Is it possible to create a perfect vacuum? - Rolf Landua and Anais Rassat

1,093,447 views ・ 2017-09-12

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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The universe is bustling with matter and energy.
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Even in the vast apparent emptiness of intergalactic space,
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there's one hydrogen atom per cubic meter.
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That's not the mention a barrage of particles
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and electromagnetic radiation
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passing every which way from stars, galaxies, and into black holes.
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There's even radiation left over from the Big Bang.
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So is there such thing as a total absence of everything?
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This isn't just a thought experiment.
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Empty spaces, or vacuums, are incredibly useful.
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Inside our homes, most vacuum cleaners work
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by using a fan to create a low-pressure relatively empty area
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that sucks matter in to fill the void.
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But that's far from empty.
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There's still plenty of matter bouncing around.
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Manufacturers rely on more thorough, sealed vacuums
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for all sorts of purposes.
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That includes vacuum-packed food that stays fresh longer,
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and the vacuums inside early light bulbs that protected filaments from degrading.
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These vacuums are generally created with some version
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of what a vacuum cleaner does
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using high-powered pumps that create enough suction
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to remove as many stray atoms as possible.
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But the best of these industrial processes
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tends to leave hundreds of millions of atoms
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per cubic centimeter of space.
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That isn't empty enough for scientists who work on experiments,
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like the Large Hadron Collider,
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where particle beams need to circulate at close to the speed of light
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for up to ten hours without hitting any stray atoms.
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So how do they create a vacuum?
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The LHC's pipes are made of materials, like stainless steel,
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that don't release any of their own molecules
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and are lined with a special coating to absorb stray gases.
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Raising the temperature to 200 degrees Celsius
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burns off any moisture,
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and hundreds of vacuum pumps take two weeks to trap enough gas and debris
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out of the pipes for the collider's incredibly sensitive experiments.
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Even with all this,
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the Large Hadron Collider isn't a perfect vacuum.
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In the emptiest places, there are still
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about 100,000 particles per cubic centimeter.
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But let's say an experiment like that could somehow get every last atom out.
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There's still an unfathomably huge amount of radiation all around us
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that can pass right through the walls.
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Every second, about 50 muons from cosmic rays,
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10 million neutrinos coming directly from the Big Bang,
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30 million photons from the cosmic microwave background,
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and 300 trillion neutrinos from the Sun pass through your body.
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It is possible to shield vacuum chambers with substances,
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including water,
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that absorb and reflect this radiation,
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except for neutrinos.
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Let's say you've somehow removed all of the atoms
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and blocked all of the radiation.
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Is the space now totally empty?
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Actually, no.
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All space is filled with what physicists call quantum fields.
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What we think of as subatomic particles,
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electrons and photons and their relatives,
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are actually vibrations in a quantum fabric
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that extends throughout the universe.
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And because of a physical law called the Heisenberg Principle,
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these fields never stop oscillating,
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even without any particles to set off the ripples.
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They always have some minimum fluctuation called a vacuum fluctuation.
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This means they have energy, a huge amount of it.
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Because Einstein's equations tell us that mass and energy are equivalent,
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the quantum fluctuations in every cubic meter of space
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have an energy that corresponds to a mass of about four protons.
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In other words, the seemingly empty space inside your vacuum
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would actually weigh a small amount.
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Quantum fluctuations have existed since the earliest moments of the universe.
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In the moments after the Big Bang,
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as the universe expanded,
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they were amplified and stretched out to cosmic scales.
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Cosmologists believe that these original quantum fluctuations
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were the seeds of everything we see today:
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galaxies and the entire large scale structure of the universe,
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as well as planets and solar systems.
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They're also the center of one of the greatest scientific mysteries of our time
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because according to the current theories,
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the quantum fluctuations in the vacuum of space
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ought to have 120 orders of magnitude more energy than we observe.
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Solving the mystery of that missing energy
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may entirely rewrite our understanding of physics and the universe.
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