Ghosts Vampires And Zombies Cinema Fiction vs Physics Reality.pdf

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Ghosts, Vampires and Zombies
Cinema Fiction vs Physics Reality
Costas J. Efthimiou 1
and Sohang Gandhi 2
Abstract
We examine certain features of popular myths regarding ghosts, vampires and zombies as they
appear in lm and folklore. We use physics to illuminate inconsistencies associated with these
myths and to give practical explanation to certain aspects.
1 Introduction
Perhaps for many, ghosts, vampires, zombies and the like are no more than Hollywood fantasy. How-
ever, increasingly these movies have come to reect popularly held pseudoscientic beliefs. For in-
stance, the movie “White Noise,” starring Michael Keaton, is based on the new trend among paranor-
malists — Electronic Voice Phenomena (EVP). The occult underground in both America and Europe
is witnessing a trendy rise in vampirism and belief in voodoo zombiecation which is widespread in
many parts of South America and Africa. Further, paranormal depictions in the media, especially
television and Hollywood, have a denite inuence on the way people think about paranormal claims
( [Sparks 1998, Sparks 2006] and references therein).
In this article we point out inconsistencies associated with the ghost, vampire and zombie mytholo-
gies as portrayed in popular lms and folklore, and give practical explanations to some of their features.
We also use the occasion as an excuse to teach a little about physics and mathematics.
Of course the paranormalist or occultist could claim that the Hollywood portrayal is a rather
unsophisticated and inaccurate representation of their beliefs, and thus the discussion we give hear
is moot. However, if they are to change their denition each time we raise issue, then all that they
are really arguing is that there exists something out there which may be given the name ‘ghost’, for
instance. Surely, no skeptic could argue with this.
2 Ghosts
2.1 Sudden Colds
It has become almost a Hollywood cliche that the entrance of a ghostly presence be foreshadowed by
a sudden and overwhelming chill (see, for example, “The Sixth Sense”, starring Bruce Willis). In fact,
sharp temperature drops are very commonly reported in association with supposed real-life encounters
with ghosts or poltergeists. This feature of supposed ghost sightings lends itself naturally to physical
explanation.
The famous Haunted Gallery at Hampton Court Palace near London, UK, is reputedly stalked by
the spirit of Catherine Howard, who was executed on 13 February, 1542, by Henry VIII. Visitors to the
room have described hearing screams and seeing apparitions in the gallery. A team of ghost-busting
psychologists, led by Dr Richard Wiseman of Hertfordshire University, installed thermal cameras and
air movement detectors in the gallery. About 400 palace visitors were then quizzed on whether they
1 C.J. Efthimiou is a theoretical physicist at the University of Central Florida (UCF). He is the advisor of the local
Campus Freethought Alliance (CFA) chapter which he helped to establish at UCF. Address: Department of Physics,
UCF, 4000 Central Florida Blvd, Orlando, FL 32816. costas@physics.ucf.edu
2 S. Gandhi has just received his BS in physics with honors. Among his many awards, he has been a Goldwater scholar
and an NSF fellow and was selected for the 2006 all-USA third team. He has served as the president of the CFA chapter
at UCF. In fall 2006, he will be a graduate student in physics at Cornell University.
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could feel a “presence” in the gallery. More than half reported sudden drops in temperature and some
said they sensed a ghostly presence. Several people claimed to have seen Elizabethan gures.
Before moving on to an explanation, we will need to outline the concept of heat. When a ‘warm’
object is placed next to a ‘cool’ object (see gure 1) energy will begin to ow from the warmer body,
causing it to cool, to the cooler body, causing it to warm. This energy, which is being transferred
between the two objects due to their dierence in temperature, is called heat. Note that an object is
never said to ‘possess’ any amount of heat. Heat is only dened through transfer. For instance, no
matter how high one turns their stove, it never possesses any degree of heat. In the instance where
someone suddenly touches the stove, however, there is there occurrence heat — it is the energy owing
from the stove to that person’s hand.
Figure 1: Heat always moves from a hotter object to a colder object. Picture is borrowed from
As heat continues to be transferred from the warmer body to the cooler one in gure 1, and
the warmer body’s temperature continues to drop while the cooler body’s temperature climbs, there
comes a point when the two bodies are at the same temperature. At this point heat ceases to ow
between the two object since neither is the hotter one and heat has no denite direction in which to
be transferred. This condition is called thermal equilibrium.
