The REAL source of Gravity might SURPRISE you...

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  • čas přidán 12. 06. 2020
  • Einstein's general relativity says gravity is spacetime curvature, but what does that mean? Let's take a look at how gravitational time dilation results in an effect that looks a lot like gravity. The flow of time brings mass together.
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    VIDEO ANNOTATIONS/CARDS
    What the HECK is Time?!
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    Why Does Stuff Happen? Gradients!
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Komentáře • 22K

  • @ScienceAsylum
    @ScienceAsylum  Před 3 lety +1893

    *1. Why does the motion arrow turn?*
    Well... we're imagining that the squirrel is in some kind of fluid flow. It's not but it's a useful picture, so just imagine he is. If a real squirrel was in a real fluid flow like that, what would happen? The squirrel would turn. In a spacetime diagram, a rotation is a change in speed... also known as an acceleration. You're welcome 🙇‍♂️
    *2. Wouldn't that mean that taller things would accelerate more because the gradient is bigger?*
    No. While the total difference between the top and bottom of something like a building is bigger than it is for a squirrel, that doesn't actually matter. Curvature isn't a global phenomenon. It's a local one. Imagine both the building and the squirrel are giant stacks of infinitesimally-separated clocks. It's the gradient between _adjacent_ clocks that matters. Although, that does pose a different problem: spaghettification. Different parts of an object can experience different time gradients if they're tall enough. That means different parts of them will fall at different rates and be torn to shreds. This is a common event near stellar-mass black holes.
    *EDIT on 6/29/2020:*
    *3. Isn't this a circular argument? Doesn't gravity cause the time dilation?*
    It only seems circular because of a common misconception you picked up along the way. At 2:40, I state that gravity is _not_ the cause of the time dilation. It is the result of it. The cause of the time dilation is the Earth (or whatever source mass). The Earth causes the dilation _directly._ That's the connection between energy/mass and spacetime described by Einstein's field equation. We don't have a mechanism for that because it _IS_ the mechanism that causes gravity. Note: When I say "gravity" in this video, I mean "gravitational attraction." That attraction is observed behavior, not a force.
    *4. Isn't time dilation caused by motion?*
    Yes, that is one type of time dilation called kinetic time dilation. Gravitational time dilation is a completely separate effect. They're two different types. How much there is of each depends on the circumstances. Tall buildings and GPS satellites are predominantly affected by the gravitational kind. Astronauts on the ISS are predominantly affected by the kinetic kind.

    • @valeriobertoncello1809
      @valeriobertoncello1809 Před 3 lety +58

      But if curvature is a local phenomenon rather than a global one, why is spacetime considered "locally flat" everywhere?

    • @luudest
      @luudest Před 3 lety +57

      How does gravitotional time diletation affect photons?

    • @maxlovesvivan
      @maxlovesvivan Před 3 lety +24

      what about you smash the earth into a flat pan? Or even just creat a mathematically infinite plate? then there will be no gravity gradient, while the squrrell still falls to the ground

    • @ailblentyn
      @ailblentyn Před 3 lety +46

      Gravity seems almost reminiscent of refraction!

    • @rajesh_shenoy
      @rajesh_shenoy Před 3 lety +117

      First, Einstein tells me that it's not me being heavy, but the Earth trying to smash into me! 😩 Now you're telling me that the Earth is trying to spaghettify me all the time! 😵 I want a new planet! 😭😭

  • @jacqualinesalb6431
    @jacqualinesalb6431 Před 2 lety +2674

    I think I understand, I might not, but because of this video, I believe I’m much closer to understanding time-space. I’m 75 years old, and I’ve got a lot of un-learning to do. Thank you

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 2 lety +415

      *"I’ve got a lot of un-learning to do."*
      That's fairly normal when learning modern physics. (modern physics = most physics discovered after 1885)

    • @rustysteel8714
      @rustysteel8714 Před 2 lety +57

      You're not alone, js!

    • @MatHelm
      @MatHelm Před 2 lety +70

      I'm 75 backwards... 57, So, I believe time in this dimension is basically the physical movement of subatomic particles. A simple 2D representation would be a atom moving forward. As the electrons orbit the nucleus, with the speed of light being the limiting factor in this dimension, on the half of that orbit moving in the same direction as the atom, the atoms forward speed must be subtracted from the electron's speed of light orbit, and is not added to the backwards half of the orbit because speed of light in this dimension. So the faster forward the atom moves, the longer it takes for the electron to complete a orbit. Hence time passing slower as you approach the speed of light is because the movements of a atom is slower. Of course the point at which a atom theoretically reaches the speed of light it would be at absolute zero. As in frozen dead still. It came to me after studying the speed limiting factors of a helicopter...

    • @ninadgadre3934
      @ninadgadre3934 Před 2 lety +67

      I hope I am as enthusiastic and curious about science when I am 75!! Kudos to you

    • @rmlmrnda
      @rmlmrnda Před 2 lety +52

      It’s rare to find a person with an established way of thinking while also having an open mind. Salute!

  • @simoncook1885
    @simoncook1885 Před 3 lety +505

    I'm now lying down to ensure my body ages at the same rate.

  • @walabter1887
    @walabter1887 Před rokem +161

    I would have never imagine a 7 seven minute video as mindblowing as this one thank you so much for all your effort

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před rokem +4

      Glad you enjoyed it! 🤓

    • @samuelgarrod8327
      @samuelgarrod8327 Před rokem

      Did any of it sink in?

    • @savage22bolt32
      @savage22bolt32 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@ScienceAsylum Constructive criticism: lose the background noise!
      The subject & your narration of it is great. The addition of distracting, monotonous & annoying music ruined the vid for me. I did not get past the halfway point.

    • @wooddogg8
      @wooddogg8 Před 8 dny

      @@savage22bolt32 Your loss, My friend. I come back to this video every few months, sometimes to blow friend's minds, sometime just because I want to. Never even noticed background noise, music or whatever you mean. Please try again to make it all the way through. It's only 8 minutes long. PEACE ✌😎

  • @TheTimothyChannel
    @TheTimothyChannel Před rokem +17

    you made something complex seem simple to an extent. Excellent upload!

  • @murilovsilva
    @murilovsilva Před 3 lety +462

    This crazy looking man who speaks in hand waves and eye rolls has taught me more about gravity in 7 minutes than all other videos on the internet that I have ever watched. Great work!

  • @jorgepiresjunior
    @jorgepiresjunior Před 3 lety +477

    At the beginning It was confuse, but at the end it seemed like the beginning.

  • @yessumify
    @yessumify Před 6 měsíci +1

    This was wonderful. Very eye-opening. I'm glad to have found your channel.

  • @ADEpoch
    @ADEpoch Před rokem +5

    This is possibly the best “dumb it down” explanation I’ve ever heard because this has been confusing me for years. Thanks.

  • @samiverstine7351
    @samiverstine7351 Před 3 lety +85

    I’m a physicist and I never knew how to correlate time with gravity. You are a great teacher!

