The Concept of Mass - with Jim Baggott

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  • Опубликовано: 13 апр 2025

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @julianbroadhurst8287
    @julianbroadhurst8287 7 лет назад +76

    Sometimes it is instructive to have things you thought you knew well, explained real slow, by someone who really understands it - especially when you gain a subtle insight you had not known before, that makes a huge difference.

    • @slyy4096
      @slyy4096 Год назад

      Playback speed 1.5x makes huge difference on wasting time.
      Mass is the synonym of slowness and locality.
      Question is how something can move slower than c.
      Answer is: locality. Something entering X Y Z dimensions (our "space") tries to specify it's (relative) position thus slowing it down, which means giving a mass.
      If you take away a mass from something, it'd fly away at speed of light, wouldn't be here anymore, and if you follow a moment later, you'd never catch it! It didn't disappear from existence, it still has information/value/energy in electromagnetic dimensions.

  • @shaileshrana7165
    @shaileshrana7165 5 лет назад +19

    That audience did not deserve you, good sir

  • @billmunsie647
    @billmunsie647 5 лет назад +4

    Your mom was correct . Your choice of word size was correct and now my understanding of mass is finally correct .....it took 77years for this particular pleasure to happen , thank you.

  • @brandonmorad737
    @brandonmorad737 2 года назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @ernestolombardo5811
    @ernestolombardo5811 7 лет назад +45

    This man has a spectacular way with words and tone.

  • @fourquartets7900
    @fourquartets7900 4 года назад +11

    What a wonderful lecture! Jim Baggott has a great sense of humour, and his patience with people like me meant that I was able to understand his lecture, learn a lot, and enjoy it at the same time. Thanks so much!

  • @McBeever2k9
    @McBeever2k9 7 лет назад +154

    Maybe I just can't hear it but the audience really didn't help this guy, it's sort of an etiquette to laugh at any humour at these talks, no matter how bad the joke or quip is, and I thought this guy gave a well presented talk and made a number of witty remarks. It's not for comedy purposes but it helps the speaker connect with the audience and can really settle the speaker's nerves. Leaving awkward pauses only puts more pressure on a naturally daunting lecture. We've all done public speaking at some stage I'm sure you can relate.

    • @henrytjernlund
      @henrytjernlund 7 лет назад +13

      It's interesting how entire classes can have a group personality to them.

    • @RWBHere
      @RWBHere 6 лет назад +13

      With due respect, British reserve. We're not renowned for being over-enthusiastic.

    • @ejpmooB
      @ejpmooB 6 лет назад +14

      It's probably because the way he talks and acts makes me (and them) feel uncomfortable

    • @honuputters1891
      @honuputters1891 6 лет назад +19

      Personally I think this guy should just ditch the attempts at humor and stick to the topic. His quips were not funny and his comic delivery is weak. If the audience were to have laughed, it would have been obviously fake which is worse than uncomfortable silence. Some people are good at integrating humor with serious presentations (for example see Andrew Pontzen's videos) and some are just not. And yes, I have given presentations, with and without humor, so I know what it is like on stage.
      This guy is extraordinarily knowledgeable about his topic and his narrative is clear and coherent, if a bit slow-paced. He should stick to his strength.

    • @outsidethepyramid
      @outsidethepyramid 5 лет назад +2

      @patrice numarkioan
      Typical comments about humour because of a lack of understanding on the subject matter. LOL

  • @MichaelHarrisIreland
    @MichaelHarrisIreland 5 лет назад +76

    "I think it’s revolutionary that ANY man with an internet connection has access to this information. Remember, once there was a time not too long ago when information like this was only accessible by the elite and the wealthy". Just to repeat J K from a year ago.

    • @Jaantoenen
      @Jaantoenen 2 года назад +9

      Not true. 70 years ago a 4th grade extremely poor child had access to this information from the Gulbenkian Foundation Bookmobile, where no one had access to TV, and very few to Radio. And read by candle, oil, and kerosine lamps fore there was not yet electricity at his house.

    • @Denosophem
      @Denosophem 11 месяцев назад

      You're so right, I only wish that the consumption of free information would qualify its consumers for the college providers tuition credit: and applicable degree(S).

    • @stevejeffries5571
      @stevejeffries5571 Месяц назад +1

      Or a library card😊

    • @colinhughes6635
      @colinhughes6635 29 дней назад

      And women too

  • @charliehubbard4073
    @charliehubbard4073 6 лет назад +3

    As I type this, this video has approximately 3,000 likes and 300 dislikes, meaning 10% of the people that cared to weigh in, hated this talk, and I am mystified by that. I have watched a LOT of Christmas Lectures and Evening Discourses via this RUclips channel. Some of them are better than others, but I don't know if I have ever seen a difficult topic presented so clearly, delivered so brilliantly as the material in this lecture was. I am embarrassed to say, I don't really know who Jim Baggott is, but I do know he knows how to give a lecture. Well done, sir. Thank you.
    And to those who felt the pace was too slow, may I suggest that you tell RUclips to deliver it faster than real-time (a playback setting you can set via the Settings icon). It does this well, without distorting the pitch of the audio. I did this myself, watching this lecture at 1.25 times faster than real time. However, I don't think the pace of the lecture was too slow. I think it was spot on. I watch most RI videos at 1.5x real time. This one was compelling enough to slow down.

    • @TheRoyalInstitution
      @TheRoyalInstitution  6 лет назад

      Thanks for your kind words, Charlie. We have some good news for you. Jim was recently in the building giving a talk about how space itself is quantum in nature. It should come our on our channel shortly!

    • @theskett
      @theskett 5 лет назад

      Dude sucks as a lecturer. The problem isn't the pace was/is too slow, rather that his humor was kinda naff and his delivery of interesting information was too slow. Unfortunate, and not fixed by speeding up the video (because then we just get faster naff humor attempts).

  • @FranklinNewhart
    @FranklinNewhart 7 лет назад +56

    Clear and concise. A lecture that even a primary pupil could grasp. All. the concepts are presented in a way that has given me a better understanding of the higgs boson than I have yet had.

