"magnetic forces do no work"

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 18. 02. 2024
  • This video is an answer to a question that was lost in my brain for over ten years. Magnetic fields do work…unless you are working inside a classical electrodynamics theory that isn’t aware of the concept of intrinsic quantum mechanical spin. Which is a very odd choice! But that’s just my opinion, man.
    ​@ScienceAsylum video on this topic: • Can Magnets Do Work?
    American Institute of Physics, David Griffiths oral history: www.aip.org/history-programs/...
    Link to my Patreon- one new video each month: / acollierastro
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 1,8K

  • @orangebutnotred
    @orangebutnotred Před 3 měsíci +1561

    One must imagine Sisyphus happy pushing the box with a consistent force up the frictionless ramp

    • @dsracoon
      @dsracoon Před 3 měsíci +80

      Sisyphus spinning eternally into a magnetic field. But since Sisyphus has a spin he can do work and be happy!

    • @GrantWaller.-hf6jn
      @GrantWaller.-hf6jn Před 3 měsíci +3

      Kermit is hopping is work

    • @user6122
      @user6122 Před 3 měsíci +4

      +2

    • @michaelmoorrees3585
      @michaelmoorrees3585 Před 3 měsíci +11

      Sounds about right for a physics problem. When I took physics, Sisyphus was probably just entered the underworld.

    • @gilyun8352
      @gilyun8352 Před 3 měsíci +2

      How would he pushes himself up

  • @fwiffo
    @fwiffo Před 3 měsíci +1164

    "Magnets, how do they work? And I don't wanna talk to a scientist, 'cause they'll tell you they don't."

    • @xavariusquest4603
      @xavariusquest4603 Před 3 měsíci

      Look at you....are down clown?

    • @b.6603
      @b.6603 Před 3 měsíci +33

      Kkkkkkkkk this comment is perfect

    • @d-sizzle3053
      @d-sizzle3053 Před 3 měsíci +13

      Congradulations! That was so good!

    • @caesarinchina
      @caesarinchina Před 3 měsíci +29

      "(...) 'cause they'll tell you they don't, and make Angela pissed"
      Gotta conserve the rhyme and the metric (both contributing to a sense of rhythm)

    • @caesarinchina
      @caesarinchina Před 3 měsíci +20

      Also, it's "Fucking magnets (...)"

  • @hugofontes5708
    @hugofontes5708 Před 3 měsíci +418

    I hadn't realized how lucky I was I got the "sorry, that will go into QM" explanation from the professor way back when I took that course with that book.

    • @anonymes2884
      @anonymes2884 Před 3 měsíci +24

      In fairness, that's _also_ a solution to Dr Collier's problem - either she had a teacher that didn't provide that very simple answer OR she never asked the question (but I guess then we wouldn't have got this very entertaining video :).

    • @judahmatende3769
      @judahmatende3769 Před 3 měsíci +10

      she did say she wasn't paying attention during classes

    • @beaubellamy
      @beaubellamy Před 3 měsíci +33

      @@judahmatende3769 Undergrad physics was like drinking from a fire-hose to me. It's understandable that she wasn't fully engaged on every nuance.

    • @nickcrovo9512
      @nickcrovo9512 Před 3 měsíci +17

      I had to extract that from my physics undergrad professor during office hours. I saw that bolded boxed sentence, looked up when he would be in his office, and was like "I can pick stuff up with magnets, explain yourself." I don't think he had really thought about it in a while, and it was fun to watch him remember more and more as he started explaining.

    • @anti0918
      @anti0918 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@nickcrovo9512 lol "office hours" what are those? Our profs didn't give a shit. They were too busy with their research.

  • @James-wb1iq
    @James-wb1iq Před 3 měsíci +75

    Wow - we didn't have this problem in our classical engineering textbooks. They were quite clear that magnetic forces do no work on _electric_ charge, but magnetic field gradients can do work on magnetic dipoles. And also that electric fields and magnetic fields turn into each other when you change reference frames - so they're kind of the same thing.

  • @madeline6951
    @madeline6951 Před 3 měsíci +1460

    making a rant about a minor misunderstanding that could've been easily corrected years ago has to be a universal human experience

    • @krabkrabkrab
      @krabkrabkrab Před 3 měsíci +54

      but it's not minor. It's done real damage.

    • @seitanbeatsyourmeat666
      @seitanbeatsyourmeat666 Před 3 měsíci +14

      Every repeat argument me and my husband have ever had 😂

    • @madeline6951
      @madeline6951 Před 3 měsíci +48

      @@krabkrabkrab I mean... the damage could be great, but the misunderstanding is still small. It could've been resolved with one sentence like "Work done by magnetic fields is not in scope of classical electrodynamics".

    • @oxylepy2
      @oxylepy2 Před 3 měsíci +28

      I think the biggest issue with this kind of thing is how people will take in concepts mentally and then fight and die on those hills. Kinda like when someone misunderstands "fossil fuels" and will fight and argue and die on the hill that is "gasoline is made from dinosaurs." Because once a concept has set root, some people just refuse to ever allow it to be changed

    • @boriscat1999
      @boriscat1999 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Minor misunderstandings turning into a big problem reminds me of an old Kids in the Hall skit. Never Put Salt In Your Eyes. czcams.com/video/_83MEuLoz9Y/video.html

  • @ionsilver557
    @ionsilver557 Před 3 měsíci +361

    Seeing this video title just made me realize that I had almost completely forgotten that I had ever learned this rule. When I first learned it I immediately thought of two magnets attracting each other and asked my teacher about it. My teacher told me straight away that this "magnetic forces do no work" was too general a statement, and that it would be more accurate to say that "Lorentz forces do no work". I thought for a few seconds and said oh, and then never got it wrong again.

    • @jjsanchez2
      @jjsanchez2 Před 3 měsíci +51

      good teacher

    • @TalysAlankil
      @TalysAlankil Před 3 měsíci +31

      okay see that's so much better already

    • @vipinx8881
      @vipinx8881 Před 3 měsíci +12

      wha.... isnt the lorentz force q(E+vxB)??? the force that accelerates projectiles out of a railgun??

    • @ionsilver557
      @ionsilver557 Před 3 měsíci +34

      @@vipinx8881 Yes, strictly speaking, the Lorentz force also does work when considering a complete electromagnetic field, with both non-zero E and B, it's just that the original context of this discussion was magnetism and especially static magnetism. When I was first introduced to the concept of the Lorentz force, the scenario talked about was almost always the motion of a point charge in a static magnetic field. At that point, the Lorentz force naturally does no work because of that cross multiplication.

