Took my daughter there as a gift when she graduated from university . Now she's a Postdoctoral Research Fellow. Proud Dad
@user-sj7he8mq5s7 ай бұрын
Did you explain how it a huge waste of taxpayer dollars
@MemoriesAreLost7 ай бұрын
Exactly how close do I need to get to CERN before I become a Postdoctoral Research Fellow? And did it affect you too? 😋
@snared_7 ай бұрын
@@user-sj7he8mq5s what do you have against fundamental research?
@enadegheeghaghe63697 ай бұрын
@@user-sj7he8mq5sif humanity listened to people like you we would still be living in caves eating slugs
@NullScar7 ай бұрын
Can you be my dad for a day and also bring me. I swear, I will not touch anything, but I will try to use my telekinesis ability, though. Only for research purposes, that is.
@j.d.cunegan3027 ай бұрын
Find someone who looks at you the way Cleo looks at the CERN collider. Your passion and awe for this stuff is infectious.
@Jojo-o6o6w7 ай бұрын
@HanaaAhmedSuleiman7 ай бұрын
The contemporary Muslim awareness course, and the psychology course, will teach you why the West lags behind the Islamic community.
@TreCayUltimateLife7 ай бұрын
Hah! Right. My parents don't even love me.
@dlrabin7 ай бұрын
Find Cleo and be a collider ;)
@spvillano7 ай бұрын
Had that for over 41 years, lost her just over two years ago.
@BharaniSai7 ай бұрын
Loved the final note about how we want an Alien civilization to look at us as a scientific and curious race and not just a planet of conflict and mass destruction
@nuklearboysymbiote7 ай бұрын
in order for that to happen, humans need to solve ethics & justice issues first… not rush to research new tech that can be used dangerously by those in power…
@3rdlegend4457 ай бұрын
@@nuklearboysymbiotei love you both are talking about it like we know aliens’ intentions and thoughts 😂😂
@nuklearboysymbiote7 ай бұрын
@@3rdlegend445 i mean, we don't know how to communicate to ants, but we still know that there are massive empires and wars going on… actions are a more universal language than abstractions
@aaryanjadhav28227 ай бұрын
I don't know how they will feel after knowing that the first use of necular tech was to build an extinction bomb.😂
@Andreas.r27 ай бұрын
I too loved that cleo talks but i know this next collider will create argue and conflict between scientists and reserchers......i too love to go to space and meet at least one aliens gen who is probably not a planet eater.
@J18533 ай бұрын
As a curious human being i am so proud of the discovery that has been made by these amazing scientists who i look up to.
@TedRader2 ай бұрын
Which discovery?
@JCb-u6v2 ай бұрын
@@TedRaderhe discovered he is and idiot..... CERN is creating black matter....... terrible.....
@waterssolar5025Ай бұрын
@@TedRaderthe bump! Didn't you see the bump? LOL!
@glenn532819 күн бұрын
They are children……..so little true knowledge
@ParticleClara7 ай бұрын
Thanks for coming to visit us at CERN! It was fantastic to show you and the team our experiment and I love how the video came out! ☺
@toaster1437 ай бұрын
Thank you also, you're TikTok account is amazing please never stop!
@AidenHere7 ай бұрын
Hello!
@Nayr867 ай бұрын
On a serious note 🧐 It's a Stargate isn't it ?
@TheJacklwilliams7 ай бұрын
You all are so very cool! Im insanely jealous of what you get to experience! CERN is such an amazing place!
@TT-zo6px7 ай бұрын
So you guys know how to get antimatter, why turn it on when the "eclipse" was going on? Interesting how you guys have a statue in front of CERN that has a "portal"
@frankijupiter7 ай бұрын
For context... $17B is roughly 1 week of the US military budget. Just to give a little perspective.
@podunkest7 ай бұрын
Also pretty close to NASA's yearly budget, which is about 22-23 bn iirc.
@AragornMeulendijks7 ай бұрын
I've been to CERN, the tech is very antiquated. That is to say, all their computers and servers are, the actually LHC is of course state of art. But because they are so poor as an institute, they don't even store their own data on drives, but still use TAPES (Cheaper they say.) They send everything to partners for analysis, other universities. The world spends BILLIONS every day on War... and only a few billion a year onscience.
@EricBurbeck7 ай бұрын
"I'll take contextual clues that are unrelatable to the point of irrelevance for...$17B" :P
@tedebayer17 ай бұрын
still a lot for trying to make mini black holes... the ones that suck money into it
@ArminiusReturn7 ай бұрын
@ItsMrMetaverse wouldn't it be nice if they just spent $6 billion On the Border that's something that would have an immediate a benefit upon every citizen. For years to come. Possibly decades we could also just cut all the benefits. Give it to the people who live here. Who deserve it . That would also stop the flow. Instead of putting up a sign saying it's a free-for-all come into our country and instead of helping our Instead of putting up a sign saying it's a free-for-all come into our country and instead of helping our own Citizens We're going to give it to you what a great deal.
@m00nrise6 ай бұрын
My dad works at CERN and i've visited it countless time. This video does a really good job at explaining what they are doing and why ! Well done !
@rakeshchandraaaaa5 ай бұрын
That's so cool , I wish I could visit CERN
@Sf_solarflare2 ай бұрын
wish i could visit it sounds super cool! (as a science geek)
@jasperspierings3 ай бұрын
Military budget is $801 billion per year and this project was 5 billion. You see how much money could be going to science instead of murder?
@ahsanahmed36925 күн бұрын
5 billion - particle smasher 801 billion - ufos
@AlphaSigmA14 күн бұрын
But you Americans spend a lot of money for NASA . CERN is European. We Europeans pay for it.
@PeterSalling6 ай бұрын
My dad's uncle Knud was the original physicist behind the electromagnet for the Cern particle accelerator. He told so many crazy stories around the dinner table about the stuff they were doing at work. He just passed away three weeks ago... and this video was released three weeks ago?!?... Life is weird sometimes... Anyways, thanks for a cool deep dive into this amazing world.
@LightofDawn75 ай бұрын
What stories?!
@michelleper50655 ай бұрын
and to think that millenials are responsible to supervise this... well it is the ai that does all the work but the combination of ai and millenials is horrific as you came to know in 2020s
@BrianSapp9455 ай бұрын
@@LightofDawn7he or she won’t tell you because it’s ALL B.S
@mercedesmartinez22604 ай бұрын
What did he die of?
@hallysis54394 ай бұрын
@@michelleper5065 you can't be serious
@R4wF4ce7 ай бұрын
Cleo is just out here living our nerd fantasies; working with NASA, Boston Dynamics, F1, CERN, etc. Thanks for bringing us along with you.