    • @ArthurHau
      @ArthurHau 6 лет назад +4

      Clear and concise, but not very precise! The size of objects do not shrink when they are travelling at high speed. To a stationary observer, it appears as if the size of a fast moving object has been shrunk. Einstein's relativity theories are about measurement discrepancies that led to the failure of the laws of Newtonian physics. The failure was due to measurement of space-time.

    • @nandodenandos6957
      @nandodenandos6957 6 лет назад

      Perhaps you could be happier discovering that all these is just nonsense? please see the following video of Stephen Crothers: The Logical Inconsistency of the Special Theory of Relativity | EU2017 ruclips.net/video/6zWy6_Mog70/видео.html

    • @thomasdahl3083
      @thomasdahl3083 6 лет назад +1

      @@ArthurHau I agree. And since they do not shrink, the Higgs Field does not slow them down, it's not like molasses. So, we need to find a better explanation of what's going on.
      No stationary observer would ever be able to grasp the size of an object moving close to the speed of light, so I don't get that comparison.

    • @ArthurHau
      @ArthurHau 4 года назад +1

      @SPARTAMERICUS First of all, you need to define "length". There is a difference between reality and the measurement of reality. Just what is reality? Physicists are totally NAIVE. They don't understand the difference between reality and our perception of reality.

    • @freyc1
      @freyc1 2 года назад

      @@ArthurHau I think your distinction would make sense if there was such a thing as an absolute speed. Since this is not the case, and since speed is necessarily defined in relation to a given referential, I don't think it is wrong (although it might be awkward) to say that objects shrink when they are travelling at high speed. Of course, they do not shrink in a referential relative to which they are at rest. But by definition, in that referential, they are not travelling at high speed.

  • @raduantoniu
    @raduantoniu 4 года назад +28

    I thoroughly enjoyed the humor in this talk! I particularly liked the the line at 17:56 "Just at the time at the beginning of the 20th century when we were starting to get of evidence that atoms really existed, physicists were working out how to split them apart."

    • @robinhooper7702
      @robinhooper7702 4 года назад

      That would be like putting a puzzle together. It has constituent parts that make a whole picture. So yeah, you need to look at how it holds together? Take it apart to understand it.

  • @asokoniso
    @asokoniso 7 лет назад +14

    What an eloquent lecture for which an hour is rightfully spent in the most joyous way possible.

  • @brandonmorad737
    @brandonmorad737 6 лет назад +34

    Thank you very much, Mr. Baggott, for your superbly explaining "The Concept Of Mass". You are a phenomenal Physicist.

  • @mattbustamante2765
    @mattbustamante2765 4 года назад +5

    I didn't think such a complex subject could be explained in a clear enough way so that it could be understood by my small brain. Thank you for this!

  • @sanjchiro
    @sanjchiro 7 лет назад +47

    Brilliant and lucid explanation of where we are at in regards to understanding mass. I particularly appreciated the clarity of the discovery that 95% of the mass of things (such as my body) is due to the energy contained by massless gluons binding quarks together. I feel a little more enlightened, thank you Mr Baggott

    • @david203
      @david203 5 лет назад +4

      But the main question, how do the gluons create inertia and gravity, is not even mentioned.

    • @beascene6998
      @beascene6998 5 лет назад +1

      Not to mention explaining the mass of an electron.

    • @TheCryptPhoenix
      @TheCryptPhoenix 5 лет назад

      @@beascene6998 personally i think the "mass" comes from an energy density in a global electron field.

    • @showponyexpressify
      @showponyexpressify 3 года назад

      @@david203 yes he kind of glossed over that fundamental mystery

    • @showponyexpressify
      @showponyexpressify 3 года назад

      @@beascene6998 the mass of an electron also supposedly comes from the Higgs field also, as it does for quarks... it is the mechanism of the 99% of all mass (although somehow is equivalent to the energy of the gluons holding the quarks together) that was not explained.

  • @parttroll1
    @parttroll1 7 лет назад +45

    I bought his book on the back of this. Love stuff like this, advanced physics explained in a simple manner for the layman.

    • @miguelferreiramoutajunior2475
      @miguelferreiramoutajunior2475 6 лет назад +2

      His book is not so easy, but It is clear enough to make a correct yet deep comprehension.

    • @osstorba1
      @osstorba1 4 года назад +1

      Did he write a book? Can't remember him mentioning that!!! :-) :-) :-)

    • @chrisryan6464
      @chrisryan6464 4 года назад

      @@osstorba1 same as every scientist that comes and speaks at the RI, did they ever write any books ?!?!?

    • @ssdajoker
      @ssdajoker 3 года назад +1

      HOW WAS THE BOOK??

  • @madderhat5852
    @madderhat5852 7 лет назад +31

    Excellent talk, again a great deal was clarified that was missing from other documentaries.I'm binge watching these lectures at the moment and learning a huge amount or rather my small brain is kindly being fed by these great lecturers.

    • @wbiro
      @wbiro 6 лет назад

      Einstein's brain was on the small side, volume-wise...

    • @briseboy
      @briseboy 2 года назад

      Binge - the attempt to collapse the local region of the HIggs field.

    • @briseboy
      @briseboy 2 года назад

      @@wbiro So, of course, is a pebble-sized bit of depleted uranium, COMPARED with a pebble-sized bit of marshmallow.
      In reality, Einstein's brain examined had a higher proportion of whit matter - largely necessary oligodendrites - myelin.
      There is MUCH more to brain communication, monitoring, and function than is apparent - but expect exercised brains to bee ABLE to function in these ways than less-exercised brains (although we ALL run through capacities while sleeping and otherwise resting in Default Mode.)

  • @rhizin1
    @rhizin1 7 лет назад +2

    Nice. He doesn't talk so exited and fast and overly dramatic. Very good to listen too.

