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New magnetic component discovered in the Faraday effect

We intuitively think in particles and see a world of billiard balls colliding with one another.

But actually everything is merely waves and fields.

There's going to be a time where humans finally reconcile the quantum with the newtonian -- and I can't wait for that day

18 hours agonamanyayg

I disagree. Our notion of waves is no less an analogy to macroscopic phenomena than billiard balls. There’s no avoiding the dual nature, and there’s no problem with saying that the wave analogy works in some places, but the particle analogy works in others. The only real truth here is “neither.” A photon is a photon, and there is no macroscopic analogy it reduces to perfectly.

3 hours agosevensor

[dead]

2 hours agoszundi

There's no problem reconciling the quantum with the Newtonian. Quantum mechanics recovers Newtonian mechanics in the appropriate limit. The problem is reconciling the quantum and the Einsteinian.

16 hours agocanjobear

But there’s no quantum explanation of gravity, right?

16 hours agososodev

Actually, Newtonian gravity can be added to QM and work perfectly well. It's GR gravity that doesn't work with QM, especially if you try to model very high curvature like you'd get near a black hole.

12 hours agotsimionescu

Quantum Electro-Dynamics (QED) is the application of Special Relativity (non-accelerating frames of reference, i.e. moving at a constant speed) to Electromagnetism. Thus, the issue is with applying accelerating frames of reference (the General in GR) to QM.

12 hours agorhdunn

None of these have anything to do with what I said. SR works just as well as classical mechanics with acceleration. If SR didn't work with acceleration, it would have never been accepted as a valid theory at all, it would have been a laughing stock, as acceleration was well understood since the times of Newton.

What general relativity does different from special relativity is that it extends the concept of relativity from inertial frames of reference to all frames of reference, even accelerating ones. In the process, it also explains the reason why inertial mass and gravitational mass happen to be the same, by tying the gravitational interaction fundamentally to the concept of acceleration.

4 hours agotsimionescu

> Special Relativity (non-accelerating frames of reference, i.e. moving at a constant speed)

Sorry, but this is a pet peeve of mine: special relativity works perfectly well in accelerating frames of reference, as long as the spacetime remains flat (a Minkowski space[1]), for example when any curvature caused by gravity is small enough that you can ignore it.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minkowski_space

4 hours agomoefh

At this point we have several

They’re all largely untestable though

String theory, LQG, half a dozen others

16 hours agolmpdev

There’s no explanation of gravity, quantum or no. There are merely descriptions.

13 hours agofnordpiglet

Isn't everything descriptions, in the end, aka models? Turtles all the way down...

12 hours agoisolli

"Two masses attract each other with a force F = m1 m2 G/r^2"

"OK, but why don't they repel each other?"

"That would make life really hard, and we wouldn't be here discussing it ..."

3 hours agoB1FF_PSUVM

Classified

16 hours agoarthurcolle

3Blue1Brown has a very good explanation of how light works as a wave And the barber pole effect shows how matter (sugar) rotates light https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QCX62YJCmGk

There is also evidence that "photons" are just thresholds in the material that is used to detect light. The atoms vibrate with the EM-wave and at a certain threshold they switch to a higher vibration state that can release an electron. If the starting state is random, the release of an electron will often coincide with the light that is transmitted from just one atom.

This threshold means that one "photon" can cause zero or multiple detections. This was tested by Eric Reiter in many experiments and he saw that this variation indeed happens. Especially when the experiment is tuned to reveal this. By using high frequency light for example. It happens also in experiments done by others, but they disregarded the zero or multiple detections as noise. I think the double detection effect was discovered when he worked in the laboratory with ultraviolet light.

Here is a paper about Eric Reiter's work: https://progress-in-physics.com/2014/PP-37-06.PDF And here is his book. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1BlY5IeTNdu1X6pRA5dnJvRq3ip6...

