If you want to pull your data out of a black hole of data brokers, then head to incogni.com/veritasium and use code veritasium to get 60% off an annual plan.
@Ihavenoclue4378 ай бұрын
Hello veritasium
@AquarianSoulTimeTraveler8 ай бұрын
What you're seeing in your thumbnail is a cross-section of a torrid on one side of the singularity of the toroid time Flows In Reverse and on the other side it flows regular this is the shape of the universe and we observe a flat universe because we are not the fundamental dimension of space and we have proof of Singularity inside of a convex or concave mirror and also inside of magnetism which is also a toroid with opposite spinning toroidal flows
@venomous73218 ай бұрын
this comment is strangely old
@mage43698 ай бұрын
make a video about strange ocean stuff like the bloop. (The bloop is debunked but there's possibly even stranger unsolved mysteries)
@lelouchlemprouge63808 ай бұрын
If black hole is there , there must be somewhere like an exit so is that exit Past or some parallel universe?
@elementallobsterx2 ай бұрын
Finding out about a black hole on paper and then finding it in real life must’ve been an eerie and horrific endeavor.
@iffyfox97492 ай бұрын
I can only imagine the existential crisis some of these theorists and scientists felt when they discovered one
@TheTechAdmin2 ай бұрын
Must have felt good though. A lot of times I know the inner workings of things without opening them up. But when the day comes that the object is broken and I get to open it; I enjoy seeing I was right. I imagine it was a similar feeling.
@Hkouggbmha2 ай бұрын
@@TheTechAdmindude yess loll
@wordt1232 ай бұрын
Actual bot.
@elementallobsterx2 ай бұрын
@@wordt123 big word scare TikTok baby🍼
@betterchapter8 ай бұрын
Once you get so far into math, the math doesn’t even look like math anymore
@danyaproudstudent8 ай бұрын
then you need meth to understand math
@herobrine8763og8 ай бұрын
You don’t even need to go far tbh lol
@DrDeuteron8 ай бұрын
omg, this stuff is so practical compared to, say, category theory.
@parithiilamaaran.h98298 ай бұрын
@@danyaproudstudent lol me asf
@Zazacollector8 ай бұрын
Math ain't Mathing
@john_wack8 ай бұрын
Redbull will be the first to cover someone going through a singularity
@sharthakghosh9708 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣
@Merlin_YouTube8 ай бұрын
On the worlds most advanced GoPro, no less
@theunknowman128 ай бұрын
@@Merlin_KZbin Galaxy most advance GoPro*
@corl41478 ай бұрын
and the footage will be relayed back by Starlink
@RM-sy8oo8 ай бұрын
max Verstappen attempts to traverse the singularity in red bulls 2038 season entry car
@hunszaszist2 ай бұрын
This is probably the best video you've done yet. You consider all known factors for why these structures might exist but also don't jump to Michio Kaku-like insane conclusions by showing how the universe we see don't seem to allow that. All the while you never crush our sense of longing for something wondrous. Amazing job, Derek. You're a science communicator par excellence.
@cedriceveleigh5 күн бұрын
Well said!
@nilsgensert58144 ай бұрын
"We have one universe, why can't we have two?" Youre not getting another universe until you finish your first one, young man!
@thetruereality24 ай бұрын
Underrated 😂
@variancewithin4 ай бұрын
Lmfao
@Perseverence1114 ай бұрын
We’ve had one universe, yes, but what about second universe?
@hr80324 ай бұрын
@@Perseverence111 I don't think Aragorn knows about second universe, Pip!
@dolurosu4 ай бұрын
@@Perseverence111 *Newton throws an apple at you*
@bluerie._.30213 ай бұрын
And now I can begin to understand why photographing a black hole was such a big deal. Incredible.
@windws71372 ай бұрын
1930s: black holes are crazy, how can they exist! 2019: here's a photo
@prateekpanwar6462 ай бұрын
@@windws7137 Leave black hole we didn't even knew if Pluto was real.
@Powerate2 ай бұрын
It seems that the first black hole discovery was in 1971 tho
@ProjectMATHEW2 ай бұрын
@@PowerateKinda, it's my understanding that there was objects that were assumed to be black holes with the observation methods available (without being able to detect gravitational waves) and they were then used to form the basis of Penrose and Hawkings' work on thermodynamics and radiation, but in 2016 they were able to detect gravitational waves, probing their existence and in 2017 they were able to capture an image which 2 years later was proved to be the first confirmed and sighted black hole. Though earlier observations were assumed and formed a basis, it is impossible to know that they weren't something else that acted in the same way, and in this field you kinda don't count anything out until you've got all the proof, you just keep working at it.
@Powerate2 ай бұрын
@@ProjectMATHEW This is very interesting because media culture has been portraying black holes for decades, I wonder if the perception or how they are portrayed will change by taking inspiration from the photo
@highqualitywriter7 ай бұрын
"he looks back at you, shaking his fist at a constant rate" something only a physicist would say
@markkline61237 ай бұрын
lol I was thinking the same thing
@blaeks7 ай бұрын
I was thinking about something else:)
@averageracist_2197 ай бұрын
@@blaeksI was thinking about u😈😈🔥🗣🐐🧑🏿🦲
@mattjack39837 ай бұрын
@@averageracist_219Yikes
@guerrillaradio99537 ай бұрын
Picture a spherical fist....
@lenapermyakova7307Ай бұрын
After discovering Hidden Astral Projection Techniques on Shirlest, I can't believe I waited so long to explore astral projection. The little details made all the difference for me!
@namitapaАй бұрын
thank you
@megalaldamor8854Ай бұрын
I read it few days ago and its really great
@jumpvelocity3953Ай бұрын
Is this a botted comment? This is so strange. No relevance to the video whatsoever, but an absurd number of likes with little to no replies.
@mcmuffinravager891Ай бұрын
@@jumpvelocity3953 That's what I was wondering. If you search up 'shirlest' it brings up tons of ads for "astral projection" BS. How sad.
@prizm8530Ай бұрын
@@jumpvelocity3953this comment is super weird to have like 6k likes in 2 days
@agnosticpanda66558 ай бұрын
It's an amazing coincidence that the event horizon acts as a kind of "black shield", shielding the events inside from the outside world, and "black shield" is literally what "Schwarzschild" means in german.
@mariocastillo83348 ай бұрын
Ayo...
@atomgutan80648 ай бұрын
Extremely big language coincidence. Like how could this happen. He didn't choose his last name or anything.
@EEEEEEEE8 ай бұрын
E
@austinhixson6258 ай бұрын
Dude is that actually true? That's WILD
@atomgutan80648 ай бұрын
@@austinhixson625 Yeah like this a thing I would tell my future grandchildren.
@hashbrownthebro8 ай бұрын
this is why u shouldn't divide by 0
@tarferi8 ай бұрын
You know what? I'm going to start dividing by 0 even harder
@baomao72438 ай бұрын
@@tarferiDon’t be a Zero…
@Benjamin-od8od8 ай бұрын
@@tarferiyou scare me
@christopherstage98148 ай бұрын
How many 0s does it take to get to center of a singularity?
@baomao72438 ай бұрын
@@christopherstage9814 All that you’ve got…then add at least one more zero…
@allseriousness8 ай бұрын
Insane that you’ve kept 6.3 million people watching so far (after 5 days) and gotten to #1 on trending with a math heavy video with the word math in the title. It’s an educational KZbinr master class
@BigDamCentral8 ай бұрын
Yeah math and topics like this are dope, shouldn’t be a surprise
@B20C08 ай бұрын
Also a visualization master class. Visualizing this in this way made it understandable for people with no math affinity.
@Vincer8 ай бұрын
Many things help: Eistein still have a stardom fame in popular imagination, and then the title also lures with Strange - and something... something what? A weird/exotic/strange mistery around einsteins greatest work. Then that vagueness of the title +mistery +strange can also allude to way more things- like what if its alluding to something wrong or something shattering... Sadly the kind of public interest (even more so for education) we ideally need would be one where this kind of view count would be in a video called 'the fascinating math of eistein' wich just doesnt happen
@Fungfetti8 ай бұрын
I have a severe math disability, and I'm still invested despite not knowing a single thing going on 😭🙏
@hhaste8 ай бұрын
@@BigDamCentral It's a surprise because of the algorithm, not because of the content
@enilegnave872 ай бұрын
4:19 I am currently studying philosophy of physics in my third year of university. I'm a philosopher and haven't done much physics so this idea was entirely mind-boggling to me. you just simplified what we've been study for 5 weeks into a couple of minutes. thank you so much this will definitely help me in my module
@Levittchen4GАй бұрын
That's such an amazing combination of fields! You're basically learning plasticity of thinking in two different fields that most people think of as completely removed.
@enilegnave87Ай бұрын
@@Levittchen4G Thanks so much for your kind words! This really made my day :) i've often felt a bit insecure about my degree because people question its usefulness a lot but this really made me feel more confident about it
@tristantreart1019Ай бұрын
Do you mind if I ask where you’re studying? I’ve actually considered philosophy of physics as a major but couldn’t find any universities that offered it. Also, what do you hope to do once you graduate?
