Atomic Physics

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 17. 12. 2017
  • ➡ Subscribe: bit.ly/UCHICAGOARTSytSubscribe
    About #UChicagoArts: Where scholars, students, artists and audiences converge, explore, and create at @UChicago. The arts are central to the mission of the University of Chicago. With a strong tradition of cross-disciplinary practices, intricately mixed with intellectual curiosity and creative energy, UChicago Arts fosters a bustling arts community on Chicago’s South Side.
    #UChicagoArts on the Web:
    Home: bit.ly/uchicagoarts
    Facebook: bit.ly/UCHICAGOARTS-FB
    Twitter: bit.ly/UCHICAGOARTS-TW
    Instagram: bit.ly/UCHICAGOARTS-IG
    University of Chicago on CZcams: / uchicagoarts
    *** ACCESSIBILITY: If you experience any technical difficulties with this video or would like to make an accessibility-related request, please email arts@uchicago.edu.

Komentáře • 33

  • @randomtux1234
    @randomtux1234 Před rokem +6

    if only they'd teach it at school like this, we wouldnt be looking for this 30 years later

    • @TomKappeln
      @TomKappeln Před 11 měsíci

      Because the new agenda is holding people dumb.
      Consume and obey !

    • @dutchess406
      @dutchess406 Před měsícem

      ​@aabbcc5154 you're a Dbag

  • @donbrown5414
    @donbrown5414 Před 2 lety +6

    Great video wish I had seen this in high school back in the 70"s

    • @whirledpeas3477
      @whirledpeas3477 Před 2 lety

      Why?

    • @donbrown5414
      @donbrown5414 Před 2 lety

      @@whirledpeas3477 LOL, good point! Not sure exactly where I was going with that. It seemed like a very clear presentation of a complex subject.

    • @whirledpeas3477
      @whirledpeas3477 Před 2 lety

      @@donbrown5414 ✌

    • @randomtux1234
      @randomtux1234 Před rokem

      me 2, i might have become a nuclear physicist, had they explained it like this back then, instead of thrashing us to pieces with the slipper

  • @robdudley3867
    @robdudley3867 Před 2 lety +2

    Wonderful! Thanks for sharing this.

  • @htwt
    @htwt Před rokem

    Wow! Incredibly great film!

  • @abcde_fz
    @abcde_fz Před 2 lety +8

    No Comments! Geez!! Never done a First Comment before!!!
    Old as this is, it's pretty good for anyone who wants to get a decent idea of how The Atom became useful to us all. Covers all the bases in the proper order, makes sure to include the contributions of some of the less well known names in atomic physics history. Needs little math to describe some aspects, and needs none at all to understand them. Well paced, too, if you ask me.
    Was kinda' like watching a light mystery or comedy film. Kept my attention all the way through.
    Hell, I'll give it an A.
    :-)

    • @bayekofsiwa365
      @bayekofsiwa365 Před 2 lety

      This is how education is supposed to be done.

    • @donbrown5414
      @donbrown5414 Před 2 lety

      Absolutely agree with your comments. Very well done, I wish I had seen this video 45 years ago in high school.

  • @kyleb3754
    @kyleb3754 Před 2 lety +1

    Fantastic film! Thanks for sharing it. 👍👍👍👍👍

  • @davidwilkie9551
    @davidwilkie9551 Před 2 lety

    Uchicagoarts can now explain 3D-T Physics format in Geometrical Theoretical Drawing and Perspective Projection Techniques of transverse trancendental sync-duration Superspin Singularity Reciproction-recirculation.
    (You have to start, and finish, everywhere-when-> somewhere, ie conic-cyclonic logarithmic->holographic wave-packaging?)

  • @ulisesfonseca7937
    @ulisesfonseca7937 Před 2 lety +1

    thanks

  • @thomasrussell4674
    @thomasrussell4674 Před 6 měsíci

    I love the way it says with thanks to ...
    ...Albert Einstein

  • @dizzo95
    @dizzo95 Před 2 lety

    Q: ) Why Is There Something Rather Than Nothing?
    A: ) Because Magnetism is an attractive force, not a repulsive force ?
    That's a guess, gravity is also an attractive force.
    Isaac Asimov in a book thought it was because there were more protons than electrons in the universe ( thus forming matter )

  • @whirledpeas3477
    @whirledpeas3477 Před rokem

    I have to say this is good for me, thanks

  • @clarencewright9841
    @clarencewright9841 Před 2 lety

    This is done by the British that's why it is so good

  • @detectiveofmoneypolitics

    1:27 PUBLIC CHANNEL* Educate on Money * Credit * Debt & Politics * Keep it Simple ! Ham Radio Operator VK3GFS is following this Overdue Debate ! 73s Frank

  • @AntzLoks1314
    @AntzLoks1314 Před rokem

    el-Choctaw-lord-de-CalifasMexicoAztlan ANTZ Holywater i cali

  • @buckaroundandfindout
    @buckaroundandfindout Před 2 lety +1

    If the definition of an atom is indivisible, and of course I'm paraphrasing. Then why do you classify uranium as an atom if it breaks down?