    • @GSBarlev
      @GSBarlev Před 3 měsíci +24

      My undergrad taught (teaches?) QM _before_ E&M, so my Physics 240 professor straightaway went, "except we all know that magnets are actually spinny bois" and everyone just nodded along.
      Except me, who was taking the course as a freshman _before_ taking Quantum in the second semester. So I remember fixating like Angela did and trying to work out the limit as r went to zero without QM like Griffiths' collaborator is doing.
      That class was a ball and a half, and I don't think I ever felt more meaningfully challenged, before or since, but _damn_ if I wasn't a problem student.

  • @ScienceAsylum
    @ScienceAsylum Před 3 měsíci +345

    Great video! I really tried to cram a lot of info into my video. I talked _really_ fast and had to include a supplementary point in a pinned comment because I rushed production, so I'm glad you made one where you take your time. I love how thorough it is.
    Also, IMO, Griffiths making a purely classical textbook was a mistake (pedagogically speaking) for reasons you point out. We can't just forget permanent magnets exist. That's unreasonable.

    • @narfwhals7843
      @narfwhals7843 Před 3 měsíci +19

      How does classical EM treat permanent magnets? With tiny current loops?
      I can't imagine people just didn't realize their amazing complete theory of electromagnetism just didn't actually explain magnets.

    • @anonymes2884
      @anonymes2884 Před 3 měsíci +15

      The thing is, he actually _doesn't_ ignore quantum mechanics entirely for the exact reason you give - in his section on ferromagnetism (page 278 in the 3rd ed) he mentions that neighbouring dipoles prefer to align for an "essentially quantum mechanical" reason "I shall not endeavour to explain" (he even mentions "electron spins", though I guess he _may_ mean "of tiny current loops").
      So it's actually arguably _worse_ than some (admittedly eccentric or, y'know, "a _little_ crazy" :) attempt to produce an entirely classical EM textbook because he's arbitrarily non-classical at other times.

    • @Huntracony
      @Huntracony Před 3 měsíci +22

      I think it's fine to make a purely classical textbook as long as you just say "Hey, permanent magnets don't quite make sense in classical physics, so we're ignoring them." That's all it takes.

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum Před 3 měsíci +40

      @@Huntracony Sure, but if someone does that, they shouldn't give the zero magnetic work thing so much emphasis. Don't bold it and box it like it's a fundamental principle.

    • @Huntracony
      @Huntracony Před 3 měsíci +10

      @@ScienceAsylum Yeah, I agree.

  • @0sm1um76
    @0sm1um76 Před 3 měsíci +38

    David Griffiths has been real quiet since this dropped

  • @misterguts
    @misterguts Před 3 měsíci +162

    27:19 For our civilization to work, for our world to work, for us to be able to sleep peacefully in our beds at night...
    ...someone has to care enough about this topic to get totally bent.
    Thank you, Angela.

  • @G1itcher
    @G1itcher Před 3 měsíci +597

    Time for a new video I barely understand yet inexplicably enjoy

    • @zwiebeldogs
      @zwiebeldogs Před 3 měsíci +17

      Truest statement I've seen all day

    • @SteveJubs
      @SteveJubs Před 3 měsíci +8

      Lol same

    • @diggysoze2897
      @diggysoze2897 Před 3 měsíci +39

      Time for a new video I completely and entirely do not understand, but could very easily explain why I enjoy.
      It makes me feel dumb in a way that doesn’t make me feel bad about being dumb.

    • @gaminikokawalage7124
      @gaminikokawalage7124 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Absolutely

    • @idontwantahandlethough
      @idontwantahandlethough Před 3 měsíci +8

      @@diggysoze2897 probably makes you (read: us) slightly less dumb in the process too!
      Assuming you (again, we) learned anything at all over the course of the video 😂

  • @lorddarkflare
    @lorddarkflare Před 3 měsíci +194

    My favorite genre of video is when CZcamsrs make videos about esoteric grudges in fields I do not care about. Always so much fun and this channel has so many of them.

    • @Alex-js5lg
      @Alex-js5lg Před 3 měsíci +4

      I'll let you know when I make my rant about singular they.

    • @NZsaltz
      @NZsaltz Před 2 měsíci

      @@Alex-js5lg And I'll let you know when I make my counter-rant. I mean, singular they does suck, but I'll argue for it as the best option for English. Alternatively, we can talk it out right now?

    • @coopj70
      @coopj70 Před 2 měsíci

      a couple of semesters of college physics was enough to get me a lifetime of small grudges on how they could possibly represent concepts.
      ...fuckin' optics, man.

    • @wbeaty
      @wbeaty Před 20 dny +1

      Let me introduce you to ...rants about Lifting Force in Airfoils! The years of online grudge-rants even resulted in entire contrary textbooks being written, by hated enemy groups in academia. (So, if we cannot convince youtubers to reject our opponents' base heresies, well, instead we can educate entire generations of aerodynamics undergrads. What did Johnathan Swift say about "the best way to crack an egg?" The genocidal Big-Endians want to wipe the Little-endians from the face of the Earth. Or maybe it was the other way 'round.)

  • @zamnodorszk7898
    @zamnodorszk7898 Před 3 měsíci +17

    I think the most relatable part of this for a fellow physicist is when she says “I’m scared of magnets”.
    I’m getting flashbacks to the time I dropped a Nd magnet in a particle physics lab and it… exploded. I got a shard of it in my leg, and the resulting shards stuck to every piece of metal equipment, sending stray fields all over the place and f’d with the beam lines for years.
    I’m scared of magnets.

    • @Limonadetaart
      @Limonadetaart Před měsícem +2

      Being scared of magnets is entirely justified. Nd magnets are sold as toys but can definitely take a finger off if you're not careful.

  • @AstroDLogic
    @AstroDLogic Před 3 měsíci +172

    I CANNOT OVERSTATE just how close to home this video hits for me. I have spent so much time wondering about this, googling to no avail, and I never got a satisfactory answer. Thank you for this video, you rock!

    • @Amethyst_Friend
      @Amethyst_Friend Před 3 měsíci

      Don’t try then

    • @everythingisalllies2141
      @everythingisalllies2141 Před 3 měsíci +5

      This is a classic case where we see that Math can't explain "Natural Physical process". The equation is intended to allow the creation of a graph, on which we intend to plot points to create vectors. The graph arranges the Force axis always perpendicular to the Velocity axis. But that is not what happens natural physics, its only applicable to your graph. The upshot of all this is that because math has been elevated above the understanding of Natural Physics, it then is assumed to be driving natural processes. But this is incorrect. In fact, your math may be totally wrong, because you have developed a wrong equation, because you never understood actual natural processes, or you forgot to include something, or you made too many assumptions. A incorrect equation can still give results that resemble what we observe, so this is a very real trap for those that think that the universe is ruled by math. Its not.

