Erik Verlinde Public Lecture: A New View on Gravity and the Dark Side of the Cosmos

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  • čas přidán 19. 05. 2024
  • In his public lecture at Perimeter on October 4, 2017, Dr. Erik Verlinde explored the core ideas behind this research into emergent gravity, and examine the implications of this potential revolution in our understanding of the universe.
    Perimeter Institute (charitable registration number 88981 4323 RR0001) is the world’s largest independent research hub devoted to theoretical physics, created to foster breakthroughs in the fundamental understanding of our universe, from the smallest particles to the entire cosmos. The Perimeter Institute Public Lecture Series is made possible in part by the support of donors like you. Be part of the equation: perimeterinstitute.ca/inspiri...
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Komentáře • 1K

  • @IIVVBlues
    @IIVVBlues Před 6 lety +27

    I am reminded that since, in cosmological time, we've only been observing the universe from the perspective of a single point for a fraction of a moment in time as we understand it, we really know almost nothing at all and all of our theories of existence are tentative.
    At our present state of evolution, we can never hope to reach an understanding of the thing, but perhaps this is a case where the journey is more important than the destination.
    Dr. Verlinde has given me a glimpse of that journey. Thinking back on what I have just viewed has given me goose bumps! Thank you for the ride.

    • @TheMeaningCode
      @TheMeaningCode Před 4 lety +1

      John If you are interested in looking at this concept of a universe constructed on information, you might enjoy this interview reflecting on universal truths gained through art and life experience but coming to the very same conclusion. czcams.com/video/HlMgGkwWUNY/video.html

  • @DeadWhiteButterflies
    @DeadWhiteButterflies Před 6 lety +23

    Erik Verlinde casually roasting Dark Matter for an hour. Love it XD

    • @robertproffitt287
      @robertproffitt287 Před 3 lety +1

      Thats really a good observation on ur oart..bad for him roasting a theory thats invisible but there. Kinda like consciousness he def a materialist.

    • @tomstarin1574
      @tomstarin1574 Před 3 lety

      Yes

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB Před 2 lety

      Lies again? Soccer Club

  • @friendlyone2706
    @friendlyone2706 Před rokem +1

    I'm thankful for an internet that lets us in the hinterlands watch brilliant people expound on new ideas.

  • @SandersStuff4u
    @SandersStuff4u Před 6 lety +10

    Great out of the box thinking. If confirmed, being able to knock a fundamental force from the standard model would be more of an achievement than just a nobel prize!

    • @voornaam3191
      @voornaam3191 Před rokem

      What I like about Verlinde, is that he is a Dutch scientist, doing a very good job. Do check Lewin and Dijkgraaf, working for famous American universities. Those two love explaining things.

    • @voornaam3191
      @voornaam3191 Před rokem

      If he would cause a breakthrough in nuclear fusion, more people would benefit NOW. Implications for the future could be interesting. Burning Texas oil is not the way we all should get energy. Burning is wasting material. Gone. Only some gasses left. Hope this new science finds CLEAN energy from atom cores. Without your old age persons all dying from cancer. Ever noticed THEY DO?!

  • @roman2011
    @roman2011 Před 6 lety +4

    I love these lectures. Thank you, Pi!

  • @kataseiko
    @kataseiko Před 6 lety +13

    Much more plausible than "hey, there's stuff we can't see or measure or even prove that it's there."

    • @nihlify
      @nihlify Před 4 lety +2

      That's not how science works...

    • @MrSuperman957
      @MrSuperman957 Před 3 lety

      @asdf More like Hypothesis

    • @onderozenc4470
      @onderozenc4470 Před 3 lety

      Existance of dark matter was proven gravitational but the enigma is how they were formed.

  • @bobbymah2682
    @bobbymah2682 Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks Dr Verlinde and Perimeter Institute. I truly hope Dr. Verlinde is right and solves gravity. Hope he wins the Nobel prize.

  • @makermarx8862
    @makermarx8862 Před 2 lety +1

    He puts forward a clear explanation of the way he understands things.

  • @bkbland1626
    @bkbland1626 Před 6 lety +3

    Fascinating. Thank you for provoking, or promoting thought.

  • @DavidODuvall
    @DavidODuvall Před 6 lety +28

    A very interesting idea. Thank you Dr. Verlinde!

    • @franklipsky149
      @franklipsky149 Před 6 lety

      David : I agree ;he has ignited my interest in qubits

  • @veronicaalessandrello1022

    I hope is not too late to share a comment about this wonderful lecture.
    I am fascinated with Dr Erik Verlinde and his view on how many scientists for many years have been 'orbiting' around Newton's law of GRAVITY without realizing that something was missing and another approach was needed in order to solve the Big Questions.
    If my intuition is right, Dr Verlinde might have come across a work from an amateur that challenged the idea of Impact craters in 2006 at the 1st International Conference of Impact Craters organized by ESA in Holland. It was my work. Large Scale Gas Bubbles Bursting Mechanism Vs Impact Craters. I was confident to question to everyone in that conference what Verlinde said about the scientist jumping to conclusions without knowing much of what things are made of. I questioned how gravity was wrongly seen and calculated to justify perpendicular impacts from a meteor or asteroid. I questioned how a scientist can calculate the gravity of a distant planet if they don't know how many gas bubbles are trapped inside its body? That clearly affects density, therefore the mass and the whole calculation of gravity. Right? haha, Later Prof Brian Cox explained in a documentary that actually the gravity in other distant planets could be estimated by their capacity to hold an atmosphere.
    Also liked that Dr Verlinde opposes the idea of the Big Bang. I support him 100%
    If I was right with the gas bubble bursting on the surface of planets as the mechanism that shaped craters, then those planets were droplets of fluid matter that must have come from a high energy event and were experiencing basic principles of Thermodynamics.
    Inevitably, This thought led me to rethink the Big Bang too. I called it the Big Sneeze. ; )
    I am not a physicist and not a theorist, but have always been inspired by Richard Feynman lectures and interviews.
    It was very reassuring to hear Dr Verlinde views on Gravity, Thermodynamics and black holes. I don't feel like a fish out of the water anymore.
    Thank you for such amazing lecture.

  • @coastwalker101
    @coastwalker101 Před 6 lety +1

    Excellent introduction to the field leading up to the new idea that is described at 42 minutes. I find it perplexing that the Stanford crowd have not visibly discussed Eric Verlinde's concept. They are after all keenly interested in the collision of information theory and black hole horizons. Of course there is plenty of circumstantial evidence that dark matter exists, the keystone of which is that simulations of the evolution of the distribution of matter in the universe works with dark matter. Eric seems well justified in persuing the concept currently.

  • @skroot7975
    @skroot7975 Před 6 lety +44

    starts at 2:54 if you wanna skip the intro

    • @hansschmalberger2922
      @hansschmalberger2922 Před 6 lety

      Skroot dam i clicked ur link and it brought me back a few seconds...

    • @Brinta3
      @Brinta3 Před 5 lety

      Took me more than three minutes to arrive at your comment.

    • @r7diego
      @r7diego Před 4 lety

      i wanna skip the full talk

    • @robwells5753
      @robwells5753 Před 4 lety +1

      @@r7diego go to 109:15

  • @hongyuan
    @hongyuan Před 6 lety +10

    I am not a physicist. But I think I can follow some of the key ideas. Good talk. I like the new view of how matters in our cosmos may interact through information.

    • @vagizz
      @vagizz Před 6 lety

      it might be information :)

    • @pjcle1
      @pjcle1 Před 6 lety

      You didn't understand what Hongyuan Li said. he said How it interacts through information.

  • @muhanadjamjum9137
    @muhanadjamjum9137 Před 6 lety +1

    Very interesting and clever (yet daring) to use quantum mechanics to explain dark areas of gravity, while a few years back gravity was clearly widely accepted and quantum was seen as behaving erratically (The irony of things sometimes!) but I love how we are stretching our possible solutions and thinking out of the box. I find it very informative and promising. I hope it leads to a better explanation of our universe. Thank you for the post.

  • @chrisstanford3652
    @chrisstanford3652 Před 5 lety +2

    A very interesting conclusion/conjecture, quite a bit to digest from a single lecture, will need to study more, thankyou for something profound to 🤔

  • @FobbitMike
    @FobbitMike Před 6 lety +82

    Dark matter never seemed to be a plausable explanation for galaxy rotation curves. The anamalous gravitational changes always happen at the same distance from the galactic center. That would mean that Dark Matter would have to be distributed in a very specific way each and every time. Verlinde's theory does away with this ad hoc methodology and replaces it with what so far has had some empirically verified mathematics. Can you say "future Nobel winner"? I hope he's right!

