Kind: captions Language: en [Applause] today I'm doing an experiment that demonstrates Heisenberg's uncertainty principle so here I have a green laser and I'm firing it down towards the front of the room through a narrow slit now that slit can be adjusted so it could be made narrower or wider and the laser spot is projected onto a screen behind it so what do you think is going to happen to this spot on the screen as I narrow the slit well let's have a look you see exactly what you'd expect the spot gets narrower and narrower the sides are getting cut off by the slit makes complete sense and if you stopped there you would never realize that Heisenberg's uncertainty principle is at work but if you keep going something strange happens as you make the slit even narrower the spot starts to spread out isn't that incredible you're making the slit narrower and yet the spot on the wall is getting wider the narrower you make it the wider that spot on the wall becomes to understand this we have to look at Heisenberg's uncertainty principle Heisenberg's uncertainty principle is normally written as Delta X Delta p is greater than or equal to H on 4 Pi so what does this mean well it's about the position and the momentum of a particle so X is the position of the particle and P is its momentum so Delta X is the uncertainty in position and Delta p is the uncertainty in the momentum now if you multiply those two quantities together they must always be greater than or equal to H on 4 Pi now H is Plank's constant and that deserves a video all to itself like this one by 60 symbols but for our purposes it's just a very small number so in our everyday lives we don't come up against this uncertainty relation because everything is much much bigger than H but as we narrowed the slit we were decreasing Delta X for those photons so we were getting more and more precise about where the photons were passing through that slit and at a certain point you come to this limit so that if you narrow this any further you're going to break this uncertainty relationship so what needs to happen is the uncertainty and momentum needs to go up I should specify this is uncertainty and momentum in the X Direction in the horizontal Direction so if before photons were going perfectly straight now they must Veer off to the left to the right to ensure that we don't break Heisenberg's uncertainty relation and the more you decrease your uncertainty in position the more narrow you make that sliit the more the uncertainty in momentum has to go up and so if these photons are going to the left and the right that's going to produce a much wider beam it's really really non-intuitive but it's the way the world works that it must be the sun playing tricks with my mind the what about here is really going to test you right tell me about what's next well this is only a few blocks from here with you expect we see October I've got to say a big thank you to Professor Walter Luen at MIT he inspired me to make this video and I also have to say a big thanks to the University of Sydney for letting me use their equipment and especially to Tom and Ralph for helping me set this all up oh and just one more thing I should point out that this explanation of the experiment is slightly controversal at least in that Henry from minute physics and I have been debating whether it's really that counterintuitive I mean if you see light as a wave then all light is doing here is diffracting that's the phenomenon where if a wave passes through a slit it bends at the corners and radiates out in all directions and that explains the spreading of the beam but that goes to the very nature of light is it made of waves or particles that's something that I would like to explore in the coming weeks so stay tuned for that but Henry has an excellent video about Heisenberg's uncertainty principle which I think makes it more intuitive and less spooky so if you want to check that out click on The annotation it's a really good video