Kind: captions Language: en what hello and welcome I am Caitlyn saxs a senior producer for Nova and today we are going to be having a conversation with David Kaiser and we're going to be talking about the fundamentals of physics and by that I mean the fundamental physics group and that's physics uh with an f f y s i KS we'll explain that in a bit but these were a group of physicists who held quite a reputation as the hippies of physics uh but who also help catalyze the advancement of quantum physics so we're going to get into that we're going to delve deep into some trippy stuff like the nature of quantum entanglement and how these aspects of nature are being used in technology today so David Kaiser is a professor of the history of Science and a professor of physics at MIT he's the author of several award-winning books on the history of modern physics including how the hippies saved physics science counterculture and the quantum Revival uh the subject of which we will be talking about today of course he's also featured in a number of NOVA documentaries including particles Unknown about nutrino Einstein's Quantum Einstein's Quantum riddle what what is the universe made of and most recently this year's decoding the cosmos I have to say when I um started to look up how many films David has been in I just stopped there I figured that's enough but every time we at Nova talk to David our mind is blown that's why we put him in so many of our films some of which he has actually helped Inspire so my goal for this conversation today is to share that with you to try to blow your mind um without the use of any psychedelic drugs uh or whatnot so David thanks for joining us today are you are you up for this challenge are you ready to blow some Minds well I'll do my best and Kaitlyn thanks so much for inviting me on it's always r a treat to be able to talk with you and all the colleagues at Nova so thank you thank you um so first little housekeeping um this is a live conversation so to the audience watching live if you have uh questions for David please just drop them in the chat and we will try to get to them all right so David first let's let's start with the basics what what was this fundamental physics group yeah well as you say they they spelled physics with an F that already gives you an indication they were they were open to having a pretty fun time they didn't take themselves too seriously and that's part of what drew me to them actually when I was working on this project so the fundamental physics group was an informal group they weren't formally organized in any way it was a rag tag group actually you know not quite a dozen people um and they all kind of found each other in the San Francisco Bay Area uh in the early and mid 1970s they began having regular meetings uh most of the time every Friday afternoon for some big open-ended discussions about basically how does the world work what's the world made of things like what's how do they best try to make sense of things like quantum theory which was is then as now can can keep us up scratching our heads at night um and so uh so they they were a group of people almost all of whom had either completed phds in physics or in the process they were active grad students at the time but they were finding a kind of frustration with the typical way that that young physicists were being trained especially in the United States at that time uh they had all entered the field with these you know dreaming big big thoughts about about quantum theory about relativity about black holes about the Big Bang about these really deep deep kind of Juicy stories of of how the world works and they each found in their kind of formal training especially at the PHD level that it seemed to them at least kind of narrow it seemed to kind of cut out some of these bigger what if or how does it all work kinds of questions that had helped Inspire them you know when they were young kids teenagers and so on on their own combined with that they had the the the remarkable bad fortune of trying to enter physics at what turned out to be one of the worst times to try to get a job as a young physicist is through no fault of their own the entire field especially in the United States although it turns out similar Trends in many parts of the world at that time there was a kind of um rapid cut in the demand for young physicists not just in university positions to become young professors but also in industrial labs in government Labs there was just a huge huge fall in the demand and the supply was was exploding so it was a really tough time to make a kind of typical career in physics and these folks decided Well well they weren't finding their main questions answered in their kind of typical curricula they some of them felt like what do they have to lose because the typical career path was shifting kind of under their feet and so they kind of bumbled along and found each other through the kind of accidents of history and they made a little kind of study group a discussion group in um in Berkeley California and one of the topics they were most excited about was quantum entanglement and then and then you know topics that would spring out from there um so I want to get to Quantum because that requires a pause to try to wrap our heads around it and I will say despite having made a film on it I still haven't wrapped my head around it I don't know if anybody has actually fully wrapped their head around quantum entanglement But first you also explained in your book um you know in the 1970s is there's a growing New Age movement pulling in some aspects of Eastern mysticism and they're also seeing something um really appealing or some alignment with with the principles of quantum physics can you explain a little bit like what what was it that they were seeing in quantum physics yeah I I should start by saying it's a great question Kaitlyn so you know the group was is about you know again maybe 8 to 12 kind of core members and they were kind of accordi and week by week more people come and go but there was a core group and even among that group there was a wide range of opinions the their own opinions or ideas would change um over time so so even though it's not a huge group there was variety among them and for some of them just as you say they got very very interested really enthusiastic about all kinds of um spiritual and and intellectual Traditions beyond the ones that they had experienced through their kind of typical training uh and for some of them ideas from various strains of Eastern kind of spiritual or mystical Traditions really really excited them like um Confucianism like uh Daoism or Buddhism Confucianism they're not the same as each other those Traditions uh and some of these folks got excited about trying to do a kind of compare and contrast so they some of them really became um you know they would read a lot of books that go to go go to lectures in the Bay Area at a time when interest in these topics was growing especially in the San Francisco area at that time so one of the things that got some of these folks excited like like FR of COA who's a member of this group uh he was originally actually from Austria but was at that point doing a post-doctoral fellowship uh in in California in Santa Cruz not so far from Berkeley uh and so froff was really noticing in his EXP ations there were no there ideas at least in some of these Eastern traditions of a kind of underlying wholeness a kind of uh hidden connectedness among things that might appear to be separated that was one thing that really resonated with frof as a young person because it seems to be parallel at least with ideas that he really was grappling with day by day in areas of quantum theory that in Quantum in tanglement but not only in that is there a kind of um could could the you know could the whole be more than the some of its part parts we might say and that was something that he was he was exploring or getting exposed to in his reading in his lectures and in his own um increasing kind of meditations and so on that's an example he went on to write a bestselling book about that called the da of physics that as far as I know is still in print speaking of a blockbuster International seller but it was really a kind of pet project a passion project of copras because he was trying to really sit with these two different sets of ideas that to him seemed maybe to have things to offer to each other so that's a quick example um that that a kind of notion of subject and object might not be the same as a kind of typical or traditional uh Western View is there a role for the Observer that might have an impact in what even gets counted as being observed or what we attribute to being something as a part of objective reality are we bringing something to that controversial questions to this day in the in the topic of quantum physics but again in the 70s was getting some of these folks really interested about possible connections or at least parallels with things were just beginning to explore so it sounds like the idea of quantum entanglement which I want to get into in just a moment but basically the idea that things can communicate faster than the speed of light and also this idea of the role of the observer in a system are things that um both the physicists of and I don't know what you'd call them philosophers of the day were very uh interested in so let's get into what those are exactly from a physics perspect physics perspective the quantum entanglement start at the beginning this this came about what in the early 1900s yeah I really gets articulated in the 1930s mid 1930s so long before the hippie days that were otherwise that we've been talking about and in fact entanglement is in that era was most closely associated with names that really we do know that we think of as kind of unhp is like Albert Einstein and Arin Schrodinger uh they each had kind of Bohemian streaks in their own day but they certainly weren't 1970s California hippies let's be clear about that and so uh what they were doing they weren't the OG hippies right right that's fair to say I think they'd agree with that statement too if we could ask um but what they were doing they were you know these were some of the most important architects of quantum theory the H1 Nobel prizes uh for their work contributing to quantum physics also it's important to remember is that both Einstein and even Aaron Schrodinger by this point became pretty convinced Skeptics or critics of quantum theory so they helped build this amazing