a physicist responds: physics has done very little for like 70 years

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  • čas přidán 11. 09. 2024
  • What have you done for me lately physics???
    Turns out a whole lot of stuff. Neat. Physics is cool.
    Link to join the patreon if you are interest / acollierastro
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Komentáře • 3,5K

  • @ilessthan3bees
    @ilessthan3bees Před 11 měsíci +2175

    I made this same mistake while I was studying chemistry. I was like "wow, everything significant in chemistry happened more than 50 years ago". Then I got into grad school. Turns out they don't teach you recent stuff until you learn the basics. Big "well fucking duh" moment on that one.

    • @dstinnettmusic
      @dstinnettmusic Před 11 měsíci +248

      They also don’t teach the new stuff because it is not proven or settled in a way that would be useful in teaching undergrads. Otherwise the curriculum would need to be heavily revised every year…and even in the middle of the semester.

    • @derekcavanaugh1788
      @derekcavanaugh1788 Před 11 měsíci +44

      Lol even inorganic in undergrad shows one frontier of the field of chemistry. Like hey, we don't really understand complexes, but we can explain some of their behavior by using bits of models that don't work, like VSEPR and Crystal Field Theory. There is so much room for discovery in chemistry.

    • @BigDaddyWes
      @BigDaddyWes Před 11 měsíci +50

      +1. I was thinking that a recent Physics student could easily get that impression if they spend multiple years learning about discoveries from generations ago. It doesn't feel like they are studying anything current, and they definitely aren't conducting research on the cutting edge, but babygurl you gotta learn this stuff first. Plus, it's just VERY easy for us to convince ourselves of something that aligns with our world view.
      Honestly though, I doubt most of the people making these comments have ever even taken a college level physics course.

    • @zekayman
      @zekayman Před 11 měsíci +5

      @@derekcavanaugh1788 Inorganic feels like a fever dream to me. Idk about you, but I only had to take one inorganic course whereas physical and organic totaled to six courses between the two (including labs). Needless to say, I definitely need to brush up on it.

    • @nikhillrao3799
      @nikhillrao3799 Před 11 měsíci +3

      That's the cool thing about studying computer science, you might be reading a paper from a couple years ago in an undergrad class

  • @PermafrostLP
    @PermafrostLP Před 11 měsíci +4789

    Alright, but apart from the Higgs boson, the tau neutrino, cosmic microwave background observations, graviational waves, the black hole image, the isolation and characterization of graphene, the internet, atomic clocks and the other things mentioned, what has physics ever done for us?

    • @dreambuffer
      @dreambuffer Před 11 měsíci +517

      The internet was the product of a physics institution, but the internet is not itself a physics discovery. Let computer scientists have a few things.

    • @jacobsims5848
      @jacobsims5848 Před 11 měsíci +55

      Everything you listed could be completely made up except the last three things. Open your eyes not your as

    • @Preciouspink
      @Preciouspink Před 11 měsíci +12

      Prying the mystery beyond space time would be nice. Oh probably that can’t be so readily monetized…

    • @erikhall1146
      @erikhall1146 Před 11 měsíci

      This is a pretty dumb comment ngl.
      The Internet, was as much a discovery of Physics as the car was a discovery of Biology. Yes the fields are related, but the Internet was not purley physics in nature. It was a defense invention based on electronics and circuits which had been known for ages. The theory which enables the Internet to work on a fundamental level really has not changed all to much.
      Then there is the fact all the discoveries you mentioned, Higgs, Tau, CMB, Gravitational Waves, black hole images etc outside of Graphene have no impact on the day to day live of 99,9999% of people. And will never, Black Hole physics is nice as a concept but has no known applications. Similarly, the Standard Model, which predicted the Higgs, has not changed in ages so the discovery of the Higgs similarly didnt really do anything as the Standard Model only worked with it.
      The Sentiment that Physics as a field is standing still is based on the fact no new big theories have emerged in decades. We are still not any smarter on what Dark Matter or Energy are, Quantum Field Theory and GR are not an inch closer to being unified, High Energy Physics has not produced a new broader model since the Standard one, String Theory was a total bust.
      Nobody argues discoveries in physics have a great impact on everyones live. The argument is that at its core the field has stood pretty still for a while.

    • @NateEngle
      @NateEngle Před 11 měsíci +94

      The selection of 1973 as a date seems especially odd to me as a computer guy because of course that's when the world was first introduced to the microcomputer.

  • @Ethelgiggle
    @Ethelgiggle Před 11 měsíci +206

    My favorite physics are similar to MRI: PET scans. You basically inject someone with something radioactive like Glucose with one OH replaced by a radioactive isotope of Flourine. In this application when tumors are in the body they use up a lot of energy so the Glucose ends up there. The radioactive substance emits a positron that then annihilates quickly in the body made of matter. This emits two gamma rays that you can use to build an image and see where tumors and metastases are. It sounds so sci-fi but gets used every day. Amazing. (btw this was from the top of my head and its not my field so if I said anything wrong please correct me)

    • @mattflores8911
      @mattflores8911 Před 10 měsíci +9

      Don’t really have a background in this but this explanation made so much sense! Thanks for going out of your way to make a complex subject easy for someone to understand

    • @realzachfluke1
      @realzachfluke1 Před 10 měsíci +17

      Right?!?! PET scans are absolutely astonishing, _AND_ they're routine. Humanity is an awesome expression of this universe.

    • @bernardburdick9264
      @bernardburdick9264 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Good point; I’ve had one.

    • @jamesdriscoll_tmp1515
      @jamesdriscoll_tmp1515 Před 8 měsíci +3

      You had me at antimatter

    • @DanielKlein23
      @DanielKlein23 Před 6 měsíci +4

      Came here to mention PET scans. They're literally detecting matter-antimatter annihilations happening in a patient's body to discover where your body uses how much energy, and to me that's incredibly sci-fi. If you put that concept into a sci-fi novel and didn't call it a PET scan, people would be like "woah this is such a cool sci-fi concept".

  • @RokaiMusic
    @RokaiMusic Před 11 měsíci +1204

    Man it's crazy how this field of science that I haven't paid attention to since high school has not made any significant discoveries since I graduated high school.

    • @stooshie1616
      @stooshie1616 Před 11 měsíci +240

      I've paid attention to physics, and there haven't been any significant discoveries since I graduated high school. I must say, though, I graduated in June, so there hasn't been that much time.

    • @Greenhopper14
      @Greenhopper14 Před 11 měsíci +213

      @@stooshie1616I know this is a joke but unironically, findings on gravitational waves were detected and published in July 💀

    • @asdfasdf-dd9lk
      @asdfasdf-dd9lk Před 11 měsíci +86

      @@stooshie1616 last week the first paper showing that antimatter experiences gravity in the same way as other particles was released. There are hundreds of thousands of physicists out there, working in an endless number of different fields, and by the day people learn more and more about the way the world works :)

    • @Smo1k
      @Smo1k Před 11 měsíci +38

      @@stooshie1616 The power of a good-natured, humorous comment in action: People who know something are spurred into sharing it 😉

    • @JustButton
      @JustButton Před 11 měsíci

      @@stooshie1616excellent comment

  • @MrCaptainWTF
    @MrCaptainWTF Před 11 měsíci +637

    As I sit at my electron microscope, I think to myself, what are physicists doing these days?

    • @lunasophia9002
      @lunasophia9002 Před 11 měsíci +55

      Same, as I reply on a computer that is orders of magnitude more powerful (yet also quieter!), in every possible respect, than the first one I used, using an internet connection that is similarly orders of magnitude faster than what I started with.

    • @dardar7903
      @dardar7903 Před 11 měsíci +10

      Rest in peace coolio

    • @crystal4o681
      @crystal4o681 Před 11 měsíci +27

      Me as I analyze the 50,000,000,000 base pairs of DNA sequenced on one machine in 24 hours

    • @isweartofuckinggod
      @isweartofuckinggod Před 11 měsíci +2

      luckily, you can check.

    • @realityChemist
      @realityChemist Před 11 měsíci +6

      Hello fellow electron microscopist 👋

  • @gyeongchankim5423
    @gyeongchankim5423 Před 11 měsíci +129

    When thinking about progress in field of study, people usually think of large paradigm shifts; something that can completely redefine our understanding of the subject. But if you become involved in any area of research you realize that progress is usually accumulation of thousands of tiny discoveries. Also a very substantial breakthrough in a certain area might not seem super impressive from the perspective of outsiders if it does not directly impact our lives immediately.

    • @kylegonewild
      @kylegonewild Před 10 měsíci +11

      Yeah, it took our species over 100,000 years before written language. Everything we've learned about the universe has happened in a miniscule fraction of the time we've had to learn it because of how much comes before you even get to the point that you can meaningfully answer wild questions for the time like heliocentrism. We had to stop hiding and shitting in bushes, develop tool use, develop language, develop agriculture, develop writing, develop governance, develop trade, develop translation, develop mathematics and so on and so on before you get to the likes of Galileo and Copernicus and those guys came around roughly 2000 years after Archimedes, Euclid, Pythagoras, etc.. Before we could even begin to start answering the kind of questions we can answer now calculus had to be developed and G.O.A.T Isaac Newton came in and started hammering in loose nails everywhere. So much gets lost in the details because it's easier to explain the really big stuff and very hard to get people to understand the significance of the really small.

    • @KipIngram
      @KipIngram Před 10 měsíci +11

      Yeah, the mainstream is guilty of only really wanting the "sensational" stuff. Steady progress is "boring" to them.

    • @Daitsuki294
      @Daitsuki294 Před 8 měsíci

      Oh right! Accumulation of thousands of people are needed for discoveries in physics! What about these?
      - Bell's Theorems
      - Newton's dynamical laws and gravitation
      - Special Relativity
      - Schrodinger's wave equation
      - Schwarzchild's solution
      - Prediction of the Higg's Boson
      - Maxwell's equations
      - Friedmann's equations
      - Heisenberg's uncertainty principle
      - Pauli's prediction of neutrinos
      - Dirac's prediction of antimatter
      - Weinberg's electro-weak unification
      I guess taking a picture of something theorized 100 years ago must be really considered a breakthrough, truly an amazing feat!

    • @octavioavila6548
      @octavioavila6548 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Real progress is when the paradigm shifts happen. The boring, incremental progress is just the existing paradigm playing itself out and keeping the scientists occupied until the next paradigm shift that will provide a new context to all of the results obtained during the boring period

    • @LoudWaffle
      @LoudWaffle Před 6 měsíci +19

      @@octavioavila6548 Fortunately for the real world, science's effectiveness isn't graded on how entertaining or boring it is to laymen.

  • @jez2718
    @jez2718 Před 11 měsíci +172

    A note on MRI: Not only is it a big success story of modern physics, it is also a big success story of applied mathematics. See, the MRI machine takes a bunch of measurements of your body from a bunch of different angles. But it turns out, to exactly figure out the state of your body with high resolution requires a *lot* of measurements. To take enough measurements to get MRI images of the quality one is used to, one would need to be in the machine for hours: no fun for you, bad for the patients in line behind you, expensive for the hospital, and more chance of motion blur from you moving around.
    But if you've ever had an MRI scan, chances are you weren't in there that long. How? Applied mathematicians figured out how one could take *not enough measurements*, but use what we know about the structure of an image to reconstruct a high-resolution image anyway, despite having fewer measurements than are technically necessary. This method of "subsampling" has been integral to the success of MRI. And progress continues to occur on this front, nowadays using deep learning. MRI (and CT, and PET, and...) will keep getting better and better thanks to advances in image processing.

    • @nujuat
      @nujuat Před 11 měsíci +20

      Compressive sensing and compression in general is such a fascinating and subtle topic which a lot of people (including physicsists I've talked to) think is trivial.

    • @aidanarbaugh1248
      @aidanarbaugh1248 Před 10 měsíci +3

      This and also how the theory transferred to chemistry in NMR spectroscopy which may be the most powerful analytical tool for deducing/affirming structures of molecules

    • @robbie_
      @robbie_ Před 10 měsíci +3

      I have a vague idea it involves a lot of Fourier Methods.