    • @MsRofex88
      @MsRofex88 Před 3 lety +5

      I would like to bring to the attention of experts (preferably physicists or mathematicians and / or scientists), a scientific question on communication between two people, one of which is under the influence of gravitational force. Thanks for your attention!
      QUESTION:
      Einstein said: "If all space exists now, let all time (past, present and REAL future) exist now."
      OBSERVATION:
      If we point the telescope 🔭 towards the sun, we will observe it (holographically) as it was 8 minutes in the past (from the point of view of the astronomical distance), since the light takes 8 minutes starting from the sun to reach the retina of our eyes. But the gravity exerted by the solar mass is such as to bend time to make it flow 2 seconds slower than us earthlings, so those who, ideally speaking, are in the sun would live 2 REAL seconds in the past than us.
      QUESTION: If a man were immersed in a gravitational field such as to bend time up to 1 minute slower (in the past) than me and, the man I want to relate to was 1 meter away from me, approaching me, I could squeeze his hand, see him and speak to him at the same instant that he starts listening to me? And he, immersed in the gravitational field, could he hear and see me? Would I be able to converse with my interlocutor in the same space (and in the same instant in time with which I start the conversation) to speak directly with whoever is in front of me, even if the latter lived a minute in the past with respect to me? In other words, according to Einstein, gravity slows down time, but with the distance of one meter, I would see my interlocutor as:
      A) How is he REALLY 1 minute in the past and can I communicate with him in the same instant of time because the light would take a billionth of a second? 🤔❓❓
      B) I would see him holographically (as I see the sun eight minutes late) but I cannot communicate with him. ⏱️⌚
      C) I wouldn't see him at all, it's impossible, unless I would talk to him through a wormhole.
      D) Other ........... (To you the answer I do not understand anything 🤷🏻‍♂️🤪 sorry).

    • @rdean150
      @rdean150 Před 3 lety

      @@MsRofex88 I would think that if he stayed in that gravity differential, he would perpetually be seeing you from a minute in your future. In which case, communication would depend entirely on him leaving messages that you can receive later. But how could you possibly respond to him if he stays ahead of you in time? What would he even be seeing? Would he be seeing your response to actions that he has not yet taken?
      No, I guess the motions would actually be locked in sync, him immediately seeing your reaction and you immediately hearing his words, even though there is technically a wide gap in time between them, so long as the two perspectives stayed constant. But if you were moving toward each other, they wouldn't stay constant, would they? Oh my this is a mind-bender.

    • @flbmx98
      @flbmx98 Před 3 lety

      @@MsRofex88 I would imagine that if you were to try to shake his hand you would be increasingly rapidly pulled towards him and probably he towards you, until you met at a mostly equal velocity. Sounds painful. I would also imagine your words would be distorted, and would probably arrive to him late but be sped up as he hears it.

    • @derryberry16
      @derryberry16 Před 3 lety

      @@MsRofex88 i think your observation is wrong. Coz you're forgetting to account thensum and its change on time as its a greater mass. Those sun people would argue that you're in the past and both of you wouldn't be wrong.

    • @Wink-Wright
      @Wink-Wright Před 2 lety

      @@MsRofex88 Necro'ing this to help others learn.
      Remember that dilation causes a disparity in the actual amount of time elapsed relative to another region of spacetime, which is proportional to the distance you each are to your respective masses. In general, the closer you are to a mass, the less time you will experience relative to the rest of the universe.
      If you are on the earth's surface, then there's some distance above from the sun's surface where the dilation is equal. If your friend was this altitude from the sun, your only obstruction is the ~8 minute delay that light takes to reach one another. You'd have a 16 minute round trip to communicate with one another at this point. Great!
      So move him closer to the Sun. Is your friend really in a space that has "slowed down" time? At this point he will appear to be moving slower, his light slightly reddened as the photons he emits stretch (called redshifting) relative to you. It looks like he's sped up slightly. Time isn't slower, per say, there's just literally less of it being experienced in this region of space, so you see more of it from your temporal vantage point of the earth.
      The word "delay" isn't really possible in this scenario, because there's not a "stream" of time that he is further behind on. You both experience time, both are in your respective present, but the *amount* of time you are experiencing is different.
      To your scenario, a bizarre gravity field that has some sort of limiting shell a meter in distance away. You would see basically the same thing, dilation.
      In order to not break causality it HAS to be something relative, say an extra minute per hour past.
      It would look largely the same. Your friend's movement would appear an extra 1/60th slowed down. If there were molecules between you there would be heat transferred (to your friend's side) as the slower moving gasses receive energy from the (see: RELATIVELY) faster gasses and his voice would be slightly lower pitch from the vibrations appearing stretched relative to your perception. You could shake hands, but your arm would move easier and would be younger then the rest of you when returned to your side.
      To your friend, you would appear to have a higher pitched voice, and have a hand that feels heavier to shake. The stars around him would appear to spin faster then they do to you.
      In conclusion, your question isn't really possible with the mechanisms possible via gravity. The only way you could get the delay described is for your friend to be on your side, step over for an hour by his then-current clock, then step back towards you. But, this wouldn't be the "delay" that you're looking for, he'd have experienced less time then the rest of the matter around you - he'd be younger. Option D, I guess.
      I hope this give you a new perspective, happy learning.

  • @randybarnhill3098
    @randybarnhill3098 Před 3 lety +145

    Great video. This explains why people on the top floor have to leave earlier than people on the bottom floor to catch the same bus to get to work.

  • @AyratHungryStudent
    @AyratHungryStudent Před rokem +5

    - Forget everything you've learned in school about gravity.
    - Way ahead of you.

  • @fredreeves7652
    @fredreeves7652 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Along this same topic, about 10 years ago, a time/clock experiment was done using an airplane, a mountain top and sea level, but the clocks were atomic clocks. What the experiment determined was gravity alters time. Of course, the time difference was very minute, but it was detectable none the less.

    • @2oqp577
      @2oqp577 Před 6 měsíci

      Was this experiment done many times? Were the results converging? Are the result lost in the noise level of the measuring devices?

    • @millicentsmallpenny5837
      @millicentsmallpenny5837 Před 2 měsíci

      The fact that gravity alters time does not serve to explain gravity

  • @bustedshark5559
    @bustedshark5559 Před 2 lety +440

    I just watched this with my 5-year-old great-grandaughter. She proceeded to walk up to my wife and declare that gravity was caused by a squirrel and two clocks. I'll try again in about 5 years!
    Excellent analogy though!

    • @southface8838
      @southface8838 Před 2 lety +19

      😂😂

    • @rockhound3.14
      @rockhound3.14 Před 2 lety +9

      Lmao

    • @keerthi3086
      @keerthi3086 Před 2 lety +13

      😆. that's cute.

    • @lastyhopper2792
      @lastyhopper2792 Před 2 lety +6

      😅there're many terms that she wouldn't know, so she simply ruled it out of the equation.
      like, "..you can think of it like a -flow gradient- around the Earth.."
      she might don't know the concept of flow and gradient.. So she didn't even hear those words been spoken..
      probably

    • @hegemon3
      @hegemon3 Před 2 lety +18

      All hail The Time Squirrel.