@enilegnave87Ай бұрын
@@tristantreart1019 I go to university in the UK and quite a few universities here do the combined. I go to University of York and have had a great time - I think the teaching there is fantastic. I'm not reaaaaalllyyy sure what I want to do afterwards, if i'm honest i haven't looked into that much stuff so i'll have to get back to you haha. hope this helped!
@zerz46178 ай бұрын
The transition to Penrose diagram was one of the smoothest I’ve ever seen. Never understood it until now
@thewhiteknuckler8 ай бұрын
Clearly 👍
@BhimChawhan8 ай бұрын
Goosebumps
@vixinitydbz8 ай бұрын
Penrose Diagram jumpscare
@EnciuConstantin8 ай бұрын
I'm just a regular guy who wasn't exceptionally bright at maths or physics in school, my field of work is nowhere near astrophysics or something like that. I just like Veritasium, PBS Spacetime and Isaac Arthur's channels, and this was the first time I actually got to kinda make sense of all this stuff.
@c.jishnu3788 ай бұрын
314 likes but I destroyed it.
@audioentropy62428 ай бұрын
As a german, I'm still stunned how a person with the name "Schwarzschild" could predict the radius of a black hole. It's such an unbelievable semantic coincident, as it basically is translated to "Blackshield"... Feels very weird hearing this, as I couldn't imagine a better word describing this phenomenon.
@andydataguy8 ай бұрын
Simulation confirmed - lore designers got lazy with the naming conventions
@tsraikage8 ай бұрын
superior beings were like "this humans are dumb, lets create somebody who can actually solve it, I've got a perfect name"
@Princesspandapop8 ай бұрын
😳😱🤯
@christiankrause15948 ай бұрын
Yeah, and the poynting vector is the vector, pointing to the energy flux. When you experiment with cold nitrogen, the Leidenfrost Effect will prevent you from Frostleiden (german for: frost damage / frost suffer). The Rayleigh scatter scribes the scatter of a light ray. Nomen est omen! P.S.: It's a pitty Amalie Noether didn't proved that there is no ether in spacetime.
@el0j8 ай бұрын
i thought the same thing! very certain Schwarzschild already visited it and came back and changed his name, or, he actually came from another universe. ooooooooooooh
@ActionLabShorts7 ай бұрын
The graphics in your latest videos top most any scientific graphics that exist on the internet. It is very hard to make graphics that are both accurate and understandable. Very well done
@darkshao517 ай бұрын
Well I think you should see scienceclic english.
@Isusia7 ай бұрын
What do you think about this graphics? 😂 And most important about an idea that black/white holes are just viewer position perspective? Viewer outside: black hole (material flow in) . -- ~~~ -- . .-~ ~-. / Viewer \ / inside: \ material flow | white < < < |< < < < < | hole < < < |< < < < < | < < < |< < < < < \ material flows / \ from / `-. everywhere .-' ~- . _ . -~ White hole by definition is a "surface" where anything can only fly out of it and nothing can fall in/reach it. So when someone outside of black hole he just see like everything fall in and disappears. But when he fall in he see material can only fly out of that same "surface" he just pass through. And nothing can reach it back. Then that is a "white hole" now. How do find this idea? :)
@hector49137 ай бұрын
@@Isusia not completely true & not completely false cause you just might be right & wrong at the very same time...friend
@EmpressOfExile2067 ай бұрын
@@hector4913Well you can't really label his hypothesis true/false either seeing as *_all_* theories on black/white hole physics are simply unproven hypothesis based on hypothetical possibilities and thus are *equally* possible of being "true" _regardless_ of how "supported/unsupported" they are due to the amount of *_direct_*_ observation/ _*_objective_*_ data_ which we base these hypothesis on being *none* precisely lmao 💯👍
@EmpressOfExile2067 ай бұрын
It's awesome to see another of my *favorite channels* for demonstrations of science concepts here‼️ The viewers *_want & need_* an ActionLab/Veritasium collaboration 💯
@djannias2 ай бұрын
🎯 Key points for quick navigation: 00:00 *🚀 Time Dilation Near the Event Horizon* - As objects approach a black hole’s event horizon, they appear to slow down and even seem frozen in time due to extreme gravitational time dilation, - Light from the object gets redshifted, eventually fading away entirely as it nears the horizon. 01:26 *🌌 Implications of Einstein’s Relativity on Black and White Holes* - Einstein’s equations hinted not only at black holes but also white holes and potential bridges, or wormholes, connecting parallel universes. - Black holes absorb all nearby matter and energy, while white holes theoretically do the opposite, ejecting matter. 02:26 *🌀 Einstein’s Field Equations: A Gravitational Shift from Newton* - Newton’s gravity faced a conceptual gap that Einstein resolved by showing gravity as the result of spacetime curvature, with masses shaping their surroundings. - These equations link mass-energy distribution with spacetime curvature, effectively describing gravitational interactions without “action at a distance.” 04:22 *⏳ Spacetime Light Cones and Event Horizons* - Light cones determine which regions of spacetime can affect or be affected by a point in space-time, defining reachable and observable areas. - Close to massive bodies, light cones narrow, signifying that objects cannot escape certain regions, hinting at black holes' event horizons. 06:22 *🌍 Karl Schwarzschild’s Solution and the Singularity Paradox* - Schwarzschild solved Einstein’s equations in 1915, discovering that near a black hole, spacetime curves steeply, leading to a “singularity” at r=0. - A second apparent singularity arises at the Schwarzschild radius, the event horizon, where escape velocity equals the speed of light. 08:22 *💥 Black Holes and Star Collapse Theories* - Early theorists doubted black holes’ existence, suggesting degeneracy pressures (electron and neutron) might prevent collapse, forming white dwarfs or neutron stars. - Chandrasekhar discovered a mass limit where even these pressures fail, suggesting massive stars could collapse into black holes. 11:55 *🌠 Event Horizons and the Spacetime Experience* - Oppenheimer’s insight showed that while external observers never see objects cross the event horizon, a person crossing it wouldn’t notice anything unusual. - Spacetime diagrams demonstrate how light cones change near a black hole, tipping inward so that anything within the horizon must continue towards the singularity. 15:25 *🌍 Distortions of Spacetime Projections* - Just as map projections distort Earth’s geography, different spacetime maps alter how we view black hole dynamics. - Reframing the coordinates at the event horizon removes the apparent singularity, allowing objects to cross it smoothly. 16:56 *🕳️ The “Waterfall” Model of Black Holes* - Space near a black hole behaves like a waterfall, where space flows inward; photons near the event horizon struggle against this flow but eventually fall in. - At the horizon, space itself falls faster than light speed, trapping everything inside. 20:19 *⌛ The Kruskal-Szekeres and Penrose Diagrams* - The Kruskal-Szekeres diagram reinterprets the black hole singularity as a final moment in time rather than a spatial point, revealing spacetime’s temporal boundary. - Penrose diagrams compress spacetime, illustrating the inevitable progression toward the singularity and showing reachable and unreachable zones in spacetime. 22:15 *🌌 White Holes: Black Hole Counterparts* - White holes, theorized counterparts of black holes, eject material instead of absorbing it, remaining inaccessible as nothing can enter them. - Unlike black holes, white holes exist in theory as time-reversed black holes, theoretically expelling matter and light. 23:46 *🌌 White Holes as Time-Reversed Black Holes* - White holes, the theoretical inverse of black holes, expel matter instead of trapping it, as relativity allows time-reversed solutions to the equations, - If real, white holes would prevent entry but eject everything inside back into space. 24:44 *🌍 Parallel Universes and Coordinate Systems* - Relativity equations allow alternate universes; parallel worlds might theoretically exist beyond the black hole's horizon, - Schwarzschild’s model shows that another universe could be mapped mathematically, similar to discovering a “southern hemisphere” on a previously unknown Earth. 27:09 *🌀 Einstein-Rosen Bridges and Wormholes* - Extending solutions to Einstein’s equations reveals theoretical wormholes, or Einstein-Rosen bridges, that link separate universes, - This model, while hypothetical, suggests that black holes might connect different regions or universes in spacetime. 28:11 *🕳️ Challenges of Traversing Wormholes* - Wormholes, if real, are thought to be unstable, with the connection “pinching off” before anything can cross, - Light cannot bridge these gaps, making travel between universes through a wormhole impossible with current understanding. 29:40 *🔄 Rotating Black Holes and Ergosphere Dynamics* - Kerr’s solution for rotating black holes includes layers such as the ergosphere, where space is dragged by rotation, making escape challenging but possible, - A second inner horizon allows limited movement but would still lead toward a ring singularity, theoretically providing a way through. 31:45 *🌠 Entering New Realms in Rotating Black Holes* - Within a rotating black hole, explorers might navigate freely around the ring singularity and enter other universes or an “anti-verse” with reversed gravity, - This remains theoretical; even if spacetime curves allow such transitions, verifying them remains beyond current science. 33:43 *⚠️ Limitations of Eternal Solutions for Black Holes* - Extended models of black holes and parallel universes assume static, eternal conditions not found in our universe, - Real black holes are formed through star collapse, making white holes improbable, as they would lack the necessary formation mechanism. 34:43 *💥 Instability of Inner Horizons in Real Black Holes* - Real black holes’ inner horizons may concentrate energy infinitely, creating singularities that block passage to any parallel universe, - This would limit any wormhole-like structures to theoretical speculation rather than practical reality. 35:13 *🚀 Theoretical Wormholes and Exotic Matter* - Wormholes suitable for stable travel require “exotic matter” with negative energy, an idea not supported by current physics, - Without exotic matter, wormholes collapse, preventing them from connecting distant parts of the universe or separate universes. 36:17 *🌌 Possibility of Surprises in Cosmology* - While white holes, wormholes, and parallel universes seem improbable by today’s physics, black holes were once deemed impossible too, - Continuing advancements in cosmology may reveal unexpected realities in our understanding of the universe. Made with HARPA AI
@zairazaira_23 күн бұрын
well this is a really cool way of using AI!