    • @r3d0c
      @r3d0c Před 6 lety

      lol alright

    • @naimulhaq9626
      @naimulhaq9626 Před 6 lety +3

      Mixing elasticity, entanglement, qubits, produced Verlinde's emergent gravity theory. What remains is to merge 3-d information on 2-d surface, which he claims to be an assumption.

    • @bobblacka918
      @bobblacka918 Před 6 lety +8

      Mike Petersen: Agree completely. I never completely bought into the Dark Matter / Dark Energy theory. Always seemed like a lame fudge factor to make the equations work.

    • @nihlify
      @nihlify Před 6 lety +7

      Well, neither the theory of dark matter or dark energy says exactly what it is, so no sane person "buys it" completely.

    • @SpenserRoger
      @SpenserRoger Před 6 lety +7

      Erik Nilsson You're right. Every morning I grab a dark coffee but I rarely consume it completely.

  • @Euquila
    @Euquila Před 6 lety +8

    I'm 15 minutes in and I am so happy right now.
    Edit: wow that was amazing. I have had similar ideas the past few years and I'm glad that this view is emerging :)

  • @bobblacka918
    @bobblacka918 Před 6 lety +2

    I'm pretty sure this will be mainstream science in about ten years. It passes the simplicity and "beauty" test and just seems intuitively right.

    • @user-lb8qx8yl8k
      @user-lb8qx8yl8k Před rokem +1

      You really think it passes the simplicity test? This talk wasn't bad but his original 51 page paper is a beast!!

    • @aurelienyonrac
      @aurelienyonrac Před 10 měsíci

      ​​@@user-lb8qx8yl8khe concept is simple. Gravity is the deformation of space time like in any slope it goes up one way and goes down the other and actually does not move. Add a dimension it expands and contracts depending in where you look and does not move at all.
      At quantum level the space is flat and empty but particle and anti particle pop in and out.
      A funny way of seeing that is an infinit row of chair and on it is an infinit football team. That is empty space. Is there room for one more player
      Yes. Player one gets up and moves to seat of number 2 who gets up and move to ...
      That is a gravitational wave.
      It works like an edge dislocation in a metal that is bent. Matter is shards of space time.
      Now make the row move one way and the team an other, that is gravity and space time bending.
      An other way of looking at it is : pull on a stocking, that ilustate a black hole.
      Now if you take the fabric where you pinch as your frame of reference, it appears that a dark energy is pushing the fabric away from you. 😅
      It means that who is wearing the stocking is pulling there way.
      Seeing the size difference between dark energy and our univers i would say we are pulling on the stocking of our mother 😂
      And every black hole is our children universe.😮
      I think that is what he is saying but he dies not want to say.
      Because today is the leading edge of the universe ❤... eternaly.
      So yes. It is pretty static and dynamic all at once.

  • @reggiepantig963
    @reggiepantig963 Před 5 lety

    He said that spacetime is so stiff. I find it amazing that we can still occupy a region in spacetime, a thing we cannot do occupying the space occupied by a massive material object.

  • @NeilRieck
    @NeilRieck Před 6 lety +55

    I attended the lecture and found it thought-provoking. Like many people today, the speaker (Erik Verlinde) is bothered about the band-aid invention of DARK MATTER and DARK ENERGY ("how can we claim that 95% of the universe is missing with no experimental evidence"). He alluded to the fact that these DARK topics are similar to the previous century's PLANET VULCAN (postulated to explain the strange orbit of Mercury before Einstein's General Theory of Relativity)

    • @w0rmblood323
      @w0rmblood323 Před 6 lety +13

      Dark Matter and Dark Energy were not "invented", they are an intricate derivative of currently known cosmology.
      The universe does not conform to our views on how it should be, the best evidence still predicts dark matter and dark energy.
      Nobody believed Einstein for years, yet he has been 100% correct on every count of relativity, every prediction made has been confirmed and no other model currently exists that comes even close to challenging this. Any new model would need to still be as accurate as his but also go drastically further, without "inventing" new physics or observations.

    • @brokensilence6790
      @brokensilence6790 Před 6 lety +11

      Nicholas Bolding. Where do you get your information from, that can be condensed into your above comment? There are numerous volumes of scientific papers, from every camp, that are contrary to what you have stated. I'm still undecided. Once one ventures into Quantum Field, it seems to come undone. Doesn't really matter which way I look; out or in, I end up dizzy anyway.

    • @Nehmo
      @Nehmo Před 6 lety +4

      Bullet cluster: astrobites.org/2016/11/04/the-bullet-cluster-a-smoking-gun-for-dark-matter/
      Convincing evidence of dark matter

    • @robotguy
      @robotguy Před 6 lety +7

      Dark Matter has never been observed, only inferred like epicycles. In fact, both Dark Matter and Dark Energy are identical to epicycles, constructed so we don't have to admit that our formulas for gravity are wrong.

    • @bgswblusteringgales8740
      @bgswblusteringgales8740 Před 6 lety +5

      Actually, they are actually much more similar to the "Phlogiston" theory which plagued science and chemistry for hundreds of years...

  • @ThinkTank255
    @ThinkTank255 Před 6 lety +3

    I want to point out that his claim that the deviation occurs at a "very specific point" is a lie. The deviation occurs at the point where the mass drops off. This has been known for a very long time. The constant H is *very* small 2.2*10^-18 s (you almost never see it written that way but that is what it is). So he could plug in ANY small value on the right and it would work.

  • @mitchmartin1871
    @mitchmartin1871 Před 6 lety +1

    I totally agree with you Dr. Verlinde about your uneasy feeling of how gravity has been described. I have felt that my whole life. I also feel like you are on the very much the right tract. Please keep up the brilliant research. It would be the most impactful science in history to achieve a correct theory of gravity.

  • @AdventureswithAixe596
    @AdventureswithAixe596 Před 6 lety +2

    Excellent approach and very exiting how it will develop further. It brings physics closer to ancient wisdom (I personally believe that once upon a time humanity had solved these questions profoundly better and that we have very few bits of information left). I heard very similar ideas from "alternative" scientists (like Nassim Harramein) but it is good to see that now people from the high end core of science are getting there from other angles of approach.

    • @aurelienyonrac
      @aurelienyonrac Před 10 měsíci

      You got that right Sir. Each person is rediscovering the univers all over again. If that is not reincarnation.😅

  • @charlesbrightman4237
    @charlesbrightman4237 Před 6 lety +5

    It's maybe possible that the universe is NOT expanding, ('space' itself expanding), but that 'time' (being defined as the flow of energy), is slowing down giving us a relative perspective of an expanding universe.
    Or, maybe our solar system is being pulled toward our galactic center faster and faster due to the gravitational pull on our solar system getting stronger and stronger the closer we get to the galactic center, hence we perceive a universe expanding faster and faster including a red shift of energy of galaxies away from ours.
    Or, maybe some are all are true? 'Space' expanding AND 'time' slowing down AND maybe our solar system is being pulled toward our galactic center.
    Why is it that only 'space' expanding is the explanation of what is observed?

    • @Effivera
      @Effivera Před 6 lety

      Charles Brightman Wow, those are some very thought provoking speculations I had not seen before. Are you a physicist Charles?

