The Greatest Mysteries in Physics: Forces, Numbers, Energies, and Sizes | ASMR

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Let's Find Out

Let's Find Out

Күн бұрын

The greatest unsolved problems in physics are mysteries that range from the subatomic to the cosmic. Let's find out the boundaries of our knowledge about the universe.
▸ Want to leave a tip or connect?: linktr.ee/letsfindoutasmr
▸Timestamps:
0:00 There are major gaps in our scientific framework (music: "Horizon" - by @atmoslabmusic )
5:10 music: "Pillars of Creation" - by @atmoslabmusic
9:57 The Fine Structure Constant (Dimensionless Physical Constants)
31:09 The Cosmological constant (Dark Energy)
37:11 Martin Rees's "Just Six Numbers"
47:05 Reconciling Gravity and Quantum Field Theory (Theories of Everything)
59:54 Cosmic voids and "vacuum energy" (catastrophe)
1:14:30 Dark Matter
1:25:15 Primordial, Direct-collapse Black Holes
1:29:40 The Heirarchy Problem
▸Music:
-The two opening tracks are courtesy of Atmoslab by Jeremy Vessey @atmoslabmusic
-All the rest are originals.
▸ Images and Video:
-NASA, ESA, STSci
- / :
u/pxlmover
u/PinGUY
u/MonkeBanano
u/Justmitya
u/Thatspretttyfunny
u/Tampadarlyn
u/BodyMindHeart
DanTheMan "Relax in the deep of universe"
u/Obtainer_of_Goods
u/Vadimsadovski
-playgroundai.com:
Welbis Perez
NAKUL SHARMA
Данила Леший
jib heo
-Phil Owen's short film "Origin of Mass - Search for the Higgs"
-All other AI art (including thumbnail) made by me with Bing/DALL·E 3
#educational #letsfindout #ASMR #relaxing #space #science #lecture #documentary #physics

Пікірлер: 336
@awc512
@awc512 7 ай бұрын
Thanks! Always look forward to a new Let's Find Out video
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks man. the donation means alot
@kingjosephrbidenjriii5820
@kingjosephrbidenjriii5820 6 ай бұрын
Good asmr, but have you ever questioned what science says? Geocentric ideas don't have the dark matter problem. This gravity theory is off by 10 to the 120th power. That's according to the mainstream, so what kind of pseudoscience is that? There's also no experiment that can be done to show we are moving. Not one. So again we are told pseudoscience but they tell us it's real science. They're lying and it's obvious to anyone that actually does research. Belief is the enemy of knowing
@rshrbs
@rshrbs 5 ай бұрын
​😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😅
@jchrist2z
@jchrist2z 4 ай бұрын
444⁴=r c. Dr r​@@rshrbs
@deluludoxepin
@deluludoxepin 7 ай бұрын
BABE WAKE UP LETS FIND OUT POSTED (we’re gonna fall back asleep to this)
@choosetolivefree
@choosetolivefree 5 ай бұрын
Nooooo don't sleep to this, it's too good to miss, watch it
@macysondheim
@macysondheim 5 ай бұрын
Not your “babe”
@deluludoxepin
@deluludoxepin 5 ай бұрын
@@macysondheim did a tag you? mention you? say your name? or did i call the air in front of me babe. you’re craaaaaazy for this one
@garethwillis
@garethwillis 5 ай бұрын
So you wake your babe up so they can return to sleep?
@I.Love.Kishka
@I.Love.Kishka 5 ай бұрын
this is hilarious
@StaticBlaster
@StaticBlaster 7 ай бұрын
It's always great to see a new video from you, bro. I love all these science ASMR videos especially all the astronomy ones. And I hope your family is doing well.
@tlovehater
@tlovehater 6 ай бұрын
8==D
@kyrrinx517
@kyrrinx517 6 ай бұрын
bro i read ur comment and thought you said "i love you bro"
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks for the love sb. really glad everyone likes the astronomy topics too. and the fam is great thanks. best to you too
@hannahroush3214
@hannahroush3214 6 ай бұрын
This channel is the best thing I've ever found on the Internet.
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks hannah 🙏🏽
@bloop6111
@bloop6111 5 ай бұрын
This was great, I enjoyed learning for about 20 or so min, then not only fell asleep but I could still faintly hear you in the dream and realized I was dreaming. So I got a nice lucid dream out of it too :) Thanks for making this and not putting ads throughout. New sub!
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 4 ай бұрын
that's the perfect experience i'm aiming for with these videos. thanks for watching and i really appreciate the support bloop
@l3br1n11
@l3br1n11 6 ай бұрын
I started studying physics 2 years ago and your videos truly helped me making connections on what i learned in class and what it actually means, how these numbers represent reality. So fascinating!!