    • @camipco
      @camipco Před 4 měsíci

      obligatory "all physics is just applied mathematics" comment

  • @ougonce
    @ougonce Před 11 měsíci +189

    I never realized how cool lasers are until I laid on a table, someone beamed my eyes with one and suddenly I could see without glasses for the first time in my entire life

    • @shitmandood
      @shitmandood Před 11 měsíci +2

      And the same ppl need extremely thick coke bottle bottomed glasses just to look at a computer screen 8+ hours/day for their day job. 😂

    • @kylegonewild
      @kylegonewild Před 10 měsíci +5

      @@shitmandood Ever considered they like glasses or can't afford the procedure themselves?

    • @SnakebitSTI
      @SnakebitSTI Před 6 měsíci +14

      @@kylegonewildI doubt many people "like glasses" so much as "like not having lifelong complications from laser surgery". Not everyone wants to make that roll of the dice.

    • @tomlxyz
      @tomlxyz Před měsícem +1

      ​@@SnakebitSTIyeah. I have glasses, I'm pretty used to them so they're a non issue for the most part. No need for a risky procedure

  • @Yarck-Yurki
    @Yarck-Yurki Před 10 měsíci +96

    Reminds me of people saying "there is no good music released anymore", people that didn't take any effort to do research of what is actually released (and not just the charts...)

    • @SnakebitSTI
      @SnakebitSTI Před 6 měsíci +12

      Happens with all sorts of media. "It's so easy to find collections of the greatest X from the past few decades, but when I consume a random new X, it sucks! X is bad now!"
      Combine that with nostalgia, and the fact that the more media you consume, the more media literate you are likely to become, the more likely you are to spot flaws you would not have noticed previously...

    • @shimrrashai-rc8fq
      @shimrrashai-rc8fq Před 5 měsíci

      Good music continues to be released, but maybe the quality of _pop_ music declines?

    • @Yarck-Yurki
      @Yarck-Yurki Před 5 měsíci +4

      ​@@shimrrashai-rc8fq ​ Not at all true...maybe in the charts, but that's never been a true reflection of things.
      For pop music I think these are all outstanding and refreshing right now: Caroline Polacheck, Billie Eilish, Beyonce, FKA Twigs, Porter Robinson, Grimes, Frank Ocean, SOPHIE, underscores, Charli XCX (hyperpop fase), ...

    • @MooRhy
      @MooRhy Před 3 měsíci +4

      Also that's survior bias. There was certainly as much trash music back then as is now but it has long been forgotten and only the good stuff remains.

    • @EJD339
      @EJD339 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Those people drive me crazy. My coworker was complaining “remember 10 years ago when no one cared you were gay”? I just started bursting out laughing because that was not a true statement but it’s funny how we tend to think about the past

  • @frasercain
    @frasercain Před 11 měsíci +120

    Like you, I have to wade through hundreds of eye-rolling comments about how physics is broken, scientists can't think out of the box, etc. But every single interaction I have with scientists confirms their creativity and open-mindedness to me. There's an idealogical wish to return to simplicity, I think, and it definitely tracks with the apocalypse influence. "When everyone's gone, I'll finally be respected for my brilliant ideas."

    • @michaelblacktree
      @michaelblacktree Před 11 měsíci +12

      It's cool to see Fraser in the comments. Yeah, I marvel at the sheer volume of mind-numbing comments. It's a weird juxtaposition to the science video they're commenting about.

    • @hans-joachimbierwirth4727
      @hans-joachimbierwirth4727 Před 11 měsíci +8

      Lasers are fantastic at poking holes in people who deny progress in science!

    • @culwin
      @culwin Před 11 měsíci +2

      It's almost like some of these comments contain specific talking points that are orchestrated with a motive.

    • @michaelblacktree
      @michaelblacktree Před 11 měsíci +3

      Hanlon's Razor: Never attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by stupidity.

    • @therealpbristow
      @therealpbristow Před 5 měsíci

      @@hans-joachimbierwirth4727 I think there's a law against that. =:oD

  • @UFL3
    @UFL3 Před 11 měsíci +466

    Hard to overstate how much I love this channel

    • @theryanglepodcast2482
      @theryanglepodcast2482 Před 11 měsíci +13

      One of the few channels where I watch every single video immediately and completely

    • @tdbla98
      @tdbla98 Před 11 měsíci +8

      ​@@theryanglepodcast2482right?! I immediately got excited to see she posted this morning when I woke up. There hasn't been a video I didn't like and watch all the way through.

    • @HarryNicNicholas
      @HarryNicNicholas Před 11 měsíci

      @@theryanglepodcast2482 i think her glasses should be bigger.

    • @danthephamily
      @danthephamily Před 11 měsíci +1

      ​@HarryNicholas, oh, like Spaceballs? Every episode they get bigger and bigger? I'm all for it.

    • @411bvRGiskard
      @411bvRGiskard Před 11 měsíci +7

      @@theryanglepodcast2482 Agree. Trying to put my finger on why. Think it’s her easy, bff-like storytelling style & delivery that sets your expectations at chill Valley-Girl levels but then it’s the low-key dry & ridiculously sharp sarcasm that hooks the listener in and reveals the depth of intelligence & perspective we rarely get from other videos in this genre. And it’s so refreshing.

  • @Heater-v1.0.0
    @Heater-v1.0.0 Před 10 měsíci +61

    One of my favourite bits of progress in physics is the humble LED. I saw my first red LED while in high school in about 1970. It was small and dim but wow, that's a diode that emits light! I have had a thing about LEDs ever since. Now the whole world is lit up by LED's, from phone screens to street lamps. Kind of a huge impact on regular peoples lives, even if most of them don't even notice it.

    • @audunskilbrei8279
      @audunskilbrei8279 Před 3 měsíci

      I know this is late and you are likely very well aware of it. But if not you should look up how the blue LED was made and why it came 30 years later than red and green LEDs. Fascinating stuff.
      czcams.com/video/AF8d72mA41M/video.html

    • @Merilix2
      @Merilix2 Před 2 měsíci +2

      especially the blue one changed the world ;)

    • @mikeg9b
      @mikeg9b Před 2 měsíci +2

      Veritasium did a video on the blue LED: czcams.com/video/AF8d72mA41M/video.htmlsi=RL9nwH5bbCjVJbQG

    • @Merilix2
      @Merilix2 Před 2 měsíci +5

      @@mikeg9b Sorry, I don't like that channel because there are too many half right, half wrong things mixed together to force people to click.

    • @reaganharder1480
      @reaganharder1480 Před měsícem +1

      I'm quite a bit younger than you, but I remember, as a child, reading books that were like "right now, LEDs aren't good for lighting homes because we need red, green, and blue to make white, and right now blue LEDs are very hard to make, but once they figure out how to make blue LEDs cheaply, they'll be lighting all our homes", and while that exact explanation of how white LEDs work is rather false, LEDs being the emergent technology about to take over the lighting space was 100% correct.

  • @poposterous236
    @poposterous236 Před 11 měsíci +238

    One of those posts started with "I was listening to Joe Rogan"
    goddammit

    • @analogicparadox
      @analogicparadox Před 11 měsíci +47

      What an absolute and unexpected coincidence!

    • @Skillprofi
      @Skillprofi Před 11 měsíci

      His talks with Brian Cox and Neil DeGrasse Tyson were pretty nice though

    • @DavidLindes
      @DavidLindes Před 11 měsíci +31

      @@Skillprofiwere they, though? 😉

    • @michaelblacktree
      @michaelblacktree Před 11 měsíci +39

      When someone tells me they're a Rogan fan, I immediately eye them suspiciously. Because their declaration of Rogan fandom is usually followed by a load of pure bullshit.

    • @shivanshu6204
      @shivanshu6204 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@Skillprofino, they were not. Neil Tyson is a fucking grifter and you content consooming goblins are the reason everyone will eventually hate capitalism. Imagine thinking watching a fighter and comedian talk to some midwits to entertain the lowest common denominator will give you any knowledge whatsoever.
      Einstien or Feynman or Dirac wouldn't have talked to Joe fucking Rogan.

  • @kingmobisinvisible
    @kingmobisinvisible Před 11 měsíci +138

    The headaches thing is real. I get episodic cluster headaches. When I was first seeing a neurologist, they were like its probably cluster headaches, but there's a small chance it could be something really bad so just go get an MRI so we can look at your brain and make sure. After a quick routine visit to the MRI, I can rest easy knowing there's nothing sinister going on inside my head. Before this, I guess I would have had to live with the headaches and the fear that it was a tumor just waiting to kill me. Thanks physics!

    • @tedwalford7615
      @tedwalford7615 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Exact same. I'm so grateful.

    • @killerbee.13
      @killerbee.13 Před 11 měsíci +4

      They did a CT scan when I first started getting chronic migraines but later on did an MRI. I think they did CT first because the CT machine was closer to me and easier to get to than the MRI machine at a different facility out of town, and I hadn't had any x-rays before. Anyway my brain looks normal, no tumors, luckily. Still haven't managed to get the migraines sorted though.

    • @SABlister
      @SABlister Před 11 měsíci +3

      ... itsnotatumor!

  • @alandoak5146
    @alandoak5146 Před 11 měsíci +25

    Clocks!!! My EE career recently circled back to atomic clock design (I interned at NIST 25 years ago), and I'm blown away by the performance of modern lasers and laser combs. The bleeding edge of clocks are sensitive to a 1cm height difference due to gravitational redshifting. Our group is recreating the performance of the NIST-7 ensemble, which filled multiple labs and took a lot of maintenance, in a 3U rackmount box! So much of physics and engineering is deeply rooted in time.
    Oh, one quibble about voltage measurements... at NIST I designed a 76.76GHz synthesizer for the Josephson Voltage Standard. The output voltage is proportional to the input frequency (multiplied by exactly defined fundamental constants). The more accurate our clocks, the more accurate our voltage reference. Sure, there's a bunch of voltage/time conversion techniques, but they're nowhere near the 14-19 zero's of our clocks.

    • @KipIngram
      @KipIngram Před 10 měsíci

      The problem with clocks, though (impressive as the new advances are) is that they reached "good enough" a long time ago. Do you really need a clock accurate to one second in the life of the universe? Don't get me wrong - I'm not contending that quartz watches are "good enough." They're good enough for your routine life, but scientists certainly need better. But even in science there comes a point where it's hard to imagine actually more accuracy, and I think we hit that point some time ago.
      The history of clock development is a story, though.

    • @alandoak5146
      @alandoak5146 Před 10 měsíci +7

      @@KipIngram Not true, there's always a need for better clocks, otherwise people wouldn't be paying to develop them: communication systems, navigation, astronomy, holdover in GPS denial attacks, physics research, stabilized lasers, having better clocks to test your clocks against, combining short and long term performance, high performance ADC's/DAC's, making them smaller, simpler, and less sensitive to environmental conditions...

  • @IslandHermit
    @IslandHermit Před 11 měsíci +275

    I think the focus in the popular press on string theory over the past 20 years has led to this believe that nothing new has happened in theoretical physics for decades. There's been lots of theoretical work that simply got drowned out by string theory.

    • @joed180
      @joed180 Před 11 měsíci +31

      Thought the same thing, and by me thinking I mean, she did a video covering that issue awhile ago and I am remembering it.

    • @Karlswebb
      @Karlswebb Před 11 měsíci

      @@joed180This is why you need to admit that you’re not an expert on 99.99% of topics. It takes a lot of humility to admit you don’t know. But the fact is 99.99% of topics we’re ignorant about and shouldn’t form strong opinions on.
      MRI’s exist. They wouldn’t without physics funding. Same for field effect transistors which are allowing us to extend moores law another 10-20 years. We can get down to 1 nm transistors now, whereas before we could only get to 5nm before tunnelling made the transistors unusable.
      Despite the lack of progress on a FUNDAMENTAL (ultraviolet complete, as in it works as you go to infinite energy scales) theory of everything, immense progress has been made in practical effective theories that allow for new superconductors, smaller transistors, etc. Take for example material sciences; effective field theories allow for new materials to be predicted/made such as the superconductors used at the upgraded LHC.