  • @Decco6306
    @Decco6306 5 лет назад +138

    I love how he adds humor, (I did laugh some)
    and the crowd is just dead silent
    oof
    I felt that from here

    • @rustyk4645
      @rustyk4645 5 лет назад +7

      They're a tough crowd.

    • @Alasdair-Morrison
      @Alasdair-Morrison 5 лет назад +6

      Must have been cardboard cutouts lol

    • @MidnightSt
      @MidnightSt 5 лет назад +4

      I was like "oof, how oblivious he is about his attempts to add humor totally not being funny and not landing"
      =D

    • @voidremoved
      @voidremoved 5 лет назад +1

      Sheldon Cooper in the audience and you expect laughter?

    • @danielgregg2530
      @danielgregg2530 5 лет назад +2

      There's nothing like a lousy audience !

  • @bigcountry5520
    @bigcountry5520 3 года назад +2

    I came up with my own theory of massless particle deflection, as an explanation for gravitation of bodies, and mass. This is exactly it, with a few added details about gluons. TY so much.

  • @henrytjernlund
    @henrytjernlund 7 лет назад +24

    Some complain that this is slow, but this is how good teaching is done.

    • @mentalmelt
      @mentalmelt 5 лет назад +6

      Actually, no. Good teaching is engaging, and this guy is not a particularly engaging lecturer.

    • @theskett
      @theskett 5 лет назад +2

      Is actively disengaging, tbh *yawn*

  • @trulucy
    @trulucy 6 лет назад +1

    I enjoyed this lecture and how he would pause for a second or two so I could soak in and understand a point he made. I am an older black guy living in the south suburbs of Chicago with less than two years of college but I’ve always have been curious about the world and am glad I’m living in 2019 and know how to use the smartphone iPhone my daughter taught me how to use. I appreciate I can learn so many different legitimate things I couldn’t learn otherwise without a financial cost I cannot afford and without an unnecessary degree. Thank you for posting all of your videos.

  • @chaladhanwada4499
    @chaladhanwada4499 6 лет назад +12

    Loved the presentation. Probably also the video I rewinded the most to make sure I didn't miss a point being made!

  • @JavierBonillaC
    @JavierBonillaC Год назад

    20:00 the modern part starts. If like me, you have studied the dual slit experiment you can skip to minute 30:00 summary at 41:30.

  • @mrustem64
    @mrustem64 5 лет назад +5

    After listening to Jim’s lecture l feel like someone has turned a light on and everything is clear. I actually understand this in a way l did not before. He has the unique ability to explain things that l find crystal clear and l am not an intellectual but just your average London black cab driver.

  • @rajendramirji5830
    @rajendramirji5830 3 года назад +3

    Absolutely gripping narration around understanding of what mass might be. How gravity gets associated with mass is amazing too. Am looking forward to a similar session for layman .

  • @garykay
    @garykay 7 лет назад +67

    I do standup comedy and that audience would make me have my atoms decomposed !

    • @nolan412
      @nolan412 5 лет назад

      You could drop Thor's Hammer on your foot and nothing.

    • @nolan412
      @nolan412 5 лет назад

      Siren goes off.

  • @williamnot8934
    @williamnot8934 2 года назад +8

    We live in an age where the line between Science Fiction and Science Fact is becoming blurred evolving into Magic. I am 73 and have always been fascinated by Technology. I have studied Electronics since the first time I saw a Valve Radio operating with its covers off. I want to live forever just to see what happens.

    • @briseboy
      @briseboy 2 года назад

      We don't see fiction in anything other than the analogies made. Magic is an undefined trm related to our hormonally generated attention (surprise!) at an event or perception w had not previously experienced of imagined with our limited experience.
      I enjoy surprise, whenever it ha not resulted in injury or death. We never (hopefully) depart from a sense of magic/unpredicted surprise.
      Art Clarke made a poetic statement that must not be taken for fact, as it's only an observation of the brain's evolved function - to predict. And prediction, as is implied in the above talk, is only assessment of probabilities.
      Settle on one, and yu carry it with you until the carrier, that brain, is perturbed by novel sensory event[s].

  • @brandonmorad737
    @brandonmorad737 6 лет назад +9

    I watched the video again and enjoyed it a lot. Historical background and explanations are superb and concise. Simplified scientific descriptions of the complicated physics were also outstanding. Thanks again, Dr. Baggott.

  • @ThisIsJoe07
    @ThisIsJoe07 3 года назад +2

    I’ll be honest, the first 10 mins or so was not that engaging, but I realise that was intentional and quite deliberate to set up the rest. Which then kept me glued to the content. Master display of presentation and taking a massively complex subject down to such simplicity was wonderful.

  • @sharrodstewart7076
    @sharrodstewart7076 5 лет назад +12

    I honestly think sometimes when I’m so interested in a subject, I’m quiet. I wouldn’t judge the audience for their silence.

  • @anwaya
    @anwaya 7 лет назад +6

    Mr Baggott does not say that one of the properties of mass is that it is conserved (absolutely, in classical metrics): this is an important part of the classical analysis.

  • @davidrobinson7112
    @davidrobinson7112 5 лет назад +5

    Absolutely totally absorbing....better than the lectures in college

  • @eggimal
    @eggimal 5 лет назад +1

    This gentleman has a decent sense of humour that is just flying right over the sleeping audience. Good lecture and much appreciated Mr Jim Baggott.

  • @kevinschnarr3684
    @kevinschnarr3684 6 лет назад +5

    One of the best talks I have seen on any of the top channels.
    Well done!

  • @compresswealthdivideeconom3757
    @compresswealthdivideeconom3757 2 года назад +1

    Twelve minutes in and I already drank a quart of water to take down the dry humor.

  • @Osvath97
    @Osvath97 5 лет назад +22

    To be frank, the microphone set-up can radically change how much laughter from the audience is picked up. So let's perhaps give it the benefit of the doubt.

  • @dixztube
    @dixztube 2 года назад +2

    Learning by telling a story is so powerful. Enjoying this and learning a lot!