edifice and then over the intervening decade from the 1920s to the 1930s and indeed Beyond Einstein and schinger each started kind of nursing these really significant questions and even kind of doubts crit criticisms and so each of them began thinking about what we now call quantum entanglement partly because they were convinced this couldn't be real in the world they were trying to sus out do does quantum mechanics predict such strange sounding things and if so isn't that a problem for quantum theory right so so they're helping to articulate things we still read their papers with great profit to this day exceptionally clear from the 1930s but their goal was not to say hey there's this cool feature quantum theory isn't that great their goal for each of them Einstein and ringer both and they're kind of egging each other on through letters of the time was to say this sounds just too strange to be real it sounds like spooky ghost stories as opposed to real physics nonetheless what they began to to identify is that if one took the equations of quantum theory really at face value as it had been worked out already in the 1920s and 30s quantum theory seem to suggest that under certain circumstances if there were two little bits of matter two particles two um to things we could imagine performing measurements on or interacting with in a laboratory if they moved very far apart arbitrarily far apart um that they would still retain a kind of connectedness so they weren't clear at the time was did it involve actually communication the word that you'd used um there's some kind of connection in fact as Einstein iously called it dismissively in a letter to a friend it looked like a spooky action at a distance for him that was not terms of Praise that it would looked like it was like ghost stories of weirdness so the idea was the equation suggested that there was a kind of again that that a Quantum system was more had more to it than just adding up everything you might know about one piece and adding what you might know separately about a second piece that there were connectedness or correlations or connected behaviors that the equation suggested could be real uh beyond what you would ever be able to to kind of think about in a classical physics or say in a Newtonian system and for for Einstein as for Schrodinger this spelled trouble not excitement um nonetheless I wrote these papers in the 1930s actually was schinger himself who coined the term entanglement in English he had just fled his job in Berlin because of the rise of the Nazis he was doing more and more work in the English language Schrodinger coined the term entanglement Einstein had likewise fled uh Berlin um earlier and had resettled in the United States so the two of them were now exchanging letters across the Atlantic Ocean and really kind of as I say kind of coaxing each other to articulate their criticisms of quantum theory around topics like entanglement so that's where this topic kind of stays so a number of of the earliest kind of proponents for quantum theory like Neils bore and his younger colleagues M Heisenberg WF gang poy a lot of these uh folks were were kind of not too impressed with Einstein's critique um they some of them wrote their own responses that frankly are hard to follow today and some people call the responses kind of muddled it was kind of you know a debate that seemed not to go anywhere and so Einstein and bour remained lifelong friends but they never convinced the other of how to think about Quantum the about topics like entanglement in particular and basically they both died having not convinced the other over after discussions that had had unfolded over decades nearly 30 years uh soon after each of them actually had passed away as it turns out a much younger physicist and member of the next generation named John Bell who's originally from Northern Ireland was kind of dissatisfied by the state of play by the state of discussion of these topics and so he read Einstein's paper very very carefully the so-called epr paper Einstein had written this paper with two younger colleagues um uh Boris Podolski and Nathan Rosen we usually use their initials E this is the paper saying that quantum entanglement proves quantum Theory there is a problem with Quant quantum theory that that's exactly right so that's right so the epr paper published in in in Spring of 1935 that's Einstein podowski Rosen identifies this strange prediction quantum theory and says that's like too bad for quantum theory right and so so John Bell much later was reading that paper with great great interest he read and was really dissatisfied with Neil's B's response that also had been published in in the 1930s and so B returned to this with let's say fresh eyes younger generation not quite beholden to the same um sort of all the same assumptions that had animated the ear earlier folks and what bell did was he realized there might be a way to really test this this question and not just argue late at night through kind of C cigar smoke um among friends which is how Bor and Einstein tended to talk about it Pipe smoke or cigar smoke and so John Bell says maybe we could actually force a showdown maybe there's an empirical contrast between a world that behaves the way Einstein assumed it would have to and a world that would obey these strange looking equations of quantum theory and so Bell divide what we now call in his honor Bell tests he said maybe there's a way to actually subject Paris of particles that have been prepared a certain way conduct a series of measurements on each member of the pair and and try to understand whether their behavior really lines up is correlated in this much stronger set of correlations that quantum theory seem to suggest so what he did is he basically took the the core ideas that Einstein and Podolski Rose and had put forward in the 30s and tried to codify them what bell did was kind of codify them any theory of nature that obeyed what Einstein and his colleagues considered kind of um um you non-negotiable they core principles that must lead to different predictions for real experimental outcomes Bell is the one who really first showed this compared to the Now by that point fairly standard predictions from the equations of quantum theory and if when design these clever experiments and conduct them very carefully maybe we could sus that out so that's what Bel did he published that article in late in um in uh in the year of 1964 so almost 30 years after the epr paper and schinger similar work from the 30s uh and then um this amazing body of work which now we teach all our students we consider one of the most significant papers in the history of modern physics John Bell's article uh it went nowhere it was completely ignored in its early days in fact uh it was published in 1964 it received zero citations in the worldwide sent of literature the next year he received one citation two years later and that was by John Bell himself it was a self- citation no one was picking this up literally no one uh and then what caught my eye was the first among the first to begin to pay attention was this group that you and I began talking about just a few minutes ago the group that had called themselves the fundamental physics group uh in Berkeley this I mean the fundamental Mysteries of the universe why was nobody paying attention to that for a a generation or more it's a good question and that's partly what I tried to explore in in the book that you mentioned a lot I think a lot of it has to do with the changing way in which uh physicists were training newer physicists and the changing kind of landscape in which young physicists found themselves during the period between the 1930s and the 1960s or really 1970s a lot changed in the world a lot changed in physics in between one of the big ones of course being the second world war these enormous um weapons projects uh like the nuclear weapons project headquartered at Los Alamos the Manhattan Project in the US uh and and these you know huge kind of Applied Physics projects that that really enveloped a generation or two now what happened especially in the United States not only there coming out of the second world war was a pretty significant reorientation in what seemed to count as worthwhile physics I should clarify most physicists in the United States were not working on weapons projects after the war the weapons projects continue to grow the supply of young physicists grew faster so it's not that everyone was working on bombs afterwards at all those projects were going strong but it was a minority of the population but there was a a kind of ripple effect nonetheless and that really caught my eye when I was wearing my historian's cap if you look at changing textbooks in quantum theory look look at changing lecture notes look at changing homework assignments and these things you we have paper traces this was long before the internet so people had to write stuff down like z o which was the best thing for historians paper trail all over place you see this transition in what sort of is is taken to count as as really kind of worth celebrating or worth focusing on in training young scientists young physicists in particular so it's not that they all started focusing narrowly on nuclear reactions or let alone weapon stuff but there was a focus on a kind of pragmatic approach that we the the attitude became it was often kind of caricatured by the saying shut up and calculate which was attributed to F and it's not clear if ever said it but it's it rang true with an attitude that he and many many of his generation would try to instill in their own students their job is not they argued to stay up late at night through the cigar smoke arguing about what it all means but actually to say let's put these equations to work let's find new phenomena build new things and let's ask different kinds of questions not bad questions I want to be clear in many ways this was a golden age for physics United States more Nobel prizes than ever before people were finding really important things that we still take for granted and teach our students today it wasn't bad physics it was a different set of priorities so is it safe to say that physicists of that day were creating Technologies advancing science that relied on these fundamentals of quantum physics to be true they just weren't asking why they were true I think that's a good gloss I think that's exactly right that's consistent with you know the questions they were asked for their homework assignments the way the