@awc512
@awc512 7 ай бұрын
Can someone please put in a good word for me with the people running the simulation? They did not do a very good job in the character creator when they made my face. On a more serious note, glad to see a new video from you. Always a welcome sight.
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
lol thanks for watching awc
@sleepytime677
@sleepytime677 7 ай бұрын
Your voice is so relaxing and the topics are always so interesting that I can’t decide if I should sleep or watch. Thank you for this gem ❤
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks for the kind words sleepytime
@JimMcHugsU
@JimMcHugsU 5 ай бұрын
STAY AWAKE for this one. The narrative and graphics are outstanding.
@-swar-
@-swar- 6 ай бұрын
It’s amazing how much you’re videos have improved over the years I really appreciate your content
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks for the super swar that's a huge encouragement
@scottgall5452
@scottgall5452 7 ай бұрын
I’ve never commented on a video before. But really enjoying yours and this is so well done… so well I’m too engaged to drift off to sleep. A+
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
awesome to read you enjoyed it. thanks for the compliment and comment scott.
@stephanieparker1250
@stephanieparker1250 6 ай бұрын
You, sir, are a blessing to this world. 💜🙌 This’ll be my sleep video for a long time!
@chrisrickenbach8167
@chrisrickenbach8167 6 ай бұрын
Been a fan for sometime! You're great at what you do and I really appreciate you and the content that you provide.
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 4 ай бұрын
i don't know how i missed this chris, my apologies, but i'm really grateful for the donation. it means alot that you get so much from what i do that your support the channel. happy new year to you man
@demolitionlover5336
@demolitionlover5336 7 ай бұрын
you always post exactly when we need you the most. much love to you and your channel 🫶
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks for the love dl, means alot :)
@julili5689
@julili5689 7 ай бұрын
This time again and with a small delay, I'm happy to learn and rest with my favorite AMSRtist ! Thank you for the video Rich, you're amazing, as always
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks for watching juli
@wiggie1
@wiggie1 6 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video, I always appreciate your new findings and how you combine all of them in a video
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks wiggie
@user-FYgXBx9WqbvpIH3zNQ2Z
@user-FYgXBx9WqbvpIH3zNQ2Z 6 ай бұрын
The quality of these videos are crazy
@Im-Kaspa
@Im-Kaspa 7 ай бұрын
Youre an absolute legend!! Getting so many people interested in the sciences!! Never miss a video brother thank you!! Ill be learning more for another year as i keep falling asleep
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks for supporting ik!
@thehouseofupsidedown
@thehouseofupsidedown 6 ай бұрын
I can't believe I wasn't subscribed to you. I can remember listening as far back as 2019 but it's taken me a while to get the hang of KZbin, maybe that's why. It's been a while since I've seen a video of yours & I'm so glad that the algorithm gods were kind enough to bring you back 😊
@luniversenexpansion9338
@luniversenexpansion9338 6 ай бұрын
Little hi from France just to thank your hard work and the passion you radiate from your long and interesting talks ! I really love your content, it’s not only relaxing but also full of knowledge + it’s free !! I’ve been falling asleep on your videos, so I wanted to take time and comment to thank you properly !! Keep the good word and can’t wait to see more C:
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
Thanks for the sweet comment. means alot that you enjoy my videos so much. have a great Sunday :)
@Quadrant14
@Quadrant14 6 ай бұрын
Thanks for this mate, I not only use this to wind down to, but the information and facts that I knew , and forgotten as I have aged come back to me, seeing a diagram with names like Pauli /Dirac etc, the Astronomy/Cosmology material is wonderful. Thanks from Perth, Western Australia at 3.47AM
@dessertkitchen11
@dessertkitchen11 6 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for your effort on making these delicated asmr videos! This is the best type of asmr videos I've ever seen
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks for watching dk
@stephenpenor9957
@stephenpenor9957 5 ай бұрын
@Let's Find Out ASMR man you hit every fact with a unique tone that hits the chords man. Love listening to your explanations of these subjects! You're a very intelligent dude! Thanks for everything! Stephen Penor
@SoHereASMR
@SoHereASMR 6 ай бұрын
Wow ! So relaxing 😍💤
@berwickington
@berwickington 7 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this video, I don’t even use these videos just as asmr, as they actually talk about interesting things, I’ll use them as podcasts when I get free time sometimes. Once again, thank you!!
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
glad they can check different boxes for you, ber. that's awesome to hear thanks for the comment
@andin916
@andin916 6 ай бұрын
I love this! I get to learn without killing my ears!
@melodicasmr5676
@melodicasmr5676 6 ай бұрын
You’re so good at making videos. The editing is so good!!
