The Secrets of Feynman Diagrams

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 25. 07. 2017
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    Unlock the secrets of Feynman Diagrams. Part 5 in our Quantum Field Theory series. And if you're submitting an answer to our challenge question email your answer by August 2nd to pbsspacetime [AT] gmail.com with the subject line "Feynman Diagram Challenge."
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    Previous Episode:
    The Real Star Wars
    ‱ The Real Star Wars
    Feynman’s path integral shows us that, to properly calculate the probability of a particle traveling from point A to point B, we need to add up the contributions from all conceivable paths between those points - including the impossible paths! In fact we can go even further: according to Feynman’s approach, every conceivable happening that leads from a measured initial state to a measured final state DOES in a sense happen. To calculate the probability of any quantum system evolving from one state into any other state we need to sum over every conceivable intermediate state. This is impossible because there are infinite possible intermediate states.
    Written and Hosted by Matt O’Dowd
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Komentáƙe • 929

  • @RealStuntPanda
    @RealStuntPanda Pƙed 2 lety +103

    I love the story about Feynman's wife, Gwyneth Howarth, driving the Dodge Tradesman van with Feynman diagrams all over it and some CalTech physics students were shocked so asked her why she had Feynman diagrams on her van. Her response was something like, "Because my husband invented them."

    • @lilblackduc7312
      @lilblackduc7312 Pƙed rokem +4

      She sounds like a practical wife!

    • @davedsilva
      @davedsilva Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci

      I hear Gwyneth, I think Iron Man's wife 😂. Quantum Feynman Fusion ARC reactor anyone?

  • @flymypg
    @flymypg Pƙed 7 lety +379

    OMFG! I was exposed to Feynman Diagrams in 1983, toward the end of a very intensive 2-year undergraduate physics sequence. Back then, I learned the math, turned the crank, and passed the exams.
    Only today, 34 years later, did the light bulb light, the "Eureka!" get shouted, and the Zen-like state of the "Wonder of the Universe Explained" inhabit my mind.
    Matt, thanks so much for communicating so extraordinary well! I think it was the "rotations of a single vertex diagram" that broke my mental block.
    I knocked out the challenges in literally 10 minutes, delighting and amazing myself in the process. But I won't submit them, since, ideally, I really should have been able to do them 34 years ago.
    I've already got my prize. Thanks!

    • @aneeshprasobhan
      @aneeshprasobhan Pƙed 7 lety +4

      Hi Bob,
      Im an Electrical Engineer and I dont remember learning Feinman diagrams in Physics. Can you suggest a good book to learn it ?

    • @LasseloH
      @LasseloH Pƙed 7 lety +18

      This is probably the best comment I've seen on CZcams so far. The best to you sir !

    • @alarcon99
      @alarcon99 Pƙed 7 lety +5

      BobC you took the words out of my mouth! I'm less than 5 min into video and its so beautifully simple!

    • @themandalorian7352
      @themandalorian7352 Pƙed 7 lety +6

      you're a gentleman. thank you sir

    • @flymypg
      @flymypg Pƙed 6 lety +2

      UCSD? *ME TOO!* Were we extremely fortunate to go there, or what?

  • @dabebop
    @dabebop Pƙed 7 lety +597

    I'd get a Feynman Diagram tattoo if i wasn't so unsure about getting one.

    • @jamesroseii
      @jamesroseii Pƙed 7 lety +28

      dabebop lol I don't know if you were being literal or punny, but I actually was thinking that they would make a great tattoo.

    • @andreguimaraes9347
      @andreguimaraes9347 Pƙed 7 lety +34

      I got a math tattoo, because if something is true right now in math, it is true forever and ever in the whole universe. Math is put logic. But physics is too volatile, stuff changes "quickly". I'd hate to make a physics tattoo, and have someone discover a new/better way that makes whatever I tattooed obsolete :(

    • @dabebop
      @dabebop Pƙed 7 lety +17

      I was being both, at the same time!

    • @jamesroseii
      @jamesroseii Pƙed 7 lety

      dabebop even better!

    • @NGC6144
      @NGC6144 Pƙed 7 lety +5

      Do your own henna "tattoo" of a Feynman Diagram. It will last only a week or two.

  • @LamirLakantry
    @LamirLakantry Pƙed 7 lety +512

    I'm getting the impression that this Feynmen guy was kind of a smart guy.

    • @Crosshill
      @Crosshill Pƙed 5 lety +10

      im glad gell-mann named the quarks tho, thats a whole 'nother level of genius

    • @cristig243
      @cristig243 Pƙed 5 lety +9

      Maybe... He certainly painted some beautiful drawings

    • @craigsmith1443
      @craigsmith1443 Pƙed 5 lety +11

      The Nobel committee seemed to think so. He won it in 1965 along with two other physicists.

    • @MarsJenkar
      @MarsJenkar Pƙed 4 lety +11

      @Seth Martin If that's the case, then Feynman may well be the most _underrated_ physicist of all time.

    • @hintaraaz4052
      @hintaraaz4052 Pƙed 3 lety +17

      @@MarsJenkar Dude... I think you haven't heard about him that much because his work mostly comes in Graduation Physics. If there had been social media like today, he'd be most interesting guy of all time. More than half of today's physicists say Feynman is their primary inspiration. I suggest you read Feynman Lectures Vol 1,2,3 and "Surely you're joking Mr. Feynman".

