High Definition Standard Definition Theater
Video id : CBrsWPCp_rs
ImmersiveAmbientModecolor: #97aba4 (color 2)
Video Format : 22 (720p) openh264 ( https://github.com/cisco/openh264) mp4a.40.2 | 44100Hz
Audio Format: Opus - Normalized audio
PokeTubeEncryptID: b6ca1e578956d54b389a39d944a243cc0a268ca04c115b0386f183150574976951730f76baa0aad0251fdd828ece97c5
Proxy : eu-proxy.poketube.fun - refresh the page to change the proxy location
Date : 1715362358903 - unknown on Apple WebKit
Mystery text : Q0Jyc1dQQ3BfcnMgaSAgbG92ICB1IGV1LXByb3h5LnBva2V0dWJlLmZ1bg==
143 : true
9,571,085 Views • May 25, 2014 • Click to toggle off description
Check:    • Video  
The World of Quantum - Full Documentary HD
www.advexon.com/ For more Scientific DOCUMENTARIES.
Subscribe for more Videos...
Quantum mechanics (QM -- also known as quantum physics, or quantum theory) is a branch of physics which deals with physical phenomena at nanoscopic scales where the action is on the order of the Planck constant. It departs from classical mechanics primarily at the quantum realm of atomic and subatomic length scales. Quantum mechanics provides a mathematical description of much of the dual particle-like and wave-like behavior and interactions of energy and matter. Quantum mechanics provides a substantially useful framework for many features of the modern periodic table of elements including the behavior of atoms during chemical bonding and has played a significant role in the development of many modern technologies.

In advanced topics of quantum mechanics, some of these behaviors are macroscopic (see macroscopic quantum phenomena) and emerge at only extreme (i.e., very low or very high) energies or temperatures (such as in the use of superconducting magnets). For example, the angular momentum of an electron bound to an atom or molecule is quantized. In contrast, the angular momentum of an unbound electron is not quantized. In the context of quantum mechanics, the wave--particle duality of energy and matter and the uncertainty principle provide a unified view of the behavior of photons, electrons, and other atomic-scale objects.

The mathematical formulations of quantum mechanics are abstract. A mathematical function, the wavefunction, provides information about the probability amplitude of position, momentum, and other physical properties of a particle. Mathematical manipulations of the wavefunction usually involve bra--ket notation which requires an understanding of complex numbers and linear functionals. The wavefunction formulation treats the particle as a quantum harmonic oscillator, and the mathematics is akin to that describing acoustic resonance. Many of the results of quantum mechanics are not easily visualized in terms of classical mechanics. For instance, in a quantum mechanical model the lowest energy state of a system, the ground state, is non-zero as opposed to a more "traditional" ground state with zero kinetic energy (all particles at rest). Instead of a traditional static, unchanging zero energy state, quantum mechanics allows for far more dynamic, chaotic possibilities, according to John Wheeler.

The earliest versions of quantum mechanics were formulated in the first decade of the 20th century. About this time, the atomic theory and the corpuscular theory of light (as updated by Einstein)[1] first came to be widely accepted as scientific fact; these latter theories can be viewed as quantum theories of matter and electromagnetic radiation, respectively. Early quantum theory was significantly reformulated in the mid-1920s by Werner Heisenberg, Max Born and Pascual Jordan, (matrix mechanics); Louis de Broglie and Erwin Schrödinger (wave mechanics); and Wolfgang Pauli and Satyendra Nath Bose (statistics of subatomic particles). Moreover, the Copenhagen interpretation of Niels Bohr became widely accepted. By 1930, quantum mechanics had been further unified and formalized by the work of David Hilbert, Paul Dirac and John von Neumann[2] with a greater emphasis placed on measurement in quantum mechanics, the statistical nature of our knowledge of reality, and philosophical speculation about the role of the observer. Quantum mechanics has since permeated throughout many aspects of 20th-century physics and other disciplines including quantum chemistry, quantum electronics, quantum optics, and quantum information science. Much 19th-century physics has been re-evaluated as the "classical limit" of quantum mechanics and its more advanced developments in terms of quantum field theory, string theory, and speculative quantum gravity theories.    • Video  

quantum solace, quantum world, #quantum
Metadata And Engagement

Views : 9,571,085
Genre: Science & Technology
Date of upload: May 25, 2014 ^^


Rating : 4.868 (3,517/102,755 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2022-04-09T16:18:59.772564Z
See in json
Tags
Connections
Nyo connections found on the description ;_; report a issue lol

