What is Quantum Tunneling, Exactly?

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @NotHPotter
    @NotHPotter 6 лет назад +912

    The humility you bring to these videos where you're willing to ask for explanations and admit what isn't your forte is really inspiring and makes some pretty esoteric stuff a lot more approachable.

    • @willemvandebeek
      @willemvandebeek 6 лет назад +21

      Hear hear! :) I never heard of evanescent waves before, so I am very curious for the explanation as well (none in the comments so far :-/...).

    • @ChristopherCurtis
      @ChristopherCurtis 5 лет назад +2

      I can't say I understand this enough to explain it, but 3blue1brown has an excellent video correlating quantum tunneling (via the Uncertainty Principle / Unsharpness Relation) to a Fourier analysis. Whether true or not, it helps me make sense of that and the "infinite sharpness" required to make waves simply start, end, or turn 90 degrees without side effects. I believe this is also made more explicit in another video I can't readily find. ruclips.net/video/MBnnXbOM5S4/видео.html

    • @devonbrockhaus6554
      @devonbrockhaus6554 5 лет назад +4

      @brian' It would be fun if just once she was flippant and punctuated every explanation with "Duh!" 😂

    • @legendarylightyagamiimmanu1821
      @legendarylightyagamiimmanu1821 5 лет назад +1

      First of she can’t even explain the quantum mechanical humility copanhageng interpreters have

    • @DjonnyKrajkatoaSimataIrMsc
      @DjonnyKrajkatoaSimataIrMsc 5 лет назад +2

      You bring quantum mech.. to a whole new poetic level

  • @Valdagast
    @Valdagast 6 лет назад +340

    Cats are inherently non-classical objects [1]. My cat can move through a closed cat door, but he never does so when I'm there observing him (he just meows for me to open the cat door). Is it possible that he has harnessed quantum tunneling?
    [1] Schrödinger, 1935

    • @qaziahmer7175
      @qaziahmer7175 4 года назад +7

      Lmao
      Im dying

    • @jovanastefanovic5482
      @jovanastefanovic5482 4 года назад

      xD

    • @meneldal
      @meneldal 4 года назад +8

      The tunneling is his wife wanting the cat to stop whining.

    • @punkkauz
      @punkkauz 3 года назад

      Lol

    • @Neel-xb1ok
      @Neel-xb1ok 3 года назад +2

      Cats are gods, they can manipulate the laws of physics
      The Egyptians were right

  • @ceriseauthor7155
    @ceriseauthor7155 5 лет назад +87

    I think quantum field theory might help with intuition. Instead of thinking in terms of particle vs wave you can view everything as disturbances in fields. This means that particle behavior arises from interacting perturbations in fields and the interactions of different “particles” or a complicated multiple perturbation event can create a field effect without the particle seeming to cross that distance.
    Really the move from thinking of particles and waves to considering fields was a huge moment for me!

    • @aaroncurtis8545
      @aaroncurtis8545 5 лет назад +2

      Yeah, but it leads to similar catastrophes as treating light like a wave... Then you gotta come up with new corrections...

    • @andy_o6133
      @andy_o6133 2 года назад +1

      You put water into a teapot, it becomes the teapot.
      Now water can flow or it can crash.
      Be water, my friend."

  • @doougle
    @doougle 5 лет назад +349

    Pleased to meet you. Welcome to the Tom Scott Effect!

  • @zachstar
    @zachstar 6 лет назад +272

    Just here to watch the video and see if this channel is at a million subs yet. No...alright will check back next week.

    • @minhtri2398
      @minhtri2398 6 лет назад +8

      omg majorprep, your comment actually made me to check if your channel is millions sub yet, hahah. Great job both of you

    • @TheSassi14
      @TheSassi14 4 года назад +1

      Still only a quarter million...

    • @alemurillo2621
      @alemurillo2621 4 года назад

      Been a year bruv

    • @phenomenalphysics3548
      @phenomenalphysics3548 4 года назад +2

      Yes! This channel deserves a million

    • @danielcadwell9812
      @danielcadwell9812 3 года назад +1

      Looks like you're going to be checking back for a long time yet.

  • @MrCardeso
    @MrCardeso 6 лет назад +263

    So, there's a miniscule probability that some Quantum Mechanics concepts will tunnel into my ape brain? Too bad they are evanescent :(

    • @eaterdrinker000
      @eaterdrinker000 6 лет назад +16

      I can't wake up

    • @JorgetePanete
      @JorgetePanete 6 лет назад +15

      @@eaterdrinker000 WAKE ME UP INSIDE

    • @eaterdrinker000
      @eaterdrinker000 6 лет назад +2

      Now I'm having flashbacks to being drunk at raucous bars in 2003.

    • @marcusjaycebjorn6551
      @marcusjaycebjorn6551 5 лет назад +2

      Somebody save me and wake me up because I can't wake up, save me

    • @Damian-uj2qe
      @Damian-uj2qe 5 лет назад +1

      get closer to the computer

  • @TheGrooseIsLoose
    @TheGrooseIsLoose 6 лет назад +2064

    “Unlike a ball, we can’t pinpoint exactly where an electron is.”
    Wow, balls must be really good at physics to be able to pinpoint exactly where an electron is.

    • @isaacchen6630
      @isaacchen6630 6 лет назад +44

      XD made my day!

    • @azdgariarada
      @azdgariarada 6 лет назад +69

      Balls have Heisenberg compensators.

    • @pomtubes1205
      @pomtubes1205 6 лет назад +27

      Nothing But The Austin These balls break the laws of quantum mechanics. Wait, that sounds wrong...

    • @Blox117
      @Blox117 6 лет назад +14

      what kind of balls? balls of steel?

    • @CamaradaArdi
      @CamaradaArdi 6 лет назад +9

      Ah, the old quantum-a-roo

  • @paulmorphy6187
    @paulmorphy6187 5 лет назад +101

    I think I suffer from 'frustrated total internal reflection'...

    • @_BangDroid_
      @_BangDroid_ 5 лет назад +3

      Ditto. Maybe a change to our boundary might help with some refraction

    • @thatellipsisguy8984
      @thatellipsisguy8984 4 года назад +1

      Me trying to meditate...

