Is Brian Cox full of it? [View all]
In this 1 minute 42 second video Brian Cox makes an astounding claim about the Pauli Exclusion Principle - when he rubs a diamond between his hands, all the elctrons in the universe are affected.
There's been some criticism of his claim on the internet - a lot of it by other physicists. There is an interesting explanation of what Cox said (and more) by
Sean Carroll. An excerpt:
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The point of this last statement is that when you say When I heat this diamond up all the electrons across the universe instantly but imperceptibly change their energy levels, people are naturally going to believe that something has changed about electrons very far away. But thats not true, in the most accurate meaning we can attach to those words. In particular, imagine there is some physicist located in the Andromeda galaxy, doing experiments on the energy levels of electrons. This is a really good experimenter, with lots of electrons available and the ability to measure energies to arbitrarily good precision. When we rub the diamond here on Earth, is there any change at all in what that experimenter would measure?
Of course the answer is none whatsoever. Not just in practice, but in principle. The Hamiltonian of the universe will change when we heat up the diamond, which changes the instantaneous time-independent solutions to the Schoedinger equation throughout space, so in principle the energy levels of all the electrons in the universe do change. But that change is completely invisible to the far-off experimenter; there will be a change, but it wont happen until the change in the electromagnetic field itself has had time to propagate out to Andromeda, which is at the speed of light. Another way of saying it is that energy levels are static, unchanging states, and what really happens is that we poke the electron into a non-static state that gradually evolves. (If it were any other way, we could send signals faster than light using this technique.)
Verdict: if this is whats going on, there is an interpretation under which Coxs statement is correct, except that it has nothing to do with the exclusion principle, and more importantly it gives a quite false impression to anyone who might be listening.
The other possibly relevant bit of physics is quantum entanglement and wave function collapse. This is usually the topic where people start talking about instantaneous changes throughout space, and we get mired in interpretive messes. Again, these concepts werent mentioned in this part of the lecture, and arent directly tied to the exclusion principle, but its worth discussing them.
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