Why General Relativity (and Newton's Laws) tell us The Sky is Falling Up

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Dialect

Dialect

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 2 000
@IamSatria
@IamSatria 7 ай бұрын
"Gravity Don't Make Things Fall" "Gravity Things Doesn't Fall Make"
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 2 жыл бұрын
Yet again a fantastic video!
@sgringo
@sgringo 2 жыл бұрын
Coming from you, that is high praise! You're one of the best content providers for this subject matter (no pun intended).
@dialectphilosophy
@dialectphilosophy 2 жыл бұрын
Your support has made a world of difference for us. There isn't thanks enough we can give.
@sgringo
@sgringo 2 жыл бұрын
@@dialectphilosophy Your content is always superb. I've learned a lot from both you and ScienceClic.
@abhir7823
@abhir7823 2 жыл бұрын
Was just thinking that Dialect's video style narration animation etc resembles Science Clic...😁
@Name-js5uq
@Name-js5uq 2 жыл бұрын
If you're on board then I can trust everything in this video wholeheartedly. I love each and every single one of your videos. They truly are the benchmark for which all others must strive to become. You are at the top for helping others to become more enlightened about physics and spacetime. I think about your videos often and rewatch them just to stay current with my knowledge. I can never thank you enough. 😊 P.S. I love the background music so very much as it actually helps me to stay focused on your subject matter. Please don't change it. 🙏
@evrimagaci
@evrimagaci 2 жыл бұрын
Great video! But: How does tidal forces towards the end of the video explain the problem with "earth falling up in all directions"? You asked the right question there but I am not sure if I understand how your explanation answers how the Earth can "fall up" in all directions? Also, you mentioned it's as if the objects are sucking the space-time around them. So this also goes against the Earth/sky falling up in all directions. Do they suck in or do they fall up?
@-_Nuke_-
@-_Nuke_- 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, those 2 things cancel each other out (after millions of years after the formation of the Earth) perfectly, so the Earth continues to have the same shape. The Earth is moving outwards in spacetime due to the Earth's own internal geological pressure, and spacetime itself, is falling inwards due to the Earth's energy density "sucking in" local spacetime. You could imagine that the Earth is flat and accelerating upwards but in a curved spacetime! All of a sudden, time at different altitudes runs either faster or slower and the entire shape of the flat Earth takes the shape of the local spacetime... Basically, a sphere. That doesn't mean that the superimposed spacetime, isn't equally Deus ex machina as it is with Newton's force of Gravity. It's just a more sophisticated Deus ex machina that takes more stuff into account, and gives an accurate result that respects the speed of light limit. But the explanation isn't any more or less "magical" than that of Newton.
@edwardjenner1381
@edwardjenner1381 2 жыл бұрын
I believe that it is the time-curvature in 'spacetime' curvature. Notice the gravitational subtractions were all done in space. The residual is the space curvature. Nearly all the effects of gravity near a body such as the earth or sun are due to the curvature of time. (I'm not 100% sure about this, because I would explain the concept differently, but I'm pretty sure that is what is explained). The earth accelerating 'up' is caused by the time curvature. If you are sitting on the earth in empty space, then relative to the earth you are stationary and thus not traveling through space, so you should not be influenced by space curvature, but you are still traveling in time, so you do experience time curvature. Falling off a building, you do then experience both space and time curvature since you are moving relative to the earth. But he space curvature is a tiny fraction of the overall gravitational effect. Here is the thing though with the above explanation at the end. If you consider that the earth is dragging spacetime into itself, then it seems more like objects that are stationary in that spacetime are indeed being pulled toward the earth, rather than the earth accelerating outwards. That is at odds with the video and the inertial frame of reference idea. - EXCEPT the inertial frame of reference is still local. Suppose you took the view of the earth as a whole as int he video with the apples on each side of the earth. You then have 2 people jumping off roofs in the US and Australia. Now has the act of jumping off the roof switched off the gravitational field? No, it has not. IDK, this then gets way deeper than a youtube reply. But locally the earth is accelerating up due to time-curvature - it is accelerating into you in time, not space.
@justintime9714
@justintime9714 2 жыл бұрын
@@edwardjenner1381 The best explanation is, that gravity is a real force which obeys Einsteins equations. Like it would be if gravitons would exist.
@juliavixen176
@juliavixen176 2 жыл бұрын
The rocks, which make up this thing we call the Earth, are in currently in hydrostatic equilibrium between the outwards electrostatic forces in the atoms of the rocks, and the pressure of spacetime getting squeezed inwards by gravity. Gravity is making the space that the Earth occupies "physically shrink"... you don't see the Earth actually shrinking though, because the core of the Earth, the mantle, the crust, etc. are stretching out by exactly the same amount that space is shrinking. (Here on the surface, that stretching out is about 9.8m/s of linear acceleration... going "up") Smaller rocky bodies in our solar system, like asteroids and stuff, are not compressed enough by gravity for their rocks to get squished into a sphere. The electrostatic forces in the rocks are greater than the "force" of gravity, so they are not in hydrostatic equilibrium. (The rocks don't flow like a liquid.) I should also mention, the ~15PSI (760mm Hg) atmospheric pressure we have here on the surface of the Earth is also due to gravity compressing spacetime. Literally compressing a gas... Water pressure in the oceans is also for the same reason. We're all floating on top of a big ball of liquid rocks and metals. Also, below the surface of the Earth, the local acceleration that you feel -- your weight -- decreases until you reach the center of mass of the Earth, where you will feel weightless, as if you were floating in space (because you are). (This is assuming a hypothetical situation if there was a room at the core of the earth which was comfortable for a human being, and not actually a 9800°F blob of iron.)
@aaronperelmuter8433
@aaronperelmuter8433 2 жыл бұрын
@@justintime9714 That makes no sense at all. Firstly it most definitely is NOT the best explanation to say that gravity is a real force which obeys Einstein’s equations because the only way to obey said equations is for gravity to not actually be a force at all. And what exactly does it even mean “like it would be if gravitons exist”? What would actually change if gravitons existed and more to the point, how could you possibly have any idea whatsoever about how anything would change by postulating the existence of imaginary particles? Why do you believe there is any need for yet another imaginary and completely unnecessary particle? What would change if gravitons were discovered? It’s as if you’re insinuating that gravity has some requirement to be quantised, which is clearly incorrect. How do you know it’s not quantum mechanics which needs to be gravitised?
@souvikchakraborty2019
@souvikchakraborty2019 Жыл бұрын
Misinformation. The equivalence principle says that a uniform gravitational field is indistinguishable from a freely falling reference frame. They are still two completely different things and you cannot claim that a uniform gravitational field is actually an accelerating reference frame. Objects in a uniform gravitational field move in a "straight" line towards lower gravitational potential, just like electrically charged objects in an electromagnetic field. The earth is not "falling up", and in fact there are clear differences between a gravitational field an an accelerating reference frame. Source: Physics postgrad working in general relativity.
@kerrylittle7368
@kerrylittle7368 Ай бұрын
Kinda like trying to calculate escape velocity from a black hole. (Humorous intent.)
@MrBBywaters
@MrBBywaters 7 күн бұрын
Thank God someone on here has a lick of sense!
@MrBBywaters
@MrBBywaters 7 күн бұрын
And I'll go you one further. I'll argue that a geodesic path by itself does not and cannot create gravitation. It is the contraction of spacetime toward the center of mass that creates both the paths and the potential gradient that causes an object to accelerate from regions of higher potential to regions of lower potential at the surface of the earth.
@andrewbarrenger
@andrewbarrenger Жыл бұрын
One of the few channels where I don't need subtitles, perfect diction! The switch-off gravity idea switched something on in my head. Thank you!
@warrenlancaster286
@warrenlancaster286 2 жыл бұрын
I have watched many videos on gravity over the years and I think this was one of the best . Thanks
@spyros_77
@spyros_77 2 жыл бұрын
The ability to effectively explain complex concepts isn’t just extraordinary, it's a service to the world!
@walterchavez3081
@walterchavez3081 Жыл бұрын
One of the best videos I've seen explaining how the equivalence principles of freefall to zero-G and gravity to acceleration can still work despite facts like gravity gets weaker over distance and causes things to fall radially.
@atila8623
@atila8623 Жыл бұрын
This Chanel is a paradise for physicists and who are interested in physics. You're doing great. I don't know how to thank you.
@messi8459
@messi8459 Жыл бұрын
being able to come up with effective analogies is a hella underrated skill, and you have it in spades, terrific video 10/10
@ImpShimadon
@ImpShimadon 2 жыл бұрын
Wow, I knew the equivalence principle was locally true for a homogeneous field, but I never thought about it using the tidal forces and the subtraction of vector component. Well done !!!!!
@hiZarki
@hiZarki Жыл бұрын
for a homogenous field isn't it globally true?
@anuman99ful
@anuman99ful 9 ай бұрын
@@hiZarki Indeed
@micry8167
@micry8167 Жыл бұрын
I appreciate that you acknowledge the left over questions most viewers are left with. Just that makes me comfortable accepting the model for now. Great presentation and work.
@davidkent2804
@davidkent2804 2 жыл бұрын
Breakthrough concepts for the layman patiently and convincingly explained. Kudos
@dialectphilosophy
@dialectphilosophy 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your support!