  • @Icewind007
    @Icewind007 Před 3 lety +273

    I think this is the first time "might SURPRISE you" in a youtube title actually guessed right.

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 3 lety +38

      I'm not going to put something like that in the title if I can't _deliver._

    • @kakalimukherjee3297
      @kakalimukherjee3297 Před 3 lety +4

      @@ScienceAsylum
      You blow my mind even more than 3b1b, and at the same time, make perfect sense. There's no reason why you don't have million+ subs. Wait for it, I'm sure it'll happen

    • @tricky778
      @tricky778 Před 3 lety +4

      This squirrel was stationary in curved space-time, you'll never guess what happened next.

    • @TheRogerbacon
      @TheRogerbacon Před 3 lety +1

      @@tricky778 how a single clock-wearing squirrel has been blowing the mind of scientists for over a century

    • @rbaika9281
      @rbaika9281 Před 3 lety

      Jj

  • @atlantisvelforening
    @atlantisvelforening Před 9 měsíci +1

    Let's say we perform an experiment with laser light in a gravitational field. The probability distribution for where an emitted laser light particle might be observed, spreads out as time goes by. If one pulse have propagated (spread out) for a longer amount of time than some other pulse,, but they besides that are pointed in the same direction, would they both "fall" the same way? (Follow the same geosid)?

  • @sidokouki670
    @sidokouki670 Před rokem +7

    Watching this video and the PBS Space Time video finally helped me to get it, like, it was so mind-blowing that I couldn't stop thinking about it for a whole week! I'm still in awe and I just can't wrap my head around the idea that the universe just created itself.

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před rokem +2

      It's pretty deep stuff. I'm glad our videos were able to help though.

    • @MWTGoldenGun
      @MWTGoldenGun Před rokem +2

      Well.... the universe didn't just create itself, and such an idea was never mentioned in the video.

    • @wm437
      @wm437 Před rokem +1

      Nothing cannot create itself because it needs to be something before it can create itself. Only something or someone can create.🤔

    • @adityan3208
      @adityan3208 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@wm437 well Stephen Hawking said otherwise?

  • @Sauromannen
    @Sauromannen Před 2 lety +444

    Honestly, I have studied General Relativity on post-graduate level, but this was the best explanation and visualization of gravity I have come across so far.

    • @dannymccarty344
      @dannymccarty344 Před 2 lety +11

      Honestly? I was a professor of General Relatively.
      You must not have paid attention in class....the visualization? Lol

    • @Sauromannen
      @Sauromannen Před 2 lety +36

      @@dannymccarty344, Yes, I always had a feeling that squirrels had something to do with it but it was never brought up during the classes.

    • @MrOneNye
      @MrOneNye Před 2 lety +8

      @@dannymccarty344 you can't be a square on CZcams nowadays when the channel courts quirky folks.
      The roasting will leave you tender 🤣🤣

    • @danielmconnolly7
      @danielmconnolly7 Před 2 lety +3

      There is no such thing as gravity; It's a theory, not a physical reality.

    • @Sauromannen
      @Sauromannen Před 2 lety +7

      @@danielmconnolly7 yes exactly. Why don’t you prove that by stepping out from the rooftop of your house? ;-)

  • @Viperzka
    @Viperzka Před 3 lety +1044

    This is the first analogy that has actually made the "gravity isn't a force, it's curvature" make sense.

    • @kevinarturourrutiaalvarez2613
    • @ItsEverythingElse
      @ItsEverythingElse Před 3 lety +2

      The first? lol

    • @narudavidkun
      @narudavidkun Před 3 lety +9

      yeah dude, the first that I see that does that

    • @davidjacobs8558
      @davidjacobs8558 Před 3 lety +33

      "curvature" is very confusing term.
      easier to understand description would be.
      a mass creates more space per volume near it. (as in Harry Potter's magic tent)
      a mass makes the time flow slower near it.

    • @bk-sl8ee
      @bk-sl8ee Před 3 lety +27

      Yes it's the first video which literally gives you the feeling that gravity is not force at all!

  • @briansansone
    @briansansone Před 6 měsíci

    Great explanation. Great animations. Opened a new way of understanding gravity/time for me.

  • @ParameswaranChocalingam
    @ParameswaranChocalingam Před 9 měsíci +2

    Thanks, I always knew there was something weird about gravity that just wasn't ... fundamental? Great explanation.

  • @YousefBenIsreal
    @YousefBenIsreal Před 3 lety +255

    I can't think of another video that has ever obliterated my mind to this degree. An absolute mind melt down. The explanation was flawless but the impact it had on my perception of time and space was nuclear lol

    • @knowbody4903
      @knowbody4903 Před 2 lety +4

      Have you seen the movie Interstellar?

    • @vladimircuellar3420
      @vladimircuellar3420 Před 2 lety

      Agreed

    • @joecraven2712
      @joecraven2712 Před 2 lety +3

      @@knowbody4903 Yes, most people watching this probably have and if not they’re missing out. One of favourite films of all time.
      Yet still I don’t see how it’s relevant to the original person’s comment?

    • @random6033
      @random6033 Před 2 lety +1

      i knew most of it before so... nothing really changed, but that time gradient thing is kinda new, i mean i knew that it's relative

    • @knowbody4903
      @knowbody4903 Před 2 lety +1

      @@joecraven2712 it's literally a movie about complimentary concepts, Its relevance is self evident.

  • @akpak4449
    @akpak4449 Před 3 lety +81

    I was expecting to learn a new way of understanding gravity, that NO-ONE on the CZcams talked about so far and man, you delivered!

    • @gld1076
      @gld1076 Před 3 lety

      waste of time .make fun because do ot know the subject or how c to expllain it in lay ma words.

  • @miika73
    @miika73 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Thanks a lot for videos you make! So understadable way on complex universe

  • @TheRealRevelation
    @TheRealRevelation Před 9 měsíci +2

    I have So Many questions… but I’ll just binge a bunch of your videos before asking them. 😄🍻

  • @IIVVBlues
    @IIVVBlues Před 3 lety +465

    My bathroom scale is actually measuring time dilation. So, I'm not overweight, I'm just behind my time.

  • @grahamecampbell7002
    @grahamecampbell7002 Před 3 lety +298

    My physics teacher once told me that time is immaterial, so I gave him my work assignment three days late.

    • @oleksandrlevkovych8591
      @oleksandrlevkovych8591 Před 3 lety +3

      Lol

    • @constantinototis4859
      @constantinototis4859 Před 3 lety +2

      Nice and elegant excuse.

    • @ANDROLOMA
      @ANDROLOMA Před 3 lety +3

      If time is immaterial, then what is material? Time = life.

    • @JordonPatrickMears11211988
      @JordonPatrickMears11211988 Před 3 lety +3

      @@ANDROLOMA so life is immaterial? What then is material? You answer a question you didn't ask, and ask a question you don't answer.

    • @ANDROLOMA
      @ANDROLOMA Před 3 lety

      @@JordonPatrickMears11211988 What was the question I answered that I didn't ask? I asked a question you proved incapable of answering, smart guy. So you simply deflected instead of answering, the way I would expect of any grade schooler. Grow up, instead of down.

