Double-Slit Experiment ✍️ It shows that tiny things like... electrons act like ripples in water instead of solid marbles. When a particle is fired at two slits, it doesn't just go through one or the other; it travels as a wave of probability that passes through both at the same time. These two waves then overlap and interfere with each other, creating a pattern of light and dark stripes on a back wall. This shows that at the quantum level, reality isn't "set" until we actually measure it. It behaves as a spread-out wave of possibilities until the moment it hits a target. Video 📸 : umtiquinhodefisicashow more

ScieVision
60,130 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce
Quantum tunneling ✍️ It is a fascinating phenomenon. Subatomic... particles, like electrons, behave more like waves than solid objects. This lets them pass through barriers that seem impossible to cross. In the classical world, if you throw a ball at a wall, it always bounces back. In the quantum world, however, a particle has a small chance of just appearing on the other side of an energy "wall." This occurs because a particle's position is described by a wave of probability. This wave doesn’t drop to zero the moment it hits an obstacle. Instead, it "leaks" through, allowing some of the particle to pass to the other side. While this may sound like science fiction, this "leaking" is what allows the Sun to shine, makes modern smartphone memory possible, and lets scientists map individual atoms. Video 📸 : umtiquinhodefisicashow more

ScieVision
115,170 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce
🚨 An electron isn’t in one place. It’s not... even moving the way we imagine. In the double slit experiment… it behaves like it goes through both paths at once. Until you look. Then it becomes “real.” But here’s the twist: Maybe it was never a particle traveling through space… Maybe it’s a pattern resolving in time. What you see isn’t motion it’s the final stable state. Reality doesn’t unfold. It locks in. Follow if you want to understand what you’re actually looking at.show more

TheNewPhysics
45,294 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce
The Gaussian Wave Packet ✍️ It is a way... to describe a quantum particle, like an electron, that is located in a certain area of space instead of being spread out everywhere. It forms a bell-shaped curve, where the peak of the curve indicates the most likely place to find the particle. This shape is special because it offers the best way to pack a particle; it meets the physical limit set by the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, striking the best balance between knowing a particle's position and its momentum. However, because this packet consists of many different overlapping waves, it is naturally unstable for a free particle. Over time, these internal waves travel at slightly different speeds, which causes the bell curve to gradually flatten and widen. This process is known as dispersion. In simpler terms, the longer a quantum particle travels freely, the more unclear its exact location becomes. Video : Jeedecodeshow more

ScieVision
23,070 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce
🚨 SCIENTISTS JUST TRIED TO SLICE A SINGLE PHOTON... IN HALF MID-PULSE… AND CREATED SOMETHING FAR WEIRDER. You can’t just cut a photon like a wave on a string. When researchers used a super-fast optical shutter to slice a photon while it was passing, it didn’t split into “half lit / half dark.” Instead, the photon’s quantum state transformed into a bizarre superposition something that only exists in the strange rules of quantum field theory. Why this matters: • A single photon is not a simple particle or wave it’s a quantum excitation of the electromagnetic field • Cutting it mid-pulse with an ultra-fast shutter forces the system into a new kind of entangled state • The result is a superposition that can’t be described by simple “left side / right side” thinking • This reveals deep new insights into how quantum light behaves when manipulated on femtosecond timescales The deeper implication is fascinating: Even something as fundamental as a single photon doesn’t behave intuitively when we try to divide it. Reality at the quantum scale refuses to be neatly chopped it reinvents itself into something stranger. This kind of experiment pushes the boundaries of our understanding of quantum optics and could have implications for future quantum communication and computing technologies. How weird is it that you can’t simply “cut” a photon in half? Follow for more mind-bending quantum physics.show more