    • @ModuliOfRiemannSurfaces
      @ModuliOfRiemannSurfaces Před 11 měsíci +3

      And there has been incredible string-related progress too that helps us understand field theories generally.

    • @joed180
      @joed180 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@ModuliOfRiemannSurfaces I mean….

    • @Yutani_Crayven
      @Yutani_Crayven Před 11 měsíci +3

      Ask yourself why that is. When the "failure" that is String Theory is the biggest thing when it comes to the impact of physics in public perception then just how little impact does other physics research have?

  • @jtw-r
    @jtw-r Před 11 měsíci +398

    I have a theory that; most people do not realise how enormous the domain of Physics is. They think it’s just gravity or something similar - the point is, simple and reductive concepts. Physics is actually a massive field that you only truly learn about if you’ve proceeded further down the educational chain. Glad this video shows some of the amazing achievements!

    • @benjaminpointdexter7280
      @benjaminpointdexter7280 Před 11 měsíci

      They won’t understand they are all stupid

    • @blackrook8698
      @blackrook8698 Před 11 měsíci +6

      ​@@matsv201you do understand that interdisciplinary studies exist, right?

    • @blackrook8698
      @blackrook8698 Před 11 měsíci

      The implementation was as a result of the discovery that protons react a certain way when put in a magnetic field. It wasn't medical experts that discovered that

    • @wesleydeng71
      @wesleydeng71 Před 11 měsíci +7

      ​@@matsv201 Agreed. Almost all of her talking points are applications of physics, i.e. technologies derived from physics principles discovered many years before. Apparently, there is very little in the fundamental physics for her to talk about.

    • @neildutoit5177
      @neildutoit5177 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@matsv201 I agree as well. Physics to me right now looks like that staff member in the office who is always "busy" but somehow their product is never ready to ship. Physics is first and foremost about figuring out what the universe is and how it works. Not building medical equipment. Sure they may have a hand in it and interdisciplinary studies are a thing. But like, seriously, what progress has been made in answering the fundamental questions of reality in the last 70 years? Very little. All the rest is just "being busy".

  • @jaykebird2go
    @jaykebird2go Před 10 měsíci +25

    For me, personally, coming into this video, I think I had the perception that physics was more just about theories or general, intangible topics - like gravity or the interaction of forces and matter and such. Any practical applications of physics, such as lasers or superconductors, could be easily lumped into some different category; "physics" isn't a thing you can buy in a store. Obviously you touched on that a bit towards the final third of the video, and I think that mindset is one that you could indeed poke those sorts of holes into. But I wonder how many people have that similar mindset of me where you just kind of re-categorized any new discovery or application as "not physics".

    • @jorymil
      @jorymil Před 4 měsíci

      Have you ever taken a physics class? If not, maybe that's part of the issue. If you have, then we need to teach it differently.

  • @Dihydrousoxide
    @Dihydrousoxide Před 11 měsíci +251

    Timestamps / Chapters
    Top Ten Things
    1:27 Computer Simulations
    4:43 MRIs
    6:11 Space Exploration
    7:14 Black Holes and Gravitational Waves
    8:48 Bose-Einstein Condensates
    10:46 Higgs Mechanism
    12:10 Optical Fibers / Integrated Circuits / The Internet
    14:01 Superconductors
    17:17 LASERs
    19:31 Atomic Clocks
    22:17 Outro of List
    Second List
    22:38 Is it really Physics?
    23:27 Physics is progressing very fast
    24:34 "But there's no theory of everything!"
    27:36 Grifters
    31:08 Thought Journey

    • @tomfii
      @tomfii Před 11 měsíci +2

      Thank you!

    • @aceman0000099
      @aceman0000099 Před 11 měsíci +17

      When she mentions Bose-Einstein condensates, she at first talks about gases. I want to make it clear that B-E Condensate is not a gas. Nor is it a liquid or a solid or a plasma. It's the fifth fucking state of matter!! Sounds a bit more mind blowing when you find that out.

    • @brendanmay9585
      @brendanmay9585 Před 11 měsíci +3

      This needs to be pinned. Great work. Thank you!😘

    • @capbarker
      @capbarker Před 11 měsíci +2

      I'm glad this is already solidly one of the first of top comments 👍 hopefully it gets pinned too!

    • @sploofmcsterra4786
      @sploofmcsterra4786 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@aceman0000099 thank you, as a physicist I feed off small moments of validation for my own minuscule errors

  • @AndrewBakke
    @AndrewBakke Před 11 měsíci +127

    From an electrical engineer, I think physics totally deserves credit for the breakthroughs that make applications possible. Don't sell yourself short.

    • @AdrianBoyko
      @AdrianBoyko Před 11 měsíci +3

      How many of those theoretical breakthroughs were made since 1973?

    • @Brendakye2468
      @Brendakye2468 Před 11 měsíci +20

      ​@@AdrianBoykoa lot...
      A lot are made through a bunch of smaller breakthrough (not paradigm shifting ones) that all compound together that brings us to an end result.

    • @Mastikator
      @Mastikator Před 11 měsíci

      @@AdrianBoyko Since 1973 in no particular order (non exhaustive list)
      Quantum computers.
      Pulsed lasers.
      High temperature superconductivity.
      Top quark.
      The acceleration of the expansion of the universe AKA dark energy.
      Neutrino oscillation.
      Quark gluon plasma discovered.
      Graphene.
      Higgs's boson found, confirming Higg's field.
      Gravitational waves observed.
      First ever image of black hole.

    • @dylansalus9159
      @dylansalus9159 Před 11 měsíci +5

      Yeah, we study "device physics" for a reason. Somebody had to come up with that.

    • @theantipope4354
      @theantipope4354 Před 11 měsíci +15

      From another EE, same. It's just wild how many how much heavy duty physics has changed electronics every year for the last 30+ years.

  • @Officialencode
    @Officialencode Před 11 měsíci +5

    I think they said it in Futurama; "when you do something right, people won't think you did anything at all"

  • @mybuddyphil8719
    @mybuddyphil8719 Před 11 měsíci +136

    My favorite in the last 70ish years is the PET scan. PET stands for Positron Emission Tomography. Positron... the anti electron. WE'VE BEEN USING ANTIMATTER TO LOOK INSIDE OF PEOPLE!

    • @DavidLindes
      @DavidLindes Před 11 měsíci +25

      How have I missed the antimatter implication of that… fucking cool! Thank you for pointing it out to me. :)

    • @ethorii
      @ethorii Před 11 měsíci +19

      I like that the banana i ate this morning emits positrons. My insides are so sci-fi atm

    • @gerontion1011
      @gerontion1011 Před 11 měsíci +8

      Discovery of positrons is one of the greatest feats in physics (Dirac predicted using pure mathematics of spinors and then a year later experimentally verified - a lesson for the string theory preachers!). But that in itself is not 70 years old.

    • @aloe7794
      @aloe7794 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Not only that, but the use of radioactive elements as radiation emitters for the purposes of various tumor treatments - things like usage of cobalt-60 in "gamma knives", actually visible actinum isotopes as an actual gamma ray source, or utilizing isotopes of lighter-by-contrast-to-usual-radioactive-elements like iodine, caesium, technetium to emit beta and/or alpha particles as well, to allow them for medical uses
      It's something I absolutely adore, because it's not only a breakthrough in physics, but also biology and chemistry as well, showing how connected sometimes they may be despite the differences - and also proves the point that science is actively making breakthroughs

  • @BigDaddyWes
    @BigDaddyWes Před 11 měsíci +135

    This channel is one of my favorite physics discoveries I've made in the past 70 years. 😎

    • @aloe7794
      @aloe7794 Před 11 měsíci +6

      you win this comment section for me LOL
      and same

  • @atimholt
    @atimholt Před 4 měsíci +9

    I kind of want a video that goes through cool physics stuff year by year over 70 years.

    • @OceanusHelios
      @OceanusHelios Před 2 měsíci

      That video would be 70 years long. You got time for that?

  • @Smidge204
    @Smidge204 Před 11 měsíci +108

    I know it's really hard to narrow it down to just ten things, but IMHO light emitting diodes should have been on there. The first LED was made in 1961, and the first blue LED wasn't until 1972. Maybe not as flashy as photographing a black hole but I feel LEDs are definitely something they'll have daily practical experience with, and has been undeniably impactful.
    Also do not look at the laser with your remaining eye.

    • @dstinnettmusic
      @dstinnettmusic Před 11 měsíci +12

      I’m old enough to remember when a white LED was considered either impossible or very far off in the future. And this was in tech magazines I was reading in like 2002. I remember them saying something like “LEDs are really cool because of energy efficiency, but we can’t make a white light with them, so they will probably be confined for uses like stop lights for the next 25-50 years, and by then we will probably have better technology for making light.”

    • @gbormann71
      @gbormann71 Před 11 měsíci +16

      The impact of the LED on power use alone mandates a landmark-sized monument.

    • @KarlFredrik
      @KarlFredrik Před 11 měsíci +1

      It's really cool how we'll phosphors work in white LEDs.

    • @DrPumpkinz
      @DrPumpkinz Před 11 měsíci

      Remaining eye?

    • @j.f.christ8421
      @j.f.christ8421 Před 11 měsíci

      LEDs are about 100 years old, some Russian dude wrote about noticing his diodes were glowing a teeny weeny bit.

  • @WeAreMachineMedia
    @WeAreMachineMedia Před 11 měsíci +578

    "We have MRIs because we have a super-conducting material, that's so cool!" - Well thanks to modern physics it doesn't have to be SO cool 😅

    • @L3X1N
      @L3X1N Před 11 měsíci +27

      Ayyyy! That pun had been bouncing around in my mind the *moment* the video got to the topic of superconductors. Very good execution on your part!

    • @tricky2917
      @tricky2917 Před 11 měsíci +5

      I see what you did there. 😂

    • @Czeckie
      @Czeckie Před 11 měsíci +7

      sorry but where are high temperature superconductors used? Pretty much nowhere because they are all bad. The MRI machines use liquid helium even though liquid nitrogen would be cheaper. Why? Because liquid nitrogen temperature superconductors suck. They are weird ceramics incapable of forming wires and transferring huge currents.

    • @burrybondz225
      @burrybondz225 Před 11 měsíci +3

      No it would still be super cool for the foreseeable future.

    • @exponentmantissa5598
      @exponentmantissa5598 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Actually that was engineers applying physics.

  • @stevenspencer306
    @stevenspencer306 Před 6 měsíci +32

    As an engineer, I do think many of these were engineering feats, the physics used in the devices were understood. Many of the other ones were experimental physics breakthroughs, which have reinforced hypotheses or made the crisis in cosmology worse. The Higgs theorization in 64, and improvements in understanding superconductors were good one for theoretical physics in the last 70 years. To be clear I do think physicists do a lot, but I'm more hesitant about this particular list.

    • @M4TCH3SM4L0N3
      @M4TCH3SM4L0N3 Před 4 měsíci +8

      I mean, engineering is just about the practical application of theoretical sciences, which happens to advance those theoretical sciences when it discovers what physical applications work in what circumstances. Nevertheless, top-tier engineers developing new systems and technology work hand-in-hand with physicists throughout all stages of development to anticipate potential contingencies and to verify the proper application of theory.

    • @hank1519
      @hank1519 Před 4 měsíci

      Good point!

    • @camipco
      @camipco Před 4 měsíci +6

      The separation between the two seems a bit silly to me. Like how do you get to the moon? Well, you're going to need a bunch of physicist and engineers working together. One or the other just isn't going to get anything new done. I happen to know some NASA Engineers irl, and they are all super into physics. There are plenty of engineers who don't care about what's happening in physics and just apply long-established stuff without thinking about it in a deep way, but those engineers don't work at NASA.

