These Atoms Wouldn’t Move When You Were Observing Them..WOW!!

Here is a bit more on the precursor to this awesome finding by the team at Cornell.  It is a video where veritasium, the ever famous youtuber shows the experiment in water:

Light is so common that we rarely think about what it really is. But just over two hundred years ago, a groundbreaking experiment answered the question that had occupied physicists for centuries. Is light made up of waves or particles?

The experiment was conducted by Thomas Young and is known as Young’s Double Slit Experiment. This famous experiment is actually a simplification of a series of experiments on light conducted by Young. In a completely darkened room, Young allowed a thin beam of sunlight to pass through an aperture on his window and onto two narrow, closely spaced openings (the double slit). This sunlight then cast a shadow onto the wall behind the apparatus. Young found that the light diffracted as it passed through the slits, and then interfered with itself, created a series of light and dark spots. Since the sunlight consists of all colours of the rainbow, these colours were also visible in the projected spots. Young concluded that light consist of waves and not particles since only waves were known to diffract and interfere in exactly the manner that light did in his experiment.

Enjoy and feel free to comment with your ideas.

thanks to engadget for the great info

 



7 Comments

  1. John DeBoy said:

    I believe this is a direct effect of the fibulation combustulation on the quantum particle scale. Very interesting indeed.

  2. Jay Gore said:

    I once heard Corey Goode say that an experiment will always have a different outcome just by us observing it. Meaning that just by our observations alone we can cause it to change.

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