  • @temenoujkafuller4757
    @temenoujkafuller4757 6 лет назад +3

    The history of Physics - 40 min, Physics-Today - 9 minutes. I love the last 10 minutes of this video.

  • @rockanderson1823
    @rockanderson1823 7 лет назад

    For those wanting to skip some history, goto 16:58.
    What I got out of this is that everything is energy and energy has mass. M=E/C2. And ultimately, this means that the "Big Bang" where "matter comes from nothing" really makes more sense when we see things as energy.

  • @tensevo
    @tensevo 5 лет назад +5

    I imagine in 1000 years, quantum physics will be part of the history of physics.

  • @pikiwiki
    @pikiwiki 2 года назад

    So grateful for the most replayed feature. saves a lot of time

  • @brandonmorad737
    @brandonmorad737 6 лет назад +7

    Magnificient Explanation and analysis for non-physicist. Thank you very much, Dr. Baggott.

  • @Rovinman
    @Rovinman 4 года назад +2

    The light came on brightly, when you re-arranged Einsteins equation, and I said to myself, YES !
    It finally made sense, .... (I'm only 75), beautifully presented, thank you !
    Stu xx

  • @Memeophobe
    @Memeophobe 7 лет назад +200

    Where did they get the audience from????
    The morgue??

    • @dannyteal1020
      @dannyteal1020 6 лет назад +5

      Memeophobe: high school

    • @koriko88
      @koriko88 6 лет назад +36

      Pretty close...England, apparently

    • @thatguy9502
      @thatguy9502 6 лет назад

      ikr

    • @davidconner-shover51
      @davidconner-shover51 6 лет назад +5

      no responses even after prompting, this is unusual

    • @ChilledfishStick
      @ChilledfishStick 6 лет назад +6

      His questions were really bizarre. The answers were obvious, but not knowing where he was going with them, I didn't know what answer he was expecting; even if I did want to play along. I was mostly confused. I wasn't there, but maybe that's the reason.

  • @edinson1613
    @edinson1613 4 года назад +2

    Jim looks like the kind of guy who embodies the establishment... a real authority figure :D
    What a great lecture. Seems like he'd make a very patient teacher.

  • @tensevo
    @tensevo 5 лет назад +3

    Simply fantastic, intriguing, interesting, thought provoking, well delivered presentation.

  • @johnmacmillan627
    @johnmacmillan627 2 года назад +1

    Thank you Dr Baggot. Thoroughly enjoyed your lecture

  • @olly5764
    @olly5764 5 лет назад +5

    I like Jim's style. It's odd seeing so many people on here commenting about the audience not laughing, the last lecture of his I saw on here, the comments were full of complaints about his humour. To me humour helps as it aids the memory. Good stuff!

  • @buca512boxer
    @buca512boxer 6 лет назад +1

    Brilliant start: "before year zero, before the common era", great way to describe that time without entering beliefs of folklore and religion (bc/ac). Will have to remember to use that.

    • @thomasdahl3083
      @thomasdahl3083 6 лет назад

      Except that there was no year zero. So 'before year zero', when is that?

  • @brian_jackson
    @brian_jackson 7 лет назад +19

    Er, small error at the beginning of the lecture. Not a physics one, but a historical one.
    There is no year zero on the standard calendar. The year 1 CE was preceded by 1 BCE. This is illogical, mathematically, by it is nevertheless, the case, by international convention. That is why the first year of each century actual ends with a 1, not a zero. The first year of this century was 2001, not 2000.

    • @wbiro
      @wbiro 6 лет назад

      I'm not buying it. The first year in this century was 2000. You'll just have to accommodate it...

    • @anglaismoyen
      @anglaismoyen 6 лет назад +1

      He was just desperately grabbing for a way to avoid saying the word "Christ".

    • @liamhoward2208
      @liamhoward2208 6 лет назад +1

      Another way of thinking about it is that the first year wasn’t recorded until it ended

    • @thomasdahl3083
      @thomasdahl3083 6 лет назад +2

      @@wbiro Since year zero never existed, year 1 is the first year, right? Add 100 years and continue. 2001 is the first year of this millenium.

  • @DavidMorley123
    @DavidMorley123 Год назад +1

    Please display his slides always, maybe with a little window in the coerner showing the speaker. As handsom and entertaining as this guy is, I'd also like to understand his talk. Thanks.

  • @dnomyarnostaw
    @dnomyarnostaw 7 лет назад +6

    Great lecture. Filled in many gaps for me.

  • @tomsaxton9534
    @tomsaxton9534 6 лет назад +2

    I appreciate. the understanding of science thru the logic used by those who made the discoveries.It creates much easier system to learn by.This method creates a leaning process that appeals to natural intuitive thinking students can relate to.Excellent lecture

  • @ZeedijkMike
    @ZeedijkMike 7 лет назад +4

    Wow - What a great lecture.
    Interesting and entertaining.

  • @spritecut
    @spritecut 5 лет назад +1

    Great lecture. An extremely complex subject explained in a way that can be understood by anyone, which is a great achievement.

  • @darrylwillard2419
    @darrylwillard2419 7 лет назад +5

    Richard Feynman worked on QED after the war during the 1960s and got the Nobel Prize for his work.

  • @sanjuansteve
    @sanjuansteve 7 лет назад +1

    I’m a layman, but it seems the most obvious & logical explanation for particles acting like polarizable axial or circular, helical waves as they travel is that they’re orbiting something (a dark (or anti) matter particle perhaps).
    It's not unlike Earth being pulled into a wobble by the moon, or a distant star's wobble evidencing planet orbits making our trajectories as we fly thru space have an apparent axial or circular helical wave (like a packet) as well, depending on the orientation of the orbit.
    And since we think we know undetectable dark matter exists and should be 5 times as common as matter but don't yet know where it's distributed, it seems a logical possibility that we are in a sea of dark matter, even in otherwise empty space, and every particle (photons, electrons, etc) is paired (entangled) in orbit with one. I think gravitational waves could be dark matter waves and that gravity might be caused by the density of dark matter.
    This could explain the double slit experiment results, including with a detector with some interaction between the dark matter and the detector (and perhaps dark matter entanglement), it could explain the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, as well as explain the deflection of the axis of the particle's wave motion (orbit orientation) moving thru polarizing filters rotated less than 45 degrees apart, etc..
    Perhaps the only reason for photons' max speed limit is caused by the dark matter they're paired in orbit with interacting with other dark matter.
    This could also explain why the universe is expanding from the central singularity point of the big bang outward in all directions faster than the speed of light into previously completely empty universe space, given that there is no dark matter there yet.