    • @fuzzylogickben
      @fuzzylogickben Před 3 měsíci +1

      The early devices of this nature are often built by teams led by physicists. The early ones that the get out into the wild are probably engineer led with physicists on the team. It's only once they reach maturity that everyone starts making them.

  • @ashton7981
    @ashton7981 Před 11 měsíci +137

    Regarding the headache thing: before MRI there was a way of checking the brain without just cutting it open and looking. They would replace all the cerebrospinal fluid in the brain with air, do an x-ray, and then put the fluid back. It was called pneumoencephalography and obviously it was not a fun time

    • @fzigunov
      @fzigunov Před 8 měsíci +3

      holy shit! why would anyone put themselves through that?

    • @martinx.floresrodriguez4507
      @martinx.floresrodriguez4507 Před 8 měsíci +63

      @@fzigunovto do an xray of the brain perhaps, i dont think it was a hobbie

    • @michaeldeierhoi4096
      @michaeldeierhoi4096 Před 8 měsíci +7

      That procedure of replacing cerebralspinal fluid with air is still an invasive procedure compared to the MRI.

    • @nickcarroll8565
      @nickcarroll8565 Před 6 měsíci +6

      That is truly awful. A small leak causes bad headaches. I hope they were sedated.

    • @madmaxfzz
      @madmaxfzz Před 4 měsíci +3

      certainly someone couldn't survive very long wih air where their cerebrospinal fluid used to be.... crap!!!

  • @daskanguru3515
    @daskanguru3515 Před 11 měsíci +325

    It's so funny to me that the "There's been no real changes/discoveries in physics since XXXX" arguments have themselves been pretty much the same for the last decade or so

    • @benfruehling
      @benfruehling Před 11 měsíci +14

      On the contrary, I think they can be tracked to which most recent historic nuclear bomb movie came out.

    • @timcooijmans3840
      @timcooijmans3840 Před 11 měsíci +20

      That's consistent with there having been no real changes/discoveries in physics since XXXX

    • @armorclasshero2103
      @armorclasshero2103 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@timcooijmans3840LIGO.

    • @Smo1k
      @Smo1k Před 11 měsíci +10

      These proclamations have been around since ancient times. Some people simply take discoveries for granted, and think they've been around forever, if they weren't around when the discoveries were made. How many people were on the internet before 1993? People seem to think it was either always about, or that it happened by itself. The same thing applies to just about anything: During WW1 radio wasn't a reliable technology, and 25 years later, in WW2, people were dumbfounded that it could be jammed...
      "How can you not have invented an unjammable radio system yet?!"
      🙄

    • @gingerestkitten
      @gingerestkitten Před 11 měsíci +3

      s/last decade/last 490 years

  • @craigwall9536
    @craigwall9536 Před 8 měsíci +6

    It bears repeating: LEARN THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PHYSICS AND *ENGINEERING*!!!!

  • @alebarca
    @alebarca Před 11 měsíci +82

    I just want to compliment your content, I'm not a scientist myself but I cherish most of the science communication channels, your stories are Very unique, and you do manage to make the topics digestible. (Also you make some of us weirdos laugh with the simplest things).

  • @Fiasko-
    @Fiasko- Před 11 měsíci +209

    Someone leaving a comment on a CZcams video with a smartphone or a computer about how physics hasn't done anything lately feels like someone saying: "What the hell have hydrogen and oxygen done for me when I have all this water and air?"

    • @clevelandsavage
      @clevelandsavage Před 11 měsíci +15

      Smartphones and computers were designed by ENGINEERS using science overwhelmingly developed before 1973. Sure there's been more data and discovery since then...but you'll be hard pressed to find interpretations as solid as relativity, QM or thermodynamics presented in the same time.

    • @NATIK001
      @NATIK001 Před 11 měsíci +36

      @@clevelandsavage Lack of revolution does not equate lack of evolution.
      It's a huge mistake to assume that because we knew the basic theory we know all about it under all circumstances and no further work needs to be done to understand its ramifications and interactions with other existing and emerging theories and understandings. We are still testing and fine tuning the edges of classical mechanics even if the vast majority of it has been understood for decades and centuries.
      It's also a huge mistake to think that engineers don't look at developments in theoretical and experimental physics for inspiration on where to take their own work, as well as declaring engineering to not ever be science/physics itself as well. The work of engineers help physicists understand reality.
      You are missing the forest for the trees by focusing on the broad underlying theories and not recent developments built on those foundations.

    • @chaotickreg7024
      @chaotickreg7024 Před 11 měsíci +6

      @@honkhonk8009 I mean.. Quantum computers?!

    • @chaotickreg7024
      @chaotickreg7024 Před 11 měsíci +5

      @@honkhonk8009 For personal use, yeah, but just like atomic fission, I think it's still important work to be done even if it doesn't have tangible results in our lifetimes.
      Did I mean fusion?

    • @clevelandsavage
      @clevelandsavage Před 11 měsíci +4

      @NATIK001 How the theory works under different circumstances is application, NOT a change in theory itself. Just like a new mechanical invention won't be considered a change in Newtons laws.
      Of course we do and many times physicists work AS engineers and help. But formally, physicists discover the rules and engineers apply them. It's a huge mistake to conflate the two professions though. They're two different fields for a reason.
      Physicists focus on the forest and we focus on the trees. If we applied something like falsifiablility to design we'd probably get our feelings hurt--Just as scientists would if they used a 'psudoscientific' engineer assumption made for a specific case instead for a broader theory. So while blurred, the line is there.

  • @danieldanieldadada
    @danieldanieldadada Před 11 měsíci +5

    Those are mostly engineering milestones. Where's our Galileo, Newton, Einstein? Hawking is not one of those.

    • @yommish
      @yommish Před 5 měsíci

      did you watch the whole video?

    • @hypothalapotamus5293
      @hypothalapotamus5293 Před 11 dny +1

      People have an irrational desire to assign the work of an entire generation to the work of one man.

  • @BenWard29
    @BenWard29 Před 11 měsíci +666

    People who think physics hasn’t done anything in 70 years has the “where are my flying cars” or “why doesn’t the future look like the future” energy. That last one was said by Elon Musk’s son and Elon was “blown away” by it. Jeez.

    • @PaulMDavidson
      @PaulMDavidson Před 11 měsíci

      Elon Musk is a dumb person's idea of a smart person.

    • @zombieregime
      @zombieregime Před 11 měsíci

      My number 1 answer to "where is my flying car?!" is "THE AIRPORT!!! Checkout the ones made by Cessna. You people cant even figure out how a stop sign works, and can barely handle 2 dimensions, why in the world would we allow everyone to have 3 dimensions to pretend like they're the single most important person in existence in?!?!"
      And honestly, the brighter greener future just around the corner was a lie. It was a marketing gimmick to keep us distracted and complacent in the actual; A) absolutely doomed state of the atmospheric gasses, and B) devastatingly detrimental spills and releases but its okay, I recycled my plastic bottles and started driving an ugly car that can burst into a self feeding hell fire at any moment!
      Im still patiently waiting for people to stop listening to corporations and entities with vested interests, cackling along to the lunacy as we slip a little closer to hell every day......

    • @spudsbuchlaw
      @spudsbuchlaw Před 11 měsíci +65

      I hate the 'future looking like the future' thing because The Future means science fiction and like...marketing posters? One exists to make money, the other exists to tell fun ~~fantasy~~ science-adjacent stories for fun and amusement rather than actual accurate predictions and to make money
      These are awful things to base impressions of reality off of (and kinda why I lowkey dislike mythic science fiction) and unfortunately poison the human well of imagination.
      If we want people to have accurate impressions of the future, we'll unfortunately need less fantastical/cinematically appealing visions of the future to be made, which requires a truly bold vision and creator to look upon the luster of fantasy and say "no" and still be popular

    • @peterkerj7357
      @peterkerj7357 Před 11 měsíci +12

      @@spudsbuchlaw Why do movies if accuracy trumps fantasy? Why not just read papers?

    • @mccperin
      @mccperin Před 11 měsíci +56

      @@spudsbuchlaw the problem isn't that fantasy exists, the problem is that people have no reading comprehension and take things at face value

  • @markhollingsworth3262
    @markhollingsworth3262 Před 11 měsíci +141

    Brava! I am not a scientist, I read (and watch) a lot of popular science. I am 75. Ten years ago, I visited my mom and she showed me a general science textbook from my childhood. I was laughing at it! This post should be mandatory for everyone

    • @LillianRyanUhl
      @LillianRyanUhl Před 11 měsíci +7

      Wow, as "a youngin'", I would love to know anything in particular that stuck out to you as you were looking through it again!

    • @giuseppeagresta1425
      @giuseppeagresta1425 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@LillianRyanUhlsame

    • @jeremywvarietyofviewpoints3104
      @jeremywvarietyofviewpoints3104 Před 11 měsíci

      Yes, he should tell more.@@LillianRyanUhl

    • @RWZiggy
      @RWZiggy Před 11 měsíci +5

      Embarrassed to say that even in my mid 1980s EM physics classes fractal antennae were unknown, though the equiangular antenna that is in my book was years later realized to be the first fractal one.
      Negative refractive index in mid 1980s? HAH, that's nonsensical! Except....real materials with negative refractive index constructed around the year 2000.
      The universe in my textbooks was expanding at a constant rate... oops in 1990s the rate was found to be accelerating! Major shock to astrophysics!
      Gravity waves? Far too weak to detect, a theoretical curiosity forever, am I right? HAH, done deal, gravitational wave astronomy now 8 years old!
      Maybe a black hole at center of our galaxy? Confirmed, the orbits of stars around it prove it's there. Accretion disk photographed last year!
      The Milky Way was 120,000 light years in diameter in my books.... but wait, Gaia mission now says it's 200,000 !
      A laser that operates at X-Ray frequencies? Impossible, no "mirror" could reflect at the ends of a cavity to make x-rays hit excited atoms and cause them to emit another x-ray with same phase and direction, as happens in an optical laser....except, in 2009 the first x-ray laser was operated, it used bunches of electrons not a mirrors of matter!
      .

    • @markhollingsworth3262
      @markhollingsworth3262 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@LillianRyanUhl The only one I remember is that the universe is 5 billion years old. Just a little off. People still thought that Mars had canals and Venus was warm and swampy and might be populated by dinosaurs!

  • @giovannipischedda2837
    @giovannipischedda2837 Před 7 měsíci +2

    The core physics theory behind MRI was established by the 1940s, transforming this theory into the practical MRI technology was a technological achievement realized in the 1970s. Let's not confuse Theoretical physic progress with Technological progress.

  • @ShieldAre
    @ShieldAre Před 11 měsíci +75

    Just a small very practically important example before watching the video: Atomic layer deposition. Critical for making ever-smaller and more advanced transistors, necessary for modern computers, phones, and pretty much all electronics that require transistors. In fact, pretty much everything about the progress computers have made has required some very difficult materials physics to do.

    • @personzorz
      @personzorz Před 11 měsíci +4

      I think you can make an argument that foundational physics is in an awkward position where there's no large cracks with progress being made into it, not practical physics

    • @chrislawson3418
      @chrislawson3418 Před 11 měsíci +2

      It also makes sure my car engine goes Vrooom instead of Caboom because the cylinder liners use atomic deposition to be completely symmetric and consistent.

    • @SnakebitSTI
      @SnakebitSTI Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@personzorzThe cracks tend to get smaller over time and the advancements to fill them tend to get harder. Both mean that advancements seem less sensational.
      The empirical verification of gravitational waves is a good example. Empirical evidence for General Relativity came out within a decade or so of the theory. Direct gravitational wave detection took about a century. "Guys, guys, we confirmed a major prediction of General Relativity!" just doesn't seem exciting to a public who has heard that before.
      The cart winds up put before the horse: "General Relativity is correct, therefore it's just a matter of time before experiments verify its predictions" rather than "General Relativity is correct if we can experimentally verify its predictions."

