Dark Matter's Not Enough - with Andrew Pontzen

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  • čas přidán 18. 11. 2014
  • Andrew Pontzen on why the Universe should be weirder.
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    The Universe seems to be governed by rules that we can, with some effort, understand. Andrew Pontzen introduces the stranger side of the cosmos - dark matter and dark energy - but then argues that these things are not so weird or unexpected after all. The strangest thing is that our rule-laden cosmos should be so predictable.
    Andrew Pontzen is a lecturer and Royal Society University Research Fellow at University College London, as well as a musician and science communicator. His work focuses on galaxy formation and computational cosmology, as well as some early-Universe physics. Previously, he has held fellowships at Oxford Astrophysics and at the Kavli Institute for Cosmology in Cambridge. And now, he finds the time to go around the country presenting shows at science festivals.
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Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @Ilikeyourgirl
    @Ilikeyourgirl Před 8 lety +85

    He may not be a good comedian but he's a damn good teacher and knows exactly what he is doing. There was no point in time where I felt like the topic was boring or thought of something else and didn't listen. This is an amazing talk! Well done!

    • @NLB90805
      @NLB90805 Před 4 lety +4

      He certainly has a knack for drawing in those people who have a deep knowledge of physical science. And those people who never stop learning. I really enjoyed this Lecture. I wish I had more Teacher's like him going through all the different years of schooling.
      Those who can make any subject fun and keep one 'Tuned' in is an absolute Gem of a purveyor of knowledge.

    • @MrPDTaylor
      @MrPDTaylor Před 4 lety +5

      He's a great comedian.

    • @phillynott2459
      @phillynott2459 Před 3 lety +2

      Nah, he is a good comedian

    • @Shafeeqh
      @Shafeeqh Před rokem +1

      Interesting,, instructive añd informative. Thanks

  • @danchanner7887
    @danchanner7887 Před 5 lety +148

    I think we have just found the next Dr Who.

  • @nazosman984
    @nazosman984 Před 5 lety +170

    to all of you complaining about his humour, there are kids in the audience and they were engaged the whole time. Difficult to get kids attention these days. Brilliantly done.

    • @Trucmuch
      @Trucmuch Před 5 lety +10

      I posted a comment about his humour, then read your comment and decided to delete mine.

    • @WmTyndale
      @WmTyndale Před 5 lety +2

      Those are OXbridge Students not the kind that are amused easily by cartoons, sports and hollywood porno!

    • @terryfuldsgaming7995
      @terryfuldsgaming7995 Před 4 lety +8

      @@WmTyndale are you deaf? There's clearly children in the audience... you can hear them constantly...

    •  Před 3 lety +1

      "these days"

    • @phillynott2459
      @phillynott2459 Před 3 lety +1

      "it's difficult to get kids attention these days"?
      What is your basis for this comment

  • @donaldhawkins7884
    @donaldhawkins7884 Před 8 lety +20

    have watched hundreads of lectures on physics, cosmolgy, found this to be one of the more intresting and understandble

  • @Sophiedorian0535
    @Sophiedorian0535 Před 3 lety +4

    “You can see why this is my favourite experiment: it’s pretty exciting.” What a teacher!

  • @Kugelschrei
    @Kugelschrei Před 8 lety +44

    This is so cool, he must be an amazing teacher.

  • @jamiewaymire7599
    @jamiewaymire7599 Před 4 lety +25

    What a dynamic and fun speaker! Held my attention the entire time and that is hard to do! I enjoyed this immensely!

  • @seanjoseph8637
    @seanjoseph8637 Před 7 lety +80

    A Great lecture on what we really don't know, I enjoyed it immensely and the lecturer is endearingly awkward and makes his points as clearly as is possible with such a "mysterious" subject.

  • @MsGnor
    @MsGnor Před 7 lety +76

    I wish I'd had a lecturer like Andrew Pontzen when I was at school :)

    • @lesseirgpapers9245
      @lesseirgpapers9245 Před 5 lety

      @@ralphclark The last 60 years they have been promising break throughs. Every time I look into these theories they fall apart under critical scrutiny. And they all tend to violate the principle that something and nothing cannot exist in the same time. If you look at it they are now consorting to fraud like the recent black hole pictures. These are not even close to the reality. The universe expanding at several times the speed of light? They are moving farther from physic and creating SciFI. These clowns are so warped in their head that the misinterpret every simple experiment. Take Prof Nimtz for example.

    • @lesseirgpapers9245
      @lesseirgpapers9245 Před 5 lety

      @@ralphclark Then show me respect. I know more than Suesskind. I would not blabber such nonsense. In Physic "to some extent it works" lacks any rigor of thinking. It is the words of a scam artist a snake oil drifter. Wake up man. America is not about being "tongue tied by authority" as per Shakespeare. In the last 70 years these clowns have been leading you in a Alicen wonderland using ridiculous terms with no meaning that results in absurd unverifiable predictions. Just a ;lone the recent pictures of the Black Holes was deeply dishonest.

    • @kristofburek264
      @kristofburek264 Před 4 lety +1

      Like physics, my school teacher was quite serious. But he also knew when to use humour and his eccentricity to entertain his class and bring clarity to a principle. Thanks! Mr Stevenson! you raised a lifelong student of physics! And also thanks! to Andrew Pontzen! Mush enjoyed!

