SciShow Tangents - Subatomic
Episode Date: February 18, 2020Things get a little weird this episode, and by ‘little’ I mean very little! One thing I learned in this episode is that everything in the universe is touching each other, yet the particles in you...r body never truly touch! Mama Mia! Well anyway, I hope you enjoy it! Thanks for listening!Follow us on Twitter @SciShowTangents, where we’ll tweet out topics for upcoming episodes and you can ask the science couch questions! While you're at it, check out the Tangents crew on Twitter: Stefan: @itsmestefanchin Ceri: @ceriley Sam: @slamschultz Hank: @hankgreenIf you want to learn more about any of our main topics, check out these links:[Truth or Fail]https://history.fnal.gov/felicia.html#Timehttps://history.fnal.gov/meson.htmlpictures: https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/felicia-ferret-particle-accelerator-fermilabhttps://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/stocking-series-part-1-wartime-rationing-and-nylon-riots-25391066/[Fact Off]Surface plasmon resonancehttps://www.nist.gov/news-events/news/2016/12/nist-device-detecting-subatomic-scale-motion-has-potential-roboticshttps://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms13746Dark matter supercold water[Ask the Science Couch]Do atoms touch?https://www.sciencealert.com/99-9999999-of-your-body-is-empty-spacehttps://wtamu.edu/~cbaird/sq/2013/04/16/do-atoms-ever-actually-touch-each-other/https://www.britannica.com/science/Pauli-exclusion-principlehttp://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/pauli.htmlhttps://www.britannica.com/science/fermionhttps://www.pnas.org/content/114/23/5766[Butt One More Thing]Proton-powered poopshttps://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/01/080109104251.htmhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0092867407014791
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to SciShow Tangents, the lightly competitive knowledge showcase starring
some of the geniuses that make the YouTube series SciShow happen.
And this week, as always, I am joined by Stefan Chen.
Every time you say my name a little bit more extremely,
and one time you're going to go beyond.
It's going to go too far?
Yeah.
I'm going to hurt your voice.
I got a little eye twitch just now.
Be careful.
What's your tag on?
Poopy diaper?
Oh, no.
Can I bring that? We were just talking about how we don't like poopy diaper as a phrase.
Sam Schultz is also here.
Hello.
What's your tagline?
Peepy diaper.
This is the better kind.
Sari Riley.
Hi.
Hello.
What's your tagline?
Soda sculpture.
Diaper.
Just add diaper on the end of it.
No.
And I'm Hank Green, and my tagline is peepee mountain. Soda sculpture. Diaper. Just add diaper on the end of it. No.
And I'm Hank Green, and my tagline is pee-pee mountain.
Every week here at SciShow Tangents, we get together to try to one-up a maze and delight each other with science facts. We're playing for glory, and we're also keeping score and awarding sandbox from week to week.
We do everything we can to stay on topic, but actually I lied about that.
So if you go on a tangent and the rest of the team deems
it unworthy, you can be Dr. Hank Buck. And now, as always, we introduce this week's topic with
a traditional science poem this week from me. The word atom has a clear meaning. Indivisible,
no in-betweening. But then, oh, well, shit, the atom was split. I find that a little demeaning.
Well, shit, the atom was split.
I find that a little demeaning.
We worked so darn hard to define it, so immutable you cannot refine it.
But down at the hearticle, there are more particles.
Subatomic is how we assign it.
Hearticle?
Look, there are not any words that rhyme with particle and I wanted one and hearticle
felt real to me
it felt real
it's like the heart ventricle
it's a part of a heart
yeah
I would not have been surprised
if you busted out a guitar
and just sang your
I thought about it
strange charm song
yes I thought about
strange charm
but I
felt like that would be cheating
and you wouldn't give me
a point for it
because you've already
written it
it wasn't special for this I think it would've been okay the fans give me a point for it. Because you've already written it. It wasn't special for this.
I think it would have been okay.