@davidowen4816
@davidowen4816 3 ай бұрын
One of the best graphic demonstrations of this subject I've ever seen. I'm old, I've seen a lot of them. Don't miss this one.
@lucaozymandis479
@lucaozymandis479 2 жыл бұрын
What you are doing here and ScienceClic English on his channel (by the way ScienceClic, your last clip called "The Electromagnetic field, how Electric and Magnetic forces arise" is extraordinary) is THE REAL DEAL. I'm really surprised that you only have so few subscribers. Much closer to the value of the content promoted here would be at least 3 - 4 million subscribers, but if you keep it up, you will get there in the shortest time, which is what I wish for you from the bottom of my heart. I only ask you to maintain this rigor in the future and we want as many and more frequent videos like this from you (and from ScienceClic as well!). I can't wait to watch the videos in which you treat the topics you opened up with the questions at the end of this video. All the best in the future in your journey through ... space time (SIC!).
@bobinthewest8559
@bobinthewest8559 Жыл бұрын
I need a better/more thorough explanation of how all points on the surface of a sphere can be accelerating “outward” simultaneously, while the sphere itself remains intact.
@neilhopwoodsjugband
@neilhopwoodsjugband Жыл бұрын
Agreed. Where exactly is the acceleration happening if the surface is actually not moving relative to the sphere it is compromised of? Here's another one...if you are really at rest when you are falling in open space, why is the sensation of falling so internal and striking? That one has some explanations I think but it's interesting.
@tyedee7552
@tyedee7552 Жыл бұрын
When you have a cloud of gas in empty space, it expands, due to the gases' internal pressure, which occurs in every direction. This explains how the earth is accelerating in every direction, because the materials inside the earth exert pressure outward. Now to explain why the earth does not fall apart, we can't use the "force of gravity", because it is fictitious. So instead, we are forced to conclude that the volume of the spatial region encompassed by the earth is shrinking over time due to spacetime curvature(more precisely Ricci curvature). If you are wondering where this spacetime curvature comes from, it is shown in the Einstein Field Equations that mass and energy density cause spacetime curvature.
@carultch
@carultch Жыл бұрын
This is something he does a horrible job at explaining, and you have the a knee-jerk reaction anyone should have from hearing his ideas. There isn't any acceleration of the surface of our planet, in the kinematic sense of the word "acceleration" that you ordinarily experience. But there IS acceleration, in the sense that there is a net non-gravitational force, which is equivalent from the observer's point of view of being in deep space and actually accelerating. What's really going on, is that spacetime is collapsing in on itself, in the region of a gravitational field. Constraint forces "accelerate" objects on the surface of this planet outward, against the space collapsing. We are therefore "running to stay still" as a consequence of constraint forces preventing us from following the collapsing spacetime.
@dontmeansquat
@dontmeansquat Жыл бұрын
Two points on opposite sides of the earth have been accelerating away from each other at what appears to be a fairly constant rate for quite a while now. Even in just one year, their relative velocities were approaching c. Isn't that what's called "exploding"?
@carultch
@carultch Жыл бұрын
​@@dontmeansquat He has a new video out that explains this, called "The River Model of General Relativity", and it's very similar to what I described in my previous comment.
@GuyAtTheSix
@GuyAtTheSix Жыл бұрын
Your channel and ScienceClic are by far the best channels on this subject. Keep up the good work. Look forward to seeing new videos from your channel!
@Jameshazfisher
@Jameshazfisher 2 жыл бұрын
"The river model of general relativity, where mass eats space" - aha, that's exactly how I've been making sense of it! I need to see more about this interpretation!
@dexter8705
@dexter8705 2 жыл бұрын
They mostly only refer the river model to black holes but it should be used for all matter, black holes only do it on a more intense scale.
@gtitboij2586
@gtitboij2586 Жыл бұрын
Does it " eat" space or is it a diffrent form of space ? Space in a different state
@dexter8705
@dexter8705 Жыл бұрын
@@gtitboij2586 don't know, probably just returns to its previous state or dimension. Space and matter are most likely anti-pair states of something. Were use to hearing about anti particles and they destroy each other releasing energy, but gravity is space being erased or converted, but the matter stays. Most likely converted to the time dimension.
@gtitboij2586
@gtitboij2586 Жыл бұрын
@@dexter8705 we all know that matter and energy in the universe are conserved so I am of the opinion that it is a diffrent form of space , the wave model suggest that space is excited via electromagnetic waves therefore there must be a quantized point where space becomes matter thus allowing for the formation of non- degenerate bosonic particles ...
@dexter8705
@dexter8705 Жыл бұрын
@@gtitboij2586 I like that idea but wouldn't that cause other objects to be push away and not pulled in? I'm trying to visually imagine and physic'ally because sound can do something similar but thats due to the compression of the atmosphere, I wonder if the excited state of matter and space from the electromagnetic wave are doing something similar but with enough force to pull it in...
@michaeldelaney1058
@michaeldelaney1058 Жыл бұрын
Just found this channel and love its content. However, I'd appreciate a better explanation by the idea that the ground accelerates up toward objects we would normally consider as falling down. I understood everything this video said from the standpoint of vectors and so forth, and even learned a few new ways to think about GR. But when we got to the question about how Earth, a solid sphere, can accelerate upward in all directions, I felt the answer was glossed over. I'm not saying the answer isn't there, it was just rushed past. Having thoroughly enjoyed all four videos about how easy it is to pick apart solutions for the Twin Paradox by asking simple questions pointing out contradictory or incomplete answers, it is my feeling that saying that Earth, or at least the local ground, accelerates up makes way for contradictory or incomplete answers. After all, this video even points out how strange it would be for two apples to be released on opposite ends of the planet, implying Earth is accelerating in two opposing directions at the same time. Again, I'm not saying the explanation isn't there or doesn't make sense, I'm just saying it would be nice to revisit this idea I'm greater depth. Is saying the ground accelerates up merely a colloquial tool to make sense of the various vectors which add in some directions and eliminate themselves in others? Or are we to literally expect huge columns of dirt and rock to shoot up from beneath our feet every time an apple lets loose from a branch? Or is there a third way of phrasing it which a future video can explore? Thank you for considering my query as I would be very interested to learn this topic in greater depth, which I'm sure there is much yet to cover.
@dialectphilosophy
@dialectphilosophy Жыл бұрын
Glad you're enjoying the content! And you're right that a lot of information is glossed over -- we didn't want a 40-minute video on our hands, so we're breaking the topic into multiple videos (like we did with the twin paradox series). The next video in the series will tackle the question of how the earth can accelerate in many directions at once... stay tuned!
@michaeldelaney1058
@michaeldelaney1058 Жыл бұрын
@@dialectphilosophy Thanks for the response. Can't wait to see what's next.
@davidzombori54
@davidzombori54 Жыл бұрын
@@dialectphilosophy It defies common sense that channel with such quality is in fact proposing rather radical idea as earth accelerating up. It is so contraintuitive and propostereus that it should be backed with some serious evidences. So far you have not provide any. That said, everything else is among best of the best on youtube regarding relativity and physics...
@pigdog126
@pigdog126 Жыл бұрын
The idea that we are accelerating at the surface of the earth is not a new idea invented by the creators of this channel. This has been the understanding of proponents of general relativity for decades
@tonyennis1787
@tonyennis1787 Жыл бұрын
1. What experiment shows that my local gravity disappears *instantly* when I step off the building, thus proving the ground is accelerating up? 2. I can't imagine convincing anyone that the apple isn't falling. Which part of this disproved gravity is a force pulling things down?
@singh2702
@singh2702 3 ай бұрын
This is what you'll get when seeking answers to complex physics phenomena from KZbinrs. Newton's acceleration is one that is felt by a body when a force is applied to the body at a particular point, which compresses the body's matter i.e. all the atoms that make up the body exert a force on each other. This is not what is going on when a body is in a free fall in a gravitational field. Lets take for example , a person with a mass of 70kg free falling near the surface of the earth. This person is roughly made up of 7*10^27(seven billion billion billion) atoms. Since all these atoms are contained within the gravitational field, each atom will be accelerated individually by an individual force equal in magnitude for each atom. So there are no atoms exerting forces on each other hence no sensation of a force accelerating you like the force you would feel when you step on the gas pedal in your car and get pushed into your seat. When this person is standing on the surface of the earth, the surface is pushing up and since the individually accelerating atoms are obstructed from their path of travel, they are compressed, exerting forces on each other thus giving the sensation of a force accelerating you. The vector component at the center does not disappear and just leave the tidal force component.
@Wagon_Lord
@Wagon_Lord 2 жыл бұрын
Combining slapstick with general relativity. Brilliant as always.
@leapdaniel8058
@leapdaniel8058 2 жыл бұрын
This was really good, thank you. I had always been bothered by the fact that most people discussing the equivalence principle almost never mentioned its locality, and it needlessly confused me for years. The "kill engine switch" idea was really cool. It's also very nice to see that the tidal forces are like a less extreme version of the "spaghettification" that occurs when falling into a black hole.
@ivoryas1696
@ivoryas1696 2 жыл бұрын
@Science Revolution Interesting?