    • @garyrafiq9561
      @garyrafiq9561 Před 4 lety +2

      ​@@lesseirgpapers9245 Typical antiscience American who is mad at scientists for telling people things he doesn't believe in.

    • @tonywells6990
      @tonywells6990 Před 2 lety +1

      @@lesseirgpapers9245 Way derp.

  • @leqin
    @leqin Před 9 lety +37

    Well one thing is certain and it is that Andrew Pontzen's got to be one of the best science communicators I have ever had the pleasure to watch - well done Andrew - and if you watch this then also take a little more time to watch the question and answer session - I haven't seen so many young people so enthused about science before - awesome.

    • @Quintinohthree
      @Quintinohthree Před 9 lety +3

      He is a great entertainer as well. The humour he uses in this hourlong lecture is such that I'd gladly go to the RI over a nearby theater where for the same hour another man tries to entertain people with comedy alone. We definitely need more lectures like these.

    • @apontzen
      @apontzen Před 9 lety +6

      Quintinohthree Nigel Oulton thank you both, such nice comments as this make the effort worthwhile!

  • @adithyaparupudi1336
    @adithyaparupudi1336 Před 5 lety +8

    I thoroughly enjoyed every minute of explanation. It was made very simple to understand. That means he really knows his stuff. Very very interesting

  • @karlamay_
    @karlamay_ Před 2 lety +2

    I enjoyed it so much that I didn't realize he spoke for 54 minutes. He delivers well and his jokes amazing! I feel like I understand but know nothing at all! I could listen to him all day and still not get bored. Most teachers should be like him, I mean, there are still wonderful teachers but most of them don't know how to teach and are only there for your grades. Lessons should be fun and interesting just like this, not boring reiteration of the books. Wish I could see him lecture in person. More power to you Professor!

  • @Necrikus
    @Necrikus Před 7 lety +166

    Amazing that they could get the Doctor to give a talk.

  • @jadecoley
    @jadecoley Před 3 lety +3

    I'm a 50 year old kid and that was brilliant. Thank you so much

  • @fedeabascal
    @fedeabascal Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks so much for this lecture and the great Q&As

  • @billsmith9711
    @billsmith9711 Před 5 lety +5

    he has a very good delivery. I enjoyed listening and learning.

  • @GrigorisDeoudis
    @GrigorisDeoudis Před 4 lety +15

    "You must have chaos within you to give birth to a dancing star." - Friedrich Nietzsche

  • @kathyyoung1774
    @kathyyoung1774 Před 5 lety +27

    Humor is a wonderful teaching tool! Sorry some commenters prefer dry boring lectures. Most people appreciate humor.

  • @susanhawkins5914
    @susanhawkins5914 Před 2 lety

    🙏🙏👍 thanks for making a vague, mystifying subject (to me) just that little bit clearer. Terrific delivery - I was totally engaged throughout. And yes, the English accent and well versed, animated delivery made it all the more enjoyable. Back in my day during school physics lessons half of this subject matter wasn’t even a consideration!

  • @hamzariazuddin424
    @hamzariazuddin424 Před 4 lety

    briliant presentation...I was looking for something more technical but ended up watching the whole thing because of his style....clearly not just for kids but brilliant to see science taught in such a way...

  • @miglator1
    @miglator1 Před 5 lety +101

    I dont understand how there can be so many people complaining about the jokes. I know most of you are physicists and are serious people and don't have any sense of humor but come on, this lecture was for kids and even if it was for adults what is the problem of making some jokes to make the lecture more dynamical. I am also a physicist and I definitely prefer that kind of lectures were the lecturer interacts with the audience rather than those boring ones were there is a person pretending to show the world that he is awsome and knows a lot of things without even minding if they are actually understanding what he is saying

    • @metaparcel
      @metaparcel Před 5 lety +3

      Dungeons and Dragons physicist more like it.

    • @RoyFultun
      @RoyFultun Před 5 lety +2

      Bah humbug!

    • @wellrose17
      @wellrose17 Před 5 lety +2

      miglator1 Coming from the layman's perspective I think he does a great job of articulating the importance of science & it's description as well. I haven't gotten in to the negative comments but those are just patterns I suppose. I like the the way he described our question & answer process. Remaining teachable is important. Perhaps we've passed this exam? Are we in need of a new teacher or different language? You understand what I mean? Perhaps it will never be fully understood. Or possibly a bit of creativity needs to be put in to our collective questions for a an extended period of time to rearrange our methods? I don't know. I'm an artist & musician who loves this stuff and likes learning. Cheers

    • @Yatukih_001
      @Yatukih_001 Před 5 lety

      There is sufficient hard evidence that Dark Matter has been harnessed. It was harnessed in the past and used to power the world. Before everyone starts to attack me and each other over this amazing fact, facts are still facts.This is probably the first time I comment on the subject and it´s usefulness as an energy resource on youtube.

    • @akizeta
      @akizeta Před 5 lety +9

      @@Yatukih_001 Facts are facts, except when they're just stories without any foundation in reality.

  • @StephenPaulKing
    @StephenPaulKing Před 7 lety +6

    The vacuum energy has to be fantastically small for this explanation to work...

  • @GwennDana
    @GwennDana Před 5 lety

    Conveying chaos science and Poincaré to kids in a public lecture. One cannot show enough appreciation for that.