@NikolaiRubanovskii8 ай бұрын
I see a lot of smart physicists and astrophysicists in the comments being blown away by explaining and visualizing the diagrams, but I am just a regular guy who works in marketing and is simply fascinated by this stuff. I don't understand nearly as much as was intended for me in these videos, but I am infinitely grateful that I can still get something as complicated as this thanks to your impeccable delivery of information. Thanks Veritasium!
@goodshiro108 ай бұрын
same sir, I'm just 16 and i too am fascinated by stuff like these I like veritasium as he has videos that's understandable by someone like me too lol
@enzobg21638 ай бұрын
@@goodshiro10 You can still choose to follow physics in college if you want. That was the career I wanted to follow when I was young, and ended up in law haha
@ethanbang98818 ай бұрын
How do I get into marketing I’ve been really interested
@gx93628 ай бұрын
Starting astrophysics in college next year because of creators like this. Amazing what people can do.
@botato648 ай бұрын
@@enzobg2163 I would like to live happy and wealthy, which doesn't rhyme with physics
@MaoMaster698 ай бұрын
This is probably the hardest thing about math. When you get this deep into math in college, it all becomes just numbers, variables, expressions, and equations. Things start to remove themselves from a tangible way of understanding. Breaking it down like this so all of it can be consumed and comprehended in such a simple fashion while still being awe-inspiring is the most astounding things that people can do in STEM fields. People explaining an entire field like this in such a tangible fashion is so important and hard to come by.
@tonyhart27448 ай бұрын
math become deep, it remove the number with symbol and words
@NinetyUnderScore8 ай бұрын
math hard, remove number, make easy
@jamesedward93068 ай бұрын
@@NinetyUnderScore 😂😂😂
@noiJadisCailleach8 ай бұрын
This is why we need Human artists.
@blackwind7438 ай бұрын
The human effort to try to understand infinity while simultaneously trying to ignore that it exsts is amusing but also very fitting considering the nature of infinity.
@kovelamanas99054 ай бұрын
This video is just ART. Didnt understand anything but realised human ingenuity is what that needs utmost appreciation. How did we end up with these solutions with just pen and paper ? Great visuals and Narration. Veritasium never disappoints
@VNeto942 ай бұрын
Some of us are really smart monkeys, which can raise the levels of awareness of the rest of the troop.
@jayjoe37162 ай бұрын
@@VNeto94 And then there are some who are not smart and believe the earth is flat... It is a disgrace to humanity.
@harryshearer992Ай бұрын
Eh. It’s about as impressive as a priest standing below a goat, slitting its stomach and going “ZEUS PROTECTS”
@PaulThatcher-iu5in19 күн бұрын
Pen + paper are used to work these solutions through, to do the math, but in the first place the ideas come from the human mind. Einstein didn't start with math to get Special Relativity, but with a thought-experiment: "what would I see if I could ride on a light wave?"; similarly, with General Relativity, the starting point was "what would we experience in a falling elevator?". This is not unique to Einstein: Newton asked "if an apple falls, does the moon also fall?". In all cases, the genius lies in asking a simple question then pursuing the logic + math of it, no matter how counterintuitive that may appear.
@PaulThatcher-iu5in19 күн бұрын
@@harryshearer992 You deserve congratulations: this is one of the least apt, least intelligent metaphors I have ever seen!
@kunalmishra4708Ай бұрын
Great Video! Thanks
@icecream62568 ай бұрын
"Hey there's the southern hemisphere" "Also there're 2 earths" gets me 😂
@megahemphead8 ай бұрын
It made me snort :(
@MbitaChizi8 ай бұрын
My parents said if I reach 10k, they'd buy me a professional camera for recording... Pls guys Im literally begging you!.
@Apr0x1m08 ай бұрын
Just keep ignoring us, we'll be whats left after the nukes.
@kronasdese8 ай бұрын
Timestamp?
@TaylorfromPapaLouie8 ай бұрын
@@kronasdese26:28
@popoliodiego8 ай бұрын
"This is the simplest solution to the Einstein field equations and it already contains a black hole, a white hole and two universes" Great line.
@SinHurr7 ай бұрын
Glory to me, the 100th like.
@TamWam_7 ай бұрын
No bc when I was thinking of what would happen if you went inside a black hole that's spinning, before he showed us the answer, I was like "crosses into another universe through a white hole right?" But I realised it wasn't possible. Til that reveal at the end, to be fair I think anyone would've guessed that but still 😭
@tabhorian7 ай бұрын
And spinning at that!
@lukeutah4207 ай бұрын
Glory hole
@otggoddess24157 ай бұрын
@@tabhorianAND A THEORY AT THAT.
@andybrinegar88618 ай бұрын
I fully expect a “37” Easter egg in every video from now on
@Eclipse_L_8 ай бұрын
I NOTICED THAT
@nightelfmohawk98218 ай бұрын
And notice the episode is 37 minutes long too
@animatorslife97338 ай бұрын
yeah, me too!
@asheep77978 ай бұрын
like at 1:14
@animatorslife97338 ай бұрын
@@nightelfmohawk9821 👀
@andreaskiemer2 ай бұрын
Im late to the party in commenting but I need to say that this is one of the best if not the best explainer videos i have ever seen. It makes those difficult math problems so gobsmackingly accessible and clear it deserves whatever is the scientific explainer video counterpart to a Pulitzer Prize.
@benjaminw39228 ай бұрын
Fun fact as fellow artilleryman, when calculating ballistic trajectories you start by pretending there is nothing in a flat 2-d universe except the howitzer, the round, and a constant 'down'-word acceleration. From that start point of the "standard" world, you then add corrections for every error, wind speed/direction/density, humidity, your distance from the equator, the rotation of the earth, wether [sic] you're firing with or against that rotation, the weight of the round, air temperature, and most anything else that could effect any part of the round traveling. It makes logical sense to me that Schwartzchild would take a similarly empty starting approach to solve Einstein's equations.
@trrrmac7 ай бұрын
how many did you hit.
@benjaminw39227 ай бұрын
@@trrrmac I've never missed? Missing is pretty uncommon in the US. The math is surprisingly detailed, facilitated by hundreds of reference pages of raw reference data and simple/repeatable step-by-step reference sheets you use everytime all to make sure the round goes where you were asked to put it. 🤣 Not the most fun thing thing to do manually, but it works! Plus, we have a few computer systems we use as the primary means to do the math once we're out of training which helps dramatically!
@ThePrisoner8817 ай бұрын
@@trrrmac A conventional unguided M549A1 155 mm artillery projectile has a circular error probable (CEP) of 267 m (876 ft) at its maximum range, meaning that half of the rounds can be expected to land within 267 m (876 ft) of their intended target. The lethal radius of a typical 155mm round is about 50m, but fragments can extend well beyond that for "soft" targets (i.e. humans, light vehicles like unarmored trucks, etc.). So a "hit" depends on a lot of factors, not the least of which is what you're trying to hit. Troops in the open? 50m away is likely lethal to them. A tank? Unless you hit it directly, you're probably not even damaging it. A bunker? Not only must you hit it, but you must penetrate it.
@Mmoll19907 ай бұрын
This is the common approach to basically any problem that applies mathematical theory to the physical world.
@828SAGE7 ай бұрын
Not just a run-of-the-mill grunt... They're grunts who are good at ballistics and calculus 😂🎉 thanks for your service!
@kyalanur18 ай бұрын
this is the kind of veritasium videos i live for. complex enough to make me feel a lost, but with a clear thread of intuition running through it that makes me feel like I understand what's going on. def watching this a 100 more times
@hector49137 ай бұрын
it's exactly what I felt...or this just might be one his best videos ever produced 🤩!!!
@TamWam_7 ай бұрын
Frr, he explained it in such a way where I grasp the concept/bigger picture, just not the details, and I haven't even studied calculus yet 💀💀
@user-os7ec4dm8x7 ай бұрын
White holes are better than black holes!
@biopsiesbeanieboos557 ай бұрын
You’d love Floathead Physics.
@ThomasJr7 ай бұрын
Lol, it's very complex indeed. Complexity that requires a lot of studying. Then again there's a point where even the experts can't have a consensus anymore.