    • @irinabonney1721
      @irinabonney1721 Před rokem

      The definition of an atom is not indivisible , the video just said Dalton was hypothesizing.

  • @T0Mdisstroya
    @T0Mdisstroya Před 2 lety

    The only problem on this is, the us choose the not so efficient way to enreach uranium and was able to build the electronic for it. Fission reactors, electric propulsion, atomic propulsion engines missiles, rockets, EMPs, helicopters are all developments done in europe between. ww1 & ww2 with the target to be autark from oil. the invented synthetic rubber, synthetic oil, synthetic fuel, they. build new ways to come to energy, build new plants using water to generate electricity. also aerodynamic engineering, forged industrial steel forming and constructions with steel concrete, where results on forcing the chemical industry and supporting technical engineers too create their visions. the part of the allies was to steal all this things, test & reverse engineer it, use it in military top secret projects but hide it as long as possible from the public to defend the money printing fossil energy industry and the world economy & global fincial system based on the „petro-dollar"

    • @abcde_fz
      @abcde_fz Před 2 lety

      I agree. But certainly not with everything.
      I have now seen enough evidence to follow the portion on how pre-Nazi/Nazi Germany was MUCH further along in nuclear weapons research and development than we've been told for 70 (and more) years.
      Scary thought there.
      But the US stole no more 'intellectual property' from Germany and Eastern/Western Europe than what would be considered normal 'shady dealings' between nation-states all throughout history.
      As far as WARTIME is concerned, well, all bets are off.
      Intelligence/data gathered during wartime by ANY means is just flat-out how the world WORKS.
      That's my first point, but it needs to be put in context, and that context is NOT, by any means, limited to the time period during which Nazi Germany became a richer, healthier nation-state. In other words, the period between roughly 1933 and 1939. The period during which Hitler and his political machine turned Germany around 180 degrees, reversing the horrible condition the German economy was left in after WWI. Making real, economically valid changes in the way the German nation controlled it's resources. Except for the isolationist policies, which were un-sustainable in the long term. Germany lacked the natural resources necessary to remain isolationist. This is a large part of why Hitler thought he was going to rule the world. By making it ALL Germany. No more isolationism when you're the only nation-state on the planet.
      OK, the context that 'intellectual property' existed in MUST be mentioned to dispute the ridiculous assertion that the US somehow stole all it's knowledge from friggin' Nazi Germany.
      Eastern/Western European scientists and academics **they were FAR from all being German nationals or even citizens.**
      Then, as now, researchers and academics work in universities, government sponsored programs, and private industry, as they have for a couple hundred years.
      These researchers and academics PUBLISHED their work. They SHARED much of it, as has been the case, again, for hundreds of years.
      The US didn't need to 'steal' anything from Nazi Germany. We were part of the world of academia and research just as well as any OTHER country on earth. We had our scientists and researchers and academics, and the fruits of their labors, and these guys ALSO published in the various journals, then as now.
      I could go on, but it would be pointless. The facts are the facts. Yes, Nazi Germany was FAR ahead in their nuclear weapons research than we've been told for a good couple decades.
      But do your research. Before Germany became NAZI Germany, began to shy away from what had been normal relations with the rest of the world, and essentially moved into 'war is coming' mode, the US and the rest of the world interacted with German and OTHER Eastern/Western European intellectuals, and THEY interacted with the US, in kind. A GOOD portion of cutting edge research of all kinds WAS being done in Eastern/Western Europe, but that's not the same as saying it was all being done in Germany. That's absurd. The US didn't need to steal anything from Germany during peacetime. By definition, we weren't stealing from Germany during WWII, and finally, German and OTHER Eastern/Western European intellectuals WANTED to come to the US AFTER WWII.
      We didn't steal anything. It was either shared through the normal channels of scientific research, or CAME to the US eventually, anyway.