The fans would have gone crazy for it.
Ah, shit.
I didn't do that.
And our topic is subatomic particles.
And I guess that's a fairly easy thing to define.
Well, physicists have talked a lot about it.
Yes.
And it's any particle that's smaller than an atom.
Wait, it doesn't have to be
part of an atom feels like a subatomic particle has to no i guess it doesn't i don't think so i
think it's just like just smaller than an atom smaller than that but i think the only things
that are smaller than an atom are the particles that we've identified or and the ones that we've
on are unidentified yeah there are particles that are not in atoms.
So, atoms are made of
protons, neutrons,
and electrons.
Okay, yes.
And then smaller than that,
you have things like quarks.
Yes.
Are there subatomic particles
other than photons
that last
for significant amounts of time
that aren't part of an atom?
Yeah.
Neutrinos,
they're always chilling out.'re around they last is there one in this room right oh yeah yeah they don't touch us though that's good
they go right through are they like in a different plane of existence no they just are
so they just don't interact with matter very much okay we're going to talk about this later
but really nothing's touching each other ever.
We're just all like probability clouds.
Oh, that old chestnut.
Chestnuts also don't touch things.
Yeah.
Or themselves, really.
Yeah, it's basically very, very small things like quantum.
Whenever you say something's quantum, like an ant man when they say, we're going quantum.
They just mean small, like classical physics stops making sense.
And then you have to start using quantum physics to explain it.
It's a different math.
Deboki shared a tweet with me that said, petition to replace quantum with Lil.
That would be helpful for me.
Yeah, Lil Mechan me. Lil mechanics.
Lil mechanics.
That actually is
very helpful.
Yeah,
that'd be way better.
So are there any,
do you have any meanings
behind any of these words?
I looked up Adam,
but Hank said it
in his poem.
It's from Greek
Atomos,
which is
uncut,
unhewn,
indivisible.
But they weren't
talking about atoms as we understand them.
No, but they had some thought that there must be something there as a conversation.
If you cut something enough times, eventually do you get to something you can't cut?
Right.
Kind of like high person conversation.
Yeah.
Cool.
Yeah, no, they probably have some kind of leaf that they licked.
Or chewing on.
Yeah.
Okay.
No, they probably have some kind of leaf that they licked.
Or chewed on.
Yeah.
Okay.
And then it like became used in a scientific sense from like the 1800s, I think, to refer to atomic.
This is where like science and philosophy were so intertwined because people were just asking big questions about the universe and like yelling out answers.
And some of them were right.
And it's wild. Like back then, people would like yell out, Adams!
And it would be like, now we're like, what a genius! But he just happened to were right. And it's wild. Like back then, people would like yell out Adams. And it would be like, now we're like, what a genius.
But he just happened to be right.
The person arguing had all of the same evidence and all of the same reasons.
Like there wasn't any good reasons to believe Adams were a thing.
It just turned out they were.
So there might be something I've said that will turn out to be right in the future.
And people think I'm a genius?
No, not anymore.
Oh.
Yeah, that's only from back when we used
to give people a lot of credit for their weird ideas
because they were rich and powerful.
Okay, unless the world ends
and all that's left of media is this podcast,
then we'll start
all over again. Yeah, there are worse podcasts
to rebuild human
knowledge and institutions
from than this one.
That's our blurb.
Good blurb, everybody.
Thanks, Sari.
And now it's time for more Sari
because Sari's doing true science.
She's brought three science facts
for our education and enjoyment,
but only one of those facts is real.
We have to decide which fact is the true one.
If we get it right, you get a sandbuck.
If you don't, then you get the sandbuck.
Sari, what are your facts?
The Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, called NAL to start, but now Fermilab,
is a particle physics research lab in the United States that's been open since 1967.
The very basic layout, to my understanding, of early Fermilab particle accelerators
is pipes with hundreds of large,
like 20 feet long magnets along the length of them that help guide and focus the particle beam.