@vivvpprof2 ай бұрын
27:52 this is eerily similar to Dante's journey through the Earth from hell to heaven, only 800 years later.
@74Gee5 ай бұрын
I think the coordinates directly between a white hole, a black hole and the two universes would be a great place for a cafe.
@ciaran55194 ай бұрын
The Restaurant at the End of the Universe: good book title there, don't you think?
@sphinx12394 ай бұрын
@@ciaran5519 Damnn
@Just-screw-it4 ай бұрын
@@ciaran5519the last coffee on earth
@mihagomiunik27584 ай бұрын
Or a Wallmart, highway and some parking 🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🦅🦅🦅
@plo8monster4 ай бұрын
@@Just-screw-it take forever to get that cup of coffee. very slow waitresses
@Avishek858 ай бұрын
Seriously, who needs Netflix when you have amazing content like this Veritasium channel on KZbin?
@aldunlop46228 ай бұрын
I can watch videos like this all day, and not even want to pause. Utterly fascinating.
@DoomMirror8 ай бұрын
@@aldunlop4622unless they start to teach how to solve all those math equations 😂
@soundscape268 ай бұрын
They serve different purposes.
@Malthus8 ай бұрын
This comment made me look at his number of subscribers, and holy sh*t that's a big number, faith in humanity restored.
@dancod45388 ай бұрын
the glaze is crazy
@The_Unintelligent_Speculator8 ай бұрын
Every single minute of this documentary was surreal.
@Sir_Loin_8 ай бұрын
That's because it's false
@raider_cz19468 ай бұрын
@@Sir_Loin_ Explain?
@HellionSol8 ай бұрын
Its fun that a KZbin video can educate me and make me feel like a dumb monkey at the same time
@BroadHobbyProjects8 ай бұрын
@@raider_cz1946He probably thinks the earth is flat.
@Asd-tk2if8 ай бұрын
@@BroadHobbyProjects And you probably drool and clap at everything you see without forming an opinion. Not everyone agrees with some theories and not everyone needs to.
@quaidday6926Ай бұрын
34:18 Wouldn’t our ‘white hole’ be the Big Bang? Or rather, whatever caused it? If I’m understanding that diagram right, wouldn’t the only way to enter one be through a black hole or by moving backwards in time? If there’s anything I’m missing please let me know…
@pianistafj22 күн бұрын
Yep. Came here to say this. This would also entail the formation of a black hole is a big bang in a new universe, but that doesn’t feel right. Perhaps the totality of black holes in the entire universe could though.
@rishuraj28068 ай бұрын
22:38 . "Now your entire future is in blackhole." Most relatable line ever.
@unknown0soldier8 ай бұрын
Underrated comment xD
@BagOCheetos8 ай бұрын
I came looking for this comment. Wasn't disappointed. Haha
@rabeni8058 ай бұрын
@judgeaileencannon9607 Space/physical exists because of time. Not the other way around.
@blipmachine8 ай бұрын
He stole that line from my mom
@MrVinky598 ай бұрын
I was expecting this comment from at least one person!
@inscrutablemungus41435 ай бұрын
Got to hand it to you: this is probably the best layman-focused explanation of black holes that I've seen anywhere on the internet (not including formal lecture series like Lenny Susskind's Theoretical Minimum). -- I'm a theoretical physicist at a national lab in the US.
@thefreemonk69384 ай бұрын
How do I become like you?
@OK-694204 ай бұрын
Thats the neat part, you dont @@thefreemonk6938
@CuboydMC4 ай бұрын
@@thefreemonk6938Lots and lots of learning
@squedward4 ай бұрын
@@thefreemonk6938depends how old you are
@inscrutablemungus41434 ай бұрын
@@thefreemonk6938 Major in physics (and/or math) at your local state school, do well in your classes and if possible join one of your professor's research group and get some experience tackling 'real' problems. Apply to grad school (helps to have an interested advisor, so make connections!), write papers and present at conferences. Get your PhD and apply for research positions that are interesting to you. Most faculty and national lab staff positions typically require you to do a postdoc to build up your publication record. It's a long road, and academic positions come with their own annoyances and downsides. You'll make a lot more money in industry (especially given the extent of your education) and not have to work as hard. But if you really want the pure 'discovering the unknown' vocation that the Einsteins and Kelvins of the past had, a national lab staff position is about as close as you can get (excluding becoming a billionaire and funding your own lab).
@TheCompleteZygarde8 ай бұрын
36:38 Pippin - "We have one universe, yes, but what about second universe?" Merry - "Don't think he knows about second universe, Pip."
@bozhidarmihaylov8 ай бұрын
Winnie: But I Want More! 😂
@Alex.Winchester8 ай бұрын
@@bozhidarmihaylovno this is a lord of the rings fellowship of the rings reference
@RadioFreeMN8 ай бұрын
best comment
@delvijayjon8 ай бұрын
Relativity as per J.R.R.Tolkein
@cookymonstr79188 ай бұрын
No, no, the Big one. Big one!
@thelesserzdoctor2345Ай бұрын
Absolutely LOVED this video - only destroyed by the ridiculous no. of advertisements:(
@neptune-ioАй бұрын
fr!! im listening to it while going to sleep and an loving the video but i didnt expect so many ads!
@CoverBydAn8 ай бұрын
Man, the animation is totally world class. Nothing unnecessarily elaborate, but just enough to tell the story. Derek is not a youtuber, he’s an educator who uses youtube as his platform.
@adammiller1618 ай бұрын
Only this dude can keep me watching a video for 40 minutes that I understand 0% of. Great stuff
@mubaraqoshodi59538 ай бұрын
@@adammiller161 😂😂😂
@MathHunter8 ай бұрын
@@adammiller161 Um actually it's 37 minutes (easter egg?)
@rmoore8508 ай бұрын
Agreed.
@panner118 ай бұрын
True, videos like these have such value for visualization even for people already deep their STEM fields. This is why it's sad there was that whole movement done by internet elitists to try and make Veritasium out to be a fraud because of that one electricity video that caused confusion. Mob mentality really sucks.
@gunsandgranola72628 ай бұрын
I love how the PhD’s say “the mathematic equation is quite simple really.” I needed every second of this video to just grasp the idea behind it.
@skydivenext8 ай бұрын
Is this basic class of physics students?
@MrLennart19768 ай бұрын
Everything is simple once you know how. And Once people know how, they tend to forget how complicated it felt at first
@kiyarashborna67838 ай бұрын
Be proud of yourself. I rewatched every second of the video multiple times and i still dont think i even grasp the idea. @gunsandgranola7262
@matteobenvestito95378 ай бұрын
@@skydivenext Nope... you only begin to study general relativity during your master degree, at least here in Italy
@skydivenext8 ай бұрын
@@matteobenvestito9537 then is veritasium genius?
@virtualnk58258 ай бұрын
I got mind blown when Prof. Geraint F. Lewis said at 26:58 "This is the simplest solution to the Einstein field equations and it already contains a black hole, white hole and two universes".
@vedantchourey73628 ай бұрын
This may open the possibility of things which are beyond our comprehension.
@ivoryas16968 ай бұрын
@@vedantchourey7362 Or maybe... and this _maybe a _*_big_* if... *_just_* inside it! I'm hoping it is, tbh.
@ironhorse4928 ай бұрын
This progression of complexity is pretty common in physics. We use differential equations to describe how the Universe works. Thos differential equations can go from trivially easy to solve to a five minute exercise to a real headache to literally impossible to solve by just adding one term for each step. Einstein's equations are a set of 11 differential equations all coupled together, its a miracle we have any solutions at all
@galactoman55037 ай бұрын
@@ironhorse492 bruteforce ftw?
@zFreacker3 ай бұрын
@@galactoman5503 brute force get´s kind of hard considering you basically have an infinite amount of functions (let alone the curvature) most of which when applied will just return something you have to spent time on trying to understand and interpret. It´s way more than just pluging in random numbers and seeing what fits (the tough but interesting part)
@HarshKumbhar-sl8pi5 сағат бұрын
Can anyone tell me., which Book does he have in his hand .. 25:28
@xJackHunter4 сағат бұрын
+1
@goofyloofy2938 ай бұрын
Veritasium has a knack for explaining intense astrophysics in a somewhat understandable manner to us laymen.
@SoraNeku8 ай бұрын
he has a PhD in Physics Education so theres that.
@AriefAsakura8 ай бұрын
wait.... you could understand the video?
@goofyloofy2938 ай бұрын
@@AriefAsakura not really but definitely moreso that some random lecture or textbook. It was still entertaining though
@MAYNOR828 ай бұрын
But if you want real deep astrophysics explanations with calculus equations and theoretical physics, go see Matt @ PBS Spacetime! I could barely keep up!
@NebulaAccount8 ай бұрын
@@AriefAsakura it was pretty simple
@Jerrrbear7 ай бұрын
As someone with a bachelors of science and physics who has studied general relativity, this is an absolutely phenomenal video; it is arguably one of the most amazing videos on this channel. Derek, you have absolutely outdone yourself! This video finds a way to communicate some of the most complex topics in all of Physics in a way that anyone can understand, many hats off to you!