    • @marksea64
      @marksea64 5 лет назад +1

      You're right about one thing: you're not a physicist.

  • @david203
    @david203 5 лет назад +7

    So the explanation is that the energy of gluons is the source of most mass. But this is really not much of an explanation. It is almost naming the problem away. The problem that remains, after hearing this talk, is the following: how does concentrating energy in order to form mass create a gravity well, a distortion of space and time, that makes other particles experience a force of attraction? There is nothing that I can see in General Relativity that explains this. This question is at the heart of the concept of mass, since we measure and observe mass according to its inertia or its gravitational force, yet this lecturer did not even attempt to address it.

    • @nealevans3977
      @nealevans3977 4 года назад

      Quite right

    • @paulm1241
      @paulm1241 4 года назад +1

      Actually GR does explain this very simply: there is no "gravitational force". The force you feel is the force the ground exerts on you to prevent you from following a natural straight line motion in curved spacetime, which is the free fall. In some sense you are constantly accelerated in curved spacetime, by the force exerted by the ground. But I agree he should have started by these basic facts about GR.

  • @ZeedijkMike
    @ZeedijkMike 5 лет назад +2

    The most enjoyable and interesting lecture I have seen for a long time.
    Pretty unresponsive audiences though.

  • @muskyelondragon
    @muskyelondragon 7 лет назад +25

    Well done sir, very good explanation delivered with style.

  • @aquimicadomecanico6132
    @aquimicadomecanico6132 5 лет назад +1

    I have enjoyed the clear and concise way of expressing.

  • @hvbris_
    @hvbris_ 7 лет назад +13

    Brilliant stuff

  • @kn9ioutom
    @kn9ioutom 6 лет назад +1

    RI HAS GREAT LECTURES ! THANK YOU VERY MUCH !

  • @jyz
    @jyz 5 лет назад +6

    LHC accelerates protons to 99.999999 % of light speed, not 99 % of light speed.

