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4 votes
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Whiplash (as reviewed by a jazz musician)
5 votes -
Film Theory: All your memes are dead
3 votes -
How I changed the law with a GitHub pull request
20 votes -
The birthplace of the modern apple
6 votes -
Black Mesa | Xen trailer
12 votes -
Searching for gold (illegally) in South Africa's abandoned mines
10 votes -
Trump demands action to reduce deficit and pushes new deficit spending
12 votes -
'They ordered me to get an abortion': A Chinese woman's ordeal in Xinjiang
12 votes -
Time is different now
12 votes -
Poor English, few jobs: Are Australian universities using international students as 'cash cows'?
9 votes -
Doug Ford ends independence for all officers of the Ontario legislature
10 votes -
Will Britain’s beaten, betrayed migrant children find justice at last? Thousands forcibly sent to the Commonwealth from 1945-70 still await compensation – and for many time is running out
5 votes -
Why is it becoming increasingly more wrong to kill animals for food?
Probably in the majority of history people used to hunt, or kill farm animals for food without a second thought. But in the recent years it looks like the public opinion is shifting in a way when...
Probably in the majority of history people used to hunt, or kill farm animals for food without a second thought. But in the recent years it looks like the public opinion is shifting in a way when perception of eating meat is kinda like perception of homophobia or racism. Arguments against eating meat and for preserving farm animal lives are actively upvoted, and with this tendency being non vegetarian is already becoming "uncool" and eventually will be frowned upon, like littering.
Is that because hardcore vegetarians and animal rights activists got their voices spread in social media? Or it's mostly an environmental problem, particularly with large farm animals? Or humans are quickly becoming better, more civilized? If so, why meat eating is such a high priority issue to address when issues of people to people interactions are still far from being solved?
23 votes -
This Week's Releases 23/11 - Oneohtrix Point Never, Dipset, Rita Ora
Releases of the week 17/11/2018 - 23/11/2018 Featured Release Oneohtrix Point Never - Love In The Time Of Lexapro (EP) (Prog Electronic, Ambient) Oneohtrix Point Never has dropped off his new EP,...
Releases of the week 17/11/2018 - 23/11/2018
Featured Release
Oneohtrix Point Never - Love In The Time Of Lexapro (EP) (Prog Electronic, Ambient)
Oneohtrix Point Never has dropped off his new EP, Love in the Time of Lexapro....
The new effort follows producer Daniel Lopatin’s impressive 2018 album, Age Of, and The Station EP from July. It contains a pair of new songs and alternate, collaborative versions of two Age Of tracks.
The two previously unreleased originals are titled, “Thank God I’m a Country Girl” and “Love in the Time of Lexapro”. The latter title track has been an audience favorite on Lopatin’s Age Of tour, but has never been properly recorded and released until now. Also included is a rework of Age Of’s “Last Known Image Of A Song” from veteran Japanese experimental musician and composer Ryuichi Sakamoto (The Revenant), as well as an updated take on Age Of highlight “Babylon” featuring additional contributions from (Sandy) Alex G.”Other Notable Relases
Dipset - Diplomatic Ties (Trap, Hip Hop)
Rita Ora - Let You Love Me (Pop, Electropop)
Boosie Badass - Boosie Blues Cafe (Hip Hop, Blues)
Art Brut - Wham! Bang! Pow! Let’s Rock Out! (Indie, Rock)
Feel free to discuss or feature any and all other releases in the comments below
Discussion Points
Have you listened to any of these releases yet?
What are your thoughts?
What are you looking forward to listen to?
What have you enjoyed from these artists in the past?// All feedback on this format welcome below.
4 votes -
Manic pixie prostitute
9 votes -
People who have traveled many places across the world- why did you, how did you, and should others?
What's your story, where did you go, and how were you able to do it?
8 votes -
A layperson's introduction to the nature of light and matter, part 1
Introduction I want to give an introduction on several physics topics at a level understandable to laypeople (high school level physics background). Making physics accessible to laypeople is a...
