General Relativity Lecture 1

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 16. 10. 2012
  • (September 24, 2012) Leonard Susskind gives a broad introduction to general relativity, touching upon the equivalence principle.
    This series is the fourth installment of a six-quarter series that explore the foundations of modern physics. In this quarter, Leonard Susskind focuses on Einstein's General Theory of Relativity.
    Stanford University:
    www.stanford.edu/
    Stanford Continuing Studies Program:
    csp.stanford.edu/
    Stanford University Channel on CZcams:
    / stanford

Komentáře • 2K

  • @tibees
    @tibees Před 4 lety +2876

    "I haven't been in a rocket ship but I have been in an elevator" I like how he uses the example that we can all imagine and understand. A great teacher 👏

  • @AsMyTiGeR
    @AsMyTiGeR Před 8 lety +5649

    I wonder how Proffessor Susskind manages to balance his time between lecturing and being a hitman for Walter White.

  • @lucasbuvinic240
    @lucasbuvinic240 Před 4 lety +1130

    0:00 Intro
    2:06 Original intuition : Gravitational forces = accelerated reference frame (-> tidal forces)
    18:09 Curvilinear gravity (intro to coordinate transformations): Connection between gravity and curvilinear transformations of the coordinates of spacetime
    24:02 Example of the elevator: equivalence principle applied to light
    29:54 Intuitive notions on gravitational fields: you can't apply a coordinate transformation such that the tidal forces are eliminated (since gravity =/= accelerated frame of reference)
    34:11 Fake gravitational field (created due to a certain nonlinear coordinate transformation) or a real gravitational field (tidal forces=real gravitational field)
    43:58 The task: to find a coordinate transformation such that the tidal forces are eliminated
    49:00 The mathematics that are involved in GR: Studying the geometry of spacetime (notion given to us by special relativity).
    53:12 Riemannian Geometry
    55:34 Curvilienar coordinates (and generalized distance)
    1:06:22 The question of Riemannian geometry: Flat or not flat?
    1:08:07 What does it mean for space to be flat?
    1:08:47 Relation to the original problem of eliminating tidal forces
    1:17:09 Coodinate transformations (intro to tensor analysis)
    1:20:50 The notion of a contravariant vector (introduced from the perspective of the classic differential)
    1:23:24 Definition a contravariant vector and how it's components transform under a coordinate transformation.
    1:27:36 Einstein notation
    1:28:57 The notion of a covariant vector (introduced from the perspective of the gradient of a function)
    (note the connection between a basis (direction) and the partial derivative along an axis)
    1:35:17 Definition a covariant vector and how it's components transform under a coordinate transformation.
    Note: this whole introduction to coordinate transforms is nicely explained here but it's recommendable (and considering that most of us had to deal with linear algebra before getting to tensor analysis) that you'd watch eigenchris' Tensors for Beginners series
    1:35:20 Central notion to tensor analysis: Tensors are defined by the way that they transform.
    1:39:26 Generalization of this covariant and contravariant transformations (for rank 2 tensor with 2 covariant components or 2 contravariant components)
    1:47:48 Transformation of the metric (unfinished) -> the metric is a tensor

  • @DonaldEFlood
    @DonaldEFlood Před 8 lety +1898

    It's fantastic that one of the leading universities in the World, Stanford, would, at their own time & expense, provide to the general public, for free, the very best lectures that are available on topics such as this. Thank you Professor Susskind and thank you Stanford University!

    • @sourabhsaha5773
      @sourabhsaha5773 Před 5 lety +47

      Ikr.. this is just brilliant and shows how much more they care about education than money

    • @lucasm4299
      @lucasm4299 Před 5 lety +9

      Dawn Flood
      Go Stanford! 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🏆🏆❤️❤️❤️

    • @tNtNitro
      @tNtNitro Před 4 lety +16

      haha i get it
      GENERAL PUBLIC

    • @ElixirOfEuphoria
      @ElixirOfEuphoria Před 4 lety +11

      @@tNtNitro That's a stretch

    • @nfergistink110
      @nfergistink110 Před 4 lety +7

      Monetization x

  • @JohnnyYenn
    @JohnnyYenn Před 7 lety +1096

    It is such a privilege to be able to have access to these :0

  • @RalphDratman
    @RalphDratman Před 8 lety +501

    What a great teacher. He seems like an ordinary guy, and he often gets mixed up on details, but when he gets to the heart of the matter, he is just wonderful. Thank you so much, Prof. Susskind. This is so helpful.

    • @amandajaynesparrow3591
      @amandajaynesparrow3591 Před 8 lety +6

      +Ralph Dratman He is truly amazing Ralph

    • @jimkeller3868
      @jimkeller3868 Před 8 lety +49

      Disagree. He is obviously hyper intelligent, but not necessarily a great teacher. He begins by translating coordinate frames with little or no explanation as to why he is doing what he is doing, and what his goal is. In fact I disdain the type of teaching that simply, at least from my point of view, seems like "we are driving somewhere, but we have no fucking idea where we are going and why."
      HE obviously knows where he is heading, but suspect that he hasn't made it clear to his audience. The first few minutes of this lecture are confusing as hell to me.

    • @RalphDratman
      @RalphDratman Před 8 lety +16

      I think you have a good point. A few months after I wrote the comment to which you are replying, I also began to feel dissatisfied with Susskind's teaching style.

    • @rmsvideos1335
      @rmsvideos1335 Před 7 lety +37

      There really is no business to be had learning GR anything deeper than the surface level if you're not very well versed in things like coordinate transformations and things of that nature.