    • @charlesbrightman4237
      @charlesbrightman4237 Před 6 lety

      Thanks, and 'no' I am not a physicist. But I have self studied various sciences including quantum physics and advanced quantum physics.
      In addition, some of the drugs the government has me on to fight my cancer has had a side effect of clarifying my thoughts.
      I can also reasonably show how the dual slit experiment can be explained by utilizing QED and that the wave particle duality is just an illusion; and that there are probably 120 chemical elements in this universe to round off the Periodic Table of the Elements; and that what is called 'gravity' is possibly a part of what is currently recognized as the 'photon'. 'Gravity' would be the force that makes the sine wave of em expand and contract and would act 90 degrees to the em forces which would act 90 degrees to each other. And there is more too.
      But, going back to the above, why is it 'only' space expanding to explain what is observed?
      Why this matters:
      Modern science claims that this Earth and it's Sun will not last for literally all of future eternity. This appears to be currently true. So, species from Earth will have to get off of this Earth and out of this solar system to survive longer into the future.
      But now, 'if' our solar system is being pulled toward our galactic center, utilizing known forces of nature too, no dark energy or dark matter needed, then we would either have to be able to move about this galaxy or more probably have to be able to leave it one day to continue to survive into the future.
      I currently believe that main stream modern science might be wrong about this universe expanding, but we would still have to get off of this Earth and out of this solar system and possibly have to be able to leave this galaxy too. Of course, if main stream modern science is correct about this universe expanding and that it would most probably end in a 'big freeze', then we all most probably die one day anyway.
      Life itself is either ultimately meaningless or it isn't. Life itself is all just an illusion that will end one day and be forgotten or it won't.
      "What exactly matters throughout all of future eternity and to whom does it actually eternally matter to?"
      "God" alone? and/or "Me" too? and/or "Some other entity or entities"?
      OR
      "To no eternally consciously existent entity at all"?
      Currently the analysis would indicate the later to be really true and that life itself is all just an illusion, an illusion that will all end one day and be forgotten. But, as I don't know what I don't know, I will be the first to admit that I could be wrong. But, I either am or I am not. Which is it in actual reality?

    • @Ashenshugura
      @Ashenshugura Před 6 lety

      Light travels at a constant (C) so, we know via light red shifting that "slowing" of universal time is not causing spacetime expansion. Also in every direction we look out into space the other galaxies (except Andromeda, the closest galaxy to the Milky way) is traveling away from us faster and faster. I would love for this to not be true for eventual human colonization of all of the universe but, at this junction in time it seems like wormholes might be our only saving grace for universal colonization.

    • @charlesbrightman4237
      @charlesbrightman4237 Před 6 lety

      Ashen Shugur
      It is claimed that light travels at a constant (C), BUT modern science also claims that 'time' varies.
      "Speed" is distance divided by 'time'. If 'time' varies, then speed and/or distance would also have to vary. Basic math.
      "IF" our solar system were being pulled toward our galactic center, due to known forces of gravity too, no 'dark energy' and/or 'dark matter' even needed, then we would still perceive a red shifting of light from far away galaxies. And the closer and closer we get to the center of the galaxy, the stronger and stronger the gravitational pull on our solar system causing our solar system to be pulled in faster and faster, giving us a relative perspective of a universe expanding faster and faster.
      So, utilizing the scientific principal of Occam's razor, which scenario is more probable? Our solar system being pulled toward our galactic center faster and faster utilizing known forces of nature, OR that 'space' itself is expanding and even speeding up as it does so, and things like 'dark energy' have to be created to explain the observations of which 'dark energy' has yet to be found, plus one of the foundations of science is that energy cannot be created nor destroyed. So, where is this 'dark energy' hiding if it can't be created?
      But anyway,
      a. What exactly is 'space' to you that it can expand?
      b. What exactly is 'time' to you that it can vary?

    • @bobblacka918
      @bobblacka918 Před 6 lety +1

      Charles Brightman: Good one. I agree.

  • @paxwallacejazz
    @paxwallacejazz Před 6 lety +6

    Entanglement looks very different from higher dimensions doesn't it?

    • @klauskerl7400
      @klauskerl7400 Před 6 lety +2

      No, to me it doesn't. Entanglement may be direct evidence of extra dimensions.

    • @supertofue5946
      @supertofue5946 Před 6 lety

      Klaus Kerl
      .. interpretation is still only subjectivity ..

    • @paxwallacejazz
      @paxwallacejazz Před 6 lety

      Klaus Kerl dude what do you think I am saying. That's why the question about disappearing gravitons whose discovery would support string theory.

    • @supertofue5946
      @supertofue5946 Před 6 lety

      paxwallicejazz
      another interpretation on entanglement and gravitons could be that the disappearance is direct evidence of nodes in wave oscillation as sympathetic pairings - that the disappearances are a zero-point (or even that point's complement) or other property of wave anatomy from wave propagation, and not an inference for extra n-dimensional planing ... just sayin'..

    • @paxwallacejazz
      @paxwallacejazz Před 6 lety

      SuperToFue ah gee not quite as exciting as Ed Witten's idea about closed loops being able freely traverse around our multiverse. But conceded. Still the discovery of disappearing Gravitons wouldn't disprove the 11 dimensional multiverse.

  • @kennethferland5579
    @kennethferland5579 Před 6 lety +2

    I remember hearing about Entropic Gravity from a grad student online (on a minecraft server) before it was famous. But is it by sure the hottest theory in cosmology because it has huge implications. Entropic Gravity explains MOND, the observation of a minimum gravitational acceleration which completely eliminates the need for Dark Matter.

  • @tuomashamm5227
    @tuomashamm5227 Před 6 lety

    Very nice Mr. Verlinde - it is just so hard so get in touch with you - because I have the quantum space/time dynamic explaining how gravity is emerging - On my side the math is missing but the explanation is complete - and it is a background independent string-theoretical explanation close to Bohm´s mechanics and it also doesn´t need any dark ingredients to explain the cosmos even not in the very beginning (filament structure)

  • @johnmcardle8016
    @johnmcardle8016 Před 5 lety +8

    Gravity just refuses to cooperate, however hopefully one day it will fall in line with our preconceived theories.

    • @ivanniyeha4229
      @ivanniyeha4229 Před 3 lety

      gravity is a form of electrostatic force all fundamental forces are electrostatic force

    • @rudolphguarnacci197
      @rudolphguarnacci197 Před 3 lety

      It better, or we'll take it out. Boom! Boom!

  • @fransiscowijaya
    @fransiscowijaya Před 6 lety +5

    48:32 - When you lost the topic just 1 sec.

  • @pb4520
    @pb4520 Před 6 lety +1

    this made me think of Victor Borge a great great guy! thankyou for this!!!

  • @MichaelHarrisIreland
    @MichaelHarrisIreland Před 4 lety +1

    That we have human's like Verlinde in our midst, is a miracle in itself. The thirst for knowing everything reminds me why Eve eat the apple in that story. I hope we never get to the end of this quest, it's like if we were born in a fairy tale world, with all it's nightmares, none of which bother me at this moment but could at any time.

  • @damo5701
    @damo5701 Před 6 lety +6

    If gravity is entangled with entanglement (excuse the pun) then it should be instantaneous i.e. faster than C; unless space/time has some form of inertia on the information exchange or reaction to the information exchange.

    • @qqqqqqqqqq7488
      @qqqqqqqqqq7488 Před 6 lety +1

      Damo for goodness sake, is it possible you give a brief view to the physics of the last 100 years before belching non sense?

  • @dennisvvugt
    @dennisvvugt Před 6 lety +6

    Dr. Verlinde is smart

  • @ArnoldvanKampen
    @ArnoldvanKampen Před 6 lety +1

    @10:45
    It reminds me of this saying: quantity changes quality.

  • @riverfreddy
    @riverfreddy Před rokem

    One black hole is quite larger than the other one. Time stops at the horizons? Or at the singularities? The holes are pulling spacetime as they spin and as they spin around each other in the same direction or, alternately, in a different direction. Are the axis aligned or anti aligned? Semi aligned? What happens when the surface of the EH, spinning, approaches the speed of light?

  • @EXQCmoi
    @EXQCmoi Před 6 lety +5

    I would't dare to challenge his theory but to my opinion he misuses the word information too often when referring to data. Data itself is meaningless, it needs to be interpreted to become information.

    • @jrnone2047
      @jrnone2047 Před 6 lety

      XQCmoi Wrong, information is there independent of a particular observer being able to interpret it. Think of an ancient language no human now on earth can read.

    • @juju2345
      @juju2345 Před 6 lety

      Well, there’s a big difference between “information” and human communications/media theory. Two different things, Marshall McLuhan is almost irrelevant to this conversation.

  • @ronaldderooij1774
    @ronaldderooij1774 Před 6 lety +21

    gravity is emergent, time is emergent, matter is no matter but energy, entropy is emergent, everyting is emergent. So, we need a theory that describes the emergent universe.

    • @klauskerl7400
      @klauskerl7400 Před 6 lety +4

      Ronald, be patient, I'm working on it. Emergent consciousness is the next hurdle.

    • @bobblacka918
      @bobblacka918 Před 6 lety +4

      True, Universal Conscious is probably the link that binds it all together. The science appears to be heading in that direction.