    • @MohamadModather99
      @MohamadModather99 2 месяца назад

      "frustrated total internal rejection"

  • @jonathanowo7584
    @jonathanowo7584 5 лет назад +36

    3:45 that got intense real quick

  • @YoungTheFish
    @YoungTheFish 6 лет назад +880

    That electron doesn't look very happy.
    Oh well, he's just being negative.

    • @johnshioli1499
      @johnshioli1499 6 лет назад +16

      YoungTheFish so does a positron see the potential well as half full, then?

    • @Blox117
      @Blox117 6 лет назад +6

      John Shioli its an 'infinite' potential well, there is no "half full"

    • @Pekkhum
      @Pekkhum 5 лет назад +1

      @Anzu Shiina Perhaps, but some infinities are bigger than others.There is an infinite quantity of whole numbers. There are half as many odd numbers, though there is an infinite quantity... ruclips.net/video/elvOZm0d4H0/видео.html
      Edit: series=quantity

    • @martiddy
      @martiddy 5 лет назад

      @@Pekkhum Well, technically there are not infinities bigger in quantity, but there infinities of superior order (which contain numbers that other infinities does not).

    • @Pekkhum
      @Pekkhum 5 лет назад

      @@martiddy Much more accurate. 🙂

  • @davburns
    @davburns 6 лет назад +11

    I've often heard that quantum tunneling 'sometimes happens' when the energy potentials make it possible, but not about the evanescent wave function. I'm very glad to have learned something today. Thank you so much for taking it a couple steps beyond what is so often repeated, while keeping the math accessible to non-physicists.

    • @qmgthequantummechanicsguy5371
      @qmgthequantummechanicsguy5371 4 года назад

      Great! Here is a recent experiment with an interpretation:
      ruclips.net/video/w0fuxjhuD9g/видео.html

  • @nathanoladimeji4997
    @nathanoladimeji4997 2 года назад +1

    still cant believe how well you explained everything

  • @thequantummechanic8949
    @thequantummechanic8949 5 лет назад +11

    I may know why that drop of light occurs. Like when we throw a ball on floor it reflects. In this process it losses very little kinetic energy to floor . Thats why we feel vibration in floor during the process.
    Now imagine ball as a wave of force. This wave will reflect like a ball at a certain angle but very little wave will pass through floor.
    Now this may what is happening with light. When it reflects some of its energy or em wave passes through the surface . And thats why we may see a drop of light...

  • @warmCabin
    @warmCabin 3 года назад +7

    Tunneling is also a term in game/physics engines which describes when collisions are missed because the simulated objects are too small and too fast. It's a result of simulating things in discrete timesteps (two objects might only be colliding for half a timestep), and I think it's named after quantum tunneling.

    • @jdtv50
      @jdtv50 Год назад +1

      True..

  • @sheriemarie3218
    @sheriemarie3218 6 лет назад +9

    I love your honesty and references to previous videos, it shows you analyse past experiences, take on board feedback and aim to create a more efficient future with more understanding examples 😊

  • @freshoutofcrabs
    @freshoutofcrabs 5 лет назад +6

    Thank you for this. I've never encountered a description of quantum tunneling that made the remotest bit of sense to me. This gave me what I can comfortably say is a vague understanding, which, considering it's quantum physics, is high praise :)

  • @stellarfirefly
    @stellarfirefly 6 лет назад +137

    The e^(-x) function approaches but never reaches zero. Does this mean that quantum tunneling is always possible, but just increasingly improbable, for any non-infinite potential barrier?

    • @pauljackson3491
      @pauljackson3491 6 лет назад +9

      First, does QM applies to non-subatomic particles as well, like people?
      Second, does that mean there is a non-zero, though perhaps 10e-100, that I am actually at you house, which sounding from you name may be in Erupoe, er Europe?

    • @stellarfirefly
      @stellarfirefly 6 лет назад +37

      I suppose that if one is made of 10^25 particles or thereabouts then there is a reasonable chance that a handful of their particles have tunneled away from what one considers their body, for certain definitions of "reasonable". But the remainder will be at about where they are expected to be.
      I used to have a sign on my bedroom door that read, "This may be that one in a trillion chance that the atoms of your body align perfectly with those of this door, and you can walk right through it. Go ahead. Try it."

    • @marcusjaycebjorn6551
      @marcusjaycebjorn6551 5 лет назад +6

      Yep you got it bud

    • @marcusjaycebjorn6551
      @marcusjaycebjorn6551 5 лет назад +4

      @@stellarfirefly lol, the more they try, the more chances they'll find their tooth beyond that door😆

    • @mike4ty4
      @mike4ty4 5 лет назад +28

      Yup!!!! It could, in theory, tunnel in an amazingly great distance, just be extremely unlikely to do so. E.g. if the barrier is 1 m thick, and the tunnel constant is about one per nanometre (just as a very rough for atomic scale), then since 1 m = 10^9 nm, you get tunnel probability on the order of e^(-10^9) ~ one shot in 10^434,294,481 - a number that is so large, at over 434 million digits - that simply writing down its _digits_ would fill many volumes, to find it tunneled in by that highly-macroscopic distance. That's _hundreds of millions_ of _orders of magnitude_ less likely than winning the lottery jackpot every single drawing for the rest of your entire life _and_ getting hit by a bolt of lightning every day _and_ surviving each and every strike _and_ randomly encountering every single last famous person on the planet every day _and_ going to beers with each and every one, all in the same lifetime.
      Indeed, it is so fantastically unlikely that we could say with extreme confidence - enough to bet all the money on the entire planet and it'd be a _very_ safe bet with no foolishness whatsoever - that an event of this probability has _never occurred once in the entire history of the known parts of the universe_ .