  • @maxpandey
    @maxpandey Před 4 lety +1

    An amazing topic brilliantly matched with the sparkling analysis of the mysterious universe ..

  • @richarddeese1991
    @richarddeese1991 Před 5 lety +16

    "What an eccentric performance!" ;) Thanks for a very interesting talk. Rikki Tikki.

  • @DavidFMayerPhD
    @DavidFMayerPhD Před 4 lety +11

    Either: "Dark Matter" exists in abundance,
    Or: Gravity at interstellar distances does NOT behave the way we think that it does.
    Perhaps, at interstellar distances, gravity is 6 times as strong as we believe it to be?

    • @woahfarout8793
      @woahfarout8793 Před 3 lety +2

      Or we misunderstand inertia

    • @ChilledfishStick
      @ChilledfishStick Před 3 lety

      It's not like the thought hasn't occurred to astrophysicists. Dark matter isn't something set in stone. If you work out a better model, you are more than welcome to submit your work to a reputable journal.

    • @brainpain5260
      @brainpain5260 Před 3 lety

      David, some physicists are working on modified gravity theories. If your implying we don't seem to be taking it serious enough......I agree. On the particle physics side of dark matter we have eliminated much of the possibilities and supersymmetry looks grim based on latest cern runs. I think we learned from the discoveries of QM that we can't rely on our intuition outside the realm of historical human experience. I hope to live to see the answer and possibly contribute to it's resolve.

    • @mikemike6182
      @mikemike6182 Před 2 lety +1

      Dark matter don't exist, we just don't fully understand gravity yet
      Yet scientists is so bold to say it exist
      Waste millions of dollars for detection but zero progress

  • @TWJfdsa
    @TWJfdsa Před 8 lety +1

    High brow humor without snobbery, simply wonderful!

  • @vishnuteja7522
    @vishnuteja7522 Před 6 lety

    Has to be one of the best science talks of this century. Many people may not realize it but he touched upon some one the toughest challenges in computational sciences, statistical mechanics, chaos theory, vaccum energy(Casimir effect) in such an intuitive way. Like Einstein said " If you cannot explain something simply, you just don't understand it well enough" this guy knows his stuff well enough to criticize it well enough. Thanks!

  • @paulg444
    @paulg444 Před 5 lety +3

    He is solid gold !!

  • @ksimvanderhlaar
    @ksimvanderhlaar Před 9 lety +37

    It was impossible to me to be distracted from this lecture. Andrew Pontzen is awesome at science communicating, information and humour were mixed in right proportions. Also, I didn't know there was chaos theory holding some place in dark matter problem, it really motivates to learn it more. And that long-exposure shot of the pendulum looked a lot like attractors in fractal graphic redactors.
    English isn't my first language so it's far from ideal but I'm trying to improve it.

  • @chestypants78
    @chestypants78 Před 4 lety

    The part around 45:00 re: economics 'dragulescu and yakovenko 2001' was fascinating. Great lecture.

  • @chaptiss1
    @chaptiss1 Před 5 lety +1

    I love this guy, I'm so glad I stumbled upon this video.

  • @leyawonder2306
    @leyawonder2306 Před 6 lety +6

    I found his jokes quite funny actually, am I alone here

  • @chrissyphilp3619
    @chrissyphilp3619 Před 9 lety +55

    To be utterly non-scientific ... I love this man. Clarity of perception plus a sense of humour is a great mix

    • @ParalysedGekko
      @ParalysedGekko Před 6 lety +1

      Then take a look at Sean Carroll's "The Big Picture" in this RI series. This is how comedy and science just add up perfectly. I wonder how that totally untalented Mr.Pontzen got access to such a fine panel of professionals that have been invited throughout all the lecture series. Calling that a "great mix": yeah, even if Donald J. Trump would give a lecture, there would surely be fans.

    • @amoneyshredder9513
      @amoneyshredder9513 Před 6 lety +1

      I like sean carroll better

  • @lajosbaranyi7333
    @lajosbaranyi7333 Před 5 lety +2

    So well done! Amazing!

  • @moogfooger
    @moogfooger Před 2 měsíci

    what a terrific lecture! Thank you so much. Cheers

  • @David-tp7sr
    @David-tp7sr Před 8 lety +29

    When you improve your computer simulations of the Universe, how long before your simulation becomes so good that there are humans inside thinking they are real?

  • @jdavis417
    @jdavis417 Před 5 lety +4

    Douglas Adams was a super-genius! ;)

  • @_FightForYourFreedom_
    @_FightForYourFreedom_ Před 5 lety +1

    Brilliant and entertaining too! Learned a few new things about dark matter that nothing that I had come across before had explained.

  • @phillynott2459
    @phillynott2459 Před 3 lety +2

    Me after 60 seconds: "worst lecture ever"
    Me after 10 minutes: "best lecture ever"

  • @jojolafrite90
    @jojolafrite90 Před 7 lety +4

    Yep. Att 19:20. It's what I don't get. Everyone assumed it was made of particles instead of anything else, for example, it could be the influence of the mass of another space-time with it's own particles that don't directly interact with our normal mater (cf: dual universe theory). Or it could also be something else entirely.
    The point is that there ARE other possibilities to explain the excess of mass that we call dark matter than "Particles that weakly interact with other matter of our universe, but that are very massive too".
    I've never been a believer in those wimps... Some still try to find them with detectors (that are made of baryonic matter, of course, so they should hope the Wimp theory is the right one).