In our stove example, heat was transferred via conduction — the exchange of heat through direct
contact. There are two other modes by which heat may be transferred. These two modes involve
the exchange of heat by two objects which are separated by some distance. If these two objects are
emersed in a uid (Earth’s atmosphere for example), then the warmer body may provide heat to the
uid in its immediate vicinity. This warmer uid will then tend to rise thus coming in contact with
a cooler body above. There may also be a lateral current in the uid, thus allowing the heated uid
to aect a cooler body to the side. This type of heat transfer, by an intermediary uid, is called
convection.
Figure 2: Convection currents in a uid. Picture is borrowed from [ Bolemon] .
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In gure 2( a) we give an example of what is known as convection currents. Suppose that the right
wall is kept warm and the left wall is kept cool. Then air in contact with the right wall will tend to
gain heat and then rise while air in contact with the left wall will tend to loose heat and then sink.
The circular ow that then forms is called a convection current. Air cycles around a loop picking
up some heat at the right wall, dropping it o at the left wall, and then coming back around again.
Actually, the air current pattern will be somewhat more complicated then what we just described.
There will be all kinds of smaller cycles and eddies embedded in some complex pattern as in gure
2( b). The overall ow, however, will be as in gure 2( a).
The third mode of heat transfer allows for exchange between two separated objects even if they
are in a total vacuum. How can two objects exchange heat if there is no mater in between them? The
answer is radiation. The thermal energy of a body is expressed in the ‘jiggling’ of its various constituent
particles. As electrically charged particles within a body jiggle about, they produce electromagnetic
waves. When these waves hit another body, they cause the particles in that body to jiggle even more
than they were before and thus the body heats up. Since hotter bodies produce more of this radiation,
there will be more radiation from the hotter body falling upon the cooler body than radiation from
the cooler body falling upon the hotter body. Thus, overall, the hotter body will be loosing heat while
the cooler body will be gaining heat. We will not be too concerned with this particular mechanism
for heat exchange here.
Returning to the Haunted Gallery at Hampton Court Palace, Dr Wiseman’s team reported [BBC 2001]
that the experiences could be simply explained by the gallery’s numerous concealed doors. These el-
derly exits are far from draught-proof and the combination of air currents which they let in cause
sudden changes in the room’s temperature. In two particular spots, the temperature of the gallery
plummeted by up to 2 C (3.6 F). “You do, literally, walk into a column of cold air sometimes,” said
Dr Wiseman. “It’s possible that people are misattributing normal phenomena... If you suddenly feel
cold, and you’re in a haunted place, that might bring on a sense of fear and a more scary experience.”
The rumor that ‘cold spots’ are associated with ghosts seems to be a myth created by the construction
of old building and the vivid imagination of people.
But how could a few degrees drop in temperature explain the dramatic chills described so many
in ghostly accounts? First o, what we sense as cold is not correlated to temperature so much as
to the rate at which heat is being transferred from our body to the environment. For instance, even
in a temperate pool, one feel a very sharp chill when one rst enters. A moderate draft containing
condensed moisture could cause a very sharp sensation of cold. Secondly, we are all aware of the
‘tall-tale’ eect. Memories tend to become distorted and exaggerated. It is exactly this reason why
scientists tend not to rely on unchecked eyewitness accounts.
2.2 The Inconsistency of the Notion of Material-lessness
Popular myth holds that ghosts are material-less. For instance in the movie “Ghost” (starring Patrick
Swaze, Demi Moore, Whoopi Goldberg), the recently deceased main character tries desperately to
save his former lover from a violent intruder. His attempts grant him no avail, as at each lunge he
passes right through the perpetrator. It is interesting, however, that he was able to walk up the stairs
just previous to this. In fact, this is a common feature of the ghost myth. Ghosts are held to be able to
walk about as they please, but they pass through walls and any attempt to pick up an object or aect
their environment in any other way leads to material-less ine cacy — unless they are poltergeists, of
course!
Let us examine the process of walking in detail. Now walking requires an interaction with the
oor and such interactions are explained by Newton’s Laws of Motion. Newton’s rst law is the law
of inertia. It states that a body at rest will remain at rest until acted upon by an external force.