  • @MarcoPoloSanguinetti
    @MarcoPoloSanguinetti 3 года назад +2

    Jade, you asked for an explanation to evanescent wave decay. A good example is to look at ocean waves. Near the surface a measurement of the hydrostatic pressure varies in proportion to the varying wave height above the point of measurement. As the point of measurement goes deeper that point is no longer merely affected by the wave directly above it but by the combined effect of waves to either side of vertical. Assuming the waves are sinusoidal the average effect upon the variation of hydrostatic pressure tends to diminish as the contribution of multiple peaks will tend to cancel the contribution of multiple troughs. There is also a diminishing effect as you get farther from the wave due to depth (I suspect proportional to 1/r where r is the distance to the wave). There is a formula which describes the variation in hydrostatic pressure due to the waves as a function of depth, and lo and behold just as in the case of the evanascent wave that variation decays exponentialy. I am a retired sonar engineer, and this problem came up in the course of my work.

  • @benyahun
    @benyahun 4 года назад +105

    Video: evanscent
    My brain:
    wake me up! wake me up inside!

    • @TDawg0702
      @TDawg0702 4 года назад +9

      And I love how the definition of evanescent literally just describes the band. Lol

    • @Schatten2712
      @Schatten2712 4 года назад +3

      Omg I was not the only one then! nice haha

    • @abhiprakash74999
      @abhiprakash74999 4 года назад +8

      CAN'T WAKE UP !!!!!!!

    • @JoeHynes284
      @JoeHynes284 4 года назад

      thank you!!!

    • @K-A5
      @K-A5 4 года назад +2

      Saaaave meeeeehhh!

  • @soulcatch
    @soulcatch 6 лет назад +11

    Some of questions. 1) does the energy of the particle in the wave function determine how long the evanescent wave will last?
    2) If the energy of the particle does contribute to the duration of the evanescent wave, is there an upper limit to how long the evanescent wave can exist?
    3) does the material that the evanescent wave travels thru effect the duration of the wave? for example can an electron tunnel thru 1mm of paper, but it couldn't make it thru 1mm of lead. (a millimeter is a huge distance for an electron, so assume I am smart enough to know the correct units of measurement )
    4) does the mass of the particle in the wave effect the length of the evanescent wave? Would a photon evanescent longer than an electron (all other things being equal)?

    • @thstroyur
      @thstroyur 6 лет назад +3

      1) & 2) This is the time- _independent_ problem - so no relevant notion of "lasting" here
      3) Yes; in QM lango, we'd model the lead wall as a _higher_ barrier than that associated with the paper
      4) Yes; the wavelength is inversely proportional to the (square root of) mass (but notice that, although related to the exponential decay term in the barrier, in that region that term is not actually a wavenumber k (k = 2*pi/wavelength) )

    • @00ryanm00
      @00ryanm00 6 лет назад +1

      I have a more complete answer to 1 and 2. The wave function inside of the barrier is exponentially decaying. And this decay is directly proportional to the energy. The more energy the particle has, the greater probability it has to tunnel through the barrier. Of course, this is only for the case when the particles energy is less than that of the barrier. If this condition fails, then tunneling doesnt occur because the particle is free to easily overcome the barrier energy. Then the wavefunction is oscillating, not decaying. But this is unrelated to the time. If youre thinking at this high of a level, I challenge you to just look at the solutions. You should be able to understand it

    • @solsystem1342
      @solsystem1342 5 лет назад +2

      the wave doesn't stop at any distance just like how the function e^(-x) approaches 0 but never quite reaches it. So a electron could travel through 10 km of solid rock it just has such a tiny chance it probably will not happen before the heat death of the universe

  • @nagyamato
    @nagyamato 6 лет назад +12

    You are so good at explaining sophisticated subjects...like your videos so much 👍👍👍

  • @siddheshsharma22945
    @siddheshsharma22945 Год назад

    You are awesome . I am learning Quantum Physics in my Masters in Integrated Circuits and Systems here at IIT-Bombay in subject called Solid State Devices . While our professor did explain us for infinite potential well and the reason the electron cannot jump the barrier and be found on left or right 'top' sides of infinite potential well ( assuming infinite top is visible as is ) .
    Our professor then goes on to explain the E

  • @iloveplasticbottles
    @iloveplasticbottles 5 лет назад +14

    This is the best hidden gem of a channel I've ever found:)

  • @lidarman2
    @lidarman2 6 лет назад +32

    Hi Jade. You alluded the continuity of evanescent waves at around 5:49. Fundamentally in nature, there are really no abrupt changes at things with boundaries--it's exactly what you are explaining when you described non-infinite potential wells. You have to have a matched boundary condition and the natural way that happens with optical materials is to have an exponential fall off. I think you can look at it as a photon having a physical extent in that is has a spatial wavefunction associated with its position. As the photon approaches the boundary in the glass, the wave function of its position crosses the boundary and extends outside the boundary. The shorter the wavelength of the photon, the more confined it's likely position is and the faster the evanescence wave (field) strength falls off on the other side of the boundary--the wave number gets larger with photon energy causing the field to fall off faster. Thanks for making videos on this stuff.

    • @kittenhero568
      @kittenhero568 6 лет назад +5

      Actually, there are no laws that forbids discontinuity, and they do occur in nature, for EM wave propagation in particular, even though E and H are continuous across boundaries, D and B can be discontinuous. Discontinuity is particularly prominent in phase transition and quantum mechanical phenomena like the photo-electric effect and laser pumping, where there's a threshold on the input parameters which triggers a different behaviour once it is crossed.

    • @kwer3
      @kwer3 6 лет назад +6

      I'm not a physicist but a mathematician, so I'm curious about this. How can B possibly be discontinuous if you need to be able to take its gradient, curl and time derivative in order to even formulate Maxwell's equations?

    • @kittenhero568
      @kittenhero568 6 лет назад +3

      Time derivative isn't really a problem since the discontinuity is only spatial. For the gradient, well, the component of B perpendicular to the surface actually has to be continuous, while the parallel component doesn't have to be, okay, so you might still not be able to take the gradient, but we're physicists, and we're allowed to just switch to the integral form when we want, and you can take the limit as the surface of the integral approaches 0 if you want to be all rigorous. For the curl, well, Maxwell's equation is written in terms of the curl of H rather than B actually (except for non-magnetic material where B = H) so it's fine there as well. Although, formally we consider the perpendicular and parallel components separately and take the limits as the line integral shrink rather than explicitly taking the derivative at the boundary.
      If you don't like the whole limit thing, you could of course fiddle around with weird functions like the Dirac delta which is obviously discontinuous but is defined to have an integral and derivative. But that's a bit much for a youtube comment and a bit out of my comfort zone tbh.
      I guess I have to correct myself, I misremembered before but technically all of E,D,B,H can all be discontinuous. However, Maxwell's equations do force certain components to be continuous across the boundary.