    • @bunklypeppz
      @bunklypeppz Před 7 lety +21

      "I disdain the type of teaching that simply, at least from my point of
      view, seems like "we are driving somewhere, but we have no fucking idea
      where we are going and why.""
      But that describes basically any course on mathematics. That's why there's a difference between math and applied mathematics. You need to have a background understanding in the formalism before it makes sense to start learning the applications when it comes to studying any exact science. Any field of advanced physics has prerequisites in various types of mathematics and physics so it makes sense to start with sort of a crash course on those things. If you already are familiar with them, then it shouldn't be confusing because it's not even new; if you're unfamiliar with them, then you would need to know it before learning the rest to any substantial degree of detail.

  • @mrhphysics7848
    @mrhphysics7848 Před 9 lety +340

    This is great. Serves multiple uses. For people who want to learn and for people who can't sleep but are conditioned to sleep through lectures. I fit both categories so it makes for a nice sleep aid and hopefully I will learn coordinate transformations in my dreams

    • @BartAlder
      @BartAlder Před 5 lety +7

      Hahahh, loved this comment.

    • @HACKINGMADEFUN
      @HACKINGMADEFUN Před 5 lety +2

      @@BartAlder same

    • @SirLucidThoughts
      @SirLucidThoughts Před 5 lety +10

      I'm expecting results. Started listening to these lectures at night. But then I sleep so well I forget everything. Here's hoping that one random day I will suddenly be able to explain to some poor unsuspecting person.. or cat.. how various quantum physics theories and principles of their foundations work. It's in my head, but, I don't know how to teach or explain like these Masters of physics.

    • @spb1179
      @spb1179 Před 4 lety +3

      You found my secret

    • @rickrocha255
      @rickrocha255 Před 2 lety +2

      Here I am at 43 years of age trying to understand the basics of what I always wanted to know but couldn't figure it out what I wanted in life. So frustrating.
      I could blame my parents but its all my fault.
      At least now, thanks to this, I can do this without drooling on top of my school desk like the old times.
      Thank you.

  • @qbtc
    @qbtc Před 4 lety +80

    I found that the best way to learn from these lectures is to watch them twice. This is because it is always easier to review something vs learning it for the first time. Also, you always miss something the first time around if you are processing what Susskind is saying. You should review or learn Calculus 1, 2, 3 and some basic linear algebra and differential equations. Watch all of his Classical Mechanics and Special Relativity lectures before this as well. I reviewed Calculus 3 from CZcams's Professor Leonard and that turned out to be a great review of all of Calculus 1, 2, 3 since he teaches and reviews at the same. He is the best professor I have seen.

  • @marcoguariglia7734
    @marcoguariglia7734 Před 3 lety +51

    I don't understand a single mathematical passage but I watch these videos to measure the distance between me and these geniuses. great professor susskind

  • @aSeaofTroubles
    @aSeaofTroubles Před 7 lety +147

    Einstein was so brilliant! I mean who can IMAGINE this?
    Amazing lecture from Dr. Leonard Susskind.

    • @BayesianBeing
      @BayesianBeing Před 5 lety +7

      Couldnt agree more!

    • @tclaughridge
      @tclaughridge Před 4 lety +8

      @@gullit97 fantastic counter-argument.

    • @remo5097
      @remo5097 Před 4 lety +4

      @Guglielmo Ferranti, your counter argument just made me orgasm

    • @99bits46
      @99bits46 Před 4 lety +1

      Newton for sure

    • @mattbatcher802
      @mattbatcher802 Před 3 lety

      @@ericbitzer5247 Tesla posed for a photograph holding a book: Theory of Natural Philosophy, Roger Joseph Boscovich.

  • @davethinkingsystems
    @davethinkingsystems Před 8 lety +8

    This shows that someone who truly understands his topic can express it in a way others can understand.

  • @jpatrick1967
    @jpatrick1967 Před 4 lety +311

    The only word I understand in this video is elevator.

    • @programthis3805
      @programthis3805 Před 4 lety +4

      jpatrick1967 LOL

    • @Oshoim
      @Oshoim Před 4 lety +1

      The Third Wheeler ,all others are between dumb and einstein,which is C

    • @johnnykwon3999
      @johnnykwon3999 Před 4 lety +6

      i understood lil g.
      he ma homie.

    • @wayneyadams
      @wayneyadams Před 3 lety +5

      I give you credit for trying to understand, you are a cut above most CZcams viewers.

    • @muhendiseksper7026
      @muhendiseksper7026 Před 3 lety

      How a stanford professor could not teach his lecture without copy notes in hand.

  • @raffaelehuang8360
    @raffaelehuang8360 Před 10 lety +727

    The secret is that coffee. Coffee is the key to understand General Relativity.

    • @jglazemoney
      @jglazemoney Před 10 lety +26

      Agreed!! That's actually what i'm doing now! Drinking coffee and studying general relativity.

    • @PoloBoyMal
      @PoloBoyMal Před 7 lety +14

      your life sounds amazing! :)

    • @erickschulz4637
      @erickschulz4637 Před 6 lety +9

      Truth was spoken. I think Susskind doesn't discuss this part of the theory because it is part of the independent homework one should go through. You start with nothing and learn how to make coffee.

    • @stupidpdj
      @stupidpdj Před 6 lety +1

      And cookies.