    • @OrionB1498
      @OrionB1498 Před 6 lety +7

      Time is not emergent, it is an illusion.
      There is only an eternal now.
      It is the mind that creates concepts such as past and future.
      There is only Now.

    • @Hank254
      @Hank254 Před 6 lety +4

      But if time is an illusion then the Now must be unchanging. Change requires time, if it isn't real then the mind cannot create anything since that would be a change.

    • @Dyslexic-Artist-Theory-on-Time
      @Dyslexic-Artist-Theory-on-Time Před 6 lety +1

      Well said!!!

  • @JohnSmith-os5jt
    @JohnSmith-os5jt Před 3 lety

    I'm no physicist but I never liked the dark matter idea. I've been wondering if anyone was working on a theory like this. Glad I stumbled upon this video.

    • @mikegale9757
      @mikegale9757 Před 3 lety +1

      Dark matter is just a placeholder for an observed phenomenon until we figure out how to extend our theories. The Janus Model of the Cosmos (czcams.com/video/YkuWTnjuJ68/video.html) looks like a reasonable step in that direction.

  • @inesmercier1948
    @inesmercier1948 Před 6 lety

    thank you so much for posting this!

  • @nagualdesign
    @nagualdesign Před 6 lety +48

    Well, that was disappointing. An hour spent introducing the underlying concepts then.. nothing. End of discussion. I'm sure I'm not alone in already having a good grasp of all the underlying concepts before watching this. What I was hoping for was some elucidation of this new theory. I wanted to get to the meat. Sadly we are left none the wiser for watching this.

    • @Bvic3
      @Bvic3 Před 6 lety +4

      Absolutely. It was boring. I would have liked details about the qbit behaviour and so on instead of well known phenomenons.

    • @ticktock9481
      @ticktock9481 Před 5 lety +5

      Laughable dark BS made by leaches to society. The Electric Universe explains clearly.

    • @vanderdole02
      @vanderdole02 Před 5 lety

      back to skool for you.... lol...you missed the clues..

    • @marcholcombii7146
      @marcholcombii7146 Před 5 lety

      He knew more than he let on

    • @Thorsten00
      @Thorsten00 Před 5 lety

      @nagualdesign. Perhaps this expands things a bit here
      czcams.com/video/ZCyYGWqCmFw/video.html

  • @alberteinstein3078
    @alberteinstein3078 Před 6 lety +8

    Everybody needs Albert Einstein in their subscriptions. 😁😁😁

    • @josephmarsh5031
      @josephmarsh5031 Před 6 lety

      To Einstein! The worlds greatest prophet. As it was foretold, so it has come to pass...

    • @BartAlder
      @BartAlder Před 6 lety

      This is true. But I lack a proof.

    • @BartAlder
      @BartAlder Před 6 lety +1

      Thanks for your reply Joseph, my comment was actually a bit of a nerdy joke directed at the original poster, Albert Einstein who said 'Everybody needs Albert Einstein in their subscriptions.' and had nothing at all to do with the real Einstein's work.
      I don't know why you think I belong to a cult, I would need that explained.
      It would also be nice if you could talk about where Einstein predicted 'celestial bodies doing odd shit during a total eclipse' because that is not any part of any theory of gravity that I am aware of.

    • @donfox1036
      @donfox1036 Před 6 lety

      Kim loving this. Asking Einstein to speake to us from heaven.

    • @supertofue5946
      @supertofue5946 Před 6 lety +2

      .. and people say science isn't becoming religion .. ::rolleyes::

  • @Muhammet459
    @Muhammet459 Před 3 lety

    At the interface of event horizon, pulling matter and pushing antimatter reminded me Greenglow documentary and the theory of Dr Dragan Hajdukovic that antimatter creates antigravity

  • @sanjchiro
    @sanjchiro Před 6 lety +1

    wow what an amazing talk thank you Dr Erik

    • @lorenawhelan1029
      @lorenawhelan1029 Před 4 lety

      If he's right, then it is a fatalistic view of our future. I black hole is a sphere so even a singularity cannot be flat, so wouldn't we continue on forever in an inverse position?

  • @thumper8684
    @thumper8684 Před 6 lety +3

    If gravity cannot propogate faster than light, how does it pass the event horizon?

    • @jomen112
      @jomen112 Před 6 lety

      Perhaps because gravity is per definition how space-time filled with matter looks like. In that sense gravity does not travel in space but is a property of space itself. Gravity is how space-time looks like, i.e. the "look" is what we call gravity. If that was not the case, then gravity would not exist to start with. If you change the matter content or distribution you change the look. It is that change in look which cannot travel faster than the speed of light. That look is not affected by gravity but the energy/matter distribution. The look _is_ the gravity and is determined by the energy/matter distribution - not gravity. I.e. gravity is not a cause but a consequence and therefore it is not affect by itself.

    • @coastwalker101
      @coastwalker101 Před 6 lety

      A good question. I have thought about it and cannot find any answer except that nothing except hawking radiation comes out of a black hole. So the gravity only exists outside the horizon. This contradicts the idea that you can fall through the horizon and notice nothing. Also if a black hole can have a spin, how would we know it had a spin if nothing comes out of it?

    • @cornoc
      @cornoc Před 6 lety

      *Coastwalker -* when a black hole has angular momentum, it changes the shape of the event horizon and creates an ergosphere around it. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penrose_process

    • @thumper8684
      @thumper8684 Před 6 lety

      +Nam Mam Hi this makes sense to me.
      My current understanding of Einstien's field equations is that they are the laws of conservation (of mass, energy, momentum and the like). The difference with Newton's laws is that the equations are equally valid for any observer, no matter where they are or how fast they are going.
      I expect the black hole keeps it's gravity well in the same way a gyroscope stays upright.

  • @anonymike8280
    @anonymike8280 Před 5 lety +11

    Elementary particles? Hrrrumph. It's turtles all the way down.

  • @aurelienyonrac
    @aurelienyonrac Před 10 měsíci

    43:00 virtual particle pairs can recombine or the can recombine with a virtual particle next to them. That causes a motion. That motion is energy. Slightly space time bends. Slightly more virtual particles are moved to this region whill there oposit pair goes out. That is how gravity works.
    Now we got so much positive particles stacked on that side that we might as well call it matter.
    That is one way of describing it.

  • @allanlees299
    @allanlees299 Před 5 lety +1

    His observation that the deviation between expected and measured velocities of gravitational rotation occur at the Hubble Constant is interesting and definitely a clue to the underlying mechanism. But his assertion that this is a consequence of quantum entanglement was not elucidated at all in the lecture; furthermore most particles aren't entangled, so proposing that the gravitational force arises from entanglement seems somewhat odd. Information theory is currently the hot trend in physics but it's presently unclear whether or not this will actually turn out to be helpful. Each generation of physicists tends to elaborate on current technologies (steam = kinetics, electricity = wave functions, computing = information theory) but many times the elaborations turn out to be dead-ends because analogies are often misleading. We shall see what develops over the coming decades.

  • @ricardoalvarado5676
    @ricardoalvarado5676 Před 6 lety +11

    It's a good theory, but there's tons of missing pieces it needs a better foundation, thus a great theory is presided and easy to understand.

    • @russellk.bonney8534
      @russellk.bonney8534 Před 6 lety

      There is a better theory of gravity that fits all the missing pieces at... neuvophysics then the dot then the com.

    • @maureenfitzgerald9544
      @maureenfitzgerald9544 Před 6 lety

      Ricardo Alvarado and

    • @sgolab10
      @sgolab10 Před 6 lety +1

      It used to be the case that an idea in theoretical physics was only publicized after the math had been pretty much worked out. That no longer seems to be the case. Dr. Verlinde's lecture is speculation, very intelligent and educated speculation, but still just that.

    • @antonystringfellow5152
      @antonystringfellow5152 Před 6 lety +3

      Russell K. Bonney That guy is a crank. You might as well provide a link to a copy of The Bible. Please leave religion out of physics. It really has no place here.

    • @richrich9740
      @richrich9740 Před 6 lety

      i think its a sghit theory

  • @vagizz
    @vagizz Před 6 lety +27

    I knew it! I love this change in mainstream science how only couple years ago it would've been a heresy to say such things :)

    • @Muonium1
      @Muonium1 Před 6 lety +11

      this theory fails to explain a litany of other observable phenomena that wimp dark matter does explain perfectly well, so no, you and your cadre of clueless armchair physicists (read: cranks) didn't "know" anything.

