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How quantum biology might explain life’s biggest questions

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    I'd like to introduce you
    to an emerging area of science.
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    One that is still speculative,
    but hugely exciting.
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    It's certainly one that's
    growing very rapidly.
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    Quantum biology asks
    a very simple question.
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    Does quantum mechanics, that weird
    and wonderful, and powerful theory
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    of the subatomic world
    of atoms and molecules
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    that underpins so much of modern
    physics and chemistry, also play
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    a role inside the living cell?
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    On other words, are there processes,
    mechanisms, phenomena in living organisms
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    that can only be explained with a helping
    hand from quantum mechanics.
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    Now, quantum biology isn't new.
    It's been around since the early 1930s.
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    But its only in the last decade or so,
    that careful experiments
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    in biochemistry labs, using spectroscopy
    that have shown clear, firm evidence
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    that there are certain specific mechanisms
    that require quantum mechanics
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    to explain them.
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    Quantum biology brings together
    quantum physicists, biochemists,
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    molecular biologists.
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    It's a very interdisciplinary field.
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    I come from quantum physics.
    So, I'm a nuclear physicist.
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    I've spent more than three decades trying
    to get my head around quantum mechanics.
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    One of the founders of quantum
    mechanics, Neil Bohr said,
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    If you're not astonished by it,
    then you haven't understood it.
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    So, I sort of feel happy that I'm still
    astonished by it and that's a good thing.
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    But it means I study the very smallest
    structures in the universe.
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    The building blocks of reality.
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    If we think about the scale of size,
    start with something, an everyday object
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    like the tennis ball, and just go down
    orders of magnitude and size.
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    From the eye of a needle, down to a cell,
    down to a bacterium, down to an enzyme.
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    You eventually reach the nano world.
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    Now, nanotechnology may
    be a term you've heard of.
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    A nanometer is
    a billionth of a meter.
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    My area is the atomic nucleus,
    which is the tiny dot inside an atom.
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    It's even smaller in scale.
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    This is the domain of quantum mechanics,
    and physicists and chemists have had
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    a long time to get used to it.
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    Biologists on the other hand
    have got off lightly, in my view.
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    They are very happy with their
    balls-and-sticks models of molecules.
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    (Laughter)
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    The balls are the atoms, the sticks
    are the bonds between the atoms
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    and when they can't build them
    physically in the lab,
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    nowadays they have very powerful
    computers that will simulate a huge model.
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    This is a protein made up
    of 100,000 atoms.
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    It doesn't really require much in the way
    of quantum mechanics to explain it.
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    Quantum mechanics was
    developed in the 1920s.
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    It is a set of beautiful and powerful
    mathematical rules and ideas
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    that explain the world
    of the very small.
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    And it's a world that very different
    from our everyday world
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    made up of trillions of atoms.
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    It's a world built on probability
    and chance.
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    It's a fuzzy world.
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    It's a world of phantoms, where particles
    can also behave like spread out waves.
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    If we imagine quantum mechanics
    or quantum physics, then as
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    the fundamental
    foundation of reality itself.
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    That's not really surprising
    that we say quantum physics
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    underpins organic chemistry.
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    After all, it gives us the rules
    that tells us the rules that tell us
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    how the atoms fit together
    to make organic molecules.
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    Organic chemistry, scaled up in complexity
    gives us molecular biology,
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    which of course leads
    to life itself.
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    So, in a way, it's sort
    of not surprising.
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    It's almost trivial.
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    Say, well of course life ultimately
    must depend of quantum mechanics
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    -- so does everything else.
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    So does all inanimate matter,
    made up of trillions of atoms.
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    Ultimately, there's a quantum level
    that we know where we have to delve
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    into this weridness.
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    But in everyday life,
    we can forget about it.
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    Because once you put together trillions of atom, that quantum weirdness
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    just dissolves away.
Title:
How quantum biology might explain life’s biggest questions
Speaker:
Jim Al-Khalili
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
16:09

English subtitles

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