Entries in documentary (2)

Sunday
Feb142010

Brief History Of Quantum Mechanics - BestOfScience

 

via BestOfScience on YouTube

A Brief History Of Quantum Mechanics - 6 parts


The history of quantum mechanics began essentially with the 1838 discovery of cathode rays by Michael Faraday, the 1859 statement of the black body radiation problem by Gustav Kirchhoff, the 1877 suggestion by Ludwig Boltzmann that the energy states of a physical system could be discrete, and the 1900 quantum hypothesis by Max Planck that any energy is radiated and absorbed in quantities divisible by discrete energy elements, E, such that each of these energy elements is proportional to the frequency ν with which they each individually radiate energy.

Planck insisted that this was simply an aspect of the processes of absorption and emission of radiation and had nothing to do with the physical reality of the radiation itself.

However, at that time, this appeared not to explain the photoelectric effect (1839), i.e. that shining light on certain materials can function to eject electrons from the material.

In 1905, basing his work on Plancks quantum hypothesis, Albert Einstein postulated that light itself consists of individual quanta. These later came to be called photons (1926). From Einstein’s simple postulation was born a flurry of debating, theorizing and testing, and thus, the entire field of quantum physics.

Wikipedia: Quantum_mechanics (History)

Quantum mechanics (QM) is a set of principles describing the physical reality at the atomic level of matter (molecules and atoms) and the subatomic (electrons, protons, and even smaller particles). These descriptions include the simultaneous wave-like and particle-like behavior of both matter and radiation (“waveparticle duality”).

Quantum Mechanics is a mathematical description of reality, like any scientific model. Some of its predictions and implications go against the “common sense” of how humans see a set of bodies (a system) behave. This isn’t necessarily a failure of Quantum mechanics - it’s more of a reflection of how humans understand space and time on larger scales (e.g., centimetres, seconds) rather than much smaller.

Quantum mechanics says that the most complete description of a system is its wavefunction, which is just a number varying between time and place. One can derive things from the wavefunction, such as the position of a particle, or its momentum. Yet the wavefunction describes probabilities, and some physical quantities which classical physics would assume are both fully defined together simultaneously for a system are not simultaneously given definite values in Quantum mechanics.

It is not that the experimental equipment is not precise enough - the two quantities in question just are not defined at the same time by the Universe. For instance, location and velocity do not exist simultaneously for a body (this is called the Heisenberg uncertainty principle)

Certain systems, however, do exhibit quantum mechanical effects on a larger scale; superfluidity (the frictionless flow of a liquid at temperatures near absolute zero) is one well-known example. Quantum theory also provides accurate descriptions for many previously unexplained phenomena such as black body radiation and the stability of electron orbitals. It has also given insight into the workings of many different biological systems, including smell receptors and protein structures.

Even so, classical physics often can be a good approximation to results otherwise obtained by quantum physics, typically in circumstances with large numbers of particles or large quantum numbers. (However, some open questions remain in the field of quantum chaos.)

Wikipedia: Quantum Mechanics

Monday
Sep072009

Overnight (2003): The folly of Troy Duffy and The Boondock Saints

UPDATE: via /Film: Duffy responds to Overnight

Boondock Saints Director Troy Duffy Responds to Overnight; Calls the Documentary an Unfair Smear Job

…For their part, the makers of Overnight have already responded to Duffy’s allegations and denied any bias in their filmmaking. Director Tony Montana explained:

…The proverbial keys to the kingdom were handed to Troy. The narrative of ‘Overnight’ changed as the protagonist and the events changed. We simply followed the organic themes.

Overnight’s producer was slightly more forceful in his response, saying:

…I have to admit it is impressive that he got the sequel off the ground after making enemies of the likes of the William Morris Agency, Harvey Weinstein and nearly everyone else in the industry…

In my interview with him, Duffy was equally derogatory about Overnight’s filmmakers, saying:

I could go point-for-point on the whole film. But the fact of the matter is, what I accomplished was a tall order, especially for somebody with no relationships in this business. From watching that movie, you have no fucking idea how I did it. Period. They did not tell you my story. That wasn’t a documentary about me. That was a smear job executed by two opportunists who decided to screw everybody who ever helped them.


 

This is the review of Overnight I wrote long ago. I’m refreshing it because Troy Duffy recently completed Boondock Saints 2, which will arrive in theaters soon.

I’d heard about this documentary a while back, and finally screened it.  It is the story of a blue-collar nobody from Boston who sells a script and then launches into Hollywood-scale hubris and excess. Celebrities. Partying. Shouting. Phone calls. Doesn’t end happily. Highly recommended. Imdb link.

Troy Duffy, an overnight Hollywood golden boy, sells a script for $300,000 and gets a Weinstein deal to make the movie (Boondock Saints), and the sound track with his band, as well as final cut, and part ownership of a newly trendy bar in L.A. where Duffy worked before the deal. He even gets signed to a record label, and he brags that his band is the first to be signed completely unheard. They didn’t even have a demo song. The label dropped them after Weinstein dropped their film, naturally.

Well into this docu-disaster Troy Duffy said to his inner circle that things had really fallen apart and it was time to actually produce the film. So he wasn’t being paid to get drunk and schmooze with celebrities?

It’s really sad the way he strung along his brother and close friends, who perhaps assumed a Weinstein nod would turn into mounds of cash.

Directors: Tony Montana Mark Brian Smith

Cast: Troy Duffy Taylor Duffy Jerry O’Connell Willem Dafoe Mark Wahlberg Patrick Swayze Billy Zane Vincent D’Onofrio Sean Patrick Flanery John Goodman Ron Jeremy Billy Connolly

via /Film:

“Boondock Saints director Troy Duffy held a live videocast answering fan and website questions yesterday about Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day, which just wrapped production. We were asked to participate, but were too late to the game. Maybe we can get Troy on the /Filmcast Afterdark and get to the bottom of “Overnight”. Thanks to my friends at Geeks of Doom, I have the video embedded below.”