The fascinating physics of everyday life | Helen Czerski

293,920 views ・ 2017-09-28

TED


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

00:13
As you heard, I'm a physicist.
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And I think the way we talk about physics needs a little modification.
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I am from just down the road here; I don't live here anymore.
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But coming from round here means that I have a northern nana,
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my mum's mom.
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And Nana is very bright; she hasn't had much formal education,
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but she's sharp.
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And when I was a second-year undergraduate studying physics at Cambridge,
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I remember spending an afternoon at Nana's house in Urmston
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studying quantum mechanics.
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And I had these folders open in front of me
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with this, you know, hieroglyphics -- let's be honest.
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And Nana came along, and she looked at this folder,
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and she said, "What's that?"
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I said, "It's quantum mechanics, Nana."
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And I tried to explain something about what was on the page.
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It was to do with the nucleus and Einstein A and B coefficients.
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And Nana looked very impressed.
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And then she said, "Oh.
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What can you do when you know that?"
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(Laughter)
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"Don't know, ma'am."
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(Laughter)
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I think I said something about computers,
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because it was all I could think of at the time.
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But you can broaden that question out, because it's a very good question --
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"What can you do when you know that?" when "that" is physics?
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And I've come to realize that when we talk about physics in society
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and our sort of image of it,
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we don't include the things that we can do when we know that.
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Our perception of what physics is needs a bit of a shift.
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Not only does it need a bit of a shift,
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but sharing this different perspective matters for our society,
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and I'm not just saying that because I'm a physicist and I'm biased
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and I think we're the most important people in the world.
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Honest.
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So, the image of physics -- we've got an image problem, let's be honest --
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it hasn't moved on much from this.
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This is a very famous photograph that's from the Solvay Conference in 1927.
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This is when the great minds of physics were grappling
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with the nature of determinism
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and what it means only to have a probability
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that a particle might be somewhere,
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and whether any of it was real.
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And it was all very difficult.
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And you'll notice they're all very stern-looking men in suits.
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Marie Curie -- I keep maybe saying, "Marie Antoinette,"
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which would be a turn-up for the books --
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Marie Curie, third from the left on the bottom there,
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she was allowed in, but had to dress like everybody else.
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(Laughter)
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So, this is what physics is like -- there's all these kinds of hieroglyphics,
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these are to do with waves and particles.
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That is an artist's impression of two black holes colliding,
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which makes it look worth watching, to be honest.
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I'm glad I didn't have to write the risk assessment
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for whatever was going on there.
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The point is: this is the image of physics, right?
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It's weird and difficult,
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done by slightly strange people dressed in a slightly strange way.
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It's inaccessible, it's somewhere else
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and fundamentally, why should I care?
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And the problem with that is that I'm a physicist,
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and I study this.
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This -- this is my job, right?
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I study the interface between the atmosphere and the ocean.
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The atmosphere is massive, the ocean is massive,
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and the thin layer that joins them together
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is really important,
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because that's where things go from one huge reservoir to the other.
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You can see that the sea surface -- that was me who took this video --
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the average height of those waves by the way, was 10 meters.
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So this is definitely physics happening here --
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there's lots of things -- this is definitely physics.
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And yet it's not included in our cultural perception of physics,
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and that bothers me.
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So what is included in our cultural perception of physics?
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Because I'm a physicist, there has to be a graph, right?
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That's allowed.
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We've got time along the bottom here, from very fast things there,
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to things that take a long time over here.
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Small things at the bottom, big things up there.
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So, our current cultural image of physics looks like this.
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There's quantum mechanics down in that corner,
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it's very small, it's very weird,
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it happens very quickly,
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and it's a long way down in the general ...
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on the scale of anything that matters for everyday life.
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And then there's cosmology, which is up there;
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very large, very far away,
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also very weird.
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And if you go to some places
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like black holes in the beginning of the universe,
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we know that these are frontiers in physics, right?
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There's lots of work being done to discover new physics
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in these places.
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But the thing is, you will notice there's a very large gap in the middle.
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And in that gap, there are many things.
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There are planets and toasts and volcanoes and clouds
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and clarinets and bubbles and dolphins
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and all sorts of things that make up our everyday life.
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And these are also run by physics, you'd be surprised --
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there is physics in the middle, it's just that nobody talks about it.
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And the thing about all of these is that they all run
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on a relatively small number of physical laws,
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things like Newton's laws of motion,
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thermodynamics,
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some rotational dynamics.
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The physics in the middle applies over a huge range,
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from very, very small things to very, very big things.
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You have to try very hard to get outside of this.
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And there is also a frontier in research physics here,
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it's just that nobody talks about it.
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This is the world of the complex.
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When these laws work together, they bring about
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the beautiful, messy, complex world we live in.
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Fundamentally, this is the bit that really matters to me
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on an everyday basis.
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And this is the bit that we don't talk about.
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There's plenty of physics research going on here.