But in early years, they ran into some problems with this construction. When these 300 foot-ish
long pipes are cut, there are tiny metal slivers and dust left behind that can interfere
with subatomic particle travel and the magnetism because they're
metal slivers. So scientists needed to find a way to clean out these pipes and do it relatively
cheap. An engineer named Robert Sheldon came up with an unconventional solution. What is it? One,
tying together a bunch of nylon stockings, threading them through the pipe and swirling
the fabric around. Two, making slime from borax glue and warm water
that's sticky enough to grab the metal
but flowy enough to pour through the pipes a few times.
Or three, using a ferret to pull a string through the pipes
that they attached a fluffy swab to and pulled back through.
Wait, wait, can't they just flush it with water?
How do they pull it back?
What do they pull back through?
A string.
So they like make a ferret run through,
draw a string through,
and then they
attach something to the end
and pull it back through.
So they pull the ferret back through?
They're not cleaning it
with the ferret.
They're not cleaning it
with the ferret.
The ferret is the...
Is that where ferry comes from?
Uh-huh.
Comes from ferret.
The cleaning apparatus.
Just like walks it through
and then you got to...
Because ferrets are
straight dirty. You don't want a ferret to be cleaning and then you gotta cause ferrets are straight dirty
you don't want a ferret
to be cleaning stuff
with a seum ferret
maybe it's a clean ferret
maybe it's a very
tidy ferret
I guess you make like
soft pieces of clothing
out of ferrets
yeah
they're little swiffers
yeah yeah
okay
pouring slime
I'm into it
like the kind of slime
people make on YouTube
yeah but like way before
it became a YouTube thing
it was a science thing.
So you're saying this was before YouTube?
Yes.
You know, Fermilab?
Before YouTube.
How long are these pipes?
Do you have any idea?
Around 300 feet.
And how far can a ferret run?
That I can't answer.
How big are these pipes?
There are some measurements, I think, that I read that they were like a foot in diameter,
but they can get as small as like a couple inches.
Okay.
These are like particle accelerators.
Yeah, particles are going through them.
Yeah, so they need to be really, really clean
so that when they assemble it together
and they put magnets on the outside,
the stream of very subatomic particles can...
They can be pinging off the little pieces of metal floating around.
Yeah, exactly.
So we've got tying together a bunch of nylon stockings,
threading them through the pipe,
and then swirling it around.
Two, making slime from borax, glue, and warm water
to pour through there and pick up all the stuff.
Or three, run a ferret through there
so he pulls a string,
and then you can grab a fluffy swab
and yank it through the whole thing.
Because you can't turn it up on its end and, like, throw a rock down.
No.
So they could tilt them up.
And so that's, like, how they would get, hypothetically, all the things in.
So it's, like, gravity helps the ferret go down, potentially.
Or the slime.
Slime or the stockings.
Okay.
So if you stick nylon in there, that feels like it's going to leave some sort of fibers.
I don't know.
Just let me have this.
Nylon doesn't leave fibers.
That's like why it was such an important technology.
And like, because unlike other stockings,
it like didn't rip.
It didn't like shred really.
It just stayed.
It could stretch, but stay tight.
Well, I don't know.
The ferret does seem dirty, though.
That seems like it would leave something behind.
Yeah, it does seem like it could cause some extra problems.
Yeah, what if he pooped in there?
Yeah, he could leave a poopy diaper.
Yeah.
Oh, they probably put a diaper on the ferret.
Well, now they all seem plausible.
I'm going to go with the slime one.
Slime for Stefan. I'm going ferret with the slime one. Slime for Stefan.
I'm going ferret because I want him to be wearing a diaper.
I have to get every point this episode,
and you have to get no extra points this episode for me to tie you.
All right.
Well, I've already got a point because I did the poem.
I know.
I took that into account beforehand.
I'm going to go with whatever one is left.
Oh, okay.
What is it?
