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nexus1g
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Comments by "nexus1g" (@nexus1g) on "Jak moc malĂ˝ je atom?" video.
For instance, if you flip a coin 10 times, you're most likely not going to be 50/50 as you know it should be. But if you flip it 10,000 times, you're going to be 50/50 or very, very close to it.
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We'll use the double-slit experiment as an example. When you shoot an electron gun through the two slits, you see that you get a wave interference pattern. That's predictable -- you know you're going to get that pattern every time. But you only start get that pattern after trillions of electrons have passed through. Shoot a handful of electrons through, and there will be no distinguishable pattern. But we see this kind of thing up to the macro level with statistics.
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There's no question there's order; it's observable in our every day life. If there were no order, the study of physics would be impossible.
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Quantum probability. It's not entirely random. While, yes, it's impossible -- at least at this time -- to predict what a single quantum particle will do in response to stimuli, a sample matrix of quantum particles exposed to the same stimulus will cause most of the particles to react in a predictable manner. The larger the sample, the more predictable the result.
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If you don't mind me taking an aside, it sounds like you have a bit of a new-agey view of quantum physics rather than an accurate view of it.
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You have to first assume that there was a time with no order.
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You should do a video covering atomic force relative to the other forces.
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