    • @kwer3
      @kwer3 6 лет назад +1

      Cool, thank you for taking the time to type out such a detailed answer. I was suspecting that it would be something along the lines of switching to integral form or working with distributions, which don't have to be functions at all (such as the Dirac delta). Maybe at some point, I'll find the time to delve deeper into physics and will then remember your comment ;)

    • @kittenhero568
      @kittenhero568 5 лет назад

      @Phanbichdanosaurmythicalbeast etc. etc. epic memes are appreciated by all

  • @someguy9046
    @someguy9046 5 лет назад +8

    A good way to Intuit quantum tunneling (for me anyway) is to imagine a wave (of water) breaking on rocks. Some of the water jumps the rocks and ends up on the other side. Wave mechanics is (for me) very intuitive if you visualize the waveform as a literal wave made of a fluid (the water analogy also works for GR and the warping of spacetime if you include bubbles in your visualization). Hope this helps in some way

    • @someguy9046
      @someguy9046 4 года назад

      That's just details

    • @someguy9046
      @someguy9046 4 года назад

      @Razvan J the indivisible particle (quanta) IS the wave, so of course it passes through entirely, that's the meaning of the word "indivisible"
      Also the details are in the mathematics. This is about a way of picturing the mathematical results in your head.
      Still gotta actually DO the maths

    • @someguy9046
      @someguy9046 4 года назад

      @Razvan J that's your opinion and you're welcome to it. I shared the mental imagery that I personally use to make sense of the mathematics. If it doesn't work for you, then you're more than welcome to come up with your own mental imagery. However once you've done the maths a few thousand times the picture you have in your mind doesn't really matter anymore because it'll be replaced by the mathematical model and you'll gain a natural (mathematic) intuition for it.

    • @someguy9046
      @someguy9046 4 года назад

      @Razvan J the wavefunction of an electron occurs in something called a Hilbert space. The modulus of the wavefunction squared gives you the probability density of the particle's physical location. Sometimes that probability distribution extends beyond the initial boundary conditions which are imposed on the equation, and therefore the probability that the electron will be found outside the boundary is non-zero.
      Using a macroscopic wave is the method by which my brain naturally puts all that information into a picture.
      That's all.
      Like I said the details are in the mathematics, and without the mathematics the entirety of quantum mechanics means exactly nothing.

    • @someguy9046
      @someguy9046 4 года назад

      @Razvan J from textbooks and lectures, and I didn't HAVE to learn quantum mechanics, I chose to.
      The reason you have to do the maths a bunch of times is because it's the language of QM. Much like how you can't read a book until you have gone through the alphabet a bunch of times and know what all the letters are.

  • @aakkhhiil
    @aakkhhiil Год назад

    Lovely video. I have just started to work on Quantum Biological Electron Transfer and your video helped me to get some basics rights.

  • @SkillUp
    @SkillUp 5 лет назад +54

    Outer Wilds brought me here

    • @mael.1337
      @mael.1337 4 года назад +1

      Didn't expect to see you here. Love your videos btw

    • @OverlordOfNerds
      @OverlordOfNerds 4 года назад +1

      Never thought you liked this stuff too, nice!

    • @ferretappreciator
      @ferretappreciator 3 года назад

      Outer wilds is one of THE best games in the history of ever

  • @lex33122
    @lex33122 6 лет назад +2

    !!!
    You gave me an "ah-ha!" moment of my own!
    A few months ago I was researching equations of state, specifically SAFT. It basically models the molecular interactions between particles. I came across certain potentials and what not and it all made enough sense for me to at least conclude that the potentials affect the strength of interactions. Fast forward to today and here you are explaining what a potential well is and I'm like "OH MY GOD! THATS IT! THATS THE THING!!!!"
    You do amazing work. Keep it up and thank so much for that wonderful moment!

  • @Rums-AN
    @Rums-AN 4 года назад +2

    I love how enthusiastic you are explaining all this stuff to us 😊

  • @abhishekchattopadhyay5068
    @abhishekchattopadhyay5068 6 лет назад +59

    I am a 1st year engineering student and I missed the lecture on wave function.
    But YOU came to my rescue and helped me in that .
    VERY VERY THANK YOU .
    🎈🎉🎈🎉

    • @cazymike87
      @cazymike87 6 лет назад +2

      Because of the Wave function , quantum mecanichs is stuck for 100 years....Now people see the need more and more to just get rid of the wave function , like the ones that are interested in quantum gravity , or quantum information..... For me wave function is something that DOES work for things that are emergent.....when you go deeper, something else must replace the wave function..
      Its the same like F=ma work... but for relativity not.....
      Everthing is emergent if you loock hard enough and every emergent thing has his own "wave function " --meaning the thing that describe the best....for the electron its the wave function....for the apple , planets , its F=ma...
      The next step after the wave function I believe that its information....

    • @abhishekchattopadhyay5068
      @abhishekchattopadhyay5068 6 лет назад

      @@cazymike87 ? What pls explain ?

    • @cazymike87
      @cazymike87 6 лет назад +2

      What wave function its for physycs now is what Newton gravitys was for Einstein back then.....something old, ineficent , that cant explain the whole picture....
      There are many scientists that loock into this .... Try to search for your own on this matter.
      The wave function its not how Universe works !

    • @cazymike87
      @cazymike87 6 лет назад +1

      If you search quanrum computer then you will notice that the whole ideea its to just bypass the colapse of the wave function using something deeper : information.
      Outhers try to baypass the wave function using mathematical shapes ....
      There are many approaches for this subject.
      But its something that everyone knows by now : Wave function it is not fundamental.

    • @00ryanm00
      @00ryanm00 5 лет назад

      @@cazymike87 what are you talking about? Name me a reputable physicist who is suggesting to get rid of the wavefunction. If you get rid of the wavefunction you completely throw out all of quantum mechanics. Moreover, quantum computing's foundation is the wavefunction and entanglement of quantum states.