  • @shellypalumbo5297
    @shellypalumbo5297 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Thanks, very simple, clear explanation of the very complex nature of our universe!!❤️

  • @jurrich
    @jurrich Před 9 měsíci +1

    The question is "why would it turn the motion arrow" instead of just changing the distribution of "squirrel over time"? There is nothing inherently problematic about diffferent parts of the squirrel drifting apart over time, the squirrel will still be a perfectly normal squirrel at each time "slice", and causality stays preserved. So the claim that the motion arrow changes seems to do a lot of heavy lifting without any reason for it to even happen?

    • @charlesenfield2192
      @charlesenfield2192 Před 29 dny

      A heuristic explanation suitable for this video is that if the squirrel's head moves faster than it's feet and it doesn't rotate it must also get longer. College physics was 35 years ago, but I'm pretty sure the real explanations is "Lorentz says so."

  • @AliothAncalagon
    @AliothAncalagon Před 3 lety +334

    There is just one person who is able to introduce me to a completely new way of thinking about the universe and is successful in making me understand it in less than 10 minutes.
    Never stop making these videos, please.

    • @KAMiKAZOW
      @KAMiKAZOW Před 3 lety

      The sick beats in the background don't hurt either.

    • @mrhatman675
      @mrhatman675 Před 3 lety

      Sorry but these vids give you the basic concepts behind these phenomenons you would have to use math to go deeper into it

    • @mahxylim7983
      @mahxylim7983 Před 3 lety +1

      Do you watch physics video by Eugesshbfbaz(can't remember the spelling)...? His video is longer but is amazing too!

    • @gabrielhamoui6504
      @gabrielhamoui6504 Před 3 lety +1

      Pin Seng Lim could you please send the channel name with the correct spelling? I want to check him out!

    • @hyronvalkinson1749
      @hyronvalkinson1749 Před 3 lety +7

      @@mrhatman675 Yes, but these basic intuitions are often skipped when learning the complex way. I wish more professors would teach the concept first THEN the rigor, instead many of them like teaching rigor and proofs and hoping you'll make the intuitive connection on your own.

  • @ShauryaSingh-ts2oc
    @ShauryaSingh-ts2oc Před 3 lety +121

    Dude that was mind blowing. Im as amazed as the Hoodie clone

    • @b4ph0m3tdk9
      @b4ph0m3tdk9 Před 3 lety +2

      Me too, I went "wow" with him every time.

  • @gracialonignasiver6302
    @gracialonignasiver6302 Před 11 měsíci +9

    Most intuitive explanation I've seen on this topic. Took me weeks to understand this when I was trying to study it and you break it down so well.

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 11 měsíci +3

      Glad I could help 👍

    • @Dekoherence-ii8pw
      @Dekoherence-ii8pw Před 6 měsíci

      Really? I DIDN'T GET IT. There was an explanatory gap between "time travels at a different rate" and "the squirrel goes down". I don't see how the one implies the other.

  • @nukeelda
    @nukeelda Před rokem +1

    Because of this amazing explanation I had to subscribe, good job.

  • @JZainbear
    @JZainbear Před 3 lety +185

    This explains why I got left back in the 10th grade for being too high.

    • @timbrink
      @timbrink Před 3 lety +17

      If you were too high you would have skipped a grade.

    • @kevinslattery5748
      @kevinslattery5748 Před 3 lety +4

      Just lie down, gravity will be less!
      Say what❓

    • @BobStBubba
      @BobStBubba Před 3 lety

      What happens when your head is spinning a mile a minute but your feet are just standing there.
      Just dance faster!

    • @becknader2337
      @becknader2337 Před 3 lety +1

      😂😂😂

    • @ldandco
      @ldandco Před 3 lety

      Actually, you would've been leading, not lagging

  • @dekippiesip
    @dekippiesip Před 2 lety +170

    Thanks a lot man, this is the first explanation of general relativity that actually makes intuitive sense! I always got very confused by those rubber sheet analogies, but this clears it up!

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 2 lety +17

      Glad I could help! 🤓

    • @Capybearacuda
      @Capybearacuda Před 2 lety

      ... He mixed up the x variables. He propositions X as "time" but concludes it as a spacial direction of movement. to my knowledge time does not add physical energy to inert objects.

    • @Capybearacuda
      @Capybearacuda Před 2 lety +1

      the top of the squirrel would just be older than the bottom. the particle visual is confusing the way it looks like FORCE and not RATE of change

    • @sivasakthisaravanan4850
      @sivasakthisaravanan4850 Před 2 lety +1

      The problem with the rubber sheet is that it still requires gravity to make it curved! Carlo Rovelli's book was the first source for me where i read this 'time dilation causing objects to fall on the Earth' description.

    • @LouDeeCruz
      @LouDeeCruz Před 2 lety

      @@ScienceAsylum Did You? You ignored the fact that Albert predicted time would slow or speed up under different gravitational potentials. But he did NOT predict resonant frequencies would change under different gravitational forces. Seeing as Resonance was observed and understood well before Albert.
      Please note the following well accepted scientific FACT: “The *damped* *natural* *frequency* is always lower than the natural frequency”
      Notice a stronger gravitational potential is damping the atomic clock at lower altitudes.
      Not Alberts fantasies.

  • @andreasschau4215
    @andreasschau4215 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Wow! Thats the absolute best explanation of this i have ever come across!

  • @pwnedd11
    @pwnedd11 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Thank you so much for this video!!!!!

  • @wojo6567
    @wojo6567 Před 3 lety +210

    I'm reading a book on anti-gravity and just can't put it down.

    • @1084kmp
      @1084kmp Před 3 lety +9

      Shit hitting the fan yet? :)

    • @kanopatterson9128
      @kanopatterson9128 Před 3 lety

      What’s the book

    • @Layarion
      @Layarion Před 3 lety +10

      @@1084kmp i think they mighta been making a pun

    • @1084kmp
      @1084kmp Před 3 lety

      @Layarion so am I :)

    • @SouthCarolinaPrep
      @SouthCarolinaPrep Před 3 lety +4

      Want Anti-Gravity,?
      Just train your clock to run in reverse.

  • @matthewryan2887
    @matthewryan2887 Před 2 lety +60

    "Got any questions about gravity"
    I think I have more than i did when i started this video

  • @t2g4_channel
    @t2g4_channel Před rokem +2

    Man, this is the best explanation I've seen! All these 2Dgrid curved papers with the celestial bodies in the center are just confusing and give a false sense of what is actually happening!

  • @qjim16
    @qjim16 Před měsícem

    Nice explanation. You are great! 👊

  • @ryanedgerton1982
    @ryanedgerton1982 Před 2 lety +332

    Just realized that this means an hourglass is both the perfect symbol and a cognitive paradox. It's the influence of time measuring the passage of time, which means it's basically time measuring itself...