  • @JohnFHendry
    @JohnFHendry 6 лет назад

    The first step to understanding the nature of Mass is accepting the fact we observe the Universe of matter while in a state of oscillation creating 3 views of a moment arm: electron, muon, and tau, and that moving a weight to the end of a stick does not increase its Mass weight. But good luck telling that to a blind man holding the end of the stick up as you move the position of the weight out to the end. And remember... if space is connected to time then no two areas of space are "there" at the same time. A car driving up Main Street does not pass 2nd Street at the same time it goes past 3rd street even if it goes really fast and looks that way. I'm in my space... you are in your space, and relative to the observer no two observers holding E exist at the same time. "Relative to the Observer all other observers are behind in time." Time is not relative to multiple observers at the same time, time is relative a single Observer (O=E) in multiple places in time.
    31:08 Look on the other side of a black hole created by the subtrahend of the EM wave in the photon's force carrier space called the neutrino separating the weak force anti-particle phase timing (where the anti-electron holding E moves from positive to negative) from the strong force holding E where the electron moves from negative to positive and the fine structure constant shows E doing the moon dance: (e{a}/t=E.
    33:41 Anyone remember Sept 2011 when a "certain" particle with Mass was measured for years traveling 453.6 miles at (v-c)/c=2.48e-5 sec?
    "On June 8, 2012 CERN research director Sergio Bertolucci representing the four Gran Sasso teams (including OPERA) announced the speed of (massive) neutrinos is consistent with that of light. The press release, made from the 25th International Conference on Neutrino Physics and Astrophysics in Kyoto stated that the original years of OPERA measurements (following FIRMILABS) results were wrong, due to a loose cable and an equipment failure." "On July 12, 2012 OPERA updated their paper by including the new sources of errors in their calculations. They found agreement of neutrino speed with the speed of light." Of course this same light speed neutrino measurement was also made from many light years away before Sept 2011 and is well documented. And if that's not enough in a universe where "time tells all" turn the clock ahead some more to August 17, 2017 and look at the optical emissions from SSS17a 130 million light years away.
    Anyone educated in physics paying attention will notice it doesn’t matter if the massive neutrino exceeded the speed of light or traveled at the speed of light as BOTH observations are “impossible” and break the law of physics (as we know them) and are equally shocking. Yet after everything was “back to normal" with a massive particle traveling at the speed of light well confirmed silence took over. And the entire historic debate on Nature's Forum where these calculations below were posted next to CERN's own scientists was removed after replacing the longest debate ever posted by scientists on Nature's Forum and replacing the pages of historic and valuable posts with gibberish before removing it. After the text was copied and screen shots of the historic event were made of course. Many thought this was the “big one”… and it was adding a 4th oscillation phase to the atom and a 2nd reverse arrow to time with space connected as it should be.
    These simple calculations show (relative to muon phase timing) the asymmetry of the weak force adds 2.48e-5 sec to the speed of light traveling 453.6 mile by creating an asymmetry in time of 0.20e-5 sec.
    Weak Force Asymmetry {a} adds 1 hour/3600 seconds every 1000 years. RE: SLAC E158 ratio “using clocks”.
    3600 sec / 1000 years = 3.6 seconds WF Asy {a} added in one year.
    3.6 sec x 186282 (speed of light) = 670615.2 which is the {a} WF asy in distance added to the speed of light in one year so....
    670615.2 / 365.2425 days in a year = 1836.082055072999 is the {a} WF asy SOL distance added to speed of light in one day
    1836.082055072999 / 24 hours = 76.50341896137498 is the {a} WF asy time/distance added to speed of light in one hour
    76.50341896137498 / 60 minutes = 1.275056982689583 is the {a} WF asy added to speed of light in one minute
    1.275056982689583 / 60 seconds = 0.021250949711493 is the {a} WF asy added to speed of light in one second
    Now if the Earth were bigger and OPERA's neutrinos had traveled a little over 186282 miles (one second + WF Asy gained @ SOL) we would be done, but since they only traveled 453.6 miles we need to keep going till we get to the value of {a}added to the SOL traveling only 453.6 miles. So we divide the miles light travels in one second by the miles CERN's neutrinos traveled.
    186282 miles or one second/453.6 miles, the percentage of a one second gain which is = 410.6746031746032
    Now we divide 410.6746031746032 into the WF Asy one second gain of .021250949711493
    0.021250949711493 / 410.6746031746032= 5.174644243208279e-5
    That just gave us the total forward and back total neutrino oscillation WF Asy {a} time gained in 453.6 miles. Now notice it is almost exactly double OPERA's 2.48e-5sec SOL gain announced worldwide before the politics SLAC ignored stepped in. The next two calculations dividing it in half by using the 2.48e-5 forward arrow "stopping point" to add the .10e-5 sec remaining difference to the other half exposes a 4th oscillation phase of the atom (missing graviton, electron hole shown opposite the electron) and adds a second reverse arrow to time to support gravity as an asymmetry in time with an obvious and very short moment arm of force exposed.
    5.174644243208279e-5 / 2 = 2.58732212160414e-5 sec.
    Subtract the difference: 2.58e-5 - 2.48e-5 = 0.10e-5 sec... and add it to the other half. 0.10e-5 + 2.58e-5 = 2.68e-5.... to give the second reverse arrow a length of 2.68e-5 and an asymmetry in time, IE: a difference in length of .20e-5 sec compared to the forward arrow at 2.48e-5 sec.
    2.68e-5 - 2.48e-5 = .20e-5 sec.
    This shows wave cancellation with the remaining .20e-5 sec not canceled out to create the weaker force of gravity building up with nowhere
    to go creating gravity well. Call it what you like basic math can't lie. Due to the subtrahends large numeric size it is exposing the tiny moment arm involved described years in advance before Sept 2011.
    So using basic math we see that CERN and OPERA's neutrino measurement announced worldwide @ (v-c)/c =2.48e-5 sec in 453.6 miles creates an asymmetry in time of .20e-5 sec just as predicted by using the forward arrow gain of 2.48e-5 sec to show where we "fold" space to add the remaining spacetime that fits by filling in the second reverse Mass oscillation arrow with 2.68e-5 sec. creating an asymmetry in time of 0.20e-5 sec. just as it was predicted it would using SLAC's E158 weak force asymmetry ratio.
    The measurement created by years of averaging was correct but the neutrino did not exceed the speed of light, it was created at the speed of light and added to it because the neutrino is the photon's force carrier space, an empty eggshell of space so to speak, separating the weak force from the strong force and is a mechanical component of the weak force creating a speed of light clock generating photons. And that did change physics... but it did so by proving Einstein was correct again not wrong as they thought by replacing the uncertainty principle he was ridiculed for not accepting with SLAC's E158 weak force asymmetry ratio connected to cause and effect.... which was not known until 2004. And without it Einstein couldn't finish unification, and without Einstein there would be no foundation for SLAC and CERN working with OPERA to build on and deal with time dilation. When we look at the Sun we are looking at a speed of light clock yet out clocks move thanks to the asymmetry of the weak force. We live in a Universe where time is almost stopped with the E158 ratio adding 3.6 seconds a year at this level in time.
    SLAC went back over their BaBar experiment and confirmed the asymmetry in time their E158 ratio exposed and in late Nov 2012 announced time has asymmetry and gave the discovery a sigma 14 level of certainty. Even the Pauli effect couldn't affect this much data exposing the truth and showing the symmetry of the 4 forces is supported by an asymmetry within the fine structure constant connected to time dilation: (e{a})/t=E.

  • @itsnotatoober
    @itsnotatoober 6 лет назад +4

    The title was better than the speech

  • @ArnfinnRian
    @ArnfinnRian 7 лет назад +2

    Hearing this guy talk I have developed a sliver of hope that quantum physics actually may be explained at some point.

  • @brandonmorad737
    @brandonmorad737 6 лет назад +3

    Supper excellent explanation, Thank you very much

  • @variator7466
    @variator7466 5 лет назад

    Every once in a while you stumble across a really good speaker and they all seem to have the one thing in common that they have written a book about the subject

  • @IIoveasl10
    @IIoveasl10 6 лет назад +5

    Very interesting! And Jim Baggott, the speaker is :1)very intelligent and 2)very funny! Thanks for putting it up. David

  • @robertbrandywine
    @robertbrandywine 6 лет назад +2

    1) Don't be put off by the first 2:10 seconds of his talk.
    2) I thought we might be learning what matter is because I was confused about the difference between matter and mass. We don't learn what matter "really" is -- how could we, what would be an answer that would satisfy us?
    3) So most mass comes from energy -- but again -- what is energy? We don't get an answer to that either and again, what would be an answer that would satisfy us?

  • @cosmicwarriorx1
    @cosmicwarriorx1 7 лет назад +109

    What a fascinating lucid lecture.. 👏👏👏
    I like his witty style of delivery....👍

    • @sanjchiro
      @sanjchiro 7 лет назад +3

      I agree

    • @terranhealer
      @terranhealer 7 лет назад +3

      I liked one of his opening statements "I know it's not apparent that all authors set out to write something with an intention, but that's what I did here"

    • @presa609
      @presa609 7 лет назад +1

      I agree. The arrogant don't have the time though, as you can see in the denigrating comments. I'd like to see what their lectures sound like.

    • @alangarland8571
      @alangarland8571 7 лет назад +4

      I think you must have spilled your drink on the capslock key.