    • @jorymil
      @jorymil Před 4 měsíci

      There's very cool foundational physics being done now with lasers. If you want to call anything remotely practical "non-foundational," fine, but I'd urge you to think otherwise. The astrophysical advances of Webb and Hubble have only been possible due to advances in semiconductors, which have only been possible due to advances in glass-making technology and lasers. It's like looking at two sides of the same coin. Both are still physics.

  • @timotenbrinke7068
    @timotenbrinke7068 Před 11 měsíci +33

    Why is there no progress in Physics *that I can fully understand* with a high school diploma is what they mean. Thanks for the awesome new video!

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Před 11 měsíci +7

      That does hint at a real problem, that science education is lagging behind science itself massively.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@agodelianshock9422 Yeah we need to give science education a serious boost if the general public is to ever catch up. That means both in funding and in how much of the curriculum it takes up, which I think is justified because understanding science is important to everyone now. Perhaps in the 20th century science was something you could just leave to the scientists and that was fine but science now plays directly into the public debate so it is vital that everyone can participate.
      Of course education getting more funding and better planned curriculum might as well be a pipedream in the current political climate in the west.

    • @SnakebitSTI
      @SnakebitSTI Před 6 měsíci +2

      "Why can't a relatively constant investment in basic science education keep up with exponential growth in scientific progress?"
      It's a mystery.
      Seriously though, a lot of undergrad physics is learning about century plus old physics alongside the applied mathematics necessary to understand much of the work done in the 20th century. If we start teaching middle schoolers linear algebra...

    • @jorymil
      @jorymil Před 4 měsíci +1

      What bugs me is when people don't take biology, chemistry, and physics in high school. How can you begin to understand the world if you don't know even the basics about how it works. I think people should even be quizzed about basic physics concepts on driving tests: 0.5mv^2 is crucial to fuel economy and accident safety. Maybe people would pollute less and be safer if they knew how the physics works....

    • @jorymil
      @jorymil Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@SnakebitSTI True: it's a steep hill to climb, and only so much can be taught before calculus. I wish I could have taken linear algebra in HS, though! I also wish I could force-feed a basic understanding of electricity into everyone, too....

  • @DWOBoyleMusic
    @DWOBoyleMusic Před 7 měsíci +5

    Getting an MRI was a quasi spiritual experience for me. It was wild and so cool. It and CT Scans are some of the coolest stuff out there. Getting excited about that stuff also made having cancer so much more bearable. The nurses that operate them were all very excited to explain how they work and what they do.

    • @captainzork6109
      @captainzork6109 Před 7 měsíci +1

      They must've had some funny stories of people entering the room with metal stuff, like vacuum cleaners and office chairs too :D

  • @suimeingwong2043
    @suimeingwong2043 Před 11 měsíci +86

    Willful ignorance is comfortable. Love the passion you have for your subject matter.

    • @michaelblacktree
      @michaelblacktree Před 11 měsíci +11

      It's comfortable, until it isn't. Then you have to fight, to maintain that ignorance. (i.e. you become a denier)

    • @idontwantahandlethough
      @idontwantahandlethough Před 11 měsíci +5

      @@michaelblacktree but even when you get to that point, it might be harder, but it's still easier than _the alternative:_ admitting to yourself that you're wrong and now have to learn unlearn and relearn a ton of stuff that you thought you knew. That can be a really painful realization, so some people just..... don't 😕.
      Obviously it would always be easier to go back in time and choose curiosity over ignorance, but given that we don't have a time machine, that's not a viable solution :)
      EDIT - in case i wasn't very clear, my point was that it's never _actually_ harder. I guess the [total, sum] "net difficulty" is higher (if that makes sense), but for individual moments/actions it's *always* easier to continue being ignorant than it is to educate yourself.

  • @thecookiejoe
    @thecookiejoe Před 11 měsíci +66

    why don't you guys just find another gravity or air or something? those sure were banger discoveries. I can't have an MRI or Higgs at home so it sure is less of a discovery.

    • @jacquesfaba55
      @jacquesfaba55 Před 11 měsíci +17

      Exactly, where’s my room temp superconductor?

    • @glarynth
      @glarynth Před 11 měsíci +15

      I miss my luminiferous ether.

    • @sidneynatzukajr6099
      @sidneynatzukajr6099 Před 11 měsíci

      I have a lot of Higgs inside me

    • @wkgmathguy218
      @wkgmathguy218 Před 11 měsíci +5

      Where's my stargate?

    • @s1l3ntw1
      @s1l3ntw1 Před 11 měsíci

      Those are a ways off.... but in the meantime, how do you feel about room temp semiconductors? :D@@jacquesfaba55

  • @allanjmcpherson
    @allanjmcpherson Před 10 měsíci +28

    A physics achievement that is pretty close to my heart because I did some work with it in a project I worked on is Chirped Pulse Amplification, which allowed for higher power lasers. It earned its developer, Canadian physicist Donna Strickland, a Nobel prize. As a Canadian, I think what's not to love? More powerful lasers, a Canadian physicist, and a woman in physics being properly recognized for the work she's done!

    • @DAVOinIN
      @DAVOinIN Před 10 měsíci +6

      Was going to mention this too. What a phenomenal breakthrough. I actually had dinner with Donna in January and she was an absolute sweetheart. So humble and open, just the perfect model of a physicist.

  • @Micetticat
    @Micetticat Před 11 měsíci +27

    I would totally listen to a decade by decade account of physics discoveries where in each episode you tell us about 10 discoveries!

  • @ronin123958
    @ronin123958 Před 11 měsíci +63

    Loved the joke "That was in 1953. In 1954...." - and I would have totally loved the video had you chosen to do it the other way! Thanks for the interesting and well-presented topic!

    • @2adamast
      @2adamast Před 5 měsíci

      But ... but computer simulations predate physics and 1953

    • @therealpbristow
      @therealpbristow Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@2adamast Huh? Physics has been going on for a couple of centuries, minimum, so "predate physics"...?
      And what computer simulations do you have in mind that happened before 1953?

    • @2adamast
      @2adamast Před 5 měsíci

      @@therealpbristow It's about her claim that modern physics were the first to do computer simulations in 1953. They have build thousands of artillery computers before and during the war doing old school physics.

    • @camipco
      @camipco Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@2adamast the claim is that 1953 was the first time computer simulations were used to model the solution to a physics problem that could not be done without computers.
      Artillery computers in the 1940s were doing a thing a person can do with pencil and paper, computers just do it quicker and more accurately (and afaik, gunners still learn to do it by hand in case the computers break). We didn't increase our understanding of projectile motion with pre-1953 artillery computers.
      But that said, all these discoveries are building on earlier discoveries, of course they are, that's how all knowledge works.

    • @2adamast
      @2adamast Před 4 měsíci

      @@camipco 1945, they had thermonuclear reactions on computer back then’ and that’s not the first

  • @gfxartist
    @gfxartist Před 5 měsíci +3

    “Holy shit. Lasers.” I’m going to say this out loud every time I’m checking out at the grocery store. If anyone acknowledges the statement in any way, I’ll follow up with “Collimated beam of light…heck yeah!”

  • @lalc__
    @lalc__ Před 11 měsíci +54

    Sorry, this isn't how I absorb information. Can you summarize this in an inflammatory reddit post title?

  • @tricky2917
    @tricky2917 Před 11 měsíci +164

    This is quite off-topic, but I finally saw your video on sexual harassment in STEM education and I had to express how much it troubled me. I haven't been able to stop thinking about it for almost a week now. I'm glad I ended up learning so much about this topic, but I'm also disappointed that I had to learn it from you and not the dozens of other professors and science communicators I have known over the years. Your video has been out for quite a while now, so I dearly hope it helped bring about some needed change. Thank you for putting it out there.

    • @Qwicksilver
      @Qwicksilver Před 11 měsíci +14

      I’ve watched almost all of Angela’s videos except for that one. I’m afraid it’ll just confirm what I presume happens in any male-dominated/patriarchal field. So, how bad is it?

    • @dreambuffer
      @dreambuffer Před 11 měsíci +15

      @@Qwicksilver It's about that bad, yeah. Still worth watching I think, if you can stomach it.

    • @duzzo1
      @duzzo1 Před 11 měsíci +6

      That one made me cry. Took a few days to get through it.

    • @Johntedesco33
      @Johntedesco33 Před 11 měsíci +8

      @@Qwicksilverit was one of the most insightful videos I’ve ever watched. Full stop. It’s something I’ve always known was a thing but it really really brought to light just how horrible the situation is.

    • @Bella_Rei
      @Bella_Rei Před 11 měsíci +6

      i kept putting it off too, and finally watched it last month, and also cannot stop randomly thinking about it. I'm surprised to see its happening to someone else, too. i actually had to go somewhere that day, and couldn't turn it off, and its literally the only non-song ive ever played in the car, lol.

  • @azi_and_razi
    @azi_and_razi Před 4 měsíci +3

    OK, but most of those achievements are practical applications (or experimental confirmation of already existing theories). I believe when people ask such questions they mean that there were no fundamentally new theories moving physics forward (in the same level of awesomeness as Special and General Relativity, Quantum Mechanics) ;) But they don't understand that such huge leaps in science usually do not occur that often. The usually occur after accumulating "critical mass" of knowledge. XX century was special in this respect I believe.

  • @trevorstewart1308
    @trevorstewart1308 Před 11 měsíci +22

    I can't imagine I'm quantum AI enough to survive the physicspocalyps. I'd probably end up stuck in a superposition. "go on and leave me. Observation would only slow you down"

  • @dysxleia
    @dysxleia Před 11 měsíci +174

    I don't think the argument that "physics does nothing" really has to do with physics. I think it's just a testament to the huge amount of science skepticism there has always been and is again on the rise. It's a "but mah tax dollar!!!" argument to me.

    • @flabreque
      @flabreque Před 11 měsíci

      It’s people who are still bitter that their tax dollars told them to wear masks and stand 6 feet away from the person in front of them in line at the grocery store.
      WHAT HAS SCIENCE DONE IN THE LAST 70 YEARS?
      NO, NO, NOT THAT!!!

    • @uNiels_Heart
      @uNiels_Heart Před 11 měsíci +6

      True, and it's probably not an easy obstacle to tackle, as a lot of factors might contribute to it like politics, human nature, structure of society, lack of mutual empathy and understanding, et cetera. So it's fortunate that modern content creators take up the subject and bring it home to the people in an approachable way.

    • @ictogon
      @ictogon Před 11 měsíci +1

      Science is built on skeptecism

    • @backfire8744
      @backfire8744 Před 11 měsíci

      accurate@@nikobitan7294

    • @keres993
      @keres993 Před 11 měsíci +13

      @dysxleia I wish it was that clear cut. Research funding at public universities has been remarkably inefficient for a while now. We can all make the observation that the bureaucratic overhead at these schools is outrageously high, and even needlessly so. It's one thing to allocate $10 billion for research funding, and a different issue when 90% of it is wasted on worthless administrators that are mostly interested in profiting from their quasi-professional sports teams. It makes securing adequate funding significantly more difficult for researchers, who end up just as pissed as the "but mah tax dollar!!!" crowd.

  • @soulsbourne
    @soulsbourne Před 11 měsíci +4

    They are talking about theoretical physics. Higgs boson was predicted in 60's , so was neutrinos , internet is not theorietical physics but application of 40 year old known physics, so is atomic clocks, though nuclear clocks are new but the prediction is decades old, black holes were predicted nearly 75+ years ago, graphene was not obtained through theoretical physics but by 2 random dudes using tape and pencil... Lol
    And CMB was not something new... I'd you recall, People with black and.white CRT TV's could see it

    • @monkemode8128
      @monkemode8128 Před 11 měsíci

      I'm working on my master's in comp sci and maybe a PhD. IDK if it's the same in physics, but it seems like a competition of who's the smartest. I don't think it's intentional it's just that people like to use so many weird words for basic things. I think the cases of professors and other academics being tricked by nonsense papers is a sign. Although I don't think that's new. The problems get harder and harder to solve, less people are able to solve them with the same level of education and intelligence, so people have to get more educated, and then they push the boundaries of what we think, and therefore there's more stuff to learn before innovations can come.