    • @vagizz
      @vagizz Před 6 lety +6

      no need to be so salty it's just a joke.. im very far from physicist :) im just a humble proponent of simulation theory.

    • @procactus9109
      @procactus9109 Před 6 lety +7

      lol to both of you's

    • @josephmarsh5031
      @josephmarsh5031 Před 6 lety +6

      It doesn't answer anything that the magic man in the sky hypothesis cant answer either.... :P

    • @zauberschatzkiste
      @zauberschatzkiste Před 6 lety

      you mean doesn''t matter, which has no effect on the universe whatsoever

  • @infinateU
    @infinateU Před 6 lety

    Instead running with "split second" warning systems, now we logically be wary/cautious days ahead of time. Not scared but instead, prepared. Let's be courageous here & be proactive.

  • @artoffugue333
    @artoffugue333 Před 5 lety +1

    What a great lecture!

  • @mohsenvand66
    @mohsenvand66 Před 6 lety +12

    He didn’t explain his theory and just showed some equations. I spent an hour watching this just to see him explain how gravity emerges and the relationship to information theory and how his theory explains dark matter. His talk was a few disconnected and incomplete islands. Smh -.- He should watch some Feynman

    • @frenky29a
      @frenky29a Před 6 lety +2

      Yes, he is not very good in presentation. I was lucky and saw very good physicist presenting core of this theory. I love it since then. The best part is correct prediction of galaxy motion (rotation) which does not need Dark matter.

    • @beenaplumber8379
      @beenaplumber8379 Před 6 lety +1

      I can't help thinking there's something to this theory, but I wish he'd explained it a little better. Dark matter and dark energy have always been placeholders until we figure out what's happening. No one declared they are the final answer, just that there is some unexplained variable. I have a feeling that very soon this will all click. The data from the LHC seems to be refuting a lot of the more exotic particles from supersymmetry (if I understand correctly), which tells me there might be a simpler explanation that doesn't require a lot of exotic details. This has that simple elegance, if I understand him right. I don't know if I did understand him though because his talk was 95% review and 5% "new view of gravity," which was the bit I wanted to learn about. He kinda says "trust me, I did the math." That's not very satisfying to a scientist.

    • @LarrySiden
      @LarrySiden Před 6 lety

      frenky29a can you give me a link to that other talk?

    • @beenaplumber8379
      @beenaplumber8379 Před 6 lety

      Remsey, from what I have understood of other lectures, the information density is defined by Planck space and time. Each Planck cube can only hold one quantum state over one Planck time, and it is the quantum states at that level that define the maximum information in a given quantity of spacetime. That information changes, but the total amount of information is not gained or lost because every Planck speck in spacetime always has one quantum state, even if that state is zero. So are you saying that, as a galaxy rotates, that the massive change of this already-existing information is what causes gravity?
      When you put a max of 2 GB on a memory stick, you're not adding anything. You're only flipping zeroes to ones, or in theory vice versa. But the total amount of digits of information (analogous to Planck cubes in a given volume) remains constant. Can you cram more information into a given chunk of spacetime without shrinking the size of Planck cubes?

    • @happylittlemonk
      @happylittlemonk Před 6 lety +1

      You should watch his earlier videos when he did an interview. He said he likes to keep his finding a secret. I think he is keeping his cards close to his chest and said all these for the sake of this talk. The other thing is, I know what he is talking about but since his theory is new it is difficult for him to know what people don't know. When someone knows a lot about something he thinks other know what he is talking about so when they summarise it, it gets lost. He gave a long intro to show how our understanding of gravity has changes based on the technology and data we had at the time. Now he is saying the universe in a larger scale has more clue on how gravity works. It is like trying to understand weather by measuring the temperature and behaviour of one bucket of water in 10 min. We are measuring the gravity in a very isolated manner. We can see that studying the new data within the last 20 years has show so many anomalies such as dark energy and dark mater, black holes etc. So he is trying to explain all that in terms one one theory rather than adding makeshift theories that has not been verified at all. The best way to watch this kind of videos is to listen to him and try to see it his way, not to see how it fits into your model which is obviously wrong and it does not explain many things.
      I like to ask if you are Iranian (from your name) ? If so please contact me as I have a interesting theory that you may be interested in too.

  • @phizicks
    @phizicks Před 6 lety +5

    gee, I didn't see anything new here at all. so many videos on the same info already

  • @gregmellott5715
    @gregmellott5715 Před 6 lety

    He is very inspiring in that he does try to open as many perspectives as possible and relate them to each other a bit. I may be wrong in what I got from what he said, yet it seems to me he is trying to make at least one thing very clear, and that is we need to consider the time it takes for gravity to travel to reach the object it is relating to. That is, for the galaxy discussion, the time required for gravity to reach the orbiting stars can take so long that its direction of pull is far behind time wise, such that the actual direction of the star generating it is far from lining up with the direction its gravity pulling (and its light shining) upon that so remotely orbiting, so fast. This same angle difference is the same reason that Mercury precesses.
    I wonder about a couple of things that seem logical to me from what I understand of the laws of Physics. Since it is notable in Maxwell's field theory that as the intensity of a field of energy increases, the speed of light gets slower; or probably more precisely, time slows down. If one notes that factor when one considers what is going on inside a black-hole, then it is possible to consider that the gravity being generated by the contained mass gradually drops as it gets integrated into a denser and denser form. I suspect, it is even possible for a black-hole to eventually disappear simply do to that fact, and possible also due to the fact that the energy is no longer in a particle state that can generate gravity. String theorists might say the vibrations and form it can take are not able to make the type of particle that can generate gravity. This might allow a black-hole of humongous size to eventually even disappear from space, as far space around it can note, unless something is able to disturb its quiescent state enough to wake it up; or perhaps with enough relativistic speed involved, make its energy disperse into space significantly unable to be recaptured. (The rational reason gravity can escape where light cannot, it that gravity is able to express its force across all the dimensions that string theory points to. So the relative speeds of the "layers" that form a black-hole are relatively irrelevant in preventing its output, as a whole.)
    Another thing which is probably already resolved by some type of analysis is this question. How big is the universe when one uses Hubble's constant and take the frequency of the presently red shifted background microwave radiation and presume that is was the highest frequency photon possible to generate when it was created? Then to get the real full size one needs to add the increase in size that occurred before light was able to be generated. My understanding is that the inflation period was clocked as being a very short period of time mainly due to the fact that the energy levels (fields intensities) were so high that time was ticking along very slowly. The energy needed to get spread out enough to "cool down" so that the particles that could make up an electron could exist to form light energy. It is the same law causing time's rate difference that could be the foundation for the existence of strings and particles. The lensing effect that a high field of energy has would focus energy traveling past it into another point of high intensity. This intensity could get so high that it would act like a black-hole and capture energy passing too near it and bending it so much it practically can go even in the opposite direction and thus form, a stable pattern that makes strings and particles that don't need to propagate through space to exist. Or with less intensity form a stable entity like a photon that must.
    Another factor, that may be causing a drop in total gravity being notable in our part of the universe is the same thing that limits are ability to see only so far back in time. That is, the maximum speed it can propagate, and the relative strength it would have due to the loss of energy from its force being stretched out over a longer period of time due to the two bodies' relativistic speed to each other.
    A final comment I have is relating to his "fooling conservation of energy as long as no one notices" statement, and switching its moral tone. While Jesus stated he was one(-ing) with God and doing what His Father desired, it might be noted that he shied away much from the public, especially after the miracles he did of healing many. He notably told the oppressive nature that was internally dominating a soul not to speak of who he was. He rather sought to have others join him in his way toward joining his heavenly Father's glory. (*In fact he stated that miracles by themselves would lean against those not seeking his way when they had noted the miracles so directly.) Our internal state can hold belief that can make us a child of God that overcomes this world's woes by faith in the evidenced Godly potentials that make up our existence and even point to infinity and eternity, however dinky we may be seen to be. That to me is what is at the heart of the ~natural~ child like nature of energy in what causes all that exists. It may be struggling with the moment, yet it is on to go to God in no time at all: being at light's speed.