  • @SoumilSahu
    @SoumilSahu 6 лет назад +43

    I love your videos.
    That's it. That's all I have to say. I can't think of any compliments that do this video justice.

  • @MegaNancyLover
    @MegaNancyLover 3 года назад

    I swear, your method of explaining along with your visuals make quantum mechanics so much easier to comprehend.

  • @TrimutiusToo
    @TrimutiusToo 5 лет назад +4

    Well wave cannot drop to 0 and stay there because solution to wave equation is always an exponential one and exponential solutions never stay at 0, they either exhibit exponential decay towards 0, or behave like a sine wave and wiggle around 0 if you allow complex exponents, but it still means that it has zeroes but doesn't stay 0 as y=0 is a line, which is linear and not exponential solution, and wave equation doesn't have a linear solution...

  • @dips1188
    @dips1188 5 лет назад +4

    Finally, an explanation of an effect I have to know most of my life but whose maths is too complex for my small brain to work out. Thank you.

  • @omkargaikwad4363
    @omkargaikwad4363 6 лет назад +152

    It was harder for me to pretend the pencil was a straw then understand Quantum Tunneling

    • @solsystem1342
      @solsystem1342 5 лет назад +11

      fortunately I don't have that problem since I just assume they are both cylinders with zero radius and infinite length. The perks of being a physicist...

    • @Cyberplayer5
      @Cyberplayer5 5 лет назад +9

      @@solsystem1342 that straw with zero radius would make drinking really suck....XD

    • @skylardeslypere9909
      @skylardeslypere9909 5 лет назад +4

      I also presume it was harder to understand basic English grammar???

    • @achyuththouta6957
      @achyuththouta6957 4 года назад +3

      @@solsystem1342" cylinder with zero radius and infinite length". Wouldn't that just be a line?

    • @solsystem1342
      @solsystem1342 4 года назад

      @@achyuththouta6957 Seriously though for a moment, not necessarily. It could also approximate a cylinder with a very small radius and large height in some situations. Such as trying to find the electric field inside a cavity.

  • @AlexHop1
    @AlexHop1 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for the clarification about the box which holds the electron being conceptualized as an infinite potential well--this is something that I've always wondered about and never saw explained before. At Minute 1:29, it's mentioned that the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle creates the lack of knowledge of the position of the electron prior to measurement. The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle tells us that to the extent we know the velocity, we can't find the position. But the main reason we can't pinpoint the position is that, prior to measurement, the electron is in a superposition of all positions in the box, per the Schrodinger Equation.

  • @stephenpuryear
    @stephenpuryear 6 лет назад +3

    Jade these continue to be wonderful to watch. Clearly lots of people agree with me, which is reassuring. "Evanescence" is a good theme because according to (Stephen) Stigler's Law of Eponymy , "No scientific law is named after it's original discoverer." I believe that James Maxwell, while he was a genius, no doubt, left us with almost 20 Equations and that it was Oliver Heaviside who further transposed them into the 4 equations that now fit on so many t-shirts world wide. This video furthered my understanding about how transistors work for us.
    I love your stuff! Please keep it up!

  • @jacobborgmann7762
    @jacobborgmann7762 5 лет назад

    The best summary my teacher ever gave me of the Quantum realm was that it is nonsense.
    The truly and truly fast realm of subatomics do not behave as they would in the wider world.
    Fascinating lesson
    Keep up the good work!

  • @rayj4722
    @rayj4722 4 года назад +6

    I liked the surprise goodbye at the end made me jump! I’m hanging thru every word you say so that one was an unexpected surprise, fun

  • @doubleirishdutchsandwich4740
    @doubleirishdutchsandwich4740 5 лет назад +1

    I have been working on flash storage for the past 10 years and all of your solid state drives actually use quantum tunneling to store the bits!

  • @SlipUpWilly
    @SlipUpWilly 6 лет назад +6

    At 3:30 I have a feeling there's a typo in the last of Maxwell's equations, Ampere's Law should be curl not divergence!

  • @jeffpeters2241
    @jeffpeters2241 6 лет назад

    Years ago now, in our Quantum Mechanics Lab we did the tunneling experiment by reflecting a microwave beam within salt blocks ( more commonly used as nutritional supplements for cattle). We "shined" the microwave beam into a right angled rectangular prism and the evanescent wave would jump (tunnel ) the gap to an identical salt prism almost touching (gaped) at the hypotenuse. Thanks for doing Your videos.

  • @papaluskask999
    @papaluskask999 5 лет назад +4

    Best explanation I've seen so far, after 6 vids

  • @SilentWrath123
    @SilentWrath123 5 лет назад

    Really liked the video, the frustrated total internal reflection part really helped me with visualizing what is going on.

  • @noavanderhoorn2996
    @noavanderhoorn2996 4 года назад +8

    8:27 'I didn't really understand the schrodinger's equasion untill I solved it myself'
    YOU DID WHAT?

    • @alexp6013
      @alexp6013 4 года назад

      It is solvable in easy cases, but even then it is quite hard

  • @richtankone
    @richtankone 6 лет назад

    You should do an example problem for each of these videos. They are so great, but it would take it to the next level, to see actual quantum physics problems worked through that aren't just a theoretical proof type problems. Basically giving actual boundaries, Energy states, and probability values. Keep up the great work!

  • @starlalala5006
    @starlalala5006 5 лет назад +31

    “Isn’t that interesting?!” And I don’t even know what I’m looking at lol

    • @wrenwisp-wings3845
      @wrenwisp-wings3845 5 лет назад +3

      It wasn't until she circled the red trail that I realised I wasn't meant to be looking at the equation :D

    • @Guztav1337
      @Guztav1337 4 года назад

      Only way to solve that is to take a course at Uni.

  • @tttITA10
    @tttITA10 5 лет назад

    This was by a mile or ten the best science communication video on quantum tunelling I've ever seen.