textbooks were being kind of Rewritten in the Years after the end of the second World War I think it's exactly that there's another part that really intrigued me that I think at least accentuated those Trends and that's that coming out of the second world war physics enrollments were growing like crazy they in fact physics was the fastest growing field of study in the American University system of all the fields around every field of study was growing it was a huge influx of new students thanks in large measure to things like the GI Bill lots of people who' served in the second world war now have the opportunity to go to college and some of wouldn't have had that opportunity um if they hadn't served and if there hadn't been this GI Bill huge rapid rapid exponential growth in the American University system and again plays out with different rhythms in other parts of the world as well uh certainly very similar growth in the Soviet Union at the time um and then kind of uneven in other places anyway even as as as every department is growing none grew at a faster rate than physics partly because of those of the drama of the wartime projects after the end of the second world war these once highly top secret projects like radar and the man Manhattan Project were kind of unveiled selectively unveiled and young physicists became you know um kind of heroes or were treated at least as as cultural celebrities in a way that's sometimes hard me and my colleagues to imagine today they were some of them were treated as really just like basically like movie stars um and so the enrollment were booming like never before so that we treat you like a movie star David I appreciate that you're no of a movie star well uh yeah the word Nova there seems to M to play a role there Caitlyn anyway no disrespect to my friends in Nova it's not quite the same red carpet anyway I love it but the point is it was really kind of cultural phenomenon in the 40s really into the 50s where even when when like Time Magazine would conduct polls of like you know the most prestigious profession nuclear physicist would be ranked like among the top three we were're not there these days right um so it was really a cultural phenomenon as an educational phenomenon um and so the the kind of floodgates opened so if you ask yourself what's it like to teach you hundreds of students in a class on quantum theory when before the war it might have been dozens you know as a teacher I would imagine asking different kinds of questions it's hard to grade 300 essays until what it all means multiple choice you go to multiple choice or you do you know really good there was a there was a a collection of really Exquisite calculating skill again I want to be clear it's not like good bad it's shift in what gets prioritized and that post-war generation many of them got extremely good at calculating and doing kind of quantitative math-based problem sets and that's not a bad thing that's incredibly important for for physics but what got kind of shunted what got lower priority and kind of pushed to the side and sometimes actively denigrated but just kind of squeezed out pedagogically as well were these much more open-ended kind of philosophically flavored questions about let's try to ask qualitative questions about what what it means for the world to behave that way so I think a lot lots of pushes and pulls on that generation coming out of the second World War uh and Bell was really educated in that era he was one of the outliers in fact John Bell recalled later in his life that he was actively advised not to pursue these philosophical sounding was it all mean questions because it would hurt his career and he went on to an extremely prestigious career as a let's say a kind of straightforward particle physicist he used equations of quantum theory brilliantly there effects named in his honor in in kind of mainstream nuclear produ PHS to this day but it was really a kind of side interest that he learned to kind of keep quiet about even though today we now realize this was just absolutely foundational you know uh mindboggling work um I really want to get to the quantum entanglement explanation but just building off that for a second as a historian of science um you you've seen how this sort of anatomy of Paradigm shifts in in in thinking and and is this how it always happens is always these outliers or if you have any any commentary on on what it actually takes to make big shifts well that that's really interesting so I I think there I don't know it always takes that I think we can find examples so this wasn't unique let's put it that way this was the only time we found that kind of outlier but I think what what I find most interesting as an historian is that it's almost never the work of one loansome you know genius or outlier or anything else but we we a lot of the work that my historian colleagues and I really have fun trying to do and it involves kind of detective work is try to understand what are the shifting institutions in which that work was being done or uh in contrast to which the outlier you know was positioning themselves you know in contrast so that what what was the taken for granted path and how was that reinforced for example through teaching through pedagogy through the pattern of support you know Financial or otherwise for certain kinds of questions and so the the the outliers first of all are almost never working alone and secondly they're they're in a kind of they're situated um in in a kind of social universe that also is not static doesn't sit still and that's Again part of what really grabbed me about the the the the shifts we're talking about now you know the the second world war drove in the United States an unbelievable infusion of cash in the sciences and in higher education like literally never before and it didn't last forever and it began to rever the fortunes reversed equally quickly so to shockingly fast with these exponential drops in things like support uh you know roughly a quarter Century later so it's it's these kind of amazing play of ideas and curious personalities and ideas that are you know kind of delicious and strange and hard to get our heads around those aren't bubbling up in in a vacuum they're also kind of taking place uh aside some really sometimes quite dramatic shifts in how we get the work done yeah I I really appreciate that and it's something that we at Nova I think over the last few decades have Al start to appreciate moving away from this sort of Lone genius model for how uh science is Advanced because for the most part it it's actually not and you know a few often a few people get the credit you know the Nobel Prize goes to just you know a couple names right um but it's the way new ideas get created is through inter interaction it is and and what and what are the conditions to allow those interactions that accentuate some that might make put a strain and sometimes beyond the immediate control even the immediate recognition of the folks that we otherwise I think you're right tended to to focus on maybe a bit too narrowly yeah let's pause on the history for a second I want to come back to it but let's do a dive into quantum entanglement terrific great this phenomenon is hard to understand yeah uh but you probably more than most people have experienced trying to explain it so what's what's your I don't know what's your three minute uh explanation yeah it it's it is it's just it's wonderful um I think and also it is still kind of beguiling it's it's not straightforward and yet as as as I think you're already setting us up we have better evidence now than ever before it's it really seems to be how our world works and so it's worth you know three minutes maybe even four um to try to to try to get our heads around it so the idea really is that um that we we often make a lot of good progress enormous progress over centuries and centuries in fact trying to understand the properties of one say object one hunk of matter and how that hunk of matter might interact with another hunk of matter but each carrying their own properties with them and property sounds very abstract uh that means if we're talking about little particles what is its value of it spin along the X Direction let's say that's a fundamental property of many types of quantum objects kind of intrinsic AGN momentum we can measure it extremely accurately in Laboratories now it's not a hard notion even for undergrads to be able to interact with so one way we try to describe things like uh little bits of matter is with their spin spin along a certain direction in space is spinning up or down with respect to say the the X Direction and so we might think that we have two particles we could just attribute a spin to each particle separately and then ask about you know um the combination their effects and that's exactly where things start to break down that what what B tests and in this area of entanglement seem to really accentuate is that the value that we measure of say the spin of one particle over here is going to be bound up in ways that people found and still find very hard to to Really wrestle with what we measure here seems to depend on what happened over there and the over there could be across a a crowded laboratory space a couple you know feet or meters apart in principle according to Quant the it could be across the Galaxy and that's where it starts hitting up very hard with other things that we take for granted like local causes yield only local effects if I if I hit something here something shouldn't change there instantaneously it should take time for some physical process of information or force to move through space over time it's that conjunction of ideas that anagement really forces us to to to question let me unpack that a little further if I were to take prepare these particles send them off in opposite directions and then perform a measurement over here on particle a I say oh I see it spin is is spin up along the X Direction just having perform that measurement is now going to change the the measurement outcome for what a colleague is going to find arbitr far away now what I can't do is use that um to send information we can't communicate within Tang although people very smart people have tried for a long time to find a way to do that what it does is it changes the the statistics the correlations between the measurements that we measured and so if I only am sitting at one box and I see a stream of particles coming at me I measure the spin spin up spin down spin up spin up spin up spin