@tomszabo7350
@tomszabo7350 Жыл бұрын
The tidal forces are purely geometric in a classical, Newtonian sense, whereas the idea of upward acceleration of the ground doesn't actually exist in (Newtonian) geometry and thus the theory he presents is inconsistent and flawed. Just consider that a falling object experiences acceleration (weightlessness) not just at its lower contact point (feet) but also internally (e.g. butterflies in the tummy). How does the acceleration of ground upwards cause this??? Also look at floating in water, or gravity inside the earth's core ... it is 4.3m/s² IN EVERY DIRECTION ... which implies the earth is "falling inwards" but you won't have any actual or apparent motion at all, and you can't "turn off gravity" by jumping off something (you float without being weightless).
@bobinthewest8559
@bobinthewest8559 Жыл бұрын
@@tomszabo7350 … Re: “butterflies in the tummy”… Ever drive your car at speed, over a hump (such as a railroad crossing)? You are driving along at a constant speed, and in a “uniform” direction (therefore, experiencing little or no acceleration)…. Until you encounter the hump. At that point, you experience an upward acceleration, followed by a very brief moment of “weightlessness”, then a “downward” movement, followed by an abrupt “halt” of “downward motion”. The point at which you feel the “butterflies”…. Is during that brief moment of “weightlessness”, which (from one perspective) can be described as being the moment in which “your acceleration is switched off”. If interpreted in this way…. It can be argued that “butterflies” are not caused by acceleration, but instead by the “switching off” of acceleration. I’m not claiming to have a better understanding of all of this than you do…. Nor am I saying that I fully agree with the claims of this video… Just pointing out how “interpretation” can influence one’s “conclusions”. Personally…. I need a much more thorough explanation of how all points along the surface of a sphere can be accelerating “outward” simultaneously, while the sphere remains “intact”.
@tomszabo7350
@tomszabo7350 Жыл бұрын
@Bob in the West A roller coaster or even an elevator can give you the same feeling ... never mind a fighter jet! It is a nervous system reaction in the abdominal wall to a change in acceleration. My point was that the ground "falling upward" can't explain it. Gravity is not indirect. The creator of the video does have it partially correct though. In the time domain the ground and everything else "falls" up (expands outward). This happens at the speed of light. If there is no mass present, then the time domain expands smoothly and space-time is "flat". The presence of mass creates "kinks" in the time domain which causes space-time to curve. It is tricky to visualize time like this ... perhaps try imagining the universe as a diorama that you can somehow observe from outside. Now zoom in on Earth ... you are still outside the universe diorama but all of a sudden everything is much bigger. Now zoom back out to billion light year scale ... everything now appears relatively smaller. That is essentially time (though it only seems to zoom in). But to everybody inside the universe diorama there is no change (expansion) in scale since in 3 dimensions all observed objects are relative. We only detect the "passage of time". Yet the expansion itself is very real including the generation of actual quanta of space (that we can't detect in 3 dimensions). The mechanics of how this time domain expansion actually happens remains to be solved though string theory and the holographic principle are probably on the right path.
@ayushdeshmukh284
@ayushdeshmukh284 Жыл бұрын
One rebuttal: the accelerator pedal (or any theoretically perfect apparatus) cannot instantaneously make the gravity vanish. Kinda like how when you release the top of a long hanging spring, the bottom stays stationary until the top of the spring reaches the bottom at the speed of sound. Letting go of the force moving the car will not mean that the ball pendulum stops accelerating faster than the speed of light, in fact it doesn't even happen faster than the speed of sound. (Speed of sound travelling through a car metal frame) So rather than giving allowing the pendulum to seem like an example, it should be made explicitly clear that only gravity vanishing far away would be a problem. (For example, say the car travelled 1km from a starting point, then stopped accelerating at an ending point. Looking from the ending point, the gravity at the starting point vanish at a response speed that's faster than the speed of light.)
@ritemolawbks8012
@ritemolawbks8012 2 жыл бұрын
This was a very good video. The caption @ 21:31 describes my first impression of the channel. I'm happy to be proven wrong, and as a new subscriber, I'm excited to finish the learning journey with you!
@dialectphilosophy
@dialectphilosophy 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you 😂. The journey will continue!
@PhuongNguyen-oy8sj
@PhuongNguyen-oy8sj 6 ай бұрын
One of the few channels that have a dark sense of humor in physics explanation.
@Justwantahover
@Justwantahover 2 жыл бұрын
I actually checked the date of upload. And was surprised it wasn't April the first!
@hdskbdjsksndjssm
@hdskbdjsksndjssm Жыл бұрын
bro the “sky is falling up” is a great name for some horror movie
@Dragonblaster1
@Dragonblaster1 2 жыл бұрын
Galileo didn't actually drop balls from the Tower of Pisa, he rolled them down inclined planes.
@peterdevalk7929
@peterdevalk7929 Жыл бұрын
Actually it was Simon Stevin who did the proof years earlier. But he wasn't Italian.
@mikev4621
@mikev4621 4 ай бұрын
@@peterdevalk7929 Dutch
@hugoballroom5510
@hugoballroom5510 Жыл бұрын
Just seeing this one now after commenting on the animation on one of the twin paradox videos. Again, superlative work on these concepts and representing them. At 17:03 i noticed the moving coordinate grid in the background and then at the end the animated coordinates which to me visually represents the concept of i think it's referred to as the "river model" in the video? I had not heard of that term, but it makes the thinking-shift the sequence of videos strives for very clear. One of the things that i'm still hung up on is how there are arguments attributing a cause to the phenomenon of gravity. I"m remembering a Feynman crack in one of the audio lectures about how the old theory of planetary motion was angels beating their wings to push the planets around, which has now been "slightly modified. The angels push the planets toward the sun and don't have wings." His point being that while the phenomenon can be more and more accurately described (over a wider regimes), the CAUSE of gravity is not something that is yet known. Causality being a whole other level of explanation.
@dialectphilosophy
@dialectphilosophy Жыл бұрын
You raise some good points. No one knows what gravity really is, or why it is linked to mass - makes many people susceptible to theories of causation that are often just poorly applied analogies. Thanks for watching!
@Speedcuber6969
@Speedcuber6969 3 ай бұрын
Saying this video is brillliant is an understatment. The way it is written and the logic that flows is so good. Brilliant writing whicuh translates to brilliant understanding
@stevegriffin1535
@stevegriffin1535 5 ай бұрын
These videos are all great. They almost instantly stir up competing / debunking videos which are also interesting.
@misterlau5246
@misterlau5246 2 жыл бұрын
The production level with so many animations is superb. Way to go!
@neoanderson7962
@neoanderson7962 Жыл бұрын
Interesting how well presented logical fallacies smoothly take us down the road of inaccuracy 😮😮😮
@ivoryas1696
@ivoryas1696 2 жыл бұрын
Man this is _really _*_really_* one of those moments in which I wish I had happily and accidentally stumbled upon a mostly completed KZbin series... I actually didn't even have as many questions as were shown in the end, and I _still_ feel like I've been left on a cliff-hanger. I'll agree that the explanatory power of this video and it's production quality are *_well_* above its weight class in subs and views, but then again, I doubt many don't...
@dialectphilosophy
@dialectphilosophy 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the kind words, glad you found us!
@potawatomi100
@potawatomi100 Жыл бұрын
Superb and outstanding video. Excellent narration and your explanation is very engaging.
@bunyu6237
@bunyu6237 Жыл бұрын
I like the fact that you counter-argument your counter-argument to your counter-argument of your argument
@ozachar
@ozachar 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for an amazing video with insightful delicate points highlighted. It would be nice if you add a segment or another video showing explicitly how we can glean this from the metric tensor mixing parameters under the effect of mass, so we see the flow of space expressed in the rather simple algebra. There is an audience here that is not afraid of seeing math.
@boidaemon8733
@boidaemon8733 2 жыл бұрын
another great vid keep em coming, i can guarantee that this channel will blow up once people start seeing the quality in these vids.
@potawatomi100
@potawatomi100 Жыл бұрын
Outstanding video production and exceptionally well narrated. You presented information in a compelling, interesting and engaging way. I get your point, …absolutely, but my intuition still struggles with the reality of the matter.
@blurta2011
@blurta2011 10 ай бұрын
It's presented well but is it TRUE
@Roberto-REME
@Roberto-REME 10 ай бұрын
@@blurta2011 The concept is not intuitive, thus, hard to get my full understanding. But, so was Relativity when Einstein presented it in 1905 - he was ridiculed, insulted, etc. Today, w/out the necessary adjustments mandated by Relativity, geopositioning would not work (GPS), and many other tech advances.
@nihanth9145
@nihanth9145 Жыл бұрын
amazing video , the switch of falling part was epic
@lunafoxfire
@lunafoxfire Жыл бұрын
Amazing video -- really crystallizes the concepts in a way that feels incredibly easy to grasp. And without any compromise on correctness as well. Technically I knew all the stuff about GR presented here but this made me really *feel* it.