@DisposableSupervillainHenchman7 ай бұрын
The realest nerd fantasy is simply having a girlfriend. 🤷🏻♂️
@VS-is9yb7 ай бұрын
@DisposableSupervillainHenchman Nope. Cause there are a lot of women but CERN is unique.
@ethanhilgert39957 ай бұрын
9:10 “this is a beautiful description” absolutely not. That’s a spaghetti bowl of random gibberish.
@originzz7 ай бұрын
@@DisposableSupervillainHenchmanscience is better
@imkimayak7 ай бұрын
I SWEAR
@JohnHoggard_aka_DaddyHoggy7 ай бұрын
RIP Peter Higgs. As a lapsed particle physicist I actually cried during the Higgs Boson announcement scene. An amazing human and I'm so glad he got to see the actual detection of his proposed/theoretical particle.
@MS-Patriot27 ай бұрын
@@eternity8811 so did I, be a great human.
@king124kine7 ай бұрын
@@eternity8811 Man you must hate your life
@sfermigier7 ай бұрын
Higgs Boson announcement, gravitational waves detection announcement, black hole image announcement: three major scientific discoveries (maybe the three most important discoveries of the last 15 years?) that were announced live on the internet. I'm glad that the digital age has enabled such significant moments in science to be shared globally in real time.
@immortalfool76277 ай бұрын
He is in that quantum realm right now.
@RobertDeloyd7 ай бұрын
I got teared up at that scene too, but I didn't know he had passed until the end of this fine video ❤
@HerbertHeyduck3 ай бұрын
I have now discovered your channel for the first time, and my mouth was open when I saw the professionalism with which the clips are made. Your way of explaining, trying out and questioning things is also at a very high level. Kudos to you and your team. I immediately subscribed to your channel! 👍
@HystericalSej3 ай бұрын
+1
@thebigz390919 күн бұрын
@@HystericalSej + another 1
@chriscoy-jq2gp5 ай бұрын
I love how enthusiastic she is about the subject.
@wildernessfarming77264 ай бұрын
you might also like jimmy kimmel then
@jaimerivera77173 ай бұрын
@@wildernessfarming7726 🤣
@minekush11383 ай бұрын
creepy
@Guy-z6o2 ай бұрын
suspiciously so, got to wonder if some substance is colliding with her mind, in which case, good on her, we on the same page.
@theguybrarian2 ай бұрын
@@Guy-z6o tf you talking about - her job is to be a web series presenter, so of course she is going to be peppy and interested in what she's explaining. the fact that your mind first goes to substance abuse..... sorry bud. you're alone on that page.
@evanmyers5807 ай бұрын
That size comparison of a grain of rice as a nucleus honestly blew my mind
@TheGlobalProfessional7 ай бұрын
It was a great aid in truly understanding the scale.
@willcookmakeup7 ай бұрын
And it truly made sense. So many of those scale videos are just not comprehensible at such large scales
@BenjaminMilekowsky7 ай бұрын
I can't believe we made of these unseen thiny particles, but it is what it is
@evanmyers5807 ай бұрын
@@BenjaminMilekowsky It's good to be skeptical, though if you'd like to look over some proofs, I'd look up Brownian motion as well as the gold foil experiment. Both provide pretty strong evidence of atomic theory
@ashbody0007 ай бұрын
Now think almost all the mass of the whole earth is concentrated in that rice
@emreyurtseven237 ай бұрын
Your channel has quickly become one of my favorites Cleo. The subject matter, production, pacing, narration etc. are all superb. Huge props to you and your team for bringing science & technology to masses in such a well executed way!
@ocshaljufrian61094 ай бұрын
Try it bro, you can ride the highest speed train for the first time in Southeast Asia. The highest speed is 350 kilometers per hour, the Indonesian fast train Jakarta - Bandung, the newest, most sophisticated in Southeast Asia, the first,.the way to the beautiful and comfortable and beautiful and cool and cool city of Bandung, thank you sis and Ka..*,
@ocshaljufrian61094 ай бұрын
Try it bro, you can ride the highest speed train for the first time in Southeast Asia. The highest speed is 350 kilometers per hour, the Indonesian fast train Jakarta - Bandung, the newest, most sophisticated in Southeast Asia, the first,.the way to the beautiful and comfortable and beautiful and cool and cool city of Bandung, thank you sis and Ka..*,
@adw68943 ай бұрын
Nah, she's only popular because she's pretty, nothing else
@slobknocker3723 ай бұрын
layperson here, how are the protons being manufactured? where do they come from to be able to shoot hundreds of billions at a time? Or is it more of a recycling effect where the ones that miss continue around the pipes to try and collide again? This is fascinating research, borderline science fiction. Not sure where it goes from here but I'm amazed.
@Axxe803 ай бұрын
I recommend the channel of the CERN scientist you see in this video - Dr. Clara Nellist. Her videos "LHC proton origin?" and "The proton's journey" might give you some answers in (together) 1 minute and 30 seconds.
@4vickiekayeАй бұрын
Just found your channel really enjoyed this video. I am presently working at BNL on the Electron-Ion project as a Design Engineer . Exciting stuff it will take 9 more years to get the first beam. EIC is being “retrofitted “ from the existing RHIC.
@the_thunder_god7 ай бұрын
Love that you went to CERN! My Dad (now retired) and I (taking care of my dad now) used to work at the previous largest collider, Fermilab, in Batavia, IL. Nothing having to do with the physics going on there, just supporting it. My dad was a HVAC engineer there. I had a few positions....cooperative education student...forklift driver, and web development contractor. Through our time there though, we definitely learned the basics about what goes on there. You really can't avoid it when you're working on stuff supporting it every day. We don't learn unless we try. I very much support trying.
@grimskull4167 ай бұрын
Thanks to you and your dad's work!
@spvillano7 ай бұрын
I'd love to just sit there and go over the magnet control circuitry. The timing has to be a bear to maintain precise control of!
@garz757 ай бұрын
I interned at CERN 30 years ago as a comp Sci student at the Web Office with the creators of the WWW: In a few months I accumulated such a big mass of knowledge and experience working with all kind of scientists and engineers! It shaped my whole career and method of work.
@lindapratt1197 ай бұрын
let's hope you're method of work includes empathy?
@michelleplombe70197 ай бұрын
@@lindapratt119What?
@frensunited37487 ай бұрын
I'll bet they shaped your holes alright
@Lemonz19897 ай бұрын
@@lindapratt119 Such an odd response…
@naveenmanjhi57767 ай бұрын
@@lindapratt119your*
@JAWS-76756 ай бұрын
It's just amazing how complex the human brain is. It blows my mind that we can build these amazing machines and have the math that stands behind it. Thank you for all the hard work you've provided. I hope a child will find this video down the road and it opens up their mind and they go off with the wonder of it all and change the world.
