Listen "Entropy: Gaining Knowledge by Admitting Ignorance"
Episode Synopsis
Alexander Schekochihin, Professor of Theoretical Physics, gives a talk on entropy. When dealing with physical systems that contain many degrees of freedom, a researcher's most consequential realisation is of the enormous amount of detailed information about them that she does not have, and has no hope of obtaining. It turns out that this vast ignorance is not a curse but a blessing: by admitting ignorance and constructing a systematic way of making fair predictions about the system that rely only on the information that one has and on nothing else, one can get surprisingly far in describing the natural world. In an approach anticipated by Boltzmann and Gibbs and given mathematical foundation by Shannon, entropy emerges as a mathematical measure of our uncertainty about large systems and, paradoxically, a way to describe their likely behaviour—and even, some argue, the ultimate fate of the Universe. Alex Schekochihin will admit ignorance and attempt to impart some knowledge.
More episodes of the podcast Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
Nonlinear dynamics of active particles
07/05/2025
The physics of “flat” electrons
07/05/2025
How to program a quantum computer
07/05/2025
Topology in the Physics of Condensed Matter
21/02/2025
The Hubble Tension
15/11/2024
Chirality in living systems
11/06/2024
Imaging living systems
11/06/2024
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.