Introduction
I want to give an introduction on several physics topics at a level understandable to laypeople (high school level physics background). Making physics accessible to laypeople is a much discussed topic at universities. It can be very hard to translate the professional terms into a language understandable by people outside the field. So I will take this opportunity to challenge myself to (hopefully) create an understandable introduction to interesting topics in modern physics. To this end, I will take liberties in explaining things, and not always go for full scientific accuracy, while hopefully still getting the core concepts across. If a more in-depth explanation is wanted, please ask in the comments and I will do my best to answer.
Previous topics
Bookmarkable meta post with links to all previous topics
Today's topic
Today's topic is the dual nature of light and matter, the wave-particle duality. It is a central concept in quantum mechanics that - as is tradition - violates common sense. I will first discuss the duality for light and then, in the next post, for matter.
The dual nature of light
In what terms can we think of light so that its behaviour becomes understandable to us? As waves? Or as particles? There are arguments to be made for both. Let's look at what phenomena we can explain if we treat light as a wave.
The wave nature of light
Let's start with an analogy. Drop two stones in a pond, imagine what happens to the ripples in the pond when they meet each other. They will interact, when two troughs meet they amplify each other, forming a deeper trough. When two crests meet they do the same. When a crest and a trough meet they cancel out.
Now if we shine light through two small openings and observe the resulting pattern, we see it's just like ripples in a pond, forming an interference pattern. When looking at the pattern formed on a screen placed at some distance from the openings, we see a striped pattern Light can be described as an electromagnetic wave, with crests and troughs. It sure seems like light is wavey! The wave nature of light allows us to describe phenomena like refraction and diffraction.
The particle nature of light
When we shine light on some metals, they will start tossing out electrons. This is called the photoelectric effect. How can we understand this process? Well we know light is a wave, so we imagine that the wave crashes into the electron that is chilling out near the surface of the metal. Once the electron has absorbed enough of the light's energy it will be able to overcome the attractive forces between itself and the positively charged atom core (remember, an electron has negative charge and so is attracted to the atom cores). So a higher intensity of light should make the electron absorb the required amount of energy more quickly. Easy, done!
However, there's something very peculiar going on with the photoelectric effect. If we shine low frequency light on said metal, no matter how intense the light, not a single electron will emerge. Meanwhile if we shine very little high frequency light on the metal, no matter how low the intensity, the electron will emerge. But how can this be? A higher intensity of light should mean the electron is receiving more energy. Why does frequency enter into this?
It seems that the electron needs a single solid punch in order to escape the metal. In other words, it seems it needs to be hit by something like a microscopic billiard ball that will punch it out of the metal in one go. The way physicists understand this is by saying light is made up out of particles called photons, and that the energy a photon carries is linked to its frequency. So, now we can understand the photoelectric effect! When the frequency is high enough, the photons in the light beam all individually carry enough energy to convince an electron to leave the metal. When the frequency is too low, none of the photons individually can knock an electron out of the metal. So even if we fire a single photon, with high enough frequency, at the metal we will see one electron emerging. If we shine low frequency light with a super high intensity at the metal, not a single photon will emerge.
So there you have it! Light is made out of particles. Wait, what? You just told us it's made out of electromagnetic waves!
The wave-particle duality of light
So, maybe light is just particles and the wave are some sort of emerging behaviour? This was a popular idea, one that Einstein held for some time. Remember the experiment where we shone light through two small openings and saw interference (commonly known as the double slit experiment)? Let's just take a single photon and shoot it at the openings! Because light is particles we'll see the photon just goes through either opening - like a particle would. Then all the non-believers will have to admit light is made out of particles! However, when we do the experiment we see the photon interfere with itself, like it was a wave. Remember this picture which we said was due to wave interference of light? When a single photon goes through the openings, it will land somewhere on the screen, but it can only ever land in an area where the light waves wouldn't cancel out. If we shoot a bunch of photons through the openings one at a time, we will see that the photons create the same pattern as the one we said is due to wave interference!