    • @gregmellott5715
      @gregmellott5715 Před 6 lety

      Another idea just popped into my head from the statement that gravity will be pulling the the same direction as the image of the object pulling appears to be (how ever shifted due to the shift in angle due to relativistic effects). It has be stated that if one was traveling relatively nearly as fast as light (at least relative to the the source of light or gravity) that its position would appear to be quite a bit toward the direction you were heading. Going as fast as light and the light you see of other things you had passed would appear to be at your side, and at that angle its energy level would be very low and almost completely red shifted to 0 Hz. While what was straighter ahead of you would be energy enhanced, and its gravity pull likewise. That more directly behind you would not have the speed to catch up and be noted at all. Gravity would be having the same problem of catching up with you. Thus, the gravity of things in front of you would be enhanced and the gravity of whats behind weakened to non-existent. This may be the reason why, when you have a universe expanding at such high speeds relative to the rest of itself, that its speed of expansion can only increase over time. Things moving with you would appear normal. That which you encounter from your high speed relative to its source would appear (and its gravity pull) more in the direction of your relative motion. If that's the case one could possibly determine the amount of matter that existed in the area our universe is now before it existed. Or possibly postulate how much other gravity comes from a multiverse arrangement of things pulling us toward its locations.

  • @infinateU
    @infinateU Před 6 lety

    By reading the activity on our STAR, with regular cycles in mind(mind u), coupled with planetary alignment, we can anticipate either volcanoes, earthquakes, storms to strike specific "regions".

  • @robotaholic
    @robotaholic Před 6 lety +7

    I don't buy this theory. I hate to just eat up a new theory and gobble it down before it has enough separate and unbiased peer review. I'm a nonintelligent person, but this sounds like trying to connect two unknown things just because they're unknown. Also, using information as a variable in an equation is a little too anthropomorphic to me...and he tries to use weaknesses in current theory as proof for his own. Is anyone else skeptical? How does what a black hole look like matter to this theory?

    • @rubic0n2008
      @rubic0n2008 Před 6 lety +2

      It is my friend. Look up quantum gravity. It is making far better progress then weve made with any other understanding since general relativity. In fact, vetter yet, look up " are we living in a simulation" an watch the video of a quantum gravity research

    • @pansepot1490
      @pansepot1490 Před 6 lety

      John Morris, couldn't agree more.
      I am no expert so I cannot express an informed opinion but I gather that the majority of physicists aren't buying this theory so Dr. Verlinde should first convince his colleagues then I would take him seriously.

    • @captainclone1367
      @captainclone1367 Před 6 lety

      Seems to me the Higgs Field needs to come into play. Does the Higgs Field change in field density near a black hole?

    • @frenky29a
      @frenky29a Před 6 lety +7

      This theory does not deny Einstein's theory. In fact, you can esily deduce Newton and Einstein's laws from it. It is extending it.
      The difference is in very large scales. Rotation of galaxies we observe is faster than it should be according to Einstein's and Newton equations.
      So physicist introduced "Dark matter" to comply with the equations and now everyone is looking for that matter (particles), in CERN for example.
      However, with Emergent gravity theory you do not need any such "new" dark matter. This theory predicts the motion of galaxies exactly as we see it right now (calculated in 2017 for some galaxy). And this is the main contradiction to Einsteins theory, which is not good at very large scales.
      Again, from Emergent gravity you can very easily deduce both Newton and Einstein laws, so this is more general theory.
      I am looking forward to new predictions with this theory.

    • @Tapecutter59
      @Tapecutter59 Před 6 lety +2

      Look up "information theory" and its relationship to entropy. That part of his presentation is not a new idea, it's been around since WW2 (Shannon) and is not seriously disputed by anyone. In the mathematical sense, Information and entropy are basically synonyms for the same thing, there's nothing anthropomorphic about it, it's just maths.

  • @dredrotten
    @dredrotten Před 6 lety +24

    This guy just keeps waffling on and on, when is he going to get to the point? Im 54 minutes in?

    • @JizzoCalrissian
      @JizzoCalrissian Před 6 lety +3

      i gave up at 32 mins... waste of time. next video.

    • @99bits46
      @99bits46 Před 6 lety +1

      47 min and i am down to comments

    • @Slarti
      @Slarti Před 6 lety +1

      Yep - whenever I come across someone who says they have a groundbreaking new idea and can't get to the point within 5 minutes I start to smell a rat...

    • @Kalumbatsch
      @Kalumbatsch Před 6 lety +11

      +jagara1
      You can just go and read his paper, it's on arxiv (Emergent Gravity and the Dark Universe). Just kidding, you won't understand shit.

    • @Slarti
      @Slarti Před 6 lety +5

      Difficult to understand does not equal correct.

  • @Slarti
    @Slarti Před 6 lety

    I have problems with some of the explanations in this talk - he says that light travels in a curved line which is incorrect. Light travels in a straight line, it is space-time that is curved. It's a really important distinction to understand and even for novices like myself it's really important not to refer to light as being curved.

  • @kennethchow213
    @kennethchow213 Před 5 lety

    Mass in kilograms = Charge in Coulombs squared x 10 to the power minus 7 divided by distance between two charges in meters. Thus, gravity = electromagnetism = weak interaction = strong interaction. There is no 4 separate, distinct interactions, but only one, which to conform with popular expectation, we can name "quantum gravity".

  • @JimiHendrix998
    @JimiHendrix998 Před 6 lety +18

    Ye gods, this guy is hard work to follow. I lasted 15 minutes of his robotic, morse code delivery and moved on to something easier on the ear.... He is no Feinman.....

    • @bobblacka918
      @bobblacka918 Před 6 lety +9

      Actually, I thought he explained it rather well. Try watching some related videos of PBS Space-Time (Black Holes, Dark Matter, etc) and then re-visiting this. Perhaps some ancillary information will help.

    • @ParadoxCircuit
      @ParadoxCircuit Před 6 lety +2

      You can tell he would probably be more animated conversing in his first language. (German Maybe? )

    • @montyheath801
      @montyheath801 Před 6 lety +4

      Feynman.

    • @jamespilcher5287
      @jamespilcher5287 Před 6 lety +1

      2 x speed and captions are your friend. I've got through a lot of videos with people with annoying or boring voices that way

    • @StCreed
      @StCreed Před 6 lety +3

      He's a Dutch scientist, so that'd probably be Dutch.

  • @UK-Blue
    @UK-Blue Před 6 lety +4

    Theoretical nonsense. See the Thunderbolts project

    • @RicardoPestana
      @RicardoPestana Před 5 lety +1

      pff lolz

    • @insinsnoma4285
      @insinsnoma4285 Před 5 lety +1

      EU has too many holes in it to even be considered at this time.

    • @darylchaffee3083
      @darylchaffee3083 Před 5 lety

      @@insinsnoma4285 Like what, exactly? The EU model answers more questions than the standard model does.

  • @AlexthunderGnum
    @AlexthunderGnum Před 6 lety

    So a body matter may gravitate to itself, or to its own position in the past, to be more specific, if it moves relatively fast or far enough? In that case, we won't need an additional mass. Instead, we will need to count the same mass we have multiple times, or am I getting it wrong?

  • @Lantalia
    @Lantalia Před 6 lety

    Maybe I missed it, but I didn't see him address the Bullet Cluster and the filament network (the normal achilles heal of modified gravity theories)

  • @Muonium1
    @Muonium1 Před 6 lety +9

    No explanation of Bullet cluster dark matter decoupling observations, no explanation of the CMB anisotropy acoustic / frequency spectrum, no explanation of supernovae distance observations, all of which point to dark matter actually being real. Just another mond-y flavor of the week. lame

    • @FobbitMike
      @FobbitMike Před 6 lety +5

      10mintwo
      Keep something in mind, my friend. PI doesn't invite irreputable scientists to give talks.

    • @Muonium1
      @Muonium1 Před 6 lety +7

      appeal to authority much? Einstein thought QM couldn't be right because "god doesn't play dice", he was wrong. Reputability is no guarantee of correctness.

    • @iliaslerias7374
      @iliaslerias7374 Před 6 lety +2

      And yet everyone who wants to take a look at relativity and it's problems is treated like a crackpot. I mean of course it's a very successful theory but it obviously has holes, yet everyone keeps shooting down people that try looking at things differently. So it seems reputability does function as a guarantee of correctness for a lot of people.

    • @Euquila
      @Euquila Před 6 lety

      I'm sure he could cover these points to some degree. I don't think something so big can be taken on by a single person.

