G
George Herold
Oh, cripes. They are ALL my favorites, since I haven't
actually built any of them, yet.
But I'm particularly interested in playing around with the
experiments requiring a vacuum pump. Actually making my own
evacuated systems is a lot different that using "store
bought" products that are already done and sealed and only
usable for one or two experiments. This would develop and
refine new skills I don't currently have and teach me a lot
about practical problems along the way that I'd like to
learn. It would open doors to new things for me and I like
that. I'm more interested in this that the next one below
because it's more achievable for me, I think.
Obviously, I'd like to test Bell's inequality myself. That's
later in the book. I'm not sufficiently convinced that his
design is up to the real challenges, though. I think there
are sources of error that are too large and that he "got
lucky" in finding approximately the right values that he
reported. So I really think that when I get more into it, it
will wind up costing more than I really imagine in getting
the right parts. And that trying to avoid that cost and
building them myself won't make it any better. I just don't
have the right infrastructure here and getting enough of it
will set me back too much money. So before I dig into that
area, I have MORE reading to do and hopefully more study
about the details so that perhaps I can either convince
myself his approach is good enough or that I can come up with
something else that takes really good ideas from several
sources.
Another book I'm finding some recent joy with is:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/0199798125
Ahh I've heard of that book. I think I have way to many QM books,
back when I was trying to learn it, I over compensated and bought
more books rather than studying one in depth. (I didn't have a good
QM teacher.)
George H.