@yagvtt
@yagvtt 2 жыл бұрын
I have been trying to make sense of GR for many years now, yet each of your videos is an eye opener to me. It must be nice to be clever, i'll never know. Thank you very much for sharing this understanding and for the great animations. Do you have any knowledge/opinion about Laurent Nottale's Scale Relativity ? From the little i understand of it, it is very elegant. At its core it's an extension of GR to scales (=>there's no such thing as zooming/unzooming), it leads to many experimentally verified results both in micro and astro scales, and yet for some reason it has been completely ignored by the scientific community since it came out in the early 90s. I'm not intelligent enough to decide or claim that it is right or wrong, but it is so impressive that it should at least deserve some interest, even if only for debunking.
@bernardputersznit64
@bernardputersznit64 2 жыл бұрын
the very same for me - i spent years trying to understand tensor calculus - that is a very intuitive way to attempt to grasp GR. This makes it so much more LUCID 🙂
@bernardputersznit64
@bernardputersznit64 2 жыл бұрын
BTW I had a look at your YAG videos - VERY Good - Kudos
@bernardputersznit64
@bernardputersznit64 2 жыл бұрын
However I was reminded by the insanity of heterogeneous dice systems of resolution -- this and other long standing issues of most RPGs simply rub me wrong -- I am creating my own RPG system that utilizes a much simpler method of ordinary playing cards (which can be digitized as in YAG) - Face Cards allow for 'now for something different' - several face cards in a row result in something TOTALLY different.
@yagvtt
@yagvtt 2 жыл бұрын
@@bernardputersznit64 Hi, thanks a lot for the kind words about Yag :-) There is unfortunately no card management system in Yag atm because i still haven't got a good idea of how to correctly make this. It's a difficult subject^^ Anyway, i'll stop talking about Yag here as it would be impolite to take the focus out of this video. Feel free to contact me outside of those comments if you want to talk about this. Cheers.
@dialectphilosophy
@dialectphilosophy 2 жыл бұрын
We have a little bit of knowledge of that theory -- mostly cause Sabine Hossenfender bashed rather hard on it lol -- but the desire to understand theories like that also motivated our desire to better understand GR in the first place. So we can't say much about it atm but will probably be looking into it in the future. Cool gameboard design, btw.
@duality4y
@duality4y 2 жыл бұрын
this video is really really great! but could you put some sources/references in the description ?
@souvikchakraborty2019
@souvikchakraborty2019 Жыл бұрын
He can't because this is classic pseudoscience. He picked one statement and completely misinterpreted it, made it sound sciencey, and claimed he was an expert.
@duality4y
@duality4y Жыл бұрын
@@souvikchakraborty2019 that is why i asked for them :D
@green65eyes
@green65eyes 9 ай бұрын
KZbin is overrun by AI-voiced pseudoscience videos these days. What even motivates creating something like this?
@annamariacarusone6619
@annamariacarusone6619 2 жыл бұрын
Excellent video with comprehensible explanations and great animations! Astonishing job at making hard concepts of our physical world easily accessible! Thank you!
@marcoantoniazzi1890
@marcoantoniazzi1890 3 ай бұрын
It's amazing how there are constant twists and turns in this video.
@meganekkoi3282
@meganekkoi3282 2 жыл бұрын
That last sucking in of space over time is what I waited for the whole video!
@jack.d7873
@jack.d7873 2 жыл бұрын
@15:10. This is the most intuitive explanation of Einsteins equivalence principle I've ever seen. Brilliant work as usual
@jmcsquared18
@jmcsquared18 2 жыл бұрын
21:44 I don't think putting this as a footnote is pedagogically wise. The intuition that the ground is accelerating upwards, for everyone on earth's surface, is clearly impossible unless space is doing something funny (which it absolutely is doing funny in general relativity). Thus, the river model of spacetime curvature is vital to understanding this viewpoint. If you're going to cover it in a future video (which I am excited for), then that's great, but in terms of good educational practices, "just trust us" is practically blasphemy.
@jmcsquared18
@jmcsquared18 2 жыл бұрын
​@@narfwhals7843 yeah but that is the entire reason why this viewpoint can even sensibly work. I would've started with that, and then analyzed the implications of the equivalence principle in light of that understanding of spacetime. Plus, I've been wanting a video on the river/flow model from this channel for a while. Really different but valid viewpoint of the way general relativity describes spacetime curvature.
@-_Nuke_-
@-_Nuke_- 2 жыл бұрын
You need to understand that both Newton and Einstein basically say that magic makes the apple fall towards the Earth. The only difference, is that for Newton the explanation doesn't include a speed limit, where for Einstein it does. And thus, we can say, "look, the Earth is exploding outwars but at the same time spacetime is imploding inwards, so the whole thing balances each other out, and any free from any other forces body will hit the Earth because it's basically caught between 2 opposing events that counter each other. But that is still an explanation that at some level, still requires the use of "magic". The true difference from Newtons magical force of gravity, is that Einstein's magic is more sophisticated than Newton's magic, because Einstein takes into consideration the limitations of the speed of light and the hyperbolic geometry of spacetime. And that is true for all science. Quantum Mechanics uses similar kings of magic itself too. Fields, particles etc... All made us mathematical abstract objects and models to probe deeper into the unknown truth of the Universe, that still remains unrevealed.
@jmcsquared18
@jmcsquared18 2 жыл бұрын
​@@soopergoof232 I think you're missing something, which is that the flow model is a MODEL. It's a way to view the equations. There is also the B-theory of time (also known as the block universe model). These are analogies, ways we make more sense of the mathematics. And the idea that spacetime is a superfluid is not anywhere near a proven statement. It's an interesting conjecture that some physicists are working with.
@jmcsquared18
@jmcsquared18 2 жыл бұрын
@@-_Nuke_- all I will say to that is, neither Newtonian nor Einsteinian gravitation remotely qualify as "magic." Magic is something human beings control with their thinking or actions. The laws of physics, on the other hand, are blind and apathetic to our will.
@rickandrygel913
@rickandrygel913 Жыл бұрын
I thought they figured out a long time ago that gravity isn't a force... What every mechanic and some engineers know is that just because it makes sense on paper or works in a computer simulation doesn't mean it actually applies to reality.
@Jackie-wn5hx
@Jackie-wn5hx Жыл бұрын
That's only true in the framework of _general_ relativity and classical mechanics.
@singh2702
@singh2702 3 ай бұрын
Newton's acceleration is one that is felt by a body when a force is applied to the body at a particular point, which compresses the body's matter i.e. all the atoms that make up the body exert a force on each other. This is not what is going on when a body is in a free fall in a gravitational field. Lets take for example , a person with a mass of 70kg free falling near the surface of the earth. This person is roughly made up of 7*10^27(seven billion billion billion) atoms. Since all these atoms are contained within the gravitational field, each atom will be accelerated individually by an individual force equal in magnitude for each atom. So there are no atoms exerting forces on each other hence no sensation of a force accelerating you like the force you would feel when you step on the gas pedal in your car and get pushed into your seat. When this person is standing on the surface of the earth, the surface is pushing up and since the individually accelerating atoms are obstructed from their path of travel, they are compressed, exerting forces on each other thus giving the sensation of a force accelerating you. The vector component at the center does not disappear and just leave the tidal force component to be real.
@liam78587
@liam78587 23 күн бұрын
why was i ignoring this channel for so long it's a fcking gold mine!! i shall savor every bite of these precious videos thanks for the food digging in!
@riccardovacchi1362
@riccardovacchi1362 Жыл бұрын
Mi viene da piangere per quanto è semplice e intuitiva la spiegazione in questo video. Cancella completamente e in un solo colpo l'errata e insoddisfacente visione intuitiva avuta da sempre. Ora è chiaro che sia tutto sulla terra ad essere accelerato verso l'alto, ed è chiaro che buttare qualcosa da un grattacielo significa fargli raggiungere istantaneamente uno stato inerziale, cancellando definitivamente il fantomatico campo gravitazionale che immaginavamo, sottraendo l'accelerazione verso l'alto, la scomposizione delle forze radiali lascia lo spazio per una minuscola forza, che è la vera forza mareale, che da sempre mi aspettavo piccola altrimenti gli astri, invece di orbitare, si sarebbero dovuti schiantare fra loro. Dover essere accelerati a 9,8 m/s2 verso l'alto per rimanere fermi e contrastare la curvatura dello spazio-tempo ora mi sembra così logico. Grazie a questo e ai video precedenti di Dialect, sono impagabili!
@ramimehyar481
@ramimehyar481 Жыл бұрын
You blew my mind! However, there is always going to be the argument that the objects falling towards the ground do not lose (pull the plug on) the gravitational field, it only appears so because the measuring methods and tools are also accelerating with it and the complete system within the frame of reference seems to do so, at the end all of the objects are relative to each other in the same frame of reference.
@davestorm6718
@davestorm6718 10 ай бұрын
Exactly. The analogy does fail with another respect: The objects with the monkey DO feel downward force due to acceleration because that frame is NOT moving at a constant velocity. Implying that it does, is incorrect from both a relativity standpoint and a Newtonian one. The "force" is not actually "turned off". There is a massive difference between constant velocity and constant acceleration - pun intended.