    • @supertofue5946
      @supertofue5946 Před 6 lety

      "...it obviously has holes..." heh - circularly-defined Black Holes..

  • @karlslicher8520
    @karlslicher8520 Před 6 lety

    The unseen energy is a sea, the unseen matter the crest of its waves and our view of it is from an atom of the spay photoionized on it way to evaporation/dispersal?

  • @macbuff81
    @macbuff81 Před 6 lety +2

    Brian Cox and Richard Feynman both explained the concepts of gravity and entropy as well as temperature in their own lectures and documentaries in both a beautiful and insightful manner

  • @WandaDeeBackroads
    @WandaDeeBackroads Před 5 lety

    To anyone recording a lecture: I don't need to see so many close up shots of the speaker, and I don't need any shots of the audience. What I need to see is the display that he's talking about.

  • @cripmeister9104
    @cripmeister9104 Před 3 lety

    What a brilliant presentation :)

  • @roelrovira7123
    @roelrovira7123 Před rokem

    Erick, you'll know the real true nature of gravity when I publish my theory of the real true nature of gravity soon, a result of my 30-year fundamental research on gravity in Singapore.

  • @gilmedicacolombia
    @gilmedicacolombia Před 6 lety

    I really like his approach. You look at where things crack to see if they are good.

  • @jerbiebarb
    @jerbiebarb Před 6 lety

    The last I heard dark energy was the result of virtual particle activity (its strength is constant per each unit of space, but the more space expands - the stronger the dark energy push in all directions) and dark matter was a type of the matter that didn't interact with EM because its Calabi Yau shapes and its vibrational states won't allow coupling with EM fields.

  • @marcellocorra1936
    @marcellocorra1936 Před 5 lety

    Thank you professor Verlinde

  • @BinaryReader
    @BinaryReader Před 6 lety

    I wish i understood this theory, it;s very interesting. Is the view here that entanglement, and entropy are contributers to gravity? I am not sure i understand how gravity could be an emergent property based on entropy or entanglement, its hard to form a conceptual picture of how it could work. Does anyone have an idea?

  • @RWin-fp5jn
    @RWin-fp5jn Před 4 lety +1

    Erik is one of the few top physicists who dears to take a contrarian or at least novel perspective of things. Wish there could be more. He understands that before even considering ''Dark Energy' as a fix for gravity, we should first understand what gravity is all about and how it operates. He is actually very close to the solution: Gravity is the emergent off-setting effect of SPEED of (and within!!) Mass. The essential part he missed (as did even Einstein) is that gravity is fundamentally a LONGITUDINAL spacetime contraction opposite to the vector of speed. At high speeds of macro objects this becomes noticeable ( Einstein's covers this in his special relativity 'length contraction' but fails to relate it to spacetime contraction) . Within restmass we have an identical longitudinal ST contraction process going on since each atom has high spinning sub atomic particles. It is only because all these atoms are utterly unaligned that their collective ST contraction (which we traditionally call 'Gravity') APPEARS to work radially (this is Einsteins' GR). So now we see what makes stars at the outer spiral arms stay in their position; their speed induced EXTRA macro gravity (with a gradient!) binds them together. Given their different speed vectors, approximations like in MOND are allowed. Problem solved!

    • @RWin-fp5jn
      @RWin-fp5jn Před 4 lety +1

      @Dan Solomon Sure. Wall is correct in so far that he understands that at the subatomic scales (sub Planck scale), energy forms the grid, not space. As such we live in a dual continuum. It can be derived that inside our galaxy it is indeed again this 'energy' based continuum that dominates outside the border of our wider solar system. As such our galaxy would unfortunately be a singularity, embedded in the wider ST dominated continuum of our observable universe. Wall however makes the mistake in that he only promotes one side of the coin, namely his 'electric' (or 'energymass') continuum. Mainstream however is also correct in upholding their spacetime continuum and Einsteins GR. Wall makes a complete fool out of himself to attack this very well documented and equally valid mainstream supported setup. The answer lies in the combination both. Inside our solar system the ST setup dominates. Duality is the hardest thing for humans to see, but it forms the root of physics from the subatomic to the widest universe scale. In a more comprised form, it is the same answer that also explains particle-wave duality.

    • @RWin-fp5jn
      @RWin-fp5jn Před 4 lety

      @Dan Solomon Hi Dan. It's a long story. When the goal is to eliminate every physical paradox we know via reversed engineering principles, the most symmetric and simplistic (and therefor likely) outcome is that there must be duality at the root of physics. Meaning there is duality between the four functions of a continuum (Grid Clock, Potential, Inertia) and the four core ,measures (Space, Time, Energy, Mass). At the sub atomic scale energy and space switch functions as do time and mass. This dual setting basically explains any and all issues we have in physics. The consequence is that we would have a spacetime (=ST short) dominated observable universe, which allows for singularities (Galaxies) dominated by the alternative continuum setup (Energy Mass). Inside this energymass (EM) continuum (our galaxy) there would again be energymass singularities which would be ruled by the ST continuum (our wider solar system). And inside this ST continuum you again have micro ST singularities (atoms) which are ruled by the ME continuum, which again have ST singularities at their core (neutrons, protons) etc etc. So you basically have the same pattern alternating again and again. The problem mainstream has, is they only look at physics form one setup (the ST setup). The problem Wall has is that he only looks at physics form the alternative continuum (EM continuum). Once you combine them into an orthogonal dual system, we all can go home and drink a beer....

  • @gutterball10
    @gutterball10 Před 6 lety

    is there a preference for which type of particle will fall into the black hole during hawking radiation? ie antimatter particle or regular matter particle?

    • @Les537
      @Les537 Před 6 lety

      Yes - the one that is on the wrong side of the event horizon. This is the only way it can happen. One escapes and one doesn't - the one on the wrong side of gravity.

    • @gutterball10
      @gutterball10 Před 6 lety

      I understand that- the particle closer to the singularity will fall in and the one on the outside of the event-horizon will escape. But the point of my question seems to have escaped you mr. Crush, is there a preference in matter or antimatter that will fall in or escape , or will it be equal , some matter and some antimatter particles ? Is there a way of detecting this?

  • @STohme
    @STohme Před 6 lety

    Excellent presentation. Many thanks.

  • @topcatcoast2coast579
    @topcatcoast2coast579 Před rokem

    I have been functionally blind without glasses my entire life. If I hold my finger a few inches from my face without glasses there is an area of focus past my finger. Does gravity come into play with this phenomenon? It works in essence the same way gravitational lensing in effect.

  • @sanjuansteve
    @sanjuansteve Před 6 lety

    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 is that we are in a sea of dark matter, even in otherwise empty space, and every particle (photons, electrons, etc) is paired 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.
    Perhaps the only reason for photons' max speed limit is the dark matter they're paired and in orbit rotation with.
    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.

  • @iwonakozlowska6134
    @iwonakozlowska6134 Před 5 lety

    1) You assume that Newton's law is proportional to the area , but (1/r^2) also means curvature. 2) Are we all (as a matter created from space at black hole horizon) entangled with black hole?

  • @scoundrel9118
    @scoundrel9118 Před 6 lety +1

    He's using Leonard suskind's holographic principle for his own model of gravity. It's pretty interesting how everything is progressing.

  • @smitad7881
    @smitad7881 Před 6 lety

    Good theory.. can't this be tested by observations of stars around a stellar black hole? Even though they are not as big as SMBH, shouldn't it exhibit similar behavior to a lesser extent?

  • @pavlestajdohar4377
    @pavlestajdohar4377 Před 6 lety

    I liked the idea we're seeing the universe from a black hole we're falling in. Quite a new perspective, isn't it. Now the black hole theorists can explain to us how the universe we're seeing really looks like from outside our hole. At least in theory.

  • @inox1ck
    @inox1ck Před 6 lety

    If you look at the QFT theory, the reason quantum etanglement works become clear. A field associated with any particle is spreadout in the entire universe until it decays or it is absorbed. When that happens the field dissapears everywhere. But that the fields associated with all particles in the universe are overlapping, only their amplitudes differ. Moreover, when you do the a measurement on one particle, the field associated with the particles that the apparatus is made of already extends everywhere and it also reaching the entangled pair. If an instantaneus connection is still required to explain the phenomenon, this connection does not manifest as a travelling wave (like all particles do) but just some instant action at the distance which may be accepted. However, considering the explanation with fields, it may not be necessary and neither a hidden variable is required.