Implications
So it would seem light acts like a particle in some cases, but it acts like a wave in some others. Let's take a step back and question these results. Why are we trying to fit light into either description? Just because it's convenient for us to think about things like waves and particles - we understand them intuitively. But really, there is no reason nature needs to behave in ways we find easy to understand. Why can't a photon be a bit wavey and a bit particley at the same time? Is it really that weird, or is it just our intuition being confused by this world we have no intuitive experience with? I would love to hear your opinions in the comments!
Observing photons
To add one final helping of crazy to this story; if we measure the photon's location right after it emerges from the slit we find that it doesn't interfere with itself and that it just went through a single slit. This links back to my previous post where I described superpositions in quantum mechanics. By observing the photon at the slits, we collapsed its superposition and it will behave as if it's really located at one spot, instead of being somehow spread out like a wave and interacting with itself. The self interaction is a result of its wavefunction interacting with itself, a concept that I will explain in the next post.
Conclusion
We learned that light cannot be described fully by treating it simply as a wave or simply as a bunch of particles. It seems to be a bit of both - but neither - at the same time. This forces us to abandon our intuition and accept that the quantum world is just fundamentally different from our every day life.
Next time
Next time we will talk about the dual nature of matter and try to unify the wave and particle descriptions through a concept known as the wavefunction.
Feedback
As usual, please let me know where I missed the mark. Also let me know if things are not clear to you, I will try to explain further in the comments!
Addendum
The photoelectric effect is actually what gave Einstein his Nobel prize! Although he is famous for his work on relativity theory he was very influential in the development of quantum mechanics too.
21 votes -
Ryanair, Berlin, and Hamiltonian cycles - finding a travel route using graph theory
8 votes -
Children of Daicon
6 votes -
Parliament seizes cache of Facebook internal papers
9 votes -
Help! I'm indecisive and I want a keyboard.
I know there are at least fifteen threads on ~comp alone about mechanical keyboards, but, this one is mine. I recently had a run in with tendinitis, which taught me the importance of ergonomics,...
I know there are at least fifteen threads on ~comp alone about mechanical keyboards, but, this one is mine.
I recently had a run in with tendinitis, which taught me the importance of ergonomics, but I still wanted the clickety clack of a mechanical keyboard, so I decided to consider buying an ergonomic mechanical keyboard.
The first one that I looked at was the ErgoDox EZ (it was the first one I saw). It had a split layout, open source firmware, and a positive review from Linus Tech Tips.
The second one was the Ultimate Hacking Keyboard (I saw the Hacker News thread). I was interested in it for the Trackball Module.
These two keyboards are different enough from each other, so it's hard to compare them.
In conclusion, why should I choose one over the other?
14 votes -
'Sci-fi' plane with no moving parts flies successfully
12 votes -
Every 7.8μs your computer’s memory has a hiccup
19 votes -
Same-sex marriage advocates lose Taiwan referendums
9 votes -
Back from the edge: It’s easy to blame online rhetoric for violence. The reality is much harder
7 votes -
You no longer have to work and are extremely wealthy, what hobbies would you like to pursue?
Assume you have all the wealth necessary to do whatever. Money can buy all the things and grant you access to do your favourite things, but time is something is valuable and priceless. What would...
Assume you have all the wealth necessary to do whatever. Money can buy all the things and grant you access to do your favourite things, but time is something is valuable and priceless. What would be worth your value to you because you simply enjoy it?
30 votes -
What do you legally “own” with Bitcoin? A short introduction to krypto-property
7 votes -
A program to reduce Earth's heat capture by injecting aerosols into the atmosphere from high-altitude aircraft is possible, but unreasonably costly with current technology.