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Figure 3: Two stills taken from the movie “Ghost”. I the left still the ghost goes through a door. In
the right still, the ghost — which follows a burglar in his girlfriend’s home — looses his balance as he
ascends the staircase and falls on the stairs.
Therefore, a person cannot start walking unless a force, applied by some body other than herself, is
acting upon her. But where is the force coming from? The only object in contact with the person
while walking is the oor. So, the force moving a person during walking is coming from the oor. But
how does the oor know to exert a force when the person wants to start walking and stop exerting it
when the person wants to stand? Actually, there is no magic here. The person actually tells the oor.
She tells the oor by using Newton’s third law.
Newton’s third law says that if one object exerts a force on another object, then the second object
exerts a force, that is equal but oppositely directed, on the rst object — hence “for each action there
is an equal but opposite reaction.” Thus when the skate-boarder in gure 4 pushes on the wall, the
wall pushes right back on her, causing her to accelerate o to the left.
Figure 4: An example of Newton’s third law known as action-reaction law. Picture is borrowed from
[ Bolemon] .
Thus walking goes like this (see gure 5) : The person wanting to do the walking must remain at
rest unless a force acts on her. She gets the oor to apply a force on her by applying a backward force
on the oor with her foot. She keeps repeating this action, alternating feet. The point is that for the
ghost to walk, it must be applying forces to the oor. Now the oor is part of the physical universe.
Thus the ghost has an aect on the physical universe. If this is so, then we can detect the ghost via
physical observation. That is, the depiction of ghosts walking, contradicts the precept that ghosts are
material-less.
So which is it? Are ghosts material or material-less? Maybe they are only material when it comes
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Figure 5: Forces acting on the feet of a person while walking. Picture is borrowed from [ Bolemon] .
to walking. Well then we must assume that they can’t control this selective material-lessness, otherwise
Patrick Swayze would have saved his girlfriend in “Ghost.” In this case, we could place stress sensors
on the oor and detect a ghost’s presence. Maybe they walk by some other supernatural means. Well
why can’t they use this power to manipulate objects when they want to? Even more, it seems strange
to have a supernatural power that only allows you to get around by mimicking human ambulation.
This is a very slow and awkward way of moving about in the scheme of things. In any case, you’d
have to go to some lengths to make this whole thing consistent.
Incidentally, the reader may have noticed that we skipped a law in our discussion. We heard about
the rst law and the third law. Newton’s second law of motion is that the acceleration of an object —
the rate at which it speeds up — is proportional to the force applied, the constant of proportionality
being the mass. We didn’t need this law for our discussion but mention it for completeness.
3 Vampires
Anyone who has seen John Carpenter’s “Vampires” or the movie “Blade” or any of the host of other
vampire lms is already quite familiar with how the legend goes. The vampires need to feed on human
blood. After one has stuck his fangs into your neck and sucked you dry, you turn into a Vampire
yourself and carry on the blood sucking legacy. The fact of the matter is, if vampires truly feed with
even a tiny fraction of the frequency that they are depicted to in the movies and folklore, then the
human race would have been wiped out quite quickly after the rst vampire appeared.
Let us assume that a vampire need feed only once a month. This is certainly a highly conservative
assumption given any Hollywood vampire lm. Now two things happen when a vampire feeds. The
human population decreases by one and the vampire population increases by one. Let us suppose
that the rst vampire appeared in 1600 AD. It doesn’t really matter what date we choose for the
rst vampire to appear; it has little bearing on our argument. We list a government website in the
references [ US Census] which provides an estimate of the world population for given any date. For
January 1, 1600 we will accept that the global population was 536,870,911. 3 In our argument, we had
at the same time 1 vampire.
We will ignore the human mortality and birth rate for the time being and only concentrate on the
eects of vampire feeding. On February 1st, 1600 1 human will have died and a new vampire born.
This gives 2 vampires and (536, 870, 911 1) humans. The next month there are two vampires feeding
3 It may seem odd to the reader that we have specied the population with so much precision — we have a number
in the one-hundred millions and have specied it all the way down to the ‘one’s place’ (...911). We chose the particular
value for convenience. The actual estimated population in the 17th century is 562 ± 17 millions. Beyond mathematical
simplication, our choice has little impact on the argument to follow. If we were to report any number in the range of
possible values for the population in year 1600, the end result of our calculations below would be essentially the same.
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