Can leptogenesis explain why there's something instead of nothing?

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  • @whynottalklikeapirat
    @whynottalklikeapirat Před 4 lety +351

    Kleptogenesis explains why there is something rather than nothing in my buddys fridge.

    • @Potatoverse
      @Potatoverse Před 4 lety +15

      This comment deserves more likes

    • @garymartin9777
      @garymartin9777 Před 4 lety +24

      Did you steal that joke?

    • @whynottalklikeapirat
      @whynottalklikeapirat Před 4 lety +34

      @@garymartin9777 I see what you did there but I deny everything. Everything. Wasn't even there at the time. Or anytime. Ask anyone. Anytime. I was volunteering in a Kleper colony outside Kleptown not too far from Klep Horn. We'd listen to Klep Kleppard and cure Kleprosy. My buddy was from Ireland - an obvious kleprechaun. Ask him he probably did it.

    • @DrWizardMother
      @DrWizardMother Před 4 lety +4

      Kudos.

    • @CIubFoot
      @CIubFoot Před 3 lety +8

      Stop putting stolen food in your buddies fridge man

  • @diGritz1
    @diGritz1 Před 4 lety +374

    I'm curious as to how Fermi will deal with the sand worms and transportation of the spice once Dune is operational.

    • @testthewest123
      @testthewest123 Před 4 lety +63

      Well, of course with an equal amount of anti-sand worms. That should solve the issue.

    • @frankschneider6156
      @frankschneider6156 Před 4 lety +10

      diGritz1
      Just bring in the Sardaukar and don't let Lincoln near any of the harvested spice.

    • @Hambone3773
      @Hambone3773 Před 4 lety +8

      Probably with vast numbers of blue eyed Fermians guarding caches of water in their sietches.

    • @rafetizer
      @rafetizer Před 4 lety +15

      I think you mean Fremen Labs.

    • @brixomatic
      @brixomatic Před 4 lety +4

      Gracefully of course.

  • @Ouvii
    @Ouvii Před 4 lety +254

    The Steam World - Water World was a helpful analogy

    • @fuseteam
      @fuseteam Před 4 lety +11

      makes we wonder if we're going a "ice world" tho

    • @david203
      @david203 Před 4 lety +2

      It makes my skin wrinkly...

    • @ronmccord8866
      @ronmccord8866 Před 4 lety +2

      Fuseteam the ice world is in the future

    • @ronmccord8866
      @ronmccord8866 Před 4 lety +1

      Fuseteam and past

    • @fuseteam
      @fuseteam Před 4 lety +1

      @@ronmccord8866 lol

  • @esra_erimez
    @esra_erimez Před 4 lety +101

    "Bird's eye view"
    Shows us a fish

    • @threeMetreJim
      @threeMetreJim Před 4 lety +4

      yup, captain birdseye.

    • @jamesdriscoll9405
      @jamesdriscoll9405 Před 4 lety +7

      Chicken of the sea

    • @isaz2425
      @isaz2425 Před 4 lety +1

      well they are cousins if you don't mind looking far enough in their genealogy tree.

    • @dcoch2000
      @dcoch2000 Před 4 lety +1

      He always wanted to be a comedian. Obviously. Also, "the details don't matter." Hah!

    • @10Tabris01
      @10Tabris01 Před 4 lety +1

      Flying Fish, definitely

  • @timetraveler1203
    @timetraveler1203 Před 4 lety +80

    These videos deserve a prize. So informative! You are awesome Dr Don!!!

    • @irrelevantirrelevant7332
      @irrelevantirrelevant7332 Před 4 lety +12

      But what I admire most about him is his humility and his acceptance of doubt. He presents things not as facts that we have to accept, but he guides us through observations and explanations and then presents the ideo of leptogenesis. Real SCIENCE at work! :)

    • @NXTMusicianBassist
      @NXTMusicianBassist Před 4 lety +4

      @Alset Alokin On what basis do you make these claims? Are you a physicist with a dissenting opinion on the topic, or just claiming no one can understand it when you can't?

    • @NXTMusicianBassist
      @NXTMusicianBassist Před 4 lety +2

      @Alset Alokin That's hilarious because you haven't linked any videos in this thread.
      I'm simply asking how you've come to the conclusion that this video is uninformed, since it's coming from Fermilab, not some crackpot theorist. No organization is impervious to criticism, but all criticism needs to be backed with evidence. Where's yours?
      The other thing is: How can you claim other viewers couldn't understand a single thing? I understood most of the video. You'd have to be pretty arrogant to claim to be able to read others' minds.

    • @WDC_OSA
      @WDC_OSA Před 4 lety +3

      @Alset Alokin lol, "best documentary ever?" someone's a little overconfident there...

    • @NXTMusicianBassist
      @NXTMusicianBassist Před 4 lety +4

      @Alset Alokin I appreciate the videos you've shared. I watched them all. Some may call those ideas crackpot, but I think to excommunicate ideas is an unscientific attitude. At first look, I see the problems you've raised as worth addressing, not just dismissing. Pending further research, I'm willing to entertain the ideas you've presented. You must understand, though, that the theories on both sides are subject to criticism (I have some objections to the videos, but that's beyond the scope of this discussion; and you have objections which I have been willing to hear), so you must be willing to disagree with others with a more cool head (more on that later in this comment) and accept conclusions wherever they land, even if they conflict with these theories which you are so eager to share with me. (The same principle applies to me and any other proponent of any other theories, of course.)
      I think you also need to be careful with how you address others to avoid a similar dogmatic and unscientific appearance. You came off as very presumptuous ("you don't understand a thing he said and neither does he") and aggressive (picking such a fight out of nowhere as though the person should have known about your relatively obscure ideas). You also used the word "crackpot" in a directly dismissive way which I didn't, causing you to also seem unscientifically dogmatic.
      We all understand the ideas which we are holding - Fermilab among many others, the standard model; and you and well-spoken dissenters, the electric universe - so it doesn't make sense to claim to reach into another person's mind and decree that they don't understand what they're saying just because you disagree with it. Also, we understand each other's theories - I have long understood standard model concepts and you earnestly defend the electric universe model, but I also understand what you've presented and I don't assume you can't understand the standard model, even though you disagree with it.

