Quantum Field Theory visualized

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  • čas přidán 11. 05. 2024
  • How to reconcile relativity with quantum mechanics ? What is spin ? Where does the electric charge come from ? All these answers in 15 minutes !
    0:00 - Introduction
    1:52 - Field and spin
    4:38 - Conserved quantities
    6:02 - Quantum field
    7:39 - Standard model
    10:15 - Interactions
    13:58 - Conclusion
    For more videos, subscribe to the CZcams channel : / scienceclicen
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    Alessandro Roussel,
    For more info: www.alessandroroussel.com/en
    _
    To learn more :
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symmetr...)
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Komentáře • 3,2K

  • @ScienceClicEN
    @ScienceClicEN  Před 3 lety +1094

    Many thanks to my friend Thomas Harvey who helped me write this video. Thomas was my roommate during my Master's at Cambridge, he is now doing a PhD at Oxford University, and quantum field theory is his daily routine : www2.physics.ox.ac.uk/contacts/people/harveyt

    • @doc7115
      @doc7115 Před 3 lety +22

      Hi sciclic. Thank you very much for this beautiful illustration. I wonder if you can recommend some textbooks on this subject?

    • @Sam3532
      @Sam3532 Před 3 lety +1

      Is so obvious u go to cambridge\oxford. You’re over pronouncing the words.. wtf? Is just try hard and overly preppy. Alienating. Unless u think ur a cut above other ppl because ur clever and/or go to a good school. Not a bad thing, good studies get done at these places but stay human and don’t think ur better than other ppl because ur part of some elite club that speak like they have a silver spoon up their arse

    • @ScienceClicEN
      @ScienceClicEN  Před 3 lety +177

      @Hugos Thar Actually it's not me speaking in the videos, I am French and my English accent is terrible so I asked a friend who kindly accepted to record his voice. Octave is doing a great job helping me translate the videos

    • @Sam3532
      @Sam3532 Před 3 lety +26

      @@ScienceClicEN yes you are correct and I’m just angry. That sounds sarcastic but I promise it’s not. Lol sorry. The way he said v-A-ries, as if the e had no effect on the a, reminded me of things not worth mentioning, but made me angry and caused me to react with vitriol, for which I apologise.
      Maybe the manner in which I’m saying this makes it seem disingenuous, but it is the exact same reason why I was angered by the seemingly arrogant mispronunciation of certain words.
      It is however, as you correctly state my ones accent is not something to hold against someone. Not to mention a separate issue to the content of the video which I do actually value; so unsure why I let this negativity cloud my vision

    • @CornishColin
      @CornishColin Před 3 lety +35

      @@ScienceClicEN I think the English sounds pretty normal to me - so your friend did a good job. One or two “scientific” words to me are pronounced a bit odd with emphasis on the wrong syllable like “annihilate” or “temporal” - Other that that pretty normal. I did a B.Sc in Physics 30 years ago but became a geophysicist professionally - so I’ve long forgotten the maths but it’s really great to see the animations you are doing. I particularly like the space time animation you did in another video - I’ve always struggled with the rubber sheet analogy.

  • @user0K
    @user0K Před 3 lety +5644

    Wow, someone actually described what spin is

    • @Sifar_Secure
      @Sifar_Secure Před 3 lety +370

      I know, this is a wonderful lucid explanation. I've watched videos where famous physicists talked about spinors and I was left feeling even more perplexed.

    • @jigartalaviya2340
      @jigartalaviya2340 Před 3 lety +163

      @@bobbobson6867 Can you do even a little better then??
      Sort of.

    • @duprie37
      @duprie37 Před 3 lety +99

      Just what I thought. Also just how virtual particle interactions forge the paths of particles. Heard lots about Feynman diagrams and sum over all paths but not seen those so nicely intuitively linked before.

    • @mroygl
      @mroygl Před 3 lety +49

      It lacks an explanation of what the hell to turn the universe around a particle for at all.

    • @duprie37
      @duprie37 Před 3 lety +21

      @@mroygl So you can determine their spin.

  • @scottt9382
    @scottt9382 Před 3 lety +1928

    Speaking as a physicist, this is SUCH an exceptional explanation of QFT.

    • @aaronm.3581
      @aaronm.3581 Před 3 lety +25

      Try speaking as a toad. It will better suit you.

    • @andreyrushchenko2378
      @andreyrushchenko2378 Před 3 lety +5

      lmho - this is just nice graphics but nothing more...

    • @socratese5
      @socratese5 Před 3 lety +90

      @@andreyrushchenko2378 i would love to see your explanation then 👍🏽
      Is it possible to see or hear it online?

    • @didierborne166
      @didierborne166 Před 3 lety +1

      I think they have not posed the questions that divide QM from GRT. Maybe here is a bit of a revolutionary idea about the Electron czcams.com/video/1PD3uxHyhuY/video.html

    • @isodoubIet
      @isodoubIet Před 3 lety +28

      It's an extraordinarily confused explanation of QFT, illegitimately mixing together bits from canonical quantization and Feynman's path integral, as well as interpreting Feynman diagrams as real field configurations when in reality virtual particles are off-shell. Philosophically it's wrong too, since it forgets that as in every quantum process all you get at the end are probabilities for the various measurements, whereas what was presented here gives the impression of something like a Fourier sum just giving classical physics. I have no idea what a layperson would get from watching this but it wouldn't look much like what physicists do when they do QFT.

  • @stetsonlewis3095
    @stetsonlewis3095 Před 10 měsíci +222

    As a visual learner, these animations were incredible and helped immensely. The writing was also crystal clear and paired perfectly

    • @MuffinMan87
      @MuffinMan87 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Exactly! I don't speak Greek. But, I can look at their graphs and animations and write my own that results in the same conclusions.

    • @bas_ee
      @bas_ee Před 4 měsíci

      @@MuffinMan87 Greek? Its an english voice?

    • @MuffinMan87
      @MuffinMan87 Před 4 měsíci

      @@bas_ee Greek is the language of physics. I don't know what most of their letters are called. It had nothing to do with the narrator's voice.

  • @vaunjeis6751
    @vaunjeis6751 Před 2 lety +374

    12:23 blew my mind because while it is useful to think of a string as vibrating at a particular frequency, the truth is indeed that any given section of the string is vibrating differently from the rest, and it is the synthesis of all those parts of the string at once which produces the final frequencies. Once of the best ways of describing wave function I have ever heard.

    • @socalpotato
      @socalpotato Před rokem +2

      Eloquent, and elegant. Even if you’ve never had opportunity to mess around with a guitar, you can apply it to a speaker just as well (for all the bass-heads out there). I’m relatively certain that everyone has seen a speaker vibrate at some point? That’s probably naive on my part because some places just have different instruments due to culture and geography.

    • @phrastro7075
      @phrastro7075 Před rokem

      right??? like it made so much sense

    • @benbarkerdreaming
      @benbarkerdreaming Před rokem +4

      I play guitar and Didgeridoo simultaneously.. I've gone into what my people the biripi Dunghutti of Australia call the dreaming...a continuous timeless place of creation ...
      The analogue of the vibrating strings and all the frequencies coming together to create the actual sounds is an amazing interpretation... Because it allows you to see it from now of a creator perspective and even ask .. "who is playing the guitar"? ...or what lol

    • @meatmanjam
      @meatmanjam Před rokem +7

      that same visualisation can tell us why instruments sound different playing the same notes, when they are of course only emitting a series of sine waves at similar. frequencies. The dominant sine waves in that series will be harmonics of the intended/heard note: eg heard note at 300Hz: 2nd harmonic at 600Hz, 3rd at 1200Hz, etc. A particular guitar E-note string may have the root, 3rd, 4th and 12th harmonic at the largest amplitudes, whereas a violin E-note string may have root, 3rd, 10th and 15th. This simple difference in the combination of the harmonics is what determines the timbre and therefore the signature sound of one instrument compared to another.
      It’s why speaker cones can recreate every instrument- they just emit the right combination of sin waves at the right amplitudes.

    • @monx
      @monx Před rokem +1

      this analogy doesn't work for me. it does not explain the principle of least action. the harmonic vibrations of a string do not "collapse" to a single frequency, but exist completely independently, robust under measurement. it's only in human auditory perception that these overtones "collapse" to a single timbre.

  • @PhoticSneezeOne
    @PhoticSneezeOne Před 3 lety +890

    This visualization is so advanced, its like partaking in future starfleet academy education

    • @TheKingofKingscorona
      @TheKingofKingscorona Před 3 lety +6

      I think it makes sense if always wondered how the world works

    • @Gunth0r
      @Gunth0r Před 2 lety +4

      You nailed it.

    • @locke8847
      @locke8847 Před 2 lety +2

      That's just your brain's pattern recognition associating the boxes around the 9:30 mark to military insignia badges like chevron patterns.

    • @locke8847
      @locke8847 Před 2 lety

      @@BasiliskInTheSky Happy octopus

    • @rolux4853
      @rolux4853 Před 2 lety

      @@brandonm9579 I don’t understand what this has to do with the content of this Video?

  • @nicholasbohlsen8442
    @nicholasbohlsen8442 Před 3 lety +934

    The animations in this video are extremely impressive. They present some of the basics of QFT, much better than many other casual sources. (and visualisations like this are also almost unavailable in an academic context as well)

    • @ScienceClicEN
      @ScienceClicEN  Před 3 lety +147

      Thank you very much ! Took a lot of time to find good visualizations

    • @rodvanmeter517
      @rodvanmeter517 Před 3 lety +37

      @@ScienceClicEN Did you make the visualizations yourself? What tools did you use? I'm always trying to learn how visualizations that I admire are constructed.

    • @MarkRuvald
      @MarkRuvald Před 3 lety +9

      @@rodvanmeter517 i find many illustrations made in Mathematica are well done.

    • @ahitler5592
      @ahitler5592 Před 3 lety +6

      What is QFT? Quantum Fuck That?

    • @lumotroph
      @lumotroph Před 3 lety

      Agreed - the animations here are superb.

  • @effortLus
    @effortLus Před rokem +110

    This particular video was way too complex for me, yet it was fascinating to just watch and try to understand bits and pieces. It's incredible how even the most difficult type of information can come across to the most simple people, as long as its explained in a proper way. Good job

    • @Life_42
      @Life_42 Před rokem +2

      I agree!

    • @DanoshTech
      @DanoshTech Před 9 měsíci +4

      Just ask me what you didn't understand maybe I can help (just don't ask me about energy quantinization I'm still learning about that)

    • @qwertydavid8070
      @qwertydavid8070 Před 8 měsíci

      @@DanoshTech I think I got lost when he started talking about how the spins are "abstract mathematical ideas". The way I understood it, in an extremely simplified way, is that quantum field theory is essentially a way of modeling a universe using just pure math that happens to describe our actual reality. I think it'd be useful if he described how a specific spin (or combination of spins) is meant to symbolize an actual particle. That's what I got out of it at least: particles are just complex combinations of spins, whatever spins actually are meant to be, I'm still kinda lost on.
      I also got lost around 4:45. What is that y-shape supposed to represent? Is it two particles combining into one?
      I think it's also fair to advice that I'm no physicist or anything. I'm just a curious teen that's trying to learn more about the world. I admit that I don't understand these concepts the way they're meant to, these are just helpful visualizations that'll help me when I actually need to tackle these concepts eventually. I'm a very visual thinker, it helps me to imagine things in this way. I understand that when you get to such small scales the concept of visuals and distances kind of breaks down, and imagining things visually is kind of useless, things tend to get more mathematical and abstract. Still, having some sort of visualization, even if somewhat inaccurate, helps my brain wrap itself around weird concepts like this.

    • @worker_ivan_from_tver
      @worker_ivan_from_tver Před 7 měsíci +2

      ​@@qwertydavid8070 I guess in 4:45 author just wanted to illustrate the conservation of momentum. So yes, basically two particles (doesn't matter which) with opposite values of momentum components along the horizontal axis glue to each other and thus their opposite components of momentum just neutralize each other

    • @juzoli
      @juzoli Před 4 měsíci +2

      Just keep watching these videos, from different authors too, supplemented by books and other material.
      This is not a subject which could be understood from a single video, even if it gas the best explanation ever.

  • @cheahshuhuan2018
    @cheahshuhuan2018 Před rokem +90

    I studied QFT during my master's for a whole year and the lecturer lost me quite early on in the course...This video presented a visualization and explanation of QFT in such an incredibly understandable way that much of the confusion in my mind was finally cleared up! Thank you so much for creating this video!

  • @danival2090
    @danival2090 Před 3 lety +330

    Excuse me CZcams,
    Why did it take 2 years to recommend Fermilab vids to me from PBS Spacetime and 3 years to recommend ScienceClic vids to me!? This is beyond superb content!

    • @jaredf6205
      @jaredf6205 Před 3 lety +4

      Check out Science Asylum, that's the other channel that helps these types of things click for me in the way this one does.

    • @theoreticalphysics3644
      @theoreticalphysics3644 Před 3 lety +1

      @@jaredf6205 I just found that channel, finally understood tensors and the field tensor for my gr class after watch just one video there.

    • @pricett434
      @pricett434 Před 2 lety +1

      And I just found this channel only a couple of days ago already being subbed to both of those channels for years, it's SO good!!

    • @tophan5146
      @tophan5146 Před 2 lety

      I can’t stand Science Asylum host and the presentation, it’s a shame because the information is very good

    • @tim40gabby25
      @tim40gabby25 Před 2 lety

      @@tophan5146 Bit marmite, I guess?

  • @guyedwards22
    @guyedwards22 Před 3 lety +601

    You just explained quantum spin in a perfectly sound, fairly simple mathematical context without resorting to the tired line "particles don't really spin, but you can think of it that way". I'm absolutely blown away man! Also, I'm a huge fan of how you symbolized conservation laws by their corresponding transformation symmetry in the appropriate spaces. Not super necessary to understand the content, but a nice little something extra for those in the know!

    • @robertthomason8905
      @robertthomason8905 Před 2 lety +4

      Spin and vibration have similar effects. You can only spin a solid so fast. Plasma can be vibrated and accelerated to create cool quantum vacuum.

    • @matttzzz2
      @matttzzz2 Před rokem

      Why the fuck dont you nutthuggers timestamp your comments?

    • @blurta2011
      @blurta2011 Před 3 měsíci

      But it is still just all made up, it doesn't mean a thing, you people just suck this crap up and tell these people how clever they are.95% of the people watching has no idea what this guy is talking about

    • @blurta2011
      @blurta2011 Před 3 měsíci

      But it is still just all made up, it doesn't mean a thing, you people just suck this crap up and tell these people how clever they are. 98% of the people watching have no idea what this guy is talking about.
      Watch it again and tell me you know exactly what he is talking about, all these wonderful particles with their wonderful names and then there is the anti matter

    • @blurta2011
      @blurta2011 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@robertthomason8905, just keep believing it, I am sure you knew exactly what you just said

  • @vladip7662
    @vladip7662 Před 2 lety +64

    Best short presentation of QFT I've ever seen. And it fully complies with what Einstein once said: “Everything should be made as simple as possible, but no simpler.” Great work!

    • @birhon
      @birhon Před 2 měsíci

      thats an awesome quote

  • @sadariuswolf
    @sadariuswolf Před rokem +37

    I just found your channel and I had to say this is the most fun I've had in learning and understanding at least specifically Quantum Theory, and I do mean fun. You come at it like we would have in college, starting by building the theory piece by piece. But your script and breakdown level made it the most comprehensive I've ever seen. Your pacing is also incredibly satisfying as you give time for us to process the new words and topics, digest them enough to feel like "I'm not 100% there, but let's trust the process" and then link the non-visual phrasing with the excellent visualization. This is an incredibly satisfying way to learn, for me at least. But your script writing and outline is a huge part of me coming away actually understanding this on a level I really wanted to when I clicked on it.

  • @artsenor254
    @artsenor254 Před 3 lety +297

    You know, I'm a physics student, currently learning all of this stuff, and I've been searching on CZcams for months to find some way to help me visualize QFT beyond all the equations on my sheet. Well, that's the exact video I couldn't find, thank you so much for this amazing work !

    • @ScienceClicEN
      @ScienceClicEN  Před 3 lety +63

      Glad you liked it ! I've just finished my Master's and same as you, when I was studying I looked online hoping to find intuitive visualizations, but couldn't find anything convincing

    • @monkeyrobotsinc.9875
      @monkeyrobotsinc.9875 Před 3 lety +16

      im a physicis student too but i only study on youtube

    • @isodoubIet
      @isodoubIet Před 3 lety +37

      This explanation is fine for a more casual viewer but if you're actually learning physics I'd advise you to be cautious of it. 5-second long snippets of this video make sense in isolation, but they don't really form a cohesive whole -- it's as if someone mixed three different jigsaw puzzles of the Eiffel tower together and presented various bits of it as if they formed a single picture. There are pieces of several different 'perspectives' of QFT in this video, but they're not all true at once -- you have to pick one or the other.
      For example, the author says that to turn a classical object into a quantum object you "allow it to adopt several positions at the same time, with more or less probability" (which isn't quite right but it's a common enough so let's leave it aside for now). Then it is asserted that to turn a classical field into a quantum field 'we allow it to adopt several configurations'. The trouble here is that the former is describing so-called canonical quantum mechanics -- wavefunctions and so on -- whereas the latter is really describing Feynman's path integral formulation. The correct comparison should be between particles taking all paths between two points A and B, and fields taking all (time-dependent) configurations connecting configurations A and B. It's a subtle difference but an important one -- when doing canonical quantum field theory one doesn't deal with superpositions over classical configurations, but rather with superpositions of definite particle number -- there's an uncertainty relation between particle number and field intensity, so there's a possibility of confusion with the next point as well, since the presentation suggests that particles are associated with the fields being in a given classical-looking configuration but that is very much not the case.
      Anyway, the point is, if you already know QFT it's easy to sort out these various jigsaw pieces from one another and pick out the kernels of truth in the presentation, but if you're still learning you run the risk of ending more confused than when you started. I don't mean any disrespect to the creator of this video -- it's of course a laudable effort supported with really well-done visualizations. QFT is one of the hardest subjects in all of physics so it's unsurprising that it's hard to convey it in a way that's both accurate and understandable, and I think on average the video is useful for a layperson who wants to have a better idea of how this works. But if you're serious about learning QFT you need a presentation that perhaps sacrifices a little understandability for accuracy.

    • @tokyomobster3072
      @tokyomobster3072 Před 3 lety +6

      @@isodoubIet I completely agree. I'm studying for my QFT exam and I felt that the video hopped and skipped around all the important parts of my module. I felt so confused by this video I didn't know whether it's actually correct or not lol.
      At the very least, it's very pretty.

    • @mr.username
      @mr.username Před 3 lety +3

      Truth is -- QFT is complicated. There is just no way to put it simply. While the visualisation is well-made indeed (thumbs up to the author), it is unfortunately not rigorous and should not be regarded as such. Vanilla QM has quite a simple mathematical apparatus, and yet its mapping to the real world holds questions which after a century nobody can fully answer. And in case of QFT *both* of the aspects are complicated.

  • @kieranwagstaff
    @kieranwagstaff Před 3 lety +353

    I mean, scary monsters are great and all, but it's this stuff that keeps me awake at night.

    • @jandroid33
      @jandroid33 Před 2 lety +1

      What scares you the most, quarks or electrons or something else? :-)

    • @LouSaydus
      @LouSaydus Před 2 lety +20

      As long as you don't think about vacuum decay you're fine.

    • @pronobsarker3828
      @pronobsarker3828 Před 2 lety +3

      @@LouSaydus some eldrich stuff

    • @nobodyinparticular968
      @nobodyinparticular968 Před 2 lety +1

      @@LouSaydus i feel like we're more likely to die from a rogue black hole then vacuum decay

    • @NeurotiQ
      @NeurotiQ Před 2 lety +1

      @@nobodyinparticular968 don't worry, vacuum decay or black hole is nothing in comparison with our reckless stupidity. We will destroy ourselves I bet 🤣

  • @fonkyfesh
    @fonkyfesh Před 9 měsíci +2

    This is the clearest and most thorough explanation of quantum mechanics i have ever seen.

  • @deldarel
    @deldarel Před rokem +4

    I'm consistently impressed by how well you simplify and explain the necessity of things. Within 2 minutes you shows not just that we have fields, but why it's necessary we have something like fields.
    You don't just explain fields have internal symmetries, but also show why their nature necessitates these.
    If there has ever been a channel that could make M theory digestible and captivating, it's this channel

  • @uhbayhue
    @uhbayhue Před 3 lety +408

    This is by far the best explanation of QFT I've ever heard. This video seems to go by very slowly, but in a really nice way. Dont know exactly how to describe it, but thank you!!

    • @ScienceClicEN
      @ScienceClicEN  Před 3 lety +30

      Thanks glad you liked it !

    • @Kugelschrei
      @Kugelschrei Před 3 lety +37

      I believe it's the pauses. They give room to comprehend the explanations

    • @bmoneybby
      @bmoneybby Před 3 lety +2

      It's extremely impressive!

    • @zovisapphire
      @zovisapphire Před 3 lety +6

      This is EXACTLY why I like these videos. concepts are explained visually, pacing is slow enough for actually grasping the information presented, while being fast enough that you don't lose the thread. The background music track helps with this IMMENSLY.
      Maybe it's just me but that + speaking speed + information pace in a great balance is probably the most important factor when educating.

    • @santzerosantone
      @santzerosantone Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/qfi0vaBMnTA/video.html

  • @Geddyfleaharris
    @Geddyfleaharris Před 3 lety +287

    For a non-physicist layman, who just happens to enjoy reading and watching CZcams videos about it, your videos are fantastic. Great work. Keep them coming!

    • @lawoull.6581
      @lawoull.6581 Před 3 lety +1

      Do you like collard greens??.🤔

    • @vladimator1842
      @vladimator1842 Před 2 lety +1

      @@lawoull.6581 Right here...👋

    • @rachelnyn5543
      @rachelnyn5543 Před rokem

      @@lawoull.6581 I like color green…does that count? 😆

    • @lawoull.6581
      @lawoull.6581 Před rokem +1

      @@rachelnyn5543 ...it's a vast universe....you're in.. yesss

  • @singingcat02
    @singingcat02 Před 11 měsíci +16

    I'm a high school student and this video seemed interesting especially since i'm in my physics phase, and my mind is blown. That is so interesting, and i managed to understand most of it thanks to your incredibly clear explanation and visuals. I might have to watch it a few more times to memorize and understand it better, but it makes me want to dig even further into the subject. Thank you !

    • @ritishify
      @ritishify Před 10 měsíci +1

      I wish you a lot of success in your education, it's good to see younger people seriously interested in this stuff.

  • @extraxt
    @extraxt Před 2 lety +3

    This vídeo is fantastic.
    The biggest win of it is to have this micro pauses between concepts and examples, its 10x effective for me stead of having to watch the video over and over again.
    10/10 for this video, keep the great work!

  • @kuboteusz
    @kuboteusz Před 3 lety +722

    Did you just explain what an electromagnetic force is. Wow

  • @scifactorial5802
    @scifactorial5802 Před 3 lety +352

    Hands down one of the best introductions available. Love the visualizations, basically you are the 3b1b of physics! Absolutely deserves more views!
    Please keep up the great work with more videos like this. Excellent stuff!
    I might have missed it but is there a video about how you do the visualizations?

    • @ScienceClicEN
      @ScienceClicEN  Před 3 lety +90

      Thank you very much for the compliment 🙏 I am very glad you like it. Not yet no but I might do one in the future. Basically I draw the images with Photoshop, and then animate them in 2D / 3D using After Effects. With time I've learned a few tricks to optimize my workflow so I can produce better looking results

    • @Pidrittel
      @Pidrittel Před 3 lety +13

      Very very impressive!

    • @haotiangan2747
      @haotiangan2747 Před 3 lety +10

      @@ScienceClicEN You are amazing

    • @tokyomobster3072
      @tokyomobster3072 Před 3 lety +3

      @@ScienceClicEN I would recommend learning Blender

    • @ScienceClicEN
      @ScienceClicEN  Před 3 lety +11

      Yes I use Blender for some projects, it's great! (I used Maya before but switched to Blender a year ago), but for these videos as it's mainly 2D I am more familiar with AE

  • @sunnykaura8397
    @sunnykaura8397 Před 2 lety +1

    This is an outstanding explanation that brings so many threads together. When someone can make something very complicated sound clear and simpler for you, you know they have a proper grasp of the subject matter.

  • @anthropomorphichuman
    @anthropomorphichuman Před rokem +10

    This is an amazing explanation, wonderfully done. Great job - I think a lot of people have had concepts snap into place after watching this visualisation. Great soundtrack choice, too

  • @lorenzozappa3347
    @lorenzozappa3347 Před 3 lety +156

    Wow, I am actually studying this stuff but I often get confused by algebra and I lose the meaning behind. Your video is absolutely amazing, everything is explained in such an intuitive way. It reminds me what I am doing when I get lost in equations. Thank you very much!

    • @ScienceClicEN
      @ScienceClicEN  Před 3 lety +29

      Very glad this can help you ! Good luck in your work, QFT is very interesting

    • @thesciencehinduby
      @thesciencehinduby Před 3 lety +4

      Hi Lorenzo I am a novice. But can understand maths ans enjoys. Please recommend a book on QFT, the one I have is too complicated for me.
      I have Introduction to QFT by Peskin and Schroeder

    • @paperbitch123
      @paperbitch123 Před 3 lety +2

      @@thesciencehinduby the lecture notes by David tong are pretty good, also free :)

    • @youtubesucks1885
      @youtubesucks1885 Před 3 lety +2

      @@thesciencehinduby Peskin in Schroeder give by far the best substantial introduction to QFT available

    • @bezbezzebbyson788
      @bezbezzebbyson788 Před 2 lety

      @@youtubesucks1885 Peskin is good if you already know qft

  • @umi3017
    @umi3017 Před 3 lety +403

    Physicist: spinor
    Me: oh, you mean USB(typeA) connector?

    • @AttilaAsztalos
      @AttilaAsztalos Před 3 lety +12

      And this is why I read comments before commenting. Came to say the same. Clearly!

    • @JavierAlbinarrate
      @JavierAlbinarrate Před 3 lety +3

      LOL.... damn good one! hey, this comment should have thousands of likes... here you have mine, just one is all I can give unfortunately :)

    • @mohdrazif777
      @mohdrazif777 Před 3 lety +1

      Damn.

    • @yash1152
      @yash1152 Před 3 lety

      what does this mean..??

    • @notgonnalie1846
      @notgonnalie1846 Před 3 lety +1

      I salute you for making me feel even more stupid

  • @jdbrinton
    @jdbrinton Před rokem +13

    Bravo. Best QFT summary available. Your work is truly a donation to humanity.

  • @kyoto9916
    @kyoto9916 Před 2 lety +4

    I've never seen such a good and simple description of something so seemingly complex. And it's mind-blowing that someone actually once came up with this concept by merely observing the universe

  • @greptheloot
    @greptheloot Před 3 lety +60

    Seriously...thank you for taking the time to animate this and provide visual context to these theories. A rarity on youtube, instant sub!

  • @CitizenAyellowblue
    @CitizenAyellowblue Před 3 lety +98

    The guitar analogy really hit the spot!

    • @yash1152
      @yash1152 Před 3 lety

      12:30

    • @yourself88xbl
      @yourself88xbl Před 3 lety +1

      Yes! Especially after I just learned about the nature of overtones which is you hearing the individual sin waves that make up the superposition and learning that sythisisers are just computers that synthesize sin waves. 🤯

    • @pascalfragnoud2846
      @pascalfragnoud2846 Před 3 lety

      But, what if the guitar has a vibrato ?

    • @yash1152
      @yash1152 Před 3 lety

      @@pascalfragnoud2846 any example video? so that i can see and reply accordingly?

    • @pascalfragnoud2846
      @pascalfragnoud2846 Před 3 lety +2

      @@yash1152 Oh, that was just a joke ! But alright, I'll play the game.
      The part where the strings meet the body of a guitar is called the bridge. There are many types of bridge, but mainly we can split them in two categories: fixed bridges, and floating bridges.
      What is special about a floating bridge is that you can move it, usually with a thin metal bar, which has the effect of changing the length of the string ever so slightly. Changing the length of a string will in turn change the frequency at which it vibrates, and thus change the note.
      Floating bridges have many names, a familiar one being vibrato (which may be confusing, as this word is also used for a different albeit not totally unrelated thing).
      The typical vibrato is the one used by Hendrix for the famous diving bomb effect.
      You can see one in use by Jeff Beck here (You can see the vibrato bar pretty clearly around 20 seconds, and he uses it regularly though the whole video, or even through his whole career) :
      czcams.com/video/nQDjSGnmYBI/video.html
      If you type whammy bar in youtube, you'll find a thousand videos showing exactly what I was talking about.
      I personally don't use them much, but it's a quite fun little thing !

  • @trewillz7425
    @trewillz7425 Před rokem +15

    Incredible work!! This SHOULD be in schools. Absolutely amazing visuals and very descriptive.

  • @psicologiajoseh
    @psicologiajoseh Před 2 lety +1

    I think the same as I read in a previous comment... Arguably one of the best science channels out there! You really can see how much he understands these topics as he explains them with so much propriety and simplicity.

  • @neerkoli
    @neerkoli Před 3 lety +39

    This is one of those "woah!" moments for me. You have that gift of explaining things clearly and precisely. People like you are making ordinary mortals like me understand quantum physics and relativity, at least a little bit. Thank you!

  • @PatricioHondagneuRoig
    @PatricioHondagneuRoig Před 3 lety +56

    How dare you make the meaning of particle spin finally click in my head? No videos should be this good.

  • @zucc4764
    @zucc4764 Před rokem +3

    this is an awesome explanation of how electrons repel each other and how they fit within a quantum field.
    really appreciate how you hit us with Feynman diagrams without making it look too hard to digest.
    also makes me appreciate how close we are to arriving to a theory of everything. excited about what comes next in QFT.

  • @ryangleason3559
    @ryangleason3559 Před 9 měsíci +1

    It’s truly a gift to have someone who’s put in the requisite cognitive labor to understand these concepts relay them to the rest of us in a way that stokes curiosity and intuition. I’ve gained so much from your content and your work is brilliant. thank you 🙏🔥

  • @Grzyb032
    @Grzyb032 Před 3 lety +136

    Beautifully explained, am gonna share it with friends that are also into this stuff

    • @ScienceClicEN
      @ScienceClicEN  Před 3 lety +19

      Thank you that helps a lot 🙏

    • @djtomleeuwen
      @djtomleeuwen Před 3 lety

      I'm quickly done with the sharing...

    • @polymloth
      @polymloth Před 3 lety

      I’m also gonna share it with friends who are not into this stuff bc maybe they will be after watching this

  • @mozzerianmisanthrope406
    @mozzerianmisanthrope406 Před 2 lety +9

    As a philosophy student this is fantastic. I have never considered paying attention to physics, but I understand how important it is to the world around us and the intersectionality between quantum mechanics and philosophical concepts has blown my mind. Absolutely fascinating, and you did a great job in making it super easy to comprehend. Thank you.

    • @danieljones4032
      @danieljones4032 Před rokem

      A fitting review, indeed

    • @NalitaQubit
      @NalitaQubit Před rokem +2

      You will enjoy then listening to Sean Carroll; he has a Patreon account which is the best way to expand one’s brain horizons.

  • @LewisBavin
    @LewisBavin Před rokem +3

    Just guna echo what everyone else said but this is INCREDIBLY digestible.
    I have watched and read a crazy amount of videos and papers about quantum mechanics but this visualisation has completely contextualised everything I've learnt in a way that makes me understand it so much simpler.
    Incredible video

  • @Chrisbajs
    @Chrisbajs Před 3 lety +95

    13:19 Eureka-moment for me. THIS IS the electromagnetic force!

    • @carlandren7062
      @carlandren7062 Před 2 lety +2

      Still don't understand why the particle was emitted in the first place though

    • @Owlrrex
      @Owlrrex Před 2 lety +7

      @@carlandren7062 Because it's allowed. On macro-scale, you what is observed is the summed result of all possible scenarios. In that sum, all possible scenarios have to be considered: What if 1 photon is emitted, what if 2 are emitted (and how), and so on. Scenarios with multiple chained interactions at once are less likely, so they contribute less to the final result, but just from probability sooner or later the two (resting) electrons are likely to exchange a photon now and then, w hich makes them move away from each other. Because it's allowed, because it's possible, it will happen sooner or later.

    • @protorhinocerator142
      @protorhinocerator142 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Owlrrex Correct. It's an average of a billion zillion random microscopic movements and exchanges.
      For instance, at the molecular level, every oxygen molecule in a canister is moving in a random direction. But back yourself out to the canister level, and the average interactions are so consistent and predictable, they follow the Ideal Gas Law.
      Order from chaos.

    • @Koodles33
      @Koodles33 Před 2 lety

      @@protorhinocerator142 Great example.

    • @edfun42
      @edfun42 Před 2 lety +1

      So the act of emitting photons (from electrons) is the reason why electrons repel each other? And is there a similar reason why positive charges repel??

  • @scepticalchymist
    @scepticalchymist Před 3 lety +32

    Beautifully animated and impressively clear, concise, and comprehensible. A true piece of magic.

  • @stevenhoman2253
    @stevenhoman2253 Před rokem +2

    As a recent subscriber who stumbled across your channel, it is gratifying to see such fine representations and explications of dynamic quantum fields. Keep up the fine work.

  • @netopir3804
    @netopir3804 Před rokem

    The precisely paced narration with this timbre of mysterious clarity spoken in an appealing accent is what brings this excellent video really to life…shoutout to the narrator!

  • @macronencer
    @macronencer Před 3 lety +13

    Why have I NEVER before seen that explanation of spin? I'm not a physicist but as I studied maths, it immediately made some sense to me. Thank you!

    • @darthnihilus4074
      @darthnihilus4074 Před 3 lety +3

      The best analogy for me is the deck of cards analogy. Imagine a king of hearts. It has two heads, one on either side. You have to rotate the card 180 degrees for there to still be a head facing up. Therefore it’s spin is 2. Imagine a ace of spades. You have to rotate it 360 degrees so that it is facing upright again, because it is not symmetrical. Therefore it’s spin is 1. I hope this makes sense!

    • @yash1152
      @yash1152 Před 3 lety +1

      ​@@darthnihilus4074 yeah, same thing with vectors too (as shown in the video - 3:45) - but yeah, urs one is more layman.
      and as with most things, the mathematical description requires less words but that's somewhat compensated by the requirement of more background info lol.

    • @actuallyawful
      @actuallyawful Před 2 lety

      @@darthnihilus4074 that's because the rotational symmetry is given by 2*pi/spin

  • @crowbringer
    @crowbringer Před 3 lety +49

    Great! I like how you make these pauses while you explain stuff. Gives me some time to process what you just said. There are many other great channels here but for the first time I feel like I actually remember something from the video. Sub+

    • @voges1001
      @voges1001 Před 3 lety +2

      Yeah I watched it on 0.5x playback speed

  • @HolyAwe10
    @HolyAwe10 Před 2 lety

    This Chanel is fuel to my soul. Summarizing very complex ideas behind formulas,equations in amazing visuals and narration. Outstanding work.

  • @charlesdavis7940
    @charlesdavis7940 Před 11 měsíci

    Great expansion. As a visual person struggling for years to understand particle physics and quantum mechanics, I find these to be the most understandable explanations I’ve found. Thank you.

  • @RomainPuech
    @RomainPuech Před 3 lety +43

    One of the most relevant video of the Science CZcams Game

  • @sxbmissive
    @sxbmissive Před 3 lety +6

    I’ve been watching a video or two of yours (or 3 or 4) each night for about a week, and on every occasion, I am amazed at how well you explain and animate/visualize these complicated topics. Way to go!

  • @captainprice2331
    @captainprice2331 Před 2 lety +10

    It is masterpiece, I remember watching this a few months back and banging my head but since they I have gathered some more mathematical and physics knowledge and now I totally got the video and I fell in love.....

  • @craigwatson4460
    @craigwatson4460 Před 21 dnem

    This is easily the most informative video I've ever seen on QFT. Thanks for all the time you put into this, and thanks for finally making it clear what spin and charge actually might be in a physical sense.

  • @StephanieHoltz0220
    @StephanieHoltz0220 Před 3 lety +53

    This is such a great visual aide to understand something which is (extremely difficult) to visualize/comprehend. I am not a physics major but am still deeply interested in the subject. Please keep making more videos..haha

  • @Kosmologi-Indonesia
    @Kosmologi-Indonesia Před 3 lety +39

    The best 15 minutes of my life. Thanks for the sharing. I'm studying QFT by myself now and this visualization helps me a lot.

    • @loroverde1621
      @loroverde1621 Před rokem

      hello, so you understand some of what he said or almost evreything he say, yes i know a year later,are you still there?, this is very interesting anyway, the things we now days can see and understand from the micro world

    • @Kosmologi-Indonesia
      @Kosmologi-Indonesia Před rokem +1

      @@loroverde1621 just little bit

    • @loroverde1621
      @loroverde1621 Před rokem

      @@Kosmologi-Indonesia same thing here with me, but curiosity, AND. SEARCH,NOT FOR THE TRUTH, rader than just a better understandig,all the things, that i have beèn wondering to understend, since i was born, just like you or anybodyelse whit the desire to learn how things work in the universe, before i leave this world = this life,,and ,off course, this body off mine. PS, if i play with the words ,y shall say, this body off mind,

  • @albertrenshaw4252
    @albertrenshaw4252 Před 2 lety +3

    This is one of the greatest videos I have ever seen. I wish so desperately I could animate like this to visually describe some thoughts I have.

  • @thegreatreverendx
    @thegreatreverendx Před rokem

    This is the clearest, most lucid explanation of anything regarding quantum mechanics or particle physics I’ve ever seen. If all physics classes can be taught like this, I imagine we’d have a lot more working physicists.

  • @twokharacters
    @twokharacters Před 3 lety +37

    As a scientist who has heard the theory of special relativity explained a number times, this is the first time it's clicked. Thank you kindly.

  • @raysubject
    @raysubject Před 3 lety +14

    Another amazing piece. Man, you're making best "easy to understand explanation of complex things" i ever saw on youtube .. first your general relativity visualisation and now this .. GREAT

  • @SebastianSchepis
    @SebastianSchepis Před rokem

    This is one of the best summary videos of quantum field theory I've seen. Excellent work.

  • @PrasadNarse
    @PrasadNarse Před rokem

    Simplifying the quantum theory with visual representation is an eye opener! Thanks so much for the simplified expressions!

  • @matthiascoppens2062
    @matthiascoppens2062 Před 3 lety +14

    Great video! I especially liked how spin just casually shows up when you're creating relativistic fields. This must be about the best explanation for spin I ever heard.

    • @ScienceClicEN
      @ScienceClicEN  Před 3 lety +9

      Thanks ! Indeed, spin is often presented as some weird quantum property, although in some sense it rather comes from relativity as a way to classify mathematical objects

    • @matthiascoppens2062
      @matthiascoppens2062 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ScienceClicEN I'd love to add Dutch subtitles to your video, but I don't seem to be able to do that

  • @mikeytrw
    @mikeytrw Před 3 lety +7

    This video brought so many concepts I've read about together, and visualised them in such a way I had a 'wow' moment. Thank you.

  • @MyskokorwEpikz
    @MyskokorwEpikz Před 2 lety +17

    I'm a MSc student in particle physics and I must say that these are some of the most well made videos on theoretical physics in layman's terms I've ever seen. Many other pop-science videos on youtube can't maintain accuracy when simplifying the concepts and making them aesthetic and captivating, but you have managed to do both. It's a great accomplishment!
    I have a question: Do you think modern physics have been established for so long that it's time to teach it from the start, and skip the "detour" through classical physics that traditional teaching does? On the one hand, classical physics teaches you how to work with a physical model that can be cross-checked with your everyday physical intuition, on the other hand it reinforces intuition that you later have to unlearn when learning modern physics. But maybe this unlearning is good, since that is probably what we need to do anyways for the (hopefully) next paradigm shift? Studying several incompatible models might make us more open to new models?

    • @Userkzb20253
      @Userkzb20253 Před 2 lety +3

      I think it’s an overkill if engineers skip classical physics. It works so well for the real world except the two extremes. May be physicist students should skip classical mechanics.

  • @SAN-rm4qp
    @SAN-rm4qp Před 2 lety +1

    Simply do not have words for this channel, easiest visualized qft video ever. Wanna say thank you to this person.
    This channel deserves millions of subscribers.

  • @PCGamer1732
    @PCGamer1732 Před 3 lety +12

    This is absolutely the best summarized description I have ever seen

    • @ListenToMcMuck
      @ListenToMcMuck Před 3 lety

      Well, @ least the most compact I've seen 'till now.
      Highly complex it comes along with optimized audio & videofeatures
      in order to be easily absorbed.
      & it rushes by with a pretty hard impact on me as well...
      @ least according to the impression it has left on me.
      Great stuff d(8)b...
      & THXxL, muck(8)

  • @Chauncylew
    @Chauncylew Před 3 lety +5

    Cheers to the day where videos like this go viral and the human attention shifts toward wonder and amazement again.

  • @isaac.zeitgeist
    @isaac.zeitgeist Před rokem

    the way you just summarized all possible electron-electron interactions to give as a result what we observer as repulsion is just... magic
    congrats on the video, seriously, you have a new subscriber

  • @alessiomasciandaro1022
    @alessiomasciandaro1022 Před 8 měsíci

    The animations make everything much more understandable! You sir are doing humanity a favor with these videos. Keep it up!

  • @enricolucarelli816
    @enricolucarelli816 Před 3 lety +12

    I am studying physics for fun. Well, it’s more than just fun. It’s passion. Understanding QFT is one of my mayor pending challenges. With this video, I feel like having reached in minutes what other ways would have taken years of struggling towards understanding. Thank you so much. This video is a real revelation.

    • @Teo-uw7mh
      @Teo-uw7mh Před 2 lety +1

      watching a youtube video is not studying. If you dont read a proper book on QFT you will never understand it.

    • @enricolucarelli816
      @enricolucarelli816 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Teo-uw7mh well, I agree with you that to watch a short video is not going to have the same result as reading a most likely very thick book. But if your point is that, in general, a video can not substitute a book, I disagree. Actually, nowadays I most commonly listen to audiobooks instead of reading them, or, I watch videos of complete courses recorded in a classroom, with famous professors like Feinmann, Susskind, and many others.

  • @extinnocence
    @extinnocence Před 3 lety +3

    My minds been blown. I've been wondering about these things for years and could never get a clear visual, and you've done it kind sir.

  • @aunumever
    @aunumever Před 5 měsíci

    This is the intro everyone needs and probably the best video I’ve ever watched. One that I will keep rewinding to understand.

  • @Duffynez
    @Duffynez Před 2 lety

    BY FAR THE BEST explanation of the QFD I have ever seen. Well done!

  • @spacekettle2478
    @spacekettle2478 Před 3 lety +112

    "How is it, that an electron coming from the far reaches of the cosmos, has exactly the same mass or charge as an electron in an apple?"
    Mind. Blown.

    • @elizabethwinsor5140
      @elizabethwinsor5140 Před 3 lety +4

      Its the taste of the apple that should blow your mind - "How" does taste get into it and into "you" unless your a superposition of thems ....?

    • @Skynet_the_AI
      @Skynet_the_AI Před 3 lety

      @@elizabethwinsor5140 how: wow!

    • @Geddyfleaharris
      @Geddyfleaharris Před 3 lety +6

      I am not, nor even close, to being a physicist. I just like reading and watching CZcams videos about physics, relativity etc. But the 2 electrons being the same seemed logical to me. Along the lines of an electron is an electron is an electron. I have no scientific explanation to back that up. Just seemed intuitive to me.

    • @yash1152
      @yash1152 Před 3 lety +4

      reallyyyy??
      to me, both are called same thing, "electron" in this case, because they have same properties. And 2 electrons - which by the name means that they have same property - WILL have same properties. if it had different properties, then they'd have different names lol.
      take how is anything named.... this is how it goes.

    • @kashu7691
      @kashu7691 Před 3 lety +4

      @@yash1152 circular reasoning

  • @lucas_liano
    @lucas_liano Před 3 lety +3

    This is absolutely awesome! The animations are super clear and the explanation is so good that you dont need to know much math to understand the concept below it. Super glad you made this!

  • @willcollins9470
    @willcollins9470 Před 2 lety

    I've been watching videos for five years on this stuff. finally it is all in one place. thanks

  • @davidsansom2553
    @davidsansom2553 Před 2 lety

    Outstanding, the best explanation of fields, classical and quantum, symmetries, and spin I have ever encountered. I love your videos on General Relativity. Kudos to you 😊

  • @freddytime
    @freddytime Před 3 lety +12

    As a passionated without any academic study, I can't thank you enough for this visualisation. It makes it super simple and makes a lot of sense. I had some issue even with simple concepts jumping from QM to QFT, like characteristics of particles, even as simple as particles charge. It has been always a step of faith of particles behaviours which didn't make much sense. Now I believe I can say that charge and interactions are phase QFT waves interactions and their disturbances. I'm still totally ignorant, but at the least I got comfortable to have my own partial understanding.

  • @raifsam3408
    @raifsam3408 Před 3 lety +32

    amazing explaination, as a experimental particle physicist, i'll give this a 10/10 for the content!

    • @gaborszucs6075
      @gaborszucs6075 Před 2 lety

      Me too, I agree.

    • @tim40gabby25
      @tim40gabby25 Před 2 lety

      9 out of 10 for your spelling, but who cares :) May I ask - why do you think there appears to be so much (professional?) disagreement about the usefulness of this video, underneath the lovely images? I'm totally an amateur, wondering at these difficult concepts. Just asking.

  • @davidwright8432
    @davidwright8432 Před rokem

    I wish I'd had this video when starting quantum mechanics in undergrad physics! It has two crucial qualities: It's clear, and it conveys the basic ideas without distorting them. The devil is in the details such an account can't discuss; but at a qualitative level, leaving out horrendous mathematical detail, this is superb. Thanks!

  • @andriy6485
    @andriy6485 Před 2 lety +1

    Absolutely astonishing elegance that just morphs it into near- or true perfection of introductory explanation of QFT.

  • @ForTiorIJohnny
    @ForTiorIJohnny Před 3 lety +3

    finally someone who actaully leaves little pauses in his explanation to let things sink in. it´s so important in teaching.

    • @yash1152
      @yash1152 Před 3 lety

      and ppl like me speed up to 1.5x lol... i am soo impatient i guess 😅😅😆

  • @audiblevideo
    @audiblevideo Před 3 lety +24

    I’ve been a casual pursuer of physics since my childhood when my science project was about black holes (back when they were only theoretical objects). This video combined with several other recent explanations have finally cemented a mental model in my head of our current understanding. Thank you VERY much for the explanation of spin. Too many people just hand wave it away. Having the Higgs particle/field explained as having a spin of zero makes sense for a lowest energy field that permeates all space. Sorry if my diction isn’t properly technical.

    • @thedeemon
      @thedeemon Před 3 lety +2

      Higgs field's spin is not related to its energy. It's spin zero because it's a scalar field, as opposed to vector fields of bosons like photons and W/Z/gluons, and spinor fields of fermions like electrons etc. On the opposite, it has much more energy than others: while for other fields their vacuum state is being at zero, no particles, no energy, in Higgs field its current vacuum state remains at a non-zero value everywhere, its vacuum expectation value. This non-zero value of Higgs field is what's giving mass to other particles.

    • @audiblevideo
      @audiblevideo Před 3 lety

      @@thedeemon I understand that the Higgs field has a value everywhere. Is that number a positive or negative value, and does that matter? Is the Mexican hat dip above or below vacuum 0? Is this even a question that make sense? :)
      Having the field scalar makes sense. Thanks for your explanation.

    • @thedeemon
      @thedeemon Před 3 lety +3

      @@audiblevideo The scalar in Higgs field is a complex number, not a real one. Is i above or below zero?
      I guess you've seen that 3D mexican hat chart. It shows how the potential of the Higgs field depends on the value of the Higgs field, where the complex number value of the field serves as the horizontal 2D coordinates and the height of the hat at that point shows the potential.
      The center of the hat is the complex value of zero, the zero value of the Higgs field. It's a local maximum of the potential, so as you go away from zero in any direction the potential gets lower. At a certain radius it reaches a minimum and then starts growing again. That circle of points where the potential has that minimum is a set of values of Higgs field with the same absolute value but different phase. The current Higgs field value is believed to lie on that circle, but it can freely move along that circle. So we know the absolute value, but probably not the phase, not the angle where exactly on that circle the actual value lies.
      This shape of the potential means the Higgs field value can move/change in some directions (along the circle) without a change in potential, this gives us some massless Goldstone boson. A change in radial direction involves growth of the potential, it's like a potential well, a change in radial direction gives us a massive boson, the Higgs boson (an excitation of the Higgs field from its vacuum expectation value).

    • @audiblevideo
      @audiblevideo Před 3 lety

      @@thedeemon thank you. I think I glossed over in my readings that the Higgs field represented a complex number. Complex numbers are VERY interesting.
      For anyone else here is a good run down of complex (imaginary) numbers
      czcams.com/video/T647CGsuOVU/video.html

    • @deepjyotiray2010
      @deepjyotiray2010 Před 3 lety +1

      @@audiblevideo but why is a physical field partially imaginary ?

  • @IrakliKavtaradzepsyche
    @IrakliKavtaradzepsyche Před rokem +1

    I work in data visualisation. I can tell you, these are the best instructional visualisations I have ever encountered.

  • @sarsedacn
    @sarsedacn Před 8 měsíci +1

    As a Physicist I'm astonished at the level of accuracy of this video. Well done!

  • @paulgoodwin8840
    @paulgoodwin8840 Před 3 lety +6

    This is hands down the best explanation for QFT I've ever seen.

  • @serenityindeed
    @serenityindeed Před 3 lety +4

    Very nice, describing the roll of spin for various fields really helped build up my intuition. Thanks!

  • @lemonblue6282
    @lemonblue6282 Před měsícem

    This video is a trip. Thank you. I know no one would ever say its what I'm actually seeing - because we're talking about things only seen with electron microscopes and other such equipment - but I've had my eyes examined for years by different specialists - and this video sounds most like what I see and have seen since the early 90s.

  • @jayitabanerjee2810
    @jayitabanerjee2810 Před 2 lety +3

    Why on earth is this channel so underrated?!

  • @davidroberts6909
    @davidroberts6909 Před 3 lety +3

    This is spectacular. The pauses are great, giving a chance to let it sink in the mind. Your visuals and script work tremendously well. I only now have a better idea of spin due to your work.

  • @SergeiKotikov
    @SergeiKotikov Před 3 lety +4

    Your visualisations are fantastic. 3b1b grade stuff - very consistent and pleasant to look at.

    • @ScienceClicEN
      @ScienceClicEN  Před 3 lety

      Thank you very much that's quite a compliment !

  • @MatsueMusic
    @MatsueMusic Před rokem +3

    As a hobbyist sound designer and musician, “symphony of the universe” is a very interesting concept. I am not spiritual by any means yet our free will, determined or otherwise, gives us a unique awareness of and connection to this symphony, I hope we can continue to enjoy and understand it.

  • @raiden542
    @raiden542 Před 3 měsíci

    You have sparked a hidden passion and wonder i never knew existed. Amazing with 2 fields and 3 interactions possible or rules you can already describe the Electromagnetic Force. I love it.

  • @kieferonline
    @kieferonline Před 3 lety +4

    Hats off to the creator of this video. Really good script and excellent visuals!

  • @EngineerNick
    @EngineerNick Před 3 lety +3

    This is amazing :) I think having this kind of thing freely available on the internet may be pushing us toward new discoveries faster than a yet bigger particle collider would.

  • @OroborOSX11
    @OroborOSX11 Před 2 lety

    I hope you make these videos forever. Stunning info visualization and motion design.

  • @Colony28
    @Colony28 Před 2 lety

    Wow! This is so accessible, beautiful, and simple to follow. I totally love it.

  • @fuu812
    @fuu812 Před 3 lety +3

    Thanks for attempting to illustrate such a complex topic, I really feel closer to when I started. Really impressed by the quality of this video!

  • @ph6560
    @ph6560 Před 3 lety +8

    Woow, Alessandro is good! These physics visualisations and explanations are - without exaggeration - some of the best I've seen on youtube. Please keep making more!

  • @StephenDix
    @StephenDix Před rokem +4

    This is one of the greatest meditation videos I have ever seen. Please make more in this exact style.
    It's one thing to learn a little about quantum mechanics, but it is a far deeper thing to come face to face with the sheer quantity and importance of the things I still do not know. It's humbling in the best way.

  • @jefffiooo
    @jefffiooo Před 2 lety

    This is the best channel to learn more about the concept of (theoretical) physics and our fundamental reality! Please keep up this good work!!