@TamWam_7 ай бұрын
Physics scares me 😨 this is why I take chemistry
@cjpartridge7 ай бұрын
@@TamWam_ You'll learn much more about your reality with chemistry, than you ever will from these Jesuit spawned mathematical models masquerading as science.
@ThomasJr7 ай бұрын
I've watched many such videos and there many amazing ones. I think the one by Alex of Astrum is even better than this one (then again Alex is a real physicist, not just a communicator).
@ncykalewicz7 ай бұрын
All his videos are great. Love this guy
@professorwiggins32907 ай бұрын
We are like house cats discussing calculus. We can't even imagine. We throw words around that we can understand, but we don't have brains that can comprehend.
@adityavenkatraman75094 ай бұрын
A mathematician friend of mine pointed to 16:39 and reminded me not to put infinity directly in the integral limits. I told him that if I ever dealt with a black hole as an engineer, I'll remember not to
@cheowweikoay26014 ай бұрын
need more likes!!!
@DipanshuSehjal4 ай бұрын
Spot on!
@emilyrln3 ай бұрын
Who needs infinity when you have a reasonable approximation? 😂
@seaonat15763 ай бұрын
OuiI’m t😂o otired ooui😂🎉😂😂ooooouo😢😢o🎉🎉🎉🎉😢😢io😢p🎉pi😢 o 🎉🎉🎉🎉😢😢😂😢p😢😢u😢p😢up😢o😢ooyy🎉🎉ii😂😢😢😢😢o😂😢😢😢😢p😢uoooiioo😢o😂😢😂😢😂😢😂😂😂🎉😢😢u😢u🎉y🎉😂😂oooiooiiiiiiiiooo I😢it p🎉ypuoyoypypppypypypyp😂 I😂😂😂oiiiioops o u i uiiii o ou ou iuu😂😂😂 😂uooi 🎉iii😂ioo 🎉oooi😂😂😂of 🎉😂🎉o🎉🎉🎉o🎉🎉i😂oi😂😂😂😂😂o😂my😂😂😂😢😂😂or else 😂oooops 😂Lord is you is oo🎉uoou😢ii😂😢or 😂😂😂😂o😂😂o😂😂😢😂😢😢😂😂😢😂😢😂😢😢😂😢😂😢😂😂😢o😢😢😢😂😢😂😢😂😂😢🎉😂😂😢😂😂😂o😂😂ome😂😂😂😂😂😂😢😂😢😢😂😢😂o😢😂😢😂😢😢😂😢o😢😂😢😂😂😢😂😢😂😢😂😢😢😢😢😂😢😂😂😢
@afaintbluelight3 ай бұрын
@@emilyrlnexactly!
@richikbhattacharya457716 сағат бұрын
I absolutely love your channel and this video is amazing. While speaking to the general audience, you don't tell misinformation while simplifying. You went right into SR, then Schwarschild, Kruskal Zekeres coordinates and then the Kerr metric. This is how it's taught in universities. I cannot say that I've seen a more accurate video on this subject on KZbin. All the best and keep uploading such excellent videos.
@haariger_wookie56468 ай бұрын
Full respect for dancing on the line between „ohhhh that is how that works“ and „I have no idea what they are talking about…“
@haariger_wookie56468 ай бұрын
Never mind… it has been 5 more minutes and I am firmly in „I have no idea what they are talking about…“ Still very entertaining
@rohan76378 ай бұрын
LMAOOOOOOO, I'm still just sure about few things said here, yet unsure about all the maths and the diagram which was shown at last about wormholes
@cslack8138 ай бұрын
Did you know that you can use the same character for opening and closing quotes “”??
@MrJdsenior8 ай бұрын
@@cslack813 Hell, I didn't even know that character EXISTED. :-) Can I assume it is just a double comma? It makes me wonder if that is the way quotes work in some language other than English. Also, just because one question mark is good doesn't mean two are better (just kidding).
@tomas.stesti8 ай бұрын
You are just on the event horizon of not/understanding it 😀
@ScienceClicEN8 ай бұрын
Fantastic video as always! Very glad I could participate 🙏
@yoloboogie36748 ай бұрын
hard to understand the scienceclic videos but this makes more sense
@Siberian_Khatru.8 ай бұрын
Ive seen a few of your videos,they are absolutely good and your editing levels are top notch too!
@Advythe8 ай бұрын
I've been subbed for a while, as soon as I saw the Astronaut POV clip I knew it was you, congrats on the collab!
@mouchoirs_blancs35828 ай бұрын
Sa m'a étonné quand j'ai entendu ton nom dans la vidéo XD
@albertosierraalta32238 ай бұрын
@@yoloboogie3674I disagree. I think ScienceClic has some of the best explanations in science
@hibryd74818 ай бұрын
2015: The earth is actually flat. 2025: Okay, the earth is round, but the southern hemisphere doesn't exist.
@SethidusVorscye8 ай бұрын
The earth is partially flat now, and Australia and Brazil disappear. Everyone's happy.
@DotDodd8 ай бұрын
2035: so we have all the hemisphere's, but Antarctica is a ring around the planet
@_mrspanky_45878 ай бұрын
Flat Earthers believe Australia doesn't exist. Maybe they were right all along 😱😱
@grepy8 ай бұрын
The Earth is flat, but the spacetime is curved around it to make it round :D
@isabelkloberdanz63298 ай бұрын
I mean in the west people do act like the global south doesn’t exist lol
@harshwardhanmane18555 күн бұрын
"I have never seen someone explain such a topic with such ease-love watching these videos!"
@zubairno17 ай бұрын
I rarely leave comments, but I have to say, the incredible effort you've poured into this video is absolutely astonishing. Your ability to explain Einstein's complex equations with such clarity and engagement is a testament to your years of dedication and the deep insights you gained during your PhD research on effective science education. The stunning graphics and your compelling presentation style kept me captivated throughout the entire video. This work brilliantly showcases your passion and the extensive journey you've undertaken to make challenging topics accessible and enthralling for everyone. Amazing job, Derek!!! 👍🏽
@GG-vv1zq7 ай бұрын
Excellent review for this video. So well stated, that I couldn't help but think that you would be great at writing reviews for companies. You could sell just about any company, with your eloquent way of speaking on a subject. Outstanding!!
@zubairno17 ай бұрын
@@GG-vv1zq Thank you for your kind words. I am unsure who would pay for my reviews lol but I am glad my approach resonated with you :)
@shloksinha70237 ай бұрын
what about melody ship
@beigeninjah7 ай бұрын
This comment right here golden
@robdutk7 ай бұрын
YES! us plebians really appreciate your time and effort to edumacate us!
@gibn15428 ай бұрын
I never expected to learn how Einstein Rosen bridges actually work more than just watching it being referenced in pop culture media as a cheap way to get characters to another space
@DarthHoosier30388 ай бұрын
One thing I’m confused about is, he speaks about anti-universes where gravity pushes rather than pulls. But, in that case, wouldn’t it be impossible for black holes to form? Aren’t black holes essentially wells of inwardly pulling gravity?
@woodthomas148 ай бұрын
@@DarthHoosier3038 I think it would be similar to how white holes are most likely impossible in regular universes
@BrianWelch-vc7xy8 ай бұрын
@@DarthHoosier3038 Yes, which is why in an anti-verse white holes would dominate instead of black holes. The mode of travel to a new universe would be the same. Not sure how a ship would react being in such a universe, however. Interesting thought experiment.
@MysticalRefpanel8 ай бұрын
@@woodthomas14 yeah it takes looking at the anti universe with the same lense as our regular one, the white holes take place of the black holes and black holes take place of the white ones. white ones in the antiverse are not just possible but provable just as our regular black holes there. on the other hand the black holes are "unlikely to exist"
@tobbse4ever8 ай бұрын
@@BrianWelch-vc7xy You know what would be awesome? 1. Travelling into the Antiverse, 2. get some good ol steel bars with negative density, 3. go back into a normal universe, 4. build custom wormhole back to home. 5. Bring freedom to new planets 6. Profit 😊
@SivadBop8 ай бұрын
Opened this thinking "ok black holes are well-trodden youtube material and PBS Spacetime has been crushing it on the science explainers," and what could this possibly add? Then there's this coherent, beautifully structured and produced, 37-minute-video-that-feels-18-minutes long that is a masterwork of both passion and competence for teaching. It makes NdGT seem unapproachable in comparison. Awesome
@dsp43928 ай бұрын
Woah, I honestly wouldn't have realized this was 37 minutes long if it wasn't for your comment.
@krishbrd8 ай бұрын
NdGT catching strays
@Merennulli8 ай бұрын
PBS Spacetime did a good job explaining it as well. They split it up across a few videos to get more into the weeds, though. This was a good high level overview.
@gracetonsanthmayor66878 ай бұрын
Well spoken, comrad
@panner118 ай бұрын
My hope is that this video leads curious people and bridges them over to channels like PBS spacetime that dive deeper into these subjects.
@AlexGolimbievskyАй бұрын
Mind-bending in the very best way. Stellar job breaking down these concepts into understandable pieces. Veritasiam is a gift to this world. Thank you, Derek and team!