    • @dreadformer
      @dreadformer Před 3 měsíci

      what no its totally explained by quantum mechanics just not classical physics@@everythingisalllies2141

    • @owensspace
      @owensspace Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@everythingisalllies2141it is ruled by math, kinda, but math is complicated. Like in her ramp example how she left out the friction of the ramp and the air and said the force is constant. The universe is math, but it’s a lot of math to do anything. Like, do you model every atom?

    • @everythingisalllies2141
      @everythingisalllies2141 Před 2 měsíci

      @@owensspace Your math is only as good and correct as the hypothesis that was used to develop the equations. Garbage hypothesis = garbage math.

  • @stevepayne3094
    @stevepayne3094 Před 3 měsíci +245

    I'm scared of magnets, and now I'm also scared of hypothetical Tyler.

  • @ambrisabelle
    @ambrisabelle Před 3 měsíci +72

    The little tune before each section makes me so happy

    • @scottwatrous
      @scottwatrous Před 3 měsíci +11

      There's a channel about old historical firearms where every year they do a holiday fundraiser and when they meet certain goals they will feed berries to a guinea pig, and they play that same tune: so every time it transitioned in this video I thought about a happy little whistle tater getting a strawberry.

    • @thomastergaard
      @thomastergaard Před 3 měsíci

      @@scottwatrous Do they mention the artist(s) over there? :)

    • @mesoseven1633
      @mesoseven1633 Před měsícem

      ​@@thomastergaard I wanna say Kevin McLeod

  • @jardelelias5625
    @jardelelias5625 Před 3 měsíci +19

    I had the EXACT same experience in 2009 in EM class, with the same book. In our case, seven guys just sat in a library having this discussion for hours..

  • @KMO325
    @KMO325 Před 3 měsíci +60

    “Fucking magnets, how do they….”
    So the moral of this story is to properly tell your readership what your textbook is about or else they’ll think you are a troll.

    • @LimeyLassen
      @LimeyLassen Před 3 měsíci +11

      I only consider someone an expert if their book has a preface, in intro, AND a forward!

    • @jaimlawson
      @jaimlawson Před 3 měsíci

      💀

  • @cookechris28
    @cookechris28 Před 3 měsíci +260

    That's kinda mean to say to magnetic forces, they've been unemployed since 2021. They've been working on in. They cook, they clean!

    • @MrWaschbrettbaer
      @MrWaschbrettbaer Před 3 měsíci +24

      Yeah, life is treating them so perpendicularly

    • @GSBarlev
      @GSBarlev Před 3 měsíci +16

      That's certainly an interesting _spin_ on the issue.

    • @Jablicek
      @Jablicek Před 3 měsíci +4

      They're learning to code in Python to upskill. They need encouragement, not taking down a peg!

    • @thomaskalinowski8851
      @thomaskalinowski8851 Před 3 měsíci +2

      We should arrest the magnetic forces for loitering. The warden will set them to work filling potholes.

  • @Mnimosa
    @Mnimosa Před 3 měsíci +19

    ..."I'm like... I'm not disturbed man... I'm just confused!..." ! ! !

  • @Pystro
    @Pystro Před 2 měsíci +7

    This reminds me of something that I learned once:
    "A scientific law needs to contain two parts; a mathematical relation that holds true, and a description *under which conditions it holds true."*
    This whole thing seems like an issue caused by Griffith forgetting to do that second part.
    There seem to be struggles all throughout science education that stem from not realizing this wisdom. Most notably students when they miss-apply a scientific law. But it certainly doesn't help if a professor, nay, the author of a textbook is guilty of overlooking this aspect of scientific laws.

  • @rstuurman
    @rstuurman Před 3 měsíci +122

    In the preface of the new 5th version Griffiths says: "I have added some new commentary on subtle issues: ambiguities in the definition of polarization in crystals, problematic aspects of electric and (especially) magnetic field lines, the awkward role of intrinsic spin (a strictly quantum phenomenon) in a classical discussion of magnetic materials." I have not gotten far enough in the book to speak on how he incorporates it in the text, but apparently it is now mentioned!

    • @Khronogi
      @Khronogi Před 3 měsíci +7

      This type of text is how I could not continue to read text books. And why I don't read any type of books anymore.

    • @BlueHawkPictures17
      @BlueHawkPictures17 Před 3 měsíci +11

      @@Khronogi its a really good book though

    • @theomniscientoverlord5443
      @theomniscientoverlord5443 Před 3 měsíci +11

      I actually despise his use of language. It's like he's a 1700's aristocrat

    • @algumnomeaihehe
      @algumnomeaihehe Před 3 měsíci +6

      ​@@Khronoginot the self report 💀

    • @i-am-linja
      @i-am-linja Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@Khronogi They're not all this bad, I promise! There are plenty of fantastic ones, they're just not necessarily the ones that get set. It does take a bit of exposure to discern between the good and bad quickly though.
      And _books,_ in general? There's an _overwhelming_ variance of prose and tone out there! You are _seriously_ blinkering yourself if you let a few elitists put you off an _entire medium._

  • @bobross5716
    @bobross5716 Před 3 měsíci +55

    i find it very interesting that Griffiths won’t mention dipole forces because it’s not a classical effect. but a few chapters later he goes on to talk about the gyromagnetic ratio and that due to quantum effects, the actual ratio for the electron is different from the predicted classical value

    • @anonymes2884
      @anonymes2884 Před 3 měsíci +15

      Likewise (in the chapter after "magnets do no work", in a section on ferromagnetism) he explicitly mentions an "essentially quantum mechanical" reason for neighbouring dipoles to align (though declines to explain it).
      So he's not averse to mentioning QM, except in the section on work done apparently.

  • @migi7831
    @migi7831 Před 3 měsíci +18

    As a dynamicist magnetic fields terrify me and I feel like I'm in too deep at this point to have asked anyone about this irl, so I'm really glad you made this video cause this is honestly so relatable

    • @AlanCanon2222
      @AlanCanon2222 Před 2 měsíci

      Reminds me of Feynman at Oak Ridge, embarrassed because he didn't ask them to explain the symbols on the blueprints right away. "Right away would have been okay, but you let it go too long!"

  • @kimmeren1
    @kimmeren1 Před 3 měsíci +10

    A note on the foot-pounds vs pound-foot thing. They're exactly equivalent. Pound-foot is typically associated with the torque equivalent to one pound of force acting perpendicular at a distance of one foot, whereas foot-pounds is typically associated with the moment created by that torque. But they can be used completely interchangably with no issues at all. Myself and most other engineers i've interacted with use foot-pounds for both.