  • @Bellafroebel
    @Bellafroebel 5 лет назад +5

    Amazing vid!! Didn’t feel like a dumb ass the whole time, your kind vibe really puts me at ease and heck the content is cool. Nice one

  • @heel57
    @heel57 3 года назад

    Great video. At 5:47 you request a good physical explanation why the wave cant change direction at an interface without an evanescent wave. My take of this is:
    The wave has to "decide" what to do when meeting an interface. In order to make this decision it must know what kind of interface it is, so it has to probe it before it can "decide" what to do next. Probing means it must penetrate the material to some degree in order to interact with the medium.
    For this it need the evanescent part.

  • @anujarora0
    @anujarora0 6 лет назад +4

    2:10 Who is the guy surfing on the wave function on a rainy day?? Because of quantum tunneling there is a limitation to how small transistors can get btw great video as always keep up the good work

    • @solsystem1342
      @solsystem1342 5 лет назад +1

      ah correction, there is a limit to how small they can get and still be decently reliable

  • @davelongmore4643
    @davelongmore4643 3 года назад

    watched alot of videos on RUclips and this is the first one that explained in a way I could understand. Good work!

  • @ketchup143
    @ketchup143 5 лет назад +6

    darn, i really thought u were going to talk about the "why" of the decay instead of just the "what". oh, and i looked at that box and thought of wyoming.

    • @pwnmeisterage
      @pwnmeisterage 5 лет назад

      The "what" explanation seems to be introducing overcomplicated sophistications into a comparatively simple "why" mechanism.
      The particle could be treated as a wave which must either reflect or refract at the barrier. There is a point, a very precise (uncertain and irreducibly random) point, where both possibilities exist and the particle/wave could go either way ... and it must go forward, it can only go one way, it can't go both ways ... so it then exists in one discrete state or the other without ever travelling "between" them. Sometimes this means the particle/wave (or some probabilistic fraction of many particles/waves) will "tunnel" to the other side of the barrier.

  • @DS-fj8fh
    @DS-fj8fh 3 года назад

    To answer your question about frustrated internal reflection, I think if you consider the barrier of potential as consisting of many vibrating waves, there is a some chance that some of those vibrations will constructively interfere with the wave of light, pushing it just slightly passed the barrier itself, and producing the evanescent wave. In other words, throwing a tennis ball at a vibrating wall, if that wall has just the right vibration, it could facilitate the tunneling of that tennis ball just barely through its own medium. (Please feel free to correct me if this doesn’t make sense, just a hypothesis).

  • @christianmarquez3143
    @christianmarquez3143 6 лет назад +3

    Why is quantum tunneling essential to nuclear fusion in stars, spontaneous mutation in dna and scanning tunnel microscopy?

    • @ResandOuies
      @ResandOuies 6 лет назад +5

      Don't know the other two, but stars need it since the nuclei in the stars usually don't have enough energy to get close enough to fuse. So they basically need to tunnel the last bit

    • @thstroyur
      @thstroyur 6 лет назад +2

      The DNA thing may be related with the fact protons can tunnel through enzymes; as for microscopy, fine-tuning of the potential barrier between an atom and the probe makes it so that when an electron tunnels through, it's read as a signal

    • @MagruderSpoots
      @MagruderSpoots 6 лет назад +1

      ST microscopes have a very sharp needle that is brought to just above the surface of a material. Electrons can tunnel to the material from the needle causing a current. As the needle is scanned across the surface the magnitude of the current is kept constant by varying the distance between the needle and the surface. And that is how they know the shape of the surface.

  • @larrygraham3377
    @larrygraham3377 Год назад

    Great video.
    The explanation of quantum tunneling is like reducing a fraction to its lowest terms.
    Wonderfully simple but yet elegant !!!
    😺😺😺

  • @JimGiant
    @JimGiant 5 лет назад +3

    Could quantum tunnelling be explained by errors in the simulated universe's collision detection?

    • @yashkhurana9170
      @yashkhurana9170 5 лет назад

      wow, i never thought of it that way. would love to know the answer.

    • @michaelwinter742
      @michaelwinter742 5 лет назад

      No, and we’ll now have to scrub you. Thanks for the extra work.

  • @amiteshshrey7178
    @amiteshshrey7178 5 лет назад +1

    Your passion for the subject is commendable. Thanks for making me pass this semester :)

  • @NoorquackerInd
    @NoorquackerInd 4 года назад +3

    "Can you learn quantum mechanics without math?"
    " *B R I L L I A N T D O T O R G* "

  • @Jakeuplink
    @Jakeuplink 5 лет назад

    There is another way for a wave to tunnel through an object. Say we have two components in a thought experiment: the traveling wave (A) and the denser medium (B). If the intersecting points of the material vibrations of the traveling wave (A) and the denser medium (B) is synchronized a Planck frame apart at each intersection point, the traveling wave can utilize the gaps between Planck frames to propagate itself "through" the denser medium (B) without any loss in magnitude.

  • @victoragaba1783
    @victoragaba1783 4 года назад +3

    I like your explanation!
    But if it's an infinitely thick-walled box, can it have an "outside" to begin with?
    I think the probability of it outside being zero is because there is no outside.

  • @KhushiKumari-hz5wi
    @KhushiKumari-hz5wi 2 года назад

    This was the most amazing explanation I've seen so far

  • @richiegrey5377
    @richiegrey5377 6 лет назад +3

    Quantum jumping with J A D E 👩‍🏫👸👊👋👏👍👌

  • @TheTheIdefix
    @TheTheIdefix 2 месяца назад

    I stumbled upon your channel looking for “how other people explain physics and math”. Glad I did! Love your energy and approach. However, note that in your tunneling problem, E is the same on the left and right of the barrier. It’s the amplitude that changes. This means that the “bumps” in your animation should be spaced equally on both sides, i.e., the wavelength is the same. Small detail. 😂 Keep making these videos! ❤ 9:02 You are brilliant - no pun intended! 😂

  • @electrikshock2950
    @electrikshock2950 6 лет назад +13

    Earliest boi , also hi Jade this could be a little but different than your usual videos but could you do something on what do you do after graduating with a physics degree