@justyourfriendlyneighborho9038 ай бұрын
Insane that an educational video got to #2 on the overall trending page, goes to show how amazing this channel is
@wyzcrackzcomedy52158 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣It's funny that you all think this ridiculousness is educational. Shows why this world is in the situation it's in. People really believe pseudo science is real science. Following the herd generally indicates that you're following stupidity. And that's exactly what this nonsense is. A bunch of theoretical nonsense.
@JJean648 ай бұрын
Actually it was #1 for some time
@PHOTON.thief.8 ай бұрын
okay
@rosestrohm79868 ай бұрын
I think its great that people still want to learn
@Epoch118 ай бұрын
It shows that not everyone on KZbin is an idiot just most people
@bartk078 ай бұрын
The guy talking just like that with physics world gurus and showing it all to us here in yt in such a quality and elegant way simply blows my mind.
@mikemondano36248 ай бұрын
Derek has a background in physics education. Normally, that means more education and less physics. He turned that paradigm on its head. It's refreshing to listem to an educator who actually knows what he is talking about. Prospective teachers at my university get simplified courses whose textbooks look like coloring books. But they sure study a lot about how to deliver the knowledge that they don't have.
@bartk078 ай бұрын
@@mikemondano3624 I follow Derek's channel for years and yet still cannot believe there is still room for the quality to be getting better and better.
@mkhanman123458 ай бұрын
@@bartk07better believe it Watching some Ty tube KZbin
@SuperShadowmetal8 ай бұрын
"the war treated me kindly enough, in spite of the heavy gunfire, to allow me to get away from it all and take this walk into the land of your ideas" ..... BARS and eloquence.
@solidoxygen78738 ай бұрын
I'm glad he didn't get killed by a stay explosion
@richtigmann18 ай бұрын
@@solidoxygen7873 agreed, that would have really sucked
@ShaiyanD8 ай бұрын
@@richtigmann1like a black hole
@NickGreyden8 ай бұрын
The war has treated me kindly enough In spite of the, like, gunfire and stuff To allow me to get away from all this malice To allow me a walk inside of your mind palace
@sion88 ай бұрын
@@NickGreyden *+*
@onesunnyday56992 күн бұрын
Did I understand 1 thing about this? No. Did I watch the entire video? Yes.
@thekoseng8 ай бұрын
Bro solved a complex problem in advanced physics in a war zone while i am barely able to do my homework in my comfortable home.
@ericbeauchamp73858 ай бұрын
I've taken just enough math that I BARELY understand what they're saying and my mind is absolutely blown. This. Is. INCREDIBLE.
@michaelcherokee89068 ай бұрын
There was math in this video?
@sorteskyer8 ай бұрын
@@michaelcherokee8906 Everything shown in this video was math
@michaelcherokee89068 ай бұрын
@@sorteskyer Shown? You mean you actually WATCH videos still?
@AdityaSharma-th1gl8 ай бұрын
"Since the mathematicians have invaded the theory of relativity.... ..... I do not understand it myself anymore" -Albert Einstein
@franklinjablonsky76138 ай бұрын
There should be a space between understand and it, Mr. Einstein. Thought you were smart
@micholous8 ай бұрын
i mean it makes sense. there never was and never will be any single person who could even try to understand everything. our smol brains are not made to make sense of it all
@colbyboucher63918 ай бұрын
There's a point at which observation is the best we can do, and intuitive understanding just isn't possible any more.
@Crymeareva8 ай бұрын
Because Einstein stole the idea from someone prolly and published as its own.
@icodestuff62418 ай бұрын
@@colbyboucher6391 were far past that point. The best we can do now is just math; we are nowhere near testing the very theoretical theories (i.e. string theory which is basically irrelevant nowadays because of how untestable it is)
@Vladhin7 күн бұрын
Man, your videos are amazing. KZbin recommends me to watch them from time to time and I’m always like „whaaaat, 40 minutes, too long and sounds boooring” but after a while I’m clicking in and maaaan, what a journey it is! And I feel like I understand that subject a moment 😅 Great stuff very well made, rock on buddy! And have a good Christmas!
@st.blocks80558 ай бұрын
00:02 Objects crossing the Event Horizon of a black hole appear frozen in time. 02:31 Einstein's field equations describe how gravity is mediated by SpaceTime curvature. 07:08 Schwarzschild metric describes spacetime curvature around a massive object. 09:33 Electron degeneracy pressure explains white dwarf formation 14:29 Different projections of 4D SpaceTime can help study different properties. 16:51 Understanding how space flows into a black hole 20:58 Universe can be contracted into a single map using Penrose diagram. 23:09 White holes expel matter, opposite of black holes 27:14 Black holes can potentially be used to travel from one universe to another. 29:12 Kerr found solutions for spinning black holes 33:39 Challenges with Schwarzschild and Kerr solutions 35:43 Wormholes require exotic matter with negative energy density.
@roxaskobold51018 ай бұрын
Doing God's work
@ChrisBeenDeadInside4WhileNow8 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service
@HoboGardenerBen8 ай бұрын
Champion comment :)
@arrondeese56888 ай бұрын
Thank you! 😂
@totally_not_mikeyАй бұрын
Bro saw this video and went "these small details are killing me... Must... Correct"
@josephmuema79168 ай бұрын
30:14 This whole motion sequence just blew my mind. I felt like I was the one travelling through it. Phenomenal
@MichaelEilers8 ай бұрын
Why is it a cardioid shape, not a sphere?
@Kavaitsu8 ай бұрын
@@MichaelEilers because this black hole is rotating, Veritasium said it right before the time stamp
@Kavaitsu8 ай бұрын
I hope someone makes a movie with these accurate dimensions (I guess Interstellar is the closest yet)
@josephmuema79168 ай бұрын
@@MichaelEilers just as @Kavaitsu said, it is because it's a rotating blackhole, so the centripetal force resulting from it pushes its boundaries outwards from its original spherical shape.
@thibaudbourgeois44068 ай бұрын
Go check out ScienceClic youtube channel (the one who made the animation). The is one of the best channel here on KZbin. State of the art videos for understanding advanced astronomical concepts. Maybe the best educational channel. He does videos in french, but I know that he now uploads the same videos on a new English equivalent clone channel with English voice explanation.
@X3n0nLP7 ай бұрын
The moment the diagram was laid out as a square with a triangle on top I thought "well that kinda seems incomplete" and with every expansion my mind was further blown. So satisfying to watch that diagram slowly grow until it reaches theoretical infinity.
@Jarvodavis6 ай бұрын
So you think you are better than Einstein
@stellarintellect6 ай бұрын
@@Jarvodavisbruh what
@elwoodjardeo61336 ай бұрын
@@Jarvodavis whaat hes just exclaiming in awe why are you making this an ego thing
@janimalius6 ай бұрын
Is it reaching infinity, or is it looping? I mean, the guy gave the example of a globe...
@jokerimmortal6 ай бұрын
It's a pyramid scheme
@Vladhin7 күн бұрын
Dziękujemy.
@st.altair49362 ай бұрын
This is hands-down one of the coolest videos on KZbin. So many concepts I just could not wrap my head around summed up so succinctly.
@vigilantcosmicpenguin87218 ай бұрын
This video was a fun journey from explaining things I thought I already understood, to things I knew I didn't understand, to things I didn't think I could understand, to explaining things I didn't realize anyone could understand, to explaining things that can't be understood. It's like I've entered this video's event horizon and ended up at the end of its universe.
@Innovate228 ай бұрын
Well Said Sir 👏👏👏
@mdmoz17778 ай бұрын
Substitute "video" with "physical life."
@amatthew12318 ай бұрын
I love all the anecdotes from history of famous scientists basically saying "Yeah theoretically maybe but there's no way that actually exists, no sane man would believe it, it's absurd. And the video is about worm holes and parallel universes.
@bozhidarmihaylov8 ай бұрын
The only possible journey one can have at the moment 😊
@undine1208 ай бұрын
"When a distinguished but elderly scientist states that something is possible, he is almost certainly right. When he states that something is impossible, he is very probably wrong." - Arthur C Clarke.
@atomgutan80648 ай бұрын
@@undine120 This single quote is one of the best I have seen about science.
@davidwuhrer67048 ай бұрын
@@atomgutan8064It's about the guy who won two Nobel prizes. Linus Pauling.
@jhchooo8 ай бұрын
We are the music makers and the dreamer of dreams
@marh122Ай бұрын
the more I learn about time and spacetime and relativity the more I am amazed by Einsteins intelligence, he was out of this planet
@rickintexas15848 ай бұрын
The brilliance of the people who figured this stuff out is staggering. That Einstein guy truly was pretty smart.
@aldunlop46228 ай бұрын
It's also a lot of bloody hard work.
@AndrewBailee-x5w8 ай бұрын
i like newton...you like fruit (ice cube 22 jump street line)
@MysticalRefpanel8 ай бұрын
people continue to underestimate the term "a life's work" dude literally spent his entire existence on it and also had the enough intelligence to keep going. yes.
@bobs1828 ай бұрын
@@MysticalRefpanel Einstein came up with General and Special Relativity while he was young.