    • @alpineplace7451
      @alpineplace7451 Před 6 lety

      Erick Schulz pill of eternal alteration

  • @theindianchannelmotivation
    @theindianchannelmotivation Před 8 lety +592

    he is just amazing he is the one who played an important role in developing string theory. He won the black hole war against hawking . he is awesome

  • @NPCvsNPC
    @NPCvsNPC Před 4 lety +93

    If I am ever able to do something with my life, a lot of credit has to go to these free Stanford classes

    • @EscapeCondition
      @EscapeCondition Před 4 lety +8

      Keep studying, learning always makes life better

    • @sravanthkumarchintalacheru1359
      @sravanthkumarchintalacheru1359 Před 4 lety +1

      best wishes

    • @justinhamilton8647
      @justinhamilton8647 Před 4 lety +5

      Mike Blair this mindset really chilled me out, I was always so anxious about everything until I realized it won’t matter in the end, so just enjoy the moment and do whatever the hell you want

    • @Jwhansink
      @Jwhansink Před 4 lety +2

      lol lol llolllllll lololl mo lllo lol l lol loooolll lol lol loll lol lol lol lllllllllll lol llllllllllll lol lolll lol loo ll loool llllllllllllllll lol l loll lol lollllllllllll lol llllllllll loool lol lollll I’l lol lllllll lol l lol loo

    • @reading7324
      @reading7324 Před 3 lety +2

      You're gonna be massively successful and live a wonderful life. I have total faith in ya.

  • @crowdozer3592
    @crowdozer3592 Před 3 lety +57

    "now I know you know this, I know you know all this I just wanted to formalize it"
    me, clueless: 👁️🕳️👁️

  • @7mus7y
    @7mus7y Před 10 lety +332

    Damn he drank that coffee for the full two hours

    • @hm4939
      @hm4939 Před 10 lety +77

      the secret is that its not coffee in the cup.

    • @Peter_1986
      @Peter_1986 Před 10 lety +16

      It's all about practice.

    • @kilogods
      @kilogods Před 7 lety +22

      7mus7y it's not coffee, it's codeine syrup.

    • @TopCroFutsal
      @TopCroFutsal Před 4 lety +6

      Here in Balkan (Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia) it is normal that we drink coffee a couple of hours

    • @programthis3805
      @programthis3805 Před 4 lety +13

      he mathematically rationed each sip to last the full length of the lecture

  • @Urdatorn
    @Urdatorn Před 4 lety +18

    “Being squashed to death is an invariant fact - it’s not something you can make go away by doing a coordinate transformation!”

    • @colalightyear7859
      @colalightyear7859 Před 4 lety +1

      such a coordinate transformation some would consider unnatural

  • @andreamannoni3199
    @andreamannoni3199 Před 4 lety +32

    I've done Physics and then moved to business, it's just wonderful to have available these lectures that bring me back to my twenties. Great initiative by one of the leading universities in the world

  • @atanumaulik7093
    @atanumaulik7093 Před 2 lety +25

    I really envy today's students. They have access to stuff like these.

    • @lawliet2263
      @lawliet2263 Před 2 lety

      These videos should not be made available for the third world countries.

    • @dean107
      @dean107 Před 2 lety +5

      @@lawliet2263 wtf

    • @mangos2888
      @mangos2888 Před rokem

      Right? My day, circa 00's, we didn't get videos!

  • @user-xb6fl9ri6g
    @user-xb6fl9ri6g Před 3 lety +7

    He reminds me of my middle school math teacher, simple instructions on how to understand complicated ideas related with care and humor. Fantastic

    • @saadhassan8813
      @saadhassan8813 Před 7 měsíci

      "Care and humour" the most apt description of his style.

  • @tclaughridge
    @tclaughridge Před 4 lety +16

    My mind was blown at 28:50. The dots connected in my head and I understood the nature of the relationship between gravity, time, and acceleration. Truly amazing.

  • @PhoenixMaster123
    @PhoenixMaster123 Před 4 lety +3

    i highly appreciate these free lectures. As a person who studies engineering but also really loves physics, it's very useful to have these to learn the content of a physics degree without actually paying money to do the degree

  • @AnonYmous-sk7kp
    @AnonYmous-sk7kp Před 10 lety +22

    These are "continuing education" courses and we are very lucky to have them. You can tell by the questions from the audience that nearly all of them are in completely over their heads. He is doing a great service by presenting these topics at this level, considering the level at which he actually understands them.

  • @jaroslavprucha9198
    @jaroslavprucha9198 Před 9 lety +50

    I really enjoy his style of teaching. Starting with simple things makes it easy to grasp the theory.

  • @sundarrajn1003
    @sundarrajn1003 Před 7 lety +17

    susskind is doing a great favor to humanity by posting these lectures...thanks a lot..

  • @yousteve221
    @yousteve221 Před 3 lety +2

    I have done post grad. math... Chaos/Non-Linear Dynamics, Quantum Mech. along with Neural Networks.. Knowing the math, these lectures are a beautiful explanation of this theory I had never seen before!!! I discovered these lectures several years ago and cherish their existence. I have had to rejoin the 'Stanford' channel three times to keep these lectures in my review. WHY!!!

  • @tomdeneckere
    @tomdeneckere Před 3 lety +10

    Great course!
    At 1:26:48 Professor Susskind says he doesn’t know why this type of transformation is called ‘contravariant’ as opposed to another name. I always thought it has to do with this: imagine a vector in the plane and its components in a certain coordinate system (a basis). Now imagine another basis, say one that is rotated counterclockwise with respect to the first. Then the components of the vector in this second basis will correspond to the components in the original basis of a vector that has rotated by the same amount as the basis but clockwise. So for an observer in the second frame, the vector seems to be rotated clockwise (in the opposite sense as the basis itself) as compared to the vector in the first basis. In other words, the components of the vector transform in a way as to counteract the movement of the basis itself. Hence contravariant.
    Agreed?