YouTube Comments - 7,672 Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@chrish3079

6 years ago

Its crazy 6 million + people just from this video learned about some advanced theory. Crazy just couple decades ago you would have to go to a college to learn about this. We are living in the information golden age.

3.9K |

@ravhul6562

3 years ago

My parents think I just sit on games and videos all day when really I’m learning the quantum theory

2.1K |

@shrutipandharipande4042

1 year ago

It's amazing to see how 8 years after this documentary John Clauser, Alain Aspect, and Anton Zeilinger have been awarded Nobel Prize for Quantum Entanglement and how far we have come in the field of quantum computing. Like Feynman said " If you think you understand quantum mechanics, you don't understand it at all. "

43 |

@SushDazzles

3 years ago

This is amazing!

403 |

@blahblah2556

7 years ago

I was going to tell a joke about quantum mechanics but unfortunately by its very nature it's both funny and unfunny at the same time.

3.5K |

@ClearlyImAKong

4 years ago

Me: gets drunk and falls asleep Me an hour later: wakes up and watches a documentary about quantum theory

968 |

@pedroantoniodacruzferreira1487

3 years ago

This is one of the best explanations of all the core theories in Quantum mechanics! Very well made

14 |

@SDMAustralia

3 years ago

This just became my favourite documentary! Absolutely brilliant. Explained in perfect measure

8 |

@XxMusclecarsxX

7 years ago

When u leave a video with more questions than u original had...... you know it's good stuff

516 |

@minhazrajib251

4 years ago

Let’s appreciate the amount of editing that went to this video

573 |

@AbhijeetGawas

3 years ago

Studying quantum mechanics was really nightmare for me.. But after watching this documentary respire love for quantum mechanics ❤️❤️

22 |

@sharvarichoudhari7582

2 years ago

Super brilliant! Hats off to the team that conceived and created this video. You’ve made it unimaginably simple to comprehend ... and more importantly remember what you made us see.

2 |

@Sophie-ol5lk

5 years ago

this video made me a physics major ... have to watch it atleast once a semester to remind me why im putting myself through hell 😂

976 |

@Lunamine

4 years ago

This is what Youtube's been made for, sharing such beautiful yet intricate knowledge !

705 |

@dilpreetghotra8814

11 months ago

this video holds a special place in my heart because it is how I was introduced to quantum mechanics in 5th grade

2 |

@raimibraun8601

3 years ago

This is my absolute favorite documentary and I’ve watched it a million times

6 |

@allegrovivace6806

4 years ago

This video changed my life. I first watched it when I was just a kid, looking for cool facts on space. However, my mom accidentally clicked this video (or perhaps not by accident but simply thinking it may interest me) instead of a space one. I watched it, and thereafter I was deep in the world of physics, a new idea of quantum mechanics always in my mind. A few years later, I was looking for a video further about quantum physics on a rainy weekend. I clicked on a few links and soon I was watching this one. When I saw the guy at the bar I was like, hmm it seems kind of familiar. Then, I saw the rotating blue and red balls and I gained excitement. Then, I saw the multiple escalators and multiple images of the same person riding these escalators and I was, like, Ooh I saw this video when I was little! This video changed my life. Thank you for allowing me to discover such a wonderful, such an amazing, such a miraculous part of life.

523 |

@RedRogue

9 years ago

Wants to watch intelligent science based documentary. Clicks on video about Quantum Theory. Sees annotation link for "Funny Street Russian Fight" ...... Ugh, I'll be right back.

1.5K |

@SaarangP_007

2 years ago

Excellent video! In addition to the content that was covered, the visualizations used were also amazing! Kudos to the Editing and VFX team because representing such complex topic is always a challenge!!

4 |

Go To Top