down I look it seem seems to be a completely random set of basically plus ones and minus ones as far as I can tell there's no information conveyed When I Look only at one box that I have access to what's really remarkable is that when my colleague who might have been on alphas and Tor takes a jet back uh and we compare our notes only when we see the complete set of that experiment what questions did I ask what measurements did I perform round by round over here what measurements did my colag can perform on her particle over there time and time and time and time again that when that we see when we each ask certain questions in common we got related answers we went when we asked different questions those answers also lined up in a spooky way so the particles were behaving as if they somehow shared joint properties even though we only saw random noise at one box at a time is a random box at each random outcomes at each box it means I can't send a message to her saying oh you know go um you know change your stock portfolio because the correlations only come from seeing the combination of measurements performed and outcomes received nonetheless when we perform that when we get all the log books together we find that the particles are behaving in a correlated way that far exceeds whatever could have happened by chance if each of them had definite properties on their own if I just try to say each particle had a value spin before I chose to measure it I literally get the wrong answer my friend and I together get the wrong answers and so by attributing sort of fixed properties to a particle that are that are revealed by my measurement by just making that assumption even saying I don't know what it is I just assume there's a value that gets revealed I get different answers for the combined experiment when I bring all the log books together then I then then what quantum theory predicts that might still not be as clarifying as we'd like but yeah so I want to get back to the history because essentially and I see why hippie's New Age movement Eastern missm could see something appealing here right basically physics seems to be telling us that there is some sort of way that particles are communicating instantaneously which has a lot of parallels sorry sorry sorry k i be careful with the word communicating because one of the things that came out actually of this group's work was something we now call the no signaling or no communication theorem so so it's not it's not like put it the way it's we can guard against the following we've done this with real experiments now for Generations um decades now if it were communication then we might expect communication to have to um involve say sending a signal even one bit a zero or one from this side to that side and as far as we know communication has a speed limit the speed of light given relativity and so we're able to do these experiments shutting experimenting far enough apart from each other the two boxes two detectors there's not time for a single light beam a single you know status update on on Facebook to get from that device to that device so so they're not communicating and then lay on top of that we have no useful information we only have one box so we can't receive a signal from the other side know is so so what is the verb what are they yeah it's it's dissatisfying um I I tend to use the word correlated uh but because correlation implies you need the whole set to then find these patterns you need both right um as opposed to like I just got you know a message in my in my in my ear yeah or or behaving as one system almost their behavior is correlated that's exactly right so the behaviors what we what we measure will show patterns but we can only sus out those patterns frustratingly and yet bizarrely when we bring the two sets of of kind of log books together um and so and that wasn't clear I should say even clarifying that was part of what the work of this group that we began talking about really really did uh one of the members of that group uh who was um an enthusiastic participant in their discussions Philipe abart who is a staff scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and would meet with them often he actually was responding to these really joyful very clever thought experiments that members of the group other members of the group were coming up with exactly to try to send messages they wanted to have a kind of fast and light Telegram and Philly Bart published one of the first ever demonstr that even according to quantum theory that shouldn't work that won't work because you need to you know bring both boxes both log books together so we know that I can say that with a straight face like oh well there's a no signaling theorem because the work of groups like like this fundamental physics group because it was not straightforward actually John Bell himself ended his classic 1964 paper worried that maybe this did leave the door open to fast and light communication because it was because it was so you know difficult to sus out so I don't mean to make it sound like it was so straightforward over the work um over in that case about a decade and then the decades ever since then people clarifying that it's not exactly communication but there's something certainly spooky or unexpected that still happens so we left the the story the history at at um John Bell has sort of um envisioned a hypothetical way that this could be experimentally tested where do the fundamental physics group come in what what happens next that actually changes the field right so one of the people who discovered John Bell's article which otherwise as head was really being ignored largely ignored in the literature was at the time a PhD student named John clauser clauser was at the time at Columbia University in New York uh in the late 60s and early 70s and he basically found Bell's article by accident he was in the University library and he found a funnyl looking Journal Bell published his article not one of the mainstream journals for all kinds of reasons we can talk about and basically as a kind of study break from his main dissertation project young John clauser found this weird looking journal on the shelf and he kind of took it took it off the shelf and in great Serendipity you know kind of semi- randomly it fell open to her he he flipping through found this strange sounding article by John Bell Bel the title of Bell's article mentioned was it Serendipity or was it uh quantum entanglement right we'll never know that's right I I can't rule out either but it was certainly not he wasn't he didn't go looking for it I'll put it that way it's not that clauser had already heard about the article because few people heard about it so by whatever wonderful spooky actions um clauser found John Bell's article and got very excited this this looked like the kinds of big you know how does the world work kinds of questions that had attracted young John clauser to study Physics in the first place so as clouds recalls he rushes back to his dissertation advisor look at this amazing thing we could do these experiments John Bell was a theoretical physicist clauser was a budding experimental physicist so Bell had had identified a type of experiment perform it he wasn't prepared to do it himself CU oh we we could do that and his advisor said that looks like you know kind of philosophy or not what we should be doing do this straightforward project on very very important topic um but do this other work and don't bother me with these philosophical Trifles at least as clauser remembered really just a strong brush on so nonetheless the topic kind of got under clouser's skin he wrote letters to John Bell uh asking if other experimentalists had taken it on Bell was delighted to hear from anyone let alone an actual experimentalist that no one's done it maybe you could do it that would be amazing and so they have a little kind of pen pal correspondence and then slowly again through kind of Fun accidents uh John clauser has put in touch with other young folks the few exceptions who also had kind of found John Bell's article there's a group in the Boston area uh and and a few others so John Bell as John Claus completes his dissertation gets a postto at Lawrence Berkeley laboratory so to do his kind of mainstream to continue his mainstream research well he gets there just to the laboratory like most of his going through a huge downturn in fortunes there's lots and lots of kind of you know spare time because the funding has been cut way way back so he has permission of his new supervisor new postdoctor supervisor to spend kind of a little portion of his time on this kind of pet project could one design a kind of bell test and really do it and to his credit his advisor Charles Town said sure you can spend some time in that cuz you know we're not at capacity and Charles towns went further and enabled um a PhD a new PhD student at the time to start working with John clauser uh and so the two of them were able to work on these first ever you know Bell tests clauser recalled that he basically got good at dumpster diving like there was not like he got grants from you know the federal government to do this thing it was like what could he scrap for spare parts and there are photographs that I love of him actually literally duct taping equipment together in this uh in this kind of leftover space of the lab um but nonetheless together um Stuart Friedman the grad student and and John clauser were able to do the first ever Bell test and they found against what clauser had hoped for uh exactly the correlations that quantum mechanics predicts I should say both John Bell and John clauser hop this would be a way to show that Einstein was right and that quantum theory wasn't really true after all it wasn't as true as as um as correct as could be but there was something maybe wrong and that entanglement would be entanglement tests would be a way to to to reveal that quantum theory is not the last word and instead ironically clauser and uh and his colleague um younger colleague Stewart Freeman actually found beautiful beautiful scen results everybody wanted to be on team Einstein everyone not everyone but but some of these is Iconic guys yeah yeah uh and so to to to turn that story forward uh that so clauser basically shared the Nobel Prize in 2022 for an experiment that he hoped we give opposite results maybe we all make such mistakes in the lab is pretty great so um so that's an example of how the topic began getting local attention now Cloud this in Berkeley