@AndrewCowell-sz9dx3 ай бұрын
It’s only people who aren’t religious go figure 😊
@a-ramenartist97343 ай бұрын
Its not just the human brain, but the human brain in a society. One person can only do so much, everyone together forms one society of knowledge, that societal aspect is why its important that we discover, so that other humans in the future can learn and build from us.
@HadesRL2 ай бұрын
Run, Barry, Run.
@nikhiljajatinanda10662 ай бұрын
Hahaha 😄 😁
@wompa707 ай бұрын
"Yep, it's a bump on a chart." This is part of why I learn so much from your videos.
@jgleigh7 ай бұрын
$17B is a bump on global defense spending. Just build it!
@oldmech6197 ай бұрын
And it is a small bump on the chart. I think CERN really hasn’t found anything big. Finding the Higgs really doesn’t mean much to science.
@spvillano7 ай бұрын
@@oldmech619 well, since mass isn't a big deal to you, neither is gravity. Feel free to step off of a roof and show us all how little mass and gravity mean to you.
@oldmech6197 ай бұрын
@@spvillano Gravity is not something we understand and may never understand the how and why it works. The Higgs bump does nothing to further the science.
@styleguruful7 ай бұрын
@@oldmech619 Yet. You can't say it has done nothing to further science when science is evolving minute by minute. You can say it did nothing to further science when this world ceases to exist, and you look back at the eons in retrospect.
@ReclaimerPC7 ай бұрын
Really appreciated how you had the script fact checked. Loved how this production was able to explain the importance and impact of not only the LHC but all fundamental research. Well done, would LOVE to see more content like this in the future.
@eel71577 ай бұрын
@@fibonachoBAHAHAHA 💀💀💀💀💀
@joel63767 ай бұрын
Yet no mention of demons or interdimensional portals.
@soubhagyagrover26307 ай бұрын
This is easily my new favourite place to come to on the internet. I’ve never felt more proud of being part of this whole human project and be surrounded by folks like yall.
@ezmadarlington9427 ай бұрын
That’s a mistake !!! Stop drinking the cool aid or being injected
@laststand64207 ай бұрын
It's amazing how much variety humanity holds
@monetroshi7 ай бұрын
Calm down… the discovery will most likely be used to harm other humans or the planet. That’s all we do
@chillydoog7 ай бұрын
Someone blew a load in the collider
@walterspaceman55923 ай бұрын
When I was informed the experiments at CERN were so cutting edge, that collisions photographed could be altered simply by a human seeing the action, , I was impressed with their cognizant disciplined ability, and the implication we know so little. So objectively we have concrete data that proves we radiate wavelength energies. Sometimes a person behind you across a big room is looking directly at you, you sense this " wavelength energies ", pivot in a fight or flight reaction and look exactly where you felt the threat, to find someone staring perhaps randomly, proving sight projects radiates energies and receives. And you personally have experienced this. Best wishes.
@josh-lewis7 ай бұрын
I'm bald so I don't understand how small protons are.
@iamcjamesgmail6 ай бұрын
My Dink is large so I don't understand women.
@ParadiseStudio-v4g6 ай бұрын
Come on, You have to have one on your butt somewhere don't you?
@Nitro156 ай бұрын
None of you were funny Lmao what now your still not funny
@Russellsauce6 ай бұрын
@@Nitro15 you no where grammar?
@jamieclarke26946 ай бұрын
@Nitro15 luckily for you, I'm funny... were*
@jacoboblanco15557 ай бұрын
I was immensely lucky to be able to work as part of the ATLAS collaboration and make a tiny tiny contribution. Amazing group of people from all over the worlds doing great work.
@freemanrader757 ай бұрын
Everyone is working for money or out of passionate curiosity therefore nobody realizes what they are building, its purpose or who it’s for. I might be ugly but at least I ain’t got no money.
@elodie98987 ай бұрын
I've been part of the ATLAS collaboration too! one of the best job experience I had
@prem95017 ай бұрын
Huge respect
@Jo-the-fixer7 ай бұрын
Super cool
@abhigyan_tiwari57 ай бұрын
RIP Peter Ware Higgs... The giant genius of particle physics🙏🙏
@schmantikor7 ай бұрын
But everyone forgets that the Higgs Boson only lends its mass to electrons, so only 20 grams of an 80 kilogram person come from it.
@TitusRex7 ай бұрын
@@schmantikor this is not true. Completely wrong. The Higgs field gives mass to various fundamental particles like quarks, leptons and electrons.
@tonywells69907 ай бұрын
@@schmantikor Don't forget quarks, so about 0.8 kg.
@ashifarman48137 ай бұрын
@@schmantikorno they also give mass to your mom that why she is fato
@BenjaminMilekowsky7 ай бұрын
I can't believe we made of these unseen thiny particles, but it is what it is
@AlphaSigmA14 күн бұрын
This project is a collaboration of Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Israel, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Slovak Republic, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and United Kingdom. Thank you all ❤
@sahilshah23927 ай бұрын
I have to say that this is the best influncer I have ever seen in this industry. Keep up the great work.Research and scripting are at their finest, so please continue.
@garymartin97777 ай бұрын
A rival to Physics Girl. Poor thing is suffering a long illness so she's not doing anything new.
@pthk28747 ай бұрын
@@garymartin9777never heard of her, thank you for sharing. Gonna give her a follow, don’t know what’s her illness but hope she gets better!
@BRNavalgund2 ай бұрын
What you are showing Lord siva's statue as worshiping devil. 7:11 all Hindu real religious people hate this. You can show your related photo, or something related you instead of Lord Siva.
@rushja7 ай бұрын
Well put Cleo, science needs people like you to make it more accessible. The best thing about science is that it's a shared human experience in time, and we need to accelerate that knowledge
@viktorgoa7 ай бұрын
I went there before the pandemic during the open days, when they had every part of LHC open. It was the best weekend of my life, this machine is truly an engineering masterpiece
@ParticleClara7 ай бұрын
So great to see this! :)
@boodle49606 ай бұрын
Best weekend of ur life?
@Maxpressive3 ай бұрын
It's so frustrating that we don't focus on science mostly, we could do so much better.
@chicken3026Ай бұрын
What do we focus on mostly if not science?
@AutumnLillyCelesteАй бұрын
@@chicken3026 War, conflict, killing each other
@chicken3026Ай бұрын
@@AutumnLillyCeleste so then how do you suggest we end conflict? ill answer it for you, we cant. As long as there is a difference between humans, there will always be conflict. war is also historically known for advancing technology
@AutumnLillyCelesteАй бұрын
@@chicken3026 That is true, I'm not debating that. The focus on war, is a focus on war not on science. I'll freely admit that the outcomes of the wars, such as tourniquets and quick-clot are incredible, and as an EMT I am incredibly thankful for the outcomes of those inventions.