    • @nandodenandos6957
      @nandodenandos6957 6 лет назад

      There are GALAXIES that travel faster than the speed of light and they are not flat 2D objects!!! all this is just rubbish!!

  • @gautambasu1586
    @gautambasu1586 3 года назад +2

    Fantastic talk. Very smart presentation. Loved so much. Superb.

  • @Ouvii
    @Ouvii 6 лет назад +12

    2:18 Those symbols for the four elements are from Avatar The Last Airbender. Lol

    • @larryyoung4827
      @larryyoung4827 5 лет назад +2

      Overkillius
      Where do you think they got it from ?

  • @edwardlee2794
    @edwardlee2794 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks for your lecture. It helps me understand more about Higgs boson and mass. It mentions gluons too. Thanks again and keep up with the good work. From HK

  • @macbuff81
    @macbuff81 7 лет назад +4

    very cool. I hated physics in high school. It just seemed do foreign. However, I was able to follow this lecture. It's a great feeling to finally understand something I thought was beyond my understanding. Keep it up!

    • @wbiro
      @wbiro 6 лет назад

      I was a million lightyears away from physics in high school (sadly)...

  • @alcyone1349
    @alcyone1349 2 года назад

    Would have bever really crossed my mind to think of mass as "just energy" but it's literally written in the formulae such as the one of Einstein. Thank you Jim and thanks for Ri and RUclips for the chance.

  • @davids9522
    @davids9522 6 лет назад +7

    I'll make it short for you. We dont know what mass is. End.

    • @labibbidabibbadum
      @labibbidabibbadum 5 лет назад +3

      The most astounding thing is our lack of even the most basic knowledge.
      Mass? We know what it does but we don't know what it is.
      Energy? We know what it does but we don't know what it is.
      Magnetism? We know what it does but we don't know what it is.
      Strong/weak force? We know what they do but we don't know what they are.
      Charge? We know what it does but we don't know what it is.
      Dark matter? We (kind of) know what it does but we don't know what it is.
      Consciousness? We know what it does but we don't know what it is.
      Free will? We know what it feels like but we don't know whether we have it.
      Anyone who thinks there isn't as much work ahead of absolute basic science and philosophy is kidding themselves. We have done amazing work to find out how the essential parts of the universe fit together. One day we might begin to understand what they actually are.

    • @FistOfMichallin
      @FistOfMichallin 5 лет назад +2

      @@labibbidabibbadum It's an endless fractal. When you know what something is at its' essence relative to your experience of it, you will only find more that you don't know about. That said, we can, if we wanted to, conclude that these elements of reality simply *are*. Science doesn't like that, though, but unfortunately, there's a limit to human perception; there is no limit to reality.

    • @yogeshnagpal3671
      @yogeshnagpal3671 4 года назад +2

      @@labibbidabibbadum finally some people I like

  • @net81j
    @net81j 7 лет назад +1

    I needed it. It answered a question that's been bothering me for a quite awhile.
    But, now I need to know more about Gluons and Higgs Field.

    • @wbiro
      @wbiro 6 лет назад

      the philosophical question is, 'Why Bother?' and if you arrive at the ultimate answer to that, then the next question is 'Now What?' and, if you've decided on a course of action, the next question is, 'How?' If you want skip the mental effort, I've given the answer below (which are the core of my philosophy of universal survival and morality - read it)...
      "Why Bother?" Because consciousness is a good thing (consider the alternative - no consciousness).
      "Now What?" Now you pursue the ultimate goal of life, which is to secure the ultimate value of life, which is securing consciousness in a harsh and deadly universe.
      "How?" By employing the Strategies of Broader Survival, which are comprised of the three Lower Strategies (which all of life uses, right down to microbes): Population Increase, Population Diversity, Population Dispersal, and the three Higher Strategies (which emerged with our higher consciousness): Extended Reason, Proaction, and Higher Technology.

  • @RWBHere
    @RWBHere 6 лет назад +7

    One howler, throughout his fascinating talk, is that there was no Year 0. The last year before our common era was 1 BCE, and that was followed by 1CE. In other words, the first year of our calendar would have been 1.

    • @pigsbishop99
      @pigsbishop99 5 лет назад

      Use of the expression 'Common era' is a 'howler'. Don't subscribe to the indoctrination everybody.

    • @jbt-qu6lm
      @jbt-qu6lm 5 лет назад +1

      @@pigsbishop99
      I bet you literally don't know what AD means. Also, the indoctrination is what has happened to you that makes you so incredibly opposed to religion neutral language that not only doesn't actually change anything and also *doesn't actually change* the Christ-centric placing of year 1. Granted I bet you also think the Crusades were good, if you believed they happened at all.

    • @lunam7249
      @lunam7249 2 года назад

      You are wize...and correct...I could go further, however it would become a book....the elite who run this planet, spend thier time keeping everyone(sheep) in distraction or false theory or outright deception....

  • @extradimension7356
    @extradimension7356 6 лет назад

    @34:00 bit of a "Clanger" light has vertical and horizontal polarization (linear polarization), but it also has circular polarization , CW and CCW (clockwise and counter clockwise) around the direction of travel.

    • @ferdinandkraft857
      @ferdinandkraft857 6 лет назад

      It's the same phenomenon. Linear polarization is just CW and CCW superimposed. Or, viewed classically, as electric and magnetic fields that oscillate without rotating.

    • @extradimension7356
      @extradimension7356 6 лет назад

      @@ferdinandkraft857 You might like this... ruclips.net/video/8YkfEft4p-w/видео.html
      Worth watching to the end.

  • @thekaiser4333
    @thekaiser4333 7 лет назад +7

    I know ice, especially Ice9.

  • @gregfridholm2136
    @gregfridholm2136 5 лет назад

    Bingo! Thank you. I haven't even watched the video yet, but when I graduated from US High School 40 years ago I was quite confident I knew the physics definition of the word 'mass.' The older I get, the less confident I have become. Hopefully, an hour from now, I will have the reanimated confidence of a new high school graduate. What is mass?
    6:05 OK? Happy? Um, no, way out of our comfort zone, perhaps, eh?
    44:44 (47:12) Ahh, thank you. There is the answer.