    • @gcewing
      @gcewing Před 3 měsíci +1

      Maybe we should use vector units? Then work would have units of feet-dot-pounds, which is the same as pounds-dot-feet. But torque would have units of feet-cross-pounds, which is not the same as pounds-cross-feet!
      I feel like we're slipping into geometric algebra here...

    • @adamnevraumont4027
      @adamnevraumont4027 Před měsícem

      Not quite: the torque direction is sort of a co-space, like the space of oriented planes vs directions. Angular stuff (and torque) lives in a universe of oriented planes, while non-angular lives in the land of direftions.
      We can choose to correspond these spaces, but doing so involves an arbitrary non-physical choice of convention.
      Except of course the weak force shows up and cares about it!

  • @TheDeityRyan
    @TheDeityRyan Před 3 měsíci +233

    I also do no work

    • @stevepayne3094
      @stevepayne3094 Před 3 měsíci +24

      Is that written inside a little box?

    • @lansingstudios
      @lansingstudios Před 3 měsíci +6

      Hell yeah brother

    • @sudokode
      @sudokode Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@stevepayne3094 on the door to his battery compartment

    • @YouB3anz
      @YouB3anz Před 3 měsíci +5

      you are a magnetic force

    • @BarackLesnar
      @BarackLesnar Před 3 měsíci +3

      Me and magnets are similar in that way

  • @Sam_on_YouTube
    @Sam_on_YouTube Před 3 měsíci +334

    When I, as an ethnically Jewish atheist, taught high school physics in an Orthodox Jewish school, it was very tempting to apply to physics definition of work to the Sabbath. Like... just put everything back and you've done no work on it.
    But I didn't think that would be appreciated.

    • @seijirou302
      @seijirou302 Před 3 měsíci +8

      That's amazing 😂

    • @idontwantahandlethough
      @idontwantahandlethough Před 3 měsíci +8

      hahahaha love it

    • @ssolomon999
      @ssolomon999 Před 3 měsíci +24

      Actually they likely would have appreciated it, as it helps distinguish the English word "work" from the sorts of activities your students would consider prohibited on the Sabbath. In general, if you can restore it back to the way it was, i.e., you haven't transformed its state in a persistent manner, then it's not prohibited "work." So in fact it could have been a useful way to discuss different meanings of the word "work" without needing to get into the religious aspects.

    • @zeggyiv
      @zeggyiv Před 3 měsíci +5

      Get out of bed without applying a force over a distance and we'll talk.

    • @seijirou302
      @seijirou302 Před 3 měsíci +21

      @@zeggyiv why don't you just come to bed and we'll talk here?

  • @davidnotonstinnett
    @davidnotonstinnett Před 3 měsíci +11

    I love hearing you ramble around a subject. It is relatable to how I work through questions and problems.

  • @soundlyawake
    @soundlyawake Před 3 měsíci +4

    I don’t know anything about this topic but did I still click on, watch, and remain engaged throughout this entire video? Absolutely.

  • @jjsanchez2
    @jjsanchez2 Před 3 měsíci +75

    I'm so happy you made this, I've also been haunted by memories of that one line in Griffiths, its shadowy presence has weighed upon me all through my PhD studying magnetic materials and even into my current postdoc. You have exorcised an intro physics demon and I suddenly feel free, thank you (*signs up for patreon)

    • @MrAnonEMoss
      @MrAnonEMoss Před 3 měsíci +5

      I don't know about you or anyone else, but I have had to accept throughout my education in Physics that some of the information I am given is just plain wrong, either out of lies by omission, overgeneralization, or professors who are straight up wrong. I now have a thing where whenever I read or hear something in Physics, I have to go, "Ok, but is that *really* true?"

    • @i-am-linja
      @i-am-linja Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@MrAnonEMoss Multiple sources, always. That's how it is with all knowledge, in all areas of life.

  • @silverharloe
    @silverharloe Před 3 měsíci +37

    I'm reminded of how we were taught simplified versions of biology, chemistry, history, etc in middle school and were just not given the note that "of course, you'll learn more in high school and college that will sometimes completely contradict what you're learning now"
    Leaving off that footnote was frustrating then, and you're just telling me that it doesn't stop in middle school: they will keep annoying me by leaving off that footnote forever. I guess the assumption is that I'd just know school is like that after the first time, so it's too redundant to keep printing it?

    • @silverharloe
      @silverharloe Před 3 měsíci +8

      @@leeroyjenkins0 that's all fair, but I just want to note that I didn't say the simplified teaching was a problem, I just found it frustrating how rarely I was told, "of course this model has already been superceded by one you'll learn in a few years" This was incredibly frustrating in history classes where the simplified histories really were deeply misleading rather than merely omitting details.

    • @chrisl6546
      @chrisl6546 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@silverharloe That's why I like PhysicsGirl Dianna Cowern- she does a great job of simplifying things without dumbing down or making up analogies that will lead you astray later. I hope she gets well and gets back to making videos. (Angela tends to do things for a much higher level than PhysicsGirl)

    • @-tera-3345
      @-tera-3345 Před 3 měsíci +4

      I know had a similar mental break when learning high school biology because of things like "Your cells store energy as ATP." OK, but what actually IS ATP, how does your body produce it, how is it moved around to places that need energy, how is it used to supply that energy? Like, I know it would be absurd to expect them to get into all the specifics of the chemistry involved, but you're leaving out basically the entire story when you simplify the entire process to "your cells store energy as ATP" and then never elaborate any further in any way. At that point you're not actually understanding anything, just memorizing a list of phrases.
      It's like how everyone knows "the mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell," but ask anyone what that actually MEANS and nobody actually knows anything beyond that one phrase.

    • @anonymes2884
      @anonymes2884 Před 3 měsíci

      A "lie-to-children" as it's sometimes known (coined by Ian Stewart and Jack Cohen but popularised by the inimitable Terry Pratchett).
      I guess the positive version would be, "All our models are approximations of reality and the higher the level you study at, the better the approximations become [but you'll never get The Truth because that's not really what science does]" (which may also have the advantage that if/when people _do_ find out that, when it works as intended, science is _the_ best way we have of becoming less wrong about the world BUT can _never_ provide 100% certainty, they don't then become disbelieving of the whole enterprise, as seems to be happening increasingly often these days).

    • @ChucksSEADnDEAD
      @ChucksSEADnDEAD Před 3 měsíci +2

      ​@@-tera-3345 Usually textbooks have a rough sketch of the aerobic respiration for Eukaryote cells. All things considered it's somewhat superfluous to get into the exact biochemistry of ATP. Everyone remembers "mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell" because it's been memed to hell and back but we don't look at that textbook diagram showing how O2 is used.