@chicken3026Ай бұрын
@@AutumnLillyCeleste you're an emt? thats sick
@Astrolab.insights7 ай бұрын
This video gave me chills so many times, in a very good way! Your words just felt really powerful and made my soul smile
@ocshaljufrian61094 ай бұрын
Try it bro, you can ride the highest speed train for the first time in Southeast Asia. The highest speed is 350 kilometers per hour, the Indonesian fast train Jakarta - Bandung, the newest, most sophisticated in Southeast Asia, the first,.the way to the beautiful and comfortable and beautiful and cool and cool city of Bandung, thank you sis and Ka..*,
@ocshaljufrian61094 ай бұрын
Try it bro, you can ride the highest speed train for the first time in Southeast Asia. The highest speed is 350 kilometers per hour, the Indonesian fast train Jakarta - Bandung, the newest, most sophisticated in Southeast Asia, the first,.the way to the beautiful and comfortable and beautiful and cool and cool city of Bandung, thank you sis and Ka..*,
@chachakanjar7 ай бұрын
Oh wow, did not know that Peter Higgs recently died! What a legacy that man left behind. From not taken seriously to finally seeing his theories in action must have been a delight. RIP
@MiddlePath337 ай бұрын
He died during the eclipse
@jeffcookdotau7 ай бұрын
@@MiddlePath33 He died on the day of the eclipse, which was only partial in Edinburgh. What makes you believe that he passed away during one of the 12 minutes of the eclipse?
@CraftySasquatch6 ай бұрын
So many scientists from every field always suffer the same thing. For instance the ones claiming a micro nova caused by the 12k year cyclical galactic wave. Great news is we only have to wait until 2040. Until then we will see an increase in the so called m@n M@de CliEm@te ch@nge. Just ask them why is the cliEm@te ch@nging on other planets in our solar system.
@kshaeta4 ай бұрын
Well... he must have been taken seriously, because they spent 5 billion dollars and what 25 years to build a gargantuan machine underground to see if he was right. No one has spent that much on a machine to prove God exists.
@chachakanjar4 ай бұрын
@@kshaeta as a matter of fact, he was not taken seriously for a long time. Which is not unusual in the scientific community. It's a cutthroat world with a lot of skeptics (rightfully so). Higgs particle was initially referred to as the "Goddamn particle", because it was so goddamn hard to detect. To suggest that the LHC (Large Hadron Collider) was specifically built to prove existence of God is oversimplification. Indeed, it's an expensive machine - but its main purpose is to facilitate the research done in the field of particle physics and to form better understanding of fundamental building blocks of matter and the forces that interact between them. If you think $5Bn is a lot, you should look into how much the newer version (FCC - Future Circular Collider) will cost, and how long would the construction take?
@noumanintown7 ай бұрын
Thank you for making complex topics digestible and comprehensible, you have struck a great balance for the general public.
@maxkho005 ай бұрын
Balance? I wouldn't quite call it balance. It is 100% accessibility 0% scientific rigour. Which is fine; I actually enjoyed the video and think it could be a great introduction for people without a scientific background. But calling it a "balance" is a bit of a stretch.
@josebejaranolopez2 ай бұрын
Your videos and your work are absolutely amazing. You are letting us enter into such a complex world to admire and grasp real greatness from humanity. Thank you Cleo!
@JaeJude3 ай бұрын
This isn't directly a story about particle physics, but more about CERN and the Internet. In the mid 1980s, I was a young, brash, and inexperienced IT guy. In 1983, I attended a lecture about early networking at a conference in Comox, British Columbia. One of the first lecturers was a middle aged woman, who looked like somebody's Ukranian babushka (describing me as "young, brash, and inexperienced" probably gives me more credit than I deserved). This woman gets up to the podium in front of an almost exclusively male geeks and starts to talk about her day job in particle physics at the University of British Columbia. Her normal day began with a 300 baud acoustic connection from UBC to a National Research Council of Canada computer in Ottawa. That computer had a 300 kb connection to a computer in Washington, DC. From there, she would make another 300 kb connection to a computer at CERN in Switzerland, where she would analyze data from the high energy physics experiments running there. There was no Internet, no TCP/IP, just 300 baud modem connections between computers. To a man (yes, we were all male IT geeks), we were agog at her story. I was too naive to fully appreciate the obstacles that this woman must have overcome to get to where she was in such a male dominated culture, but she was awesome! Looking at a history of UBC particle physics, I think that this might have been Dr. Anna Celler, but I cannot be certain. Nevertheless, she was one amazing babushka!
@AndrewCowell-sz9dx3 ай бұрын
And all in the sole purpose in dispelling the myth of god as you know 😊
@JaeJude3 ай бұрын
@@AndrewCowell-sz9dx Huh?
@AndrewCowell-sz9dx3 ай бұрын
@@JaeJudehuh read the statement it’s sole purpose is to dispel the myth of religion you obviously don’t know what it’s for it’s to create the Big Bang
@borregospringsbs2 ай бұрын
@@AndrewCowell-sz9dx physics can never disprove god, an no one claims it will. thats like saying if a gun is a murder weapon, you can by analyzing the gun figure out not only who shot the gun, but who made the gun, who loaded the bullet, who invented gun powder, who discovered combustion, who harnessed fire. Can you learn all that from one murder weapon? No? Then stop being a scientific denier. No ones trying to explain god or disprove god...
@AndrewCowell-sz9dx2 ай бұрын
@@JaeJudeduh
@jonathancohen25067 ай бұрын
Cleo- you’re a scientist and a poet. You and the content you create makes the internet a better, smarter, and more hopeful place. Thank you!
@jweaver68627 ай бұрын
I'm lucky enough to know a physicist who doesn't mind explaining Everything that I barely comprehend! Great Video Cleo!
@ocshaljufrian61094 ай бұрын
Try it bro, you can ride the highest speed train for the first time in Southeast Asia. The highest speed is 350 kilometers per hour, the Indonesian fast train Jakarta - Bandung, the newest, most sophisticated in Southeast Asia, the first,.the way to the beautiful and comfortable and beautiful and cool and cool city of Bandung, thank you sis and Ka..*,
@ocshaljufrian61094 ай бұрын
Try it bro, you can ride the highest speed train for the first time in Southeast Asia. The highest speed is 350 kilometers per hour, the Indonesian fast train Jakarta - Bandung, the newest, most sophisticated in Southeast Asia, the first,.the way to the beautiful and comfortable and beautiful and cool and cool city of Bandung, thank you sis and Ka..*,
@this_is_just_the_begining4 күн бұрын
bro 17 to 20 billion is nothing absolutely nothing do people know what the U.S spends on their military why don't we and other countries pool and dedicate our money and resources to this fascinating Reasearch
@RamKrishna-xi6lo7 ай бұрын
Internet needs people like you, Cleo. You wonderfully put things together for an average human brain to understand things.