5 hours agozyxzevn

There are so many artifacts that could cause those observations that I emit serious doubts that's what is happening in those experiments.

an hour agota988

I think neither analogy is correct. We're using macro metaphors (real world things at human time and spatial scales) to explain microscopic phenomena that may not correspond to anything that we find familiar.

16 hours agohliyan

I agree with this. As a physicist, I believe the most accurate resolution is to say that «quantum fields» and «quantum particles» describe neither waves (in the sense of e.g. water or acoustic waves) nor particles (in the sense of marbles and billiard balls), but a third thing that simply has some things in common with both classical waves and classical particles. The analogies are useful for understanding that third thing, but if you believe the analogies too literally, then you’ll make mistakes.

11 hours agosetopt

Thank you! That's a paradigm that I had in the back of my head, but not explicitly phrased.

Photons aren't like particles nor waves. Particles and waves are like photons. And, as with all similes, they fail when you inspect too closely.

5 hours agoIAmBroom

What a timely article and comment. I've been watching a lecture series over the last few days about quantum mechanics and the many worlds interpretation. And I have questions.

I may have missed it or didn't understand it when I heard it explained. What underpins the notion that when a particle transitions from a superposed to defined state, the other basis states continue to exist? If they have to continue to exist, then okay many worlds, but why do we think (or know?) they must continue to exist?

5 hours agouberduper

Because quantum mechanics describes the universe with a wave function, which evolves according to the schroedinger equation.

In it, there is no notion of collapse. The only thing that makes sense is saying the observer becomes entangled with the measurement.

So if you only look at the Schrödinger equation, this is the only conclusion.

Wave function collapse is something which is simply added ad-hoc to describe our observation, not something which is actually defined in QM

5 hours agomoi2388

That we're just collections of wave interference is wild.

17 hours agojagged-chisel

We're built on so many layers of emergence, it's wild!

quantum particles => atoms => chemistry => biochemistry => cellular life => multi-cellular life => intelligence

12 hours agoisolli

It can keep going!

Intelligence -> societies -> technology -> ?

One has to wonder how far can emergence stretch given enough time, some kind of entropic limit probably exists but I'm just a layman, hopefully someone more knowledgeable can share if we already know a physical hard limit for emergence.

10 hours agopiva00

I like your progression. It makes me wonder if intelligence could lead to technology absent societies.

8 hours agojacquesm

If we take a simple definition of technology - such as “tool” or some external inanimate thing we use as an extension of ourselves - then I think all animals on Earth that we have deemed intelligent to some degree use “technology”. Crows using sticks to pick things out holes, chimps crafting spears for hunting, dolphins wearing “hats”, octopuses building stone fortresses, etc. So I guess it’s important to define the limit of the definition of technology.

7 hours agoboyanlevchev

After a brilliant start (atoms etc.,) it starts to be problematic once one hits societies. After all, the earlier progressions are undeniably astounding stable successes in their various incarnations. A pessimist might say 'Stable' societies so far have tended eventually towards being self-destructive tyrannies.

an hour agovixen99

Just listen to Feynmann trying to explain why he can't explain magnetism in macro terms (e.g. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MO0r930Sn_8)

10 hours agobaq

So, are you telling me that we actually-don’t- know how magnets work lol?

8 hours agoK0balt

Not at all - but we don't know how to explain how they work using any analogy from the macro world that we intuitively understand.

7 hours agobaq

I don't have the math, but doesn't quantum field theory say this?

14 hours agochadcmulligan

Maybe think of it as binary(particles) vs analog(waves).

12 hours agogethly

> But actually everything is merely waves and fields.

The two-slit experiment says otherwise.

18 hours agothaumasiotes

Another interpretation of the double-slit posits a guiding 'Pilot Wave' separate from physical particles... aka DeBroglie-Bohm Theory or Bohmian Mechanics.

Apparently it's not popular among professional physicsts though John Bell investigated it a bit. Einstein had some unpublished notes in the 1920s about a "Gespensterfeld" (ghost field) that guided particles.