    • @Yismeicha
      @Yismeicha Před 2 lety +16

      Whoa

    • @d3.1415
      @d3.1415 Před 2 lety +20

      Interesting thought. So would that mean it actuall measures nothing, or is representing time squared? I wonder what happens to the hourglass if it stops moving through time.

    • @arturzathas499
      @arturzathas499 Před 2 lety +9

      meta

    • @kosmique
      @kosmique Před 2 lety +22

      man u just blew up my brain's blown-up parts, that blew up from the video already.

    • @harsh3624
      @harsh3624 Před 2 lety

      Wtf.

  • @rofiqwahyukurniawan8137
    @rofiqwahyukurniawan8137 Před 3 lety +44

    It's been a long time since I read about Einstein's theory of relativity (about time dilation) but didn't understand it, now I understand a little because you are using a crazy way ... thank you sir

    • @McSupraQc
      @McSupraQc Před 2 lety

      A journey to the end of the universe by cool world, check it out my man 😉

    • @VaiskHD
      @VaiskHD Před 2 lety +1

      @@McSupraQc yessir caliss go habs go

    • @McSupraQc
      @McSupraQc Před 2 lety

      @@VaiskHD pouahahahaha esti d'malade 😎🤘

  • @RoyHerbert-dd7og
    @RoyHerbert-dd7og Před 7 měsíci +1

    Thank you for helping to explain dilation theory. my eternal dynamic thanks :)

  • @twisterwiper
    @twisterwiper Před 6 měsíci

    Wow, that was quite a revelation for me! Great explanation 👍🏻

  • @velkoivanov9155
    @velkoivanov9155 Před 3 lety +628

    Or as a wise man once said - the squirrel falls simply because its future is on the ground

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před 3 lety +27

      Or as a wise squirrel once said: why not climb that tree and challenge Einstein?

    • @VitorSalsicha
      @VitorSalsicha Před 3 lety +4

      picture of captain america pointing at the camera*

    • @grantlaing7465
      @grantlaing7465 Před 3 lety +3

      Great explanation. Thanks!

    • @mr.noname6109
      @mr.noname6109 Před 3 lety

      @@andrewboychurch Aristotle's ideas are tortole for the present time. 🐢

    • @EricVerbose
      @EricVerbose Před 3 lety +1

      Time dilation...the past is on the ground...so perhaps the squirrel falls because he is doomed to repeat history?

  • @1amswill
    @1amswill Před 3 lety +107

    This is it! A eureka moment for me. The first video out of hundreds to make me truly understand what gravity is.

    • @JailBiden
      @JailBiden Před 3 lety +2

      Ditto here

    • @kabellion
      @kabellion Před 3 lety +6

      Yeah , for me too, now i have some serious questiona about time tho....

    • @autoparts6873
      @autoparts6873 Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah, how is this not common knowledge if it isn’t fraudulent?

    • @markvanslooten5311
      @markvanslooten5311 Před 3 lety +4

      So you know why and how mass causes a time gradient??

    • @1amswill
      @1amswill Před 3 lety

      @@markvanslooten5311 nope. I'd have to find another video for that

  • @luisantonioalves460
    @luisantonioalves460 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Hallo Sir Impressed the most beatifull window about time and gravity I heard ... Tanks

  • @HaraldMacGerhard
    @HaraldMacGerhard Před 2 měsíci +1

    Nick, this may be my favoruite youtube video of all times. I just gotta love it 🤠🤩🥰😎
    So someone jumps out from a building, why does he fall, yes because time runs faster at his feet than his head. And when I look at it, it all makes sense
    Nick, you are genius 😍

  • @20runninginthebackground
    @20runninginthebackground Před 3 lety +563

    That explains why my beard turned white but not my pubic hair!

    • @billping2633
      @billping2633 Před 3 lety +6

      LOL oh to funny....but it may be true why do feet get bigger as you get older?

    • @braatsch
      @braatsch Před 3 lety +1

      yes

    • @marcus23antonius
      @marcus23antonius Před 3 lety +32

      If so, then why does the scrotum wrinkles more than the face.

    • @markg7963
      @markg7963 Před 3 lety +9

      Proximity to mass?😂😂😂

    • @Zeldaschampion
      @Zeldaschampion Před 3 lety +6

      I was going to upvote this but I think this comment should stay at 69 likes.

  • @AironExTv
    @AironExTv Před 3 lety +174

    Something just blew up. I think it was everything.
    Why has nobody talked about this before that I could randomly find ?!

    • @Clich13300
      @Clich13300 Před 3 lety +7

      Many people talked about that but it is so incredible that you didn't searched fot it.
      Please try "gravity illusion" in the seaching part of youtube and you will find many videos about this subject, like the famous one from PBS space time : czcams.com/video/NblR01hHK6U/video.html
      Regards

    • @mekman
      @mekman Před 3 lety +3

      Try here: czcams.com/video/gcvq1DAM-DE/video.html

    • @uvbe
      @uvbe Před 3 lety +8

      You don't watch Vsauce?

    • @sadhlife
      @sadhlife Před 3 lety +1

      read about relativity, it's all really good

    • @jkvdv4447
      @jkvdv4447 Před 3 lety +1

      yeah something did blow...my head

  • @gauravkotian3282
    @gauravkotian3282 Před 5 měsíci

    Amazing work. Thank you very much for guiding us.

  • @Bootmahoy88
    @Bootmahoy88 Před 6 měsíci +1

    That’s was an exquisite explanation. I actually think I’m beginning to grasp the concept of Space-time. Wow. Thankyou.

  • @clairerogerson2153
    @clairerogerson2153 Před 3 lety +46

    This explained time causing gravity better than anything else I’ve seen!

    • @Ghostalking
      @Ghostalking Před 3 lety +1

      This is a good introduction, follow up on VSauce for a more in-depth look at it

  • @captaindic5649
    @captaindic5649 Před 3 lety +18

    You are (The Man)! It's refreshing to see a scientist not trying to use up all the 26 letter words in the dictionary without saying a damn thing. You know how to pass along knowledge which leads to understanding. Bravo

  • @coryg303
    @coryg303 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I feel confident I can explain this to my outdoor ed students, thank you for your clarity 🙏

  • @EpsilonAD
    @EpsilonAD Před 2 měsíci +2

    I love this channel.
    I find happily odd and intelligent people (who communicate well) quite wonderful.

  • @davidr5685
    @davidr5685 Před 2 lety +53

    Thank you very much! I've been trying to explain gravity to my kids ( 6 &4 yrs old). Most adults don't understand and I've never been able to really grasp it , but your explanation helps! Thanks for shedding more light!

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 2 lety +6

      Glad I could help 🤓

    • @davidm4566
      @davidm4566 Před 2 lety +6

      Gravity is like sitting on your mattress with a bunch of various objects on it.
      The heavier the object, the deeper the squish in the mattress. We put more squish into the mattress so the smaller objects and their little squishes get absorbed into our larger squish, pulling them in!
      Or, you know, maybe a trampoline or something. Some videos on youtube have teachers putting out a tight cloth with various weights that really demonstrates this well: the heavier, the deeper they pull into the fabric. Some objects are even made to simulate orbit.