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks man. im trying to improve a little bit at a time
@uniquesquid3904
@uniquesquid3904 6 ай бұрын
Channel needa more appreciation fr
@lastmanstanding80
@lastmanstanding80 6 ай бұрын
Beautiful work. Thank you 😊
@vinnythep4216
@vinnythep4216 21 күн бұрын
The time it takes to edit a video like this must be insane
@naokisan07
@naokisan07 6 ай бұрын
You would SO Love the Mass Effect videogame saga! Its pure space Sci-Fi with some interesting space dynamics
@krishangmudaliar2961
@krishangmudaliar2961 6 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for these videos man!
@faceinstone
@faceinstone 7 ай бұрын
Amazing classes, achieves what a class must: be as clear and accesible as posible, be inteligible and what i value most, be fun to listen to or watch or attend. You get a check on all points. Congrats
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks fis, i really appreciate that. i have a long way to go, but i appreciate the encouraging words
@skarecrowster
@skarecrowster 5 ай бұрын
On par with history of the universe, I find myself not being able to sleep to this context recently, as the story tellers are so good, I fight the sleep to listen to the story. Keep it up, great work
@atmoslabmusic
@atmoslabmusic 5 ай бұрын
Great work on this!
@maxpoulin5744
@maxpoulin5744 6 ай бұрын
Very well done thank you finally a great narrator!
@wolpumba4099
@wolpumba4099 6 ай бұрын
*Summary Part 1 of 2* *Section 1: Introduction and Historical Perspective* - 0:02: Introduction; mentions gaps in scientific framework, debate on reality as a simulation. - 0:33: Dependence on intellectuals for grounding in reality; power of science since the Industrial Revolution. - 1:01: Historical advances; from electromagnetism to Einstein's relativity theories. - 1:50: Entering the nuclear age and other 20th-century breakthroughs. - 2:09: Current technological landscape; nuclear, nanotech, medicine. *Section 2: Recent Medical and Technological Developments* - 2:51: Medical breakthroughs in biochemistry, biotechnology, DNA sequencing. - 3:13: Scientific discoveries at smallest scales, like CERN, and largest scales, like cosmic microwave background. - 4:08: Revolutionary tech like the internet; social relevance of software and AI. *Section 3: The Role and Limitations of Science* - 5:00: Science as a harbor against existential doubt. - 5:18: Cracks in scientific worldview; inconsistencies at subatomic and intergalactic levels. - 6:39: Dozens of unsolved problems in physics; confusions at foundational levels. - 7:08: Examples include dark matter, dark energy, matter-antimatter asymmetry. *Section 4: Mysteries in Physics and Discussion on Fine Structure Constant* - 8:27: Incompatibility between standard model of physics and general relativity. - 9:37: Introduction to unsolved mysteries in physics. - 10:01: Discussion on dimensionless physical constants like the Fine Structure Constant. - 10:59: Richard Feynman's remarks on the mystery of Fine Structure Constant. - 12:05: Fine Structure Constant in historical context; first measured in 1887 by Michelson-Morley. *Section 5: Revisiting Theories and Discoveries* - 13:21: Phenomena of spectral line splitting due to electron spin. - 15:38: Discussion on electron spin and the need to consider relativistic effects due to significant speed. - 15:57: Mention of incorporating these relativistic corrections into the Schrödinger equation for better predictive ability. - 16:49: Introduction of the fine structure constant by physicist Arnold Sommerfeld, explaining its role in spectral lines and energy levels. - 18:05: Explanation of how the fine structure constant relates to atomic numbers and the scale of energy splitting. - 18:44: Physicist Wolfgang Pauli and his fascination with the fine structure constant, even collaborating with Carl Jung to explore its significance. *Section 6: Universe Exploration and Constants in Physics* - 19:55: Stephen Hawking's exploration of the multiverse theory and the idea of a fine-tuned universe. - 20:57: Discussion on how the great minds in physics grapple with deep cosmic mysteries. - 24:10: Mention of how electromagnetic forces, even those in the human brain, are governed by these rules. - 25:08: The idea that at high energies, fundamental forces are unified. - 26:37: Paul Dirac's thoughts on the mathematical beauty of the universe and its underlying structure. - 29:12: The fine structure constant as one of many dimensionless numbers in physics, with the current standard model having 25 such constants. *Section 7: Cosmos, Constants, and Conundrums* - 31:13: Brief touch on the Cosmological constant, originally theorized by Einstein, related to Dark Energy. - 31:51: Hubble observed that light from distant galaxies was red-shifted, indicating that galaxies are expanding away from us. - 32:09: The expansion is uniform and not in a single direction, suggesting a cosmological phenomenon. - 32:27: Einstein originally included a cosmological constant (Lambda) in his equations to account for a static universe, which was the prevailing belief. - 33:08: Scientists, influenced by