@CTFlyer77 ай бұрын
I think we have quite enough system bots already.
@RamKrishna-xi6lo7 ай бұрын
@@CTFlyer7 yeah, one bot just replied to my comment.
@richardgoldenberg8147 ай бұрын
Really, dude!!! There are a dozen of other people that are more informative, professional and not annoying as she. They also don't pitch personal products in the middle of the video just like she did 👎👎👎👎. Most of the work and editing here is done by the team, she only reads off prompter. Stop licking 👅👅 👞👞
@BRNavalgund2 ай бұрын
What you are showing Lord siva's statue as worshiping devil. 7:11 all Hindu real religious people hate this. You can show your related photo, or something related you instead of Lord Siva.
@mistersir31857 ай бұрын
That's why her channel is so unique. She can explain anything in a way that anyone could understand in such a captivating way. That ending was beautifully said.
@ocshaljufrian61094 ай бұрын
Try it bro, you can ride the highest speed train for the first time in Southeast Asia. The highest speed is 350 kilometers per hour, the Indonesian fast train Jakarta - Bandung, the newest, most sophisticated in Southeast Asia, the first,.the way to the beautiful and comfortable and beautiful and cool and cool city of Bandung, thank you sis and Ka..*,
@ocshaljufrian61094 ай бұрын
Try it bro, you can ride the highest speed train for the first time in Southeast Asia. The highest speed is 350 kilometers per hour, the Indonesian fast train Jakarta - Bandung, the newest, most sophisticated in Southeast Asia, the first,.the way to the beautiful and comfortable and beautiful and cool and cool city of Bandung, thank you sis and Ka..*,
@rjvitt7 ай бұрын
Thanks for always making me feel like there's hope for the world. Its tough sometimes, but your videos really showcase the great people who are doing so many great things.
@ocshaljufrian61094 ай бұрын
Try it bro, you can ride the highest speed train for the first time in Southeast Asia. The highest speed is 350 kilometers per hour, the Indonesian fast train Jakarta - Bandung, the newest, most sophisticated in Southeast Asia, the first,.the way to the beautiful and comfortable and beautiful and cool and cool city of Bandung, thank you sis and Ka..*,
@ocshaljufrian61094 ай бұрын
Try it bro, you can ride the highest speed train for the first time in Southeast Asia. The highest speed is 350 kilometers per hour, the Indonesian fast train Jakarta - Bandung, the newest, most sophisticated in Southeast Asia, the first,.the way to the beautiful and comfortable and beautiful and cool and cool city of Bandung, thank you sis and Ka..*,
@marlonmendoza81715 күн бұрын
I just want to thank you for your work in expanding consciousness.
@lathikamihiranga7 ай бұрын
Cleo is probably one of the best person to have a conversation considering the range of topics she's covered
@danielglavas7 ай бұрын
"Monuments dedicated to knowledge." That's a pretty way to put it!
@Daniel9.137 ай бұрын
Knowledge is great the wisdom to appropriately use said knowledge is greater. Knowledge + Wisdom =🤍 Capiche ?
@MrDStCyr7 ай бұрын
Agree, I like that description as well
@SuperMTight7 ай бұрын
You made a bunch of great videos on this channel, but this one is your best yet. It's so much complex content, looking back and forward, all condensed into a comprehensible and captivating video, with a beautiful, positive, and motivating note at the end. Fantastic, Cleo and team! With all these horrible, destructive things happening in the world right now, with humanity showing its dark side all the time, this is really uplifting. Thanks for your hard and awesome work!
@sammieseoul55442 ай бұрын
I went from not knowing about CERN to now desperate to visit and learning everything I can about it
@Ernthir7 ай бұрын
Well done. You managed to explain everything in a very cool way without oversensationalizing it.
@jdock327786 ай бұрын
And very listenable and articulate..
@taknothing48967 ай бұрын
This is science journalism done right. You've got my appreciation.
@cheetah1007 ай бұрын
Only it isn't. Good production values, but acting as a PR agent for the new collider rather than being objective.
@GH0ST3697 ай бұрын
Unlike COVID, set us back to trust science...
@paulsengupta9717 ай бұрын
@@GH0ST369 Only for the ignorant.
@YOLOBNB7 ай бұрын
Where were you all this time? I loved this video. I am a Physics student currently doing my Masters. This video literally gave me a boost in my motivation to learn more.
@anitaig0524 күн бұрын
I just love Cleo’s enthusiasm and here voice! Great videos!!
@neelanshguptaa3107 ай бұрын
I so love the enthusiasm and giddy excitement with which she makes her videos. It's so nice to see someone really enjoy their work the way she does.
@getmorphed7 ай бұрын
I have learned more about CERN from this video than any other. Great graphics and pacing. Thanks Cleo.
@dadunce72737 ай бұрын
You make me love science the way my teachers can’t. Thank you
@scrumptious96737 ай бұрын
❤
@THESHOMROM3 ай бұрын
WOW This is a fantastic script. Your research was excellent and the presentation was phenomenal ! ! ! ! ! CONGRATULATIONS !
@nishantpatil12477 ай бұрын
Steins gate anyone?
@Katiethekitten7 ай бұрын
What even is that?
@Curb65-f3r7 ай бұрын
It's an anime show.
@rDaragaming7 ай бұрын
Embarrassed to say Stein's; gate was my very first thought 😅.. I do love the science behind the collider though, it's very interesting stuff and this video was very engaging
@DodgerX7 ай бұрын
Yesssss
@the.spriggan7 ай бұрын
Behind the facade of searching for new particles and learning more about the ones we already know of, CERN, or should I say SERN is an evil organisation conspiring to take over the world by building a time machine.
@fernandorosales24187 ай бұрын
A bunch of scientists trying to figure out the fabric of the universe while a bunch of politicians are salivating trying to figure out how this can make a bigger, better military weapon.
@Birdgangg7 ай бұрын
This is facts. There’s no way this would happen if that weren’t the underlying purpose.
@PaulSzkibik7 ай бұрын
@@Birdgangg Nope, it's still just an opinion unless you can actually provide proof. Which you may well be able to but so far, I don't think Cern has made any new weapon tech possible. So... do you have any actual proof (facts?) to back this claim up?
@JerehmiaBoaz7 ай бұрын
The fact that you can't use this research directly to produce military technology is an important reason for why the LHC wasn't built in the USA but in Europe.
@loveszappa7 ай бұрын
I think the point was that politicians WISH they could and absolutely would if it were possible…but science seems to bring out the condescending and superior attitude in many.
@loveszappa7 ай бұрын
@@PaulSzkibikhe didn’t make any claims, it was clearly conjecture based on historical facts. If you think politicians care about science, well, that explains it.