    • @avid0g
      @avid0g Před 5 lety

      The point is that the dark matter does not clump into planetary sized objects, much less stars. It does not interact with itself or with our familiar matter, except through gravity. There is already an upper limit on how heavy a dm clump can be without already being detectable.
      The most sensible response to observations is that we need to extend the quantum theories to include "weakly interacting (no electric charge) particles with mass". Since we haven't needed dark matter to explain results from our "atom smashers", the energy (and therefore mass) of dark matter must exceed their energy capacity. This puts a lower boundary on their mass. Thus, "massive".
      Since _two_ galaxies have been found with *no* significant dark matter, alternate gravitation theories are invalidated.

  • @horseman1968
    @horseman1968 Před 4 lety +12

    We are children running around with scissors ;)

  • @melvinshelton8448
    @melvinshelton8448 Před 5 lety

    Your CZcams blurb is spot-on in listing "science communicator" as one of your roles. You are definitely a star. In the sciences, it seems that you know something about a subject when you can simplify it without distortion, clearly enough that non-scientists can understand it, and remember it. You, like Sagan and Feynmann, have that gift. If I had had you, at some time, as my teacher in physics, I would have been seduced into studying cosmololgy. (At least, until my math gave out...)
    Thanks. I would like to see one of your professional presentations, but London is a long way from Seattle; I hope you have a lot of stuff on YT!
    M.D. Shelton, M.D., Ph.D. (Biophysical Sciences)

  • @tconthejazz1
    @tconthejazz1 Před 4 lety +1

    What a fabulous lecturer! Really good.

  • @jeremielebrun3637
    @jeremielebrun3637 Před 4 lety +17

    i'm french and i understand every words you say, that means your french accent is good enough
    EDIT: it seems that you were speaking english...
    i've probably no frenchin' idea of what you say...
    and your Baltimore accent is deplorable!

    • @galbrunfranck9960
      @galbrunfranck9960 Před 3 lety

      Il parle anglais pas américain. C'est la langue que nous appren(i)ons à l'école.

    • @jeremielebrun3637
      @jeremielebrun3637 Před 3 lety

      @@galbrunfranck9960 ... merde je croyais que c'était en français...

    • @galbrunfranck9960
      @galbrunfranck9960 Před 3 lety

      @@jeremielebrun3637 Il y a des jours comme çà ou rien ne marche... un type drôle et intelligent et il est anglais... )

  • @ChrisBrengel
    @ChrisBrengel Před 4 lety +4

    The emotional computer was pretty funny :)

  • @JorgeConstancio
    @JorgeConstancio Před 5 lety +1

    i just love to know about how humanity stands in matters of science right now, thank you all by this :)

  • @terrymcnee3568
    @terrymcnee3568 Před 2 lety +1

    A man who is such a good teacher for children is a brilliant teacher for us adults too Thanks

  • @ToddSloanIAAN
    @ToddSloanIAAN Před 5 lety +3

    ENTHUSIASM, MAN!

  • @eddyr3691
    @eddyr3691 Před 5 lety +7

    A thousand times more informative than any of the BBC Horizon episodes of the last decade.

  • @Age_of_Apocalypse
    @Age_of_Apocalypse Před 5 lety +1

    Andrew Pontzen: Brilliant! Thank You!

  • @skodbolle
    @skodbolle Před 5 lety +2

    Great lecture, and humor helps you learn so much more :)

  • @JonnysGameChannel
    @JonnysGameChannel Před 9 lety +11

    Is the arrow at 14:18 in the wrong direction ? Does anyone know ?

    • @TheRoyalInstitution
      @TheRoyalInstitution  Před 9 lety +12

      JonnysGameChannel Most (though not all) galaxies have spiral arms that trail behind the direction of the rotation. Andrew says that it does seem that he drew his arrow the other way around on this image of M81 but that the point he's making is unaffected. Good spot.

    • @samuraiwarrior5
      @samuraiwarrior5 Před 8 lety

      +JonnysGameChannel Sadly, no prize for that find. But let's get back to the science at hand here lol great lecture.

    • @JonnysGameChannel
      @JonnysGameChannel Před 8 lety +1

      doceigen
      Heh, I thought you were trolling right away, but you made me google it. Nice try.

    • @JonnysGameChannel
      @JonnysGameChannel Před 8 lety

      7%=?

    • @JonnysGameChannel
      @JonnysGameChannel Před 8 lety

      doceigen
      So it would seem.

  • @rizendell
    @rizendell Před 8 lety +5

    There is a fundamental problem with the whole dark matter bit and that is what we created it for (to explain 5x matter). Its suppose to cause and be influenced by gravity, but if it is just flying through everyone and everything and has no bearing on the orbit of the planets or anything else, then the science is wrong, the prediction is wrong.

    • @LendallPitts
      @LendallPitts Před 8 lety +2

      +rizendell So much time and money are spent trying to save Einstein's theories -- to prove that he was right about everything. Saving Einstein means, among other things, saving locality, despite the fact that already in the 1960s John Bell demonstrated that Einstein (EPR) must be wrong about this. The reason why Einstein wanted so desperately to save locality was that "spooky action at a distance" implied that something was happening faster than the speed of light, and if that were the case, many of his theories would collapse. The trust about gravity is tied up with this somehow.