  • @A.F.Whitepigeon
    @A.F.Whitepigeon Před 3 měsíci +6

    27:18 is giving big, "That's right. It goes in the square hole," energy.

  • @clickallnight
    @clickallnight Před 3 měsíci +7

    I love the rare earth magnets I harvest from old harddrives, but I usually get a nasty pinch when I play with them :(

  • @bo_broadwater
    @bo_broadwater Před 3 měsíci +50

    My god, I was instantly teleported back to my EM class in 2009. I had an almost identical experience as you, and this video unlocked a _flood_ of memories that I had neatly ignored for 15 years. Thank you so much for chasing this down and finally closing a decade-and-a-half old question on my brain! Amazingly interesting video, as always!

  • @monkerud2108
    @monkerud2108 Před 3 měsíci +38

    ... 567 assumptions later; assume the moon is not slowing down the earths rotations such that the inclined slope version is not affected by a lateral acceleration of the reference frame. 568; assume the earth is a flat plane with a constant gravitational field, negating the need for assumption 567. 569: assume "nice!" conditions. 570 : astrology can be ignored...

  • @anti0918
    @anti0918 Před 2 měsíci +3

    Before even playing the video, I pictured a name in my head, “David Griffiths”, who I still partially credit with derailing my understanding and interest in physics around 2004-2005. I seriously had no idea you’d mention the exact same book. We also used his QM book with the stupid cat (1st ed). I just remember reading the same introductory paragraph over and over again, trying to understand what he was saying about an electron, and giving up. I was so excited for those classes, but I just couldn’t make it stick in my brain. The profs were all researchers, and seemed more interested in their work than the students they were forced to teach. They didn't care. If our grades were low at the end of the year, they'd just curve them all up and push us along to the next year. I skirted by and got the hell out of there with a BS and a shit ton of debt.

  • @DanPFS
    @DanPFS Před 3 měsíci +6

    I went on a real roller coaster with this one, gradually getting grumpier and thinking things like "but that's not the best definition of work" etc. etc. and then got more and more relieved and/or sheepish as the video went on and you then addressed all of those things and I wondered why I thought you wouldn't.

  • @De2Venner
    @De2Venner Před 3 měsíci +46

    For those curious, Barandes did publish his work on a classical theory of intrinsic dipole moments. I think the paper Griffiths was specifically referring to is "On magnetic forces and work
    JA Barandes - Foundations of Physics, 2021".

    • @JulianSildenLanglo
      @JulianSildenLanglo Před 3 měsíci +1

      So, eid he manage to do it?

    • @De2Venner
      @De2Venner Před 3 měsíci +14

      @@JulianSildenLanglo According to himself, he has done it. I don't know what objections Griffiths or other smart physicists would have to his construction. I would need to read the paper and go into all the details to see why the construction may not work as intended.
      I might do it, and if so post another reply here. I'm actually quite intrigued by the paper, since it is common knowledge (At least I was taught this in the context of the Bohr-Van Leeuwen theorem) that you need quantum mechanics to explain magnetism . If this isn't the case, I would be quite shocked.

    • @i-am-linja
      @i-am-linja Před 3 měsíci

      @@De2Venner And, well, what would be the point? Yeah I get it, it's interesting, but QM has worked pretty damn well for us. Why do we need to jam its concepts into a less effective theory? Just to retroactively vindicate this dickhead?

  • @commentsectionuser577
    @commentsectionuser577 Před 3 měsíci +160

    fuckin magnets, how do they work?

    • @iro4201
      @iro4201 Před 3 měsíci +6

      ask Feynman

    • @devforfun5618
      @devforfun5618 Před 3 měsíci +54

      they dont

    • @iro4201
      @iro4201 Před 3 měsíci

      segmentation fault @@devforfun5618

    • @devoarco
      @devoarco Před 3 měsíci

      if you are fucking them you're doing it wrong

    • @chrisl6546
      @chrisl6546 Před 3 měsíci

      @@devforfun5618 especially if you get them wet

  • @ruffshots
    @ruffshots Před 3 měsíci +10

    Angela picking up the 4th edition at around the 22:00 min mark is like the midpoint of act 2 where things look fine (an explanation, huzzah!) on the surface, but are about to go to shit, plunging to the act 3 break pit of despair

  • @olleassistans7467
    @olleassistans7467 Před 3 měsíci +5

    Really good that you think instead of just trying to make faulty statements work.
    Feels so good to understand things instead of just applying info without the understanding, youre smart i think, all of those points makes it pleasant to watch your videos :)

  • @kevley26
    @kevley26 Před 3 měsíci +68

    I've always understood that they do no work on charged particles (ignoring spin), but yeah I never understood how they do no work on magnetic materials.

    • @TheHadMatters
      @TheHadMatters Před 3 měsíci +3

      I'm pretty sure that has nothing to do with what it's supposed to be about.

    • @sciptick
      @sciptick Před 3 měsíci +12

      Exactly. Evidently magnets do not exist in the formal model of Classical Electromagnetics. His note should have said that the fact of magnetic forces in the model unable to do work is proof of the model's incompleteness.

    • @anonymes2884
      @anonymes2884 Před 3 měsíci +7

      @@sciptick Of course magnets exist in classical electro _magnetism_ - it'd hardly be widely lauded as _the_ crowning achievement of 19th century physics if it didn't account for well known objects which demonstrate the exact phenomena it's attempting to explain.
      The classical explanation though involves treating electrons as tiny spinning charges (as in _actually_ spinning, like e.g. planets do, rather than their intrinsically quantum mechanical property "spin") and the _work_ is done by _electric_ forces, as per Coulomb's law (which _doesn't_ act perpendicularly to the direction of motion but just along a vector between the charges).

  • @SteveJubs
    @SteveJubs Před 3 měsíci +105

    “Imagine you’re moving because you live in America and you’re renting and rent’s expensive and you have to move every single year so every single year you pack up all your books into little boxes and you carry them down the steps and you put them on a truck and you move them to a second place where you carry them up the steps and you unpack them only to do it again in like 11 months …”
    If all the physics problems I had to do in high school would have started like this, I’d have been way more prepared for the actual world.

    • @davidfiler7439
      @davidfiler7439 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I always presumed that students got daddy to do it?

    • @seijirou302
      @seijirou302 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@davidfiler7439as a daddy with 3 kids. Fuck.