    • @wesphillips8058
      @wesphillips8058 Před 8 měsíci

      Graphene is theoretical physics

    • @stormtrooper9404
      @stormtrooper9404 Před 2 měsíci

      Correct!
      And the MRI is more of a collective feat from many disciplines and some “old” physics!

  • @MonocleTopHats
    @MonocleTopHats Před 11 měsíci +114

    This position has been espoused a lot by Sabine Hossenfelder, who was a pretty effective science communicator before she started slowly realizing that center/right pandering was a more profitable pathway forward

    • @DavidLindes
      @DavidLindes Před 11 měsíci +26

      I tensed up at the name, and then relaxed in the end. 😂

    • @Yajoy-kh3kc
      @Yajoy-kh3kc Před 11 měsíci +25

      But she narrows that take down to the subfield of particle physics, doesn't she?

    • @MonocleTopHats
      @MonocleTopHats Před 11 měsíci +5

      ​@@Yajoy-kh3kc oh shit you might be right, thanks for the correction!

    • @MonocleTopHats
      @MonocleTopHats Před 11 měsíci +24

      @@Yajoy-kh3kc wait no, she's written some articles about physics as a whole , look up "Why physics has made no progress in 50 years."

    • @Yajoy-kh3kc
      @Yajoy-kh3kc Před 11 měsíci +20

      @MonocleTopHats alright, I looked it up and read it and yeah, her stance seems to be more extensive and hyperbolic than I previously thought (even though the title of her piece includes " 'the foundations of' physics" to be precise). Plus it's quite reductive regarding the proposed causes, ascribing alleged inertia to cultivated arrogance and lack of interdisciplinary curiosity instead of a function of general socioeconomic imperatives in academia.

  • @PaulWrightHome
    @PaulWrightHome Před 11 měsíci +19

    I appreciate and learn from your analysis but what really makes it compelling viewing is your earnest and unfiltered energy. Keep up the good work.

  • @thecasualfront7432
    @thecasualfront7432 Před 4 měsíci +4

    It’s absolutely true that chemists and biologists are doing the heavy lifting for humanity whilst physicists drone on about black holes etc. sort out nuclear fusion and we’ll talk. Yours sincerely, a chemist.

    • @HunsterMonter
      @HunsterMonter Před 2 měsíci +1

      Have you never heard about lasers before? MRI? Superconductors? GPS? Fiber optics? Ever smaller transistors? That's all physics

    • @thecasualfront7432
      @thecasualfront7432 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@HunsterMonter I’d say the engineers did all that tbf

    • @chandelier6811
      @chandelier6811 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@thecasualfront7432all were invented by physicists engineers just applied it

    • @omnirath
      @omnirath Před 22 dny

      ⁠​⁠@@chandelier6811I think saying all of those inventions are all because of physics is like saying Einstein invented the nuke, no in both cases it was a multidisciplinary approach made by both physicists and engineers. Transistors for exemple were the result of works in physics and chemistry but the standardization of usable transistors, then silicium transistors over germanium ones is directly the result of engineers. For the "physics only drone about black holes" it’s more or less true, since 70 years we are refining the standard model and our experiments/observations of physical phenomenons. There have not been huge revolutions like those brought up by Einstein and his contemporaries because for now we have no reasons to throw all of their works away but that doesn’t mean nothing had happened since, far from that

  • @michaelomara
    @michaelomara Před 11 měsíci +9

    Hi, I've only watched your content for about a month or two now. You might be one of the most apt and engaging presenters on this platform. I am learning so much about the subject AND how to better connect with audiences. Really appreciate the effort.

  • @emmaoudekempers2
    @emmaoudekempers2 Před 11 měsíci +38

    Collaborating with physicists in neuroscience (from my AI background) blew my mind, every conversation just mutually kept adding puzzle pieces, and there is just something about physicists (esp. compared to computer scientists..); they always have this air of excited curiosity around them and it is so contagious

    • @bozydarziemniak1853
      @bozydarziemniak1853 Před 11 měsíci +1

      If you could ask just one question to person who knows all which question would it be?

    • @dubscheckum8246
      @dubscheckum8246 Před 11 měsíci +1

      physicists in neuroscience sounds like a scam

    • @bozydarziemniak1853
      @bozydarziemniak1853 Před 11 měsíci

      @@dubscheckum8246 Not exactly because brain is physical object. His role is similarly to a computer by this i mean it processing data from input and giving the result output as for example muscle contraction. Physicists are working mainly on small particles and they want to know generally the physics of our world and how it works. Brain is part of our world. Neuroscience investigating brain and neurons, which are physical objets of role simirar to transistors and wires in computer. The main difference is that the neuron transfering the electric impulse from sensors and changing it on the chemical information which brain can decript. The electric information is the electric impulse of some potential and guess what physicist are investigating electric impulses in some potential fields. Moreover each neurotransmitter also have its own electric potential so it can be also part of investigation by both considered branches of science. So here the plane of neuroscience and physics are connecting.

    • @user_2793
      @user_2793 Před 10 měsíci

      @@dubscheckum8246have you ever heard of the entire field of study called statistical mechanics?

    • @astralLichen
      @astralLichen Před 10 měsíci +10

      @dubscheckum8246 A lot of physics is the study of complex dynamicsl systems, so there's a lot of overlap with neuroscience. The electrical activity of the brain is inherently electrodynamics so i think it makes a lot of sense given the interdisciplinary nature of neuroscience

  • @valridagan
    @valridagan Před 10 měsíci +4

    my favorite thing that physics has done in the past 70 years (aside from the stuff you mentioned) is something very small, very weird, and without any practical known applications- but apparently phonons can be considered to have anti-gravitational force, which is just... so silly and so cool. I know it's mostly just a result of modelling phonons in certain ways, or something like that, but its still super cool in a kind of cute way.

  • @TypoKnig
    @TypoKnig Před 11 měsíci +12

    The Fractional Quantum Hall Effect - completely unexpected! The experimental proof of the Integer was a tour de force that won the Nobel Prize in ‘85, for work done in ‘80.

  • @perkinscurry8665
    @perkinscurry8665 Před 11 měsíci +30

    I imagine that the same people who complain that physics has made not progress since Einstein, Bohr, Schrodinger, et al. would have complained in 1899 that physics had made not progress since Newton.

    • @robertadsett5273
      @robertadsett5273 Před 11 měsíci +6

      There was a similar complaint that physics had stalled around 1900. And then they kept running into phenomena they couldn’t explain and explanations that made impossible predictions

    • @thstroyur
      @thstroyur Před 11 měsíci

      ... No.

    • @robertadsett5273
      @robertadsett5273 Před 11 měsíci +4

      “The more important fundamental laws and facts of physical science have all been discovered, and these are now so firmly established that the possibility of their ever being supplanted in consequence of new discoveries is exceedingly remote.” Albert Michelson 1899

    • @thstroyur
      @thstroyur Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@robertadsett5273 "We are very lucky to be living in an age in which we are still making discoveries. It is like the discovery of America-you only discover it once. The age in which we live is the age in which we are discovering the fundamental laws of nature, and that day will never come again. It is very exciting, it is marvelous, but this excitement will have to go." Richard Feynman, 1964

    • @robertadsett5273
      @robertadsett5273 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@thstroyur I’m agreed with Feynman but that’s little to do with the opinions of people at the turn of 20’th century, before he was born

  • @gstlynx
    @gstlynx Před 2 měsíci +1

    Thanks Doc. Modern life is so overwhelmingly awesome in myriad ways it is very possible to take it all for granted.

  • @pauforcadellcampos4452
    @pauforcadellcampos4452 Před 11 měsíci +5

    Yup a new acollierastro video makes this a good day. Btw congrats on the 100k. I've been loving all of your latest vids, and also would like an update on the scientific equipment collection!

  • @slolerner7349
    @slolerner7349 Před 11 měsíci +15

    I was about to comment that people are comparing our puny lives to the paradigm shattering early decades of the 20th century, but your rant is so much better than mine.

  • @christinamansen8636
    @christinamansen8636 Před měsícem

    As a bio and chem girl, its really nice to have this explained to me because applications of physics often go over my head and sometimes i need reminding that the only way for chem equipment to get better is for a physicist to do physics things I dont understand

  • @naco747
    @naco747 Před 11 měsíci +116

    Brilliant video, loved it. Just finished my PhD on theoretical condensed matter physics, so thank you for mentioning us 😊 In my opinion, you missed graphene (2004), which is a huge deal.

    • @byronwilliams7977
      @byronwilliams7977 Před 11 měsíci +14

      I worked with Graphene and Buckey Balls in a Lab at Iowa State University. It gets frustrating having folks outside of the sciences, who don't appreciate that the details matter, speaking so disparagingly of the "sciences". They don't see that their lives are being improved immensely in the background. Right now AI is in the spotlight however there is a ridiculous amount of scientific and technological advances that makes those visible advances possible. SMH

    • @TacticusPrime
      @TacticusPrime Před 11 měsíci +3

      I'm excited for graphene battery technology to see wider adoption.

    • @pyrosianheir
      @pyrosianheir Před 11 měsíci +4

      Oh man, I just remembered the talks about graphene a few years later (not in the "I'm a physicist," way but in the "I sometimes heard science stuff in the late 00s and early 10s that was interesting and vaguely scifi) where it was like... the stepping stone to Carbon Nanotubes or something and we were going to use it to start putting up space elevators and blah-blah-blah.Funny that that's where my brain went, considering the last video put out here.

    • @simontillson482
      @simontillson482 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@TacticusPrimeDon’t hold your breath. Graphene can help with conductivity, and possibly with surface area, but so far it has only added maybe 20% extra capacity or power handling (note: not both at the same time!) so don’t get too drunk on the graphene hype - claims that the graphene battery is gonna store 10x as much energy are physically impossible and always will be.

    • @simontillson482
      @simontillson482 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@zjg4gcvn Not really. For composite materials, it’s brilliant. A few percent mixed into the resin used to lay up glass fibre or woven carbon fibre, increases the stiffness and toughness remarkably, without adding any extra weight. Great for racing cars and aircraft. Shame it still costs far too much to make, although the new flash graphene production process is going to start reducing that cost fairly soon.

  • @BentArrowni
    @BentArrowni Před 11 měsíci +12

    Back in the university the theory of everything seemed so exciting, but the more I learned about science the more I've grown into the mindset that "maybe there is no theory" is such a fundamental important part on how we approach learning

    • @st3pwise
      @st3pwise Před 9 měsíci

      The unified theory of everything has already been found. But the military made sure to keep that to themselves...

    • @SnakebitSTI
      @SnakebitSTI Před 6 měsíci +4

      I think there's a bit of anthropocentrism behind the idea of a unified theory of everything. Namely, the idea that there must surely be some underlying explanation to the universe which _we_ find beautiful and elegant. That's not to say that such a theory can't exist, but I don't think we should be deliberately looking for one. It will emerge as we improve our collective patchwork understanding of the universe, or it won't.

  • @ToTheWolves
    @ToTheWolves Před měsícem +1

    MRI can def be used in treatment procedures during the actual treatments so you’re not wrong there.

  • @mutabazimichael8404
    @mutabazimichael8404 Před 11 měsíci +10

    watching this in the week where the attoseconds research was given the nobel prize and someone explained to me how much it expands our frontier of knowledge just makes me so delighted to watch this Video .
    as Always , excellent Video.

  • @PHHE1
    @PHHE1 Před 11 měsíci +6

    I think the feeling people mean is, that there are fewer completely new fundamental theories. But I'd say that is because we have these very successful fundamental theories and the last decades and technological progress have been used to confirm all their predictions. And as they largely worked out, there really wasn't a reason to develop a new standard model and stuff

  • @bobiboulon
    @bobiboulon Před 10 měsíci +4

    For sometime yt had recommended videos from you and I never took the time to watch any, I guess. Now, after seeing a couple of them in a row, I feel like bingewatching your channel.
    As the saying goes: Liked and subscribed.