    • @morkney8510
      @morkney8510 Před 5 lety

      +risendell
      How does it have no bearing on the orbits of planets? Dark matter, due to its gravitational attraction, is expected to condense and form large isothermal blobs. These big blobs will have their own gravitational pull, so they WILL influence the orbits of observable matter. I think your interpretation is wrong.

    • @Yatukih_001
      @Yatukih_001 Před 5 lety

      Well you need a large tower to manipulate dark matter so you can harness it and then turn it into energy and use the electricity produced from that.

    • @avid0g
      @avid0g Před 5 lety

      The point is not how dark matter (DM) affects planets, but how planets, asteroids, stars, and black holes affect DM. By repeatedly deflecting DM particles into Chaotic orbits around galaxies, and by capturing DM in black holes, condensed conventional matter has affected the dark matter by thoroughly randomizing the orbital paths of minute particles.
      On the other hand, with a diffuse cloud of dark matter passing through our Galaxy in a random spherical cloud with five times its mass and ranging far beyond the "edges" of our disc, the speed of rotation of the outer regions of the galaxy is increased.
      The fact that the spokes of galaxies are curved spirals and not a smear, as found around Saturn, is a testament to the profound long term effects of dark matter.

  • @wailinburnin
    @wailinburnin Před 2 lety +1

    Comments on the presentation - seemed silly to some - but his delivery was totally chaotic, it was brilliant to his point. Bravo. Even ended with a jab at injustice with the economy bit (like a super clever anarchist, right there on Faraday’s desk!) subtlety indoctrinating your kids. Brilliant performance, guy’s a total genius!

  • @bijanajamlou5152
    @bijanajamlou5152 Před 6 lety +1

    Great presentation!

  • @demonslayer357
    @demonslayer357 Před 7 lety +8

    25:10 "How on earth did you go about finding a millionth of a millionth of a millionth of a kilogram of something
    that's invisible and untoucheable?"
    LSD! Psychedelics!

    • @0-m-1-n-0-u-5
      @0-m-1-n-0-u-5 Před 4 lety

      Something everyone should experience at least once.

  • @Arktriam
    @Arktriam Před 8 lety +8

    I'm only 20 minutes in so sorry if he explains this later on. Einstein says that gravity is actually space bending. So what if dark matter isn't matter at all. We think of matter as being related to gravity but what if the gravity we think is from dark matter is just space rippling in a fourth dimension from some disturbance like the Big Bang and not matter.

    • @theprinceofdarkness4679
      @theprinceofdarkness4679 Před 8 lety

      Arktriam There might be something there. If you can find some equations to fit that and then find a way to test that, we will have a breakthrough in our understanding of dark matter. We are still working on neutrinos and testing all the parameters for that. Once that is done, we will need to look in new directions to find this elusive dark matter, whatever it really is. Unfortunately for us, the other dimensions are difficult to investigate because we have so many competing string theories. Quantum theory is very challenging already.

    • @Arktriam
      @Arktriam Před 8 lety +1

      Roger Smith I wish I could come up with equations and figure out ways to test it but I'm only a sophomore in high school. The most complex math I know is Algebra II and Trig. I can't wait until I get to college and have the resources and knowledge to pursue stuff like this on a deeper level. Until then, I can only focus on the fundamentals of these topics.

    • @theprinceofdarkness4679
      @theprinceofdarkness4679 Před 8 lety +1

      Arktriam You are on the right path. Take Calculus as soon as they let you. Also take Physics. If your high school allows, take the courses at college or university. In the next 10 years, we are going to have some exciting times in Physics. You won't want to miss any of it and you will be in the right place. You will find those equations eventually. You are already asking the right questions.

    • @kwanarchive
      @kwanarchive Před 8 lety +1

      Arktriam Don't be confused by the name "dark matter". It's just a placeholder name. Same with dark energy. They could just as well be called "Fred" and "Wilma". An exotic form of matter is just one of the more easily testable hypotheses we have, but it is by no means the only avenue of research. However, it must be said that post-Einstein theories of gravity, like MOND or elsewise, haven't had much success even from a mathematical standpoint.

    • @johnkendal5562
      @johnkendal5562 Před 7 lety

      In other words untestable hypothesis - not empirical science - hence not yet proven to be true.

  • @EntropicNightmare
    @EntropicNightmare Před 8 lety +1

    19:45 While there is certainly a contribution from electromagnetic forces, the primary reason you don't pass through the floor is due to the pauli exclusion principle.

  • @FalkFlak
    @FalkFlak Před 2 lety

    the example of modeling economics was an eye opener. You can have a solution/approximation without knowing whats actually going on.
    That was very humble. In contrast, when listening to other science presenters talking about dark matter and "stuff" you sometimes get the impression they want you to think they figured it all out.

  • @colinsmith1495
    @colinsmith1495 Před 5 lety +4

    Or, alternative theory, maybe we don't have matter wrong (5/6ths of the universe not being what we think of as matter), but rather maybe we have gravity wrong.
    I mean, not *wrong* wrong, but like Newton had it 'wrong' in that when we got to planetary orbits and relativistic motion, he just wasn't quite right. Maybe Einstein and relativity are good for orbital mechanics and stellar motion, but not quite right on the galactic and intergalactic scale.
    There are a *bunch* of such theories, collectively called MoG (Modified Gravity) Theories, but none seem quite right either.
    So, basically, it's not really any more likely than dark matter, it's just that it's not really any _less_ likely, either.