  • @tabaks
    @tabaks 7 лет назад +123

    20-minute content stretched into almost full 50 minutes of pain.

    • @yashodakrishna2351
      @yashodakrishna2351 7 лет назад +8

      ?????
      are u kidding???

    • @andreas_fi
      @andreas_fi 7 лет назад +14

      I have to agree. It´s pretty dragging.

    • @walshamite
      @walshamite 7 лет назад +4

      I just can't focus on this style of teaching any more. Give me a snappy VSAUCE-type presentation every time. Things, thankfully, have moved on.

    • @jaredsimpson5672
      @jaredsimpson5672 7 лет назад +28

      education isn't entertainment

    • @yashodakrishna2351
      @yashodakrishna2351 7 лет назад +3

      JAred it is
      For the engrossed ones at least

  • @ruthconradie8650
    @ruthconradie8650 3 года назад +2

    Very interesting and entertaining. Lovely sense of humour. Thank you.

  • @captainmeowzers
    @captainmeowzers 6 лет назад +4

    another great lecture @ the Ri

  • @ryandoeren6638
    @ryandoeren6638 2 года назад +2

    One of my favorite lectures. I really appreciate your storytelling and the pace of relevant information Jim. Although, I'm curious why you showed a picture of Niels Bohr but used a quote from de Broglie when introducing quantum mechanics?

  • @jamesanonymous2343
    @jamesanonymous2343 7 лет назад +4

    after 46 min. I now know less about "m" than I thought I knew b/4

    • @anantapadmanabhmyatagiri
      @anantapadmanabhmyatagiri 4 года назад

      Bro that's what a learning is how much more you learn that much less you know and it's endless

  • @MuriloAIto
    @MuriloAIto 8 месяцев назад

    Amazing lecture! Thank you so much for the chronological summary of theories.

  • @nazosman984
    @nazosman984 6 лет назад +5

    Thank you RI, but that was a difficult watch

    • @35milesoflead
      @35milesoflead 5 лет назад

      Think they need a new sound engineer to help them out a bit.

  • @chetnasirodaria3579
    @chetnasirodaria3579 4 года назад +1

    This man presented each and everything for which i was wondering for 3-4 years and gave me most satisfying and logical answers. He is great explainer and btw audience sucks!!

  • @holdmybeer
    @holdmybeer 7 лет назад +20

    tough crowd in the comment section. id like to see half of you keyboard warriors give a lecturer.

    • @jhwheuer
      @jhwheuer 6 лет назад +1

      Agreed, I my experience, once you commit to a sequence of detailed powerpoint slides with text, you can no longer play the room.. and if the room is different fro: what you expect, it’s an uphill walk... I did a few lectures that bombed hard that way.. now using images and videos, mostly

    • @ArthurHau
      @ArthurHau 6 лет назад

      You will be amazed who these keyboard warriors are! :) Amongst them, there are kids, but there are also professionals and/or highly intelligent people!

    • @vc2702
      @vc2702 6 лет назад

      It's good to have people help correct his video's. And yes it's horrible when people are just saying thing's to tare down another person when all he is trying to do is enlighten others. If i was him i would think of ways to be more detailed in giving information. I would not treat people like kids, i would give honest information and not sugarcoat the information. You can make it simple with out making it to simple.

    • @jackshepard8070
      @jackshepard8070 6 лет назад

      @@ArthurHau Highly intelligent people? How do you know? The comments certainly don't indicate that. Yeah, maybe it is the crafty way they shit all over someone else's work.

    • @leov4751
      @leov4751 6 лет назад +1

      I have given quite a few lectures and presentations. I was always happy to be told new information / viewpoints. It helps to improve.

  • @thijsdebont
    @thijsdebont 7 лет назад

    21:32 Quotes and talks about Louis De Broglie -> shows a photograph of Niels Bohr. Bohr was only 15 years old in 1900.

  • @derekokeeffe9919
    @derekokeeffe9919 7 лет назад +97

    Pro-tip. Menu > playback speed > 1.5x

    • @nimehage
      @nimehage 7 лет назад +9

      Derek OKeeffe 1.25 good for me, btw ty

    • @Stevie-joes6851
      @Stevie-joes6851 7 лет назад +2

      Derek OKeeffe Too slow, I watch at 100 million ×

    • @matochkinsaasia7350
      @matochkinsaasia7350 7 лет назад +1

      That is better. Thanks

    • @omhekde
      @omhekde 7 лет назад

      Derek OKeeffe i did the same

    • @therocinante3443
      @therocinante3443 7 лет назад +1

      That way you can hear the nose breathing in -1.5 speed.. Couldn't watch because of that.

  • @PresCalvinCoolidge
    @PresCalvinCoolidge 2 года назад

    Question: @49:29 Jim says the proton mass comes from, "1% up & down quarks" and "99% the energy of the massless gluons". What about the kinetic energy of the moving quarks? Wouldn't this energy also explain part of the mass.

  • @RomanNumural9
    @RomanNumural9 7 лет назад +24

    I absolutely love this lecturer and the content was very interesting. I'd love to see more from him

    • @fburton8
      @fburton8 7 лет назад

      I only just realized this is the same guy who wrote the superb book "The Quantum Story: a history in 40 moments" - the best treatment of this fascinating subject I've come across.

    • @TheDruidKing
      @TheDruidKing 7 лет назад

      I agree Josh! He should've gained at least 40kg to give this lecture. Brmp Tsss.

  • @zacoolm
    @zacoolm Год назад +1

    Amazing lecture even I understood most of it, thank you Jim!

  • @ViktorSolenoid
    @ViktorSolenoid 6 лет назад +4

    pro-tip. the lecture starts at 46:53 and ends at 48:15 . the rest is well known history, heavy breathing and unfortunate jokes.

  • @andrewpaulhart
    @andrewpaulhart 4 года назад +1

    Absolutely brilliant. Thank you for that expansion of my understanding