  • @ena131
    @ena131 Před 9 lety +480

    He has forgotten more knowledge than we will ever know ourselves

    • @Snake_In_The_Box
      @Snake_In_The_Box Před 5 lety +33

      including how to draw parallel parabola

    • @qwerpasdf
      @qwerpasdf Před 4 lety +15

      @@Snake_In_The_Box he's just not using the correct TOOL

    • @michaelvivirito
      @michaelvivirito Před 4 lety +17

      Maybe more than you’ll ever know lol

    • @vivalibertasergovivitelibe4111
      @vivalibertasergovivitelibe4111 Před 4 lety +1

      @@qwerpasdf nice

    • @ena131
      @ena131 Před 3 lety +3

      Michael Vivirito y’all this was five years ago and it was about him having more intelligence and knowledge than common people

  • @realhbk316
    @realhbk316 Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you Stanford University for making such advanced knowledge easily available to the masses.

  • @imCurveee
    @imCurveee Před 4 lety +26

    "Now I know you guys know this, I'm just doing this for the CZcams viewers at home who have no idea what I'm talking about."

  • @sudarshan750
    @sudarshan750 Před 4 lety +6

    There is a unique elegance in your teaching style.

  • @loooongneck
    @loooongneck Před 2 lety +13

    How could 1.2k people dislike this. You are being presented some of the highest knowledge of our world by an accomplished expert for free within the comfort of your home. People 100 years ago would have been grateful as hell for resources like this

  • @florenpan8155
    @florenpan8155 Před 7 lety +1

    Thank you for these videos! No amount of reading Ta-Pei Cheng will give me such an understanding of Einstein's General Relativity!

  • @zidaneabderahim7131
    @zidaneabderahim7131 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Now i understand why the equivalence principle was Einstein's happiest thought.

  • @bigfuss4135
    @bigfuss4135 Před 5 lety +3

    I can't believe I found this on CZcams. A whole set of lectures by Prof. Susskind himself!

  • @evansiegel1732
    @evansiegel1732 Před 10 lety +3

    This lecture has been eye-opening in its clarity. Wonderful job.
    And... Love his snacking out on coffee and cake while plowing into his topic.

  • @WaterproofSoap
    @WaterproofSoap Před 3 lety +1

    Videos like this are among the truly redeeming qualities of the internet.
    .....they are also amongst the rarest.

  • @xinzeng-iq7zv
    @xinzeng-iq7zv Před 21 dnem

    studying physics takes persistence, dedication, and passion for the subject matter

  • @jennydanza3974
    @jennydanza3974 Před 9 lety +7

    Almost anyone can learn it but not everyone is so good at teaching it, nice lecture.

  • @sartrevincent9322
    @sartrevincent9322 Před 4 lety +3

    Thanks for this marvelous lecture.
    General relativity becomes accessible. I tried many times to learn it, it is the first I clearly understand the basic of RG. Few basic mathematics, a couple of sketches...Answers also to questions regarding the equivalence principe which is generally proposed in a trivial way: there's a way to distinguish acceleration from a gravity field, it is the essence of RG which linked to curved geometry.

  • @dgriffon
    @dgriffon Před 20 dny

    Just finished this course and I highly recommend it! Professor Susskind might be a bit messy on the whiteboard, but he provides intuitive insights that really help you understand this complex topic.

  • @bonob0123
    @bonob0123 Před 4 lety +1

    what an age to be alive for stuff like this is free on the internet.

    • @reading7324
      @reading7324 Před 3 lety

      Im depressed
      I just had to say that to somebody

    • @bonob0123
      @bonob0123 Před 3 lety +1

      ​@@reading7324 Me too at times. Get outside, go for a walk or run, take a shower, clean your place. Make a plan. Better yourself in some way: work out, plan to finish a book, or even just watch a meaningful youtube playlist that which you will be proud of: intro to linear algebra, a physics class series, machine learning, whatever you are interested in but haven't gotten around to teaching yourself. Set a goal to better yourself in some way; if the activity involves helping others it will be even better and you will feel great. Corny as it sounds, volunteer or do something generous which helps someone else. I promise you will feel better. Forgive yourself. You had set goals before but you didn't feel like doing them and sat in the dark at home all day. So what? You needed a break and recharged. Now we start fresh today and there is no reason to trash yourself for yesterday. Being with other people you like helps but not all of us have people we can turn to. In that case think of yourself in a monastic process of bettering yourself and bettering the world. You are fucking bruce wayne in the mountains training with the monks to come out a badass for good on the other side. Be better. But first... get outside and take a walk. Good luck.

    • @reading7324
      @reading7324 Před 3 lety

      @@bonob0123 **tears**
      I can't believe you actually replied...and cared so much.
      Thankyou. I needed this.
      Probably gonna keep reading it for motivation.
      💙🙏
      That was PROFOUND

    • @bonob0123
      @bonob0123 Před 3 lety +2

      @@reading7324 You made your way of your own accord to watch Lenny Susskind talk about relativity. Clearly you're already doing something right about your interests and interactions with the world. For the world to get to a better place it needs more educated, curious, good-hearted people interested in more than consumption and distractions. Good luck on your journey.

  • @zaclaplant3001
    @zaclaplant3001 Před 6 lety +6

    Taught myself Calc 1 (skipping it and going strait into 2), Green's theorem (Calc 3 topic), Quantum Physics, and now General Relativity due to vids like this. I've been able pass classes and have even been able to CLEP out of some due to them! You can do it in your own time and it saves thousands of dollars. Plus, you can always rewind and re-watch if you missed something. This video and videos like these are the greatest. I've gone no further than Calc 2 and have a minor understanding in Diff E and can grasp Calc 3 easily enough to understand verbiage and mathematical language used (knowledge also acquired by videos like these). It's at the point to where it's just FUN! Love every minute of them

    • @zaclaplant3001
      @zaclaplant3001 Před 6 lety

      Haven't even had differential geometry, but I looked up (metric) tensors and tensor analysis in order to understand the derivation as to follow the explanations. Not too shabby.

    • @stanis083
      @stanis083 Před 5 lety +3

      @@zaclaplant3001 And now you are posting on youtube how awesome you are?

    • @BartAlder
      @BartAlder Před 5 lety +1

      @@stanis083 Anyone who takes the time to teach themselves mathematics and physics deserves better than your belittling comment. I think it's great and they have every reason to feel good about their effort.

    • @stanis083
      @stanis083 Před 5 lety

      @@BartAlder same for every other topic...

    • @avr8844
      @avr8844 Před rokem

      @@zaclaplant3001 do you want a 🥉 or something? Why is your ego so misguidedley inflated that you think anyone else gives a solitary fuck?
      Fyi, you are nothing. You are utterly worthless by any standard, a millisecond biological accident that will have no impact on anything, and leave no trace of it's pointless existence. The fact you "brag" to strangers on CZcams is so hilariously sad, and your pathetic need for attention only highlights your total insignificance.
      Fuck off and have a nice day.

  • @SiddhantSinghscience
    @SiddhantSinghscience Před 8 lety +3

    I love your way and methods prof. Susskind!

  • @wayneyadams
    @wayneyadams Před 3 lety +2

    1:22:30 Those little backwards 6 symbols (stylized lower case d) are called partial differentials (or derivatives), they tell you the rate of change of the coordinate in the numerator as the coordinate in the denominator changes. Let's look at a real world example.
    You are standing on an uneven stretch of ground with a hill in front of you. Let's call the east-west direction X, and the north-south direction, Y. You want to calculate the change in elevation (height) when you walk from one point to another on the hill. Let's say the point is some distance in the X direction and some distance in the Y direction away from you. We'll use Z for the elevation. So, we are asking for the change in elevation, dZ.
    Here's the plan. You will walk in the X direction first and calculate the change in elevation, then turn and walk in the Y direction finding that change in elevation. Adding them together gives you the total change in elevation, dZ. To keep this simple. let's assume the changes are smooth continuous upward changes, in other words, you are always walking uphill.
    Let's say the hill has a slope so that the elevation changes at a rate of 20 cm per meter as you walk in the X direction. That is what the partial derivative gives you. It is the change in elevation in the X direction ignoring changes in the Y direction. Let's say you walk 10 meters. Your change will be the rate of change, the partial differential, times the distance you walked, dX. 20 cm/meter x 10 meters = 200 cm.
    Now you turn and walk in the Y direction. Let's say the elevation changes at the rate of 5 cm per meter in the Y direction. Let's say you have to walk 20 meters in the Y direction to reach your final destination. Just like before, you multiply the rate of change of the elevation, the partial derivative, times the distance you walked, dY. 5 cm/meter x 20 meters = 100 cm. Remember that you are already 200 cm higher because of the first part of the walk.
    Your total change in elevation for the walk is the 200 cm change from the walk in the X direction plus the 100 cm change from the walk in the Y direction. dZ = 200 cm + 100 cm = 300 cm.
    That is all partial differentials do, they break down paths into small independent pieces that are then added together to get the total.
    Now to keep everything honest. in real world applications all those changes would be very small, and dZ would be the rate of change of your elevation as you walk from from one point to the next. I used large numbers to help clarify the process with understandable quantities that we can all relate to.
    When we break a vector (a path in some direction) into pieces like this, the pieces are called components.
    Of course this can be extended to any number of coordinates.
    Wayne Y. Adams
    B.S. Chemistry (ACS Certified)
    M.S. Physics
    R&D Chemist (9 yrs.)
    Physics Instructor (33 yrs., retired)

    • @lawliet2263
      @lawliet2263 Před 2 lety

      Very nice explanation.

    • @wayneyadams
      @wayneyadams Před 2 lety

      @@lawliet2263 Thanks, you are the only person to have ever commented on an explanation (lesson) I have written (there are dozens), and I really appreciate it.
      Wayne

  • @neilk.astrophotography7590

    Thank you for making & uploading this study into General Relativity!

  • @camilicristina2839
    @camilicristina2839 Před 4 lety +13

    It would be nice if there was subtitles, at least English, but even more interesting if it had several languages. a good tip, because I am Brazilian and I understand English very well, but sometimes I have difficulty and I know others who would like to watch but do not understand English.
    In fact, the class was very good.

    • @ahmadyogi1340
      @ahmadyogi1340 Před 4 lety +1

      English subtitle would help me a lot to understand

    • @meleseberehannu2861
      @meleseberehannu2861 Před 4 lety

      It has subtitles you do not know how to activate in your computer

  • @matteovissani1071
    @matteovissani1071 Před 3 lety +7

    Beautiful lecture. For the first time I really understood tensors.

  • @dencameron3450
    @dencameron3450 Před 2 lety +1

    I love this bloke. He taught me so much. A phenomenal physicist and a wonderful human being

  • @robtheprocrastinator1197
    @robtheprocrastinator1197 Před 4 lety +91

    Don’t even know why I’m here when I’ve failed pre-algebra.....

    • @Godakuri
      @Godakuri Před 4 lety +10

      Rob the procrastinator how do you fail pre algebra. Your teacher must have been awful, or maybe you just didn’t pay attention. Pre alg is just adding, subtracting, multiplying, and dividing

    • @chaoticstorm8145
      @chaoticstorm8145 Před 4 lety +13

      Study whatever you like. Let your curiosity lead you. If you see an idea that you haven't learned or dont understand then leave the video watch another video describing it and come back later. The internet has all the information in the world at your finger tips, you just have to use it

    • @madyjules
      @madyjules Před 4 lety +6

      It’s awesome that you’re here & PLEASE don’t leave...
      there are many who are not ready for information when we’re exposed to it
      Pre-algebra is usually taught during middle school (most often during 7 or 8 grade-> when we’re approx. 12 or 13 years old )
      More human beings are in the same boat as you then those who are exposed to math & science in our childhoods
      You’re here now!!!! 😎
      If you want to be inspired even more I recommend you check out Walter Lewin’s Physics lectures (available on you tube)

    • @aftermath4096
      @aftermath4096 Před 3 lety

      rekt

    • @spikeoac4248
      @spikeoac4248 Před 3 lety +2

      @the l33t hamm3rbro Hey asshat, not everybody is good at math

  • @wayneyadams
    @wayneyadams Před 3 lety +5

    It has been decades since I was in graduate school and worked with these advanced concepts, so this series is a great refresher. There is not a lot of demand for advanced topics like these teaching high school Physics, even in the AP courses. I remember a few years ago when these lectures were only available on iTunes and they were difficult to find, now thanks to CZcams they are readily available to everyone.
    It is still depressing to see that the greatest number of comments are inane sophomoric humor rather than scholarly discussions. It makes me wonder how many viewers came to this site expecting another watered down video filled with cute animations and bombastic commentary about falling into Black Holes. Surprise!!! It's a college lecture! LOL
    Having said that (correct usage), I just can't resist the temptation to make one inane comment myself. I love the way he says, curvilinear, as though it were "curvy linear." I apologize for giving in to temptation.

    • @justmeeagainn
      @justmeeagainn Před rokem

      Are you always this big of a dick, Wayne, or do you save it for CZcams comments?

  • @omgsolikevalleygirl
    @omgsolikevalleygirl Před 4 lety +10

    I want to have things explained to me by Leonard Susskind all day for the rest of my life :D

  • @M-uy1zc
    @M-uy1zc Před 20 dny

    WRT @qbtc, I found that the best way to learn from these lectures is to watch them 6 times.
    I would REALLY appreciate closed captions, especially for audience questions and statements. i can hear and *understand* Dr. Susskind but sometime the audience id VERY difficult to understand (hear). Great Teacher.

  • @blackmambagyn
    @blackmambagyn Před 4 lety +2

    The best thing about youtube classes is that you can simply skip the questions some students have, but yourself don't.
    The worst thing about youtube classes is that you can't clarify the doubts you had, but no one else did.

    • @ManyHeavens42
      @ManyHeavens42 Před 2 lety

      Bad answer : The answers are not in the , Answer ,It's in The Right Questions ?

  • @MehrdadGivehchi
    @MehrdadGivehchi Před 4 lety +9

    What a gifted teacher... thanks for sharing

  • @ClaringtonMusic
    @ClaringtonMusic Před 3 lety +3

    I wonder how many people can really understand how really special this lecture series is! - This sentence is sadly true and full of Baoley

  • @rosskious7084
    @rosskious7084 Před 8 měsíci

    To me the greatest achievement of Einstein was not General and Special Relativity, but his ability to give the world the concepts on a level that they could understand.

  • @cheeheifoo9282
    @cheeheifoo9282 Před měsícem

    Leonard Susskind is such a patient teacher listening to all the difficulties

  • @ShakeSpear1949
    @ShakeSpear1949 Před 11 lety +10

    Check out Spring 2010: Particle Physics part 3. Some lectures by Prof Susskind on Supersymmetry.

  • @dvl973
    @dvl973 Před 3 lety +18

    He's 80 years old and still kickin'... I hope he lives at least another 20 :) what a legend

    • @cyx4304
      @cyx4304 Před 3 lety

      More 80 t least

    • @justinshin2279
      @justinshin2279 Před 3 lety +4

      I’d trade 15 years of my life for 2 of his because he will have a way bigger impact on the future of humanity than I

  • @daltanionwaves
    @daltanionwaves Před 3 lety +1

    GR is my favorite concept out of all the concepts of life. Because of how simple and intuitive it is as a tool, while having such far reaching & sometimes less intuitive consequences & implications

    • @ManyHeavens42
      @ManyHeavens42 Před 2 lety

      Everything's a program and everything is quantum mechanics, welcome to The matrix

  • @oet2633
    @oet2633 Před 7 lety +1

    The lengths physicists go to avoid modern mathematical concepts/definitions which make everything so much easier, and are unavoidable in the long run anyway... (This has nothing to do with Professor Susskind.) Beautifully done.

  • @swaybryan319
    @swaybryan319 Před 4 lety +18

    I just hit 2 blunts then watched this.....you don’t want to know how mind blown I am

    • @scu8a
      @scu8a Před 3 lety +3

      I'm having a visit with Jack Herer this morning. It's nice to know that I'm not the only one who watches/reads scientific material after getting ripped. CBD of course ;)

    • @diamondisgood4u
      @diamondisgood4u Před 3 lety +1

      ​@@scu8a Herer has always been my fav, me and all my coworkers definitely use sativas while we learn stuff like reading papers about cannabis or me who watches stuff like this in my free time.

    • @scu8a
      @scu8a Před 3 lety

      @@diamondisgood4u Yeah, it's between Herer and Girl Scout Cookie for me.