Born was influenced by this 'Ghost field' idea when he published his famous interpretation of the 'Wave Function' |Ψ|^2 as a probability rather than a physical field.

More info: Nonlocal and local ghost fields in quantum correlations. https://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/9502017

13 hours agofarrelle25

Pilot wave is still my favorite - I don’t really believe it, but I like the image

12 hours agomock-possum
[deleted]
10 hours ago

It is indeed a great way to translate classical intuitions to the quantum domain.

6 hours agonaasking

The way I've always thought of this is there are potentials for interactions and interactions.

Interactions act like point particles and potentials for interactions act like waves.

Arguing over the distinction is a bit like debating whether people are the things they do, or the thing that does things. There is some philosophical discussion to be had, but for the most part it doesn't really matter.

18 hours agoFloorEgg

It does not. It shows that individual photons self interfere, so they cannot be idealized particles.

15 hours agojasonwatkinspdx

Are you getting confused with the photoelectric effect experiment?

15 hours agodcl

Hmm? The double slit experiment definitely shows that particles are waves—weird quantum waves, but still waves.

18 hours agogucci-on-fleek

what happens when you only send a single photon down the line though?

17 hours agofragmede

It still interferes with itself, and that interference affects the pattern of detections. It's as if the photon were a wave right up until the moment of detection, at which points it's forced to “particalize” and pick a spot to be located at — but it's the amplitude of the wave it was just before detection that determines where on the detection screen the photon is likely to show up. If you send many photons through one at a time, the detections (each just a point on the screen) will fill out the expected double slit pattern.

16 hours agobobbylarrybobby

It's worth reading about, but it's kind of wave-like even then: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double-slit_experiment#Interfe...

It would be going too far to say it's only a wave though. It's both wave and particle.

17 hours agompyne

The way I read GGP was as contradicting the assertion that everything is just waves and not at all particles.

17 hours agobinary132

I've always wondered what degree of confidence exists amongst the cogniscenti that a single photon event happened. I tend to think the criteria of measurement here would suggest the most likely outcome was a shitload more than 1 photon, and that all the "but we measured we can see one only" measurements are themselvs hedged by a bunch of belief.

That said, I do like the single photon experiment, when it's more than a thought experiment.

16 hours agoggm

Double slit experiment has been done with electrons which are, afaik, much easier to detect and send single file. It's been done with molecules. It's not a thought experiment.

Quantum superposition is real. There's no doubt about that.

5 hours agouberduper

It's a wave of probability, that interferes through the slits and then collapses into a probability of one somewhere along the wavefront at the point of detection. Whatever that means :-)

15 hours agodanparsonson

As the other comments have already mentioned, it interferes with itself, so you still observe the same interference patterns [0] [1]. Which admittedly seems impossible at first, but so does the rest of quantum physics.

[0]: https://www.feynmanlectures.caltech.edu/III_01.html#Ch1-S5

[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wave%E2%80%93particle_duality#...

15 hours agogucci-on-fleek

> Which admittedly seems impossible at first, but so does the rest of quantum physics.

AKA, miracles can happen, hehe.

I'm not trolling, this is a philosophical point I'm making.

9 hours agoprmph

Depends on the definition of miracle I guess. There's all sort of unintuitive shit going on in the quantum world, but we can make it happen so reliably that it's hardly a miracle anymore. Wikipedia defines a miracle as "an event that is inexplicable by natural or scientific laws and accordingly gets attributed to some supernatural or praeternatural cause". But we understand "how" quantum mechanics quite well, even if the behavior described by the equations is not very intuitive to humans.

7 hours agoWJW

do it once, it looks like one particle.

repeat the single photon launch many times, and you see a wavelike distribution of photon strikes

17 hours agorolph

The two-slit experiment shows that photons behave like waves if you aren't looking at them, and that they fail to behave like waves if you are.

11 hours agothaumasiotes

Everett reconciled that. They only appear to fail to behave like waves because the observer is waves as well.