  • @Meticulate826
    @Meticulate826 Před 4 lety +42

    Love your community-oriented vids. Fermilab being on the cutting edge of research of the ghostly neutrinos makes your discoveries really exciting to hear about. Getting the facts of your research first-hand really helps in getting an evolving impression of what goes on in the part of what is but we cannot interact with or sense.
    Thanks for making these. Without more than due expectations, I can't wait for the next chapter.

  • @NethDugan
    @NethDugan Před 4 lety +6

    That steam world analogy is a fantastic one. It does help. Also, I had no idea that temperature impacts Higgs so that's a big thing I learnt today. This entire thing is really interesting.

  • @larsalfredhenrikstahlin8012

    I know I'm not the intended viewer for these videos being a swede not even living in the US, but I am non the less greatly thankful for you putting these videos up for anyone in the world to see. They are super interesting. Thank you!!

    • @pansepot1490
      @pansepot1490 Před 4 lety +10

      Everyone who has a minimum of interest in the topic is an intended viewer.

    • @larsalfredhenrikstahlin8012
      @larsalfredhenrikstahlin8012 Před 4 lety +1

      @@pansepot1490 Sure, but it's funded by US tax dollars so it's intended viewer is of course the US general public

    • @slizzardshroomer9666
      @slizzardshroomer9666 Před rokem +1

      @@larsalfredhenrikstahlin8012 Not necessarily true. That's very insular thinking. I hope your country becomes more international in the future

  • @georgemattson5723
    @georgemattson5723 Před 4 lety +44

    Wow: Great video; another nice, understandable explanation for business degree science junkies / "dummies". Thanks.

  • @Vorador666
    @Vorador666 Před 3 lety +7

    This video really blew my mind. Thank you so much to Fermilab for this kind of content and Don for being so good at explaining such complex ideas in a way that can be understood by everyone. Really really good work here.

  • @halogenic
    @halogenic Před 4 lety +111

    "Good things come to those who wait."
    Unless you die while waiting for the answer.

    • @HylanderSB
      @HylanderSB Před 4 lety +8

      "That's research!"

    • @Baigle1
      @Baigle1 Před 4 lety +4

      glimmer of sunshine for sure

    • @frankschneider6156
      @frankschneider6156 Před 4 lety +2

      halogenic
      There are no answers in science, just more questions.

    • @Baigle1
      @Baigle1 Před 4 lety +4

      @@frankschneider6156 whatever you say Cardinal Bellarmine....

    • @frankschneider6156
      @frankschneider6156 Před 4 lety +2

      I am indeed a saint.

  • @WitzyZed
    @WitzyZed Před 4 lety +15

    I grew up in Aurora, IL, very happy to see you smart chaps at Fermilab still up to something !

    • @Ian_sothejokeworks
      @Ian_sothejokeworks Před 3 lety +2

      Every since Wayne and Garth got kicked off cable access, Aurora, IL. has kinda sucked.

  • @garyknight8616
    @garyknight8616 Před 4 lety +4

    Brilliantly explained. Utterly fascinating. Thank you.

  • @nileshkulkarni6196
    @nileshkulkarni6196 Před 4 lety +7

    A big fan of you Dr. Lincoln

  • @JanneWolterbeek
    @JanneWolterbeek Před 4 lety +2

    Love this channel!! Dr. Don does a great job!

  • @Ambienfinity
    @Ambienfinity Před 4 lety

    I love the clarity of Don's presentations - he can make a truly complex physical theory palatable through the clear explanation of the basics and good use of analogy. He's da man.

  • @francoislacombe9071
    @francoislacombe9071 Před 4 lety +13

    The whole time he was describing the theory, I could only think about the classic "Then a miracle occurs" cartoon. 🤭

  • @Lightning_Lance
    @Lightning_Lance Před 4 lety +26

    Dune: deep underground neutrino experiment. Right. Good one guys 🤣

    • @DadicekCz
      @DadicekCz Před 4 lety

      ?

    • @heathenflame
      @heathenflame Před 3 lety +3

      D-eep
      U-nderground
      N-eutrino
      E-xpiriment
      I think the joke is that they are up to something nefarious

  • @Earwaxfire909
    @Earwaxfire909 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you! This explanation is both great and humbling. I would really appreciate hearing more about the details please!

  • @destinysphilosophyuploads

    A really cool video, Dr.
    Lincoln. Keep it up!!!!!!

  • @asgallant1219
    @asgallant1219 Před 4 lety +7

    Maybe this is part of the stuff you glossed over, but it seems that leptogenesis just pushes the question back one layer to "why would these special neutrinos prefer to be antimatter rather than matter?"

    • @Priapos93
      @Priapos93 Před 4 lety

      They were teenage neutrinos

  • @ronaldderooij1774
    @ronaldderooij1774 Před 4 lety +33

    I need to look at this again. I just woke up from my beauty sleep. This was a bit too harsh for my brain right now.

    • @m_i_g_5108
      @m_i_g_5108 Před 4 lety +3

      If you just woke up from your beauty sleep, why you still ugly?
      Lol JK bro 🍻

    • @cantsolvesudokus
      @cantsolvesudokus Před 4 lety +1

      Also watching right after my nap...

  • @alleneverhart4141
    @alleneverhart4141 Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks again Dr. Lincoln for sharing a little of what you're thinkin'. This is cool cutting-edge stuff.

  • @cannonfish5000
    @cannonfish5000 Před 4 lety +1

    Holy cow I I love this CZcams channel! Yet another mind-blowing video.

  • @jimmyshrimbe9361
    @jimmyshrimbe9361 Před 4 lety +3

    This is so exciting!

  • @AnnoyingMoose
    @AnnoyingMoose Před 4 lety +20

    The title of this should actually be "Can leptogenesis explain why there is a preponderance of matter versus antimatter?"

    • @karlwarda7628
      @karlwarda7628 Před 4 lety +4

      Their title isn't the best but it's not wrong, since preponderance of one type of matter is the reason why there is something instead of nothing

    • @jansugalski4856
      @jansugalski4856 Před 4 lety +3

      I agree. This is a typical confusion. The narrator is con fused about the grounds for asking a scientific question. All scientific problems must be based
      the fact that something exists. Notice that all his speech is based things existing. The inability to distinguish between scientific and philosophical question
      is going to kill me.