  • @maxgalarza9955
    @maxgalarza9955 Před 4 lety +13

    the dark energy of today is the old ether of the past

    • @wirsindhelden0
      @wirsindhelden0 Před 3 lety +2

      I was thinking about this the other day, and if anything I would relate the "ether" of the old days to the quantum field of electromagnetism of today. In many ways those scientists were absolutely on the right track and had the right notions.

  • @traditionalsunni629
    @traditionalsunni629 Před 4 lety

    6:40 you are in for a treat. Damn he didnt lie. That was soooo goooood

  • @gunterstrubinsky9452
    @gunterstrubinsky9452 Před 6 lety +1

    I love it and so did the kids. You would never get them there, even less to listen to as complex matter as Mr. Pontzen talked about. Absolutely hilarious! Not to mention very brave of him to step out of science's comfort zone! (Ooops, I mentioned it)

  • @videom
    @videom Před 5 lety +19

    Dark Matter is as real as luminiferous aether was. We need to figure out gravity and throw dark matter behind us IMO.

    • @kristofburek264
      @kristofburek264 Před 4 lety

      Sure! I think he put across rather well that physicists from the future might well regard the concept of dark matter as laughably naïve. But he's amongst the best and I don't think I can do better right now.

    • @econrith
      @econrith Před 4 lety

      Especially black holes. Sag A

    • @KipIngram
      @KipIngram Před 4 lety +1

      I think that's a distinct possibility. There's no evidence for it EXCEPT our inability to make gravity work out right. So we just toss in some dark matter and say all is well. Well, MAYBE - but MAYBE NOT. We need to be more rigorous.

    • @mikem.s.1183
      @mikem.s.1183 Před 4 lety

      No.
      But definitely you have to figure out what our current understanding of gravity is before making such a statement.
      And comparing aether (no equations ever supported it) to dark matter (the mathematics point towards its existence) is illogical.

  • @1972martind28
    @1972martind28 Před 5 lety +28

    Electric Universe

  • @bigcountry5520
    @bigcountry5520 Před 2 lety +1

    it would be difficult to say whether we can feel dark matter, or not, because we've always been subjected to it, so the true experiment would be to figure out how to block dark matter, and then ask that question.

  • @danievdw
    @danievdw Před 6 lety

    Very interesting talk, and well presented.

  • @Will-be-free
    @Will-be-free Před 5 lety +4

    It used to be that scientists made up formulas that would fit what they could observe. Lately it seems that they instead comes up with make-belief stuff to explain why they don't want to change the formulas with new observations.

  • @passives0n
    @passives0n Před 7 lety +6

    He misses the obvious point that dark matter is likely massive blackholes with a constant ratio of 5:1 gravity to the visible mass in the universe.
    It may also be the property of the higgs field. As space expands the higgs field decreases in strength producing negative mass and gravity.
    I thought it was an interesting presentation.

    • @meggido7863
      @meggido7863 Před 7 lety

      yeahh this is very possible that dark matter may be a brown dawrf white dwarf or even a black hole but i have seen some calculations that even this would not be enough to explain why stars travel so fast around the galaxy they say that there are no enough mass to create such gravity

    • @Mernom
      @Mernom Před 6 lety

      Your explenation about the higgs field is actualy counters your point, since the higgs field losing strength would require even MORE stuff to make up for the 5/1 ratio. It having more effect on the galactic scale could explain it though.

    • @aurelienyonrac
      @aurelienyonrac Před 5 lety

      I like how you think. i was just thinking about negative mass and gravity. and a way to test it. if scientist can test there theory on economy why not do that with negative mass and negative gravity? Let us see how it apply in every day life.
      33:59 "massless particle only travel at the speed of light" . All particles travel at the speed of light and are 2 dimensional plus time. When they are slowed down below the speed of light they develop mass, when accelerated above the speed of light they develop anti mass.
      Pretty funny.
      Let us see that applyed.
      "Everyone is doing the best they can and if they could do better they would" that is the speed of light. Now if you congratulat someone they will have a tendency to have better self esteem, more presence, more mass. People are attracted to them, they have gravity. But if you push someone who is allready at it's max you get negative gravity, they push you away, in exactly the opposite of what you want. Just as predicted by Herman Bondi in "Review of modern physics". Funny and true.
      inspiered by "the concept of mass" by Jim Baggot

    • @avid0g
      @avid0g Před 5 lety

      The recent discovery of two galaxies with little or no DM has refuted the alternate gravity theories. Watch for corroboration of more light weight galaxies.

  • @ellaa123
    @ellaa123 Před 6 lety

    great lecture, thanks

  • @Na-eo1gx
    @Na-eo1gx Před 3 lety +2

    This guys an amazing presenter!

  • @RonJohn63
    @RonJohn63 Před 8 lety +4

    17:15 Novices trust experts on a pretty regular basis, no?

    • @luke666808g
      @luke666808g Před 8 lety

      +RonJohn63 On average, comments like that are likely to be a pun, or perhaps you just need a stronger computer to calculate just how regular a basis it is.

    • @martinzitter4551
      @martinzitter4551 Před 8 lety +6

      +RonJohn63 - I was a professional pert for many years. I retired and now I'm an expert.