    • @idontwantahandlethough
      @idontwantahandlethough Před 3 měsíci +17

      ​@@davidfiler7439 What is the point of this comment

    • @davidfiler7439
      @davidfiler7439 Před 3 měsíci +5

      A feeble attempt at humour?@@idontwantahandlethough

    • @Khronogi
      @Khronogi Před 3 měsíci +4

      ​@@davidfiler7439nope, gotta do it myself :(. That's why we just leave it in boxes until we need something.

  • @specimen532
    @specimen532 Před měsícem +1

    Love how you systematically take us through your thinking and how righteously annoyed you are when not understanding something. Great video

  • @Tossphate
    @Tossphate Před 2 měsíci +2

    We found an excellent use for the NMR magnet back when I was doing my PhD. This guy kept sticking on his crap heavy metal mix tape in the lab, and wouldn't compromise with allowing anyone else's music. When he was off on his lunch break, one quick rub on the side of the NMR magnet downstairs and all his carefully curated death metal was reduced to blissful white noise.

    • @restitutororbis964
      @restitutororbis964 Před 2 měsíci

      Lol that’s a great story. But I thought NMR magnets were shielded as to prevent things like that? Or was it an exposed magnet not inside the NMR spectrometer? Those are incredibly strong magnets.

  • @blakewendland8378
    @blakewendland8378 Před 3 měsíci +23

    In the 4th edition of Griffith’s, he does an entire section (6.4.2) about the intrinsically quantum phenomenon of ferromagnetism. On page 288, he even mentions electron spins: “… to align virtually 100% of the unpaired electron spins”. Love this book as an intro E&M text, but I really enjoyed your comments on it

    • @anonymes2884
      @anonymes2884 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Fun fact: that's _also_ in the 3rd edition (page 278 in mine) so the hypothesis that Griffiths has effectively written a book _as if_ quantum mechanics doesn't exist is false.
      In fairness, Dr Collier _does_ say that she may have missed it, as an undergrad she didn't meticulously read the entire book etc. And anyway, how hard would it have been to just stick a similar line in the section on magnets and work (or to do as he's now done in the 4th edition, include an explicit mention of where he _does_ explain it) ?
      (but then, we wouldn't have got this entertaining video :)

  • @orange-micro-fiber9740
    @orange-micro-fiber9740 Před 3 měsíci +69

    1:15 "audience of only me" - oh, no, I remember this phrase in this book. We debated it heatedly because it didn't make sense to us. We eventually dropped it because it derailed the class for so long. I've thought about it a couple times since (decades ago) but chalked it up to the book being wrong in an effort for brevity.

    • @facingup1624
      @facingup1624 Před 3 měsíci +20

      And yet instead of adding "in classical electrodynamics" to the 4th edition, he adds a completely new section basically saying the people questioning it are idiots. He might write a good textbook, but he seems rather unsocialized.

    • @idontwantahandlethough
      @idontwantahandlethough Před 3 měsíci +14

      it's not even just one book, or one teacher.. it's everywhere! It's one of those oft-repeated science phrases that aren't super helpful but get repeated over and over verbatim, like the one about centrifugal force not being real (although that's admittedly more helpful and less confusing. It's just the only thing I could think of this early).

    • @GSBarlev
      @GSBarlev Před 3 měsíci +12

      @@idontwantahandlethough Funny-the only places I ever remember hearing that the centrifugal force doesn't exist is pop culture and _maybe_ high school physics. By the time I was learning classical mechanics, we were *all about* doing the coordinate transformations to derive centrifugal and coriolis forces.
      Now, was that due to me making the jump to college / major physics? -Definitely- Maybe. But I'd like to think it was because I graduated high school in 2005, right around the time that xkcd came out.

    • @Sletty73
      @Sletty73 Před 3 měsíci

      Is it Classical Electrodynamics by Jackson?

    • @robertadsett5273
      @robertadsett5273 Před 3 měsíci +6

      @@idontwantahandlethough except, of course, centrifugal force is real. You can, in fact, measure it and it has consequences. The nomenclature here does a real disservice. Inertial and non-inertial are better terms

  • @Maedas
    @Maedas Před 3 měsíci +2

    Have a like and comment for respecting that yes, I did just want the 5min summary today.
    Also, have a new sub for informing me of the option and linking it in an approachable way. Thanks for not treating your channel as the end-all-be-all source of information where the goal is to monetize attention, but for what CZcams should be about.
    Your style is great and I look forward to the next one!

  • @danthem2278
    @danthem2278 Před 3 měsíci +3

    I used Griffiths for E&M last year. I just started the video and don't know if you mention this later, but he actually spends a few pages explaining this a bit later in the book.

  • @paulhammer2279
    @paulhammer2279 Před 3 měsíci +20

    In my high school physics class, my teacher illustrated the non-intuitive character of work. He held a lab stool motionless straight out to the side. He declared that he was doing no work despite the emphatic disagreement coming from his arm and shoulder muscles.

    • @407BRR
      @407BRR Před 3 měsíci +15

      But he is doing work. It's just that the work isn't being done to the stool. The work being done is internal to his body. There's ions being pumped around his muscle tissues, things like that.

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 Před 3 měsíci +8

      In general relativity, he's accelerating the lab stool. : /

    • @growtocycle6992
      @growtocycle6992 Před 3 měsíci +1

      But magnets create a force that MOVE objects over a distance. I think you missed a little bit in this video

  • @talideon
    @talideon Před 3 měsíci +39

    Magnetic forces: the ultimate slacker.

    • @GSBarlev
      @GSBarlev Před 3 měsíci +8

      Worse-while they do no work, they _divert_ the paths of charged particles. So really, they're *the ultimate trolls.*

  • @GeneralPublic
    @GeneralPublic Před 13 dny

    I love that you reference the Serway book, my dad worked on the instructor’s manual and student solutions manual for that textbook for many years (but not the main textbook). Nice to see people learned from it and became successful physicists who know a lot. I have met Professor Serway and stayed at his house, he and my dad were co-workers and friends. Went swimming in a lake in his backyard, even.

  • @TrickyD8P
    @TrickyD8P Před 3 měsíci +2

    Great video as always!
    1 small thing, could you make the video a little louder? when an ad comes on it's super loud relative to the video

  • @XavierGobble
    @XavierGobble Před 3 měsíci +14

    This video is also for me, someone currently retaking undergrad EM with that exact textbook

  • @sasx1487
    @sasx1487 Před 3 měsíci +16

    I loved that i was perfectly following along on the discussion on work and energy, then stuff went out there with quantum spin stuff and I was once again humbled.