    • @briantw
      @briantw Před 4 lety +1

      @@karlwarda7628 YOu mean, versus the preponderance of the other type of matter? The other type that is a THING? That is SOME thing?

    • @jacanchaplais8083
      @jacanchaplais8083 Před 4 lety +1

      r/iamverysmart

  • @martifingers
    @martifingers Před 4 lety +1

    Always great when even complex physics can be made at least partially understandable. All the more when it's as cutting edge as this. Great job.

  • @welcometothemotherverse6213

    i've admired your presentations for many years now. imo, you are currently the most important science communicator. i don't always agree with you, but you present ideas in physics the most simply and beneficially to us less educated souls. thank you

  • @claudiozucchelli7391
    @claudiozucchelli7391 Před 4 lety +3

    Great video. The logical sequence suggested makes sense, and it's exciting to know that part of it is being tested. However, for me it simply moves the question from "why is there more matter than antimatter" to become "why are there more antileptons than leptons"?

    • @KT-dj4iy
      @KT-dj4iy Před 11 měsíci +1

      You're exactly right. By the "nothing" in the video title, many if not most physicists aren't really referring to no-thing. A good example of this was seen in 2012 when David Albert reviewed Lawrence Krauss's book, "A Universe from Nothing" in the NYT. The fact that your comment has only 2 upvotes (3 now 🤓) is frustratingly depressing since it suggests that most physics-interested folk may be just as befuddled as the pros. There are notable exceptions of course. Sean Carroll is an example.

  • @nileshkulkarni6196
    @nileshkulkarni6196 Před 4 lety +18

    Please make a video on evanescent waves and quantum tunneling .

    • @flyingskyward2153
      @flyingskyward2153 Před 4 lety +15

      Evanescent waves wake me up inside

    • @adlockhungry304
      @adlockhungry304 Před 4 lety

      Flying Skyward, 😂

    • @phiphedude7684
      @phiphedude7684 Před 4 lety

      Watch PBS space times video on quantum tunneling

    • @SpaceCadet4Jesus
      @SpaceCadet4Jesus Před 4 lety

      That's precisely how they are making DUNE...using evanescent waves and quantum tunneling. No ditch diggers need apply.

  • @neodeb240
    @neodeb240 Před rokem

    Mindblowling and mind bending. Excellent teacher and worth watching a few times to let it permeate. Way to go Fermilab!

  • @chonchjohnch
    @chonchjohnch Před 4 lety

    It feels amazing to progress through different physics courses and slowly gain insights into videos like these. I love this science and I hope I contribute something to it

  • @hamentaschen
    @hamentaschen Před 4 lety +3

    Loved the fish!!!!

  • @silo_fx3182
    @silo_fx3182 Před 4 lety +31

    Ahh, finally found Schrödinger's cat and its alive, just sometimes not a cat.

  • @heliomartins6681
    @heliomartins6681 Před 4 lety +2

    I'm your fan, Doc, keep it going!

  • @mrnunez87
    @mrnunez87 Před 4 lety +1

    love the work u guys do at fermilab

  • @demogorgonzola
    @demogorgonzola Před 4 lety +28

    "We call it Dune..."
    I misheard it as Doom the first time.

    • @interdictr3657
      @interdictr3657 Před 4 lety +2

      Same, I thought "oh dear, that sounds a tad ominous"

    • @frankschneider6156
      @frankschneider6156 Před 4 lety +2

      No, no ... not Doom .. it's Dune, like the desert planet with the nice pet worms and lots of spice (aka worm shit). Pretty sure, once Don rules over Dune, he will snort lots of the stuff and become a Mentat.

    • @destinysphilosophyuploads
      @destinysphilosophyuploads Před 4 lety

      My god

    • @demogorgonzola
      @demogorgonzola Před 4 lety +2

      @@frankschneider6156 But how a fishisicist would fare on a desert world? I suspect it's more likely he would become a guild navigator - still in a cozy tank but able to see all the universe.

  • @DutchPhlogiston
    @DutchPhlogiston Před 4 lety +13

    It does not answer the question why there is anything at all...
    Just potentially why we observe mainly matter and virtually no antimatter.
    Still, I've learned many things from this and many of your other video's, thanks.

    • @causeitso
      @causeitso Před 4 lety +8

      It is not a question of 'why', rather a question of 'how'. The 'why' question in this regard is non answerable by science. The 'how' question though might be answerable.

    • @generichuman_
      @generichuman_ Před rokem +1

      @@causeitso In this case, the how isn't really answered either. "How" implies that there is some mechanism that explains the thing in question, and because a mechanism can never be "nothing", that mechanism also needs to be explained, and it's either turtles all the way down, or you reach a necessary or arbitrary brute fact. Either way, we epistemologically bottom out.

  • @duckypaul
    @duckypaul Před 4 lety +3

    Great topic! Can’t wait to find out

  • @whitehorse1959
    @whitehorse1959 Před 4 lety +1

    Great video, well spoken, good info, thanks.

  • @1dilbert111
    @1dilbert111 Před 4 lety +36

    What happens during the crossover from having no mass and moving at light speed and then having mass and not moving at light Speed? Does the quark really decelerate? Also I thought particles moving at light speed didn’t experience time. What would it be like to go from timeless to experiencing time?

    • @w01dnick
      @w01dnick Před 4 lety +2

      why not? they had some impulse, like photon does, that value just hadn't changed. And who cares about speed itself?