religious worldviews, believed the universe was static and eternal. *Section 8: Exploring Universe’s Expansion and Theories* - 34:07: Einstein’s equations actually predicted a dynamic universe, either collapsing or expanding. - 34:55: Once Hubble’s observations confirmed an expanding universe, Einstein removed his cosmological constant. - 35:44: In the 1990s, research led by Adam Reiss and Alexander Filipenko found the universe’s expansion is accelerating. - 36:37: The cosmological constant now represents the density of dark energy, a key driver in the accelerated expansion of the universe. - 37:14: Martin Rees's book "Just Six Numbers" explores six fundamental constants in physics, touching on the nature and fate of the universe. - 39:00: One of these constants, Omega, indicates the density of the universe and thereby its ultimate fate-either a "Big Crunch" or eternal expansion. *Section 9: Addressing Theories on Fundamental Forces and Dark Matter* - 44:13: Another key constant, Lambda, deals with the density of dark energy in the universe. - 45:43: The constant 'q' represents the energy needed to disperse galactic clusters and is a very small fraction of the total energy. - 47:08: Reconciliation between quantum mechanics and gravity, often called a Theory of Everything, remains an open question in physics. - 48:43: Gravity is much weaker than other fundamental forces and acts at larger distances, posing challenges for unifying it with quantum mechanics. - 49:06: General relativity and quantum mechanics typically apply at very different scales, meaning usually only one is needed for a particular phenomenon. - 50:00: Large Hadron Collider is not the end-all solution, and a bigger collider, Future Circular Collider (FCC), is in the works.
@lorditherecruit884
@lorditherecruit884 7 ай бұрын
Love how you upgraded ur video quality to a whole new level
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
appreciate it, i'm trying to learn new editing tricks as i go
@jaysanf
@jaysanf 6 ай бұрын
Have to keep putting the video each night at a different timestamp since I keep falling asleep and only get 5 minutes of the info. Great content!
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks jay
@wolpumba4099
@wolpumba4099 6 ай бұрын
*Summary Part 2 of 2* *Section 10: Debates and Discussions on Universe's Fundamental Forces* - 51:30: Early universe had all forces indistinguishable, separation occurred later. - 54:07: Electroweak interaction theory proposed by Weinberg, Glashow, and Salam; won 1979 Nobel Prize. - 56:21: A "Theory of Everything" would unify all four fundamental forces, including gravity. - 57:05: String theory is a leading candidate for unifying these forces but is controversial due to lack of testable predictions. *Section 11: Dark Energy and The Mysteries of the Universe* - 1:00:03: Cosmic voids and vacuum energy still not well understood; could have implications on how time and space behave at large scales. - 1:04:20: Existence of voids could complicate our understanding of the universe's beginnings and its large-scale evolution. - 1:04:59: Discusses energy, space, and time's dynamic relationship to allow the universe's evolution. - 1:05:13: Points out the lack of a theory of gravity at small scales. - 1:05:49: Introduces dark energy, which makes up 70% of total matter and energy but is poorly understood. - 1:06:21: Discusses concept of vacuum energy in particle physics as a candidate for dark energy. - 1:07:40: Highlights the massive discrepancy between theoretical vacuum energy and observed dark energy. *Section 12: Unresolved Questions and Theories About Dark Matter and Dark Energy* - 1:08:10: Mentions anthropic solutions suggesting the universe is fine-tuned for human existence. - 1:11:17: Talks about modifying gravity theories as alternatives but acknowledges the dominance of general relativity. - 1:12:27: Notes ongoing research into solving the cosmological constant problem related to dark energy. - 1:14:09: Contrasts dark matter with dark energy; dark matter is more localized around galaxies. - 1:15:54: Describes how dark matter is difficult to detect except through its gravitational influence. - 1:16:58: Mentions that dark matter's existence is implied by observations like orbital velocities. - 1:18:10: States that there's no known substance to account for the mass discrepancy causing galaxies to rotate as they do. - 1:19:33: Concludes that dark matter's identity remains a mystery and is a current focus in particle physics. *Section 13: Theories and Discoveries on Dark Matter and The Future of Physics* - 1:20:21: Discusses the theory that dark matter is composed of weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs). These particles have not yet been detected in small-scale experiments on Earth but affect galactic cores. - 1:21:18: Mentions the possibility that more powerful particle colliders like the Future Circular Collider might help us detect these particles. - 1:22:35: Notes that current particle accelerators are not yet reaching the energy levels that existed at the beginning of the universe, leaving room for discoveries. - 1:22:50: Introduces the alternative theory that dark matter could be primordial black holes. - 1:24:02: Explains that dark matter can be classified as cold, warm, or hot. Current models favor cold dark matter. - 1:25:19: Notes lack of success in detecting dark matter particles despite various detection techniques. - 1:25:38: Mentions that telescopes like the James Webb could strengthen the case for primordial black holes. - 1:26:55: Discusses direct collapse black holes that bypass typical stellar evolution, forming early in the universe. - 1:28:23: Cites a 2016 study that identified the first two candidate direct collapse black holes. *Section 14: Fundamental Forces and The Hierarchy Problem* - 1:29:40: Introduces the "Hierarchy Problem," which questions the massive discrepancy between the strengths of the four fundamental forces, particularly how weak gravity is compared to others. - 1:33:00: Highlights how all forces except gravity have similar magnitudes of strength at the quantum level. - 1:33:47: Notes that general relativity describes gravity well at macroscopic scales but fails at quantum levels. - 1:35:14: Concludes by pointing out the strangeness that electromagnetism seems to bridge the gap between cosmic and quantum scales, while gravity does not. *Section 15: Gravity, Electromagnetism, and The Quest for Unification* - 1:35:21: Discusses how gravity dominates on scales familiar to human life, while other forces like electromagnetism rule the subatomic world. - 1:35:55: Notes that although electromagnetism is stronger than gravity on human scales, gravity dominates on celestial scales. - 1:36:18: Points out that electromagnetism tends to balance out on cosmic scales, leading to no net effect on the universe's evolution. - 1:37:11: Emphasizes the need for a unified theory to account for all observed forces, which currently don't reconcile well. - 1:37:31: Highlights the unique aspect of gravity having only one "charge" or attractive force, unlike electromagnetism which has both positive and negative charges. *Section 16: Dark Energy, Theories of Gravity and The Future of Physics* - 1:38:05: Mentions the role of dark energy and other placeholders that seem to counteract gravity. - 1:38:32: Points out discrepancies between special/general relativity and quantum mechanics, particularly around space-time singularities like black holes. - 1:39:42: Talks about the ongoing search for a Theory of Everything to unify all scales and realms of the universe. - 1:40:10: Speculates about future technological advancements like galaxy-scale particle colliders or star-powered supercomputers for running experiments. - 1:41:03: Concludes by imagining a scenario where simulated beings in an experiment become so advanced they start questioning the limitations of their own simulation. Disclaimer: This summary was created using the GPT-4 model and serves as a condensed version of the original transcript. The transcript was divided into two segments. I used this prompt: "Summarize as a bullet list. Keep starting timestamp for each bullet point:". The bullet points were subsequently organized into sections with appropriate titles with this prompt: "Split the following bullet list into sections. Create section titles. Keep timestamps.". I formatted the text manually with KZbin comment markup.
@adamchiasson1774
@adamchiasson1774 7 ай бұрын
And yet again Rich you are amazing.i have not listened yet but i already know this will be awesome. love asmr and i love physics. you are the only male asmrtist that i listen to and it is because you do science!! nothing like actually learning while you sleep i think in brave new world they called it "hypnopedia" or something like that been awhile since i read that. lol anyways keep up the great scientific work sir love from canada
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
i haven't read brave new world, but i kind of like "hypnopedia". interesting phrase. thanks for the love and kind words adam
@adamchiasson1774
@adamchiasson1774 6 ай бұрын
well good sir let me recommend it to you amazing book the first book i ever read twice love your work :)@@LetsFindOut1
@jakobe9907
@jakobe9907 6 ай бұрын
yo brother these videos are like 70% of my youtube usage, keep it up, these videos are informative and entertaining 🤯
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks for the kind words man 🙏🏽
@mhd4020
@mhd4020 6 ай бұрын
YESSSS a new video ! So happy
@elizabethtaylor9910
@elizabethtaylor9910 Ай бұрын
I'm 65 this year and just realized I love cosmology theories.❤
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 Ай бұрын
awesome!
@Debbie338
@Debbie338 7 ай бұрын
Yes! This is the style I fell in love with-the velvet voice talking about science. Perfect.
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
awesome, thanks for the support debbie
@BradsPitts.
@BradsPitts. 6 ай бұрын
I love that I can watch these videos again and again because I keep following asleep in the middle of them, and I’m not smart enough to understand most of this anyway 😂
@undercover_idiot
@undercover_idiot 6 ай бұрын
The editing is awesome on this one! Thanks for the video!