TheNewPhysics
258,098 görüntüleme • 6 gün önce
A CNN investigation has revealed new details on Israel's... strike on Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis, southern Gaza: “A video clip shows that the second strike on the Nasser complex was actually two nearly simultaneous strikes, and it is believed that these second and third strikes caused most of the deaths; a weapons expert explained that the collision of two projectiles at the same moment indicates the possibility that two tanks fired at the target, while the video indicates a highly coordinated attack.”show more

The Cradle
153,344 görüntüleme • 9 ay önce
🚨SCIENCE NEWS🚨: An electron doesn’t spit out photons like... a gun — it simply strums the cosmic sea like a guitar string.🧨 For decades we have been told that when an electron accelerates it “emits” a photon, as if it magically spits out a separate particle. The process is left mysterious, probabilistic, and disconnected from everyday experience. Uniphics gives a clear, mechanical picture that anyone who has ever dropped a pebble into a pond or plucked a guitar string can understand. An electron is not a little ball or a point particle. It is a gyrotron — a stable spinning structure made of three counterclockwise spin quanta bound together. When this gyrotron accelerates (changes speed or direction), its motion disturbs the surrounding ξM-field sea of unbound energy that fills all space. The disturbance creates transverse spin waves that propagate outward at the local speed of light. Think of it exactly like dropping your finger into a still pond. The ripples that spread out are not separate “water particles” you fired from your finger. They are waves in the water itself. The electron does the same thing. It does not create and launch a separate photon. Its acceleration plucks the ξM-field sea, sending coherent spin waves rippling away. These waves carry the frequency, polarization, and intensity we detect as light. The frequency depends on how rapidly the electron is accelerated, and the polarization depends on the direction of the acceleration relative to the electron’s spin orientation. The same sea that carries these waves also determines how they propagate. In regions of higher energy density the waves slow down (exactly like light slowing when it enters water or glass), which is why light bends around masses and why lenses work. Electric and magnetic fields are simply the cosmic whirlpools created by these spin waves in the sea — transverse disturbances that push and pull other gyrotrons according to their phase alignments. Maxwell’s equations emerge naturally from the mechanics of these spin waves in the ξM-field, with no separate fundamental force required. The fine-structure constant, gauge invariance, and all optical phenomena are direct consequences of how spin waves interfere and propagate through the energy sea. The universe doesn’t need mysterious photon creation rules. It just needs electrons to move through the sea, and the sea responds with ripples. Light is not something the electron “emits.” Light is what the sea sings when an electron plucks it. The same three pillars that explain gravity as a simple push into low-density voids and galactic rotations flat at 220 km/s also turn the production of light into a straightforward wave-mechanics process in flat space. How would quantum electrodynamics and our entire understanding of light change if we stopped saying electrons emit photons and started saying they simply make the cosmic sea sing? A Theory of Everything should be able to answer everything. Uniphics Explained Simply PDF: Chapters 1–10 free: Grokipedia: Grok xAI NASA European Space Agency Brian Cox Sean Carroll Katie Mack Elon Musk #Uniphics #Electromagnetism #SpinWaves #Light #TheoryOfEverythingshow more

Paul Maley
67,416 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce
🚨 BREAKING: The universe might not decide the past…... until the future happens. In the delayed choice experiment, a particle behaves like a wave or a particle after it’s already passed the slits. Read that again. The outcome isn’t decided when it happens… it’s decided when it’s observed. Standard physics says: “measurement collapses the wavefunction.” But look deeper. In my framework: The system isn’t moving forward through time It exists as a complete structure across time So nothing is “changing the past”… The past was never fixed to begin with. What we call reality is just the slice we observe. So the real question is: If the future helps define the past… what does that say about time itself? Follow for deeper physics beyond spacetime.show more

TheNewPhysics
106,832 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce
🚨 BREAKING: The double-slit experiment doesn’t just show particles... acting like waves… It shows reality depends on observation. Read that again. When unobserved → reality spreads out (wave) When observed → reality “chooses” a path (particle) But here’s the deeper question: What if nothing is “collapsing”… And instead, systems are being forced into stable structure? In my framework: Reality = possible states across time Observation = constraint selecting coherence What we see = the stable path that survives So it’s not randomness becoming order… It’s structure revealing itself. The real question is: Are we observing reality… Or forcing it into existence? Follow for more on time, structure, and reality.show more