@steveandthesea6 ай бұрын
I can never understand the "we can't afford it" argument when there are individual people out there just hoarding several times that much wealth for themselves.
@fredr0fc5 ай бұрын
Because you can't make decisions with other people's money
@BangMaster965 ай бұрын
@stvmccrthy By that logic, we should take 20% or even 40% of the Money from your bank account because you are just hoarding that wealth for yourself, and give that money to charity, or science, or some random homeless people in 3rd world nations. You are acting as if you are entitled to other People's Money.
@toheedsaeed19475 ай бұрын
They are doing spending tons of money on defense budgets@@fredr0fc
@ishitvasrivastava5 ай бұрын
@@BangMaster96 tell me I'm baman without telling me I'm baman from north india
@mikewhocheeseharry52925 ай бұрын
There are checks and balances in which certain funds go to certain things. I once thought, well why can’t the government just print money and pay for it. But, without controlled money circulation, the value of the US dollar would become almost nothing.
@sammydanger72875 күн бұрын
And this completely split us into an alternate timeline. Nobody can convince me otherwise. (Grabs tinfoil hat)
@soulwarrior7 ай бұрын
Man, the production quality is really something else. The way you broke down all of this information (that isn't easy to grasp for someone that's not deep into the topic) is amazing. You have an excellent talent for teaching and as many others have pointed out, your affection for the topic is infectious. 🙂
@dragoonseye764 ай бұрын
As a species, humans are most definitely not on the right track
@jaimerivera77173 ай бұрын
I agree with you lol..
@lialara3433 ай бұрын
why do you say that?
@dragoonseye763 ай бұрын
@@lialara343 Look at the world news. Put the pieces together yourself
@paulwilliams20243 ай бұрын
I agree this place is Santanic
@dragoonseye763 ай бұрын
@@paulwilliams2024 weirdo
@doctortrouserpants13877 ай бұрын
This is the first time in my life that I got a real sense of the size of a proton, so thank you for that!
@michaelwright1234567Ай бұрын
I guess I'm the only one that is in love with Cleo? I'm just kidding. There are probably thousands of us. She is really something. Humor brains drive beauty. She literally has it all. And she doesn't brag about it, or act condescending. She's constantly informing us about things that I had wondered about but didn't research, because seriously who has time to do research unless that's their job? And she always comes across the right way. That is astounding these days. She is an inspiration to ALL. And if she's not then THEY don't have their priorities straight. THIS WOULD NEVER HAPPEN BUT SHE SHOULD be the head of PR for NASA. I mean why not? SHE'S ON IT. SHE'S PREPARED. EVERYBODY LOVES HER. NEED I SAY MORE? 😂❤❤❤
@dmor33597 ай бұрын
One of my favorite KZbin videos of yours. Great job! Oh, and I still love your voice and enthusiasm. :)
@Mermaidkilla7 ай бұрын
Well said
@numbersandsports42067 ай бұрын
Think of how far humans have come in just the last 150 years to imagine, plan, prepare and execute a project like this. Amazing.
@MrAmitkr0077 ай бұрын
Not last 150 years. This is how anything works. You keep pushing, a long plateau followed by huge rise
@ivok98467 ай бұрын
i'm thinking what they gained with it: nothing. except few fathers being proud of their daughters, it seems...
@Ronnet7 ай бұрын
@@ivok9846go back 150 years and tell me there weren't massive improvements in our understanding of the world such as our medical knowledge and the social systems that allowed an increasing number of people to benefit. Go back another 150 years, and another. You'll find that the improvements become less and less. We really have ramped up our capabilities in the last 150 years. Those fathers should be proud of their children who are taking part in the betterment of humankind. What are you contributing besides being negative Nancy online?
@MartijnPennings7 ай бұрын
I'd love to see a video about how this project came about. How do you get the idea to build this? And then the plans? And then the money? It must have been an uphill battle for the people who built this to convince people, universities and even countries to invest in this crazy project.
@ZwaetschgeRaeuber7 ай бұрын
1. Scientific discoveries: - Discovery of the W and Z bosons in 1983[1] - First observations of antinuclei[4] - Discovery of direct CP violation in the NA48 experiment[4] - In 2000, the Heavy Ion Programme discovered a new state of matter, the Quark Gluon Plasma[4] - Isolation of antihydrogen atoms in 2010 and maintaining them for over 15 minutes in 2011[4] - Discovery of the Higgs boson in 2012, confirming the Standard Model of particle physics[1][4] - Discovery of pentaquarks in 2015[3] 2. Technological innovations: - Development of the World Wide Web in 1989 to allow scientists to share information[4][5] - Advancement of particle accelerator and detector technologies that have found applications in fields like medical diagnosis and therapy, computer chip manufacturing, etc.[5] - Development of Grid computing to process the vast amounts of data collected by the LHC experiments[5] 3. Training and inspiration: - CERN provides extensive knowledge and skills to researchers, especially those early in their careers. Researchers who engage with CERN earn 12% more on average throughout their working life.[2] - Runs programs to encourage young people to pursue science, training teachers and allowing students to visit and participate in research[2] 4. Economic and societal benefits: - Every Swiss franc invested in upgrades to the Large Hadron Collider is estimated to generate 1.8 Swiss francs in societal benefits through technology transfer, training, cultural activities, etc.[6] - UK companies supplying CERN have gained improved reputation and significant contracts[2] In summary, CERN has enabled groundbreaking fundamental physics discoveries, driven cutting-edge technological innovations that benefit other fields, provides valuable scientific training and inspiration, and generates economic and societal benefits that exceed the investments made. @@ivok9846
@DamiantenBohmer7 ай бұрын
Seriously, you have just described how they squeeze and smash the protons together better than anybody I have heard, watched or listened to; just showing the scale of the Atlas sensor and then the hair and then how they relate to the Earth and down was awesome. Thank you for all your videos; your enthusiasm for science is tremendous. 😃
@Jojo-o6o6w7 ай бұрын
simping too hard
@qwerty1994ize7 ай бұрын
@@Jojo-o6o6wget a life incel
@gruntopolouski59193 ай бұрын
You know what I’d love to see? A colab between Cleo and a healthy PhysicsGirl. Maybe someday.
@MartinCharles7 ай бұрын
Cleo, I love that you're actually excited about the things you cover.
@muditagarwal86427 ай бұрын
The conclusion touched a nerve. It was very beautifully written and elicits empowering affirmations.
@Lee-tt2yb7 ай бұрын
@muditagarwal8642 Worrying about what hypothetical aliens think? Like, keeping up with the galactic Joneses?
@miinyoo7 ай бұрын
Also terrifying hubris. It goes both ways.
@rblew1317 ай бұрын
You're positively killing it, Cleo. Keep up this incredible work!