    • @additionaddict5524
      @additionaddict5524 6 лет назад +5

      go in a hole and cry because you're never going to use it

    • @Andy-tc2gt
      @Andy-tc2gt 5 лет назад +1

      ​@@additionaddict5524 go back to uni and study engineering. Nah but seriously I'm studying a dual degree of physics/engineering and on the physics side of things, naturally a big part of potential career prospects is working in academics. So, research/lecturing kinda stuff. Another option is teaching of some kind, high school physics/maths teaching is one. You could also try to get into industry as a statistician/data analyst/programmer/industry based physics researcher, even get into more economics/financial kinda stuff. You could also shift into more kinda engineering sides of things. But you'd most likely never be preferred over an actual engineering graduate (at least I wouldn't think so). So summarising, unless you work in academics, research or teaching, the jobs a physics degree will land, are mainly jobs that aren't completely physics based. This is just my experience in seeing graduates and might be different around the world

  • @NandishPatelV
    @NandishPatelV 2 года назад

    First explanation of quantum tunnelling that makes sense. Thanks ! KeepSmiling 😊🌺

  • @Jona69
    @Jona69 5 лет назад +3

    Exponential decay never reaches 0 though.

    • @dezznutts1197
      @dezznutts1197 5 лет назад

      Jonathan Dirks as x approaches negative infinity it does.

    • @Pistabacsiable
      @Pistabacsiable 4 года назад

      @@dezznutts1197 "approaches"

    • @dezznutts1197
      @dezznutts1197 4 года назад

      Attila do you actually understand what that means

    • @Pistabacsiable
      @Pistabacsiable 4 года назад

      @@dezznutts1197 I think so

    • @dezznutts1197
      @dezznutts1197 4 года назад

      Attila I recommend to search it up. It’s called “limits”. It’s weird.

  • @ProfessorPolitics
    @ProfessorPolitics 6 лет назад +1

    4:30 I think the term Evanescent wave is apt because, after a brief moment, the light ends up waking up inside the stuff it's passing through.

  • @diamondwhite5208
    @diamondwhite5208 5 лет назад +6

    Brain.exe is not responding

  • @H4K4LA
    @H4K4LA 5 лет назад

    I'm sure you're not reading these anymore, but to answer your question about physical analogs to why evanescent waves exist; my understanding is that nothing can stop perfectly abruptly and turn around, similar to a ball bouncing only so many times and some energy dissipating into the floor. Excellent video btw. I really appreciate how you navigate the complexity.

  • @theultimatereductionist7592
    @theultimatereductionist7592 5 лет назад +5

    Thumbed up for shamelessly admitting that you're not good at physical experiments. Neither am I. :(

  • @DarkNeutrino_R
    @DarkNeutrino_R 6 лет назад +1

    Now this i call a good explanation ! I like that you included the equation into the video. It would be cool if you could do that with more videos.

  • @wiggy1212
    @wiggy1212 5 лет назад +3

    Hands up if Tom brought you here?:-)

  • @user-up5xn7nu8i
    @user-up5xn7nu8i 4 года назад

    I am from India , u cleared my all doubts , thanks

  • @Gilgamesh557
    @Gilgamesh557 6 лет назад

    Amazing video!
    I don't have an answer to your question, but maybe a beginning of intuition for why it can't be otherwise. Virtually cut your cristal in half horizontally; we know by experience that all the light will go through. Now take two cristals and bring them so close to each other that no air molecule can fit in between. The only difference between the two situations is that thin layer of emptiness. Yet, considering the layered molecular arrangement of the cristal, there are also empty gaps between atoms in the first situation, so the two situations are actually very similar and they should yield a similar result...
    I know it's not a proof, but hopefully it helps with the intuition

  • @grankwastaken
    @grankwastaken 6 лет назад

    Excluding the random extreme close-up, I genuinely think you are really starting to nail down the presentation in this videos. This chill and stripped down approach works really well, and btw, great video! ;)

  • @yashen12345
    @yashen12345 3 года назад

    THIS IS THE BEST EXPLANATION EVERRRRRRRRR SOOOO INTUITIVE

  • @kinpatu
    @kinpatu 6 лет назад

    I work in optoelectronics for telecommunications. Very good video, especially the total internal reflection and exponential decay.

  • @AlphaFuton
    @AlphaFuton Год назад

    For that side question "why can't a wave just abruptly end?" I think of this in terms of frequencies or momentum. If you take the Fourier transform of a wave that suddenly stops at a wall, the frequency spectrum is infinitely wide. Like for the particle in an infinite box, the wavefunction is continuous but not differentiable at the walls, which gives the momentum spectrum oscillations out to very high frequencies. With any real-world finite potential, the evanescent wave can make the momentum spectrum, or the spatial frequency spectrum, better contained and not oscillate out to infinity. Or another way to say it - you don't have enough energy to abruptly stop. The evanescent wave is a lower kinetic energy solution than a hard stop.

  • @themcchuck8400
    @themcchuck8400 2 года назад

    To simplify understanding, quantum tunneling works because the barrier is also made of particles whose location is not fixed. Sometimes, the barrier particles aren't there to block the tunneling particle, and it escapes. Think of a jail break from a prison where the guards are numerous and on random patrol schedules and routes. Every once in a while, if you get lucky and time it just right, you can walk out while all the guards just happen to be absent or looking the other way.

  • @AgentOccam
    @AgentOccam 6 лет назад +1

    I love the general background music on your videos. It's oddly relaxing.

  • @stevemonkey6666
    @stevemonkey6666 6 лет назад

    This is a very interesting video.
    First thing is I like the way you are humble about what you don't know.
    But the conclusion of the video is that the quantum world is a mathematical thing and it is hard to understand it without understanding the mathematics. This is at odds with many people trying to explain quantum physics without the mathematics

  • @TheyCallMeNewb
    @TheyCallMeNewb 6 лет назад

    This instalment proved even more useful than I had expected.