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
appreciate you noticing, ui
@sashasmr2156
@sashasmr2156 7 ай бұрын
Incredible!! I’ve been watching/listening to you for years and your voice never gets old ❤
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks sasha :)
@kraftykatty
@kraftykatty 6 ай бұрын
Wonderful! I don’t understand half of it but your presentations are fascinating and much appreciated 👏👏Thank you 🤗
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thnaks for watching katty
@punkyfish22
@punkyfish22 6 ай бұрын
Another great upload from you ric. 👍🏼👍🏼
@jerrydrouinjr.6705
@jerrydrouinjr.6705 6 ай бұрын
Always a treat to get a new video from you Rich. I will be having weight loss surgery on the 30th and I have a bunch of your videos downloaded through KZbin premium. You're the best. Please keep it going. Many blessings to you Molly and your lil girl
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
best of luck to you jerry. thanks for the support and kind words man
@jerrydrouinjr.6705
@jerrydrouinjr.6705 6 ай бұрын
@LetsFindOut1 thank you so much. You provide me a much needed escape on A daily basis. When I have a crap work day I definitely listen to you o. My drives home. When the anxiety gets too much and I can't sleep I can depend on your content to put me in a better mindset so I can sleep. You are a gift sir. Thank you
@countzulu99
@countzulu99 7 ай бұрын
I think why I love your videos is because it oozes curiosity and it feeds mine
@Tamagumo
@Tamagumo 6 ай бұрын
No shit
@countzulu99
@countzulu99 6 ай бұрын
@@Tamagumo you don’t
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thats a huge compliment, thanks zulu
@K0NG
@K0NG 6 ай бұрын
Every video you make tops the previous, you always pick the most fascinating topics ❤
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks kong
@the-witness8811
@the-witness8811 5 ай бұрын
I know you like science and technology, and some of your best videos are about space. So I thought maybe it would be cool if you did a video explaining the cold war, the space race, and how the race for space affects us today.
@GabeCleveland-qh7gu
@GabeCleveland-qh7gu 7 ай бұрын
just in time for me because its almost midnight and i couldn't find a good ASMR vid but then this video pops up thanks lad
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
nice. hope you enjoyed it, thanks for watching gabe
@jamesharley1592
@jamesharley1592 6 ай бұрын
I dead ass take notes to all your vides
@cosmicswan1922
@cosmicswan1922 5 ай бұрын
Netflix get out of the way… the production quality of your videos is amazing !!!
@HolyPoseida
@HolyPoseida 7 ай бұрын
I look forward to falling asleep while listening to this video over the next several days, each night getting a little further!
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks for watching michael. super glad you can sleep to this
@Machoman-xu4co
@Machoman-xu4co 7 ай бұрын
I love your voice so much it's so relaxing
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
appreciate that macho
@nkbhgy798uoij
@nkbhgy798uoij 7 ай бұрын
every time you upload is a joy!
@MaiPoirot
@MaiPoirot 6 ай бұрын
I love your videos!❤
@TobasscoJelly
@TobasscoJelly 7 ай бұрын
Yeaaaa boiiii! The walking legend is back. Love it if you ever could do another history video again with ambient music. (Your old egypt video was top) Brilliant content as always.
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
i'll be doing some history again, thanks for the suggestion tj
@rakhsanrazan4333
@rakhsanrazan4333 6 ай бұрын
Great full!
@AnastasiaW_
@AnastasiaW_ 7 ай бұрын
perfect timing, i’m about to sleep!
@crazyawesometimee
@crazyawesometimee 6 ай бұрын
This the new how its made❤
@panchovalance6270
@panchovalance6270 6 ай бұрын
Enjoying the results of your reading and research. Thank you.
@Metaldetectiontubeworldwide
@Metaldetectiontubeworldwide 6 ай бұрын
I always compaire the expanding universes ( multi), with the single point emerging CO2-bubles in a bottle of coca cola . Out of nothing emerging in a medium we call empty space...but empty is far from empty..energy less . Likewiss the CO² was already absorbed in the medium before it emerged, we where to already present/ absorbed by the "medium". Grtzz from the Netherlands Johny geerts
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thats a cool visual. cheers from florida
@Mephistopheles_666
@Mephistopheles_666 Ай бұрын
Making sure I Come back to this
@choosetolivefree
@choosetolivefree 5 ай бұрын
What a beautiful video.
@lucaswarnke3668
@lucaswarnke3668 6 ай бұрын
I like how Gravity and Electromagnetism works opposite Gravity: Likes attract, Opposites repel EM: Likes repel, Opposites attract
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
the opposites of gravity are an interesting idea
@lucaswarnke3668
@lucaswarnke3668 6 ай бұрын
@@LetsFindOut1 yea, positive and negative mass
@phazebeast7373
@phazebeast7373 6 ай бұрын
Rich with another awesome ASMR 🙏 Hope you are doing good brother
@kingvegetatheape4663
@kingvegetatheape4663 6 ай бұрын
You videos are so cool man, thanks for uploading
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks vegeta
@Enivixity.