The nylon stocking. Yeah. Does that sound good? Do you actually want it or with whatever one is left. Oh, okay. What is it? The nylon stocking.
Yeah. Does that sound good? Do you actually want it
or do you want to... Oh, no.
Do you want to hurt Sari more than
you want to hurt me? Yeah.
Yeah. She's more in the lead.
I like the ferret. I'm going with the ferret.
Okay, two ferrets.
Ferret is correct. Yay!
Oh, sorry, Sari.
No, that's okay. I switched him.
Yeah, you're never going to get mad at me. is correct. Oh, sorry, Sari. I switched him.
Yeah.
It's you're never going to get mad at me.
Why?
I just you're too nice.
Oh, we can get mad at you.
Do you want us to try?
Oh, you can get mad at me.
I'm less likely to get mad
at you than Sari is.
I feel like you get
ornery faster than I do.
Totally do.
That's what the fuck?
I get vengeful. I'm not saying I don't like it. This is a part of me You're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like, you're just like Yeah, she did. Oh my God. And it was just one ferret?
They only had one ferret working? Yeah.
Her name was Felicia.
She was about 15 inches long.
She cost $35.
Did they go to the store and get a Felicia just for this?
They did, but not a store like some sort of ferret ranch.
That's a store.
Yeah, that's a kind of a store.
Special delivery from the Wild Game and Fur Farm in Minnesota.
Oh, so Felicia had a...
Bad future coming.
Yeah, potentially.
Had a better life than she otherwise would have had.
Yeah.
They didn't ever accelerate particles into her.
No.
They trained her very gently, started her on shorter tubes to be like, run through this tube.
They fitted her, outfitted her with a small leather harness and a diaper to
collect her poop and attached to a string so that when she would run through the tube, she could
like unhook, they could unhook the string and then attach a cleaning swab, which as far as I could
tell is like a brush or a cloth with some sort of cleaning fluid on it. And then they'd pull that
through and pick up a bunch of dust and metal filings. And do it again and again, however many times you need.
Felicia's here for you.
Does she just go into the darkness?
I guess ferrets don't go into the dark.
She just ran into the darkness.
And part of why they chose ferrets is because ferrets love tunnels.
She was a little bit nervous at first because it's just a 300-foot-long tunnel.
And so by training with small, dark tunnels, she got more comfortable with it.
But they chose ferrets because they chase after things in tunnels all the time.
This is a picture of her.
She's very cute.
Oh!
Did they keep her around?
She's really cute.
Well, I mean, once you train a ferret to clean a particle accelerator.
But once they're clean, what are you going to do with a ferret?
Maybe it gets dusty in there.
You got to do it again.
Okay.
So they kept her around for a little bit, and apparently all the engineers loved her,
and they fed her meat. She liked ground beef i think yeah it sounds like
ferret food but but oh this is not because of them i don't think but around 1972 someone else
had created a magnetic ferret basically they called it a magnetic ferret modeled after felicia but it
did not look like a robot it was just like one of those tubes you stick in a drain pipe and swirl
around so it was like that with magnets on it that they pushed through with compressed air to
basically do the same thing as she did so she was like a temporary solution so then she retired and
she was gonna be like live a cushy life but then like a couple months after she retired she like went to an emergency
vet visit and had an intestinal abscess and died and everyone was really sad she couldn't enjoy
her retirement was there slime truth or were you just talking about slime from youtube yeah i feel
like you were just talking about i just made it up. I talked about nylon because the history of nylon, very interesting.
It was created, I think, initially just by a material scientist who then realized it could be marketed to women for stockings instead of silk.
But then during one of the world wars, they realized that nylon could also be used for really important like other fabric applications like parachutes.
And so then they basically banned stockings from being sold and recalled all of them.
And so everyone was in like a stocking frenzy.
It's like, ah, I need my tights.
Well, thanks to Robert Sheldon for bringing us Felicia.
Next up, we're going to have a short break and then it'll be time for the Fact Off.
We're back, everybody.