  • @alexbowman7582
    @alexbowman7582 Před 6 lety +6

    It would be more accurate to call it dark knowledge.

  • @madden1957
    @madden1957 Před 4 lety +1

    Brilliance and entertaining. This guy is a rare one. Good Job Andrew!

    • @banmadabon
      @banmadabon Před 4 lety +1

      Ok mom, nice try...

    • @madden1957
      @madden1957 Před 4 lety +1

      @@banmadabon Whaaaaaat????????

    • @banmadabon
      @banmadabon Před 4 lety

      @@madden1957 Given that I've found the bloke's humour terrible (I'm not the only one...) and the super flattering comment of yours I was jokingly implying that the author was his mom in disguise...

    • @madden1957
      @madden1957 Před 4 lety +2

      @@banmadabon You think HIS humor is bad yet you need to actually EXPLAIN yours??? Such irony.

    • @FrederickTheGrt
      @FrederickTheGrt Před rokem +1

      Banmadabon's comment was the only thing I actually laughed at. The video was cringe.

  • @angiestewart7616
    @angiestewart7616 Před 4 lety

    Well l am so hooked l had my computer on and next thing Andrew Pontzen is on my screen so hence been almost spellbound listening to this guys lecturing and l love Quantum Physics ideas l have had no education to speak of but l am could sit here for hours on end listening -hell l been here for hours LOL

  • @davidwaynechoate8059
    @davidwaynechoate8059 Před 5 lety +4

    There's gonna be like 100 or more "Dark" add-onns to the Big Bang Model..It's just insulting now.

    • @lito11111940
      @lito11111940 Před 5 lety +1

      I agree, it's utterly absurd !

    • @Yatukih_001
      @Yatukih_001 Před 5 lety +2

      Exactly. And everyone is acting as if everything has already been discovered.

  • @edek3159
    @edek3159 Před 7 lety +10

    I feel like I have asthma from his breathing

  • @youtubemusic374
    @youtubemusic374 Před 5 lety

    he is a veryy talented speaker and he really can get the attention of the young people in his audience with ecellent ideas and in the end he showed an absolutely brilliant computer simulation how galaxies in the early universe merge and how they are pulled together by their dark matter. All these facts were presented with a profound knowledge of didactics and great and fantastic sense of humour that caught the young people by their heart. This wa s one of the best and smartest talks that i ever heard on dark matter Joerg J.

  • @leobritton8929
    @leobritton8929 Před 3 lety

    To point out, chaos is a question of systematic understanding, he pointed out that it is difficult to be precise about the start conditions of any given system. His point was more despite this lack of available initial field conditions that we can infer that dark matter field and dark energy fields both exist.

  • @roxannamason4400
    @roxannamason4400 Před 5 lety +3

    Dark matter is the spirit world, unseeable in our existence.

    • @cdurkinz
      @cdurkinz Před 5 lety +2

      I've actually thought of this as well. Definitely makes you wonder....

    • @theundead1600
      @theundead1600 Před 5 lety

      Maybe but maybe not for long.

  • @trajanaugustus2792
    @trajanaugustus2792 Před 8 lety +7

    I used to be enamored with British accents but people like this presenter make it annoying. The heavy breathing, over dramatic speaking, stupid jokes, etc just kills the pleasure of learning the subject.

    • @romteb
      @romteb Před 6 lety

      That's English (not british) people in a nutshell, always trying way too hard to be funny or charming, extraordinarily off putting.

  • @ryanfitzalan8634
    @ryanfitzalan8634 Před 4 lety +1

    i really thought this was about what Dark Matter is, only to get to the end and feel very duped

  • @climbeverest
    @climbeverest Před 6 lety

    Awesome, thanks

  • @rgaleny
    @rgaleny Před 8 lety +3

    What about ELECTROMAGNETISM? dust BUNNY GALAXIES.

    • @NLB90805
      @NLB90805 Před 4 lety

      I just want to know where do all the odd number socks, that go missing, after one has put them in the wash - then dryer. And blamo, where did the matching sock to my Argyll pair disappear to, some other dimension or universe? Floating-off into some yet unidentified "Odd (Man-Out) Sock" Field, where all these socks disappear to? Another one of those heavy, heavy questions science has yet to discover!

  • @verneukteaap
    @verneukteaap Před 8 lety +6

    I watched the entire video and while I'm not an expert at all, on anything physics related, I feel like it was a bad presentation. And I don't mean the jokes as ofcourse I understand a large part of the audience were children, but inherently. After about 50 minutes I really hoped he'd end with some sort of eye-opening revelation, or a conclusion that would blow my mind, but what he pretty much ended with was: "We can only give you predictions of things we don't understand. Estimates so broad and vague that they encompass nearly the entire subject so that eventually, when precise evidence does come up, we can say that we weren't wrong."
    If this really is the only point he made, then the one hour talk was a bit disappointing. However, a lot of the comments here seem really positive about it. So am I missing something? English isn't my first language so if there is something I might not have understood correctly someone please tell me. Thanks a lot.

    • @edkorthof
      @edkorthof Před 5 lety

      I think that's the state of the science wrt to dark matter and dark energy -- they produce good simulations/models, but at the same time are somewhat unsatisfying (for many people) as explanations. I actually really liked the analogy provided by the "physicist's model of economics" -- the way physicists use dark matter and dark energy might turn out to be very accurate, or it might be wildly different from the actual mechanics but still produce similar predictions on aggregate.

