student
    @the_eternal_student 7 часов назад

    This was one of my favorite episodes in a few episodes, because you gave us a sense of possibility. Can you do an episode on what it would take to unify or entangle humans with their environment, so that the function of one was transferred to the other in a superposition of states?

  • @jcuhtred3569
    @jcuhtred3569 День назад

    Mind-blowing! Simply incredible what amazing scientists past and present have discovered and created in our very special spacetime 👏

  • @123wordbird321
    @123wordbird321 2 дня назад +1

    That episode was a banger!

  • @polarwind77777
    @polarwind77777 18 часов назад

    Another incredible video! How do you all keep doing this?

  • @couryswan2448
    @couryswan2448 День назад

    Damn good job of explaining this. This is cool/important and has some very interesting ramifications in technology.....

  • @bikwode
    @bikwode 2 дня назад

    its a nice topic! great video.

  • @djp1234
    @djp1234 2 дня назад

    I don't understand any of this, but still love watching it.

  • @smiththewright
    @smiththewright 2 дня назад

    This is REALLY interesting!

  • @ChilledParadox
    @ChilledParadox 2 дня назад +2

    Hey Dr. SpaceTime, I was wondering how Spinors are related to this idea. I recently watched an hour long on the topographic features of Spinors and how they emerge in our world has fermions, which is what ultimately allows superconductors to function, as we’re able to, excuse me here I’m a homeless layperson, mathematically combine fermions to essentially create the spin of a boson, which allows these combined opposite spin electrons to function as bosons, occupying the same state, and then allowing many more electrons to flow through a material, more than should realistically be allowed if they still acted as fermions. I’ve skipped some steps here for brevity and oversimplified, but I wonder how Spinors relate to this idea of anyions? Onions.

    • @falnica
      @falnica 2 дня назад

      Usually spinors are written using two numbers, one for the amplitude of spin up and another for the amplitude of spin down
      Anyons can also be represented with spinnors but since they have more possible spin states they require larger spinors to represent all their possible states

  • @asystole_
    @asystole_ День назад

    I've just finished a university quantum mechanics course and this video (around the 7 minute mark) finally made the e^(i*theta) phase factor click for me.

  • @sjzara
    @sjzara 2 дня назад

    This was beautiful. Who came up with this beautiful example of the effects of symmetry?

  • @WAMTAT
    @WAMTAT День назад

    Fascinating video

  • @ender1598
    @ender1598 День назад

    Wow... this video was just at the limit of my understanding. But it was pretty mind-blowing to learn that researchers have been able to create theoretically impossible particles to potentially power a new type of quantum computer. That's really really cool!

  • @MCsCreations
    @MCsCreations 2 дня назад

    Fascinating!

  • @Kram1032
    @Kram1032 День назад

    the three-particle version of this can be neatly done on a sphere where you end up with eight copies of the space, one for each octant of the sphere. It's a useful tool for exploring the three body problem.