  • @romajimamulo
    @romajimamulo Pƙed 7 lety +148

    you should make a "I am made of particles of questionable reality" shirt

  • @gorog
    @gorog Pƙed 7 lety +101

    This is amazing. This is basically a free semi-formal lecture with sharp and engaging production value -- I am really getting a lot out of this. Thank you!

    • @das_it_mane
      @das_it_mane Pƙed 4 lety +9

      gorog in a way this is better than a lecture because you don't have to wait for the prof to draw each diagram. You can just focus on the ideas themselves.

  • @akshatsaxena1431
    @akshatsaxena1431 Pƙed 7 lety +99

    I got really excited when he said that we're going to do some quantum field theory ourselves

    • @TheAngryIntellect-
      @TheAngryIntellect- Pƙed 3 lety

      Are you excited to pretend to be smart? đŸ€”
      I don't understand most of this, which is why I watch and listen intently. Makes my brain tingle to learn of things I never knew of. Unlike watching a Hollywood movie.

    • @tobyzxcd
      @tobyzxcd Pƙed 3 lety +16

      @@TheAngryIntellect- I could spend another 10 hours reading this comment and still have no idea what it means or why you posted it

    • @JacobRy
      @JacobRy Pƙed 3 lety +2

      @@tobyzxcd lmao

  • @ArturdeSousaRocha
    @ArturdeSousaRocha Pƙed 5 lety +12

    How come a popular science channel just gave a more in-depth and clearer explanation of Feynman Diagrams than what I got at the university where I majored in physics? I watch your videos from time to time because I've been working in a different area for the last two decades and I often discover stuff here that wasn't even known at the time (plus astrophysics was just one optional lecture - one I took and liked). Now I got a new appreciation of the quality of the work you do!

  • @yanamorim5747
    @yanamorim5747 Pƙed 6 lety +10

    "you can make your quantum field theories yourself" *throws glitter in the air*

  • @EugeneKhutoryansky
    @EugeneKhutoryansky Pƙed 7 lety +228

    The "questionable reality" of virtual particles should make us all very nervous. Our only measure for evaluating a theory is how precise its predictions are, and in this respect QED is the most successful theory in history, but this unfortunately still doesn’t tell us if it is an accurate description of reality. Some have the point of view that science is "only" about making accurate predictions. But the reason for getting interested in science, at least for me, is wanting to know what is actually going on.

    • @Special1122
      @Special1122 Pƙed 7 lety +6

      But The problem is the fact that you just can't measure virtual particles so if we know that positron exists then considering conservation laws there must be this exchange things in feynman diagram right? What's the other possibility besides such theories containing non measurable things?

    • @WilliamDye-willdye
      @WilliamDye-willdye Pƙed 7 lety +49

      Eugene: When trying to discover "what is actually going on" in physics, maybe we should avoid thinking in terms of particles or even fields -- things which have a position in space and time. When we cut apart a piece of wood, for example, we get two pieces of wood, but the process doesn't go on forever. Eventually we get pieces of things which are not themselves "wood", but instead consist of the more fundamental things which can combine to form wood. Just so with particles. For a while we can keep splitting them into smaller particles, but the process eventually ends when we have things which are not themselves particles, but consist of more the more fundamental things which combine to form particles.
      If a particle (or field) can be thought of as a bundle of characteristics in a given location in time and space, then what is more fundamental than "location"? Whatever it is, it cannot be things which themselves have a location. Certain elements of QM might seem counter-intuitive, but maybe the fix is to stop thinking that anything which is "real" must always have a definite position in spacetime. Field theory works, but what gives rise to fields? What gives rise to the complexities of "location" itself, or "energy"? When we start to deal with things that cannot themselves be described in those terms, feel happy! We're not avoiding reality, we're finally breaking into the next level of understanding it.

    • @neil6477
      @neil6477 Pƙed 6 lety +37

      I'm sure this is obvious to anyone who reads this but surely the problem lies in the meaning of the expression, 'what's actually going on'? When I first entered physics, some 40 years ago, I too felt the need to find out 'what's really going on' and would agree that such need was a main drive. But increasingly I felt that the answer was less and less of a real goal. I no longer believe that physics will ever know, 'what's really going on' but we will develop increasingly sophisticated models which will enable us to create our own, human based, version of what reality is. To be honest, for what it is worth, I have dropped the idea of knowing 'what's going on'. I am no longer convinced that it is within our brains ability to answer, or understand such a question. In many ways we may have already crossed the threshold at which we can understand reality - hence the division between our beautiful, accurate mathematical models and our failure to be able cognise the physical reality that the maths describes.

    • @fandomguy8025
      @fandomguy8025 Pƙed 6 lety +3

      We know they exist, due to their effects, we just can't know what paths they take.

    • @rbnsrkr
      @rbnsrkr Pƙed 6 lety

      Physics Videos by Eugene Khutoryansky f

  • @TimmacTR
    @TimmacTR Pƙed 7 lety +16

    I just wanted to stop and say that we live in an incredible time, where we have direct interaction, not with our anti-particle, but with experts in the field that can explain to us in simple and entertaining terms how the fundamental mechanics of existance work..
    My brain interacted with this information and the result was a blown brain...