    • @radishpineapple74
      @radishpineapple74 Před 4 lety +30

      Not a physicist, but here goes:
      Massless particles gain mass by interacting with things. Particles which would otherwise be massless gain mass by interacting with the Higgs field if they can; the Higgs field is non-zero everywhere and thus the particles which CAN interact with the Higgs field do so at all times; the higher the frequency of interaction (or, equivalently, the stronger the interaction), the higher the mass generated. Massless photons trapped in a massless reflective box give the entire ensemble mass. Massless gluons interacting within the confines of hadrons gain mass and constitute the majority of the mass of hadrons such as the proton. (Also, massless gluons are predicted to be able to interact with themselves into a confined glueball, which would be massive). Photons respond to warped spacetime and actually warp spacetime themselves; if you get enough of them in a close space so that they can warp spacetime enough to create a black hole, the photons would be trapped, and an outside observer would see that the black hole, called a kugelblitz, has a mass.
      So, massless particles are those which are not interacting with anything. A high-energy (and thus higher-mass) atom in an excited state can emit a photon, losing mass in the process. The photon then can travel across long distances without itself experiencing time. Then, when it interacts with another atom far away, it can be absorbed by that atom, transforming it into a high-energy (and thus higher-mass) atom. From the point of view of the photon, which is traveling at the speed of light, the journey takes no time at all, and the distance traveled is zero. So, the photon allows the two atoms to interact with each other, even though the photon itself experiences neither time elapsed nor distance traveled. However, if you consider the entire system of two atoms and photon, the whole system has higher mass than if there were no excited state, no photon, or no possibility of interaction.
      Another example are two electrons brought near each other. One way to think about it is that, the closer the two electrons are to each other, the higher frequency of exchange of massless virtual photons between the two electrons, and the higher the potential energy (and mass) of the system. You could also forget about virtual photons, and just think of it as the electromagnetic field between the electrons gaining energy, and thus mass.
      To go from massless to massive, massless particles must interact with something. Consider a massless photon passing through glass. During its passage, the photon will be probabilistically absorbed and re-emitted, most likely by an electron in the glass. We can't say when and where this absorption and re-emission will occur, but the odds are that it will happen at a certain frequency. (Also, the photon direction is a result of the superposition of all possible absorption/re-emission outcomes by various atoms, and as it turns out, the most likely path of the photon through the glass is the same way it came from, not scattered randomly like you might expect from classical particles). The higher the frequency of interaction between the photon and electrons, the slower the passage. With a sensitive enough scale, the glass could be seen to increase in mass (due to the temporarily excited electrons) during the period in which the photon is interacting with it. Equivalently, the superposition of all those interactions can be thought of as a massive quasiparticle which travels slower than the speed of light.
      You can't measure a non-interacting photon in free space, because any measurement would require an interaction of some sort, which destroys the photon. Photons, like all massless particles, only exist BETWEEN interactions. So, massless particles don't actually decelerate once they start interacting with things, but they transform into some superposition of interactions which must travel slower than light. Photons stuck in a box are all going at the speed of light, bouncing back and forth, but because they're trapped, an outside observer can say that they're effectively moving along at the same speed as the box. Wherever the photon box goes, the photons most follow, due to the interactions they have with the box's reflective walls.
      I hope that helps, and I apologize for the length and any inaccuracies.

    • @nikufellow
      @nikufellow Před 4 lety +1

      @@radishpineapple74 you're awesome. Please suggest more to read/watch for more info on the actual topic of the video - why is there something rather than nothing, if you've time for it.

    • @SocksWithSandals
      @SocksWithSandals Před 4 lety

      A collision would do it.

    • @Mernom
      @Mernom Před 4 lety +2

      @@radishpineapple74 very good explanation.

  • @sirmeowthelibrarycat
    @sirmeowthelibrarycat Před 4 lety +3

    😳 Surely leptogenesis is a hypothesis, and not yet an explanatory theory . . . ?
    😸 Kudos all round for the appearance of the cats 🐈!

  • @kaushaltimilsina7727
    @kaushaltimilsina7727 Před 4 lety +2

    Awesome! Thanks for greatly simplifying the ideas of Sphaleron and Higgs spontaneous symmetry breaking, and making them interesting as always!

    • @galacticbob1
      @galacticbob1 Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks for this comment. I had never heard of the Sphaleron process and was wondering why a process like that wouldn't also be working in reverse. "Spontaneous symmetry breaking" put it in context for me. 👍🏼

  • @naveenraj2008eee
    @naveenraj2008eee Před 4 lety +2

    Hi Dr.Don
    Explained complex physics topic clearly..
    Got some insight..
    Thanks for the video...🙏👍😊

  • @generalleenknassknotretire9180

    *I understand this, completely*
    The chalk board is a recipe for s'mores.

    • @alohathaxted
      @alohathaxted Před 4 lety +1

      General Lee N Knass /knot retired/
      Some Moreuon neutrinos.

  • @mustafashaban7193
    @mustafashaban7193 Před 4 lety +4

    As always like first then see the video I never regret it

  • @louismasar6147
    @louismasar6147 Před 3 lety

    Love your videos!!! Thank you for the knowledge

  • @tumbleddry2887
    @tumbleddry2887 Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you Dr. Lincoln. Your explanation (and Dr. Turner) helped me understand leptogenisis in much more detail (particulalrly the outlining 4 assumptions for the theory).

  • @stephenmihailides8407
    @stephenmihailides8407 Před 4 lety +3

    Thank you Dr Lincoln. I was curious to a video you might make about neutrinos as a linked topic to behaviour of oscillations in black holes. given that neutrino shock waves are at the frontline on supernovae inverse sphere explosions, could neutrinos act as such somehow associated with quasar activity ?

  • @doremifabrications320
    @doremifabrications320 Před 4 lety +388

    Hah, a "fishisicist"!

  • @SquirrelASMR
    @SquirrelASMR Před 3 lety +1

    This is the best fermilab intro. It just suits the epicness of Dr Don. Oh and physics.

  • @KL-bi2un
    @KL-bi2un Před 2 lety +1

    Dear Dr. Lincoln. Thank you for an amazing lecture series. I loved your great courses series as well and you are doing a wonderful job of explaining high level physics as well as bringing it to the masses. I know it's not as popular as a tik tok video; but your efforts are greatly appreciated.

  • @cezarcatalin1406
    @cezarcatalin1406 Před 4 lety +5

    And how exactly would temperature influence the Higgs field ?

    • @Baigle1
      @Baigle1 Před 4 lety

      _theoretical_ physicist, departed from 'laws' a long time ago. honestly after relativity anything goes..

    • @tsresc
      @tsresc Před 4 lety

      Infinities matter.

    • @tsresc
      @tsresc Před 4 lety

      and Anti.

  • @klausolekristiansen2960
    @klausolekristiansen2960 Před 4 lety +52

    So if this theory is true, neutrinos and antineutrinos behave differently, and they are also one and the same. Hmm.