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But because it doesn't involve pointing at stars,
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people for some reason think it's not that.
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Now, the cool thing about this is that there are so many things
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in this middle bit,
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all following the same physical laws,
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that we can see those laws at work
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almost all the time around us.
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I've got a little video here.
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So the game is, one of these eggs is raw and one of them has been boiled.
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I want you to tell me which one is which.
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Which one's raw?
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(Audience responds)
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The one on the left -- yes!
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And even though you might not have tried that, you all knew.
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The reason for that is, you set them spinning,
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and when you stop the cooked egg, the one that's completely solid,
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you stop the entire egg.
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When you stop the other one, you only stop the shell;
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the liquid inside is still rotating because nothing's made it stop.
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And then it pushes the shell round again, so the egg starts to rotate again.
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This is brilliant, right?
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It's a demonstration of something in physics
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that we call the law of conservation of angular momentum,
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which basically says that if you set something spinning
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about a fixed axis,
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that it will keep spinning unless you do something to stop it.
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And that's really fundamental in how the universe works.
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And it's not just eggs that it applies to,
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although it's really useful if you're the sort of person --
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and apparently, these people do exist --
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who will boil eggs and then put them back in the fridge.
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Who does that? Don't admit to it -- it's OK. We won't judge you.
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But it's also got much broader applicabilities.
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This is the Hubble Space Telescope.
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The Hubble Ultra Deep Field, which is a very tiny part of the sky.
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Hubble has been floating in free space for 25 years,
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not touching anything.
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And yet it can point to a tiny region of sky.
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For 11 and a half days, it did it in sections,
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accurately enough to take amazing images like this.
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So the question is:
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How does something that is not touching anything
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know where it is?
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The answer is that right in the middle of it, it has something
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that, to my great disappointment, isn't a raw egg,
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but basically does the same job.
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It's got gyroscopes which are spinning,
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and because of the law of conservation of angular momentum,
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they keep spinning with the same axis, indefinitely.
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Hubble kind of rotates around them, and so it can orient itself.
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So the same little physical law we can play with in the kitchen and use,
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also explains what makes possible some of the most advanced technology
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of our time.
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So this is the fun bit of physics, that you learn these patterns
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and then you can apply them again and again and again.
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And it's really rewarding when you spot them in new places.
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This is the fun of physics.
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I have shown that egg video to an audience full of businesspeople once
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and they were all dressed up very smartly and trying to impress their bosses.
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And I was running out of time, so I showed the egg video and then said,
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"Well, you can work it out, and ask me afterwards to check."
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Then I left the stage.
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And I had, literally,
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middle-aged grown men tugging on my sleeve afterwards,
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saying, "Is it this? Is it this?"
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And when I said, "Yes." They went, "Yes!"
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(Laughter)
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The joy that you get from spotting these patterns
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doesn't go away when you're an adult.
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And that's really important,
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because physics is all about patterns,
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and a small number of patterns give you access
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to almost all of the physics in our everyday world.
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The thing that's best about this is it involves playing with toys.
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Things like the egg shouldn't be dismissed as the mundane little things
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that we just give the kids to play with on a Saturday afternoon
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to keep them quiet.
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This is the stuff that actually really matters,
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because this is the laws of the universe and it applies to eggs
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and toast falling butter-side down and all sorts of other things,
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just as much as it applies to modern technology
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and anything else that's going on in the world.
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So I think we should play with these patterns.
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Basically, there are a small number of concepts
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that you can become familiar with using things in your kitchen,
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that are really useful for life in the outside world.
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If you want to learn about thermodynamics, a duck is a good place to start,
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for example, why their feet don't get cold.
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Once you've got a bit of thermodynamics with the duck,
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you can also explain fridges.
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Magnets that you can play with in your kitchen
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get you to wind turbines and modern energy generation.
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Raisins in [fizzy] lemonade, which is always a good thing to play with.
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If you're at a boring party, fish some raisins out of the bar snacks,
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put them in some lemonade.
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It's got three consequences.
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First thing is, it's quite good to watch; try it.
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Secondly, it sends the boring people away.
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Thirdly, it brings the interesting people to you.
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You win on all fronts.
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And then there's spin and gas laws and viscosity.
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There's these little patterns, and they're right around us everywhere.
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And it's fundamentally democratic, right?
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Everybody has access to the same physics; you don't need a big, posh lab.
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When I wrote the book, I had the chapter on spin.
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I had written a bit about toast falling butter-side down.
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I gave the chapter to a friend of mine who's not a scientist,
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for him to read and tell me what he thought,
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and he took the chapter away.
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He was working overseas.
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I got this text message back from him a couple of weeks later,
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and it said, "I'm at breakfast in a posh hotel in Switzerland,
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and I really want to push toast off the table,
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because I don't believe what you wrote."
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And that was the good bit -- he doesn't have to.
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He can push the toast off the table and try it for himself.
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And so there's two important things to know about science:
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the fundamental laws we've learned through experience and experimentation,
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work.
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The day we drop an apple and it goes up,
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then we'll have a debate about gravity.
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Up to that point, we basically know how gravity works,
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and we can learn the framework.
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Then there's the process of experimentation:
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having confidence in things, trying things out,
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critical thinking -- how we move science forward --
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and you can learn both of those things
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by playing with toys in the everyday world.
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And it's really important,
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because there's all this talk about technology,
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we've heard talks about quantum computing
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and all these mysterious, far-off things.
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But fundamentally, we still live in bodies that are about this size,
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we still walk about, sit on chairs that are about this size,
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we still live in the physical world.
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And being familiar with these concepts means we're not helpless.
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And I think it's really important that we're not helpless,
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that society feels it can look at things,
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because this isn't about knowing all the answers.
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It's about having the framework so you can ask the right questions.
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And by playing with these fundamental little things in everyday life,
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we gain the confidence to ask the right questions.
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So, there's a bigger thing.
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In answer to Nana's question
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about what can you do when you know that --
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because there's lots of stuff in the everyday world
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that you can do when you know that,
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especially if you've got eggs in the fridge --
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there's a much deeper answer.
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And so there's all the fun and the curiosity
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that you could have playing with toys.
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By the way -- why should kids have all the fun, right?
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All of us can have fun playing with toys,
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and we shouldn't be embarrassed about it.
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You can blame me, it's fine.
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So when it comes to reasons for studying physics, for example,
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here is the best reason I can think of:
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I think that each of us has three life-support systems.
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We've got our own body, we've got a planet
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and we've got our civilization.
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Each of those is an independent life-support system,
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keeping us alive in its own way.
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And they all run on the fundamental physical laws
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that you can learn in the kitchen with eggs and teacups and lemonade,
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and everything else you can play with.
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This is the reason, for example,
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why something like climate change is such a serious problem,
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because It's two of these life-support systems,
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our planet and our civilization,
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kind of butting up against each other;
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they're in conflict, and we need to negotiate that boundary.
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And the fundamental physical laws that we can learn
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that are the way the world around us works,
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are the tools at the basis of everything;
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they're the foundation.
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There's lots of things to know about in life,
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but knowing the foundations is going to get you a long way.
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And I think this, if you're not interested in having fun with physics
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or anything like that -- strange, but apparently, these people exist --
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you surely are interested in keeping yourself alive
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and in how our life-support systems work.
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The framework for physics is remarkably constant;
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it's the same in lots and lots of things that we measure.
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It's not going to change anytime soon.
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They might discover some new quantum mechanics,
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but apples right here are still going to fall down.
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So, the question is --
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I get asked sometimes: How do you start?
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What's the place to start
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if you're interested in the physical world, in not being helpless,
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and in finding some toys to play with?
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Here is my suggestion to you:
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the place to start is that moment -- and adults do this --
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you're drifting along somewhere,
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and you spot something and your brain goes, "Oh, that's weird."
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And then your consciousness goes, "You're an adult. Keep going."
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And that's the point -- hold that thought --
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that bit where your brain went, "Oh, that's a bit odd,"
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because there's something there to play with,
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and it's worth you playing with it,
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so that's the place to start.
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But if you don't have any of those little moments
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on your way home from this event,
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here are some things to start with.
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Put raisins in [fizzy] lemonade; highly entertaining.
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Watch a coffee spill dry.
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I know that sounds a little bit like watching paint dry,
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but it does do quite weird things; it's worth watching.
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I'm an acquired taste at dinner parties if there are teacups around.
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There are so many things you can do to play with teacups, it's brilliant.
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The most obvious one is to get a teacup, get a spoon,
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tap the teacup around the rim and listen,
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and you will hear something strange.
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And the other thing is, push your toast off the table
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because you can, and you'll learn stuff from it.
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And if you're feeling really ambitious,
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try and push it off in such a way that it doesn't fall butter-side down,
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which is possible.
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The point of all of this is that,
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first of all, we should all play with toys.
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We shouldn't be afraid to investigate the physical world for ourselves
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with the tools around us,
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because we all have access to them.
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It matters, because if we want to understand society,
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if we want to be good citizens,
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we need to understand the framework on which everything else must be based.
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Playing with toys is great.
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Understanding how to keep our life-support systems going is great.
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But fundamentally, the thing that we need to change
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in the way that we talk about physics,
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is we need to understand
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that physics isn't out there with weird people
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and strange hieroglyphics
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for somebody else in a posh lab.
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Physics is right here; it's for us, and we can all play with it.
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Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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About this website

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