  • @walts555
    @walts555 Pƙed 7 lety +86

    This video is especially good. Discussion of the six orientations of the basic vertex is quite clear and usually muddled in most field theory textbooks. Great job!

    • @JamesSamples
      @JamesSamples Pƙed 2 lety +1

      In these diagrams he has arrows pointing straight up and in others straight down. Does this mean that the respective Positron, Electron, and/or photon neither moves forward or backward in time?

  • @ToastedFanArt
    @ToastedFanArt Pƙed 7 lety +120

    I'm super high stumbling through CZcams and this comes up new. Great timing...

    • @kailen98
      @kailen98 Pƙed 7 lety +3

      Toasted Fan Art haha... same

    • @nukezat
      @nukezat Pƙed 7 lety +2

      3rd hahaha

    • @eliminatorxx713xx
      @eliminatorxx713xx Pƙed 7 lety +3

      Toasted Fan Art I have a feeling you are going to win one of those shirts....

    • @jedaaa
      @jedaaa Pƙed 7 lety +6

      watch it again when you're not high. you'll probably realize you didn't understand it the first time. just felt like you did. weed is like that. unless you're talking about meth, in which case ..... go to rehab ;p

    • @EndingTimes0
      @EndingTimes0 Pƙed 7 lety +9

      If it was heroin youd have only seen the first 20 seconds then nodded out and woke up again to see a space chicken.

  • @CrownedMeadow
    @CrownedMeadow Pƙed rokem +4

    I just looked up a bio on Dr. Matt and found out that he writes all of these scripts himself. Just when I thought that talent might have been left to someone else.
    (Nope. Apparently he has ALL of the talents. I really enjoy every SpaceTime video. I’m a complete layperson with a new interest in physics for personal reasons, and this channel is practically all I watch anymore.)

  • @ayoobewonders5287
    @ayoobewonders5287 Pƙed 7 lety +88

    Quantum mechanics joke:
    "A photon walks into the bars."

  • @hoogmonster
    @hoogmonster Pƙed 3 lety +2

    Two things I regret; not continuing physics study being secondary school and not learning maths to a more advanced level too. But PBS Space-time perfectly feeds my continuing lay curiosity in these fields. Maybe when i retire I'll take some evening courses in physics and maths just for the fun of it. Meanwhile channels like this are a real treasure and joy to watch.

  • @AtlasReburdened
    @AtlasReburdened Pƙed 7 lety +221

    What did one approaching electron say to the other?
    I only want a photonic relationship.

    • @thapeloafrika6459
      @thapeloafrika6459 Pƙed 7 lety +22

      is this a "light" joke?

    • @mmicoski
      @mmicoski Pƙed 7 lety +12

      The electron says to the photon: "you are so enlightening"

    • @Bdix1256
      @Bdix1256 Pƙed 7 lety +5

      One electron asks the other "how much longer till we get to the egg?" The other electron answers "Not long now - we just passed the tonsils".
      Oh - my mistake - that was sperm - not electrons. Sorry.

    • @mmicoski
      @mmicoski Pƙed 7 lety +14

      an electron and a neutrino walk into a bar. Who pays the bill? The electron. He says to the neutrino: "for you, no charge"

    • @jeffreylardizabal3964
      @jeffreylardizabal3964 Pƙed 7 lety +3

      Mauricio Micoski worth the price of admission 😂

  • @vacuumdiagrams652
    @vacuumdiagrams652 Pƙed 7 lety +52

    To all of you having trouble with conservation laws and the vertex: you are right. The vertex by itself does not respect both conservation of energy and momentum and thus doesn't represent a real process. If you do the math, you can calculate the amplitude for, say, an electron and a positron to annihilate and produce a photon, and that probability is always zero.
    It's best to think of the vertex as a building block you can use to build more complicated diagrams. For example, the diagram in which an electron and a positron exchange a virtual electron (or positron!), emitting *two* photons gives a nonzero amplitude.

    • @pierrecurie
      @pierrecurie Pƙed 7 lety

      yay furry's theorem

    • @thedeemon
      @thedeemon Pƙed 7 lety +1

      There are delta-functions over sums of momenta involved in complete equations, providing the conservation. Would be nice if someone explained in more details where exactly these delta-functions go (each vertex or the whole term of a single diagram or something else) and which kinds of momentum (3D or 4D) are used there...

    • @vacuumdiagrams652
      @vacuumdiagrams652 Pƙed 7 lety +3

      thedeemon, the delta functions go on each vertex, and they refer to 4-momentum. This is because each "particle creation" (or destruction) event accompanies a factor of e^(±ip.x). You have to be careful with the signs, which depend both on your conventions and whether you're dealing with a particle or antiparticle. You then integrate over x (heuristically because the event can happen anywhere), and what you get is a known representation of the delta function.

    • @BatMandor
      @BatMandor Pƙed 7 lety

      The emit the photon and reabsorb it at the same time right? Because else the energy is lost.
      But how can it take 0 seconds to emit and reabsorb??! Wow this is weird...

    • @pbsspacetime
      @pbsspacetime  Pƙed 7 lety +34

      Thanks for pointing this out, Dr Diagrams. Vertices are building blocks, not valid diagrams in and of themselves. We'll be sure to note this and talk about why in the solution episode.