@BiasOfficialChannel8 ай бұрын
What's really fascinating here is that we can predict the universe with math. Like did we invent math or discover it?
@Etanmm8 ай бұрын
Math: You can't divide by zero Physics: Dividing by zero produces an einstein rosen bridge in the space time manifold to another universe traversable only if the singularity is spinning
@liam785878 ай бұрын
average math nerd vs average physics enjoyer
@lilwoody17388 ай бұрын
@@liam78587In this context its actually really funny and makes sense lol
@zaidbhaiboss8 ай бұрын
From what I understand I think it's not dividing by absolute zero but something that approaches zero so that's a different thing. You do this all the time in Calculus.
@necoyouth8 ай бұрын
Dammit math nerd😂 I like the Einstein rosen bridge into another universe through the spinning singularity
@MagikMKW8 ай бұрын
Me when I compare highschool maths with research level physics
@nyscersul422 ай бұрын
This video deserves a better title. If it had been, "An exploration of black holes, white holes, and wormholes", as he sums it up early on, it's likely it wouldnt have sat on my feed unseen for 5 months before viewing. Excellent topic, by a proven excellent explorer. :D
@lorkano2 ай бұрын
There is a video on this channel about why they have to clickbait - I am still against it though
@nyscersul422 ай бұрын
@@lorkano Silliness ends up with people missing the true topic.
@nikplaysgames47342 ай бұрын
absolutely true, but ta title like that wouldn't do well under the yoututbe algorithm. Unfortunately, he has to play towards that to get any sort of traction
@BB-9E_top-1Ай бұрын
"Based on Einsteins math
@CyrusEppieАй бұрын
Unfortunately youtube algorithm proves that titles like these gain higher engagement for a general audience.
@Unelith2 ай бұрын
31:32 When a new DLC drops
@simpleysimsАй бұрын
Precisely
@gav234447 ай бұрын
the ad countdown timer in the upper right corner is genius i love it
@supdawg_277 ай бұрын
Yes, makes it easy to skip
@maxbildungsaccount69156 ай бұрын
I mean yes for me too bc it‘s easier to skip but isn‘t this kinda his job to make ppl watch ads?
@supaplayer1236 ай бұрын
Get KZbin premium Best ever I honestly forget ppl even watch ads on KZbin
@gav234446 ай бұрын
@@supaplayer123 I’m momentarily poor lol
@gav234446 ай бұрын
@@maxbildungsaccount6915 nah he makes content, he obviously cares more about his viewers than ads. But yeah there’s def still a balance between the 2 he gotta maintain
@markkline61237 ай бұрын
Love this. Also, nothing says, "this is a math video" as much as, "your nemesis looks back at you, shaking his fist AT A CONSTANT RATE" 😅😅😅
@feynmanschwingere_mc22707 ай бұрын
LMAOOOO sooo true
@Heroo014 ай бұрын
more physics but yes
@diestormlie2 ай бұрын
It's very considerate of them!
@Aassymcass8 ай бұрын
The thumbnail looks like Einstein drooling on a toothbrush.
@jayhu22968 ай бұрын
not drool..
@vukodlak58 ай бұрын
It looks like AI generated ru
@junioramora8 ай бұрын
I don't understand what it's supposed to be, it really looks like he's drooling
@indefinitingdefinition8 ай бұрын
he actually is?..
@ThePizzaGoblin8 ай бұрын
Saw the same thing.
@sorrybhai1002 ай бұрын
Loved this video man. Reignited my excitement I used to have when I was studying physics in high school. Also please get a camera stand. I feel like I had second hand pain just by watching you hold that camera 😅😂
@rishi_sk8 ай бұрын
This "37" minute video on black holes might be one of the best educational video to ever exist.
@joj45418 ай бұрын
36, the ad
@VelexiaOmbra8 ай бұрын
37 | 73 12 | 21 (prime ranks) 144 | 441 (prime ranks squared) 37 | 27 | 73 12 | - | 21 37+27+73 = 137 12+21 = 33 (prime rank of 137) Behold the mathematical Trinity ;) 37 -> Your inner world (Red, Thor, Animus, Conscious, Horus) 73 -> Your outer world (Blue, Hel, Anima, Unconscious, Set) 27 -> the observer (Green, Loki, No One, Subconscious, Anubis) 137 -> everything and nothing (White/Black, Odin/Freyja, Self/No Self, No Self/Self, Isis/Osiris) (Check them out geometrically as well, centered hexagonal numbers, star numbers, triangular numbers (makes the "triforce" together), etc) Note, 37 and 73 are hyperbolically mirrored, such that one appears larger from the vantage point of the other, one appears to wrap around the other, until you cross the "event horizon" between them, just like crossing a black hole event horizon, the horizon would wrap around you completely, appearing at first convex, then a perfectly flat infinite plane, and finally concave until the last bit of light directly behind you was gone, and at that point you have "crossed". You would never see yourself pass through, but the inside would become the outside, and the outside would become the inside, going from Spacetime to Timespace.
@nicho70108 ай бұрын
37 minutes long on purpose? veritasium you naughty boy
@pradeepgade83558 ай бұрын
37th like
@MartinPrinzler8 ай бұрын
oh, reference to an earlier video. I thought the maximum time a StarGate can kept open xD But this would be 38 ;)
@ssupernovass8 ай бұрын
@MartinPrinzler 37 minutes ago
@chotai8 ай бұрын
@@ssupernovass I missed by 1 min
@piyushmate38378 ай бұрын
I like it 😂
@bakasaksham36308 ай бұрын
If someone is wondering which book is it at 25:03 its, Black Holes: The Key to Understanding the Universe By Brian Cox, Jeff Forshaw
@bulletsizednuke11008 ай бұрын
Thanks, may the universe endow you with great fortunes!
@sokjeong-ho70338 ай бұрын
heheheh cox
@Estebiken7 ай бұрын
Is fantastic book
@teddyochieng7922Ай бұрын
The thing I like about Veritasium is that the math and Physics parts are hard to watch, but I can endure that pain knowing there's something amazing coming. Delivers always!
@jonasjanousek71328 ай бұрын
You've just got me puzzled. Again. Literally every Veritasium video makes want to leave university and go study physics, maths or anything the video talks about. I barely understand anything in your videos, but that's what I love about them, and what makes me watch every single episode. Thank you for educating people. Keep up the good work.
@Dilip-be9xb8 ай бұрын
I guess i am not the only one thay feels this way
@aerchys47798 ай бұрын
I mean, if you’re in uni you’re already in one of the best possible positions to study physics, so if it really captivates you that much give it a shot, like a minor or a double major if you’re not ready to change yet
@GamerKiwiOfficial8 ай бұрын
U gonna hate it, dont 😂😂
@DanBowkley8 ай бұрын
You could "take a few courses" via MIT's Open Courseware. They don't count for credits or anything (hence the quotes) but they include all the course materials including tests so you can see if it's actually something you'd want to study. It's a free test drive you can take infinitely.
@lemyskaman8 ай бұрын
becarefull is not that visually easy on math or physics universities course, to taggle that down you need skill and they need time and effort to be develop
@JustVisiting_8 ай бұрын
Sorry, but I'm still stuck on the thumbnail where you have Einstein drooling.
@ThePacmandevil8 ай бұрын
AI generated lookin thumbnail
@philippemalacher26498 ай бұрын
Yes, i don't get it too
@DoNotSin8 ай бұрын
I think it's Einstein brushing his teeth when a black hole suddenly appeared
@pantsshitter5338 ай бұрын
freaky einstein 👅👅👅
@Jonathan-q7n2m8 ай бұрын
For reals @@ThePacmandevil
@realmehuhn94378 ай бұрын
Those diagrams must be wrong, they fail to picture a library inside a kid's room.
@coreyanderson32888 ай бұрын
fantastic reference
@Malthus8 ай бұрын
MURPH!
@adiabd18 ай бұрын
But they did able to picture a stick figure adventure into a black hole and entering the wormhole that goes to other universe
@MrThrifty18 ай бұрын
Wait what's the reference?
@SUPER_ZOMBIE8 ай бұрын
@@MrThrifty1to the movie Interstellar
@kato_dsrdr8 ай бұрын
It's kinda crazy that math can predict the existence of such things without us first actually seeing them.
@Scorch4288 ай бұрын
Yeah my mom used to count to 3.... and I knew after 3 there was an ass-whoopin'.
@smita5688 ай бұрын
I was very fascinated when i first heard how, the stats of frequency and wavelength etc of any tune can give us the length of the string it came from and type of instrument it came from. So suppose you've never actually seen a guitar, you can use math to construct the whole thing on a computer. That's how scientists do a lot of deep space mapping.
@MananW18 ай бұрын
@@Scorch428😂😂 👍
@123lambobo8 ай бұрын
Yup, and the cool thing is everything is based around pure logic. Math build on it self and it all comes from simple addition, subtraction, division and multiplication. Then u need to do experiments to see if u where right with your prediction ofcourse but yea its very cool that we can predict these things, and if im not mistaken i think all of Einsteins predictions that we have been able to verify by experiments have turned out to be true…. That man was truly a genious.