@Enivixity. 7 ай бұрын
I love these so much😊
@RhysGirffiths
@RhysGirffiths 6 ай бұрын
Hey let’s find out I’ve been watching you for a couple of years now and I was wondering if you could do an ASMR video on string theory, much love ❤❤
@skrtgg1083
@skrtgg1083 7 ай бұрын
Saw the notification that you posted. My 🧠: awesome sauce!
@onyourdreamies
@onyourdreamies 6 ай бұрын
It's kinda hard for me to find this channel bcz i forgot the name 😭 now i already subscribe❤
@vydexx8371
@vydexx8371 7 ай бұрын
getting ready for bed ❤ thank you
@hilirie4683
@hilirie4683 6 ай бұрын
Physics and deep thinking ❤⚛ So grateful for this content!
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks hilirie
@red-xpn
@red-xpn 7 ай бұрын
right before i went to bed thanks!
@Blickyboat
@Blickyboat 5 ай бұрын
I wish I was smart enough to follow along with this info without any prior knowledge of physics
@sodabowl6453
@sodabowl6453 6 ай бұрын
Mr. LFO, can we please get a video on nuclear technology or theory or otherwise? I think that would be very interesting and potentially new topic that we could learn about :)
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
great suggestion
@robertgullett3809
@robertgullett3809 5 ай бұрын
Your content is great, and you are knowledgeable in the presented material. The opening of your message seems to convey mistrust for science, and whether you agree or don't agree is of no consequence, but what is important is that more humans that get involved, begging the questions and contributing what one can. Each humans fingerprints differ from one another and so each person also has a perception unique and different from one another. Each perspective just might be the perspective even in its most smallest contribution, as viewed by some, that perspective could not have been accessible to the person that took that rid but and suddenly that person could see or imagine what would have otherwise not have been so available. Because of the many perspectives that are shut down simply because one does not care to hear the difference to their own view of the world so we lose or give up as a result sitting on the sidelines and never considering or assuming that others will figure it all out. This is why we seem to be stagnant. When one considers that when measured against those that begged the question in other periods of history we do not seem to possess what it takes to find the connections or possibility of other driving forces or contributors to what we see around us. Essentially placing blinders on or do not see as the blinders or restrictions that limit our innovation because we to often are still seeing through the eyes of those before us. This statement is not intended to imply that one should go out half-cocked and throw out theories, models, or laws that have proven useful in not only begging the question but also sparking the mind in such a way that when we look at the world around us, we see that recognize that something we can observe ( the yellow lines in the road while peering out of a window in a patent office and the spark begged the question or a fisherman observed that wave crest passed his boat in a pattern or sorts and it begs the question or observing that birds migrate and return with out Google maps WHAT! The observer then wonders, and the spark of curiosity is ignited. We have zero chance of solving these mysteries if we think we already have all the answers we can know; when we think we know them, we no longer look. In history, there have been periods where humans have lost this quality altogether (dark ages), and I am sure most of you have already thought of many examples where we as a species lost ourselves. I do not know much, but I can say that I have yet to come across a theory or anything discovered that the pattern or lack of it has not been observed in nature and the world around us. The separating factor is curiosity, which compelled the observer to wonder why, so it begs the question. We are but a small occurrence, but we are ( as far as I can tell) immersed in a part of whatever your definition but a model of sorts. If it happens out there, it happens here but on a much larger or smaller scale in some pattern or process that first must be identified. Only through curiosity and looking at the world around us will we be able to try to make the connection to begin the process of extrapolation and put into motion the next process that might lead to a puzzle piece we can leave behind for others that follow. The minds of yesterday were brilliant, but their contributions can only take us so far. Only those who wonder will be able to make the connection of that seemingly mundane event that may hold the key to a better understanding of the world and the cosmos. The answers are right before our faces, but we have to look, not see, and wonder enough to make the connection ( curiosity) we need to ask the question. Few are endowed with the process of finding viable pieces for any one of the puzzles in life. When a small fraction of people are not only in search of answers to our questions, we surrender not only our ability to think but also our power and follow or, more appropriately, are corralled in any direction those in power choose, and this happens in any situation or facet of life, we risk developing blinders. As genius as all those who came before you ( not only are they dead ), but those who were and will soon exist are limited by what they know, as they do not have the needed fresh perspectives of those that follow. As stupid as one may think this sounds, it is when we do not know that we stumble across an idea that may serve to add another piece. It is a shame that most social media platforms ( intended or not) tend to pit one against another, and this happens across the board, so it happens with science, politics, and the range of any other discussion as people get fixed on what they know to be true and the fight begins because what they claim to know is a closely scripted agenda for what they want and for whatever purpose is to be served. We can claim a satisfactory answer to allow the next question to emerge. With this understanding, we all agree that when the satisfied answer no longer stands true or does not provide a bridge to the next question, we must surrender the notion to those who do. All of our theories and ideas are based on assumptions that we must provide so that we can either confirm or toss out once the next question has put us one step closer to recognizing the picture that appears when the pieces are put together where the assumptions are discovered to be crap or one step above a guess and then eventually what we can depend on what was an assumption to a dependable space filler until such time it is not. When our assumptions have not evolved to a more dependable space holder, we become stagnant and desperately cling to the old ideas we know are true, closing down any discussion that would suggest otherwise. We begin to fight one another and dehumanize those that disagree. We train our children not to question and dumb them down to believe that they do not hold the keys for their generation to unlock what others cannot recognize, even if they see it every day. You are tasked with asking the question; others can help find an answer. If there is no question, then there can be no hope of answering. Get involved with whatever intrigues your curiosity, if not, one day, you will be incapable of asking a question because you, too, will have all the answers. It is okay for us to ask questions. It is okay to be wrong as that is the nature of begging the question. Eventually the curious will find the question and through our understanding of testing these questions the answer will reveal itself. It is the only way we move forward. Know what you know, but invite those who think differently so the process is not arrested. Let our questions be different, and our thoughts be acknowledged (even if we do not agree) so that people are not divided. When we divide enough, we render ourselves to a foreseeable ending or at least surrender or suspend the thinking process to those we deem as better and let them think for us.