  • @DanPFS
    @DanPFS Před 11 měsíci +17

    I mean condensed matter physics has come a long way, and admittedly it's not my area, but it was always interesting to me how much of the foundational work was done by such current day contemporary physicists as... Einstein, Pauli, Bloch, Fermi, Brillouin, etc. There haven't been any huge foundational paradigm shifts in physics for some time, but also, that's okay. Most of the low hanging fruit is gone, it's gonna take longer between those moments.

    • @lerualnaej5917
      @lerualnaej5917 Před 11 měsíci +11

      I think it's also worth pointing out that there isn't a political need to push contemporary physicists into mainstream recognition and household-name-dom as there was in the first half of the 20th century. We care about those guys because we already know their names. We know their names because their names were successfully communicated. That communication was more easily successful because there was more of an appetite for demonstrations of How Very Good America and its allies were at physics in the lead up to, during, and after WWII and into the early cold war.

    • @DanPFS
      @DanPFS Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@jshowao-rw1dh not paradigm shifts in the underlying physics in the way that most people mean them, though. For example, general relativity or quantum mechanics fundamentally changed the way we view the universe (even for the layperson) and opened entirely new fields of research. The advent of the laser had huge knock-on effects that changed the day-to-day lives of the general public, but required no new theoretical framework to describe, fitting comfortably into existing QM and optical physics.
      I'm not saying that the "physics has done nothing for 70 years" people are right, just that it's natural for there to be long periods between huge shifts in the landscape of the foundations of physics, even though we've seen huge progress in the applications of physics.

    • @DanPFS
      @DanPFS Před 11 měsíci

      @@jshowao-rw1dh my dude, I am a physicist. The discovery of the laser let us, for example, access the realm of nonlinear optics - which had already been predicted in the 1930s (earlier if we count the Kerr nonlinearity). Very exciting and interesting fields, that did not particularly require new theoretical frameworks, just the existing ones applied to new areas. Which again, is fine, is new and interesting, but not a paradigm shift on the theoretical side of things, or at least not on the scale of the birth of QM or GR. Even though NLO has had a bigger direct impact on the layperson than GR

    • @DanPFS
      @DanPFS Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@jshowao-rw1dh Neither special or general relativity are special cases of Newtonian mechanics, rather Newtonian mechanics is a subset of relativity, as it required a new theoretical framework (based around the consistency of c between frames and the equivalence principle etc.) to be described and to make predictions with. Particle physics, or at least the standard model, required the development of quantum field theory. My point has *only* been that it has been some time since we had to develop an entirely new theoretical framework to describe some new physics, which is not a value judgement, and if anything is the expected behaviour. Anything else are words you are trying to put into my mouth -- I never said that there has been *no new physics*, and in fact the example I gave you of nonlinear optics is even my own field, specifically nonlinear quantum optics. Plenty of progress is made all of the time, and it's mostly the kind of small incremental progress that is typical of 99% of science, which is what makes the big paradigm shifts so remarkable when they occur.
      I think perhaps you assumed that I was disagreeing with the premise of the video, and arguing against that position rather than my actual position. In fact I am not disagreeing with the video at all, just remarking that it's interesting how much of very modern fields (like condensed matter physics) had its foundational work done in the early 20th century. Standing on the shoulders of giants and all that.

    • @DanPFS
      @DanPFS Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@jshowao-rw1dh I have no idea what point you're trying to make, frankly. I never said no theoretical developments, I said developing entirely new theoretical frameworks, I was very specific. My entire field of research was developed in the decade or two following the invention of the laser in the 60s, and a robust theory has been developed around it, but that was really just developing the most useful effective field theories, rather than doing anything fundamentally new at the theoretical level, even though nonlinear optics gives us access to a huge swathe of new experiments and technologies. I am not dismissing the worth or progress of my entire field, simply pointing out that it didn't require us to develop an entirely new theoretical framework to get to where we are.

  • @tallskinnygeek
    @tallskinnygeek Před 11 měsíci +76

    The "room temperature" super conductor thing sounds like 2 competing engineering/physics projects, one taking an ordinary room in a regular house, and chilling it as much as possible, and the other developing higher temperature superconductors to place in that room.

    • @takanara7
      @takanara7 Před 11 měsíci +13

      Actually, the critical temperature for YBCO is 93 Kelvin, and the liquification temp of oxygen is 90 Kelvin, so *in theory* you could have a room with a breathable atmosphere with superconductors in it, however, you only have a 3K window between your superconductor ceasing to work, and the oxygen liquifying out of the air and suffocating you. Wikipedia lists something called BSCCO as having an even higher critical temp of 110 so that might be a little easier. That said your lungs would probably freeze but you could maybe have some device that would heat the air as you breath it in to prevent that. (I think I'm thinking about this way too much, lol)

    • @thesaltybeard1793
      @thesaltybeard1793 Před 11 měsíci

      This fucking ruined me lmao

    • @RWZiggy
      @RWZiggy Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@Mandragara but MRI now able to work at higher temperatures and with less energy, thanks to physics. Liquid nitrogen MRI and also refrigeration MRI that use tiny amount of liquid helium, half a liter, now exist.

    • @RWZiggy
      @RWZiggy Před 11 měsíci

      @@Mandragara Liquid nitrogen MRI without helium have been announced. There are superconductors that function at LN temperatures.

    • @RWZiggy
      @RWZiggy Před 11 měsíci

      @@Mandragara That is a defect we in USA have, to ignore rest of world and think we lead everything. Voxelgrids Innovations in India has the nitrogen only MRI

  • @voidify3
    @voidify3 Před 11 měsíci +1

    It’s a category error because they don’t think of it as theoretical physics they think of MRIs as medicine and space exploration as its own thing etc

  • @DontMockMySmock
    @DontMockMySmock Před 11 měsíci +62

    I had no idea this was a widespread idea at all. It's something I've been mulling over in my head for a while. For reference, I am a former physicist.
    70 years is clearly too much. Much of the Standard Model was developed in the 60s and 70s. 40 years ago is around where I'd put the beginning of the stagnation. And as you point out, there are many parts of physics that aren't stagnated, especially condensed matter as you point out. What's stagnated is just the most fundamental parts of physics - particle theory, astrophysics theory/cosmology. A lot of the stuff you mention is not new physics, but experimental confirmation of old physics. That's not to say that that's not important - it is - but it's not NEW in the same way as the flurry of discovery that characterized the first half of the 20th century. We're all still waiting to find out the answers to questions that were first asked a lifetime ago - what's dark matter, how does QFT work in curved spacetime, did cosmic inflation really happen, is there a unified theory of the electroweak and strong interactions, etc.
    But I don't think there's anything much to be learned from this observation. So what if some fields of physics are stagnated? We have no idea how hard these problems are to solve until we try to solve them, and sometimes it takes a while. I don't think it's reasonable to expect that the ridiculous pace of discovery of the early 20th century be continued forever. It just is what it is. I don't think the field of physics is full of people whose creativity is stagnated or anything - I just think that these problems are hard as balls.

    • @volbla
      @volbla Před 11 měsíci +8

      I feel the same way. Every time i hear about contemporary _theoretical_ physics, it's some unsolved problem in our models or observations that we have no idea how to explain. I don't know the last time i heard "We have finally figured out X." (and that explanation actually becoming consensus).
      Experimental physics is of course still physics, and it does important research and we learn a lot from it. It just feels like it's been standing on a shaky foundation for a while, and the cement truck is nowhere in sight.

    • @roybobxiv8996
      @roybobxiv8996 Před 11 měsíci

      Ah another believer of the legendary black holes 🤣 math crack be strong stuff

    • @level10peon
      @level10peon Před 11 měsíci +18

      Thanks for saying this. I feel like this video and a lot of commenters are almost willfully missing the point of (the best versions of) these critiques.

    • @kanishkchaturvedi1745
      @kanishkchaturvedi1745 Před 11 měsíci +5

      It's quite obvious they are missing the point of the critiques in bad faith.....almost as if they were offended by the criticism@@level10peon

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@level10peon The best version of this critique is equally if not more stupid than the one being responded to though, the comment literally points it out.

  • @liamfeatherly458
    @liamfeatherly458 Před 11 měsíci +67

    I have a theory of quantum gravity unfortunately it doesnt have analytic solutions nor numerical ones but I swear its right!

    • @rca7591a
      @rca7591a Před 2 měsíci

      Yeah, I know exactly what you are saying. The math for a lot of unresolved mysteries lurking in the models are as of yet undefined.

  • @deonwalker6270
    @deonwalker6270 Před 3 měsíci +1

    The sarcastic delivery here is on point.

  • @swanronson173
    @swanronson173 Před 11 měsíci +15

    Congrats on 100k Angela, very well deserved! 🎉👍

  • @jsnams
    @jsnams Před 11 měsíci +9

    As a former teenager who thought he wanted to be an astrophysicist from watching videos until he tried it and saw the math only got harder I can assure you the physics apocalypse hypothesis 100% tracks

    • @joed180
      @joed180 Před 11 měsíci +4

      👈 This guy wanted to study physics and ended up with a master's in... communication . Lol.
      Math amirite?

    • @KipIngram
      @KipIngram Před 10 měsíci

      Yes, it turns out that the real world is actually complicated. In astrophysics, just to follow your example, the two-body problem is nice and tidy and lovely. But add just one more body and the math completely changes and in fact we can't solve that problem in general to this day. And on top of that, it's a chaotic dynamic system, so we can't even use numerical simulation to make predictions into the future beyond a certain point. It's ok for a while, but then you get to the point where just the fact that your computer uses limited precision numbers means your prediction is worthless - your prediction might put Jupiter completely on the wrong side of the sun far enough into the future.

  • @camipco
    @camipco Před 4 měsíci +2

    I feel like there's some very specific physics youtubers the end is aimed at, and I'm not aware who they are, but I'm curious.

  • @djmcheme
    @djmcheme Před 11 měsíci +53

    Physics needs young minds like yours to bring the majestic universe down to the level of everyday people. This is another awesome video from this young scientist. Her future is bright.

    • @user_2793
      @user_2793 Před 10 měsíci +11

      She’s already a postdoc lol, her future is secured

  • @Jason-gq8fo
    @Jason-gq8fo Před 11 měsíci +7

    Well I feel really stupid for leaving that comment now. I think I was more annoyed after watching your string theory video that people had spent so long on something that doesn’t work and nothing came out of it and I more meant like there hasn’t been any fundamental changes in physics I guess. Like we still don’t know what dark matter is for example. Idk i suck at explaining what I mean.
    A lot of this seems more like engineering and technological like lasers than fundamental physics/theory, it’s not like I didn’t know most of these things happened. but perhaps that’s just me being stupid with my definitions aha. I don’t actually know about the theory of everything tbh, haven’t seen that before
    But yeah stupid comment on my part and I’m happy to learn more. Really enjoyed finding your channel recently
    I also didn’t expect to get called out on a comment from a months old video 😅 feel pretty embarrassed now, like I don’t deserve to watch anymore

  • @IcyMidnight
    @IcyMidnight Před měsícem +1

    Best fact of the video: our clocks are now so accurate they notice the time dilation of walking up a mountain 🤯

  • @rahulsanjay18
    @rahulsanjay18 Před 11 měsíci +7

    As much as I agree with your assessment that these people want a "theory of everything", when you talked about the advancements of condensed matter physics, that is a serious, theoretical development in physics that counters the intent of these online folks' statements, so it still works. Lovely video as always, can't wait for the next one.

  • @evanstephenson4591
    @evanstephenson4591 Před 11 měsíci +16

    Every single one of your videos is a total banger. And how do people just forget that we found the higgs boson less than a decade ago?

  • @MikeKing-cj9cx
    @MikeKing-cj9cx Před měsícem

    So well done.
    In 2023, a study out of Australia based on our solar system calls for perpetual motion to be redefined as spontaneous motion (included was the equation for spontaneous motion); which in turn gave additional clarity to the mechanism of cosmic inflation, motion/time, dark matter, positive sub-space, ultra- minimalism, the singularity and more.
    I saw Neil Toruk discussing a similar theory in 2024.
    Great paper and great things to look forward too.
    So many good things happening in Physics.