  • @jaredmulconry
    @jaredmulconry Pƙed 7 lety +9

    I wasn't sure how I would go with Feynman Diagrams. When you showed the example with an incoming electron and photon and showed the reverse-time electron, I immediately laughed and thought that was pretty cool.
    3 months ago, I never thought I would be okay with all of this quantum weirdness. Now I'm just having a good time exploring all that goes on at this scale. :)

  • @deeponjitbose8188
    @deeponjitbose8188 Pƙed 3 lety +3

    I am a Undergrad Physics Major student. Wish I have been learning physics from professors like you. So well and smartly explained sir. Many Many thanks Professor Matt for explaining these stuffs so simply and interestingly

  • @learnerlearns
    @learnerlearns Pƙed 7 lety +20

    So, now in addition to dark matter and dark energy, we have Dark Humor.
    Heat Death Coming.

  • @jacksonburek9508
    @jacksonburek9508 Pƙed 7 lety +23

    Wow. Kind of reminds me of control systems diagrams, and how they can be converted to the system diff EQs

    • @Timfamy
      @Timfamy Pƙed 4 lety

      I thought that too

    • @Samir_Zouaoui
      @Samir_Zouaoui Pƙed 3 lety

      same

    • @bezbezzebbyson788
      @bezbezzebbyson788 Pƙed 2 lety

      Feynman diagrams are a pictorial representation of perturbation series terms. You can draw them for nonlinear PDEs perturbative solutions. See R.C. Helling solving classical field equations. This is pretty well known

  • @ttul007
    @ttul007 Pƙed 7 lety +1

    I don't always understand everything that you say. but you do, and it's very comforting.

  • @EGarrett01
    @EGarrett01 Pƙed 7 lety +2

    I love that they have the balls to ask a challenge question after these videos.

  • @robertschlesinger1342
    @robertschlesinger1342 Pƙed 4 lety +9

    Excellent elementary overview on Feynman Diagrams. A must see for all beginning Physics students.

  • @powesify
    @powesify Pƙed 7 lety +4

    I love the "do it yourself" things! Could you give us more of them? I think that I got the diagram correctly, but I'm not sure... I've followed you for the past year or so, and I cannot get enough of these videos :D I watch them like a fat guy watches a donut shop.

  • @nijaradeka7304
    @nijaradeka7304 Pƙed 3 lety

    Just nothing but a very very humble thank you Matt!! This is by far one of the best channels across all genre on CZcams!

  • @bryanroland8649
    @bryanroland8649 Pƙed 7 lety

    My favourite channel. The explanations are clear, even to an innumerate viewer like me, and the way they are delivered is always easy to listen to. Thanks, PBS and guy with cool T-shirts, whatever your name is.

  • @Michael-1337
    @Michael-1337 Pƙed 7 lety +22

    It is cool to see a Feynman diagram of Compton scattering. I work in radiology and Compton scatter of x-rays is an issue we have to deal with when performing exams that contributes to image degradation as x-rays are scattered off into alternate paths from the primary beam. We use specialized angled grids made of lead to absorb and minimize the affect of these scattered x-rays to help improve image quality.

    • @Soupy_loopy
      @Soupy_loopy Pƙed 7 lety +11

      I thought Compton scattering was when the po po breaks up the party.

    • @jaredmulconry
      @jaredmulconry Pƙed 7 lety +1

      I Listen to Lucid Planet You read my mind. X3

    • @thstroyur
      @thstroyur Pƙed 7 lety

      Really? You work with some kind of precision work, or is the idiot typing this too naĂŻve in assuming only the lowest-order (AKA classical) contribution is relevant to radiology? LOL me, LOL my

    • @b43xoit
      @b43xoit Pƙed 7 lety

      *effect (unless you mean emotion)

    • @yuvraj7214
      @yuvraj7214 Pƙed 7 lety

      so, are you going to give the email?

  • @gaemlinsidoharthi
    @gaemlinsidoharthi Pƙed 3 lety +3

    I always wonder how Matt manages to keep missing the plural from mathematics in abbreviation, US style, and still sleep at night.

  • @hinkles73
    @hinkles73 Pƙed 4 lety

    I color-coded these diagrams! Quarks: red, jade, or sky blue according to the colors. Antiquarks: maroon, pine green, or blue according to the anti-colors. Gluons: A mix of a color and an anti-color. Leptons and anti-leptons: yellow. Photons: purple. W+ and W-: orange. Z: brown. Higgs Boson: pink.

  • @mina86
    @mina86 Pƙed 7 lety +1

    ‘On-shell’ sounds like a new synonym of ‘cool’. Example usage:
    ‘Have you seen the film I recommended?’
    ‘Yeah, you were right, it was on-shell.’
    ‘Off-shell’ could be used as well to mean something wasn’t cool.

  • @coolmdj111
    @coolmdj111 Pƙed 7 lety +246

    _People-who-wait-for-Spacetime-to-upload-on-Wednesdays_ Squad!

  • @cindyyamaguchi2336
    @cindyyamaguchi2336 Pƙed 7 lety +26

    Matt is the best but sometimes I miss Gabe, what is he up to?

    • @michellereed2535
      @michellereed2535 Pƙed 7 lety +6

      matt can science me anyday!