@Demoralisd8 ай бұрын
math isnt predicting anything we are just finding clues
@Sollace8 ай бұрын
My immediate thought upon seeing this is "But all quantum physics is strange". Except for quarks. Only a sixth of those are strange.
@wstavis31358 ай бұрын
Nice. 👏
@KafshakTashtak8 ай бұрын
I thought only 1/6 are strange.
@Kazedor8 ай бұрын
One sixth. There are six types of quarks. Only one sixth of them are strange.
@Sollace8 ай бұрын
@@Kazedor Ah my bad, I didn't count them xD
@ThangPVan_7 ай бұрын
nice joke
@AHeckman1187 ай бұрын
A big issue with sending someone through a singularity to see if it leads to another universe, besides all the ones related to the whole “we’re made of meat” thing, is that if we managed to get someone through a singularity, unless time worked different in that universe somehow, they wouldn’t be able to “turn around” and come back to tell us
@warrenarnoldmusic6 ай бұрын
Its me, my people sent me here to tell you that our souls are black and that we should turn to the lord
@doublevgreen6 ай бұрын
the problem with the einstein rosen bridge is that it is physical garbage and only used to catch peoples attention for propagating physics. parrelel universes or wormholes do not exist. they are just a mathematical hallucination of general relativity and have no physical reasoning
@domothebro24356 ай бұрын
Wouldn’t we be able to assuming it’s all spinning? Using the energy to pull something faster than light seems like it could also be the solution to turning around and relaying that info
@OverDunkNessSEVEN6 ай бұрын
If you could enter their universe then it stands to reason that the other universe could enter here. By that logic there's no reason they couldn't "turn around" to come tell us, just as long as they've already entered the other universe. Might be billions of years later from our perspective, but we would find out eventually.
@magicksilver44446 ай бұрын
@@OverDunkNessSEVENif it’s billions years later we will definitely not be there to see that haha
@sushrutalgs21 күн бұрын
What textbook are they referring to here at 33:31? I see that they have mentioned the Book by Brian Cox, But I do see a textbook of some sort whereby explaining the pennrose diagram. Anyone who can tell me this ?
@amitamaloo92488 ай бұрын
It's really amazing how a human mind sitting on earth could literally think of this visualize this and bring out all this stuff.
@badboi4lyff8 ай бұрын
I like to think those that watch and briefly understand the concept of videos like this are the privileged ones. Those who can appreciate the complexity of what's out there. There are millions, if not billions of people out there that have no idea what a black hole is and don't care.
@mkhanman123458 ай бұрын
Omg
@phoenixlal74288 ай бұрын
Its like origami. We fold the physics as much as we can (without tearing it up) to make it understandable which eventually turns into a beautiful object.
@athgowla6878 ай бұрын
@@badboi4lyff And the majority have good reasons not to care. If you need every hour to work-eat-sleep (+ household & care) and survive, you better don't care about this, even if you would have access to youtube. So, you need double privilige for it: education/intelligence and a certain level of wealth. It should be our mission to make more people have this double privilige.
@Teslijah8 ай бұрын
And then potentially share it with every other living human
@pannenkoek20128 ай бұрын
This may be the second best explanation of parallel universes I've seen
@ModernMugs8 ай бұрын
what is the first?
@bop83578 ай бұрын
Super mario
@normalrachael8 ай бұрын
Sheeeeeeeeeesh
@jasoneverett8 ай бұрын
Best explanation is what happens when you put bacon bits on a strip of bacon.
@Blaisem8 ай бұрын
@@ModernMugs The best is presumably in a parallel universe.
@jlo20178 ай бұрын
That has to be THE best explanation of some of the higher concepts that get touched on but never really explained in other YT videos. While still incredibly complex, I could follow this enough to feel better about some of the concepts that drive theoretical physics. Thank you!!!!
@pbsuite8 ай бұрын
So if we want to talk to someone from a parralel universe , we not only can't send info back to report our interraction , we will also be both crushed at the singularity 😢😢😢
@asmaalketbi2 ай бұрын
Thanks
@nielspalmans62378 ай бұрын
10:54 gave me a good chuckle :p "astronomers had found stars that fit this decription" --> *shows image of a badass star* --> "one of them is Sirius B" --> *zooms in on the little innocuous dot in the corner*
@tomaszp20278 ай бұрын
oh c'mon, b sirius here
@vintagevibes-wl3wr8 ай бұрын
@@tomaszp2027 🤣🤣😂
@rolling50lama508 ай бұрын
@@tomaszp2027ahah!
@johnchessant30128 ай бұрын
I love math. The fact that people were able to mathematically see that black holes could exist, even as most physicists thought they were preposterous, is just so awesome.
@mikemondano36248 ай бұрын
It was the physicists who saw them as mathematically possible.
@MarkAhlquist8 ай бұрын
It's happening again with the Many Worlds interpretation, isn't it?
@Tubylec70288 ай бұрын
facts
@HandledToaster28 ай бұрын
@@MarkAhlquist No
@SedoKai8 ай бұрын
@@MarkAhlquistI'm sure there's many worlds. But there's no way they connect neatly like is proposed here, and you're not going to see "parallel" worlds where things look nearly identical and there's extra versions of yourself or others. And there's certainly not infinite worlds.
@PaulThatcher-iu5in7 ай бұрын
Approaching the problem by using different projections really helped me to understand, for example, why images of everything that fell in do not remain at the event horizon. In fact, the map projection analogy itself made Penrose diagrams suddenly feel much less alien, more intuitive. Also, pleased to see the cooperation with Science Clic, a channel that excels at intuitive explanations. All good!
@Matty00213 күн бұрын
it will never stop driving me crazy that much of the time scientists, when trying to argue for or against something, dont automatically try to prove its true AND prove its false. its usually one or the other, so someone makes an argument for 1 side, and until someone notices something to make an argument against it, possibly making process, time just goes on without accurate advancement. in the field im familiar with decades have gone by without things being revisited in the past that caused big waves and changes after being challenged, and only now are people speaking out about making assumptions and not exploring other possibilities that go against 'tradition'
@nameless-ix8 ай бұрын
my man was at the frontlines of war and thought..."after all why not...why not publish physics papers right here and now?" damn...
@HistoryNerd8088 ай бұрын
I know it's a joke but his miracle year was 1905. Germany wasn't at war then(WW1 started in 1914)
@mtrest46 ай бұрын
@@HistoryNerd808 He is talking about the schwartzchild dude.
@HistoryNerd8086 ай бұрын
@@mtrest4 Oh. Whoops.
@theunknowman122 ай бұрын
"man you know what this war really need? That's right a physics paper that contain a black hole + white hole and a paraller universe"
@araarashinigami8 ай бұрын
8:40 Math teacher: “You cannot divide by zero.” Black hole: “Hold my beer.”
@Merennulli8 ай бұрын
I remember arguing with a teacher about it and getting her to admit that it was technically a simple infinity but physically meaningless. EDIT: I'm getting a lot of replies from people who haven't taken much math. What I've said here is accurate. If you don't believe it, go read about division by zero somewhere online. It doesn't have physical relevance and the result is not a number, but it is an important part of mathematics. I'm not going to reply to any more @ replies here from people who were too egotistical to bother checking before they try to "correct" someone.
@aberroa19558 ай бұрын
Also black hole: **rips it's own ass into infinite multiverse**
@charlesederle29568 ай бұрын
The center of a black hole is where god divides by 0!
@aldi_nh8 ай бұрын
@@charlesederle2956 0! = 1
@kazedcat8 ай бұрын
You can divide with zero you just need to adopt a different algebra where dividing by zero makes sense. There are two ways of doing this the first one is having a point of infinity where +∞=-∞. The other way is a lot weirder and you need to modify the distributive property of multiplication over addition.
@ivybridge40548 ай бұрын
This topic, especially for many in your regular audience, has been attempted by many from PBS to Sabine to even lectures by Leonard and podcasts in which Penrose himself is explaining. From someone who is not on the level to truly understand despite a lot of attempts and re-watching, as well as an educator, thank you for trying again because I really learned and connected a lot that I had not fully understood before. One of your best videos, and that is saying something.
@mishmash867 ай бұрын
My thoughts exactly. This is the clearest explanation I've seen thus far for a layperson with keen interest in understanding astrophysics. Superb!
@TamWam_7 ай бұрын
@@mishmash86Fr, I haven't even reached the point in math where you learn calculus and I still felt like I understood this (the concept and not the details tho) 😭
@shilohbridgewater64073 ай бұрын
Check out the book in the video by Brian Cox and Jeff Forshaw called Black holes. If you want to dive deeper, it's an excellent read
@Gingermamma25 күн бұрын
Thank you for the ad progress circle. I watched the whole ad in gratitude for the respect of my time and attention.
@opterios8 ай бұрын
Derek, I think this is your best video yet (and that's saying something, because every video you make is worth watching), but this is on another level. As a non professional physisist/mathematician, I finally understand what scientists mean when they say "math predicts that there may be other universes" or "math predicts that white holes are possible", which was almost like a taboo to go into details by anyone! Thank you!