  • @blah3156210
    @blah3156210 Před 11 měsíci +11

    Now to slip ergodic into to day to day conversation

  • @michaelmull2957
    @michaelmull2957 Před 11 měsíci +12

    You are quickly becoming my go to source for science education communications. I love the way you dispell all the podcast nonsense I've been fed over recent years. I wish I'd found this channel sooner. Excellent work!

  • @charlesloeffler333
    @charlesloeffler333 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Of course, you often crossed the boundaries into math, chemistry, and electrical engineering, but this was so well done you deserve crossing some blurry edges

    • @jorymil
      @jorymil Před 4 měsíci +1

      The edges _are_ pretty blurry: for nature, it's all the same stuff; we just throw boundaries at it as humans so we can try to understand parts of it. And so we can teach it in school. You see many, many cross-disciplinary teams of scientists these days. Biophysics, materials science, medical physics, physical chemistry... it goes on. When biological mechanisms are quantum in nature, it helps to understand quantum mechanics, for example.

  • @joechip1232
    @joechip1232 Před 11 měsíci +60

    The greatest achievement of physics in the past 70 years is, without a doubt in my mind, the Pink Floyd Laser Show that they used to do in at the Planetarium in the mid-90's. Now THAT was life-changing!

    • @Crazy_Diamond_75
      @Crazy_Diamond_75 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Hello... (hello, hello, hello...) Is there anybody out there...

    • @RobGalo
      @RobGalo Před 11 měsíci

      LASERS

  • @jacoblojewski8729
    @jacoblojewski8729 Před 11 měsíci +14

    I was expecting GPS to be on that list, but good list! Along the medical field I'd also add in the advancements in targeted radiation therapy (wave shaping, interference patterns, etc)

  • @mattgilbert7347
    @mattgilbert7347 Před 11 měsíci +2

    MRIs are only "pain-free" if you remember to take OUT the metal butt-plug BEFORE going into the damn machine.
    Just sayin'

  • @todhagan2966
    @todhagan2966 Před 11 měsíci +22

    Oh cool, a new acollierastro video! And congrats on 100K!
    I'm so old that I eyeroll any time I see someone hyping room temperature superconductors. It's been decades now and none of the gushing articles panned out. When I see the Maglevs being built I'll start paying attention again.
    Is it bad that I love your snark so much? Every time you do, "Quantum, quantum, quantum! Quantum quantum?" it cracks me up!

    • @ericeaton2386
      @ericeaton2386 Před 11 měsíci +1

      A maglev is being built, in Japan! But they do not use room temperature superconductors, just regular old supercold ones.

    • @jorymil
      @jorymil Před 4 měsíci

      Even liquid-nitrogen superconductors are still cool! You can walk around with a bottle of the stuff pretty easily :-)

  • @TrickyD8P
    @TrickyD8P Před 11 měsíci +7

    I love the idea that physicists just aren't thinking outside the box. it's so funny

  • @fredscallietsoundman9701
    @fredscallietsoundman9701 Před 4 měsíci +6

    I think when people say there's not much happening in Physics they mean fundamental theories, while you're talking about either applications, experimental/observational validations, or refinements. I can't emphasize enough how great I think those are, and I'm not too worried about a theoretical stall personally, but you're not really responding to the allegation. (note: I'm not a physicist, I just love the sound of my own voice)

  • @steamsteam-xm6om
    @steamsteam-xm6om Před 11 měsíci +14

    Isn't most of this closer to engineering and practical applications of physics instead of groundbreaking purely theoretical stuff. It's all confirming predictions instead of new theories. No new paradigm shifts.
    I think people are thinking about shifts like Newtonian mechanics to quantum mechanics or creation of theories like QFT.
    Something like a physicist going "yeah orbitals of atoms were a crude approximation. If we assume atoms to be a continuum of banana shaped objects. It really simplifies the math.Matter can be continuous in this theory."
    I think people are expecting something along the lines of this.
    Instead of "physics has done very little for like 70 years" it would be more accurate to say "fundamental theories of physics have stayed largely same for last 50 years with occasional experimental confirmation of things postulated before that time period."
    Where I think something like DFT would satisfy the people asking this question. Something mathematical which helps the computer make better results while using same computing power. People are saying there has been very less progress in things like this.

    • @AzeotropeDr
      @AzeotropeDr Před 11 měsíci +1

      Nope, it just isn’t. There is tons of stuff we don’t know about physics and new discoveries are made every day because there is even more we don’t know. It’s just too complicated for most of the public to understand, and let’s be honest unless it makes a new iphone, most people won’t care anyway.

    • @steamsteam-xm6om
      @steamsteam-xm6om Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@AzeotropeDr Then she should talk about that in video instead of practical advancements or confirmation. I don't think anyone believes physics has given no practical benefit in last 70 years

    • @ftlftws1154
      @ftlftws1154 Před 11 měsíci +4

      Well yes, but actually no shifts like these happen when there are "holes" in existing models for LARGE periods of time, Newtonian mechanics was the accepted model for 200 years or so despite its obvious shortcomings, before Einstein came and fixed it. People didnt really understand light for centuries until quantum mechanics explained photons. Also new theories DO get published but unless they are backed by either A) a huge gotcha experiment or B) an extremely public figure you probably wont notice them unless you go looking. There have been huge advancements in material science and electronics to the point that modern transistors need to account for quantum tunneling of electrons and the research for them is mostly done by phycisist afaik. Just because most physicists dont go blabbering about how this new thing they are working on is the most revolutionary innovation since the wheel like an article fishing for clicks it doesnt mean that no progress is being made. If you are looking for a new and improved standard mode or something, by physics standards you are a dew decades early at the very least.

    • @steamsteam-xm6om
      @steamsteam-xm6om Před 11 měsíci

      @@ftlftws1154 Well yeah this would take time. No is arguing that people are just comparing it to 1900s which were exceptional. Foundational physics did develop more in that period compared to now.
      "If you are looking for a new and improved standard mode or something, by physics standards you are a dew decades early at the very least." That is my point. This things take time but it does not mean **that rate of change is same at foundational level**. We can just accept that more development happened at that time because they were exceptional.

    • @ftlftws1154
      @ftlftws1154 Před 11 měsíci

      @@steamsteam-xm6om and in the 1800s you had the development of thermodynamics and statistical physics, electromagnetism while people still believed that ether exists. Also the standard model was developed in the later half of the 20th century (it was introduced 69 years ago), thats some pretty fundamental research if you ask me and people are already trying to poke holes in it/improve it. QCD was developed in the 60s/70s, and now you have god knows how many quantum or modified gravity theories that wait to be confirmed/disproven

  • @RH-ut7qv
    @RH-ut7qv Před 11 měsíci +6

    This must be the leading exasperated physicist channel on CZcams. I'm here for it.

  • @chuckaway6580
    @chuckaway6580 Před 10 měsíci +2

    I think it's important to point to how productive physics continues to be as a field. But the video seems to be talking past at least a few of the people in the opening. They seem to be saying that physics has not had any profound *theoretical* developments since, say, the 70s. I only have a BS and an ongoing amateur interest, but that claim seems true enough. The higgs, for example, was theorized in the 70s. Sure it represents a major development that it was actually experimentally confirmed, but it didn't - to my knowledge - entail a theoretical revolution.
    The only major theoretical developments I'm aware of after the 70s come from quantum computing. The techniques used there seem different enough from what came before that they can be considered a theoretical development. But even then I'd have to caveat that quantum information ideas predate the 70s and it's not as though they describe a previously un-described physics regime.
    But I really might just be ignorant here. Are there major theoretical developments (I'm thinking quantum mechanics, general relativity, quantum field theory, even something like geometric quantization) that post-date the 1970s that I should be aware of?

  • @thospe-f8x
    @thospe-f8x Před 11 měsíci +38

    Condensed matter might be the hotspot right now (I'm biased as a physics undergrad turned materials science PhD), but even science enthusiasts are barely aware that's a field of physics. It's weird because. I could see a lot of people not thinking of what I do as physics, but I promise that the mindset with which I approach problems is much more that of a physicist than it is an engineer or chemist. I have colleagues who are much more engineers or chemists - it's a very nice complementary working relationship.
    I think you really nailed it on the head with this being in no small part born out of the string theory pop science grift with a little dash of "most journalists don't have the expertise to make the actual physics advances interesting so let's default to empty philosophical-sounding questions", and also claiming physics isn't going anywhere appeals to the kinds of populist anti-intellectual/establishment politics that dominate news media

    • @chrisl6546
      @chrisl6546 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Material science is physics. But I'm biased, having come from condensed matter physics...

    • @GSBarlev
      @GSBarlev Před 9 měsíci

      The overlap is fairly substantial between people who say physics is dead and people who upgrade their computers every two years to take advantage of "the latest silicon."

    • @JMurph2015
      @JMurph2015 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@GSBarlev?

    • @GSBarlev
      @GSBarlev Před 9 měsíci

      @@JMurph2015 The rapid-fire advances in material science and lithography techniques in particular is the reason why CPUs and GPUs are worth upgrading.

    • @JMurph2015
      @JMurph2015 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@GSBarlev yes but you implied the overlap was strong between people understanding that and "physics is dead" people. Edit: ah I see you're saying it's ironic that they have those two stances.

  • @Strohalm4Me
    @Strohalm4Me Před 11 měsíci +4

    A field that is once again forgotten by a "mainstream" physicist is of course the field of geophysics (in the broader sense). ;)
    For real though, geophysical fluid dynamics, atmospheric physics and climate physics have grown so much in the last decades and they are so important to our daily life!

  • @Fran7842
    @Fran7842 Před 4 měsíci +1

    You can still mention transistors, given all the developments, even in the past decade

  • @garanceadrosehn9691
    @garanceadrosehn9691 Před 11 měsíci +22

    I'll be one of those who says that space exploration in (say) the last 50 years is *much* more about engineering than physics. Maybe not 70, but 40-50.
    I had a contender for what to replace that with in the top 10 list, especially when you went through the topic of communications without saying what I considered the most important topic. But then I got to #9, and "Lasers". Indeed, lasers. I agree completely with your enthusiasm for lasers. "I was there" (I was in high school in the early 1970's), and I remember some books from the 1960's which described lasers as "A solution in search of a problem". Sure it was a cool parlor trick, but people couldn't figure out what to do with it. I was in a high school which had one of the first classes on holography in any high school in the US. My high school physics teacher built *his* own laser (we didn't!), but then we used his laser to make our own holograms. Somewhere I think I still have a hologram that I made of my high school ring. I made some other holograms, but that's the only one I remember. The gem in my high school rings is ruby, so to me it was doubly cool that I had a hologram of a ring which had a ruby in it.
    I can't quite decide if the top 10 list already covers this, but I'd say all the physics behind GPS. I mean, that gets into atomic clocks and understanding the effects of gravity on measuring time, so the list already kind of includes it. But it'd be nice to mention the word "GPS" somewhere in that list. It's pretty easy for us to get used to technology, but for me one of the things which amazes me every time I use it is jumping into a car, typing in some destination on my cellphone, and confidently traveling there with *zero* advance preparation. _"But of course I can reach the _*_door_*_ of a building which is 500 miles away in a state I've never been to before, and do that on 10 seconds notice. I can drive there, and then get _*_walking_*_ directions to the exact door I want by looking at my watch"._ It's absolutely beyond belief that that is possible.
    I work at a college which focuses on engineering and science. And this month our college will be getting a quantum computer made by IBM. Actual quantum computing, not "simulations of it". That's a pretty amazing jump.

    • @DavidLindes
      @DavidLindes Před 11 měsíci +2

      I’ll just say it’s super cool that you did holograms in your high school class. We did some at a makerspace I used to frequent, and it was really quite an interesting and cool process. I hope I get to do it again one day.