    • @passthebutterrobot2600
      @passthebutterrobot2600 Před 4 lety +14

      Cool story bro, tell it again (clink)

    • @spudhead169
      @spudhead169 Před 4 lety +10

      Beat me to it, thought same thing. Unless he meant that they're only the same in a Zero Higgs Field environment and become distinct in a Non Zero environment.

    • @TheBiggreenpig
      @TheBiggreenpig Před 4 lety +1

      @Toughen Up, Fluffy I thought, a wizard DID it.

    • @SSGranor
      @SSGranor Před 4 lety +31

      This is one of those things where the simplifications made to make the ideas accessible also can add confusion.
      The key to making this work is actually alluded to in the video; but, not really explained. You'll not that the new, heavy neutrinos that need to be added to make the idea work were called "right-handed." Without trying to go into detail about what handedness means for fundamental particles, I'll just say that the basic implication of the idea of handedness is that it flips for the mirror image of a particle. (I.e. the mirror image of a left-handed electron is a right-handed electron, and so on.)
      One of the strangest features of the standard model is that it only has left-handed neutrinos, even though it has both left and right-handed versions of all other matter particles. The thing is, though, in order for a particle to have mass (which we know that neutrinos do) there must be both left and right-handed versions, which is why adding right-handed neutrinos is an extremely common feature of "beyond the standard model" models. (It's actually a very simple addition, as right-handed neutrinos only interact with anything in the standard model by way of the Higgs.)
      Now, there's one more important detail about handedness that I haven't mentioned yet; and, that's how handedness works with regard to antimatter. And, the piece that matters here is that the antiparticle of a left-handed particle is actually right-handed. The reason for this is related to something called CPT symmetry; but, that's really beyond what's necessary for this discussion. The important thing is that the standard model has left-handed neutrinos and right-handed antineutrinos.
      The thing that happens when you add right-handed neutrinos with a heavy majorana mass is that (in the low energy - or, as the video calls it, "water" - world) the four neutrino/antineutrino states (i.e. the left and right-handed neutrino and the left and right-handed antineutrino) get mixed up to leave behind a heavy neutrino and a light neutrino, each of which "are their own antiparticle". But, I put this in quotes because we still have to pay attention to handedness. Essentially, we end up with a pair of light states - one left-handed and one right-handed - and a similar pair of heavy states. But, now the light left-handed state can behave both as a left-handed neutrino and as a left-handed antineutrino; and, similarly for the right-handed state.
      So all of this is to get to the point of saying that the difference in behavior they're looking for is between the left and right-handed states, while the idea that the neutrino is its own antiparticle really means that its the antiparticle of the same - not opposite - handedness.

    • @nadadragojevic3213
      @nadadragojevic3213 Před 4 lety

      @@SSGranorYea. But I think we could add some peculiar mathematical reality to the idea of “being its own antiparticle”. The qualitative content of this property had been long since embodied in i2= - 1. So, the state of “being its own antiparticle” is at least as real as it is the imaginary unit i.

  • @Cenomercy
    @Cenomercy Před 4 lety +1

    This was an amazing video ! Thank you

  • @odizzido
    @odizzido Před 4 lety

    Thank you for taking the time to try explaining all this to people like me who are interested but never properly studied the subject.

  • @ifmohammed6495
    @ifmohammed6495 Před 4 lety +6

    God bless you thank you so much I don't know how to thank your efforts love from Iraq 🇮🇶🇮🇶🇮🇶

  • @jerrygundecker743
    @jerrygundecker743 Před 4 lety +12

    Let me sum up what you said. "Uhh, I dunno."

    • @petepeter1857
      @petepeter1857 Před 4 lety

      Yup 😥🤕

    • @theliamofella
      @theliamofella Před 3 lety +1

      In fairness, nobody knows but it’s good to speculate (well I like to speculate anyway)

  • @cynthiamcnulty4196
    @cynthiamcnulty4196 Před rokem +1

    Thank you SOO MUCH for making these fascinating videos - you and your colleagues are rock stars in my books!!! I'm making my way through the episodes chronologically. You often mention that lepton's change type but I haven't (yet) seen a video sketching out why we think this occurs and presenting evidence that experimental physicists have developed to convince themselves of the high likelihood of the phenomena. Even if you can't explain the theory ( no equations please) it would be super cool to see the evidence. For example I particularly enjoyed the plot pointing to the likelihood of only one type of Higgs Boson (spin 0).
    Carry on ladies and gents - you are doing important work!

  • @xilw3r
    @xilw3r Před 2 lety +1

    The physicist fish looks somewhere between constantly astounded and high af. Love it

  • @TheSwiftFalcon
    @TheSwiftFalcon Před 4 lety +11

    Very interesting and well explained as usual...but I don't think this really touches on the great philosophical question of why there is something instead of nothing.

    • @capitalist88
      @capitalist88 Před 4 lety +6

      True.
      Q: Why is there something instead of nothing?
      A: Well, we start off with matter and anti-matter and then want to know why the anti-matter disap.....
      Q: NOOOOO! Why was there matter and anti-matter? Why were there fields? Why was there ANYTHING?
      A: .......

    • @Beer_Dad1975
      @Beer_Dad1975 Před 4 lety +2

      @@capitalist88 I never understand this reasoning - it's pretty damn clear if there was nothing, then you can't ask the question, therefore the fact that you are asking the question is simply due to the fact that there is something.

    • @ps200306
      @ps200306 Před 4 lety +3

      @@Beer_Dad1975 , we _know_ there is something. The fact that it is a necessary precondition for asking the question is not an _answer_ to the question.

    • @Beer_Dad1975
      @Beer_Dad1975 Před 4 lety +1

      @@ps200306 From a scientific perspective, you are quite correct, it is not an answer to *how* there is something instead of nothing. From a philosophical perspective, it is an answer to *why* there is something instead of nothing. Think of it like this, if you bought a ticket and won a hundred million dollars in a lottery, you can ask *how* you won the lottery and calculate the statistical probabilities that might be say, one in 100,000,000 - so there is your *how*. You can, if you are a bit simple, also ask *why* you won the lottery given the odds are so small it should not have happened - but it's effectively a meaningless question, because you won already - it is already a fact - if it had not happened you would not be asking the question. Now, you can go ahead and make shit up about fate or divine intervention or magic pixies or whatever but that's just making shit up to explain something that simply is.