  • @RosendoGuitar
    @RosendoGuitar Před 3 měsíci +2

    As an engineer I was taught that boundary forces do work, but not field forces. Field forces should be accounted for in the energy equation as changes in potential energy. If an object falls to the ground (air resistance negligible) loss of potential energy is balanced by gain in kinetic energy, & no work is done by gravity. If big magnet lifts an object I’d say as it rises it gains gravitational potential energy and loses magnetic potential energy

  • @ravenlord4
    @ravenlord4 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Ok I went to watch The Science Asylum's video, but I came back for more. Your takes are always really fun :)

  • @Nylspider
    @Nylspider Před 3 měsíci +33

    “I got a couple of comments on my last video […] that were like ‘why are you scared of magnets?’
    And like, why *aren’t* you scared of magnets?”
    This is why I watch past the outro lol

  • @e1211
    @e1211 Před 3 měsíci +18

    I worked in undergrad with neodymium magnets, and even small ones if you're not careful with them will just shoot off and stick to a metal desk leg and they might break on impact, and as you said, they don't care if you are in the middle. Yeah I'm definitely scared of magnets.

    • @MarkkuS
      @MarkkuS Před 3 měsíci

      My classmate in Uni had his thumb stuck between two 10cm×10cm×5cm neodymium magnegts. It was properly flattened, but luckily they could fix it.😮

    • @deltalima6703
      @deltalima6703 Před 3 měsíci

      Well, the point of uni *IS* to make you smart…

    • @deltalima6703
      @deltalima6703 Před 3 měsíci

      That would sure make his thumb smart at least

    • @PhyllisLane-xj5uf
      @PhyllisLane-xj5uf Před 3 měsíci +1

      Magnets don't scare me. ELECTRICITY is whats scary.
      "What do you mean there's 'invisible energy' inside those perfectly normal pieces of elongated copper? And If I touch them the wrong way, I just straight up die? "

  • @lukenaude8179
    @lukenaude8179 Před 3 měsíci +3

    I did my undergraduate E&M course mearly 3 years ago and I used the new edition of Griffiths, but I was left with the same confusion as you. This bothered me to my core, and the new chapter didn't help me. Griffiths definitely made a mistake by not making his intentions clear; to write a book on purely classical E&M. Thank you for helping me find peace.
    By the way, I love your energy and I think a lot of physics students will find you very relatable. This video deserves more than a million views.

  • @dariuszzukowski5244
    @dariuszzukowski5244 Před 3 měsíci +2

    "Magnetic forces do no work" as an enigmatic mantra somehow reminds me of "Knowledge is power, France is bacon".

  • @Fabdanc
    @Fabdanc Před 3 měsíci +10

    I would just to let you know that I pay attention to all your jump cards and interlude music... I always find them very delightful.

  • @Abmebbma
    @Abmebbma Před 3 měsíci +19

    “Oh shit” “what” this had me cracking up

  • @brucetepke8150
    @brucetepke8150 Před 3 měsíci +2

    There was another theory that treated the bulk effect of spin classically. Henning Harmuth and collaborators carried on a lively debate in the IEEE journals back in the 80s, arguing that adding a (dipole sourced) magnetic displacement current to mirror Maxwell's displacement current would correct some of the infelicities involved in wave solutions in matter.

  • @Limonadetaart
    @Limonadetaart Před měsícem

    I had this exact experience during my undergrad learning EM using Griffiths 3e! "Magnetic forces do no work" has been permanently carved into my brain for the last 15 years (somewhere alongside "the mitochondrium is the powerhouse of the cell"). I always got confused when I thought about it too deeply and I now finally get what the man was trying to say!

  • @katscratch_newt
    @katscratch_newt Před 3 měsíci +20

    Dying everytime Angela has a strong reaction to magnets being magnetic 😆

  • @TimTeatro
    @TimTeatro Před 3 měsíci +35

    I love it! I took E&M from the same book, and got hung up for years on that sentence! I never understood it until I looped back around and taught E&M out of that same book and realised it was a bit of a “for a spherical chicken in a vaccuum” sort of statement. (If you know that old joke.)

    • @GSBarlev
      @GSBarlev Před 3 měsíci +5

      Griffiths is such a hit-or-miss author for undergrad physics. His Quantum book is, generously, trash, but his Elementary Particles book is great.
      I remember E&M being somewhere in between, with some members of the faculty _seriously considering_ swapping it out with Jackson.

    • @Lavabug
      @Lavabug Před 3 měsíci +6

      @@GSBarlev Indeed Griffith's quantum is horrible, built a lot of bad habits for fellow grad students. For E&M, Zangwill is basically Jackson for someone who doesn't hate their students.

    • @valasfar1557
      @valasfar1557 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@LavabugOh why is Griffiths Quantum trash? I quite liked it when I learned QM with it. Although, now I’m thinking I haven’t learned QM lol.

    • @Lavabug
      @Lavabug Před 3 měsíci

      @@valasfar1557 I learned from Cohen-Tannoudji, it was brutal and rigorous but it taught me the basics in the most general way possible. Griffiths teaches very special cases and doesn't state all the assumptions made IIRC, which I guess is fine for a single semester class, and it's fun to read, but it seemed to hurt my peers in grad school who used it for undergrad cause they had to unlearn/relearn a lot of it in a more general way to progress to the more advanced topics (addition of angular momenta, WKB theory, 2nd order perturbation theory etc.), whereas I felt way more ready thanks to Tannoudji. Zettili is a happy medium I think.

  • @franciscoathens924
    @franciscoathens924 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I never took a college physics course (astronomy survey counts?) and I don't really get the maths but I can enjoy listening to you talk about physics for 40 minutes and I just accept that despite sometimes asking myself, "why?" I don't think you need a disclaimer about such a thing that I stumble over, just that I want to share that feeling. Isn't science is all about that kinda thing that pushes us into getting deeper? Someone explains something in hopes that they are communicating at your level and for the most part, it can be OK. For those whom the explanation is not OK, they dig deeper and maybe move things forward a little too. I like how you are really demonstrating how science is fascinating and that keeps it among my thoughts. Thank you!