@singh2702
@singh2702 3 ай бұрын
@@davestorm6718 Newton's acceleration is one that is felt by a body when a force is applied to the body at a particular point, which compresses the body's matter i.e. all the atoms that make up the body exert a force on each other. This is not what is going on when a body is in a free fall in a gravitational field. Lets take for example , a person with a mass of 70kg free falling near the surface of the earth. This person is roughly made up of 7*10^27(seven billion billion billion) atoms. Since all these atoms are contained within the gravitational field, each atom will be accelerated individually by an individual force equal in magnitude for each atom. So there are no atoms exerting forces on each other hence no sensation of a force accelerating you like the force you would feel when you step on the gas pedal in your car and get pushed into your seat. When this person is standing on the surface of the earth, the surface is pushing up and since the individually accelerating atoms are obstructed from their path of travel, they are compressed, exerting forces on each other thus giving the sensation of a force accelerating you. The vector component at the center does not disappear and just leave the tidal force component.
@davestorm6718
@davestorm6718 3 ай бұрын
@@singh2702 Newton's laws were derived by the motion of an object in a gravitational field - the object moves faster and faster over time - meaning acceleration - until it crashes into the Earth. When I say "feel", I mean affected by. You don't actually "feel" anything. To say that the Earth is pushing up makes no sense (and no evidence of that). It may be have a force exerted on it by the small object causing it to move, imperceptibly towards that object, but, as per Newton's Law again, the acceleration of the small object is directly proportional to the force pulling on it. You have to consider inertia (both linear and rotational), for the Earth to push up, a ridiculous amount of force (that the small object cannot provide) would be required to overcome the inertia of the Earth (including the rotational inertia). There's no magic here. The Earth is not expanding "upwards" - this is nonsense and easily provable otherwise as any expansion would be non linear!
@singh2702
@singh2702 3 ай бұрын
@davestorm6718 I have provided the answer in detail of how you can be accelerated yet feel no force. This effect of accelerating and feeling no force can only be achieved in free fall in a gravitational field. The curvature of Spacetime is a force that acts on every single atom , sub-atomic particle, and light. The force field acts on them individually, i.e., no net forces by fellow atoms applying pressure on each other. When you stand on the surface of the earth, the surface is preventing those atoms from traveling through their geodesic path. They thus have no path to accelerate, so they can't help but exert forces on each other. This is when you feel the force of gravity. All your organs , muscles, etc. are squeezed against each other(inertia) due to the obstruction of the surface of the earth. I did not say the earth is expanding and accelerating you. I said it's an obstruction to your path of travel dictated by gravity.
@davestorm6718
@davestorm6718 3 ай бұрын
@@singh2702 There IS a differential between the atoms furthest away from the source vs the atoms closest (in the same body). The effect is so minuscule you wouldn't feel a thing, regardless, unless you were hypersensitive. With regards to extreme pull (e.g. black hole), and were falling in, feet first, I promise you will then feel it. Curvature of space and time differentials are one way to explain this (i.e. there is no gravitational force, only warped space-time), but, believe it or not, simple attractors (not requiring 'space-time') can explain the same thing (the way things were explained for a couple of centuries before Einstein's ideas hit the scientific circles) and explain relativity as a whole. Space-time concept fails to explain observations in so many fields, it's amazing that anyone who really dug into it, cannot conclude that it's invalid (in the tangibility sense) - sure, some works on paper (if you make enough "adjustments" for infinities), but it needs to be laid to rest. When the alleged "confirmations" are off by orders of magnitude (e.g. dark matter, gross error in the Gravity B probe experiment, orders of magnitude difference in light bending from prediction, multiple astronomical observations being 2-3 O.O.M. off w/ James Webb, the failed conclusions of the Michelson-Morley experiment that, while it may indicate an ether-less Universe, it also would necessarily disprove frame-dragging), it should be obvious that Einstein's version of relativity needs to be trashed so we can move forward in a productive direction. Einstein contributed greatly to science, but, he was correct when his intuition kept leading him to the VSL theory, even to the postulation G might not be a constant in later life. The science is not settled. I can't wait until someone finally figures out that a star cannot create a singularity - an externally compressed system is not the same thing as an attractor compressed system and they can grow almost indefinitely, until acted on by something else, of course. The zone of highest density is not in the center, but in a shell between the surface and the center. We made models, over 3 decades ago, via finite element analysis -style program that used attractors. The results indicated this. I'm hiring a mathematician and some devs later this year to recreate the model graphically, and run it on thousands of cores, snap shotting the true evolution of stars (and proving they cannot create singularities) vs the Fortran mod where we had pallets of printouts much to the chagrin of the computer dept (we never got to complete the run, which would take about a year, but did get indicators of our predictions). I promise a massive upheaval of the mainstream physics in the next few years, partially fueled by AI advances, and a re-visit to the classical physics (e.g. Maxwell's equations) with more rigorous analyses than humanly possible (including the search for anomalies in derived work) and extrapolations to real world observations with little error (none of this "well his theory is 100% correct, so we must tweak it when it doesn't work" nonsense).
@marcuslowe9556
@marcuslowe9556 2 жыл бұрын
Good video. I was just thinking about how gravity works recently. This "charge" that gravity exerts would be a mirror of mass equivalence when a force F is applied to an object O for time T. Mass M defined by a volume V would have an energy equivalence that causes its center of gravity to accelerate towards the sky. IMO it's more akin to mass folding space inwards based on this energy equivalence, so we get the same time dilation effects that would occur with velocity. I think this "folding space inwards" would be how matter stays matter through time. Escape velocity would be to essentially escape from one guy folding in space, only be attracted by another guy folding in space. Since the edge of our observable expands at c(and where time stops) it's akin to an event horizon and will be the ultimate attractor for those that leave their home bodies, which would also explain why galaxies stretch further and further apart.
@zBernie12345
@zBernie12345 4 ай бұрын
So if two people on opposite sides of the earth simultaneously drop an apple, the Earth would be moving in two different directions right? I just don't think this interpretation of gravity represents reality, mathematics and thought experiments notwithstanding.
@King.Mark.
@King.Mark. Ай бұрын
That's what I taught ,😅
@billyshawjr4038
@billyshawjr4038 Жыл бұрын
From what I understand, standing on Earth is LIKE traveling in a ship with an acceleration of 9.81 m/s/s. It does not make the ship the same mass as the Earth or the Earth the same mass as the ship. Having a large mass can curve the spacetime around it, but the ship has accelerated motion which is a curve through spacetime. To me it seems more plausible that all objects with mass are "falling" though time and objects with large mass can slow time increasingly with proximity, causing other nearby objects with mass "fall" through time towards the massive object until they hit and then continue "falling" through time parallel with the massive object. If you stop accelerating through spacetime then you stop the curvature and "gravity". Jumping off a building does not stop the curvature of spacetime that the mass of Earth has affected, it only removes the object that was keeping you from "falling" through time to the Earth. It seems unlikely, to me, that the surface of the Earth is racing outward thousands of feet in all directions to meet every object within thousands of feet. That's an incredibly large bat hitting a lot of small balls, not to mention the surface of the Earth rushing outwards to meet every air molecule in the atmosphere. However, I'm no genius, so please direct me to where can I read the peer reviewed proofs of this theory of the surfaces of massive objects racing outward in all directions?
@singh2702
@singh2702 3 ай бұрын
Newton's acceleration is one that is felt by a body when a force is applied to the body at a particular point, which compresses the body's matter i.e. all the atoms that make up the body exert a force on each other. This is not what is going on when a body is in a free fall in a gravitational field. Lets take for example , a person with a mass of 70kg free falling near the surface of the earth. This person is roughly made up of 7*10^27(seven billion billion billion) atoms. Since all these atoms are contained within the gravitational field, each atom will be accelerated individually by an individual force equal in magnitude for each atom. So there are no atoms exerting forces on each other hence no sensation of a force accelerating you like the force you would feel when you step on the gas pedal in your car and get pushed into your seat. When this person is standing on the surface of the earth, the surface is pushing up and since the individually accelerating atoms are obstructed from their path of travel, they are compressed, exerting forces on each other thus giving the sensation of a force accelerating you. The vector component at the center does not disappear and just leave the tidal force component.
@lexfunk
@lexfunk 2 жыл бұрын
Wonderful and insightful video. Love it. I’m looking forward to going through all of this channel’s videos.
@SemiStableUniverse
@SemiStableUniverse 2 жыл бұрын
One time when I was drunk, I could actually see spacetime flowing through me into the Earth.
@tomisaacson2762
@tomisaacson2762 Жыл бұрын
How do I get some of what you were drinking?
@chiraggowda4928
@chiraggowda4928 8 ай бұрын
We have all been there.
@tombisson3186
@tombisson3186 5 ай бұрын
I think I was with you, it was on 4-20.
@TTGTanner
@TTGTanner 2 жыл бұрын
GRAVITY THINGS DOESNT FALL MAKE
@ReasonMakes
@ReasonMakes 2 жыл бұрын
5:20 Tiny mistake here. Astronauts orbiting earth are NOT in zero-gravity. The gravity from Earth is actually about the same where the ISS orbits as it is at sea level (0.89x to be precise). They are floating because they are in *free fall,* because they are orbiting. Which, appropriately for your video, is indistinguishable for the observer within that frame.