    • @capitalist88
      @capitalist88 Před 4 lety +1

      Actually Matthew Sharpe's answer is still better than the one in the video, because at least it addresses the core meaning of the question without just ignoring it like the video does.

  • @rahulravi661
    @rahulravi661 Před 4 lety +4

    You are cool

  • @prezlamen
    @prezlamen Před 4 lety +1

    One of my favorite chanells for all time : )

    • @GNParty
      @GNParty Před 4 lety

      * channels
      * of
      * time.

  • @annieheartway8024
    @annieheartway8024 Před 3 lety +1

    I enjoy your videos very much - it will be great you cam talk more about CP violation and sphalerons - looking forward to it

  • @Mac40581
    @Mac40581 Před 4 lety +17

    If you emphasize "may" be the answer wouldn't that be a hypothesis, not a theory?

    • @georgedishman
      @georgedishman Před 4 lety +5

      Correct, "theory" refers to the maths that quantifies the hypothesis.

    • @RetrogradeBeats
      @RetrogradeBeats Před 4 lety

      Curt TDH yes

    • @roqsteady5290
      @roqsteady5290 Před 4 lety +10

      Strictly speaking, but in practice scientists use the word theory with liberal abandon for almost any conjecture, just like everyone else... shhh don't tell anyone or they might think a scientific theory is not a "well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world".

    • @windnwater7706
      @windnwater7706 Před 4 lety +1

      I remember hearing that a hypothesis is simply one assertion in a theory, which is a collection of assertions, because technically, except in mathematics, facts don't exist. For example, how do I know you are a conscious person who exists? I'm surely not the only conscious human in the universe? Buildings exist, right? I can't prove these 100%, but to a value extremely close to that.
      'Fact' is often used as a sort of colloquial term for a theory proven beyond reasonable doubt, for example, I have a theory that I am a human that I am 99.99999% sure of, so I consider it a fact. There is a technical possibility that I am a cat inside a simulation, but this probability is insignificant.
      Interesting that Doctors and experts in physics and such mention theories more often than us commonfolk likely due to the dinning-kruger effect :).

    • @RetrogradeBeats
      @RetrogradeBeats Před 4 lety

      WindnWater no

  • @piyushm2340
    @piyushm2340 Před 4 lety +3

    If temperature changes when the universe expands and it also changes the mass.
    Is the mass of fundamental particles increasing?

    • @jursamaj
      @jursamaj Před 4 lety +2

      No, it's a threshhold. When the universe was really hot, they had no mass, and after it cooled to a certain point, they had mass. It's like with his steam/water analogy: once the temperature is low enough, the steam condenses into water, but it doesn't keep condensing.

    • @phys0stud
      @phys0stud Před 4 lety

      jursamaj no but eventually it freezes.

    • @jursamaj
      @jursamaj Před 4 lety

      @@phys0stud True, but that's a whole different state change. Maybe there *is* another state change to the universe, if it gets cold enough. But that threshold would have to be *really* cold, like micro-kelvins.

    • @w01dnick
      @w01dnick Před 4 lety

      yes and no. Mass as m=E/c^2 hasn't changed, but inertial mass turned from zero to the same value as first one.

  • @daka1272
    @daka1272 Před 2 lety

    absolutely love this channel

  • @johnmcnaught7453
    @johnmcnaught7453 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks Doc ! You manage to explain complex subjects in such a manner that mare mortals as myself can somewhat understand them. My foundation is but low level college physics. Take care.

  • @philochristos
    @philochristos Před 4 lety +6

    It sounds to me like even if leptogenesis is true, it still won't answer the question of why there is something rather than nothing. Leptogenesis explains the behavior of particles that already exist; but it doesn't explain why any of them exist in the first place.

    • @michaelsommers2356
      @michaelsommers2356 Před 4 lety

      Leptogenesis would explain why there is any matter (or anti-matter) at all. If initially there had been equal amounts of matter and anti-matter, which is what one would expect, then it all would have annihilated, and there would be nothing but radiation left.

    • @philochristos
      @philochristos Před 4 lety +1

      @@michaelsommers2356 Radiation is something, though, isn't it? And even if the imbalance between matter and anti-matter is explained by Leptogenesis, that doesn't explain why there was ever any matter and anti-matter in the first place.

    • @larsalfredhenrikstahlin8012
      @larsalfredhenrikstahlin8012 Před 4 lety

      @@philochristos Yes, you are right but I think Dr. Don should have made it clear that he is not talking about the philosophical question, but the physics question that is one of the big ones we don't know about. Why is there matter instead of just 100% radiation.

    • @frankschneider6156
      @frankschneider6156 Před 4 lety

      Leptogenesis would explain why there is matter. The answer is: there is matter, because there was more matter and less anti-matter. If there would have been the same amount, both would have annihilated and there wouldn't be anything except energy. This video gives a speculative answer to the problem of the matter-antimatter imbalance.
      The question why is there is absolutely something (not just matter) instead of anything/nothing very likely requires just a very very very long waiting time and a very big spontaneous vacuum fluctuation.

    • @philochristos
      @philochristos Před 4 lety

      @@larsalfredhenrikstahlin8012 That makes sense.

  • @TheKwiatek
    @TheKwiatek Před 4 lety +4

    How do we know that there actually is more matter than antimatter?
    How do we know that some neighbor galaxy is not completly from antimatter?

    • @FarukAhmet
      @FarukAhmet Před 4 lety +9

      When antimatter and matter collide, they annihilate each other and produce intense gamma rays, so if some galaxies were made of antimatter and some others, matter, we would see shiny gamma ray fireworks in the region between them where they would inevitably come into contact with each other, but we don't, so we're pretty sure there are no antimatter galaxies in the observable universe. Could there be some outside the observable universe, too far for us to see? Theoretically, yes.

    • @F0rr0r
      @F0rr0r Před 4 lety +1

      @@FarukAhmet To iterate on that point, aside from the fact that intergalactic medium would be a mess of gamma rays signatures due to dust collisions, galactic mergers would be hilariously cataclysmic and energetic by comparison - perhaps the greatest fireworks shows in the universe, but there's been no such source of gamma rays in the observable universe. For some reason, matter won out over antimatter.