Sam Buck totals.
Sari, you got one. Sam, youals. Sari, you got one.
Sam, you got one.
Stephanie, you got none.
I am in the lead with two.
Good job.
Thanks.
I appreciate that.
Is Stephanie the least likely to get mad at you?
Am I the least likely to get mad in general?
Yeah, I don't think I've ever seen Stephanie mad.
Yeah, this is like what we were talking about
where you don't even have a resting bitch face.
No. You just a resting bitch face.
No.
Like you just have a friendly face. I feel like I do because I have a very blank face sometimes.
And I feel like a bitch.
I feel like I've seen Stefan in some situations where he should be mad but wasn't.
I think you're less likely to become.
I'm a chill dude.
You're a California guy, skateboarding around, surfing the waves.
So now it is time for the fact op.
Two panelists have brought science facts to present to the others
in an attempt to blow their minds.
The presentees each have a Sandbuck to award to the fact that we like the most.
Sari and I have the Sandbucks to award.
It will be Sam versus Stefan presenting your facts.
And to decide who goes first, you have to tell me each how many flavors of lepton there are.
Balls.
Sam, how many flavors of leptons are there?
4,000.
4,000.
Sam went with 4,000.
I'm going to say six.
Closer. I don't know, but I know that it's closer to six than 4,000. 4,000. Same one with 4,000. I'm going to say six. Closer.
I don't know, but I know that it's closer to six than 4,000.
The answer is six.
Stefan got it exactly.
A good half does.
Did you know that?
I have heard the number six before.
Oh.
I thought it might be associated with this.
So I guess, Stefan, you want to go first?
Oh, sure.
I'll go first.
To make sense of this, I have to explain something called surface plasmon resonance.
I don't know what that is.
So basically, you have a gold sheet.
And if you shine the right frequency of laser on that sheet at the right angle,
the light excites the electrons on the surface of the gold and they resonate in waves. And so
those waves are the plasmons. If you're trying to visualize it, you can think of it as like
the surface of the gold. You've got sort of like a guitar string that's vibrating in slow motion.
You can kind of see the waves happening. And these plasmon waves are sensitive
to the environment around them. And so one way to measure how two molecules are interacting is
if you attach a bunch of one molecule to the gold sheet and then flow a bunch of the other molecule
past it, when they bind, they affect the frequency of those waves, which changes how much
of the laser is absorbed. And so by measuring how much of the laser light is being reflected,
you can get a sense of what's happening with the molecules.
Like how frequently they're bonded and unbonded.
I'm pretty sure I've simplified some of this, but that's basically what's supposed to happen.
You shine a laser at something, it tells and using cool particle
physics, it tells you
things about molecular interactions
between two chemicals.
Yes, and that's surface plasma on resonance.
And so, there's this
paper from the National Institute of Standards
and Technology, where they take
a gold sheet, and then they have
this... They describe it as diving
boards that are like on top
of it and on the bottom of the diving boards are little gold nanoparticles so you have gold
nanoparticle right above this gold sheet and like it's arranged so that there is a tiny space between
them that space is so small that a laser light couldn't actually penetrate it so they couldn't
measure so you can't measure it because you need the light to bounce off it to measure it.
But what they can do is use this similar technique where you're bouncing the light off of the
gold nanoparticle.
So you get these plasmon waves.
And then if the diving board moves, if the gap changes width, then that changes the frequency
of those waves and then changes the absorption
of light.
And so then you can measure it.
Why do you want to do that?
So they describe it as very similar to the devices that detect motion and orientation
in your phone.
So like if you had this little chip with all these diving boards on it and these gold nanoparticles
in your phone and you like wiggle your phone around, the diving boards are wiggling.
And so you can measure these gap changes.
Obviously, we already have smartphones that detect those things, but this would be like
the next level of like miniaturizing those.
Right.
Smaller, more sensitive.
Yeah.
Maybe less energy intense to use.
Yeah.