@dialectphilosophy
@dialectphilosophy 2 жыл бұрын
"Zero-gravity" was actually coined to describe astronauts in orbit, so it's conflation with free-fall has existed since its origin. However, since there is no difference between free-fall and zero-gravity, both terms are appropriate in the situation.
@LeoH3L1
@LeoH3L1 2 жыл бұрын
@@dialectphilosophy No, they're not appropriate.
@MisterPoopyButthole
@MisterPoopyButthole 7 ай бұрын
"Zero Gravity - Noun the state or condition in which there is no apparent force of gravity acting on a body..." Zero gravity doesn't mean there is no gravity, just that it is not apparent. His usage of the term was correct.
@Epicus5
@Epicus5 2 ай бұрын
​@@LeoH3L1 how so, please expand.
@JackPullen-Paradox
@JackPullen-Paradox 9 ай бұрын
But one must ask how the Earth can perpetually, eternally accelerate up (in all directions)? By the way, why doesn't the Earth accelerate toward a feather at the same rate as to a steel ball?
@mikev4621
@mikev4621 4 ай бұрын
Air resistance still applies
@JackPullen-Paradox
@JackPullen-Paradox 4 ай бұрын
@@mikev4621 The Earth and its atmosphere move as one do they not? The Earth would move toward the feather at an inexorable accelerating rate, while the feather would experience a "wind" that would not have the same characteristics as air resistance. So, we would see somewhat different behaviors in the two ways of looking at the effects of gravity. At least, that is what sticks in my mind about this.
@mikev4621
@mikev4621 4 ай бұрын
@@JackPullen-Paradox Yes, but the atmosphere under the feather would act like a cushion and push it upwards relative to the steel ball. Therefore the Earth would reach the feather and the ball at different moments.
@JackPullen-Paradox
@JackPullen-Paradox 4 ай бұрын
@@mikev4621 My point is, there would be a different equation of motion in the two scenarios.
@mikev4621
@mikev4621 4 ай бұрын
@@JackPullen-Paradox it would be the same equation for the ball and the feather; but the resistance term for the feather would be greater
@quirtt
@quirtt Жыл бұрын
This channel is going to boom for sure
@williamsmith4709
@williamsmith4709 Жыл бұрын
I am not a cosmologist, but I logically can't understand that if the earth's surface is accelerating at 32 feet per second squared, then why isn't the earth expanding. I mean if the earth is coming up to push me and there is someone in China being pushed in the opposite direction, the earth, being a sphere, would have to expand, wouldn't it?
@dialectphilosophy
@dialectphilosophy Жыл бұрын
Hey, thanks for watching! We recommend checking out the follow-up video to this one, "The River Model of General Relativity" for answers to your questions!
@williamsmith4709
@williamsmith4709 Жыл бұрын
@@dialectphilosophy So, you don't know the answer? Now I know where not to go to get an answer. Thanks for trying, anyway.
@josephdennie6503
@josephdennie6503 7 ай бұрын
The earth is actually pushing against space simply because it is a solid mass... gravity is greater at the surface of the because it is the surface of the earth that is doing the pushing....further away from the surface gravity weakens....where there is mass there is gravity
@OGTimeBandit
@OGTimeBandit 17 күн бұрын
Space is being “sucked” in at the same rate.
@ronsandgren1
@ronsandgren1 5 ай бұрын
I don't understand the math or expanation of this and everything falls down and I don't feel the Earth moving up.
@nickallbritton3796
@nickallbritton3796 3 ай бұрын
A lot of the explanations are very good but the idea that earth is accelerating up is completely unfounded in this video.
@SotGravarg
@SotGravarg 3 ай бұрын
So what you're saying is "I do not understand this, therefore it must be wrong.", you probably also think the earth is flat don't you?
@moixemi
@moixemi 2 ай бұрын
i believe “you feel the earth moving up” as weight, as in how much you may weigh in lbs or kgs. however idk
@kakudmi
@kakudmi Ай бұрын
Modern scientists are trying to brainwash ppl to believe their theories instead of our senses.
@androstern
@androstern 2 жыл бұрын
"GRAVITIY MAKE FALL - DOESN'T THINGS"
@tombisson3186
@tombisson3186 5 ай бұрын
Thanks. The best explanation yet. Two questions: Why do "falling" objects stop moving? Why don't they continue to move through space at the same speed as the earth? The earth is moving at a constant speed and not accelerating. If you toss a ball in a vehicle moving at a constant speed, it does not fly backwards toward the rear. Two: Is the earth actually moving or is it sucking in space all around it?
@ghettocowboy993
@ghettocowboy993 6 ай бұрын
UNBELIEVABLE, THIS IS THE BEST DAMN VIDEO I HAVE SEEN IN A LONG TIME , AWESOME WORK.... GOOD FOR YOU 👏👏👏👏
@PronatorTendon
@PronatorTendon Жыл бұрын
Sounds like a good defense for a car accident "I wasn't accelerating, my frame of reference was"
@UhrBushaltestelle
@UhrBushaltestelle 3 ай бұрын
😂🤣🤣😂😭
@Robinson8491
@Robinson8491 2 жыл бұрын
If it's the earth that's moving upwards instead of the apple falling down, then how do you explain when something falls to the earth, *its distance to the moon increases*
@carultch
@carultch 2 жыл бұрын
Because the Earth's surface doesn't have a kinematic acceleration as we normally experience it, that is upward toward the moon. The Earth has an acceleration as General Relativity defines the term, but not as introductory kinematics defines the term. What really is happening, is that spacetime collapses inward on massive objects that are the source of gravitational fields. The normal force is accelerating you upward, so that you are "running to stay still" in this collapsing field of spacetime that we normally consider to be a gravitational field.
@Robinson8491
@Robinson8491 2 жыл бұрын
@@carultch if spacetime collapses inward, and normal force accelerates outward, you are adding two accelerating forces: so which one is it: the earth moving outwards or the space flowing inwards? You can't have both, and you are mixing them up in your answer! Double acceleration!
@carultch
@carultch 2 жыл бұрын
@@Robinson8491 The answer is that they add up to zero, when looking at it from our point of view and the Newtonian explanation. Or more specifically, very close to zero, after you account for all the kinematic acceleration associated with the planet's motion. That's why I say "running to stay still". Spacetime is collapsing inward on itself, when in a gravitational field. Constraint forces accelerate you outward, relative to the collapsing spacetime. The net result is that you aren't falling toward the center, or expanding outward, but that Earth maintains a constant size and keeps you on its surface from the equilibrium of structural forces and the gravitational field. When you stop "accelerating upward" from the normal force, you are forced to follow the collapsing spacetime. It feels as if there are zero forces acting on you, from your point of view, because unless you are sensitive enough to feel tidal forces, you cannot feel gravity.
@FalkFlak
@FalkFlak Жыл бұрын
it appears to me this is all just convention and if you switch signs and say the mass is accelerating "inwards" and spacetime "outwards" everything stays the same just by the arbitrary definition of those words. Its like those engineere who insist the earth on which they found their building is pushing with a negative sign against their buidling. It just doesnt matter it you dont mix it up.
@todradmaker4297
@todradmaker4297 8 ай бұрын
@@carultch This man gets a gold star. The surface doesn't fall up. Actually we don't really fall down either, but rather we fall in.
@Nibor999
@Nibor999 2 жыл бұрын
None of the examples that you give where the gravitational field is "instantly" turned off are correct. You cannot instantly remove your foot from the car's accelerator and even if you could the car's engine does not instantly turn off. The same applies for the rocket's kill switch. You also cannot instantly step off a building unless you travel at the speed of light. In each case the gravitational field will gradually (not instantly)diminish (if you choose to view it that way) .
@bradbadley1
@bradbadley1 2 жыл бұрын
I think the point stands. It doesn't have to be "instantly." The point is that it's FTL and if it's FTL then that should throw up red flags and alarm bells.
@-_Nuke_-
@-_Nuke_- 2 жыл бұрын
You can step off the pedal at a velocity of a m/s. At some distant part of space, gravity will turn off for you faster than light. So the a velocity isn't important here.
@salvatronprime9882
@salvatronprime9882 2 жыл бұрын
@@bradbadley1 it's never FTL, he is flat out wrong.
@salvatronprime9882
@salvatronprime9882 2 жыл бұрын
@@-_Nuke_- no, there is no point in the universe where gravity will deactivate FTL. There is a spacetime contraction/decontraction that flows through the atoms in your body as you accelerate or decelerate. His explanation is bad and Eugene Koryanki had it right the first time.
@Nibor999
@Nibor999 2 жыл бұрын
@@bradbadley1 My point is that it cannot be FTL. How can your foot move of the accelerator FTL?
@tim.martin
@tim.martin 2 жыл бұрын
Hey Dialect, your True Cause of Gravity video left me wanting more explanations about this exact topic. Thanks heaps for making this!
@DarkSkay
@DarkSkay Жыл бұрын
12:27 Reducing the acceleration of the reference frame obviously means that it will no longer accelerate at e.g. 9.81m/s^2. That's not primarily an "experiment" within the reference frame, but altering the crucial parameter of the reference frame itself.
@m.c.4674
@m.c.4674 2 жыл бұрын
daily dose of relativity contradictions ☕😮‍💨.