  • @davehamrick5028
    @davehamrick5028 Před rokem

    Seriously you are the best instructor at Fermilab.

  • @TonyBallin
    @TonyBallin Před 4 lety +1

    Learned a lot! Thanks!

  • @extradimension7356
    @extradimension7356 Před 4 lety +4

    Cool story Bro' tell it again ! (more like I have to watch this at least 5 times lol).

  • @Barbarosa1234
    @Barbarosa1234 Před 3 lety +3

    Love your videos, very informative! Thank you! However, this one, I watched the whole thing and at the end I’m still NOT sure how it answers the question “why is there something rather than nothing?” I guess that question can be heard on different levels. I think you are answering the question as “why did MATTER (= something) DOMINATE after the Big Bang?” But the way the Ancient Greeks posed this question, it was in the philosophical sense as “why is there ANYTHING AT ALL and not rather nothingness?” That points to the question: “what is the source and origin that made it possible for all that is to be AND to be that which it is” - i.e., the “question of being” (“τι το ον”) which Aristotle said was the defining question of Greek thought (later picked up in modern times by Heidegger). That points to inquiring into the ultimate source / origin / cause for reality (= all that is). I think the way PHYSICS tackles this question by answering in terms of MATTER misses the deeper - and confounding, mind-boggling, slippery, vaguer, elusive - question into the origins of all that is (being). That’s where we slip into the philosophical realm where answers are elusive and hard to grasp. So... maybe Physics isn’t “everything” as you say, and doesn’t / can’t answer everything - and in particular, the very question of this video? ;-)

  • @LoganKM76
    @LoganKM76 Před 4 lety +1

    Great video! Thanks very much.

  • @leandrolapa8461
    @leandrolapa8461 Před 3 lety

    I loved this "steam world" analogy, so helpful.

  • @XMeK
    @XMeK Před 4 lety +14

    I love Fermilab... but I find the Chiral Discrimination displayed in hunting only RIGHT-HANDED neutrinos to be despicable and unnerving. 。^‿^。

    • @luantuan1653
      @luantuan1653 Před 3 lety

      This is because all neutrinos detected until now are Left-handed (and antineutrinos all Right-handed).

  • @pms9838
    @pms9838 Před 4 lety +14

    Hands up if you realised your not that clever... :)

    • @larsalfredhenrikstahlin8012
      @larsalfredhenrikstahlin8012 Před 4 lety

      The opposite of dunning kruger effect. Very healthy to feel that way and not the other way around. :)

    • @pms9838
      @pms9838 Před 4 lety +2

      @@analogueavenue lol, you're right, well done you :)

    • @billdecat855
      @billdecat855 Před 4 lety +1

      Smart people know they are stupid but stupid people think they are smart. So hands up for the smart people that realise they are "not that clever".

  • @pmiecz
    @pmiecz Před 4 lety +1

    cool vid, thx dr. Lincoln

  • @SolaceEasy
    @SolaceEasy Před 4 lety +1

    Accessable! Fun! Informative! Thanks

  • @theophilus749
    @theophilus749 Před 4 lety +6

    It is hardly clear that any of this fascinating stuff is about ‘something from nothing’ as opposed to ‘something from something else’, the real business of physics after all.

    • @knyghtryder3599
      @knyghtryder3599 Před 3 měsíci

      Humanity is still waiting for a scrap of proof that nothingness could exist before even considering it as an alternative to the known universe

    • @theophilus749
      @theophilus749 Před měsícem

      @@knyghtryder3599 Of course nothingness cannot exist. If it could it would be something after all. But that merely definitional fact does not tell us why there should be anything at all rather than not anything at all, which is how the original question should be understood. Nothingness is the absence of anything at all, not the presence of a merely mysterious something.

    • @knyghtryder3599
      @knyghtryder3599 Před měsícem

      @@theophilus749 Right but we have no evidence for all of reality not existing
      All we have evidence for is something , and for something always existing and no evidence for any possible alternative
      We have no evidence for creation , so this is all fallacious assumption , a straw man

    • @theophilus749
      @theophilus749 Před měsícem

      @@knyghtryder3599
      Things that do or have existed are possible because they do exist or have existed. But anything that is possible may or may not have existed. That's what 'possible' means. In a sense just this is the evidence: the whole passing show (whether or not it has always existed) may _not_ have existed. It's difficult to see what other kind of evidence even could coherently be asked for. There's no straw man'.
      I rather think that you are taking 'nothingness' to be some sort of merely empty state of affairs then, quite rightly, pointing out that we have no evidence for that. But that is a false start. To repeat: 'Nothingness = not anything', including any empty states of affairs'.
      The only way you could block nothingness as a possibility is to point to one thing in the world and justifiably say of it 'this exists necessarily'. But I see no evidence for any such thing.

    • @knyghtryder3599
      @knyghtryder3599 Před měsícem

      @@theophilus749 You keep fixating on philosophical nothingness and İ am glad you agree , we don't see any evidence for it or reason to assume that nothingness ever preceded something, but why you believe we have any evidence that the universe could not exist or be any different than it is , is still a mystery, we have a universe, we have evidence for it existing, not proof but evidence, if we ever have any other evidence indicating that this universe came from another or something else or wasn't always here fine , but for some reason we treat this as a default plausible alternative with zero evidence.
      For example list anything that exists today that you believe could 'not have existed' and then let me know why you think that would be possible
      For example trees exist , but on mars we see no trees , but they still exist , even if all the trees on earth die , trees still existed , but even with no trees ever all the elements and energy that make up trees currently would always still exist and have always existed, we really see zero evidence for creation anywhere in any sense and very little true destruction , photons loose a tiny bit of energy when stretched across the entire universe but scientists are still debating if that is even true or it is just being absorbed/converted to heat , we always assume it is legit to discuss the creation of the universe or why things exist and we really don't see much of any evidence of anything being created or coming into existence in any real sense of the term, and with a universe or all known existence, we have a sample size of one and incomplete information about it.

  • @WarrenGarabrandt
    @WarrenGarabrandt Před 4 lety +4

    "we don't have to look inside the box to see what going on"
    What's in the f-- box?!
    What's in the box?