  • @puntalic
    @puntalic Před 5 lety

    Finally someone who gets it. All current accepted ideas are so flawed since they are based on something human time and flawed measuring.
    Hope this inspires alot of people to think beyond humanbeing and more on the huge grant scale. People we are not intelligent. Just because a monkey can grasp the concept of cause and effect, doesn't make me want to give it a noble price. Keep that in mind with every "clever" thing you come accross.

    • @insinsnoma4285
      @insinsnoma4285 Před 5 lety

      If you think he dissed current science you are wrong. Watch it again.

  • @marinapetrimykonos
    @marinapetrimykonos Před 6 lety

    THANK YOU VERY HELPFUL

  • @onestagetospace4892
    @onestagetospace4892 Před 6 lety

    Interesting but I just have a question: Do we not first need to find out if gravity is just a surface phenomenon, "emerging" from external forces acting on the surface of a large object? Drop tower tests cannot really confirm/discern because they operate within the Earths' gravity field at the surface. We need to test what precisely the surface does, what its role is, and how it influences measured values. The test for this is to inflate two balloons in space and measuring gravity around them with sensitive gravimeters and move them outside of the Earth's gravity well (for as much as possible). If Newton's law holds up, and this gravity hypothesis holds, then the mere fact of one balloon being larger than the other will result in a difference in measured gravity at the surface. The relation between m and G in Netwon's gravity formula's might be masking a different phenomenon. It would also explain why A or Area plays a role in more recent formula's. For added rigidity: make sure that the larger balloon has the same mass as the smaller balloon and both are made from the same elements and both are evacuated after their inflation (some type of UV rigidizing material). Depending on the sensitivity of your detector, this is an experiment that would not cost a lot of money. Maybe it can even be performed with inflatable cubesats and then it would only cost you a couple of hundreds of thousands of Euro's. You can assume that existing theories would invalidate the merit of even performing this experiment, but the experiment hasn't been performed outside of Earth's gravity well. (The hammer and feather on the moon are a different type of experiment. Composition could play a role, that is why I prefer using only the same materials). If nothing happens you've lost a million Euro's. If a difference is measured, all of the sudden you can create artificial gravity at will and learn something fundamental about the world and gravity empirically for a minuscule fraction of the cost of a LISA gravity detector. And you have centuries of Data to fill in the emerging picture. Maybe the relation between mass and G is different than what is known today.
    Push gravity theories, another alternative, do explain why we see the observed speeds at the center and edge of the galaxy, so maybe one should not disregard them as a possibility.

  • @sanjuansteve
    @sanjuansteve Před 6 lety

    The surface of the super smooth, perfectly round, super dense sphere of mass at the center of black holes would be equally bright as other rocky planets from the perspective of the surface looking "up", while looking down would appear black even from there with zero light able to reflect away from the inescapable pull towards the center of the mass (singularity point), no?

  • @astrophysiker
    @astrophysiker Před 6 lety

    I like the concept, but I am not sure it will all work out. Why do some galaxies have a larger fraction of their mass in dark matter compared to other galaxies of similar mass?

  • @JungleJargon
    @JungleJargon Před 6 lety +1

    Things farther away are moving away faster because of how much in the past they are, keeping in mind that expanded time is not a valid measure of historical time.

  • @jessemoore1384
    @jessemoore1384 Před 6 lety

    I would like to propose a theory that incorporates scale. What if there is another level of size smaller than atoms and sub-atomic particles we can't observe with our technology? That could explain dark energy. Also on a macro scale what if our entire universe is just one cell in a larger organism. I as many, thought the lecture to be somewhat scattered. But at the end when DR. Verlinde proposed that the universe is inside the event horizon of a massive black hole, I thought the figure looked alot like a living cell. Is it possible that we may be smaller than we think? also if we are in a closed cell maybe the 95% of gravity that we don't see is from our universe's interaction with other cellular universes? Is it also possible that the expasion of our universe is also related to some sort of cosmic cellular decay?

  • @artoffugue333
    @artoffugue333 Před 5 lety

    Not the most eloquent of English-speaking theoretical physicists, but certainly one of the most eloquent minds of our time.

    • @flatearth9140
      @flatearth9140 Před rokem

      WE KNOW THE EARTH IS FLAT! NASA LIES !! NASA STANDS FOR NOT ALWAYS TELLING TRUTHS.. NO REAL SCIENTIST WILL TELL YOU GRAVITY IS UNDERSTOOD. !! WE FLAT EARTHERS HAVE 100% PROOF OF FLAT EARTH. WE HAVE MEETINGS AND EVERYTHING !!

  • @spokenwordpoetrylamanmudgal

    My comment is about video at time 58:45 . "Where did it all come from ?" . I think we are still looking for this answer from a narrow perspective. We will be looking for this answer and we will keep developing our technologies without getting the answer, but to what end.
    I believe the key to the answer lies in yet another question "What is Life force?". The reason is our equipment are not only the means of observation but we are too, and the very important one. We keep modifying our telescopes and test equipment for better images and precision in readings etc, but we never modify ourselves in terms of how we are looking at science and who we are. We have never created any life not even at microscopic level from any non living matter.
    To understand why understanding ourselves is important, because we are the observer, and how we can mathematically drive "life" and what are our intellectual and physical boundaries and how can we cross them, and how can we understand ""Where did it all come from ?" through this, please drop a message on my account or comment below.

  • @sergiobirenbaum6123
    @sergiobirenbaum6123 Před 6 lety +1

    Gravity behavior as observed can also be described by laws and observation of fluid mechanics.

  • @MyYTwatcher
    @MyYTwatcher Před 6 lety

    I did not understand what he answered about question related to Bullet cluster. Maybe due to lack of understabding it seems to me that he avoided to answer the question. In fact the Bullet cluster is really heavy argument for dark matter.

  • @emilioughetto6716
    @emilioughetto6716 Před 4 lety

    Finalmente è arrivato il momento!!!!!

  • @Tapecutter59
    @Tapecutter59 Před 6 lety +2

    I've been asking knowledgeable people for 30yrs "what's wrong with the idea that we are living inside a black hole?", nobody has ever given me a satisfactory answer. A black hole doesn't contain a singularity it contains a universe (ala - dr who's tardis), even the standard diagram of a gravity well shows the space stretching off to infinity.

    • @sirroger1
      @sirroger1 Před 5 lety +1

      no one intelligent would even try to answer, because by asking that question you show that you don't have the knowledge to understand the explanation. sorry

    • @jackedwards8550
      @jackedwards8550 Před 5 lety +1

      We know that we are not because by nature a black hole "Eats" and we would from this side of the event horizon see the flow into our black hole universe and it would show on the cosmic background radiation field.

    • @jackedwards8550
      @jackedwards8550 Před 5 lety

      I consider myself an intelligent person most of the time.. I answered the question because Im not an A..Hole most of the time. Even if the question delivers a supposition that is clearly incorrect exchanging ideas is how we discover... Ridicule without adding intelligence supposes none is to available and is the response of the weaker mind unable to imagine a scenario where the statement could be correct...

  • @robertproffitt287
    @robertproffitt287 Před 3 lety

    Again .if u leave certain fundamental issues out like conciousness. This is key to quantum information link & spooky action at a distance anser This theory alone is just as good as any.

  • @Dyslexic-Artist-Theory-on-Time

    We need a geometrical process that explains gravity and explains away dark matter and dark energy! A geodynamic three dimensional process that is relative to each object or life form or relative to the atoms at low temperatures. At higher temperatures the process is relative to plasma with charge being able to cover a large area of interstellar space. Therefore we have the same process unfolding at the large scale of cellular space and at the small scale with cellular life. This can be seen with charge being relative to the membrane of each living cell!

  • @Maleblade
    @Maleblade Před 6 lety

    @I:03:42 At this point let me introduce the entanglement horizon.A Black Hole has an event horizon where particle pairs are separated.One of the pair falls into the hole while the other snaps back.Imagine it as the point of string separation where the particles represent the ends of entanglement strings.Thus the virtual particle collapses out of the entanglement web and is decoupled from the multiverse instantiation it is in.When it re-inflates it reconnects.
    The virtual particles that had previously collapsed from a multiverse instantiation re-inflate to reform the entanglement web they decoupled from to reform the instantiation they were part of...and so on.The energy contained in the collapsing virtual particle is compressed and re-inflates the virtual particle...and so on.