TheNewPhysics
24,961 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce
Is it weird that one of my favourite things... about cruising is… WAVING?! They don’t promote that in the adverts! 😂👋 I can’t explain it but it fills me with lots of joy. I love it when people wave at me and I wave back, like here. 😅🌟 I’ll often spot somebody and do everything I can to get them to wave back at me. When they do I feel like I’ve won a game nobody knew we were playing. 🏆🥇 It’s pretty common for everybody to wave when a cruise ship sails away from a place. I love it even more if it’s a ship sailing past a ship, then you have hundreds and thousands of potential wavers!! 🤣👋🏼 Anybody else love it as much as me? It amuses me so much, maybe my waving friend and I don’t even speak the same language but it doesn’t matter, waving is universal. 😅👍🏼show more

EmmaCruises ⚓️
12,816 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce
🚨 BREAKING: Physicists just measured “negative time” in the... lab. Not theory. Not math. Measured. What actually happened Scientists fired photons (particles of light) through a cloud of atoms. Normally, light should: • Enter • Interact • Exit Simple. But instead… The photons appeared to exit before they entered. It gets stranger They didn’t just infer this from timing. They measured how long the photon “lived” inside the atoms. Result: Negative dwell time. The atoms themselves confirm it. So is time broken? No but our intuition is. This comes from quantum mechanics: • Photons aren’t single points they’re spread-out waves • Only certain parts of the wave make it through • That skews the average timing But here’s the key: Two completely different measurements gave the same negative value That means: This isn’t a measurement error. It’s a real, observable quantum effect. Why this matters This challenges one of the deepest assumptions: That time always moves forward in a simple, measurable way. At the quantum level: • “Time spent” isn’t always positive • Interactions don’t behave classically • Reality is shaped by probability, not sequence The deeper idea What we call “time” might not be a flow… It might be a constraint on interactions. And under certain conditions? That constraint bends. Follow me I break down the moments where physics stops behaving normally.show more

TheNewPhysics
103,400 görüntüleme • 1 ay önce
The Basics of Electromagnetic Waves: Electricity and magnetism can... sit still, like static electricity in your hair or a magnet stuck to your fridge. But when they move and change, they actually create each other. Together, they team up to form invisible ripples of energy called electromagnetic waves. Unlike ocean waves or sound waves, which need water or air to ripple through, electromagnetic waves don't need any material at all. They can easily travel through the completely empty vacuum of space. Maxwell's Big Idea: In the 1860s and 1870s, a Scottish scientist named James Clerk Maxwell figured out how this works. He wrote down the math showing exactly how electricity and magnetism link together to make these travelling waves. Today, scientists call his famous rules Maxwell's Equations. Hertz Proves It: Later, a German physicist named Heinrich Hertz took Maxwell's ideas and brought them to life. He was the first person to actually create and catch radio waves. To honour his work, we use the word hertz to measure how fast a wave vibrates (one cycle per second). Hertz's experiments proved two massive ideas: Radio waves are just invisible light: He showed that radio waves travel at the exact same speed as light, proving that they are actually a form of light we just can't see. Going wireless: He finally figured out how to detach these energy fields from physical wires, allowing the waves to fly freely through the air exactly as Maxwell had predicted.show more