he befriended I just want emphasize that that was a Nobel prize winning experiment it turned out to be with the passage of in this his case exactly 50 years so if you are willing to wait you know that was it was not seen and in fact again not only were people still not paying much attention to John Bell's article people didn't pay much attention at the time to the to the fredman clauser experiment it was published in our most prestigious Journal unlike John Bell's article and yet it was again roundly ignored you can tell that by citation analysis there's correspondence from the time that John claer himself shared with me and other historian colleagues this was still kind of dismissed by most kind of you know mainstream physicist in fact John claer never got the kind of position in physics he had hoped for he never got a university professorship and some of the letters around his early applications make it clear is because they thought he was working on a kind of important merely philosophic on a strange topic which 50 years later you know earned a share of the Nobel Prize um so that's seems kind of hopefully that's humbling for some of our department heads in the world today anyway the point is clauser really had caught the bug he now was able to do this remarkable experiment that was not getting a lot of attention one place it did get attention was his own backyard in Berkeley and he began meeting up with this fundamental physics group he was a kind of charter member with about eight or 10 of of other kind of new friends who all the others of whom almost all of whom were actually coming from theoretical physics they were intrigued by Quantum in Tangent in Bell's article and now they had one of the world experts uh at their disposal meeting John clauser and together they met you know every Friday for years to to kind of wrestle with this some of them thought this might lead to things like faster and light communication uh and some of them thought even further maybe this would lead to things like an explanation from mind reading maybe the communication is between you know entangled particles one of which is in my mind and one of which is in your mind uh and so some of them took this into even more let's say uh new Agy kinds of directions they were they were immersed in a kind of hot bed of new age um enthusiasm in the Bay Area clauser I think to his credit had a kind of open mind about that he wasn't s of convinced about New Age stuff but he also said what do we know more than once and he would participate every week and would they would go and have study sessions at other plac places in the Bay Area like The eln Institute and CLA would go time and time again and he would say you know he he as far as I can tell was let's say um curious but not dogmatic in either direction some of his his discussion mates became um much more convinced and then maybe unconvinced and convinced again you know there were kind of strong ideas strong passions the point is the group was didn't feel Bound by what counted like to be a straightforward question they said if we're not if most of us aren't going to get the kinds of careers that we wanted anyway and these questions seem worth pursuing and curious they would kind of let their curiosity drive them and they were combine that with this really grounded discipline study of of they could push the equations around some of them could do world class experiments so it's that combination that really grabbed me of a kind of open-minded curiosity uh combined with the discipline to see it through and so they weren't just like musing they weren't just having the late night dormatory room chats they were open to that and they were doing the homework right and they were trying to say well if we take this seriously here's what my calculation suggest I could imagine a A variation on that experiment they were trying to do both and that I found really exciting so I hear that these experiments really helped kind of prove that um that the universe is spooky that these phenomenon seem to be real but does did that have a direct correlation to the um applications it sounds like there were applied physicists already kind of working on applications that relied on the underlying physics um or did this work also help Advance the both sides of the equation I think I think it's that it really had a knock on effect for for both sides I mean there weren't a lot of people at the time in fact none that I can think of frankly who were trying to exploit quantum entanglement for new devices at that time the topic was really just not of much interest either way and so part of what happened and partly why I got excited to write the book was you start seeing this early group of the kind of eccentrics um and then with their correspondence Network you could see a small number of other physicists some of whom were more had had closer ties to the mainstream and had their own range of you know Curiosities and interests there's a kind of dispersed community that begins to to talk together um some of whom start doing followup very brilliant followon experiments uh beyond the the original one that John clauser and Stuart Freeman had done and that includes people like Alan aspe who who then shared the Nobel Prize in 2022 a little later it involved people like um like Anton Zinger so there are people and others who begin doing more experiments um kind of riffing on the pattern but trying to do even more clever versions of the freedan clauser experiment there are theorists who begin trying to really sit with these challenges from the Berkeley group why can't we use quantum entanglement to send messages fast and light if we can't um does that help us understand other features of Quantum Theory and new ideas came out from that something called the no cloning theorem was one as a direct response to these kind of clever provocations so you see this unfolding again over kind of the next decade from the mid 70s into the mid 80s and that's when you start seeing now a kind of critical mass in a few Pockets not still not um on the mainstream in most textbooks um but enough people now Beyond just this this eccentric Berkeley group who begin wondering maybe if this really is true of the world could we put it to work does it become a resource and not just a curiosity and so you start seeing an effort to do things like Quantum encryption which is happening the first theoretical protocols being formulated in the mid 1980s exactly Downstream from a decade 10 years worth of really trying to wrestle with both the first Bell tests and these really clever ideas about the relationship between quantum entanglement communication and relativity and so encryption Quantum encryption becomes really the first one of the first kind of efforts to apply entanglement in a new kind of device and that's actually going yeah go ahead can you explain that a bit how does it use entanglement in device yeah so the idea the core idea between behind encryption is again to say that these uh entangled particles share features together and so if someone wanted to kind of um eases drop on a signal typically for typical signals we can we we have one source beaming out say radio beacons and if someone wants to kind of intercept that radio Beacon can get a sneak preview right uh because the radio Beacon is sort of a basically classical system and so what you do here should have not won't won't show up over there if you if your beacon instead are quantum particles in the special entangled State then their behavior is correlated and if someone Taps into this particle here that affects the behavior over there right so it changes the it it basically alerts both sides that someone's actually tapped your line it announces the fact of eaves droping which classical signals are much harder to to to verify that and actually erases or scrambles the hope for message anyway so eavesdropper doesn't get the message because they've messed up that special just kind of delicate Quantum State and they've announced their presence in brief so that really relies on these really wonderful but strange properties of say pairs of entangled particles which you don't get through kind of classical communication channels and that was again trying to play with this idea of entangle particles kind of one Quantum state that some distributed through space combining that with you know how do we communicate from this side to that side the kinds of questions that among others this Berkeley group had been really putting their putting their finger on and trying to push push push roughly 10 years later some other clever folks some of whom had been in touch with that with that uh Berkeley group in the early discussions they turn it around and say oh actually this becomes a way to protect information as opposed to a way to send it somehow by Magic so and then now that becomes that's really a kind of worldwide billion part of a billion dollar worldwide industry now that's one example are there so Quantum encryption is one example what other um applications of quantum entanglement are we seeing now so another big one yeah another big one there are several another big one is actually on Quantum Computing which is not quite as far advanced in terms of kind of entering the kind of everyone getting to buy one on Amazon but Quantum Computing is an area that's also a subject of enormous effort and enthusiasm and funding and support in universities in government labs in private Industries um everywhere in many many countries um and and at the core of of many many kind of quantum algorithms is again these kind of entangled States these now we call them Bell States they're trying to use these pair these special prepared kind of pairs of particles can really kind of take advantage of their connectedness so instead of having lots of particles lots of bits calculating kind of in parallel on their own um you actually get can get these for certain certain kinds of tasks you can exploit the connectedness and in some loose sense uh exploit the fact that that one state is again more than the sum of its parts you're getting kind of more computation out from one entangled system than you would ever get from having two kind of separated or classical bits there's much more to it but the point is that a lot of the kind of speed up or the power behind many of the um algorithms that are designed to run on quantum computers really comes from exploiting this connected these Bell States so that's that's another kind of um kind of on the horizon not quite on