On Not Talking, for the Right Reasons

Over at Backreaction, Bee has a nice piece on our current age of virality. Toward the end, she discusses some of the ways this applies to science, specifically a quote from this Nature article about collaborative efforts to measure “big G”, and a story about a Chinese initiative to encourage collaboration. She writes of the… Continue reading On Not Talking, for the Right Reasons

Schrödinger’s Cat at TED-Ed

Screenshot of the Schrodinger cat video I wrote for TED-Ed

The third of the videos I wrote for TED-Ed is now live: Schrödinger’s Cat: A Thought Experiment in Quantum Mechanics.This is using basically the same argument I outlined in this post, but with awesome animation courtesy of Agota Vegso. I’m impressed by how close the images that ended up in the video are to the… Continue reading Schrödinger’s Cat at TED-Ed

Nobel Prize for Blue LEDs

Alfred Nobel's signature in blue LED's. From the Nobel Prize Twitter feed.

The 2014 Nobel Prize in Physics has been awarded to Isamu Akasaki, Hiroshi Amano and Shuji Nakamura for the development of blue LED’s. As always, this is kind of fascinating to watch evolve in the social media sphere, because as a genuinely unexpected big science story, journalists don’t have pre-written articles based on an early… Continue reading Nobel Prize for Blue LEDs

Yes Virginia, There Are Quantum Jumps

Quantum jumps, from the Wineland group paper described in the text. The top is a mercury ion with just the 194nm laser, the middle a single ion with both 194nm and 281nm lasers, and the bottom two ions in the same trap with both lasers.

In a weird coincidence, shortly after I wrote a post about “quantum leap” as a metaphor, I was looking up some stuff about John Bell and ran into mentions of a paper he wrote called “Are There Quantum Jumps?” Bell is borrowing a title from Schrödinger, who wrote a pair of articles (really, one article… Continue reading Yes Virginia, There Are Quantum Jumps

Finding Extrasolar Planets with Lasers

Cartoon representation of a frequency comb, from one of my papers.

On Twitter Sunday morning, the National Society of Black Physicsts account retweeted this: Using Lasers to Lock Down #Exoplanet Hunting #Space http://t.co/0TN4DDo7LF — ✨The Solar System✨ (@The_SolarSystem) September 28, 2014 I recognized the title as a likely reference to the use of optical frequency combs as calibration sources for spectrometry, which is awesome stuff. Unfortunately,… Continue reading Finding Extrasolar Planets with Lasers

TED-Ed Lesson: What Is the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle?

Screenshot from the TED-Ed lesson I wrote about uncertainty.

The second one of the TED-Ed lessons I wrote about quantum physics has now been published: What Is the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle. This is, again, very similar to stuff I’ve written before, specifically this old blog post and the relevant chapter of How to Teach [Quantum] Physics to Your Dog. As usual, I tried but… Continue reading TED-Ed Lesson: What Is the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle?

TED-Ed Lesson: The Central Mystery of Quantum Physics

Screenshot of my TED-Ed lesson on particle-wave duality.

My TED@NYC adventure last fall didn’t turn into an invite to the big TED meeting, but it did lead to a cool opportunity that is another of the very cool developments I’ve been teasing for a while now: I’ve written some scripts for lessons to be posted with TED-Ed. The first of these, on particle-wave… Continue reading TED-Ed Lesson: The Central Mystery of Quantum Physics

Nordita Workshop for Science Writers: Wrap-Up

I didn’t write a summary of the third day of “Quantum Boot Camp” to go with my Day One and Day Two summaries for a simple reason: I would’ve needed to do that on Saturday, and I spent Saturday in transit back to the US. More than that, though, it was harder to summarize than… Continue reading Nordita Workshop for Science Writers: Wrap-Up

On Black Magic in Physics

The latest in a long series of articles making me glad I don’t work in psychology was this piece about replication in the Guardian. This spins off some harsh criticism of replication studies and a call for an official policy requiring consultation with the original authors of a study that you’re attempting to replicate. The… Continue reading On Black Magic in Physics

The Internet Exists Because of (Schrödinger’s) Cats

Me speaking at TED@NYC. Photo by Ryan Lash.

I’m working on some short pop-quantum explainers for reasons that I’ll be a little cagey about. In casting around for a novel way to introduce Schrödinger’s cat states, I hit on something that probably works, but illustrates the problems inherent in being both a professional physicist and a pop-science writer. The hook, as I mentioned… Continue reading The Internet Exists Because of (Schrödinger’s) Cats