And I guess it's also similar to the things that they use for airbags, like detecting
when those should go off and stuff like that.
It's like the tiniest accelerometer.
When you are looking for something like what you're describing, do you theorize that it exists and then figure out a way to look for if it exists?
Like a wave, the wave. How do they know the wave's going to be there?
It's kind of a coin toss. It could either be that they did math first and they were like,
I wonder if we could actually show this in the lab.
Or they had some gold foil and they shot a laser at it and they were like, this is weird.
Okay.
Why is it changing?
Why is the absorption changing?
And they were like, oh, it's because there's some oxygen reacting with oxygen making ozone on the surface of the gold or something.
People are smart.
They are so smart.
All right.
That was weird.
Good diving board, Stefan.
All right.
So for my thing to make sense, I have to explain something called YouTube.
So way back in 2011, which is like a million years ago in Internet time,
there were a number of videos showing off a very neat home experiment
where people were cooling purified water in really clean containers down past the freezing point,
but the water would not freeze.
It would stay liquid.
And that's because ice needs a nucleation site to form,
which is either an impurity in the water or the water jostling around
and clicking all the whatever water's made out of
into ice form.
Is that about right?
Molecules.
Water molecules.
Oh, that's an important word later in my thing.
Remember that.
First, let's explain molecules.
The science couch has got you.
They're at a level that I understand again.
Yeah, this is good.
Yeah, super cooling, I'm all there for.
So then the experimenter would shake the bottle up
and the water would basically freeze in front of your very eyes.
Very cool.
We even made a video about it in 2014, which was really helpful to me.
It said the word molecules in it for sure.
So inspired by these videos, last year a team of scientists
studying super cold water figured out, I think kind of accidentally,
that it doesn't require something as dramatic
as being shaken up to freeze,
but can be triggered by certain kinds of
uncharged subatomic particles passing through it.
So using this discovery,
they made a new kind of particle detector
called a snowball chamber.
It is basically like a chamber of super cooled water
sitting like totally away from the world.
And then when a subatomic particle passes through it, it freezes.
Nice.
So it's only affected by uncharged particles.
And I had to email the guy who wrote the paper to figure out why that was.
His name is Matthew Zadagus.
And he told me that, quote,
Charged particles interact with the electrons and lose their energy spread out over a greater distance.
This is called DE over DX.
Okay.
I don't know what that means.
Too low of DE over DX means energy is not deposited
within a critical radius, so no nucleation happens.
So I think what that means is that charged particles
don't lose their energy in a big enough burst
to jostle the water enough for it to click into ice shape.
So it only picks up uncharged particles, basically. And there's even some uncharged
particles like gamma rays that don't set it off. So why is this good? Dark matter is a hypothetical
form of matter, right? That is basically has to exist for the world, for like the universe to
make sense. Is that pretty much what? Yeah, sure. It's never been observed,
but it's also thought to have similar properties
to uncharged particles.
So the team behind the chamber thinks
that this might be a really easy way
to positively identify interactions
between dark matter and real matter.
So particle detectors search for dark matter
by watching for unexplained nudges of atoms
in the chamber that they're passing through.
They nudge the nuclei of the atoms.
But they also, regular ones pick up, like ones up until now,
pick up lots of interference from charged particles.
So you have to like screen for all those, which makes it way more complicated.
But this one would effectively just automatically screen for that.
And because water is hydrogen, which is the lightest molecule is that
right oh shit they think they could search for way smaller pieces of dark matter than they've
ever been able to search for before because it's lighter and it'll be easier to nudge so how would
they know if they found dark matter is that charged particles bounce and scatter in the chamber and you can see video shot
like super slow of the charged particles coming in and then like splitting off
and making lots of different nucleation points at once but they theorize that
dark matter would only make one nucleation point so they basically like
just search their videos for a single nucleation point do you mean uncharged
particles yes whatever one one hits the thing.
Okay.
You just said charged.