    • @coenraadloubser5768
      @coenraadloubser5768 Před 2 lety +1

      @@davidm4566 Maybe matter squishes spacetime because its made from it so there's less spacetime there to pass through?

    • @keerthi3086
      @keerthi3086 Před 2 lety

      @@coenraadloubser5768 interesting. more like knotted space time is matter, so around matter there's twisting like near a knot. All this is just fairy tale for now. Will need mathematical proving or disproving.

    • @keerthi3086
      @keerthi3086 Před 2 lety +3

      @@vhawk1951kl It's an irony you would type all that comment using your computer or phone that are built from using the very same models of modern physics which you say is no different from religion.

  • @donaldclifford5763
    @donaldclifford5763 Před rokem +1

    Thanks so much for he unsolicited mind warp!

  • @ezeebop
    @ezeebop Před rokem

    Pretty good vid. I now understand that gravity is a time gradient somehow related to the proximity of a large mass. What is harder for me to grasp is how reducing the playback speed to 0.5 slows the video to half speed, without reducing the central frequency of the narrator's voice.

  • @whitestarHokie
    @whitestarHokie Před 3 lety +178

    Would this mean that, in essence, an anti-gravity device would therefore be a time machine? "Speeding up" local time such that it is operating fast at the feet of the squirrel than at the head of the squirrel would force the vector to point in the opposite direction, there by forcing the squirrel to levitate.

    • @fernandoroque
      @fernandoroque Před 3 lety +32

      Wtf stop blowing my mind, no pls continue

    • @oscarword775
      @oscarword775 Před 3 lety +14

      Haha, that's smart. If you can figure out how to make a time machine, then this should work perfectly.

    • @ZoonCrypticon
      @ZoonCrypticon Před 3 lety +9

      I think you could levitate the squirrel also if there would be an equal mass on top of his head...letting the attraction of the both masses exerting on each other aside...the squirrel would levitate..and later on, unforutantely, rupture in two pieces. Maybe if you would create "Anti-mass" then you would have a backflow of time and anti-gravity?

    • @kosatochca
      @kosatochca Před 3 lety +3

      @@oscarword775 as long as it is causally consistent it's totally theoretically feasible

    • @oscarword775
      @oscarword775 Před 3 lety +1

      @@kosatochca That's pretty cool to know. Thanks.

  • @ginabonina6427
    @ginabonina6427 Před rokem +28

    Oh man I FINALLY GET IT!!! This was a superb explanation! I watched another video yesterday and I felt frustrated that I still didn't get it. Fun, casual and simplified and conversational rather than lectured. And the use of the word 'intuition' really hit home. And the hoodie clone LOL...Thank you.

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před rokem +4

      Glad I could help! 🤓

    • @adrianab9104
      @adrianab9104 Před rokem +1

      @@ScienceAsylum if there's a time gradient the squirrel can rotate in time in your graph but in the same place, why to fall?

  • @TheRealRevelation
    @TheRealRevelation Před 9 měsíci +1

    “What happens when there’s a gradient? Stuff.” 😄😆🤣

  • @zawilious
    @zawilious Před rokem +1

    woow, one of the best explanation ever, thank you

  • @Teelirious
    @Teelirious Před 3 lety +33

    Vids like this are why I'm a Patreon supporter and everyone else should be as well. Small price to pay for recommendable quality. Thx, Nick.

  • @eduardo_guimaraes
    @eduardo_guimaraes Před 3 lety +15

    That was awesome! I'm an engineer and I always look for science content online but this one is in a whole new level of originality! Those were incredibly interesting concepts to learn, I never thought of gravity that way

  • @ID-107
    @ID-107 Před 9 měsíci

    So if I understand it right and use not-that-perfect analogy, flow of time is like a flow of water, and mass is like a river bank (or more like the bank is a thing, and friction is its mass), slowing the flow at it. Gravity is then like bank effect, directing it to the closest bank (mass)

  • @abdulhakeemalmekhnaqi239

    I just got an idea of time dilation. Thanks for this video

  • @erezsolomon3838
    @erezsolomon3838 Před 2 lety +65

    "The best explainers of topics are the best understanders, that are best understood" - this is relevant to your channel; even though I understood gravity in the depth of Veritasium's video on it, you didn't fail to impress me when you offered a different perspective to this curious mind, and for that I am grateful. For making science more intuitive, while more fundamentally correct, I cannot thank you enough

  • @stevepreskitt283
    @stevepreskitt283 Před 2 lety +157

    It's interesting that this illustration also explains intuitively why objects fall at the same rate in a vacuum, regardless of their mass. The degree of time dilation per unit of distance remains the same regardless of the mass of the falling object, so by extension, so does the acceleration imposed by gravity.

    • @esvin8771
      @esvin8771 Před 2 lety +5

      What I don't understand is if this theory is correct than any object existing in our physical plane is in constant motion, but that would mean an object that is stationary and completely isolated from any other object of any size, it would mean it would move regardless, which goes against the laws of physics which state an object at rest will stay at rest unless acted upon by an equal and opposite force.....???? It seems this theory would only work if their are 2 objects, Mass is a missing factor in this theory, it affects if it can make any sense.

    • @JuiceTheLemon
      @JuiceTheLemon Před 2 lety +26

      @@esvin8771 everything around you is in constant motion. our galaxy is flying though the universe while we spin in circles around it and so on until we get to our planet. everything at 'rest' around you only appears that way because you are traveling through this universe at the same speed they are. if your in a car driving and set a piece of paper on the other seat its not moving in your point of reference but to everyone else outside of your car, that piece of paper is in fact moving down the road along with you and your car.

    • @adriananastasescu2644
      @adriananastasescu2644 Před 2 lety +3

      However, I got to think, that the objects with lower density would be longer thus the acceleration gradient from top/bottom is bigger. It means that the feather falls quicker than the lead. Some kind of contradiction to the law of the same rate falling in vacuum...

    • @arentol7
      @arentol7 Před 2 lety

      @@esvin8771 Newtons law says that an object will stay at rest unless acted on by an outside force. This theory is literally and directly about the way two objects affect each other, so how would it be a problem in your scenario?
      If there was a universe with only one particle in it then this theory would still work, it just wouldn't apply to that universe because there isn't a second particle to experience the effect. If there were two particles or more then this theory works and applies as expected.

    • @bvarsho1
      @bvarsho1 Před 2 lety

      Then why do all objects of different size fall at the same rate? Clearly it is not some intrinsic property of the falling object of any size. The reason it falls then, must be outside the body and act independent of the body.

  • @Donate_Please
    @Donate_Please Před 8 měsíci

    I think time dilation is an "observer" related phenomena, better explained by the relative speed of light to the observer. It's not really the source of gravity. But gravity can cause time dilation, such as around a black hole. But so can moving really fast relative to the clock doing the measuring. And moving really fast doesn't actually create gravity, it creates time dilation. Mass creates gravity by bending space itself via the Higgs Field. It's an important distinction you really have to make to understand how mass warps space and causes time dilation. But time dilation doesn't cause gravity.