  • @ankittongawar7439
    @ankittongawar7439 2 года назад

    After watching your explanation...... congratulations..... for now onwards I am your subscriber 🙋🙋🙋🙋

  • @iftikharahmad-kr2cp
    @iftikharahmad-kr2cp 4 года назад

    I swear I fell in love with this girl for the way she communicated the Abstruse and vague idea of quantum mechanics in such a lucidity, I actually give an accolade and appraisal to myself as well because I got fascinated to her.😅

  • @bomcstoots1
    @bomcstoots1 4 года назад

    Quantum Tunneling for dummies: Electrically charged Heat (kinetic potential-- super charged violently) +Force (exerting that energy). ---- Literally mini lightning on a molecular level. In magick terms, Power (kinetic potential, personal power) + Focus (Force exerted, will)= Effect. What made me look this up, i was thinking about a glass i put on my bed and then moved my heavy dresser. The glass was floating mid air when i exerted excessive force.

  • @Quarky_
    @Quarky_ 6 лет назад +2

    To sort of answer your question, why it can't abruptly go to zero, it's because of the relative permittivity. As epsilon is a finite (complex) number, the exponent is small but non-zero. AFAIR, the imaginary part is responsible for the attenuation. So for it to go to zero, the imaginary part has to be very large (like in metals). I hope this sets you off in the right direction to study more (I don't remember the details, sorry).
    PS: the wavefunction is not the probability: prob. = psi*psiconjugate. So that description of probability "oscillating" isn't accurate ;).
    Good video :)

  • @chilldowninaninstant
    @chilldowninaninstant 4 года назад

    Don't agree that you need to work out the maths to understand quantum mechanics but surly it can help.
    To understand is to become. Like a eureka moment where everything else fades.
    You already occupy a complex quantum computer as a human body.
    Look (observe) less outside and more inside.
    Then you can quantum tunnel as your consciousness/awareness
    I will leave you with this quote from krishnamurti
    "Observation is entirely different from analysis. Observation is immediate: you see the tree. If you begin to analyse you don't see the tree.
    Analysis implies the analyser analysing something outside of himself. If you observe very carefully, the analyser is the analysed."
    Great video by the way love your content.

  • @Matthew-ti4vu
    @Matthew-ti4vu 4 года назад

    This video is so good! Was looking to understand quantum tunneling in the isotope effect and this helped alot!

  • @charmendro
    @charmendro 4 года назад

    I wish these videos were around when I was really into this in high school. I still am but now I’m in university and this was helpful toward my learning

  • @jacksongomori5459
    @jacksongomori5459 4 года назад

    So im pretty sure, the reason for evanescent waves, is due to the fact that the bottom of the material the light is passing through is translucent. So if you were to do this experiment and get it to work (which is quite difficult btw) and you look from the bottom of the material, you'll see the same beam of light. BUT, you'll also notice the point that beam comes into contact with, seems to glow a little brighter. Its the same principal that justifies 1 way mirrors. Light can travel in 1 direction, but not both. Furthurmore the reason why the wave is very short, is because the beam of light isnt stronger then the physical barrier of the material the light is passing through. So its only able to leap off the surface of the material before vanishing. Think of it this way: if you stood a 1-way mirror up vertically, and looked from top-down pov, while 2 people on either side take a lazer pointer and shoot it through the mirror, you'll see how one lazer moves through, and the other lazer dosnt. But, the other lazer can barley hop off the surface. So if you were to pick up THAT evanescent wave, you could continue the lazer. Hope that made sense XD im just a highschool junior but i think im right.

  • @Dr_Larken
    @Dr_Larken 2 года назад

    I was playing around on the iPad checking on my settings and I ended up asking Siri random questions I was curious to her responses! So I asked her question that I knew something about which was “can you explain to me what quantum tunneling is“ and she listed three options your video was the second option! I practically subscribed immediately and then went to the about section on your page, to see if you had a Twitter account therefore I followed it as well! Not that this matters but generally it’s a channel I really enjoy “educational wise“ I’ll pretty much instantly follow them on Twitter as well“

    • @Dr_Larken
      @Dr_Larken 2 года назад

      Not to mention, I was in flight/aviation in high school, and I was an NROTC nerd! Ironically enough I never took physics or chemistry! But what channel is like yours which “I’m glad I found“ I honestly learned more about physics chemistry etc. primarily physics and quantum mechanics/Quantum physics! Do to videos like yours and so far yours is one of the best that explains also you label your videos and don’t deviate away from the topic! I feel like anybody that watches your videos can easily understand what you’re explaining!

  • @mr.sagittariusa1941
    @mr.sagittariusa1941 5 лет назад +1

    I'm still a 14 year kid and it's really difficult when someone bring equations i am just good at theory please continue with it

  • @kylewilliams9907
    @kylewilliams9907 2 года назад

    I have a physics degree and I swear I never learned about this evanescent wave phenomenon upon total internal reflection. Very cool and interesting.

  • @biblicallyspeaking
    @biblicallyspeaking Год назад

    You made this really fun to learn. Thanks for keeping your audience in mind

  • @tszhinhuia2511
    @tszhinhuia2511 Год назад

    Hey Jade. Regarding the intuition of the evanescent wave issue you mentioned in the video, I think that appears because the reflection boundary is not hard enough. If you have a very high potential barrier (like infinite well), then you wont have the evanescent wave. Intuitively, imagine a wave travelling to a fixed point, if you pin this fixed point very hardly, then no evanescent wave will appear. But if you dont pinch that hard, let it to move a little bit (a softer boundary), then the wave might propagate a little bit.

  • @davejacobsen3014
    @davejacobsen3014 2 года назад

    Back in the sixties I enlisted in the Marines, because of my high school education I ended up in the advanced electronics school. While there I was introduced to quantum tunneling in solid state electronics. We got hit with tons of physics and math but most worked together and got through it.

  • @mateenjamal5606
    @mateenjamal5606 5 лет назад

    Extremely helpful
    Please keep bringing stuff like this
    It's Really easy to understand the concepts from u....
    Thank u

  • @clivepoppen2559
    @clivepoppen2559 4 года назад

    No one is ever going to be as cool as the stick man surfing the EM wave!
    Great way of explaining the concepts while presenting it in a clear yet humourous way!!

  • @morganblackstone3303
    @morganblackstone3303 4 года назад +1

    I’m sorry that I can’t do your level of math with my learning disability’s but I have a thirst for knowledge that can’t be quenched . So I thank you for understanding the catch phrases.😕