@jayjay-bz3rr7 күн бұрын
Einstein would have been proud
@jml_537 ай бұрын
Great video. I'm a lifelong physics geek. I appreciate the inside look at this incredible facility, and remember being very excited when they announced the discovery of the Higgs. I also remember when the US was planning the superconducting supercollider in the early 90s and was disappointed when it was dropped from the budget. We had Fermilab but clearly needed to go to the next level. CERN got us there, but now we are at a similar decision point. This time, I'm less convinced that we need the next step. What do we expect to find at higher energy? What would have more MASS? All of our previous colliders had pretty clear objectives. Fermi was built to search for the quarks; CERN was built for Higgs. They found them, but they had strong expectations that they would be found at these energies. We don't have predictions of particles with larger MASS (aside from supersymmetric particles that look increasingly unlikely). I also don't buy into the dark matter justification. There isn't any convincing theory that says dark matter will be made of high MASS particles. All of our experience says that particles like to live in low-energy ground states. Everything we create at high energy quickly decays. There isn't any reason to believe that dark matter has an unusually MASSive ground state. Nothing contradicts it, but this is a lot of money to spend without theoretical support. Similarly, the idea that we'll learn more about things we know about is true, but are we really just increasing our confidence and precision? Is there an upper limit to useful experiments? I feel we need more theory to guide investments that large. The idea that we can find dark matter rides on an assumption that it interacts with regular matter through something other than gravity. If not, we may never see it. The only reason we see neutrinos is because they have a weak force interaction. If they didn't, we wouldn't see them either. Higher energies won't necessarily enable us to see something that doesn't interact with matter. Conservation laws also likely preclude decays that cross the dark/ordinary matter boundary. You might need something that has a quantum number like 'dark charge' to balance things out and enable the creation of dark matter. There are lots of great opportunities to spend our limited basic research funding. I think finding/ explaining dark matter/energy are high priorities. I'm just not sure this is the best use of those funds right now. Despite how long it will take to plan and build the next one, I think we need to hold off for a bit.
@anonymes28847 ай бұрын
Actually, I think it's that "not knowing where to look next" that _might_ justify the FCC. Not sure if you're aware but the _first_ phase actually _isn't_ a higher energy LHC, it's a new and improved LEP (the LHC's precursor) which would be focused on generating and analysing W, Z and Higgs bosons. To me that actually seems like a reasonable prospect for finding new physics because the Higgs is, y'know, a bit weird :) (spin 0, various coupling types/strengths etc.) - looking at it in detail, at scale, for clear SM deviations could be fruitful. The higher energy LHC equivalent wouldn't be until phase 2, probably around the 2070s (but fair enough, a lot of the cost will surely be the tunnel itself and you need that for phase 1 - that could be an argument for a different build, a linear accelerator for instance). If we can _plan_ it cheaply enough then we should certainly be doing _that_ now IMO but otherwise hold off until LHC shutdown (currently 2035 ish) - there's still a further LHC upgrade to come before then, maybe those results will suggest a new direction.
@PeerAdder7 ай бұрын
14:07 - the headline about "a massive waste of money" comes from people who seem to think that when we spend money it gets piled up into a bonfire and burned. No, it goes back into the economies of the countries involved. It gets collected again as taxes, goes into savings accounts, gets invested and recirculated. The number also seems large but only because we're stupidly impressed by lots of zeroes. $22 billion is about the same as the annual budget of NASA, which is only about the 23rd largest US federally funded organisation. The US spends a similar amount each year on railway pensions.
@franciscosegura20206 ай бұрын
Imagine to believe in Keynes. What a laught. Please, check your economic studies before your country enters into an economic crisis.
@AlphaSigmA14 күн бұрын
We , Europeans pay for CERN and we don't think is massive waste of money.
@de-motivational-speaker6 ай бұрын
I loved the excitement in ur voice while you're explaining the things. It shows how much you love the science to explain. the flow of information flowing in ur brain but your words can't keep up with the information. I feel the same when i talk about my favourite topics. I can feel you :)
@janetdanes794517 күн бұрын
My first video to watch from you and it is fabulous. I was talking to my mother today (she’s 98) about CERN and the LHC. I used AI to generate a summary of the topic and then searched for a video that turns the science into something visual and comprehensible. Your video was perfect for that. Thank you. I have subscribed to your channel now and will check other content.
@nicolasrobertgunn7 ай бұрын
This is a ridiculously good video, and I don't say that often. Great work, Cleo and team!
@IkerUnzu7 ай бұрын
I'm in love with this video. It's so well-made and incredibly amazing in its explanations. I loved every part of it. It makes me want to learn more and more about the topic!! Thank you :)
@TheGokyu6 ай бұрын
I love your research work! You're an excellent journalist and clearly turn difficult subjects into a walk in the park.
@johncorgАй бұрын
I built mine from a kit. Im using the local sewer system. I call it the Large Turdron Collider.
@akshatsiuuu7 ай бұрын
whenever i stop feeling excited about my career or science i watch one of your videos and it's amazing how you make us feel excited just as you are and thanks for that !!!!!!!!1
@BRNavalgund2 ай бұрын
What you are showing Lord siva's statue as worshiping devil. 7:11 all Hindu real religious people hate this. You can show your related photo, or something related you instead of Lord Siva.
@Chill_Gates7 ай бұрын
As an aspiring physicist, its really satisfying and joyful to watch this video
@t-mac12367 ай бұрын
This video was so well done. The passion oozes out of you and it’s a pleasure to watch. Thank you so much for this video
@EmmanuelTheMortgageSpecialist2 ай бұрын
This was amazing and thank you so much for putting this together!! It really explained the why of CERN !
@someoneelse44927 ай бұрын
The statue of shiva is purely for scientific purposes ..
@moodcatching7 ай бұрын
Also the 666 in their logo, is just a coincidence lol
@paroxysm64377 ай бұрын
the statue of shiva was a gift from India, as India has been a partner since 1960 its not that deep lol
@vikumwijekoon31667 ай бұрын
its a gift from india
@paroxysm64377 ай бұрын
@@moodcatching lol bro the logo is a synchrotron, the main thing they're working on. it's not that deep.
@Jay2stone7 ай бұрын
Yeah they put it right in front of you. Freemasonry does it all the time. Satanism does it all the time. Nazis did it.
@heyitsjay224 ай бұрын
Just found your channel, I am a fan already. I enjoy how you present everything with so much positivity.
@adw68943 ай бұрын
You're simp 😡😡😡😡
@gregmat80367 ай бұрын
This was a very good video. Thank you (and your team as well) for putting it together.
@paulbromsgrove87393 күн бұрын
Excellent video thank you for making. I have one question and it may be a stupid question... The big sensor bit that you visited, it's not that massive for the whole 27km is it? It's just like a big pipe running for the full loop with 3 of these sensor stations?