Uncharged particles scatter when they hit the water.
So a bunch of nucleation sites at once.
But they think that dark matter would only interact once
with what it was passing through and not scatter.
So they have to look for a video of that happening.
And then they would hypothetically have an interaction.
Like neutrinos are just this field of particles
that are passing through everything all the time.
Is that the idea for dark matter too?
Is there just a field of dark matter that permeates everything?
It's not supposed to be a field.
It's supposed to be particles.
It just doesn't interact with anything.
It doesn't even interact with itself.
All it has is mass.
But it has mass, and so it affects how the galaxy moves around.
So it's very possible that it's like...
It only affects through gravitational force.
That it's like literally impossible to record it nudging anything?
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah, I mean, we don't know.
Okay.
We really don't know anything about dark matter
except that it has gravity.
I mean, all we really know is that
there is more gravity than there should be.
And dark matter is an explanation for that.
So we could, in 10 or 100 years,
realize that it's something else
and call it something other than dark matter.
So we've got Stefan's Plasmon Resonance Diving Boards
to measure a gap
that light can't even get into.
And Sam has a team
studying super cold water
to try and detect dark matter
because it will super freeze that water
if any dark matter
flows through it, maybe.
Okay.
Three, two, one.
Sam. Oh. I, two, one.
Sam.
Oh.
I'm back, baby.
You reached out to the scientist.
It is.
That's big.
He was really nice.
He wrote me back really fast.
He was like,
no one cares about my dark matter snowballs.
I care.
And I will leave his paper in the show notes and maybe paraphrase his explanation of what he sent to me also to help you figure it out at home.
Where's our show notes?
The show notes are at scishowtangents.org.
If you click on any episode, it'll bring you to a page with our notes and our research and stuff.
And now it's time to ask the science couch.
We've got some listener questions
for our couch of finely honed scientific minds. This is from at pottery geek who says, so atoms
are a lot of space and a little particle. Do the particles even touch each other? Any of them,
like even a little. So it depends on how you define touch. Yeah. It depends on how you define
particle too. Like what is anything at that point?
It's just excitations in a field.
So like, yeah, your butt isn't touching this couch even though it feels like it.
You're like hovering just slightly over it.
In the macro world, it's touching.
Yeah, I mean, we say touch because...
It's the only useful way to talk about it.
We can sense all the things like the firmness and the...
So how do we sense all the things?
Electricity?
Yeah, electromagnetic interaction.
Phew.
If they did touch each other, would that be really bad?
So there is a case...
I can step through the different definitions of touch
because there is a case where they can be touching.
Neat.
Because that's where physics gets really wibbly wobbly.
One definition of touch when you're talking about atomic things is when two things influence each other.
And so under that definition, which is the broadest, all atoms are always touching because like its wave function extends out.
So I'm touching you.
Wait, so all atoms are always touching every other atom?
Yeah, so like I'm touching you right now.
I'm touching the listener of this podcast right now.
Like by virtue of the listener hearing what we're saying?
No.
Or no, by virtue of like I have mass, they have mass,
and so my mass interacts with their mass.
In the same way that like gravity from very, very distant objects
is still affecting us just like almost indistinguishable
right but that is also true of electromagnetism and the strong force and the weak force even the
ones that have very tiny distances even the weak force stretch even the weak force sam
yeah so that definition of touch useless
definition two is touch is when two objects influence each other significantly so like a
little asterisk on top of that first definition enough that like my nerves fire so sitting on
this chair sitting on this chair with an atom you consider like the size of the atom to be
the sphere that contains 95 of the atom's electron mass.
So that's what we talk about when we're like orbital spheres and things like that.
Like how big an atom is, is where 95% of its mass is.
Because if you say 100% of its mass...
That's everything.
It's everything.
What do you mean everything?
Everything.
Probability fields.
Oh no.
Yes.
This is so stupid.
It's a lot of math.
And so with this definition, you're saying that atoms are touching when that region of 95% of them start to overlap.