    • @poseidone5
      @poseidone5 Pƙed 7 lety +16

      Cindy Yamaguchi Gabe Is great but he talks too fast for people like me that hardly understand english.
      Instead I understand Matt much better then Gabe. Anyway, both are good teachers! Excuse me for my bad english but we Italians have problems with languages :)

    • @Kowzorz
      @Kowzorz Pƙed 7 lety +5

      He got a job at the National Science Foundation and had no more time to devote to this project according to a Geek Alabama article posted in 2015.

    • @BC3012
      @BC3012 Pƙed 7 lety

      I saw a couple of Gabe vids the other day, definitely talks too fast for you to absorb the information in your first viewing.

    • @Michb3ck
      @Michb3ck Pƙed 7 lety

      matteo conz there are chrome plugins that allow for slower video replay. I like x0.9 for a more chilled science kick and better understanding

  • @lewisleslie2821
    @lewisleslie2821 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    That on-shell diagram you showed and explained briefly taught me more than my relativity lecturer ever did. My grades thank you.

  • @joyecolbeck4490
    @joyecolbeck4490 Pƙed 7 lety +1

    I do love space time. It's very relaxing. Thanks for doing what you do.

  • @benjamincrom7276
    @benjamincrom7276 Pƙed 7 lety +3

    Keep up the great work !!! Thanks for another fantastic video upload : )

  • @PlayTheMind
    @PlayTheMind Pƙed 7 lety +531

    So, Feynman diagrams are *quantum memes*?

    • @jpoconnor2857
      @jpoconnor2857 Pƙed 7 lety +3

      OMG I just came from an Alex Jones meme super mix

    • @significantvloggers6033
      @significantvloggers6033 Pƙed 7 lety +2

      Perhaps they are also the definition of faith ;).

    • @AnonnymouZ
      @AnonnymouZ Pƙed 7 lety +2

      PlayTheMind oh my fucking god mang, I came here for physics to blow my mind, not CZcams comments!

    • @isodoublet
      @isodoublet Pƙed 7 lety +8

      No...

    • @MegiddoTheImmaculate
      @MegiddoTheImmaculate Pƙed 7 lety +9

      You keep using that word. I don't think you know what it means.

  • @afsharalithegreatiranian9777

    just remembered the day I subscribed this channel. Not at all regretting now! Love this channel!!

  • @koenvandamme6901
    @koenvandamme6901 Pƙed 7 lety

    I like how these recent videos are supporting my current reading material (The Particle Zoo, great read).

  • @nateunderwood7819
    @nateunderwood7819 Pƙed 7 lety +6

    I noticed something when drawing Feynman diagrams a few weeks ago, on an event horizon of a black hole, Hawking radiation looks like a positron falling into a black hole and an electron traveling away, but if positrons are time reversed electrons, then would the same electron fall out of the black hole through backwards time, then change history so it can travel away from the black hole? More importantly, is this universe Star Trek or Dr. Who?

    • @d0themath284
      @d0themath284 Pƙed 7 lety

      This article is basically what your saying but scaled up to macro scale.
      massgap.wordpress.com/2017/04/17/clever-demons-and-hungry-black-holes/

    • @vacuumdiagrams652
      @vacuumdiagrams652 Pƙed 7 lety +1

      Hawking radiation is overwhelmingly composed of photons, actually, at least up to the very last moments of the black hole's life when it becomes hot enough for more particles to be produced. The usual explanation of Hawking radiation in terms of pair of particles being generated near the horizon, where one falls in and the other escapes, is completely wrong.

    • @garethdean6382
      @garethdean6382 Pƙed 7 lety

      Be careful here, all other objections aside a positron looks like an electron moving back in time DOING WHAT THE POSITRON DOES BACKWARDS.
      So the positron CAN be an electron LAVING the black hole BUT its path would lead it to the electron outside the hole. (Which would look like a positron falling into the hole to it.) It would then be destroyed. It couldn't go back further than that because the positron's world line starts at the pair creation.
      In effect this effect is similar to rewinding a video, you can see what's happened in reverse, but you don't get a whole new movie out of it.

  • @fadibahodi5969
    @fadibahodi5969 Pƙed 7 lety +5

    Legit instant clicked

  • @nikolaos9175
    @nikolaos9175 Pƙed 7 lety

    Time to re-watch this for the entire week. I have been waiting.

  • @briancrane7634
    @briancrane7634 Pƙed 7 lety +1

    Astonishingly beautiful explanation. I wish you had been my first QED prof (instead of the old, crusty....well...).

  • @grausammesser
    @grausammesser Pƙed 7 lety +3

    NB: there is a typo of the email address in the description.

  • @AmoebaMan23
    @AmoebaMan23 Pƙed 7 lety +15

    That t-shirt would be SO much better if it just said "Heat death is Coming." It looks like you tried to cram too much into it.

    • @garethdean6382
      @garethdean6382 Pƙed 7 lety

      Yeah, but 'heat death' applies to a lot of things. YOUR heat death is coming, quite soon on cosmic timescales.

    • @filipsperl
      @filipsperl Pƙed 7 lety

      Gareth Dean but that's not heat death

    • @garethdean6382
      @garethdean6382 Pƙed 7 lety

      Well that depends. You sustain yourself on various biological processes that in the end vent heat. When you start to break down (Saying you'll die at some exact moment is a tricky thing to do.) these processes will likewise break down until the generation of heat by your body ceases. (You may or may not wish to include decay in this as your gut bacteria are a part of you too.) At this point your body will have minimum thermodynamic free energy relative to its surroundings, a relative heat death. Like wise will happen to things like individual stars long before the Ultimate Heat Death.