the Shelf yet today technology so what do you think the future might look like with respect to how Quantum Technologies might change the world I mean we're we're living right now through what seems to be like an AI Revolution it seems like it's changing a lot is there going to be a Quantum Revolution where just the fabric of the way Society works it changes because of these Technologies I I likely so but it's going to come in way in stages I think most you know big changes tend to actually so one is I think we're we one one thing that people would love to be able to do if they can get kind of robust quantum computers to really run uh on a larger scale would be to start simulating Quantum materials as we've been saying now quantum mechanics just says that matter behaves just differently than than kind of large blocks of matter behave that otherwise are otherwise described so well by classical physics and so our computers to this day our ordinary computers are really good at simulating ordinary matter even that's hard but we've got really good at it they get really really bad very quickly at simulating Quantum states of matter because of these kind of exponential kind of uh connectedness let's say and that really just swamps what our even our best supercomputers can do today quantum computers would so to speak speak that native language of quantum theory itself so one hope would be to have a just an unbel ably improved ability to understand materials at a quantum mechanical level maybe even design materials maybe that gets even a few steps down the road to things like Pharmaceuticals I don't know but what do we want to do I mean if if matter is made of quantum objects can we learn to understand and maybe even manipulate Quantum objects Quantum materials in in a in a in a in a in a kind of more thorough grounded uh first principles way with a with a ability to simulate those that equals our kind of imagination let's say that's that would be one great thing so like a quantum computer could run a fusion reactor because it's a Quantum process or something like that maybe so maybe so or or or would it help us understand again some maybe bioactive molecules better than we able to now things like that would there would there be some sort of spooky kind of blackbox aspect to how quantum computers actually do their Computing the same way you know AI is kind of a black box right now I I think that's probably right and and so it it that's right so people spend a lot of time trying to understand a design and understand Quantum algorithms but as these go up to scale I think one would likely start to find things like we find you know um huge machine learning algorithms or behind things like gener AI that really um exceed a kind of human interpretability or human explainability I would expect the same thing to happen as these Quantum algorithms again grow in their own complexity what do you think um what's your expectation for the timeline when we might actually see uh See this in our lives It's Tricky for Quantum encryption I think it's it's it's already in some sense here it's in it's in pretty Advanced beta testing I have friends and colleagues who have done this uh as kind of demonstrations but in not just in pristine laboratory conditions real world demos with kilometers and kilometers of fiber optic CA strung through cities not just in in you know kind of laboratory or university buildings and showing that encryption systems really do work as designed um and they can be deployed um not quite at scale but beyond only kind of control controlled conditions so I think encryption is frankly further along in getting closer to something that could really be of commercial and governmental use for good or ill I mean I'm not sure that's a great good thing frankly um but um but nonetheless I think it's much closer Quantum Computing I think one of the big limits maybe the biggest limit so far is not designing real really cool algorithms not designing the code we love to run on these things but getting enough of these very kind of delicate Quantum States these so-called cubits or Quantum bits to maintain their special Quantum State because you know basically heat and noise are the enemies of of quantum coherence so to really put it another way we work really hard when we do these these experiments to reveal quantum entanglement like modern day Bell tests we have to Shield our Quantum particles against all kinds of disturbances against noise and so imagine trying to do that with lots and lots and lots of these Quantum particles these Quantum entangled particles because many many kinds of effects of the environment will tend to wash out that special Quantum State and therefore wash out that kind of quantumness that you want to exploit so forgive me if this is a little bit of a one1 question but when does something become Quantum I mean obviously we don't see don't see we don't see our uh stuff in our world regularly entangled is there a reason for that or is there a line at which physicist to say this is quantum this is not it's it's the opposite of a one1 question that's still have to frankly it's it's a deep question um and so I'll give you a shallow answer but I'll just say that that the there is no single kind of dividing line it depends on you know the system and the means with which you're interacting with it nonetheless one of the great kind of races that's on today again involving some of my very dear colleagues and friends to see exactly how large how many moving Parts a system they could make that still shows the unmistakable quantumness and when does the classical description kind of take over and and become you thoroughly adequate and that's that's a moving Target we know that if we want to describe a single atom at a time we're not going to be able to do it with Newton's physics we know just as you said we want to describe a huge collection of atoms then we do really well with classical physics and where's that line is it you know 10 atoms is it 100,000 atoms is it 10 million atoms and that I think really becomes kind of context specific but part of the the kind of virtuosity is to be able to demonstrate robust Quantum behaviors for systems that have lots and lots of quantum moving Parts but not so many that it's kind of tipped over and the quantum just kind of washes out so again that's a bit of a vague answer but I'll just say it's a live issue uh and part of what what uh even for those demonstrations part of what tricky is that as I say kind of an impacts of the environment which can take many forms tend to wash out the special quantumness of one system or or of these complicated many art systems so that's what's what what creates one of the main drags on quantum computers is is how many of these so-called cubits of these specially prepared Quantum states can you keep in their quantumness in their Quantum State before they before that kind of washes out and and there's special bell-like Behavior Quantum Behavior no longer becomes usable because it's been kind of diluted because the entanglement been kind of spread out among so many partners that it no longer has that specialness between these two uh members of an entangled pair so again that's a bit of a of a of a of a imprecise answer but I think the biggest challenge right now is just is maintaining large numbers of the stuff on which you could run Quantum algorithms So speaking of things losing their Quantum state or changing them there's another aspect of quantum entanglement that is strange which is about how the Observer can affect the system uh which is troubling in some ways can you explain a little bit about that yeah that's another one that that sort of won't go away and I should also say it doesn't command a single answer you're among experts in the field it's an area people still really get rightly troubled by and many people have their own favorite answers but they all they're not it's not the same answer so again if if we take the the equations of quantum theory at face value it certainly looks as if and many people smart people including noo laureates have have described quantum theory as somehow relying on the Observer to produce um a certain outcome that we choose what measurement to perform and therefore the outcomes of measurements are sort of unavoidably dependent on our choice at least of what to do how we chose to intervene what what setting we set on our on our measuring device and therefore what answer we got especially if we combine that with what we talked about somewhat time ago about in tanglement that we no longer can describe these Quantum atics as just having fixed properties that our measurements happen to reveal right it's that that really puts the tension on what's often called the measurement problem that we chose what measurement to perform and that revealed a definite answer it's not that we get a a fuzzy or squished out answer we get a real answer might not have gotten the same answer you know the next time around so so what role did we play in kind of manifesting or bringing forth a particular measurement outcome because we chose form of measurement so some people take that and say one one person in particular Eugene vigner but that was just really uh um unavoidable and that somehow human consciousness had a role to play in quantum theory vigner I should say won the Nobel Prize in physics he was not a dummy his ideas commanded lots of attention including from this Berkeley group some of them were enamored of that is there a reason why human consciousness should be somehow written into the equations of quantum theory they were intrigued I don't think they quite succeeded at that but they were intrigued by that question these days that line of thinking is much less um popular let's say among experts in Quantum theor it's not that it's been sort of disproven necessarily but other folks have found other other roads one that's popular and it's not one that I particularly endorse but gets a lot of people excited is something called the many worlds interpretation which basically says that um that all the answers are chosen it's just that the Universe kind of splits in some sense every time a measurement is performed so that our human consciousness me here also winds up splitting and along this path or in this you know this track there's a version it's all self-consistent there's a version of me that found the electron spin up but at that moment there was a split and there's a version of me in a track that with which I had no longer have any contact that