  • @februarysnows5528
    @februarysnows5528 Před 8 měsíci

    Thanks for this informative video, but i have a question, then why do people say there is a counter force to object so that will always be two forces trying to balance each other out, and that's basically gravity. For example, a mountain emerges upward can only get at finite height because there is a counter force to push it down.
    If gravity is caused by time dilation then this concept is false?
    Sorry if it's confusing to my question 😅

  • @joeimbesi99
    @joeimbesi99 Před 3 lety +53

    "Holy time dilation Batman, I misunderstood the Gravity of the situation"..
    "Indeed Robin, Indeed"

    • @DieFoe
      @DieFoe Před 3 lety +1

      Whhhaaaappp!!!

  • @intsoumen
    @intsoumen Před 3 lety +170

    A lot of scientist, mathematicians and philosophers like you try to explain this great Einstien's theory(and Gravity is not a force) visually on youtube and other media with animation. But this is the best video I have ever seen before. Greatly done. Thank you for sharing such content. This makes me subscribe to your channel.

    • @robymaru03
      @robymaru03 Před 3 lety +1

      Me too he just got my subscription as well

    • @intsoumen
      @intsoumen Před 3 lety +1

      There is another video: czcams.com/video/wrwgIjBUYVc/video.html

    • @hv3213
      @hv3213 Před 3 lety +1

      haha yes, me too.

    • @elodnagy4061
      @elodnagy4061 Před 3 lety +1

      just subscribed for the EXACT reason! lol PLUS i can share with my father in-law because I’ve been trying to explain and visualize this to him for weeks now to no avail! THIS WILL 100% convince him! I will post back with progress! THNX warden!

  • @woll3Y
    @woll3Y Před rokem +6

    Is there a speed limit on how fast a local clock can tick when you put it really really far from any mass, like in a void between superclusters, where space is expanding? And does having lots of mass aound us the reason the space we occupy won't expand?

    • @Azoryth
      @Azoryth Před 5 měsíci +1

      It's not "space" itself expanding, as we kinda assume space is nearly infinite, it is the stuff in space expanding away from everything else. Almost like the surface of a balloon when you blow it up with air.

  • @user-tu4un9zl5f
    @user-tu4un9zl5f Před 9 měsíci +1

    My man siglehandedly making me regret not taking physics but engineering in college. What a great man 😢.

  • @marcosgonza
    @marcosgonza Před 3 lety +53

    Hoodie clone is the most similar to me of your clones.. most def

  • @PaulMillard1973
    @PaulMillard1973 Před 2 lety +14

    Mind blown!! An actual comprehensive explanation of the effect of gravity and how time produces what we can observe. Brilliant video!! 👍🏼🚀

  • @cornycor
    @cornycor Před 9 měsíci

    1:10
    I'm confused, is there time difference between the lower and the higher clock:
    a) because of their mutual distance? even if there weren't an earth underneath?
    b) because the building is placed on a rotating earth, causing the higher clock to follow a wider orbit, higher speed, slower time?

    • @narfwhals7843
      @narfwhals7843 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Neither. There is a time difference between them because of their different distances _from earth_ .
      The earth's mass is causing the time gradient. It has nothing to do with its rotation.
      See pinned comment answer 4.

  • @Hasanthe787
    @Hasanthe787 Před 11 měsíci +2

    This one of the best videos that explains gravity, every other one just puts a trampoline/plane on the screen and say that's gravity as if I don't know that already

    • @millicentsmallpenny5837
      @millicentsmallpenny5837 Před 2 měsíci

      Yuh, all it is doing is using gravity to explain gravity. Not very satisfying. (Explanation: "Small ball rolls toward big ball, because it is downhill toward the big ball, so gravity tales the small ball toward the big ball")
      You just used gravity to explain why gravity does what it does!!!!!!?.......!!!??
      All both explanations do is say that somehow the warping of space time causes gravity. But neither explains the mechanics of WHY it causes gravity

  • @varunas9784
    @varunas9784 Před 3 lety +17

    I understood this with two main presumptions
    1. Time always flows forward n when in doing so whenever it encounters a mass it slows down at its surface just like a flow of a liquid in a pipe
    2. On a fairly modest n large scales comprehensible to humans, objects tend to move towards a place where time passes slowly hence creating an illusion of gravity
    Jeez! how intriguing n weird of a concept is this!!!

    • @rajesh_shenoy
      @rajesh_shenoy Před 3 lety +2

      Now imagine that this flow of time was laminar all along due to the "pressure" of the Big Bang, and at some point in the future, it will break into turbulent flow! 😜

    • @jamestheotherone742
      @jamestheotherone742 Před 3 lety

      We are evolved from the bottom of a quite steep spacetime gradient. What we pecieve as "1 G" is the culminations of an unimaginable number of spacetime differential interactions between the particles that make up your brain that is reading this, to the aggregate of this entire patch of the Universe.

    • @hunk2140
      @hunk2140 Před 3 lety

      you just reversed scientific consensus..its the Gravity that creates the illusion of Time..how can he claim that time is more fundamental than gravity..?! well i say gravity is more fundamental than time..in fact time exists because of gravity..that's why Einstein said time is an illusion..

    • @jamestheotherone742
      @jamestheotherone742 Před 3 lety

      @@hunk2140 That is incorrect. Spacetime are the interrelated definitions of... well space and time. Gravity is a consequence, even an artifact, of spacetime curvature. The Universe is clever like that.

    • @EricVerbose
      @EricVerbose Před 3 lety

      If things move towards a place where time passes more slowly...and the big bang has all the stuff passing at minimal time...it's like everything is slowing down out of the bang, the same way things are experiencing heat death. Time death. Everything is trying to enter lower energy states? And if we consider time to be "change" (of energy...for of energy...), then time/gravity is a consequence of the universe trying to spin down from the Big Bang. Is this sensible?

  • @WilliamGard
    @WilliamGard Před 2 lety +11

    Thanks for actually doing a visual to make sense of this time delation thing. Much better than posting clocks everywhere and just comparing time readings. And now that I just saw a visually sensible demo of how it works, I guess that in a way I won't be able to "unsee" it, and maybe future readings in quora and other discussions about curved spacetime and time dilation will be somewhat easier to follow. It's similar to how I found the idea of special relativity far easier to understand when I saw a graphic representation of a Lorentz transform, and how the one angle that doesn't change is the 45deg angle of the photon's worldline.

  • @HHHGeorge
    @HHHGeorge Před 8 měsíci

    Just one question. If time creates the phenomena we call gravity because of the time dilation, (the effect due to the clock at the squirrel's head have a different time to it's feet) then why do you say at 6:57 that the earth makes time move more slowly near it? Are you meaning that time is different on the surface of the earth rather than some other point in space? What happens with satellites in geo-stationary in orbits? Does time move at the same rate for them as it does on the earth?

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 8 měsíci

      I mean that the closer you are to Earth, the slower time moves. The farther away you are, the faster it moves. The differences are very small, but they're measurable. It does affect satellites, especially if they're sensitive. We have to adjust for it in our design of GPS satellites, for example.