@DanielDiosdado7 ай бұрын
“What we spend our time on is who we are”. Brilliant, Cloe! Keep up the amazing job you do!
@Daniel9.137 ай бұрын
Hhhmmm wonder where I’ve heard that before ? 🧐
@onyx30197 ай бұрын
one quick note ,elon musk spent double the 22b to buy twitter
@mitchellmeeuwesen66717 ай бұрын
What is always the obsession with Elon Musk and how he spend HIS money? You know... work weeks, months, years 18 hours a day with all the stress and headache it brings. So once you successfully have changed the world and made billions some person online can be sour about how you spend your fortune.
@ZaynomR7 ай бұрын
@@mitchellmeeuwesen6671be fr…
@izzytoons7 ай бұрын
@@mitchellmeeuwesen6671 Trust me, he did NOT earn ALL that money. Like Trump, he screwed a lot of other people out of their money along the way. Both he and trump stiffed a lot of vendors. I'm not saying he isn't smart and he hasn't worked hard and he doesn't deserve a lot of money, but many people do that and don't take as much. Go back and look at how he interacted with his counterparts at each of the companies he been involved in while he grew his wealth. Look at how he treats his investors, de-valuing his companies by engaging in ourageous, politically charged social behavior. Look at how he treats his employees. Look at how he treats Americans, when he compares them to Chinese. Look at how he treats the government, which has provided significant funding to p-retty much every single one of his companies, whether it is contracts, tax breaks, tax breaks to incentivize his customers, etc. The guy asked how much it would cost to solve world hunger. The answer $44 billion. He turned right around and bought Twitter for $42B instead. He decided he'd rather have the world's biggest megaphone. Stop worshipping.
@kiimiLol7 ай бұрын
@@mitchellmeeuwesen6671I think his point was that the same amount of money was used to buy just an app which you can argue doesn’t do much to make humanity better, therefore, spending 22billion on this wouldn’t be as extreme as they’re making it seem. It’s not about Elon Musk, is the fact that it is not unfeasible to consider spending that amount on something that could advance us as a species when it gets invested in trivial things as twitter. Clearly this amount of money is being casually spent all around the world by those who have the means to. Governments would be better off funding this than wars or other bs that they do.
@dipayanbarman51397 ай бұрын
@@izzytoons and it's the common people's attention that made him so rich , his company is overvalued and I just want to witness if his bubble bursts, I am eager to know whether facts will get a defeat from lies or vice-versa.
@doziegamerz83637 ай бұрын
No joke Cleo you and your team are really good at what you do, I can't imagine you guys actually doing a better job than this. And also thank you!❤
@jalix30533 ай бұрын
I've been seeing shorts of yours for a while, but this was my first time watching a long form video of yours and I wanted to echo what a lot of these comments are saying. I thoroughly enjoyed watching this :). I've always been curious what CERN's hydron collider was for, but never quite understood it no matter who explained it to me. This is the first time I feel like I can actually somewhat grasp what it's for. Now, whenever someone brings up the topic of the hydron collider and why it exists I'll always suggest this video. I also highly sympathize with the message of this video (your whole channel it seems). I do not understand science, but I love the trials and tribulations of trying to. I love the unending journey towards understanding our existence and the universe around us. I feel like we will never be bored because there is so much to learn, and that pure joy of understanding just a little more about the cosmos is reason enough to fund these awe-inspiring monuments of science. But the fact that understanding the world around us leads to better ways to take care of ourselves and others is even more reason to undertake these beautifully ambitious projects.
@MrAlecPinnock7 ай бұрын
I'm glad people like you are making videos like this!! The universe is insane
@Rockysbeats7 ай бұрын
they really put the CERN in conCERNing
@UncleP4pr1k47 ай бұрын
Boo
@paulsengupta9717 ай бұрын
What are you concerned about?
@minoxiis34197 ай бұрын
I feel like whatever we are allowed to learn publicly doesn’t even touch the surface of what it’s actually for.
@PaulSzkibik7 ай бұрын
I feel like you need to get out more. Vitamin D is good for your happiness.
@jeffreyrichards153Ай бұрын
I am SO happy that you did the size comparison of how small the particles are in regards to the accelerator. Attempting to do that myself was boggling my brain. What boggles me more is the fact that ALL this never existed at one point in history, and then all of a sudden... BOOM! Someone had an idea. Then that idea turned into ALL THAT. It's just incredible to me, is all.
@f.herumusu83417 ай бұрын
The problem is that the LHC showed no "new physics". It proved the existance of the Higgs boson, but that was a must and a promise by particle physicists who built the LHC. But beyond that nothing new was found, we still have the same open questions as before. We badly need a hint where exactly to search for "new physics". That is why also physicists ask if simply building a bigger machine with higher energies to clueless look around is a good idea.
@KeithGoodwin-s7b7 ай бұрын
Yes, isn't that just science? Did it matter that bees don't come from flowers? Of course it does.
@anonymes28847 ай бұрын
Indeed. Many physicists expected the LHC to find super-symmetric particles and it hasn't. So the main use of a bigger collider would be looking for super-symmetric particles more massive than the LHC is able to investigate and a perfectly valid question to ask is, "OK, but if _that_ doesn't find them either, _then_ what ? Just build an _even bigger_ accelerator ??". The difficulty is, at what point do we basically accept that super-symmetry isn't right and a bigger accelerator isn't going to help ? Plenty are saying we're already there. So we need a new direction to look in and right now, none are particularly forthcoming.
@f.herumusu83417 ай бұрын
@@anonymes2884 Right. Some of the SUSY guys were quite inept, stating that they would be nearly sure that the LHC will find the lightest SUSY partner ... That damaged also the string guys, because any string theory must be necessary supersymmetric. In that light other physicist begin to lose thier patience with hypothesis wich could not make any experimental tested prediction ... since nearly 100 years (if we count the predecessors of string theory). Not a good time to be a high energy physisicst. It's badly stuck.
@CrMizer5 ай бұрын
This is really great but its like remodeling the bathroom while the house burns.
@gav_mac7 ай бұрын
Love that quote about discovering the building blocks for children of the future to play with
@brasnoostro2 ай бұрын
I went to CMS exactly 11 years ago tomorrow. A few months earlier, my friends and I studied the Lagrangian that describes the Higgs mechanism to keep up to date... Quite demanding material and quite a headache after a while. All this is wonderful and intriguing, why are we here, can we even know the world around us, what is mass, time, space... Unfortunately, this is all for a very small number of people on the globe. The video is beautifully made and accessible to the masses 😎 And finally: I am glad to see that a large mass of people are at mass thanks to the gain of mass from the Higgs field.