in my conscience found the outcome to spin down and so on and so you can imagine this infinite proliferation I find that pretty headyy and pretty dizzying I have very dear friends who think who think that's the most straightforward way to understand what quantum theory is telling us so it's not that my Consciousness is active in the world but in some sense my Consciousness is bound up because it's also made of quantum particles and all this this entire Quantum assembly is always doing self-consistent things but I can no longer Trust I can no longer send or receive messages from these kind of now parallel tracks that have somehow forked off now that's a great way to make some pretty cool science fiction some friends of mine think it's a great way to describe the natural world obviously that hasn't commanded you know Universal Acclaim either there's all kinds of things which which get at exactly what you put your finger on Caitlyn what is the role of let's say the observer in in our in our interactions with the quantum world and I can see how the fundamental physics group would see this as really compelling because it seems physics seems to suggest that we have a role in in we have agency in creating the the the uh universe that comes to be for some of them I mean again that was at least an an enormously consequential question and a lot of them to their credit didn't say ah I found the answer I'm right they said that's a question worth sitting with right and so I think it was it was our openness to the questions that I that again that really um I just came to admire uh not all their answers some of their answers I thought were actually frankly pretty silly some of them came to consider those answers silly too over time not all of not all again it was it was a rich variety but to be open to ask questions that otherwise seemed strange or silly I mean a lot of questions seem strange or silly at first and some of those not all but some of those questions when we bring our kind of disciplined um thinking to them can really surprise us and so that was the that's what I found so frankly endearing about the group so what happened to this group did it disband did they all just become popular phys what happened yeah they again it was kind of accidents of history that that by which they found each other in the early mid 70s and then by the late 70s early 80s they they began to kind of you know go their own ways um so some of them stayed in the Bay Area uh some of them moved on geographically um some of them became kind of very clever Consultants we might call them kind of entrepreneurs these days all kind kind of tasks some of which failed some of which you know succeeded on the margins uh one of them won the Nobel Prize right and so it really it's a it's a huge range of uh rags to riches to for some of them Rags again or to others um you know a kind of uh lasting place in in in our in our understanding of of how we've come to where we are today so and and many of them I should say many of them are still alive one or two have indeed passed away only recently they were doing this when they were in their 20s and 30s 50 years ago and so many of them are around they was around when was working on the book and they were very generous with their time when I had questions and and they would always get back to me right away and I had a chance to meet and and talk with them and so and I still hear from many of them to this day so you know they're all I think all of them have kept a sense of the Wonder I think that's fair to say some of them have pursued even more let's say heady topics that are On The Fringe or the or outside the mainstream about say could we understand UFOs are there ways to understand relativity in non-canonical or non unusual ways that might lead to strange effects again I'm not endorsing those claims but at least you can see them puzzling through them um and and others like I say have uh have now reached the very Pinnacle of success in our field like John clauser so it's it's a whole range and their legacy is that physics has continued to pursue these these questions and I understand I want to Pivot a little bit to talk a little bit about your work so I know you were involved at least in a in a in a as at least in some respect with Quantum Bell test a cosmic Bell test tell tell us about that yeah I was so it was it was really quite um it was one of the adventures of my life it wasn't just a highlight of my career it was even even more special than that but I'd written the book that we've been talking about and then you know after it came out some of the young physicist uh with whom I work um had read the book kind of for fun had a strange title and um you know they were curious so they read the book for fun and then we began talking about well could we imagine redoing or doing a new generation of bell test what using what we all have learned in the interim over the last you know several decades not just about Quantum Theory but about the structure of the universe so my younger colleagues and I were coming at this from astrophysics and cosmology not first and foremost from quantum physics per se and you know we've learned a lot about the big bag about the the kind of course of the universe over the last almost 14 billion years about the kind of causal structure which parts of the universe uh could have interacted with with other parts over time and so working with Andy fredman and Jason kikio uh they were at the time very young post talks uh we began wondering whether we could visit one of the most stubborn kind of loopholes in these generations of Bel test which was often called um the freedom of choice loophole or the Free Will loophole which is a bit more um sensationalistic but the idea was in any Bell test we have these two devices and physicist locally at each one have to choose what measurement to form in real time before that a member of the pair arrives and so it we have to do something like flip a coin and so um the question that was identified in the mid-70s by people like John clauser and talked about it and debated it with people like John Bell but was never really tackled in in um in new experiments was how do we know that we're using a Fair coin how do we know there was no hidden coordination or statistical correlation between the choices of what measurements to perform here and there which there something in the shared past that could have either tipped off the far side of the order in which measurements will be performed or maybe even nudged them both you know relativity says that things that are far part can interact it just takes some time well we've had 14 billion years of time right since the Big Bang so the question was could there have been something in the shared past some subtle effect that have been overlooked that could have kind of led to a correlation in the order in which questions were asked even though those devices are so far apart from each other today and so we decided to turn to the Heavens to turn the universe into a pair of random number generators not flip a coin you know in our in our local laboratory but turn to random processes far away and long ago on opposite sides of the sky and that's what put the cosmic in Cosmic Bell so we proposed this um we wrote a paper saying this is feasible there's light from very distant quazars very bright very early galaxies on opposite sides of the sky that lit up so early after the big bang that they had no chance to trade light signals with each other the light would be traveling through most of cosmic history toward the Earth we use those as our decision makers when we get this light on our Mountaintop this moment that light was emitted very early in Cosmic history depending on the properties of that light we receive that will tell us what measurement to perform here on our Earthbound and Tangled particle and so on over there so want those qu our signals to be as unentangled as possible as uncorrelated as possible and the universe is a big old place so it turns out one can search for really distant sources of light that were coming from opposite kind of separated parts of the sky and uh and then do an Earthbound test that way so we patched this idea so you're using the entire universe in your experiment 96% of it yes we use is this the largest experiment ever done well depends on how we how we characterize it uh but it certainly was among the biggest it was trying to push quantum theory and relativity out of their shared Comfort zones let's put it that way right so was really trying to ask questions about fundamental quantum theory with some real inputs to the experiment that span Cosmic scales that's certainly right um so I don't know if it was the biggest ever but was certainly trying to do that in a in an unusual way so as a theorist we said this could work we pitched it to Anton Zinger and he lit up immediately and he got very enthusiastic he and his group had thought similar questions as we then found out so we put a team together and we got finally got some generous support from the National Science Foundation and so we built this International collaboration we really did this we did a pilot test in uh Anton's home city of Vienna and based on how well that one turned out we did a big test on the island of La Palma in the Canary Islands with huge four meter telescopes it was just a joy and that was captured partly uh in this in this Nova film uh Einstein's Quantum riddle the the filmmakers are there they got some I think breathtaking footage of what it's like to work on a Mountaintop Observatory which is just jaw-droppingly beautiful they captured Us in moments of real uncertainty uh we got bad weather several nights we were Iced Out chased down the Mountaintop Midway down because the first few nights there were ice storms and if we didn't leave we'd you have to sleep in the telescope Dome basically so it was really you know wasn't so straightforward uh and and the filmmaker was there to catch you know kind of the highs and the lows both um which I'm very grateful for because it's you know I have my fond memories but I can go back and watch the footage too and say wow this really this is a team of 20 people working literally Around the Clock uh and and it was just a huge Adventure you thank you for doing the promo for me you did my job if you want to check that out you um that's on our website Nova maybe we can drop the link in the chat as well um but yes we did follow that experiment um a few years ago that's right so what um Mysteries of the