@HarpSeal
@HarpSeal 2 жыл бұрын
May i ask if you have a degree or any sort of certificates on physics?
@kylelochlann5053
@kylelochlann5053 2 жыл бұрын
In watching their other videos I am quite certain the content creators have no formal training in physics and if you asked them to solve a random end-of-chapter question out of Wald or Schutz even, they wouldn't have any idea whatsoever on how to solve it, but that said, this video is quite good and fairly consistent with relativity.
@green65eyes
@green65eyes 9 ай бұрын
Are you asking the person behind the video or the AI voice narrating it?
@tomusic8887
@tomusic8887 Жыл бұрын
Sounds so crazy theoretical....you give no good answering to the sky falling up, just that it is a theoretical trick.....still confused
@nickallbritton3796
@nickallbritton3796 3 ай бұрын
That's because this is absolutely bullshit. A lot of real physics poisoned by really flawed logic. Like how he pointed out which way up is would have to be every direction simultaneously all the time and then moved past it without ever explaining it. Then he concluded the earth is accelerating "up" 2 min later anyway. "As I have just showed for you 2+2 can be described very beautifully and abstractly in this new formalism. Some people say that 2+2=4 because if you take 2 of something and another 2 of that something you end up with 4 of it. Anyway with this new paradigm 2+2=5 and it's great."
@FootlooseNomad
@FootlooseNomad 2 ай бұрын
I think it boils down to our motion being determined by pressure difference, maby. Makes sense in my mind anyway
@nickallbritton3796
@nickallbritton3796 2 ай бұрын
@@FootlooseNomad no it doesn't
@TheMijoAaron
@TheMijoAaron 2 ай бұрын
@@nickallbritton3796doesn’t the internal pressure of a mass push outward in all directions. From my understanding planets and stars don’t collapse upon themselves from gravity because they are exerting just enough force to stay stable against the flow of spacetime. So the earth is pushing outward in all directions at 9.8m/s^2 or whatever the number is
@nickallbritton3796
@nickallbritton3796 2 ай бұрын
@@TheMijoAaron its pushing out against you but perfectly balanced so it's not moving. Why don't you get accelerated upwards then? Because of gravity. The math and physics just doesn't make sense without it
@afunderburgh
@afunderburgh Жыл бұрын
I just found your channel, when I first watched a video from you I thought this was a multi-million sub channel. Your production quality is absurd and your content is top notch! Your videos deserve much more attention.
@dialectphilosophy
@dialectphilosophy Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the kind words and for your support!
@zverh
@zverh Жыл бұрын
​@@dialectphilosophy If the ground is accelerating upwards, wouldn't that imply that the earth is constantly getting bigger in size and as such we should be able to measure it?
@dialectphilosophy
@dialectphilosophy Жыл бұрын
@@zverh Check out the River Model video for those answers!
@zverh
@zverh Жыл бұрын
@@dialectphilosophy Yes, I watched it. Thanks a lot, it really clarified a lot of things.
@vimal-cliobconsulting
@vimal-cliobconsulting 5 ай бұрын
Wow, this is one of the best videos I've seen on gravity and general relativity.
@romantrix
@romantrix Жыл бұрын
BELIEVING that the same results mean the same cause is a MISTAKE
@Moon-Labs
@Moon-Labs 3 ай бұрын
This is nonsense.
@DM_Curtis
@DM_Curtis Жыл бұрын
This channel is stellar. 10/10!
@bryanbotha160
@bryanbotha160 Жыл бұрын
I am impressed (and grateful) for your highly instructive and easy-to-follow videos offering a novel perspective to help make general relativity more intuitive to everyone. I also appreciate your overall attitude of calling out misinformation and inconsistencies in other youtube videos without making it personal or vindictive. It's refreshing to learn a new formulation while keeping the ego and blood pressure low and calm. The apparent "absolute" nature of acceleration in Relativity, which dispenses with previously absolute conceptions of motion, distance (space) and time, does seem odd and you're right to draw attention to it. And as you point out, even Einstein himself felt quite uncomfortable with this anomaly. It's interesting to consider your reformulation - that Earth is accelerating up in all directions to meet the apple falling from the tree rather than the other way around. Your new perspective aligns with the feeling we share in our bodies all the time here on the surface of our planet - equivalent to how we would feel if inside a jet moving with constant acceleration. One question I have is how does the discovery of gravitational waves impact your perspective on gravity? As an aside, I am curious to hear if you can share whether any of the other physics KZbinrs have reached out to you or made any acknowledgement that you are correct and they got it wrong, or whether they doubled down and still think their earlier videos got it right. Would be interesting to know their reaction either way.. I look forward to future videos from you.
@dialectphilosophy
@dialectphilosophy Жыл бұрын
Thank you for watching, and we appreciate your support! Our original inspiration for making videos on KZbin was due to the inaccuracies we kept coming across in other videos, so addressing misinformation will always be a integral part of our channel (though we are often criticized for our lack of "bedside manner", and we have been trying to go about it more professionally lately.) But we've yet to receive any acknowledgment or clarification from other KZbinrs about such topics. While it is quite human to err, and we have quite a few mistakes of our own in our older videos, it is a little disappointing that none of these larger channels are willing to address these large-scale misconceptions they have presented their viewers with. Our current understanding is that gravity waves can be viewed as the propagation of changes in local tidal forces. So, while gravitational fields still remain the fictitious consequence of accelerating, the amount you need to accelerate in order to remain stationary with respect to nearby bodies could momentarily change, should a big enough gravity wave roll through your neighborhood.
@paolomanzo2007
@paolomanzo2007 2 жыл бұрын
This video deserves 8 billions views. Bravo!
@ProgressiveEconomicsSupporter
@ProgressiveEconomicsSupporter 2 жыл бұрын
I am not sure if it is correct to bring the ISS as an example of an inertial system moving with constant velocity. Isn't ISS rather constantly free falling around the earth but just quick enough, that is why it seems zero gravity on board although there isn't.
@brianhale2977
@brianhale2977 2 жыл бұрын
Finally! Thank you for making lucid something I have been trying to tell people for years. Let me now suggest to you that, since what you call "tidal effects" are too small to account for the rates of "descent" and since the Earth is not expanding in three dimensions, the acceleration is through a fourth spatial dimension (not time) pushing up from the center of every mass.
@mitchelljohnson8810
@mitchelljohnson8810 Жыл бұрын
since physics likes to let small forces go to zero the radial motion can be ignored, if the monkey pushed the objects at orbital velocity, the vector componits could not be ignored proving equivalence valid for short time periods
@frankclough380
@frankclough380 8 ай бұрын
I think I get it. The Universe and everything in it is expanding so the earth is getting bigger, that means that as you stand on the expanding Earth you will feel it pushing you in the direction of its expansion. Likewise if you fall off a high building the expanding Earth will be accelerating towards you giving you the illusion you are falling. That makes it all clear now, thanks!
@Skullbro-bd4ue
@Skullbro-bd4ue 8 ай бұрын
Not at all. Earth is not expanding. In order for earth to stay still. Earth has to accelerate in curved to stay still. And so Earth accelerating in all directions is not expa.ding because spacetime is curved. But in flat spacetime that would be true.
@Skullbro-bd4ue
@Skullbro-bd4ue 8 ай бұрын
No
@zedred8075
@zedred8075 Жыл бұрын
Great video, really clear and helped me get a better understanding of GR. One point though. It’s unfair to claim that if Galileo and Newton had just thought about things a bit more they could have come up with GR. I would posit it was impossible for them to do so. They didn’t have the benefit of 250 odd years of maths and physics discoveries to help as Einstein did. There was no Maxwell or Minkowski or Hilbert or Lorenz to help them. Einstein himself said that without Maxwell and Newton he wouldn’t have been able to devise GR. Einstein also said that what Newton did with his universal law of gravitation was just about the only way a human being with the highest intellect could do to make sense of gravity in his time. So kudos to Galileo and Newton for laying the foundations for Einstein.
@dialectphilosophy
@dialectphilosophy Жыл бұрын
Actually! -- believe or not -- Newton was at very cusp of formulating the equivalence principle. In his works he explicitly stated that a collection of bodies all accelerated in the same manner might look, from another perspective, as if they were at rest. This is of course not that surprising given how much Newton wrote about apparent vs. actual forces. Yes, without the mathematical machinery of Riemannian geometry, formulating a precise version of GR would have been impossible. But notice that nowhere in this video did we bring up anything about higher-dimensional curvature or geometry; everything we present here can be deduced simply from the equivalence principle, which Newton very likely in essence understood. Also we never state that Newton could have come up with GR, only that he could have realized, through assiduous application of his own laws, that it was ground which was accelerating up.
@zedred8075
@zedred8075 Жыл бұрын
Thanks. I wonder if Newton had the benefit of knowing about Maxwell’s equations he might have had more confidence to go down this path? There probably wasn’t any way of rigorously proving that hypothesis though in his time. His ‘laws’ worked for everything he could see, knew about or could experience. But I bet that backward jerk he may have got from being on a horse or carriage in his time probably made him think! Pretty sure I read that he knew action at a distance wasn’t going to be the final answer. Imagine Einstein explaining GR to Newton. From what you say he probably wouldn’t have been surprised! Anyhow, thanks again for your fantastic videos on gravity. They are the best I’ve come across on this subject.