  • @bobshouse123
    @bobshouse123 Pƙed 7 lety

    This channel is fantastic. Thank you so much.

  • @matt215hallman
    @matt215hallman Pƙed 7 lety

    Thank the maker for this CZcams channel!!!

  • @asjghajksidfgoa8shef
    @asjghajksidfgoa8shef Pƙed 7 lety +212

    Who needs notifications when you live on youtube?

    • @Digimer
      @Digimer Pƙed 7 lety +1

      Yet, here you are replying instead of doing something else. Personally, I love his presentation style and, obviously, so do a very large number of other people.

    • @zvpunry1971
      @zvpunry1971 Pƙed 7 lety +1

      One of my favorite youtubers made a little song about living on youtube... bigclivedotcom So much CZcams. (No time for sleep.) and in that video he mentions other youtubers to which i am subscribed to.
      Oh it's 3 o'clock in the morning, i have to go to bed. N8.
      v=tX0lKqguw7s

    • @sr71blackbird71
      @sr71blackbird71 Pƙed 7 lety +11

      DaeNight Who needs original comments when you can just copy paste

    • @derpjesus3468
      @derpjesus3468 Pƙed 7 lety

      The Earth is flat and you can see Chicago from Michigan! There are many places to view the Chicago skyline, cause its a big lake! Second of all there are air bourn particles that cause interference , fact. Third, globe heads try telling me that some days you can see the skyline really good proving its flat and on the other day when you can't it's cause of the curvature lol. Water is level and seeks it own level always not just when it feels like it. I seek truth and facts repeatable and observable and am not interested in sitting by while people like you brain wash your followers with bullshit, stay in your cognitive dissonance I don't care, someday you will wake up.
      So can anybody here address my argument or no?

    • @Consul99
      @Consul99 Pƙed 7 lety

      @Derp Jesus
      >Meanwhile, subscribed to TYT because I'm so interested in truth and provable facts.
      Pathetic troll is pathetic. The least you could do is go to a video that's even slightly related to the globe.

  • @florencebacus6012
    @florencebacus6012 Pƙed 7 lety +3

    4:23 Shouldn't it be impossible for a positron and an electron to annihilate to produce a single photon? If we look at a reference frame where the electron-positron pair has zero momentum, then momentum cannot be conserved, since a single photon always has nonzero momentum.

    • @Soupy_loopy
      @Soupy_loopy Pƙed 7 lety

      Florence B if they have no momentum, then how would they come together?

    • @florencebacus6012
      @florencebacus6012 Pƙed 7 lety

      1. Conservation of momentum is definitely a thing? He mentions it at 4:41.
      2. The momentum of the positron-electron system being zero doesn't mean that the positron and electron individually have no momentum. Basically, I'm talking about a scenario where the two momenta are nonzero, but have opposite sign and cancel each other out.

    • @badlydrawnturtle8484
      @badlydrawnturtle8484 Pƙed 7 lety

      I think you're picturing a positron and an electron hitting each other head on, going in exact opposite directions; in which case, yes, conservation of momentum might be a problem. But that's a very specific and highly unlikely scenario; more likely, when the electron-positron pair come together, their trajectories will have a (non-straight) angle between them, in which case a zero-sum momentum is impossible and conservation of momentum isn't an issue for producing a photon. It also isn't an issue if they come in head on at different speeds.

    • @florencebacus6012
      @florencebacus6012 Pƙed 7 lety

      You can always find a reference frame in which total momentum is zero.

    • @vacuumdiagrams652
      @vacuumdiagrams652 Pƙed 7 lety +5

      That's right, it's not possible. All the diagrams with only one vertex have amplitude zero because they fail to conserve both energy and momentum simultaneously.

  • @naimulhaq9626
    @naimulhaq9626 Pƙed 6 lety

    I have no 'Feynman Diagram Challenge', but I would like to propose scooping up space debris. Unfurling a large, strongly knit magnetized net, from a special crafts, can stop the smaller pieces, like the metal nets by the road side stopping large falling rocks, from the hill by the side of the road, during mud slides. It might catch big pieces even.

  • @nbrown6648
    @nbrown6648 Pƙed 3 lety

    Great explanations. I join others here to say you did a better job than my physics profs did on this topic 38 years ago.

  • @TheLostBear78
    @TheLostBear78 Pƙed 7 lety +3

    So, if literally ANYTHING can be in between the ingoing and outgoing, as long as the end products are the same. And since faster than light and all directions in time are valid. Would that mean you could have two electrons enter, and the big bang happens, the entire universe pops into existence, lives out its entire existence, and in the end degrades into a single pair of electrons out the other side?

    • @thstroyur
      @thstroyur Pƙed 7 lety +4

      Nope - the Universe is made up of _real_, measurable particles, not _virtual_ ones.
      But I can see you're a guy who likes fun, so kudos :)

  • @emjaymj
    @emjaymj Pƙed 7 lety +3

    It's kind of silly but time being the y-axis makes this less intuitive for me.

  • @joshn2564
    @joshn2564 Pƙed 7 lety

    Thank you for explaining Feynman diagrams for the first half of the video which offers an entirely new perspective of nature.