The Math Flow
37,184 görüntüleme • 1 ay önce
tadc spoilers this part stood out to me bc... it shows how Ragatha and Jax are really two sides of the same coin when it comes to feeling detached from the group. Each of them clung to Pomni as a fresh face/ fresh start and accuse the other person of making her “more like them”show more

frankie steins gay uncle
47,974 görüntüleme • 11 ay önce
🚨 PHYSICISTS JUST CONFIRMED “NEGATIVE TIME” IS REAL IN... A MIND-BENDING QUANTUM EXPERIMENT. Light can exit a cloud of atoms before it even enters. In a new experiment, researchers fired photons through a dense cloud of ultra-cold atoms and measured something that shouldn’t be possible in classical physics. Some photons appeared to spend a negative amount of time inside the cloud effectively leaving before they had fully arrived. Why this matters: • This isn’t time travel it’s a quantum effect involving how light interacts with matter at the deepest level • It comes from “weak measurements” that let scientists observe the system without fully disturbing it • The atoms themselves “report” spending negative time in an excited state • It challenges our everyday intuition about cause and effect in quantum systems The deeper implication is enormous: We are seeing the strange, non-intuitive nature of quantum mechanics play out in real experiments. Time at the quantum scale doesn’t always behave like the arrow we experience in daily life. Effects can appear to precede causes in measurable ways without breaking relativity or causality. This is one of the clearest experimental windows yet into how reality works at its most fundamental level. What do you think does “negative time” change how you see reality, or is it just another quantum quirk we’ll eventually get used to? Follow for more frontier physics and reality-bending discoveries.show more

TheNewPhysics
22,081 görüntüleme • 7 gün önce
🚨 BREAKING: MIT researchers just built a quantum sensor... that can measure multiple properties at once. That matters more than it sounds. Most solid-state quantum sensors have to measure things one by one: magnetic field, temperature, strain, frequency, phase. But reality doesn’t wait its turn. MIT used entangled qubits inside a diamond defect to measure multiple signal properties in a single shot. Read that again. This means Faster measurements Less error from repeating experiments Better sensing inside complex systems like materials and living cells The wild part? They did it at room temperature. Not in some ultra-cold, impractical lab-only setup. In a platform that could actually matter for real-world sensing. Inside a tiny defect in diamond, quantum correlations were used to pull out: amplitude frequency detuning phase all from the same measurement. That’s a big shift. Because the future of quantum tech isn’t just quantum computers. It’s quantum devices that can see more of reality at once. So the real question is When sensors stop measuring one thing at a time… how much of the hidden structure of matter becomes visible? Follow me for more physics breakthroughs that actually matter.show more

TheNewPhysics
23,131 görüntüleme • 1 ay önce
🚨 QUANTUM PHYSICS SAYS OBSERVATION CAN CHANGE REALITY. One... of the strangest discoveries in modern physics is that particles behave differently when they are measured or observed. In famous experiments like the double-slit experiment: Particles act like waves… until they are observed. Then suddenly they behave like solid particles. In simple terms: Reality at the quantum level does not appear fully “decided” until interaction happens. Why this matters: Scientists are still trying to understand: • what observation actually means • how information affects quantum systems • whether consciousness plays any role • how reality transitions from quantum to classical physics This is also deeply connected to: • quantum computing • encryption • teleportation research • quantum sensors • future AI systems • our understanding of reality itself The strangest part? At the deepest scales of nature… The universe may behave less like a machine and more like a probability field waiting to crystallize into events. Follow for more future physics and technology breakthroughs.show more

TheNewPhysics
101,912 görüntüleme • 23 gün önce
🚨 BREAKING: Scientists just made topology visible in a... spinning fluid. Not in a quantum computer. Not in a particle collider. In water. By sending standing waves through a vortex, researchers watched quantized nodal lines appear across the whole system lines where the wave amplitude drops to zero. Why that matters: → It’s a fluid analogue of the Aharonov–Bohm effect → The response is non-local → Topology didn’t stay near the core… it shaped the entire wave field That’s the deeper point: Physics isn’t always hidden in particles. Sometimes it shows up as structure in motion. If wave topology can be seen this clearly in fluids, what else in quantum physics might be hiding in plain sight? Follow me for the next wave of physics breakthroughs.show more