  • @DemoniacDeath
    @DemoniacDeath Před 8 měsíci +1

    6:37 that point intuitively made it click for me why gravity is the weakest "force" of the universe. because of how small the time differences are on the subatomic level

  • @htmohadighigpsshefalykhatu862

    Whoa!!! Didn't see THIS coming! That's the easiest and most mind-blowing explanation I ever heard! Whoa!!! Whoa!!! Whoa!!! Thanks Professor😊

  • @RM_VFX
    @RM_VFX Před 3 lety +75

    So my head is slightly out of sync with my feet? Finally I have something to blame for my clumsiness.

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 3 lety +40

      Yep! And that's not even because of a relativity. They're actually out of a sync by a _noticeable_ fraction of a second because of how your nervous system works. Your brain just compensates and adjusts your perception so you don't notice 🤯

    • @midnightdragonfly9707
      @midnightdragonfly9707 Před 3 lety +2

      And explains why I hit a curb pulling into a gas station today..can happen while driving, too😳

    • @issacflores9278
      @issacflores9278 Před 3 lety +3

      Basically input lag

    • @gregorybrian
      @gregorybrian Před 3 lety +8

      @@ScienceAsylum This is why in martial arts, you are taught to not think. The time it takes you to think interrupts the flow. Or as baseball legend Yogi Berra said about success in batting: “You can’t think and hit at the same time.”

    • @chiefgully9353
      @chiefgully9353 Před 3 lety

      @@issacflores9278 output in this case but yhea.
      In put is the fraction of a second your brain takes to realize what your eyes are seeing.
      The total lag between input and output is reaction time.

  • @anjuthanm
    @anjuthanm Před 9 měsíci +1

    Doesn't time difference at different heights (time dilation) exist due to gravity created by the mass of the object (earth in this case)?

    • @narfwhals7843
      @narfwhals7843 Před 9 měsíci +1

      No, it exists as part of the _spacetime curvature_ around the mass of earth. Gravity, that is gravitational attraction, is a result of the curvature. See pinned comment answer 3.

  • @SB-lc2vd
    @SB-lc2vd Před rokem +1

    Mind Blowing!!
    no one explained this to me this way!! EVER and I was applied physics/mechanical engineer

    • @millicentsmallpenny5837
      @millicentsmallpenny5837 Před 2 měsíci

      And you still dont understand gravity any more than you did before.
      Setting the graph up with a squirrel mysteriously tipping in a downward direction on the graft, explains gravity???? He explained nothing.

  • @ABWEndon
    @ABWEndon Před 3 lety +30

    If you take the "it" out of "gravity" you're left with "gravy". And just like gravy, gravity can either flow smoothly or be lumpy depending on the size of mass involved.

    • @nelsonclub7722
      @nelsonclub7722 Před 3 lety +1

      Have you been to my Aunties for tea again?

    • @ABWEndon
      @ABWEndon Před 3 lety +1

      @@nelsonclub7722 Nothing like chewing on a lump of gravy... helps you to make the most out of your Sunday roast!

  • @gamalipi
    @gamalipi Před 3 lety +41

    Nick, you really love this topics and thats why we all love to see you explaining them. Thanks a lot!

  • @bradleycroteau918
    @bradleycroteau918 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Cool, I think I buy it. How long has this been understood, and why are some physicists still looking for gravitons and pulling or pushing gravitational mechanisms? If this is the case then doesn't it bridge the gap between GR and quantum gravity? Deeper questions, how does the higgs particle impart mass to other particles/larger aggregate objects, and how does mass warp space-time at a distance from the massive object?

  • @MOAON_AABE
    @MOAON_AABE Před 9 měsíci +1

    That makes crazy sense!!!

  • @gabrielsventura77
    @gabrielsventura77 Před 3 lety +5

    This explanation is amazing, I have never heard of gravitational time dilation before and it makes so much sense.
    I am Brazilian and I recently discovered your videos. I'm really enjoying it and I'm very happy that the videos have Portuguese subtitles. :)

  • @nakedb1976
    @nakedb1976 Před 3 lety +20

    I've never heard gravity explained like this. It makes alot of sense. Why have I never heard this explanation before? Mind blown!

  • @flyhighcreative
    @flyhighcreative Před 10 měsíci +1

    First time I ever hear this explanation and it makes a lot of sense

  • @dakloos316
    @dakloos316 Před 3 měsíci

    Wow this really made things a lot more clear, way more than the other 20+ videos I've watched about the subject!
    By the way, this also means that if I float in space in "a straight line", I technically do not float in "a straight line" but ever so slightly inward on myself because of gravity?

  • @nelsonclub7722
    @nelsonclub7722 Před 3 lety +110

    “The fact that we live at the bottom of a deep gravity well, on the surface of a gas covered planet going around a nuclear fireball 90 million miles away and think this to be normal is obviously some indication of how skewed our perspective tends to be.” Douglas Adams

    • @bearwithabark
      @bearwithabark Před 3 lety +2

      Don’t panic, cover it in an S.E.P field.

    • @plupkination
      @plupkination Před 3 lety +3

      Excellent point! If you want to really grasp how UN-normal our universe is, try this.. seriously contemplate our sun! Here is a giant ball of fire, that has already been burning for BILLIONS of years... and it will continue doing so for BILLIONS more.. Anyone who has ever just tried to keep a campfire going can appreciate the mammoth achievement that a star is!

    • @i.m.i.7310
      @i.m.i.7310 Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for all the fish. D

    • @i.m.i.7310
      @i.m.i.7310 Před 3 lety

      Centi.

    • @nelsonclub7722
      @nelsonclub7722 Před 3 lety +2

      @@i.m.i.7310 In the beginning the Universe was created. This has made a lot of people very angry and been widely regarded as a bad move.

  • @jeff7731
    @jeff7731 Před 3 lety +39

    you laid on a greenscreen in your pajamas doing the newborn shuffle for that shot in space...... respect!

  • @robertwestbrook8865
    @robertwestbrook8865 Před 11 měsíci +7

    I loved your visualized method for explaining this. I've been through several several physics classes and studied quantum mechanics but your video actually put it into perceptive and now I can visualize it so much better in my head.
    Now, as I see it. There's only 2 ways to get around the time warping and resulting gravity.
    1. Somehow, be able to exist outside the flow of time. At the speed of light, time and gravity don't exist. See either speed or a bubble that isolates us from its flow. Perhaps a pocket universe or dimension.
    2. To somehow have negative mass. If we could produce a negative mass system of some kind. We would not warp space or time and therefore would be not be producing time dilation or the resulting gravity

  • @ST-bc1jw
    @ST-bc1jw Před 6 měsíci +2

    All is clearly and brilliantly explained, thank you. The only question I still have is why does mass cause such time curvature.

    • @michaelevans1690
      @michaelevans1690 Před 6 měsíci

      I had the same question. Adding my comment to feed the algorithm. Hope someone can answer this

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 5 měsíci +1

      We don't actually know why. We've simple observed the relationship (between mass and spacetime) and know what that relationship looks like.