The Forgotten Experiment That Proved Quantum Mechanics

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Publicado 2024-06-27
The Stern-Gerlach Experiment was the breakthrough that showed us the world of quantum physics. Einstein called it ‘the most interesting achievement’... but you’ve probably never heard of it…
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Inspiration Article: nautil.us/the-overlooked-experiment-that-revealed-…
Other Sources:
pubs.aip.org/physicstoday/article/56/12/53/632269/…
physicsworld.com/a/how-the-stern-gerlach-experimen…

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Chapters:
00:00 A Brief History Of Physics
01:46 Understanding The Atom
03:33 Bohr's Atomic Model
05:06 Ad Read
06:28 The Stern–Gerlach Experiment
09:06 How The Experiment Nearly Failed
11:07 The Breakthrough That Changed Physics Forever
12:33 The Twist In The Story


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Todos los comentarios (21)
  • @DrBenMiles
    I'm 100% embarrassed to say I knew very little about this experiment until starting researching it 😅 I'd always assumed something like the double slit experiment was our big break. Awesome experiment - let me know what you think! Also - go to www.piavpn.com/drbenmiles to get 83% off Private Internet Access with 4 months free
  • @OpieJohansen
    Didn't hear a word of Dr. Miles for the first two minutes because I was waiting for the two pictures on the wall behind him to move on their own again!
  • @davidwright5719
    Stern-Gerlach experiment is hardly forgotten; it’s covered in every QM class. Also, it was nowhere near first experiment to show quantum effects: blackbody radiation, hydrogen spectrum, etc. came first.
  • @karankakkar3999
    Literally all quantum textbooks start with explaining the significance of these experiments
  • @n-da-bunka2650
    Thanks for the "new" presentation of this scenario. I learned about the second-hand cigar smoke being a KEY to the success of this experiment but did not realize that it wasn't originally designed to identify spin.
  • @RGF19651
    I remember the Stern-Gerlach experiment being presented in my undergrad QM and Atomic Physics courses as the experiment that verified electron spin. Thanks for the real “back story”. Interesting how when one sets out to prove or disprove something, the results turn out to verify something different.
  • @cyrilio
    OMG, seeing people smoke cigars while doing lab work is so crazy.
  • @DrDeuteron
    they were also lucky that a 19th C mathematician named Sophus Lie worked an useless abstract realm that turned out to be not so useless, otherwise this two component spin thing would have never made any sense.
  • @christophas
    Sorry for being that guy, but you've some errors in the introduction. First, Stern was German and Breslau a German city back then. That changed in 1945. Secondly, the 19th century refers to 1801 till 1900. 1901 till 2000 is 20th century.
  • @waltertoki1
    This explanation on Bohr’s model missed a key part. Bohr used Planck’s constant h, that was used to explain Black Body radiation, in his model of the Hydrogen spectrum. This constant h divided by 2pi is the quantum unit of angular momentum that the electron can have when it orbits the nucleus. This was a revolutionary step in modern physics.
  • @rudycramer225
    Looks like that moment of clarity passed me by. Never understood a thing.
  • I got married. After that, I knew the reality around me was fundamentally different from what I thought I understood.
  • @karhukivi
    The earliest evidence for quantised electron energy levels in atoms were the narrow bands in the visible (and later IR and UV) emission spectra. The names given to the lines were "strong", "principal", "diffuse" and "fundamental" as scientists like Rydberg and Balmer tried to understand their significance. Those names live on as s, p, d and f sub-quantum levels for the orbitals. Bohr used the spectrum of hydrogen as the basis for his atomic model and realised the electrons could only have certain specified energy levels. Quantum physics was built up on a variety of observations from spectroscopy and mathematical models of radiation, etc., not just the work of one person or one particular experiment.
  • I'll give this guy credit he smoothly introduced his sponsor into the discussion. I'm a physics professor, I appreciate skillfulness even when it involves advertising. Better than the getting hit in the puss with a pie approach. Blueberry is my favorite.
  • @ytashu33
    Stern-Gerlach experiment is not forgotten, if mere amatures like myself, born long after that era, have some (small) understanding of it. Gotta say the last point you made about what they thought they were measuring vs what they actually measured, was something i hadn't really appreciated. Thanks for telling the tale in a fun and engaging way!
  • @Turnipstalk
    Your comment about the "Aha!" moment in science is spot on though it's sometimes the "that's funny..." moment. I liked the expression of it by Edna St. Vincent Millay, who was very definitely not a scientist but was similarly taken by Euclid's discoveries in plane geometry: "Euclid alone Has looked on beauty bare. Fortunate they Who but once only and then from far away Have heard her massy sandal set on stone." If you've had the experience you know what she means.
  • @shantanusapru
    So how did other scientists discover that they were wrong, and that what the two had discovered was actually electron spin? Maybe make a video on/explaining that?!! That'd be cool!
  • @normanstewart7130
    2:02: Breslau in 1912 was in the German (previously Prussian) province of Upper Silesia. It became part of Poland in 1945 (as Wrocław).
  • @johnrains8409
    Hate the term "broke physics." No one in history has ever broken physics. It has been whole and there all along.They just extend our understanding of it.
  • @Finkelthusiast
    I've heard abou this experiment for years and I am so glad to hear the story of the hurdles and insights that we needed to attain the result. Great video!