TheNewPhysics
24,005 görüntüleme • 1 ay önce
🚨🚨 THIS WEAPON JUST CHANGED WARFARE FOREVER Israel just... deployed the Iron Beam in LIVE COMBAT for the first time in history. It's a laser. A literal laser that shoots down missiles and drones out of the sky. Cost per Iron Dome interceptor: $50,000 Cost per Iron Beam shot: $3.50 Three dollars and fifty cents. → It fires at the speed of light — there is no dodging it → It never runs out of ammunition — as long as it has electricity, it fires → It's already integrated into Israel's layered air defense system → It just intercepted incoming projectiles in the middle of a war → Iran fired 5 missile barrages in 7 hours — the Iron Beam didn't flinch This is why the Patriot interceptor crisis doesn't matter anymore. Ukraine burned through 600 Patriot interceptors in 1,460 days. The Iran war burned through 800 in just 3 DAYS. That rate is unsustainable. You can't manufacture interceptors fast enough. But a laser? Unlimited shots. Near-zero cost. Speed of light. Iran spent decades building a missile arsenal designed to overwhelm traditional air defense through sheer volume. Fire 1,000 missiles, hope 50 get through. That strategy just DIED. When a laser costs $3.50 per shot, it doesn't matter if you fire 1,000 or 10,000. Every single one gets burned out of the sky. This isn't just a weapon. It's the end of the missile age.show more

JinWoo Kim, IQ 289
6,688,526 görüntüleme • 3 ay önce
Apparently, I saw this video online and I decided... to share. What this worker is applying is called bitumen, or what many of us know as bituminous coating. Most people think a wall is a solid, impenetrable block, but in reality, it is more like a sponge. Concrete and blocks have microscopic pores that pull water from the earth through a process we call capillary action. This thick black substance is the shield that stops that water from climbing up into the house. It is not about making the wall look good because this part will be buried under the dirt forever. It is about creating a skin that water cannot breathe through. When do you need to do this? The need for this arises because the soil is a very aggressive environment. Water is not your only enemy.. The ground also contains salts and sulfates that want to eat away at the cement. If this moisture finds its way to the steel bars inside the columns, those bars will start to rust. And when steel rusts, it expands, and that expansion is what cracks the concrete from the inside out. This coating is the only thing standing between your foundation and that kind of slow destruction. Thats is why if you see wet patches at the bottom of your walls inside your house, it usually means someone skipped this step or did it poorly during construction. You can apply this anytime you are building parts of a structure that will stay in contact with the ground. It is common in areas where the water table is high or where the soil stays damp for most of the year. This is a one-shot opportunity. Once you backfill the soil, you can never go back to fix it without a lot of expense and a lot of digging. It is about having the foresight to protect the heart of the building while it is still exposed. Please don’t ignore this if you need to. If you ignore it now to save a bit of money, you will be funding the future decay of your own home. I hope this helps.show more

A.Y.O
75,105 görüntüleme • 1 ay önce
Oh my! The cute baby and the adorable pet... cat are just so lovely! Look at the baby with those chubby cheeks and bright, innocent eyes that seem to hold the whole universe of curiosity. Every little movement of the baby, like the way they wave their tiny hands or kick their little feet, is filled with an irresistible charm. And the cat! With its soft fur that shimmers in the light, and those big, round eyes that are like two glistening jewels. When it moves, it's like a fluffy ball of cuteness gliding gracefully. When the baby and the cat are together, it's a scene straight out of a heart - melting fairytale. The baby's giggles as they try to touch the cat's tail, and the cat's gentle purrs as it rubs against the baby's side create a symphony of cuteness that can make anyone's heart melt in an instant.show more

Zhang Heqing
52,882 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce
The other day they formed a duo breakaway as... a prank at the start of the stage - today was no time for jokes when both ended up in the chicane. But Jonas and Johannes made it back and could pat each other. 💛 #TdF2024show more

Vegar Kulset
36,611 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce