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General Relativity and Gravity | What Einstein Discovered

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  • čas přidán 15. 08. 2024
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    Shortly after publishing his special theory of relativity, Einstein began to work toward creating an even more complete and far-reaching theory of space and time. It took him another decade, but eventually Einstein came up with an expanded and completely general form of his theory. The general theory of relativity was not only a theory of space and time, but also provided us with a deeper and more powerful way of thinking about the force of gravity
    Presented by Dan Hooper
    From the series: What Einstein Got Wrong
    Learn more about Einstein's Theories at www.wondrium.c...
    00:00 What is the Special Theory of Relativity?
    01:00 Special Relativity vs. Newtonian Gravity
    01:35 What Is the General Theory of Relativity?
    02:00 What Is the Equivalence Principle?
    03:15 Acceleration and Gravity Might Be Deeply Connected
    03:28 "Mass" in Newtonian Physics
    03:40 What is Inertial Mass?
    04:00 What is Gravitational Mass?
    05:10 On the Influence of Gravity on the Propagation of Light
    06:30 Gravity and Geometry of Space and Time
    07:00 Five Basic Axioms of Euclidean Geometry
    08:45 Exceptions to Euclid's Fifth Postulate
    11:00 Gravitational Field Equations
    11:25 Einstein and Marcel Grossmann on Field Equations
    12:30 What is Tensor Analysis?
    13:00 Equations Can't Be Self-Consistently Applied
    14:30 Outline of a Generalized Theory of Relativity and of a Theory of Gravitation
    15:28 Detecting Error in Newtonian Prediction
    19:30 Incorrect Versions of Einstein’s Theory
    19:50 David Hilbert Takes Interest in Einstein's Theory
    24:05 What are Tensors?
    25:07 Einstein Publishes His General Theory of Relativity
    25:20 Implications of General Theory of Relativity
    27:25 How Scientists Measure the Effects of General Relativity
    -------------------------------------------
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    #Einstein #Gravity #TheoryofRelativity

Komentáře • 210

  • @darrylschultz6479
    @darrylschultz6479 Před 3 lety +18

    Maybe the constant change of cameras was the result of some non-scientific boss thinking this would demonstrate the mysteries of gravity.

  • @SaintBrianTheGodless
    @SaintBrianTheGodless Před 3 lety +21

    please pick a camera, all the shifting from one to another for no reason is very distracting and seems artificial and silly

  • @djp1234
    @djp1234 Před 3 lety +81

    I'd get dizzy if I had to look at a different camera every 10 seconds

    • @jps0117
      @jps0117 Před 3 lety +23

      The director evidently didn't realize the gravity of this distracting approach.

    • @jewulo
      @jewulo Před 3 lety +8

      @@jps0117 This is very good. I doubt that you understand the Gravity of your comment.

    • @HawthorneHillNaturePreserve
      @HawthorneHillNaturePreserve Před 3 lety +5

      OMG, I was just gonna make the same comment. Love the series, hate the choreography!

    • @dreamdiction
      @dreamdiction Před 3 lety +3

      Plus his annoying over-articulated voice and non-stop pointless hand gestures.

    • @BarryMagrew
      @BarryMagrew Před 3 lety

      Recannize?

  • @euanmackintosh6298
    @euanmackintosh6298 Před 3 lety +17

    Simply and elegantly explained so that an intellectual light-weight like me could (mainly) understand it. More of this please!

  • @ixiwildflowerixi
    @ixiwildflowerixi Před 2 lety +4

    Great as a podcast; vertigo inducing when watched as a video.

  • @stephenwalsh3629
    @stephenwalsh3629 Před 2 lety +8

    Excellent content. My only criticism is the incessant, and immensely distracting, jumping from one camera to another.

  • @gh778jk
    @gh778jk Před 3 lety +10

    what's with the camera angles? Can't this guy stand still?

  • @AbuSous2000PR
    @AbuSous2000PR Před 3 lety +11

    i appreciate giving us the history behind general relativity...cheers🙋‍♂️

  • @okjhum
    @okjhum Před 3 lety +11

    Oh, please stop that irritating wobbling between cameras! Each change pulls me out of focus from this otherwise very interesting and educational video, and I lose track of what is being said. :'-(
    Apart from that, thank you, anyway! :-)

    • @TheGreatCourses
      @TheGreatCourses  Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you for your feedback, we will share your comments with the right team.

    • @frankdimeglio8216
      @frankdimeglio8216 Před 2 lety

      @@TheGreatCourses WHY AND HOW ELECTROMAGNETISM/energy is gravity, AS E=MC2 IS NECESSARILY F=MA:
      TIME DILATION ULTIMATELY proves ON BALANCE that E=mC2 IS F=ma, AS ELECTROMAGNETISM/energy is gravity. INDEED, TIME is NECESSARILY possible/potential AND actual IN BALANCE; AS E=mc2 is F=ma; AS ELECTROMAGNETISM/ENERGY IS GRAVITY. Gravity IS ELECTROMAGNETISM/energy.
      E=mc2 is F=ma. This NECESSARILY represents, INVOLVES, AND DESCRIBES what is possible/potential AND actual IN BALANCE, AS ELECTROMAGNETISM/energy is gravity. The stars AND PLANETS are POINTS in the night sky, AS E=MC2 IS F=ma; AS ELECTROMAGNETISM/ENERGY IS GRAVITY. (Energy has/involves GRAVITY, AND ENERGY has/involves inertia/INERTIAL RESISTANCE.) Very importantly, outer "space" involves full inertia; AND it is fully invisible AND black. BALANCE AND completeness go hand in hand. It ALL CLEARLY makes perfect sense. Great !!!
      Gravitational force/ENERGY IS proportional to (or BALANCED with/as) inertia/INERTIAL RESISTANCE, AS E=mc2 is F=ma; AS ELECTROMAGNETISM/ENERGY IS GRAVITY. Gravity/acceleration involves BALANCED inertia/INERTIAL RESISTANCE, AS E=mc2 is F=ma; AS ELECTROMAGNETISM/ENERGY IS GRAVITY. "Mass"/ENERGY IS GRAVITY. ELECTROMAGNETISM/energy is gravity. The Earth AND the Sun are CLEARLY E=MC2 and F=ma IN BALANCE, AS ELECTROMAGNETISM/energy is gravity. The stars AND PLANETS are POINTS in the night sky. GREAT !!
      By Frank DiMeglio

  • @LuciFeric137
    @LuciFeric137 Před 3 lety +5

    One of my favorite lecturers.

  • @antalantal2366
    @antalantal2366 Před 3 lety +7

    Beautiful and informative video. There is no need to change framing with such a regular pace: it is too repetitive.

    • @R.U.1.2.
      @R.U.1.2. Před 3 lety +3

      I agree, it was oddly dizzying and unnecessary. It's a lecture, no need for frequent camera angle changes... it doesn't enhance the otherwise wonderful quality of the information being presented.

  • @robertschlesinger1342
    @robertschlesinger1342 Před 3 lety +7

    Interesting and worthwhile video.

  • @sheilaclifford-smith1458
    @sheilaclifford-smith1458 Před 3 lety +11

    Thank you for this. It was very informative, and explained some very difficult concepts with clarity. I learnt some new things for which i’m very grateful. You gave me fresh perspectives on this subject, which have helped to deepen my understanding.

    • @henryjelen7261
      @henryjelen7261 Před rokem

      M my mcpnn Maz ncco mi c BBB bo BBB. Un h N sdbho b v N r

  • @jewulo
    @jewulo Před 3 lety +8

    Please, this camera swapping dynamics is a bit nauseous. Can we just have a static camera? I thought I was going to puke at some point watching it.

  • @HawthorneHillNaturePreserve

    Honestly, who produced this video? The content is amazing, the presenter is incredible but the production with the presenter turning to face different cameras every 2 minutes is so distracting and takes away from the content. Photos intermixed with the presenter stationary, some animation…anything but making him spin. It is horrible! Please provide producers contact info so we can chastise him profusely!

    • @TheGreatCourses
      @TheGreatCourses  Před 3 lety

      Thank you for your feedback, we will share your input with the right team.

  • @robertgoss4842
    @robertgoss4842 Před 3 lety +2

    Excellent video, information-wise. But the constant camera angle changes are dizzy- ing. Horrible.

  • @walterelmore1017
    @walterelmore1017 Před 3 lety +6

    What a mistake to change cameras so often!

  • @jaed2630
    @jaed2630 Před 3 lety +3

    What's up with using the 2 cameras?

  • @spybaz
    @spybaz Před 3 lety +5

    God doc but too many camera movements. Gets irritating to watch.

  • @AshleyBobLes
    @AshleyBobLes Před 3 lety +3

    Love the video and knowledge. Just the constant changing camera was a bit jarring.

  • @cruzcam
    @cruzcam Před 3 lety +4

    The looks of the whole thing is so 90s.

    • @way2nasty533
      @way2nasty533 Před 3 lety +3

      that's the effects of time dilation

  • @gpcrawford8353
    @gpcrawford8353 Před 3 lety +3

    Bravo a brilliant talk on general relativity the only one that mentions the 1st world war stopping the measure of deflection. I have no exams or degrees but an interest in things scientific have learned from other sources that time runs slower on earths surface than higher up (as brilliantly exampled in this course) and this is the main cause of gravity. All material things want to get to the lowest energy level hence an apple falls to do so and even with humans the time difference between head and feet is enough to do this. Hence you always have an acceleration and time runs differently for an accelerating body the whole thing entirely self consistent. What you feel is a constant acceleration on the soles of your feet or equivalently the earths surface accelerating upwards.

  • @stand7074
    @stand7074 Před 3 lety +3

    An excellent presentation. Thank you.

  • @duggydo
    @duggydo Před 2 lety +1

    That switching between cameras every few seconds is distracting from an otherwise good presentation.

  • @Hydroverse
    @Hydroverse Před rokem

    I see gravity as an energy source. My reasoning is that the heat energy coming from friction during precipitation isn't the same heat energy that is observed during evaporation. Evaporation heat energy is traceable to a conversion of mass into energy like oxidation or fusion, but the heat energy that is released as water falls through the air due to gravitational acceleration being dissipated as heat isn't traceable to mass being converted into energy. Therefore, I see gravity as an energy source to explain where that additional heat comes from since evaporation heat isn't precipitation heat.

  • @sagarg4287
    @sagarg4287 Před 2 lety +2

    Brilliant lecture! Enjoyed thoroughly

  • @tusker4954
    @tusker4954 Před 3 lety +2

    Very distracting production. Over use of camera angles and camera movements although the speaker and content is good.

  • @feynmanschwingere_mc2270
    @feynmanschwingere_mc2270 Před 3 lety +4

    Albert Einstein is the greatest scientist of all time. Douglas Stone, Rhodes Scholar and head of applied physics at Yale, argues that Einstein should have won at least 7 Nobel Prizes. Most science historians are in agreement.
    He solved the tea leaf paradox in his spare time while creating quantum theory. Einstein was the first to predict the LASER, the Boson, and countless other achievements. Einstein was unparalleled in his scientific intuition and every physicist after him has been left in awe.
    To quote Sean Carroll: "Albert Einstein understood quantum mechanics better than anybody."
    To quote Douglas Stone: "Einstein is the greatest physicist to ever live and probably the greatest conceptual genius to ever live."

    • @hayfron
      @hayfron Před 3 lety

      Pity he invented absolutely nothing.

    • @vikraal6974
      @vikraal6974 Před 3 lety

      You are wrong about many things here. Einstein had little to no contribution to Quantum Mechanics infact he was a rebel to Copenhagen Interpretation which is widely accepted today. Einstein had his winners but he had many losers too.

    • @dritemolawzbks8574
      @dritemolawzbks8574 Před 3 lety

      I love Einstein and Relativity, but he's not the greatest scientist of all time. He may the most best in the 20th century.

    • @alexandrekassiantchouk1632
      @alexandrekassiantchouk1632 Před 4 měsíci

      Have you read: How Do Physicists Lose Touch with Reality?!

  • @GBuckne
    @GBuckne Před 3 lety +2

    ..the gravity probe b experiment proved that spacetime is attracted to the mass of the earth, even causing a rotating vortex of spacetime that rotates at a fraction of the Earth's rotation, which would mean that there is some type of coupling to spacetime and least that gravity is a mechanism that involves force...

  • @paulvankleet
    @paulvankleet Před 3 lety +2

    Excellent explanation, but why the constant camera angles? If nothing else, it seems so staged. (And unnecessary!).

  • @HawthorneHillNaturePreserve

    Love the series, hate the choreography! 😳

  • @joemsuki
    @joemsuki Před rokem

    honestly ive been searching youtube about why we move upwards and this video is the only one i understand easily

  • @dibaldgyfm9933
    @dibaldgyfm9933 Před 3 lety +1

    Sometimes you feel that when a lecturer explains an advanced subject he tries to ease it by simplifying and giving examples. Such an "eloquent" example is the "geometry on a spherical surface", but I have an objection here and there: The Euclidian geometry works perfectly on a spherical surface, because we OF COURSE know that it is NOT a plane, flat surface! But as a explanatory comparison it is brilliant.

    • @everythingisalllies2141
      @everythingisalllies2141 Před rokem

      no, its not brilliant, its simply a big lie. Einsteins theories are nonsense. the non Euclidean geometry of the imaginary Spacetime, is just pure Mathematics. Now tell me how a Mathematics equation about an imaginary condition called "Spacetime," can possibly cause an apple to fall to the ground? Spacetime itself is a nonsense idea. Space is simply areas between objects where there are no other objects, and Time is just the comparison between rates of change of motion of differently moving objects. So like many other aspects of modern life, we are being deceived and controlled by a elite group according to their plan, yes, its a conspiracy.

  • @NerdENerd
    @NerdENerd Před 3 lety +1

    I am only a few minutes in and can't stay with these camera changes.

  • @navaratnamratnajothi5444
    @navaratnamratnajothi5444 Před 3 lety +1

    TKNR .THANKS for the CLEAR EXPLANATION Of GRAVITY.

  • @williambunting803
    @williambunting803 Před rokem

    It’s not what Einstein Discovered, it is what Einstein didn’t discover.
    Einstein most importantly discovered that the only component of the Universe is Energy. Energy in many different forms, but Energy just the same. One of those forms of Energy is Matter.
    Einstein determined that there must be a relation ship between Matter and Gravity and he proved that Matter can bend light/Energy, and complexifying falling apples and light being bent around the sun he determined that the mechanism of the effect of Gravity is that Matter curves space (and time depending on what you think is important).
    What Einstein didn’t discover is HOW does matter bend space. The best answer to date is that it just does! Gravity is everywhere. If you stop and think about it what is matter other than more space, space with a tiny Quantity of energy concentrated in it. How can that bend space.
    I am going to tell you (argue) that matter doesn’t “bend” space, it is the Energy of the Nucleus of particles that alters the Energy Intensity Gradient of the Higgs Field that is the true mechanism of Gravity. “Moving due to the force of Gravity” is in fact the Nucleus Energy of particles pushing against the Universal Field, the Higgs Field, that causes particles to move, and they move in the direction of the highest field energy. They also move instantaneously as influenced by the Higgs Field Energy Intensity Gradient.
    How does the Nucleus of matter particles apply energy to the Higgs Field? The Higgs Field does many things. One of them is to limit the passage of Energy through it to the speed of Light. The harder you push against the Higgs Field near the speed of light, the more energy that must be applied. This is what happens in the Nucleus of particle, the energy in the quarks is trying to escape through the field but the field energy intensity is such that it cannot. It is this Energy that we call the Strong Nuclear Force, but is in fact the highly energized Higgs Field, and that Energy dissipates (elastically) away from the Nucleus as the square of the distance to where at the surface of the earth the sum total of that Field Energy is what we experience as Gravity. Gravity is the Matter Energy of of the Protons and Neutrons pushing against the Field Energy of the Universe and where the next effect of that push is towards the greatest/nearest Body of Matter.

  • @jimmybrice6360
    @jimmybrice6360 Před 2 lety +1

    i was under the understanding that general relativity stated that an object will travel in a path of least resistance. i did not understand that to mean it travels in a straight line ?

  • @bradcraft9567
    @bradcraft9567 Před 3 lety +3

    General Theory on overuse of multiple cameras.......

  • @davez4285
    @davez4285 Před 2 lety

    In Galileo system, x=vt, if only if dx/dt is constant. Lorentz transformation goal is distances (x, x’) x=f(v,t)and x’=g(c, t’) are mathematically equal in both systems with symmetry. So c is not Galileo or classic velocity, and t’ is not classic time. In Galileo, v varies, t is uniform at any point in space; whilst in Lorentz, t’ varies, c is constant in space. c =eu , is really the property of the space, or medium, or Ether. It is not velocity in Galileo.( v, C),(t,t’), they are (Apple, Orange), (Peach,Grape) in two math systems. People are still thinking they are same things. That causes confusion. Saying 1) if an object moves at speed of light, time stops. Moving object slows clock, etc. That’s wrong. It should be said t’ in Lorentz stops, or equal to 0. In Galileo, t is uniform, it doesn’t stop or slow. 2). Speed of light C is constant from any observer at different speeds. That is wrong. c in Galileo changes from observers, C in Lorentz as the property of space is constant. Then there is no ambiguity, confusing, both accurate in their own system for/from measurements. Time dilution, space-time curvature, etc. are all bogus by mixing concepts in two systems. If you use Fourier series to express a signal S, it is not the signal in time domain, it’s amplitude A in frequency domain. Nobody treats A-S as “signal dancing”. But sigma of all these series by frequency goes back to the value of signal in time domain. They are just mathematically equivalent, not necessarily physically same. There are many ways to do it mathematically, too.
    Relativity is just another way of measuring of the nature using electric magnetic wave in Lorentz system. It has advantages over Galileo system in Astronomy, because Maxwells equations describe electromagnetic wave in vacuum with eu as constant, which is the space property and its value equals to speed of light in Galileo.
    In Algol events (visit Algol website) proves the speed of light wave in Galileo system changes with observer’s or earth’s motion.

  • @al1383
    @al1383 Před rokem

    IMO it's not matter that attracts matter. It is the existence of matter that causes matter to attract matter. In combination with the expansion of the universe.
    It has been proven that the universe is expanding constantly at every point in the universe. What happens when you have multiples of the universe? Or when the universe is squeezed together?
    A black hole is so dense it is literally outside of the universe. Meaning, the area that the BH takes up is made up of nothing but matter. So where did the universe go, that was previously there? It naturally is now in multiples around the BH.
    We have multiples of the universe around the BH, and the universe is constantly expanding. So we have multiples of this expansion now. THIS causes gravity.
    Depending on how much of the universe is displaced, and how dense the matter is and the size of the matter, determines the strength of gravity.
    The displacement of the fabric of the universe (because of matter) is what allows gravity to reach out so far across the universe. When the universe is displaced, this ripple effect reaches out great distances from said objects.
    When two objects ripples come into contact with each other, their paths are altered to now travel towards each other.
    This is also why a bowling ball and a kick ball, being the same size, falls at the same speed. The balls are traveling through the expansion of the universe, virtually not moving.
    If matter attracts matter, wouldn't the bowling ball, with more mass, fall faster?

  • @seanmortazyt
    @seanmortazyt Před 3 lety +1

    fantastic writing

  • @adankseasonads935
    @adankseasonads935 Před 3 lety +1

    Awesome video!! Thank you.

  • @kennethiman2691
    @kennethiman2691 Před rokem

    Great info. Less dancing around.

  • @FiveNineO
    @FiveNineO Před rokem

    Motion seems like the most fundamental "thing" in the universe. Why does spacetime resist changes in motion? Is mass "inwardly accelerating motion"? So many questions

  • @BazNard
    @BazNard Před 3 lety +2

    The camera changes are cheesy

  • @alexandermartins65
    @alexandermartins65 Před 2 lety +1

    I believe gravity is an effect more than it is a force. Mass bends space and time and the effect is gravity.

  • @canemcave
    @canemcave Před 3 lety +2

    how annoying and pointless to spin around to look at the different camera. what is supposed to mean, wow they have 2 cameras?

  • @aminam9201
    @aminam9201 Před 3 lety +2

    G is the Gravitational field, they talk the same language so it is nearly impossible to tune in their....
    real Dilemma!

  • @DavidHeizer
    @DavidHeizer Před 3 lety +5

    Please follow the camera, don't lead it. You should only change your view *after* the camera changes, as though we're the ones making the change, and you're just keeping up. Turning before an upcoming camera change is extremely disorienting. Over and over and over and over...
    I was also hoping for a more sophisticated explanation of relativity and gravity than the tired rubber sheet analogy (which explains trajectory bend, but not attraction).

  • @JohnLRice
    @JohnLRice Před 3 lety +3

    Excellent presentation, way too many advertisement interruptions though!

  • @kylelochlann5053
    @kylelochlann5053 Před 2 lety +1

    Wrong: "Special relativity can only be applied to objects that are moving at a constant rate of speed." This is actually idiotic as you can have curved lines drawn of flat space. Acceleration is perfectly well-defined for accelerating objects and accelerated reference frames are well-described by Kottler-Rindler coordinates.

  • @elck3
    @elck3 Před 3 lety +1

    there seems to be a precession of the perihelion of the camera angles

  • @hongnoeun2479
    @hongnoeun2479 Před 11 měsíci

    This lesson is just for university .Let find a way to make everybody understant

  • @nickmerix2900
    @nickmerix2900 Před 3 lety +1

    Nice story for kids. It seems when it comes to relativity definitions go out. The window. We have straight lines that curve when by definition straight line is a line that never curves. We have spacetime that curves but only objects curve . Space is a void , empty, with nothing there and time is a concept . In relativity it seems adding a concept to nothing gets you an object . According to relativity if i walk next to a mountain in a straight line i should somehow end up around the mountain. If space is curved around massive objects and we are orbiting thinking we are moving straight , how is navigation in space possible? How would we know what direction to go when all directions end up in an orbit?

    • @Edruezzi
      @Edruezzi Před 2 lety

      The scientists are right. You are wrong.

    • @Edruezzi
      @Edruezzi Před 2 lety

      Mountains are too small for their distortion of space-time to be appreciable.

    • @Edruezzi
      @Edruezzi Před 2 lety

      Aside from the GPS system lasers and photovoltaic cells are based on equations 1st written by EinsteinAside from the GPS system lasers and photovoltaic cells are based on equations 1st written by Einstein

  • @desimoneiwanttoknow
    @desimoneiwanttoknow Před 3 lety +1

    What if the passage of time is causing the effect we call gravity. The past resisting the future. JUST A THOUGHT.

  • @silvervortex2441
    @silvervortex2441 Před 3 lety +1

    What is the name of this course. Looks like a new realease.

    • @TheGreatCourses
      @TheGreatCourses  Před 3 lety +2

      Hello! This is lecture two from the course "What Einstein Got Wrong" You can watch the entire course here: www.thegreatcoursesplus.com/what-einstein-got-wrong

  • @rickpontificates3406
    @rickpontificates3406 Před 3 lety +3

    Nothing can move THROUGH space faster than the speed of light, but there might be a way to move AROUND spacetime.
    If gravity warped spacetime so much, could it punch a hole through it? Maybe learning to control the theorized graviton is the key to intergalactic travel.

  • @BazNard
    @BazNard Před 3 lety

    Great video. Thanks!

  • @aminam9201
    @aminam9201 Před 3 lety +1

    Gravity has to do with acceleration but in different approaches related to space-time, Gravity can change both the geometry of space and time, the main mistake is the lack of differentiation between the existence of both Gravitational field and the property in each atom regarding gravity (there is a property in each atom independently interacts with the gravitational fields) that's the secret of many phenomena such as all objects free fall at the same rate of acceleration regardless of their mass or lack of gravity in the outer space....etc.
    Einstein theory does work somehow because it is a kind of wrapper.
    This way of thinking in addition to changing the current concept of space-time will lead to a quicker approach to solve the mystery of Gravity that will change human history forever.

    • @Heartbrayk.
      @Heartbrayk. Před 3 lety

      When we discover a quantum theory for gravity.

    • @feynmanschwingere_mc2270
      @feynmanschwingere_mc2270 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Heartbrayk. We are never going to discover a quantum theory of gravity. (For several reasons).
      Gravity is too weak a force.

  • @peppermillie726
    @peppermillie726 Před 3 lety +1

    I made it to 16.29, then I had to go lay down.

  • @michaelconley2793
    @michaelconley2793 Před 3 lety +2

    Great knowledge, get a new director. Changing camera angles was distracting and unnecessary

  • @gtrmusic69
    @gtrmusic69 Před rokem

    The whole switching between cameras is utterly ridiculous. Just keep one camera on the man.

  • @sahadatkhan6912
    @sahadatkhan6912 Před 3 lety

    Wonderfull explanation

  • @creativesource3514
    @creativesource3514 Před rokem

    So glad Einstein won that race against Hilbert!

  • @vissitorsteve
    @vissitorsteve Před 3 lety +2

    Hold still, I'm getting dizzy...:-)

  • @davidrandell2224
    @davidrandell2224 Před 3 lety +1

    The chamber is the earth expanding at 16 feet per second constant acceleration; that is gravity. Too simple for the modern brain. Newton, Einstein and all the rest are historical curiosities.

  • @freebyte7
    @freebyte7 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Do not turn too much. Its a distraction

  • @fernweh3726
    @fernweh3726 Před 3 lety +2

    It is TOTALLY UNTRUE that special relativity cannot be applied in case of acceleration! Acceleration is simply the derivative of velocity over time. And you can ALWAYS calculate such rate of change.

  • @edwardmacnab354
    @edwardmacnab354 Před 2 lety

    Yeah I'm stuck to the floor because space is bent , my clock runs slow and It just looks like a pulling force . Might as well include all forces in that then , minus the clock slowing thing .

  • @stellarwind1946
    @stellarwind1946 Před 2 lety

    I’m pretty confident I’ll never have any field equations named after me

  • @user-bx7nw1ve6y
    @user-bx7nw1ve6y Před 3 lety

    Gravity is NOT instantaneous. It travels at the same speed as light.

    • @darrylschultz6479
      @darrylschultz6479 Před 3 lety +1

      Gravity don't travel, it's just sitting there as a fundamental property of the Universe holdin' it all together.

  • @you5711
    @you5711 Před 3 lety

    25:40 Gravity is not merely a force but, rather, the result of the shape, or geometry, of space and time.

  • @harpersneil
    @harpersneil Před 2 lety

    6:42 ha ha yeah right!

  • @BarkerMC
    @BarkerMC Před 3 lety

    Good

  • @theknowledge.6869
    @theknowledge.6869 Před 2 lety

    Is Gravity, Space-Time extracting Space-Time from Matter ?

  • @stellarwind1946
    @stellarwind1946 Před 2 lety

    7:17 well I coulda guessed that

  • @williamrbuchanan4153
    @williamrbuchanan4153 Před 3 lety

    Thinking of Sun Mass and Earth mass, in sunlight and dark. Equal and opposite, we are in a static orbit of influence. We have to have our rotation speed to keep the effect from changing. But without consideration of any effect on the Sun by Cosmic energy changes. Not in our realm of influence. Like Rome lost Empire , influence of others to change the onboard security of its power.

  • @stevebutrimas9972
    @stevebutrimas9972 Před 2 lety

    2 parallel lines cannot cross by simple definition yet you say they can in special cases. Yes when they are not parallel.

  • @freebird5392
    @freebird5392 Před 3 lety +2

    Stop moving please ...in the past 🤔

  • @jamesadams893
    @jamesadams893 Před 2 lety

    I enjoy these talks but don't see the need of the back and forth speaking format to 3 cameras. It kinda drives me nuts

  • @garyliu6589
    @garyliu6589 Před 2 lety +1

    Dizzy dizzy

  • @georgekingston8991
    @georgekingston8991 Před 3 lety

    what if there is only the mass kind of mass?

    • @georgekingston8991
      @georgekingston8991 Před 3 lety

      @@donthesitatebegin9283 Both mass types are measured using Sir Isaac Newton's second law. Inertial in the horizontal plane and gravitational in the vertical plane. When it is found that the inertial content of a mass and the gravitational content of the same mass measure exactly the same, the obvious conclusion is that mass is simply mass and that there is no such thing as either inertial mass or gravitational mass.
      There is an inverse square law constructed around mass. Newton said he didn't know what the construct was there. Just said it is. Putting the word 'gravitational' in front of mass does not solve Sir Isaac's dilemma.
      With inertial mass, uniform motion is quantified by multiplying velocity and mass together. That perfectly explains uniform motion. The placing of the word inertial in front of mass does not. A resistance to a change of a state of motion is born when the force causing the change is born. Neither exist prior to each other. If you are lost in Einstein you won't follow all that but it's just simple logic. There is only the mass type of mass.

  • @dolfi173
    @dolfi173 Před 2 lety

    los relativistas que están a la vanguardia de la ciencia y muestran el camino NO ENTIENDEN EL EXPERIMENTO DE MICHELSON-MORLEY , ¿ puede un tipo como Einstein ser el líder de la ciencia si no entendió lo que era la gravedad ni la dilatación del tiempo ?

  • @abat5991
    @abat5991 Před 3 lety

    At the end of this video, I could not figure out "what is gravity" which is the title of the video. What, in your opinion is gravity? this is what I would like to hear, not to know all these equations.

  • @MrTweetyhack
    @MrTweetyhack Před 3 lety

    @22:59, "Einstein received a copy of Hilbert's paper" so he cheated?

  • @alexwilke7398
    @alexwilke7398 Před 3 lety

    My God.. 3 ads in the first 5 mins... unwatchable

  • @MrBendybruce
    @MrBendybruce Před 3 lety

    I have a question which drives me nuts. Is a satellite in orbit around a large body of mass, moving in a straight line through curved space? I can contrast this with a car driving around a circular race track, and thus experiencing centrifugal force. ie. You know you are in motion in the car due to the feeling of being pushed out to the side, but you would feel no force in a stable orbit, as the observation of constant velocity of your forward momentum depends entirely on a frame of reference, and the only other motion is that of falling into a gravity well. To slightly complicate matters, I understand most orbits are an ellipse, and velocity does increase at points where you are closer to the mass you are orbiting around. So back to my original question, is an orbit, even an elliptical one, to be regarded as moving in a straight line through curved space, or is that the wrong way to think about it.