  • @Brandon-rc9vp
    @Brandon-rc9vp Před 4 lety +1

    Good video, one part I think would help some of us out would be to clearly define the assumptions prior to theory explanation

  • @Shinji_Dai
    @Shinji_Dai Před 4 lety +1

    I live near Lead, about 15-20 minutes away. I always read about SURF in the newspapers around here.

  • @1stGruhn
    @1stGruhn Před 4 lety +8

    I am actually surprised. Your videos have always been exceedingly good. However, this video shows a fundamental misunderstanding of the question "why is there something rather than nothing". The question, in philosophy, has nothing to do with matter: is energy a thing? Are fields things? Philosophically they are (they have ontology). The question of "why there is something" includes these more fundamental entities within which matter exists but is not itself dependent upon matter existing.
    While there is clearly a very fundamental question of "why there is mass vs no mass" that is a far different question than "why is there something as opposed to nothing". Your explanation therefore doesn't touch this deeper question.

    • @robertsparkman8516
      @robertsparkman8516 Před 4 lety +2

      Hypothetical situation: this mechanism pans out. It's demonstrated to everyone's satisfaction. We now have the matter universe we observe and live in as opposed to a radiation filled one from total annihilation, we have our matter.
      Is it not a massive, huge step twords that ultimate question? Next come up with fields and laws. An actual, real answer to what happened at the instant of the big bang is a different question.

    • @vitakyo982
      @vitakyo982 Před 4 lety +3

      If nothing existed , we wouldn't worry why .

    • @sasilik
      @sasilik Před 4 lety +4

      If something is gonna give the answer to this question then it is a physics. Philosophy just rambles endlessly and makes assumptions and presuppositions. It literally makes things up without any way to verify anything.

    • @1stGruhn
      @1stGruhn Před 4 lety +1

      @@sasilik Granted philosophy certainly can stretch the imagination, but everybody does philosophy, just not equally well: ideas are often tossed around without consideration to their consequences. This is the case with every discipline, even physics.
      Verificationism has its own problems: not all truths can be tested much less verified. I'm not convinced that physics can answer these more ultimate questions: how can you test the immaterial? Just presuming it does not exists is a bit naive if not outright irrational.

    • @sasilik
      @sasilik Před 4 lety +1

      @@1stGruhn , how can you show that your idea that there is something immaterial has any merits? For that you should have a way to test immaterial. Just presuming that it exist is outright irrational. You are literally making something up without any way to test it and then say that others who do not accept that as a fact are naive and irrational. I also don't understand why there must be something immaterial when all can be equally explained with something material which we just don't know yet.

  • @aclearlight
    @aclearlight Před rokem

    Great work!

  • @patrickoneill1011
    @patrickoneill1011 Před 2 lety

    Exciting Topic!

  • @keppela1
    @keppela1 Před 4 lety +3

    Interesting video, but clickbait title that doesn't even come close to answering the question.

  • @3Space1time
    @3Space1time Před 4 lety +6

    I was born in 2005 a century after Einstein's miracle year

    • @xterminal5997
      @xterminal5997 Před 4 lety +1

      NAMAN GOYAL same

    • @t.gokalpelacmaz584
      @t.gokalpelacmaz584 Před 4 lety +2

      great accomplishment mate

    • @john-or9cf
      @john-or9cf Před 4 lety +1

      NAMAN GOYAL And you are watching these videos!? Way to go, youngster!

    • @3Space1time
      @3Space1time Před 4 lety

      @@john-or9cf no I had been seeing these videos from 2 years

    • @xterminal5997
      @xterminal5997 Před 4 lety

      NAMAN GOYAL I usually watch pbs space time but dr Lincoln’s calming voice and simple analogies for explaining physics make in enjoyable

  • @arpioisme
    @arpioisme Před 2 lety

    Now this needs a follow up video, dr. Don

  • @koldfizzion3762
    @koldfizzion3762 Před 4 lety +1

    You’re awesome. Thank you.

  • @MrAmalthejus
    @MrAmalthejus Před 4 lety +3

    leptogenesis has nothing to do with 'why there is something rather than nothing'. You haven't understood that question's full potential.

  • @NothingMaster
    @NothingMaster Před 4 lety +5

    From the leptogenesis argument that you’re extending here, it is painfully clear that you have no clue what even thinking about Nothing entails; at least philosophically. “Why is there something, anything at all, rather than Nothing?” is an existential / phenomenological / metaphysical question that goes far beyond the existence of matter/energy, matter-antimatter annihilation, leptons, fermions, the Big Bang, the very notion of Space (Spacetime), symmetries and asymmetries, vacuum fluctuations, and all the rest of those quaint niceties that physics is concerned about.

    • @jepkofficial
      @jepkofficial Před 4 lety +3

      True, but the title is just clickbait. The video never attempted to address the question in the title. It is just a theory about what gave rise to the asymmetry of matter-to-antimatter in the Universe (of course, by assuming a process which requires an anti-matter dominant asymmetry, to begin with, lol).
      It's difficult to tell if the theory is garbage, or if the video explanation of it is, or both.

  • @youstandcorrected
    @youstandcorrected Před 4 lety

    Hat's off. Brilliant video!

  • @tresajessygeorge210
    @tresajessygeorge210 Před 2 lety

    THANK YOU PROFESSOR LINCOLN...!!!

  • @FoxEagle993
    @FoxEagle993 Před 4 lety

    I really liked this exploration into a theory that which while unproven, neatly explains niche concepts which I've never run into before (in my armchair-fascination with particle physics!). So long as it's testable, these types of videos on niche theories are super important in generating public interest, as well as stoking the imaginations of future generations of physicists!
    Thanks heaps to Dr. Jessica Turner for her part in sharing this though provoking concept with the world!!

  • @thomaswayneward
    @thomaswayneward Před 2 lety +2

    I give Dr. Don credit for standing up and delivering this sermon with a straight face.

  • @madboyrex
    @madboyrex Před 27 dny

    Great explanations! I am so glad the internet gods got me to your channel.

  • @hans-peterporzner1381
    @hans-peterporzner1381 Před 3 lety

    Sehr spannend. Hervorragendes Video!

  • @socialscientistshiva3321

    Great information ,sir .....