  • @julianbassk
    @julianbassk Před rokem

    Great lecture. Sometimes with the kid-geared RI lectures, it doesnt hold my interest. But this weaved together dark matter, chaos theory, and even economics in ways i never expected. Kudos! Also i thought it was pretty hilarious

  • @TheLovelivepeace
    @TheLovelivepeace Před 3 lety

    Very captivating

  • @Doniazade
    @Doniazade Před 9 lety +30

    The mic is too close to the mouth again, lots small irritating noises from breathing etc. Not as bad as some previous videos but it would be nice if you could capture cleaner audio for more pleasant listening.

    • @nightrous3026
      @nightrous3026 Před 6 lety

      and the lisp.
      (im sorry)

    • @rgibbs421
      @rgibbs421 Před 6 lety +2

      Couldn't have said it better.

    • @dredrotten
      @dredrotten Před 6 lety

      Why! Why! Why! Do they have to have this forensic type of audio on so many videos? It turns me off and I cant watch them!

    • @therocinante3443
      @therocinante3443 Před 6 lety +1

      They need to hire a better audio engineer!

    • @therocinante3443
      @therocinante3443 Před 6 lety

      Red Rooster, What is "Forensic audio?" Did you just make that up?

  • @carlhopkinson
    @carlhopkinson Před 5 lety +3

    Isn't the fact that there exists a Andrew Pontzen enough to qualify the universe as weird enough??

  • @happyhugs
    @happyhugs Před 6 lety

    Brilliant ! Thank you ! :))

  • @vgrof2315
    @vgrof2315 Před 2 lety

    Thank you.

  • @sugarfrosted2005
    @sugarfrosted2005 Před 8 lety +3

    29:30 Remember kids, floats aren't real numbers.

  • @iasnaia-poliana
    @iasnaia-poliana Před 9 lety +18

    Beginning with laughing at Poincaré is not really presenting oneself as wise. But it brings joy to the children doesn't it?

    • @simonpmccullagh6320
      @simonpmccullagh6320 Před 9 lety +3

      Lefonkismine I think this is from the Christmas lecture series and it's always for kids, it's annoying as an adult but we're not the target audience, ho hum.

    • @iasnaia-poliana
      @iasnaia-poliana Před 9 lety

      Simon P McCullagh Thank you for the clarification, I didn't get that point actually.

    • @_brett_7893
      @_brett_7893 Před 9 lety +5

      Lefonkismine And I suppose having a pretentious-looking profile picture on Google+ does?

    • @EvelynDayless
      @EvelynDayless Před 9 lety +1

      Lefonkismine I thought it was more laughing with him.

    • @iasnaia-poliana
      @iasnaia-poliana Před 9 lety

      ***** Queer as folk Fritz, your only one!

  • @david203
    @david203 Před 4 lety

    Patterns are indeed important, but the specifics are even more important. That is why 100 years from now physics and daily life will be different due to genuine breakthroughs in understanding. And that final question, whose answer was omitted, is very interesting indeed, since neutrinos are passing through the Earth and us right now in great quantities, and they do act like dark matter.

  • @royrasmussen9738
    @royrasmussen9738 Před 4 lety

    Thank you

  • @ricardf1857
    @ricardf1857 Před 8 lety +7

    INSANE CRINGE MOMENT AT 24:18

  • @parkjammer
    @parkjammer Před 8 lety +109

    This guy proves that comedy is not an amateur sport and is best left to professionals.

    • @kblocal07
      @kblocal07 Před 6 lety +11

      parkjammer he is a scientist doing a lecture for youtube. be a bit boring if he didnt have any character wouldnt it. jokes werent very good but he was likeable and knowledgeable. also, kids seemed to like his jokes.

    • @istvansipos9940
      @istvansipos9940 Před 6 lety +7

      he gives this lecture to children. it worx just fine. perfectly, actually

    • @therocinante3443
      @therocinante3443 Před 6 lety +4

      Imagine a comic trying to explain (let alone understand) the things he talked about? Do you watch stand up and feel the need to criticize them on their understanding of physics? Think about things before you say them, lol.

    • @aditimisra80
      @aditimisra80 Před 6 lety +3

      parkjammer thats prolly because comedy is not a sport at all.

    • @okimotus
      @okimotus Před 6 lety +1

      Surely, you can do better

  • @williamsknowledgetruth6286

    Got ya. It seemed just like the I pad or I-phone application does. Thx for the explication. I’ll have to try a old calculator.

  • @johnmcclain3887
    @johnmcclain3887 Před 3 lety

    A couple things, regarding the pendulum, first off, an "led" is a coherent light source, meaning you lose substantial light when it's even slightly off axis with the camera, leading to the "dead zone" on the right. The second thing is the fact we are dealing with a "pendulum situation" as "control" so we must see back and forth movement based on the length and mass ratio, controlling the harmonic frequency, meaning every movement must move through the middle, to get to the other side, so right from the start, it's in the middle twice as much as either side, but in fact, equal time, on average, to both sides added up, that would be the equivalent means of looking for common patterns, in the sides, basically, folding down the middle, vertically. I suspect there would be a similar pattern density in the two sides, put together, to that in the center. I'm not sure, but trying to consider the issues mechanical in its movements.