And that can be like a bond, a chemical bond.
When two atoms are bonded, then they overlap enough to be considered touching.
Oh, yeah.
Even if they're not bonded, they could still influence each other's size.
Yeah.
Even I think me sitting.
Okay. It squishes the atoms some. Doesn't overlap them. are not bonded, they could still influence each other's size. Even I think me sitting,
it squishes the atom some.
It doesn't overlap them.
Overlapping probability fields of where an electron may or may not be.
So,
you ready for the next one?
Do things touch?
Just you wait.
The 100% of an atom's size
is the universe.
Keep going, Sari.
And then if you consider touching as two objects residing in the exact same location.
Yeah, okay.
So like if you were actually like pressed up against something else,
the Pauli exclusion principle, which you learn about in chemistry,
says that like electrons can never occupy
the same space as one another. In the probability field, there will be distinct electrons. There
will never be two electrons in one spot. But because physics, there is a material, I think,
known as a Bose-Einstein condensate, where at very low temperatures, some atoms can exist at the same location as other
atoms i'm not going to try to explain it beyond that but it's just like near absolute zero they
quote coalesce into a single quantum mechanical entity that's all simple answer to a simple
question so everything's all the same and nothing's touching. No, everything is all different and nothing's touching.
Or we all occupy the same quantum mechanical entity and everything is touching.
That sounds bad.
Basically, we should think about touching not in physics ways, but in normal human ways.
Okay, good.
Do not correct your children when they say, I touched that dog poop.
And say, well, technically, your electromagnetic
field approached it.
If you want to ask the science
coach your questions,
and how could you not after this,
you can tweet us at SciShowTangents.
We will send out the
topics for every episode that is
upcoming, so you can find out what the topic is
and let us know if you have any relevant
questions. Thank you to
AwesomeTK at Casual
Peruser and everybody else who
tweeted us your questions this episode.
Final scores!
Stefan, you came in with nothing. I freaking did
terribly. Yeah, you did. And then
Sari's got one and then I've got two
and then Sam took the lead.
Still in last place but I made up a lot of distance.
Yeah.
You and Matthew, that scientist.
Real dream team.
Thank you, Matthew.
Thank you, Matthew.
If you like this show and you want to help us out, very easy to do that.
You can leave us a review wherever you listen.
That's very helpful.
It helps us know what you think about the show.
Also, we're going to be looking at iTunes reviews for topic ideas for future episodes,
so you can leave those in there.
Second, tweet
us your favorite moment from the episode, because
I want to know if it's about
ferrets or about diapers or about
poop. We got very excited this episode,
and by we, I mean a lot of me.
And finally, if you want to show your
love for SciShow Tangents, just
tell people about us! Thank you for
joining us. I've been Hank Green. I've been Sari Reilly.
I've been Stefan Chin. And I've been Sam Schultz.
SciShow Tangents is a co-production of Complexly
and the wonderful team at WNYC Studios.
It's greeted by all of us and produced by Caitlin Hoffmeister
and Sam Schultz, who also edits a lot
of these episodes along with Hiroko Matsushima.
Our editorial assistant is Deboki Chakravarti.
Our sound design is by Joseph Tuna
Medish. Our social media organizer is
Victoria Bongiorno, and we couldn't make any of this
without our patrons on Patreon. Thank you!
And remember, the mind is not a vessel
to be filled, but a fire
to be lighted.
But, one more thing.
Speaking of poop, for a lot of creatures that poop, like us,
the intestinal muscle movements that make pooping possible are triggered by neurotransmitters being released from motor neurons.
But for the tiny roundworm C. elegans, its intestinal cells, not its nerve
cells, release protons that
stimulate muscles and make them poop.
Which is very biologically
unexpected. That's biologically
unexpected. I'll say.
That's a proton poop.
That was a great science joke,
Stephanie. Yes.
It's a proton pump like a thing.
Yeah. Okay.