universe are you trying to solve now well there are a couple left there's a few Mysteries left we're not we're not going out of work anytime soon you know one of the ones that I find most delightful and challenging really hard pivots a little bit away from Quantum anagement but it still gets to like what's the world made of I love those kinds of questions and one puzzle that's been with us for at least 50 years and has Trails even earlier around the same time that the the fundamental physics group was really forming and beginning to wonder about Quantum anagement people in other areas of field began to realize that our universe is chalk full of this mysterious stuff that we now call dark matter we don't know what it is and yet it seems to be everywhere and it seems to really have set our universe on its course in fact we need now to un to to take into account an enormous amount of dark matter if we to understand how the universe has evolved and in some sense even why we're here without dark matter it's not clear that galaxies could have formed at least not at the same rate or the same type that we you know have today maybe our own Galaxy couldn't have formed if there was no Milky Way galaxy it probably wouldn't be a on or an earth here you know for us to live on and ask questions about the Universe I have some dark matter here from physics at MIT I Peter Fisher has a bunch on his shelf too I recognize the box and so here a very small amount yes there there's approximately one per that volume one that's that's that box is great to show us just how thinly spread out it is in our local setting there'll be about roughly one you know kind of one proton's worth one hydrogen nucleus worth uh per kind of per box that size um per cubic centimeter anyway so maybe there's a few more than that but anyway it's pretty thin on the ground but when you add up how many cubic centimeters there are in the entire universe this stuff dominates it's more much more about five times more Dark Matter per per unit mass than all the ordinary matter that we know about the entire periodic table that Humanity spent a couple hundred years piecing together in testing thr in all the fancy stuff we've learned about from the large hron collider and experim before that the higs BOS on neutrinos throw it in all you want lots of great Nova special in those too those make up roughly 20% by mass of the stuff that's of the matter that seems to fill our universe so we have a big big challenge what is dark matter okay well one of my favorite hypothesis now is to say what if it's not some exotic new particle that no one's been able to find after 50 years of careful careful testing What If instead Dark Matter consists of ordinary matter the stuff that we do know a lot about that's locked locked up in unusual gravitational States known as black holes again lots of great Nova stuff on black holes um but what if these are not just ordinary black holes that we now know a lot about what if these are special black holes that formed right after the big bang they're called primordial or early Universe black black holes they formed by by kind of doing an end run by by by cutting out the typical um life course by which ordinary black holes are made these would have been made long before there were atoms L alone stars that collapsed to make astrophysical or Stellar black holes and stepen Hawking among others hypothesized about these 50 years ago in the mid 1970s the idea was like quantum entanglement kind of On The Fringe for a long time even though Elite physicist like in this case Steph Hawking had put it forward it was seen as a curiosity at best or a weird idea or not worth pursuing and really over the last roughly 10 years this hypothesis has come roaring back uh into interest partly because these other much better motivated or seemingly better motivated hypotheses like oh it's just some new particle keep coming up empty it doesn't mean the answer is Primal black holes but it gets really intriguing because now we know black holes are real that wasn't so clear at all in 1974 we can find other kinds of black holes now all the time with amazing astrophysical instruments we've learned a lot theoretically anyway we know a lot we know a lot about the early Universe what could have led to the formation of a population of these black holes early on we just know more of these puzzle pieces and a lot of them feel much more solid than they did when this was merely hypothetical 50 years ago so are you saying there could be a primordial tiny black hole in my office yes yes uh at the very now it's not very like they are among us they might be among us with with very dear colleagues uh I've been doing some work uh for on that exact question as of others if all of Dark Matter consists of these tiny black holes they would have to have a mass that was around the size of an asteroid they'd be like big space rocks in Mass but they're black holes which they've condensed they've shrunk that mass down to an impossibly small spatial size they they're so densely packed you take the mass of an asteroid a big Space Rock and you shrink it down to the size of an atom or smaller so it's a really really amazing exotic object it has um very interesting and strange properties so now if that's all of Dark Matter then you only need to sprinkle a couple of those around the solar system to make up for all the dark matter by mass that we know has to be there because each one is much more massive than say a typical particle so the number per volume goes down it's much less likely to have one in your office Caitlyn very I don't think there's something the mass of asteroid in my office probably you you'd know that you be tugging on you'd feel it to be but but instead there should be about one uh at least one or two Within a sphere the size of say Jupiter's orbit and it could be anywhere in in that sphere right and it could be zipping around at high speeds but you can presumably detect that astronomically then exactly right and so we have this really fun paper uh that's coming out soon actually coming out in one of the physics journals saying if that's really the case then there should be observable signals of of visible objects that we track with great care like the position of the planet Mars right thanks to 20 plus years of high Precision Telemetry to Mars orbiters and Mars rovers astronomers know the Earth Mars distance to an incredible accuracy centimeters amazing we know the distance between Earth and Mars to one tenth of a meter thanks to all these very cool you know basically Space Program projects that's amazing so now let's say some little tiny black hole goes zipping through this the solar system doesn't hit anything right it's mostly passing through empty space but it has enough mass and it's going so fast it sets Mars rocking just a little bit we're not talking about a Hollywood Blockbuster it's not Armageddon it's a tiny little shift a kind of rocking motion that would result in say the planet Mars but we monitor Mars so well that that rocking motion should indeed be observable over not such a long time period it should have a different kind of rocking motion than if other kinds of say space debris FL flu past so there we have reason to think it could be separated um from kind of other more more mundane explanations for these kind of um little Wiggles so this is the kind of thing we we can now try to do other colleagues wrote some really interesting papers saying what about the GPS satellite Network we know the positions of of 30 satellites to about centimeter accuracy and we've known that for decades so we have kind of historical Legacy data as well as going forward they're tracked so carefully because we need them for our navigation again if some get a little wobble not a huge effect would it show up in that kind of system as well so there's hope to think maybe we could test this bizarre sounding hypothesis what if all of dark matter is locked up in these tiny tiny microscopic black holes formed by the big bag it sounds like ridiculous we might know we might be able to tell over the coming decade or two and I find that great fascinating so you think in the next couple decades we'll have the observations to sort of verify or disprove this I think that's right I mean I think if no such W wobbles show up then that becomes a pretty tight constraint if a couple wobbles do show up then we'll have to play the usual game well it re was it really a black hole was a different mundane explanation we overlooked it'll be hard but if you find nothing that crosses the threshold then it's going to be harder to account for if all of Dark Matters black holes so it really does seem promising as a way to constrain and intriguing as a way to at least get some hints If there really were these these these wobbles that could be found and that is on a kind of decade long time scale not impossibly far into the future but we won't we won't know tomorrow but we might really know something concrete over the coming years fascinating well we are already well over time um David where can folks uh keep up with your work going forward if they want to um know the results of your black hole tests and well you know I I'm not on social media but I am uh I have a website a very oldfashioned website uh and I do keep that pretty up to date and so all our physics papers are available totally for free and open access on the pre-print server even before they're come out in the journals uh my colleagues and I really is quite common throughout physics to make sure that anyone can see them without you know any pay wall or restrictions I'm always updating it there uh to papers I write a lot of kind of more um accessible essays about those things I also make sure those are on the website and try to share them that way too and of course I love working with you and the team for Nova and other fun things on YouTube so hopefully that combination will will help uh help folks who are curious that's great yes uh you can watch any of the films David appears in on our website or on the PBS app if you want my top pick uh for right now I would go check out Einstein's Quantum riddle because that delves into and explains further what we just have been talking about in this conversation today uh David's also gonna appear in decoding the universe Quantum coming up this fall so stay tuned for that David thank you so much for joining us as always a pleasure to talk to you really Kaitlin thanks it was really fun for me and I hope folks enjoy the chat thank you thank you