  • @milkonion
    @milkonion Před 4 lety +14

    How am I enjoying a relativity lecture at 2:39 in the morning... and I can’t even stay awake during the actual lecture😂

  • @DApple-sq1om
    @DApple-sq1om Před 7 lety +1

    Nobody does it better than Leonard "Leonardo" Susskind, makes me feel sad for all the rest. Why'd you have to be so good.

  • @rjhanna13
    @rjhanna13 Před 3 lety +1

    Lenny is eating that forbidden knowledge cake throughout. But as an aside, I have a MS in physics and am immensely grateful for these, we only touched upon special relativity.

    • @MuadDib2005
      @MuadDib2005 Před 3 lety

      That's a shame. I'm working on my BS as we speak and some of my keenest interest in life is on the subject of General Relativity. I've been doing my own work, research, and diligence, because I am getting the idea that physical modeling is going to be the brunt of my studies at university. Looks like I'll just have to keep working on my own 🤷🏼‍♂️

  • @cgme7076
    @cgme7076 Před 3 lety +6

    Oh, yes, of course! The elevator is an elevator. I'm with you up until that point.

  • @billyjean8066
    @billyjean8066 Před 11 lety +14

    I love this guy... he makes me feel like im being taught physics by christopher walken

  • @dhruvshukla5591
    @dhruvshukla5591 Před 2 lety +1

    Professor Leonard Susskind is truly brilliant 👏👏 such a nice explanation

  • @SniffyPoo
    @SniffyPoo Před 4 lety +9

    I like that he gets confused at one point, even geniuses are human

    • @MotivationStation275
      @MotivationStation275 Před 4 lety +2

      Even einstine had problem with his own theory.... and yess he is human

    • @animationspace8550
      @animationspace8550 Před 4 lety +1

      You've forgotten Hal 9000, GLaDOS, and Elon Musk. But yes, everyone else is human.

  • @gergelyfazekas7285
    @gergelyfazekas7285 Před 3 lety +4

    I took up General Relativity at university, so I think I'm going to binge watch these lectures 😂

  • @MozzieSpector22
    @MozzieSpector22 Před 10 měsíci

    as a young person, 14, this breaks it down immensely. very grateful 🙏🙏🙏

  • @timmybear4449
    @timmybear4449 Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent. Talked with a German astrophysicist today, very interesting conversation. I'm technically food science, but this is very interesting.

    • @mangos2888
      @mangos2888 Před rokem +1

      Heyyy fellow food scientist 👋

  • @vivalibertasergovivitelibe4111

    We used a lot of tensor calculus in special relativity and it is kinda cool to see another approach vor introducing them. If you however are not really satisfied with this explanation and want a deeper mathematical understanding than "tensors are objects that behave like tensors" I would recommend the two video series the channel Eigenchris made on them called "Tensors for beginners" and "Tensor calculus". He explains perfectly and ectremely patiently what tensors are in regard, to space, dual space and the tensor product and why they transform as they do, what the metric tensor does and why etc.

  • @STEFJANY
    @STEFJANY Před 10 lety +15

    Einstein intelligence sends chills on my spine...how a human mind can come up with this counter intuitive ideas of curved space-time fabric...waw.

    • @BartAlder
      @BartAlder Před 5 lety +1

      Yeah it's mindblowing.

    • @fanimeproductionst.v.3735
      @fanimeproductionst.v.3735 Před 4 lety +2

      Yeah, it's mindbending

    • @ohohohitzmagic4536
      @ohohohitzmagic4536 Před 4 lety +1

      Sean Carroll says if anything Einstein is underrated.

    • @teejayevans
      @teejayevans Před 4 lety

      Einstein did not develop GR alone, he had help from mathematicians...which is probably where we get the myth that he flunked a math course. They get no credit. Look up Marcel Grossmann and Michele Besso. There was also an error in the math in the original version that got corrected in a revise paper.

    • @teejayevans
      @teejayevans Před 4 lety +1

      I didn’t mean to imply Einstein wasn’t brilliant, he deserves the recognition he gets. What I was trying to say is there are others who do as well.

  • @tretolien1195
    @tretolien1195 Před 6 měsíci

    I remember watching this 8 years ago being overwhelmed by all the amazing mathematics and rich insights. Now as a graduate physics student procrastinating on my particle physics homework just coming back from watching the Yang Mills construction on 2x speed this feels almost painfully slow. Love the guy though, great explanations and my as well as many others inspiration for getting into physics

  • @marionascimento450
    @marionascimento450 Před rokem

    Wow, I've always loved his lectures and just now I realized he was 73 (now 82). This guy is amazing.

    • @hollaadieewaldfeee
      @hollaadieewaldfeee Před 10 měsíci

      "Aquivalence principle" is unscientific, because the observation is restricted intentionally and arbitrarily. The following fraud is based on this comparison of restricted observations. Make a hole in the box, look through it, and the fraud is revealed.

  • @3monsterbeast
    @3monsterbeast Před 3 lety +16

    Man, great professor's always break the rules. In his case, eating while teaching!

  • @hfof
    @hfof Před 4 lety +4

    4:43 I was completely focused untill that moment when he said( "elephant").😂

  • @nickvansickle6734
    @nickvansickle6734 Před 2 lety +1

    This is wonderful, thank you Professor Susskind ❤️

  • @Taltinus
    @Taltinus Před 2 lety +1

    I love the clever smirk with the sheet of paper example, where mostly people like to shove a pencil through it and talk about wormholes.

  • @wayneyadams
    @wayneyadams Před 3 lety +3

    57:00 There is a convention called the "Einstein Summation Convention" that says that indices that are repeated are automatically summed. In this equation, the m and n are subscripts on the g, and superscripts on x, so the summation sign could be left out. It is a way to remove some of the clutter from long complex equations. It really does make them much easier to read.