7 hours agolayer8
[deleted]
10 hours ago

Obviously hindsight is 20/20 but this sentiment just reeks with comical levels of hubris

> However, the new research demonstrates that the magnetic field of light, long thought irrelevant,

16 hours agoghostpepper

> To quantify this influence, the team applied their model to Terbium Gallium Garnet (TGG), a crystal widely used to measure the Faraday effect. They found that the magnetic field of light accounts for about 17% of the observed rotation at visible wavelengths and up to 70% in the infrared range.

Nearly 20% seems already significant, but 70%?! that's massive.

18 hours agomagphys

Seems to be a minor typo . Paper:

>17.5% of the measured value for Terbium-Gallium-Garnet (TGG) at 800 nm, and up to 75% at 1.3 µm.

Here's what the crystal looks like

https://www.photonchinaa.com/tgg-terbium-gallium-garnet/

Here's transmission plot (UV-IR)

https://www.samaterials.com/terbium-gallium-garnet-crystal.h...

Note there's almost no effect on transmission

Relevant? https://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/51819

16 hours agogsf_emergency_6

Yes, the paper and magphys talks about rotation, not transmission.

4 hours agosehansen

Nice to see a graph of % magnetic priportion and log wavelength going from radio to gamma.

17 hours agonrhrjrjrjtntbt

How did no one notice that before, and what else have they (we) missed?

17 hours agoCamperBob2

If I'd to guess: all that exp. characterization to-date has revealed no anomaly (See my other comment)

This team might have looked at bandstructure. or not (they didn't say, & I'd guess not)

16 hours agogsf_emergency_6

so what exciting applications can we see from this?

13 hours agoagentifysh

We will put a box containing a little light and a magnet into every home and people will lose their goddamned minds looking at it every day

13 hours agogeocar

Hmm.. if only we could force this to somehow display ads..

4 hours agomoi2388

[flagged]

17 hours agodmead

People in countries you don't like can still do valid science.

17 hours agoidiotsecant

This isnt exactly new. This is a obvious and predicted effect of ECE Theor. I'm surprised that neither the article nor any other commentor mentioned it yet.

tl;dr on ECE Theory: Gravity is a curvature of spacetime, electromagnetism is a torsion.

10 hours agodiscoutdynamite

From Wikipedia:

Einstein–Cartan–Evans theory or ECE theory was an attempted unified theory of physics proposed by the Welsh chemist and physicist Myron Wyn Evans ..., which claimed to unify general relativity, quantum mechanics and electromagnetism. The hypothesis was largely published ... between 2003 and 2005. Several of Evans's central claims were later shown to be mathematically incorrect and, in 2008, the new editor of Foundations of Physics, Nobel laureate Gerard't Hooft, published an editorial note effectively retracting the journal's support for the hypothesis.

9 hours agoprmph
[deleted]
8 hours ago

I’m sorry if I offended anyone’s consciousness by bringing this up, but this can affect how we view the health effects of radio frequency electromagnetic fields.

Since the magnetic fields of these EMF’s can pass deeper into the body than the electric field, that would mean that the magnetic field can affect many of the voltage gated ion channels in the body. That’s including the brain.

4 hours agoNoaidi

> Since the magnetic fields of these EMF’s can pass deeper into the body than the electric field,

Can they actually though?

I'm not an expert, but to my knowledge the penetration depth of an electromagnetic wave depends only on its frequency. I can't find anywhere online that makes a distinction between electric waves and magnetic waves.

3 hours agowasabi991011

When the electromagnetic wave hits a substance, it splits into separate electric and magnetic waves. The electric wave does not penetrate deeply, but magnetic waves can go through anything. Magnetic waves can only be diverted, not blocked.

14 minutes agoNoaidi

But do they understand how magnets work?

16 hours agoplaguna

The fact that the explanation of how a magnet works is that it is made up of smaller magnets infuriates me.