@we-must-live
@we-must-live 3 ай бұрын
beautiful comment, this one is. it's a shame that the very thing you mentioned, the social-media-induced infighting, is existing even in this comment section. it seems the moment our ideas are challenged, there are a great many that seek to gravitate to "this side" or "that side" - maybe they'll eventually realize that they're both the same, if all they're really doing is insulting and dehumanizing the people that happened to pick "the other side". but there's also much positivity - comments like yours, and many others, that appreciate this content for what it is, and don't instinctually spring to dichotomous conclusions, even if they may not immediately agree with the content at hand.
@ioanbota9397
@ioanbota9397 3 ай бұрын
Really I like this video its so so interestyng
@NikoOneShotDad
@NikoOneShotDad 7 ай бұрын
Thank you, I love your videos so much. I hope you’ve been doing good man
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
thanks for the love cult
@NikoOneShotDad
@NikoOneShotDad 6 ай бұрын
@@LetsFindOut1 No problem!
@FudgeBalloon
@FudgeBalloon 7 ай бұрын
The legend does it again
@BluCat86
@BluCat86 6 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed this one. Cheers dude.
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 6 ай бұрын
nice, thanks blu
@diray3474
@diray3474 7 ай бұрын
Just in time for me going to bed at 5am 👌
@SleepyMattzzz
@SleepyMattzzz 7 ай бұрын
Can we get a whispered documentary at some point?
@hannienanniep
@hannienanniep 7 ай бұрын
Exciting to be early. What a great idea for a video! Can't wait for this
@ScrambledFishEggs
@ScrambledFishEggs Ай бұрын
Best of all bedtime stories.
@LetsFindOut1
@LetsFindOut1 Ай бұрын
@krycekuva
@krycekuva 7 ай бұрын
nice! the best voice is back!
@s_all1648
@s_all1648 2 ай бұрын
Manifesting my astronomy and astrophysics degree by falling asleep to this
@michaelward878
@michaelward878 5 ай бұрын
Because of today's modern science in technological Information Age has caused a transformation of consciousness from ancient calendar consciousness to universal super consciousness. Seeing the universe with a scientific perception will awaken your third eye which is your mind's eye. This is what created the all seeing eye generation.
@serri7833
@serri7833 6 ай бұрын
Wake up babe, Let's Find out just dropped another astronomy banger
@wildbill9863
@wildbill9863 7 ай бұрын
I don't remember what the theory was called but it basically says whether or not we are real or simulated or remembering or non existent To be kind and virtuous is beyond all means the most important
@NoelArmourson
@NoelArmourson 6 ай бұрын
The thumbnail image is remeniscent of the cover art on my old paperback copy of Asimov's "The Stars Like Dust".
@meganroxz18
@meganroxz18 3 ай бұрын
What a mind you have, sir
@striderwhite5197
@striderwhite5197 7 ай бұрын
Yesss so excited!
@jonnyboy5695
@jonnyboy5695 3 ай бұрын
12:28 in got on my calculator and typed in 8 divided by 95 and i got really close to the number so if anyone wants to try to find it around there so i think the number is a type of fraction like when u divided a low number my a higher number like 3%9 so if u find nice job
@ot7biasedmashups
@ot7biasedmashups 6 ай бұрын
I once saw a video about how it's more likely that we're in a simulation compared to us not being in one but I forgot the math behind it :(
@MultiGames4You
@MultiGames4You 5 ай бұрын
How do you feel about that ?
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