@dialectphilosophy
@dialectphilosophy Жыл бұрын
@@zedred8075 Maxwell's equations were undoubtedly the necessary prod towards the theory of relativity, and it would have been hard to justify those theories in their absence. And given how much Newton achieved in his own lifetime, asking that he would have developed even a rudimentary conception of GR would be demanding too much -- still, one could wonder, if he had devoted the remainder of his life to furthering his theories of gravity, rather than, say, becoming obsessed with alchemy, what additional insights he might have contributed to physics. Thanks for the compliments and for watching! New video on GR drops tomorrow, make sure to catch it!
@zedred8075
@zedred8075 Жыл бұрын
Can’t wait!!
@immagnusandreas
@immagnusandreas 2 жыл бұрын
When an apple falls to the Earth, the apple *is* accelerating down, while at the same time, the Earth *is* accelerating up (the sky is falling up at the same time the apple is falling down). The center of “pull” (acceleration) between those two objects is well within the Earth, so from our standpoint above the surface of the Earth, it is hard to see the Earth moving(accelerating) at all because: we can't see the central reference point the Earth and apple are accelerating to, and the Earth is moving much slower than the apple. Better to visualize two objects of the exact same size, density, etc. “falling” toward each other (one on 'top' the other on 'bottom'). Imagine two large balls of some pliable substance (perhaps blobs of some fluid) in space. They start moving (falling/accelerating) towards each other, toward the center of the common acceleration/gravitational point. As the spheres move toward each other (neglecting tidal forces), when the surface points closest to each other meet, you can now see the center point of the acceleration. The surrounding soft material on each side will still be accelerating toward that center. As the material of each sphere starts to interact (electromagnetic push and pull, strain between the atoms of the two spheres) they experience (feel) the acceleration(deceleration) of the motion they already had. That center point continues to cause acceleration of the rest of the material until the forces balance out and a new single sphere is created. The point is, both the Earth *and* the apple are accelerating (experiencing free-fall, Up-Earth, Down-Apple) toward the common center of mass. Lines of gravitational force should be diagrammed through the Earth and any satellite (like the moon or even an apple) with an exaggeration to shown the central point of gravity. Diagram a 2 body system like the Earth and Moon to more easily see the central gravitation point the both bodies accelerate to ~(1700 kM / 6371 kM = about a quarter the distance from the surface down to the center of the Earth in an Earth/Moon diagram).
@FalkFlak
@FalkFlak Жыл бұрын
this is a great explanation/ correction of the concept depicted quite inaccurate in the video.
@stevewhite2375
@stevewhite2375 10 ай бұрын
Impressive! That chimps behaviour at the end was definately a very good representation of me at the end!
@jnhrtmn
@jnhrtmn 2 жыл бұрын
I think the use of frames illustrates where people are confused about position in space relative something akin to mass. Space is massless (novel concept). You know acceleration is absolute. When you fall, you are accelerating, so all of those games in frames are confusion. On the surface of the planet, you see a different manifestation of acceleration. There are infinite definitions for any velocity which is just like saying NO DEFINITION. Velocity is like a potential energy that you can see, and it is how we define our world being the largest effect on our brain, but I don't think nature sees velocity at all.
@yashen12345
@yashen12345 Жыл бұрын
very very thorough, i love how precise you are in the way you speak
@friedmule5403
@friedmule5403 2 ай бұрын
Really great video, I have added some comment that try to explain my confusion:-) 8:20 "Accelerating or on Earth" If I take two atomic clocks, let one be on the floor and raise one above my head: If on Earth, will there be a difference due to the change in gravity. If I do the same in the rocked ship, will there be no difference, since gravity does not change that much. 13:45 Accelerating: The Earth is moving through space at a constant speed. Let's now take the rocket, blast off from Earth in the opposite direction of the Earth's motion through space, and let's do it with exactly the same speed as the Earth is moving. Now, can I fully postulate that I am exactly where the Earth were, and I have not moved out of that place. If I now start to apply break, will I still feel the slowing down, even it is in fact Earth that has moved.
@labidifaycal3185
@labidifaycal3185 2 ай бұрын
If the tidal forces are the main reason for attraction between bodies when considered as points falling on a big mass ( not two bodies but only one body solution as GR do ) then what is the cause of attraction between celestial bodies when no big cosmological body exist to give a cosmological tidal force. 2- that solution is only an Nth solution for a "partial issue" in all the framework of physics because : what cause the expansion of the universe , what is dark matter, antimatter , ...................🎉
@IsabellaDonna-bc8we
@IsabellaDonna-bc8we Жыл бұрын
Nice try, but no! 1) since Einstein we know that Newton’s description is an approximation for low speed and low masses. 2) in Einstein’s theory there is no gravitational force. Just a bending of space time in a 4 dimensional ‘space’
@greypilot2430
@greypilot2430 Жыл бұрын
Great explanation. I was ok until I figured out (only a few seconds before the video explained it) that the earth can't fall in two different directions. I get lost with the tidal stuff but I'm sure a lot of people understood the explanation. I'm going to watch it again and hopefully understand a little more. Thanks!
@watamatafoyu
@watamatafoyu Жыл бұрын
Neither is falling, but to the apple the earth is accelerating upward; to someone orthogonal the apple is falling to the earth. To math, warped space draws objects together over time. This video's explanation of the earth falling upward is over-complicated and based only on the falling thing's perspective, not an outer perspective.
@nimitjain4923
@nimitjain4923 2 жыл бұрын
Your videos are a great find! I feel the aha! moment and not some headache. I deeply admire your effort. Looking forward for the next ones!
@peterburkhalter6344
@peterburkhalter6344 Жыл бұрын
I may have missed the point of this video but doesn't acceleration imply that you move to a new location?
@hieronymusvonlipschitz
@hieronymusvonlipschitz Жыл бұрын
No it means a change of speed and/or direction. Twirling around in a circle at a constant speed is still accelerating because you're constantly changing direction
@peterburkhalter6344
@peterburkhalter6344 Жыл бұрын
@@hieronymusvonlipschitz I don't think so. I think we're misinterpreting "change of direction". I think a force has to be applied to something for it to accelerate
@kaleijuka8532
@kaleijuka8532 5 ай бұрын
Gravity pulls things down to Earth center. Electrons keep you from phasing through. The normal force is pushing you up because of the pressure exerted downward. Do you have information that could add more to this?
@HankMeyer
@HankMeyer 2 жыл бұрын
When I try to picture in my mind what you're saying, I keep coming to the conclusion that the sky (or more accurately, space) is falling down, not up. Because if the sky were falling up, that wouldn't explain why I'm moving down. If space, however, is falling down, then the earth and everything on it would would get the sensation that we are all accelerating upword & outward, through space. Because of this, I wonder if there is any way to experimentally prove that matter doesn't attract & absorb space instead of attracting other matter.
@juliavixen176
@juliavixen176 2 жыл бұрын
Are you moving "up" or "down" right now? Or "standing still"? What stops you from falling down into the core of the Earth? Actually, I'm just commenting that what you're proposing sounds like the Le Sage mechanical theory of gravity... which has some problems with it. Go to Wikipedia an lookup "Mechanical Explanations of Gravity"
@thedeemon
@thedeemon Жыл бұрын
The "river model" can be very misleading: a river flow has a certain velocity at every point, but "flowing spacetime" only has certain acceleration but not single velocity. So it may draw a rather misleading picture, though very visual and intuitive.
@tricky778
@tricky778 Жыл бұрын
I have a theory of the genesis of flat earthers. When we combine what's stated independently into an independent model rather than depending on a basis for our philosophical view we get the flat earth. Since one educator says the ground is moving up, but others say the planet is not getting larger and the speed of light is constant, not increasing exponentially, along with the permittivity and permeability of free space, particle masses, etc, then the earth's radius must be infinite and thus its surface is flat.
@kaceesnow
@kaceesnow Жыл бұрын
Why does a scale or with a seasaw, the heavier person touch the ground, when the seasaw stand is being pushed up? Unless while moving up, the force or friction will pull an with bigger mass down? Also, why don't we reach the sky?
@antonystringfellow5152
@antonystringfellow5152 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting but it's still not clear to me just what gravity is. Just as it's not clear to me what spacetime is or what either space or time are. All I see, from all sources, are incomplete, imperfect, simplified models. I see no difference here, though I do appreciate the different perspective offered. Whichever model I apply to mentally visualise space, time or gravity, I find it lacking. The problem I'm having with this one at the mo is how it could explain gravity waves. Seems to me that it can't. You explain how jumping off a tall building instantaniously switches gravity off, for you, as does switching off the rocket engine but gravity waves do not have an instant effect - they propagate at the speed of light (the speed of causality). So, what is a gravity wave?
@FalkFlak
@FalkFlak 3 ай бұрын
I totally agree. I often get the impression theorists just spell out mathematical equations and confuse them with reality. You then get technical statements like "if you push a car, the car pushes back with a negative force until you stop pushing it" which, while mathematically absolutely correct, obviously is not what's happening. But we have no other theory to explain the inertia. And while there is not one set of equations that explains it all so there must be inconsistencies in the brute articulation of equations.
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