    • @JDavis-xi3nl
      @JDavis-xi3nl Pƙed 7 lety +1

      Josh Neubert wait a minute I recognize that profile pic... I just can't put my finger on it...

  • @discreet_boson
    @discreet_boson Pƙed 4 lety

    The best explanation of Feynman diagrams I have ever seen

  • @JM-us3fr
    @JM-us3fr Pƙed 7 lety +4

    This mathematical/notational trick seems overly powerful. It reminds me of how the Geocentric model of the solar system was unknowingly using Fourier series to map the motions of planets. Little did the ancients know, Fourier series can be used to map ANY periodic path the planets could make. Thus, using such an overly powerful tool limited their knowledge, and made it difficult to accept the Copernican model
    My point is that perhaps this summing over all possible paths (though a valid mathematical tool for attaining accurate predictions) is just limiting our view of the truth.

  • @DishRag1
    @DishRag1 Pƙed 7 lety +91

    I don't understand how you do it but I've been reading "beyond Einstein" by Dr.Michio Kaku, and you have been uploading videos about exactly on what I'm reading this helps me understand it a lot more considering I'm only 15.

    • @nikithanayaer6302
      @nikithanayaer6302 Pƙed 7 lety +1

      DishRag so is the book good

    • @darealg6823
      @darealg6823 Pƙed 7 lety +3

      DishRag I'm 17 and ive been watching/reading all these things since i was 10...

    • @Loves2spooch123
      @Loves2spooch123 Pƙed 7 lety +78

      This is all easily solvable and easy to understand. Considering I'm an 8 month old baby...

    • @berkanyusein9262
      @berkanyusein9262 Pƙed 7 lety +50

      15 and 10?! I've been reading about Einstein ever since I was a fetus. Get on my level plebs.

    • @TheRogueWolf
      @TheRogueWolf Pƙed 7 lety +48

      You waited until you were conceived before you started studying quantum physics? Pfft.

  • @Manguadesignz
    @Manguadesignz Pƙed 3 lety +1

    My favourite science teacher.

  • @VenomStryker
    @VenomStryker Pƙed rokem

    So crazy! All these possible interactions and we are trying to diagram every possible one!

  • @inquaanate2393
    @inquaanate2393 Pƙed 7 lety +12

    Probably a misunderstanding but, could you see into the future by very closely measuring anti matter if it is in fact time reversed matter?

    • @vacuumdiagrams652
      @vacuumdiagrams652 Pƙed 7 lety +10

      "Time reversed" doesn't mean that "causality" works differently for antimatter. Think of it like this: I can film myself bringing buckets of water from a well to a city. If I play the film backwards, it'll look like I'm bringing water from the city to the well. This "backward flux" of water is analogous to how we think of positrons as being a "backwards flux" of electrons.

    • @armagetronfasttrack9808
      @armagetronfasttrack9808 Pƙed 7 lety +10

      Time reversed matter specifically only "happens" to virtual particles, which are by definition unmeasurable. So unfortunately no.

    • @TheOriginalEviltech
      @TheOriginalEviltech Pƙed 7 lety +4

      No, you can't. Once you try to look at the process the virtual particles must materialise and that will result in a different outcome.

    • @AtlasReburdened
      @AtlasReburdened Pƙed 7 lety +1

      No, the universe will not allow prediction to arbitrary time scales. It is not possible to observe enough data. Uncertainty sucks.

    • @Pfhorrest
      @Pfhorrest Pƙed 7 lety +2

      Put it this way: you could travel into the past by jumping into a vat of antimatter, because the annihilation of your particles with the antimatter particles is mathematically identical to your particles turning around in time. The problem is, "you" would arrive in the past as the scattering of antimatter particles that were collected together into the vat you-in-the-future jumped into, and then when your particles turned back around in time, they would just be the scattered particles that were created along with those antiparticles, because backward-travelling particles turning around in time is mathematically identical to particle-antiparticlel pair creation.
      Any message you might possibly want to send back in time that way would suffer the same effect: it would arrive in the past as noise. Any message from the future unintentionally sent back in time via interaction with antimatter would also suffer the same effect: it would arrive in the past as noise. So we here in the past of some future cannot glean any useful messages from that future out of antimatter -- what arrives here in the past is just noise.

  • @musicalfringe
    @musicalfringe Pƙed 2 lety

    Great video. I never quite understood the conceptual framework of Feynman diagrams and you fixed that. Also: epic pun.

  • @ddorman365
    @ddorman365 Pƙed 5 lety

    Thank you Family that is beautiful, peace and love, Doug:)

  • @martindjohnston
    @martindjohnston Pƙed 7 lety

    Great overview!

  • @steveanston4906
    @steveanston4906 Pƙed 7 lety

    best explanation of Feynman Diagrams I seen

  • @spaced___x
    @spaced___x Pƙed rokem +1

    "Within a week of the release if this video"
    Me watching it 5 years later: ahh, great

  • @dashnarayana
    @dashnarayana Pƙed 4 lety

    Very good exposition. No need to drag your feet across tons of literature about Feynman diagrams. It reveals the very characters of the alphabet for building QED

  • @GuillaumeVerdonA
    @GuillaumeVerdonA Pƙed 7 lety +1

    This was a really good explanation

  • @carsonnova4193
    @carsonnova4193 Pƙed 7 lety

    Hey getting close to 1,000,000 subscribers !! Congrats 😀

  • @YTBeyondBorders
    @YTBeyondBorders Pƙed 6 lety

    Awesome episode..Thanks

  • @TheCopelandr
    @TheCopelandr Pƙed 7 lety

    Great video!