  • @Jipzorowns
    @Jipzorowns Před 11 lety +4

    I really like how there is another lecture set about general relativity by Leonard Susskind. Great to have repetition, without having to watch the exact same video :)

  • @redfruit1993z
    @redfruit1993z Před rokem

    This is so awesome to have university level classes available for free to millions of people. Internet will revolutionize education.

  • @stephanelecras8964
    @stephanelecras8964 Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you very much Professor Susskind for this great course ! In addition with the book in french it is very interesting to learn or expand our knowledge about the General Relativity.

  • @joecasale6851
    @joecasale6851 Před 4 lety +4

    These Stanford students have some killer questions.

    • @adrianwright8685
      @adrianwright8685 Před 3 lety +1

      They're not Stanford students - Susskind gives these evening lectures to the general public. “A number of years ago I became aware of the large number of physics enthusiasts .... so I started a series of courses on modern physics ….. specifically aimed at people who know, or once knew, a bit of algebra and calculus, but are more or less beginners.”

  • @MoerreNoseshine
    @MoerreNoseshine Před 11 lety +12

    They finally discovered HD recording at Stanford, hurray!

  • @rezervoardogs
    @rezervoardogs Před 8 lety +1

    great teacher and he seems like a nice guy.one lecture down nine more to go

  • @utpalborah2896
    @utpalborah2896 Před 2 lety +2

    A valuable lecture also very interesting which I have found as a man of PHYSICS ! Hope to receive more.....

  • @akshayrathore2882
    @akshayrathore2882 Před 9 lety +108

    2 hours continues lecture
    old man got some stamina

    • @bjornsahlin
      @bjornsahlin Před 8 lety +5

      +akshay rathore
      Guilty of not paying attention m8! There's an intermission at 1:17:21 :D:DD

    • @akshayrathore2882
      @akshayrathore2882 Před 8 lety +1

      psynfel doesnt seem like an intermission. he maintained same flow

    • @amandajaynesparrow3591
      @amandajaynesparrow3591 Před 8 lety +1

      +akshay rathore Show some respect akshay rathmore he is a genius
      He is a Professor of theatrical physics the same field as myself

    • @michaelbauers8800
      @michaelbauers8800 Před 8 lety +20

      +Amanda Jayne Bristow theatrical physics eh? You would expect more drama than is present here :)

    • @amandajaynesparrow3591
      @amandajaynesparrow3591 Před 8 lety

      Professor Susskind is doing a Lecture on General Relativity one of Einstein's well known theories which I find fascinating
      This is how he explains his theories and he has always used this method Mr Bauers

  • @shimesami
    @shimesami Před 4 lety +7

    One minute I was watching cleaning rug videos and now General relativity at 1:25 AM in the morning. And I have no business with neither of them. I need help

  • @adrianf.5847
    @adrianf.5847 Před 7 měsíci +1

    6:30 two reference frames that are accelerated in the exact same way are even related by zero velocity.
    12:40 Earth's gravitation points downward
    15:00 Actually, the equivalence principle as I understand it is that on a planet, say, there is a body force acting on a solid (here a human being), that induces a downward contact force against the planet, whereas in the rocket ship, the contact force is induced by Newton's third law.
    17:10 The motion of a planet about a star is highly dependent on a mass, because both actually orbit a common center of mass, and the planet mass determines how much the star moves. This effect is especially visible in a heliocentric coordinate system.
    19:40 You forgot the primes.
    26:30 And now we know why textbooks talk about rocket ships instead of elevators.
    30:40 Mathematically, the only obstruction should be the "hole" in the center. For a simply connected region in the exterior of the planet, there should be a curvilinear transformation that makes the acceleration look horizontal. (The 2,000 mile man will still be squashed to death, because calculating in arbitrary different coordinates won't change the laws of physics.) (Galilean transformations can't be found.)
    35:40 The apparent gravity is generated by motion, not the coordinate transformations.
    52:30 I suspect most of this theory to be due to Gauß.
    53:00 For constant time, the ds^2 metric reduces to "Riemannian" geometry.
    56:20 There are geodesics.
    1:00:00 It's the cosine squared. sin(0) = 0.

  • @franklulatowskijr.6974
    @franklulatowskijr.6974 Před 2 lety +1

    Professor Susskind is one of my heroes.

  • @Jonathan-xe4ec
    @Jonathan-xe4ec Před 7 lety +48

    Listen at 1.5x speed and save yourself some time.

  • @RabbitInAHumanWoild
    @RabbitInAHumanWoild Před 10 lety +41

    Yes, there's nothing wrong with the lectures. If you get lost it's because you don't have the background.

    • @tensorwolf
      @tensorwolf Před 3 lety +4

      Jože Ws you don’t expect a 72 year old to just stand there for 2 straight hours? I’m sorry that you don’t have enough background to understand the material.

    • @sajateacher
      @sajateacher Před 3 lety

      If you get lost it's because you don't have those cookies.

    • @kthwkr
      @kthwkr Před 3 lety

      It would be better if there were no questions asked until the end. He is making a point and then they ask questions and the point gets buried.

  • @tenn46
    @tenn46 Před rokem

    Hate to say this but this is my go-to video for sleep. It literally works every time.

  • @sd2645
    @sd2645 Před 4 lety +1

    What about how the force F changes when going from coordinates (x,y,z) to (x',y',z')? Is it the same 3-component vector and why?

  • @pepechill8118
    @pepechill8118 Před 2 lety +3

    Who would have believed that I would have the right to hear lectures at such a level for free from the other part of the world

  • @morkris3753
    @morkris3753 Před 4 lety +3

    The patience of a saint.