    • @upsbZiPH
      @upsbZiPH Před 3 lety

      i dont understand it either, but what youre missing is that spaceTIME is curved. we keep trying to picture it as if space is just curved, but thats not the case and our brains really cant imagine whats going on, but you should search up videos about how its curved time that is mostly responsible for orbits and even why were stuck to the ground, i still dont fully understand it but we have to keep trying

    • @MrBendybruce
      @MrBendybruce Před 3 lety

      I appreciate the response, but I do understand (or at least acknowledge) that space is actually "spacetime" and that in GR you can't really talk about one without the other. So it was sloppy wording, but I should have said spacetime, not space. That being said, the central question remains. From everything I have managed to learn, I think a body of mass in orbit around another body of mass can be said to be travelling in a straight line through curved "spacetime" -It is simply following the most direct path, given it's forward momentum. For example, if the large body of mass were to just disappear, then it would start moving in a straight line, as described by Euclidean geometry, and be subject to the much simpler rules of special relativity. So unless someone tells me this reasoning is wrong, that's what I'm going with :)

    • @MrBendybruce
      @MrBendybruce Před 3 lety

      @@upsbZiPH thx, Eugenes videos are great. ps. It pretty much confirmed my speculation. An object in orbit is moving in a straight line through curved spacetime. It's really just Newtons second law of motion but with the addition of gravity as curved spacetime taken into account.

    • @kylelochlann5053
      @kylelochlann5053 Před 2 lety

      It's not a good to think about gravity (planetary orbits moving in a straight line). The correct was is to think of them as moving inertially, i.e. without any force. This motion is called geodesic and geodesic motion in flat spacetime is a straight line. Some people refer to geodesic motion as the "straightest" line but I don't see how this is helpful.
      Note: You cannot physically experience centrifugal force as it does not exist, but you can experience centrifugal force as a psychological interpretation of the vector sum of centripetal forces.

    • @kylelochlann5053
      @kylelochlann5053 Před 2 lety

      @@MrBendybruce You can talk about curved space and time separately in terms of the metric components, e.g. the time and radial metric coefficients being functions of the coordinates.
      If a large central body disappeared the orbiting body would continue to orbit until the gravitational wave of the disappearing object reached the orbiting object.

  • @aminam9201
    @aminam9201 Před 3 lety +2

    4:36 and 6:14 Einstein was right about both but Gravity is not a curvature of space-time!
    it is a property in each Atom independently triggers as soon as it enters the gravitational field.
    space-time works as a kind of wrapper of more complicated process.
    the current human concept about space-time missing a lot.

    • @gnarlydewd
      @gnarlydewd Před 3 lety

      It's the fabric itself and the displacement thereof.

    • @gnarlydewd
      @gnarlydewd Před 3 lety

      So it is bending.

    • @gnarlydewd
      @gnarlydewd Před 3 lety

      But what you're talking its subatomic

  • @MikeSmith-cl4ix
    @MikeSmith-cl4ix Před 3 lety

    Are you telling me that the effects of gravity do not move at the speed of light?

  • @dexter8705
    @dexter8705 Před rokem

    So it's gravitational potential is its mass.. cool.

  • @TSulemanW
    @TSulemanW Před rokem

    vacuum or empty space there is nothing to do with geometric

  • @canemcave
    @canemcave Před 3 lety +2

    you really have to concentrate in what the guy is saying and try to ignore the very distracting and annoying camera even though that make following harder. A very useless approach to teaching.

  • @jamesbrownsmiles
    @jamesbrownsmiles Před 3 lety +2

    This is [turns, looks at another camera] one of the [turns, looks at another camera] most obnoxious videos I've ever [turns, looks at another camera] seen.

  • @ronwood7029
    @ronwood7029 Před 2 lety

    How many cameramen are required to present this ?

  • @merlingrim2843
    @merlingrim2843 Před 3 lety

    seems contradictory to say that gravity is not a force if it can alter space and time.

    • @kylelochlann5053
      @kylelochlann5053 Před 2 lety

      Gravity is not a force in the sense that it cannot produce a physical acceleration. Gravity is a Fundamental force as it is an irreducible phenomenon that shapes and organizes the world. If should be noted that the neither the Weak nor Strong forces are physical forces either.

  • @viewer3091
    @viewer3091 Před 3 lety

    Is Matter and Gravity = Anti Space-Time ?

  • @benquinney2
    @benquinney2 Před 3 lety +1

    GR

  • @imdarrel
    @imdarrel Před 2 lety

    everything is a circle

  • @jamesherron9969
    @jamesherron9969 Před 2 lety

    Oh wow there’s a lot of things wrong with everything you just said one gravity does not bend light because light has no mass therefore gravity cannot act on it light bends due to the curvature of space around the object please explain things correctly I would think by your conversations your goal here is to confuse people not to educate them

  • @verbal2u
    @verbal2u Před 3 lety +1

    Camera nonsense ruins this video for me. No need.