  • @DoridTheBlue
    @DoridTheBlue Pƙed 7 lety

    Great video. Keep it up.

  • @piranha031091
    @piranha031091 Pƙed 7 lety +2

    I guess your video came just in time for me to understand the latest XKCD comic!

  • @calvingrondahl1011
    @calvingrondahl1011 Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

    It is good to see Matt before his hair went gray
 PBS Spacetime now is
 science history. The relaxed years before the plague and AGI.

  • @healinghub1112
    @healinghub1112 Pƙed 7 lety

    it was such a long wait ....for this episode

  • @SonaliSenguptasengupso41
    @SonaliSenguptasengupso41 Pƙed 7 lety

    Brilliant!

  • @sayewhatjosh
    @sayewhatjosh Pƙed 3 lety

    Great Scott!! Flux capacitor

  • @MrTripcore
    @MrTripcore Pƙed 7 lety

    The break in the law of energy conservation during the big bang solves the cosmological constant problem

  • @davidbuschhorn6539
    @davidbuschhorn6539 Pƙed 7 lety

    This made me look up what wavelength of light is given off by positron-electron annihilation.
    Gamma. And you get two photons per collision and they go off in opposite directions.

  • @Schopenhauer667
    @Schopenhauer667 Pƙed 7 lety

    Amazing episode

  • @URProductions
    @URProductions Pƙed 7 lety +1

    All the patrons on Patreon in the world can't stop the Heat Death from coming.

  • @jenspettersen7837
    @jenspettersen7837 Pƙed 7 lety

    My Feynman diagrams have these two ways for the Bhabha scattering:
    1. A positron gives off a photon and turn into an electron, then an electron absorbs the photon and becomes a positron.
    2. An electron and a positron annihilates and creates a photon. The photon then turns into an electron and a positron.

  • @Strothy2
    @Strothy2 Pƙed 7 lety

    thank you so very much for this video, I've read a book wich mentioned those and guess what I understood nothing, but this thank you!

  • @significantvloggers6033
    @significantvloggers6033 Pƙed 7 lety

    I Love this... this is beautiful.

  • @thapeloafrika6459
    @thapeloafrika6459 Pƙed 7 lety +2

    This was painful on the brain but i managed to stay on the track

  • @karlkoch1959
    @karlkoch1959 Pƙed 7 lety

    hey marc.. the marceting part of this clips get to high.. but big thanks for your show and the awesome discription ... defenetiv the best educ. channel on yt

  • @spheal4754
    @spheal4754 Pƙed 4 lety

    What happens in the middle doesn’t matter. Only the result remains. This is the power of my King Crimson!

  • @JamFilledDonut
    @JamFilledDonut Pƙed 7 lety +1

    This is awesome

  • @solapowsj25
    @solapowsj25 Pƙed 2 lety

    The times a second a photon passes a radio antenna creates phonons in the device, so we filter and amplify these for wireless audio reception.
    The times a photon strikes each atom raises its kinetic energy and temperature.
    Then photoelectric effect. Electron-positron annihilation.
    Then the W and Z Bosons with mass. All these may be represented by the Feynman diagrams.

  • @nicolaiveliki1409
    @nicolaiveliki1409 Pƙed 7 lety

    I WANT BOTH T-SHIRTS PBS SPACETIME IS AWESOME!

  • @juakofz
    @juakofz Pƙed 7 lety

    Hey guys, there is a typo in the address in the description, it says pbsspsacetime, with an extra "s" in space! I just sent my answer. Very cool video and very interesting topic

  • @neurophilosophers994
    @neurophilosophers994 Pƙed 4 lety

    So not gonna lie I’m probably going to watch this video like 50 times this week just because I love this so much and can’t believe no one taught it to me. I mean sure I didn’t major in physics but how can you know this and not work until everyone on the planet knows this ? How

  • @petersage5157
    @petersage5157 Pƙed 2 lety

    One thing that seems to be omitted in these discussions is the possibility that the electrons' wave functions simply pass through each other. There doesn't seem to be anything that prohibits this, so the Totalitarian Principle insists that it is compulsory.

  • @Hier00
    @Hier00 Pƙed 7 lety

    This gave me a new perspective on the photoelectric effect.

  • @atps
    @atps Pƙed 7 lety

    Mindblowing.

  • @cermoer
    @cermoer Pƙed 7 lety +2

    Yay ! Bravo to the electric universe and it simplicity .

  • @adankseasonads935
    @adankseasonads935 Pƙed 6 lety

    MOAR Feynman!!

  • @vhsjpdfg
    @vhsjpdfg Pƙed 7 lety

    I love PBS Space Time.

  • @UltraTM
    @UltraTM Pƙed 7 lety +1

    Oh man I just submitted my answer a few moments ago :0 Let's hope that still counts as "by 2nd August"...

  • @SlyPearTree
    @SlyPearTree Pƙed 7 lety

    I won't say I understand Feynman diagrams not but at least I can now kind of read them. One microscopic step toward my Nobel price for making a real TARDIS. I just wish future me would send the schematics to my current location in space time.