9 votes -
Muslim Magomayev - Luchshij gorod Zemli (The best city on Earth) (1964)
6 votes -
Taiwan ruling party suffers major defeat in local elections
9 votes -
Natalie Wynn: The stylish socialist who is trying to save YouTube from alt-right domination
32 votes -
New research suggests optimism for HIV/AIDS
6 votes -
World Record Progression: Super Mario Bros. 3 Warpless | Summoning Salt
15 votes -
What are you reading these days? #7
What are you reading currently? Fiction or non-fiction, any genre, any language! Tell us what you're reading, and talk a bit about it. Past weeks: Week #1 · Week #2 · Week #3 · Week #4 · Week #5 ·...
What are you reading currently? Fiction or non-fiction, any genre, any language! Tell us what you're reading, and talk a bit about it.
Past weeks: Week #1 · Week #2 · Week #3 · Week #4 · Week #5 · Week #6
11 votes -
A site that shows the most popular boards on 4chan right now
14 votes -
A break in the quest for the quantum speed limit
7 votes -
One of the few places where a communist can still dream
7 votes -
The Snowden Legacy, part one: What’s changed, really?
11 votes -
What these two French words can teach us about social change
3 votes -
Your own user page now has paginated Topics and Comments views - let's talk about user history visibility
When you're viewing your own user page, there are now two other "tabs" available, one for showing only topics that you've posted, and one for only comments. These pages are paginated, so you can...
When you're viewing your own user page, there are now two other "tabs" available, one for showing only topics that you've posted, and one for only comments. These pages are paginated, so you can go back through your whole history of topics/comments. I also intend to make the "recent activity" view paginated as well, but that's a tiny bit more complicated, so I left it out for now.
I plan to extend the tabs/pagination to all user pages some time next week, but as I previously promised, I wanted to give people at least a few days to be able to review their own posts and go back and see if there's anything they want to edit/delete before other users can more easily look through their posts.
This leads into a discussion that I want to have about whether we should do anything special to hide user history.
In general, I think that showing user history is good. It's valuable from an accountability perspective and it has a lot of legitimate benefits. If I run across a user that consistently makes good posts, it's nice to be able to look at their history and see some of the other comments they've made. Maybe (once the site is larger, anyway), I'll even learn about some new groups that I'm interested in by seeing where that user hangs out.
However, there are also obvious downsides, and we're seeing some major demonstrations of this in the media lately (mostly applied to Twitter). I don't want to get into the individual cases, but there have been repeated instances of people digging up years-old tweets and using them as ways to attack people. The main problem with this is that a full history (especially when combined with search) makes it very easy to find things to shame people about, especially when they're pulled entirely out of context of how they were written in the first place.
Tildes is still very new, but this is a real possibility as the site goes on. Do we want people to be able to easily dig up old comments a user made 5+ years ago? Do the potential downsides of that ability outweigh the benefits from being able to easily look back through a user's history?
One other thing to keep in mind is that once the site is publicly visible (and especially once there's an API), there will be external databases of everyone's posts. We can make it more difficult/inconvenient for people to be able to search/review user history, but we can't make it impossible. There's just no way to do that with a site where your posts are public.
Let me know your thoughts, it's a really difficult subject and one that I've been thinking about a lot myself as more and more of these "person in spotlight has embarrassing social media history" cases come up.
79 votes -
The “geno-economists” say DNA can predict our chances of success. Critics counter that their methods are naïve, offensive or both.
5 votes -
When is Firefox going to add support for dynamic module imports?
And currently it's a SyntaxError to boot. So nothing runs, even it doesn't run into an import call.
4 votes -
A group of school students preparing for a nationwide strike over climate change inaction have prompted the closure of Opposition Leader Bill Shorten's electorate office.
8 votes -
Seven cookbooks for getting started with a paleo diet
5 votes -
A look into the accident that was gated reverb and how it created a decade of music - and then made its return in the here and now | Vox
8 votes -
Song lyrics repetition analysis
11 votes -
Thousands of Cuban doctors leave Brazil after Bolsonaro's win
12 votes -
In solidarity with Library Genesis and Sci-Hub
28 votes -
Russia fails to curb new powers of chemical weapons watchdog
7 votes