  • @JeffBouas
    @JeffBouas Před 10 dny

    I started studying physics in 2005 and graduated in 2008. We used that exact book, and I just checked, and I still have it on my shelf. (Because why would I sell it back to the book store after I finished the class when they would give me what amounts to a rounding error on the price of the textbook.) I always chalked up the "magnetic forces do no work" line to the explanation you give about the work you do on the box: you lifted the box, but Earth "performed work" on the box. So for a crane lifting up the junker, the magnetic fields are more like the "tool" we use to lift the car in the gravitational field of Earth (like your arm), but it was still Earth "performing work" on the car. Thank you for going back and connecting the quantum mechanical aspect of it to explain that, in the "real world," magnetic fields can in fact do work.
    I also went through quantum mechanics, but never really thought about the "magnetic fields do no work line" because I thought it was not-all-that-useful pedantry when we don't even really use that work attribution to do energy accounting in the real world applications like the junkyard crane. The crane operators have to provide electricity to that crane to lift that car, and the energy carried by that electricity is going to be (more than, accounting for losses) the amount of potential energy the car gains being lifted into the air. Just like when you lift the box, sure, Earth "performs work," but your muscles are providing the energy that the box gains, and you're extracting that energy from the chemical energy in food, so in a sense the box is gaining energy from the food you ate.
    I'm rambling, but I guess what I'm getting at is, pedagogically, not only is "magnetic forces do no work" misleading since they do in quantum mechanics (and the textbook is called "Introduction to Electrodynamics" not "Classical Electrodynamics"), but the physics concept of work is less often a good representation of energy flow through a system than you would expect given the way it's presented in undergrad.

  • @natanmihretu4532
    @natanmihretu4532 Před 3 měsíci +8

    I automatically recognized it was from Griffith having just read it over a month ago.
    This was also something that had been bothering me for a long time despite it making sense mathematically. Can't wait to watch the rest of the video...*excitement*

  • @emmyfreudenrich4646
    @emmyfreudenrich4646 Před 3 měsíci +5

    I love Andrew Zangwill's explanation of this in section 12.3.1 of his Modern Electrodynamics. It helped me get a nice intuitive explanation of this phenomena in classical E&M

  • @mikeharbour6345
    @mikeharbour6345 Před 3 měsíci +2

    The music cracks me up every time. Love it.
    Another entertaining and informative video. Thank you.

    • @Elo-hv3fw
      @Elo-hv3fw Před 3 měsíci

      Mozart's flute concerto in D major.

  • @elfeiin
    @elfeiin Před 3 měsíci

    Hi Angela Collier! I am enjoying this video so far, but I was struggling to understand much of it because the audio was very low. Just wanted to let you know and thank you for putting out great content!

  • @Pingviinimursu
    @Pingviinimursu Před 3 měsíci +14

    Yesss Dr Angela uploaded and the thumbnail looks like a rant, let's goooo 🍾🔥🔥👀

  • @jacoblojewski8729
    @jacoblojewski8729 Před 3 měsíci +12

    I will say, that same boxed statement is in 4th Ed. This time he mentions to read Chapter 8 for more details. It's not until section 8.3, in the very last paragraph of a 4 page discussion, that Griffith's mentions "The magnetic field *can* do work on these 'intrinsic' dipoles...it is *not* classical electrodynamics...". This after 4 pages of justifying magnetic fields doing no work by analyzing all magnetic dipoles as infinitesimal current loops. I always felt that was a bit of a cop out.
    EDIT: Aaand I got ahead of myself, haha! 23:00

  • @janedoe3043
    @janedoe3043 Před 3 měsíci +4

    I think it's funny I would calculate work and forces and such in Science Olympia in fourth grade. But I haven't thought about work since college physics. I never think about the math anymore. I answered the work question instantly but couldn't show my work if my life depended upon it!

  • @Blackberry0Pie
    @Blackberry0Pie Před 3 měsíci +2

    Props to you for doing the ramp equation without assuming a spherical bovi-box

  • @dylancampbell3356
    @dylancampbell3356 Před 3 měsíci +8

    To be fair to him, I'm an electrical engineer so only got babies first electromagnetics and if I read that I would have thought the same thing. And then if you added well this doesn't account for electron spin I doubt that would have helped me. I'd just be like what the hell does spin have to do with this?

  • @dipi71
    @dipi71 Před 3 měsíci +6

    I was hooked from the start, this was one classical electrodynamics thriller.
    Cheers!

  • @TimFSpears
    @TimFSpears Před 3 měsíci +9

    I had a very similar frustration as an eighth-grader, or whenever it was that they taught us about the Bohr model of the atom. They merrily tell you the electrons orbit the nucleus. How does that even make sense: an accelerating electric charge should cause an electromagnetic wave to be emitted, draining the energy from the electron and the whole thing collapses and all the covalent bonds break down and the universe collapses in on itself.
    My teacher, apparently not even being aware of QM, I assume (this was 40 years ago), says in response to my inconvenient question, “it’s not accelerating - it’s just going round in circles.”. Well that didn’t instill much confidence for me that I had a good guide for this journey :/.

    • @dsdy1205
      @dsdy1205 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I actually have a textbook that quotes that very thought experiment as a reason to introduce the quantum model of the atom

    • @HarryS77
      @HarryS77 Před 3 měsíci +1

      If you were citing quantum mechanics in eighth grade, you should've gotten bumped up a few grades.

    • @LANSl0t
      @LANSl0t Před 3 měsíci +1

      this did not happen

  • @xyzasdf
    @xyzasdf Před 3 měsíci +1

    What a journey, I read the 4th edition for my physics undergrad and had similar confusions as well... the interview was great to clear things up.
    Love the video!

  • @TanyaLairdCivil
    @TanyaLairdCivil Před 3 měsíci +8

    You think foot-pounds are bad, let me introduce you to the wonderful unit of force known as the kip, short for kilo-pound. It's a standard unit in civil engineering. And it even has derivative units such as ksi (kips per square inch.) Traditionally, different grades of steel are even described by their yield strength in ksi. Good old A36 has a yield strength of 36 ksi. Got to love American engineering!

    • @kimmeren1
      @kimmeren1 Před 3 měsíci

      What's wrong with kips, it's a great unit.

  • @robertousch6129
    @robertousch6129 Před 3 měsíci +13

    Oh, you changed your channel name?

    • @Tanmaydeshpande-ne9gc
      @Tanmaydeshpande-ne9gc Před 3 měsíci +1

      I didn't know how to pronounce acollierastro until I saw her name so it's probably for the better

    • @michaelblacktree
      @michaelblacktree Před 3 měsíci

      @@realGBx64 - You think Angela Collier is harder to remember than acollierastro?

  • @darkbloomvivian1087
    @darkbloomvivian1087 Před 3 měsíci

    You just blew my mind for no other reason but bc u like hearing urself talk… you are the best science communicator i have ever had the pleasure of knowing

  • @Fancy4ya
    @Fancy4ya Před 3 měsíci

    Great video! I like that you explained things in a way that people without any knowledge in magnetic forces are still able to follow along throughout the entire video. However I am hoping to get your opinion on a matter. I am asking you because you know more about physics then I ever will, and me and a friend have been debating this question for a while now. Is it possible, from a physics standpoint, to design wings with mechanical components that enable the user to achieve flight? I am hoping your input can settle this debate, Thank you.

  • @dracon4742
    @dracon4742 Před 3 měsíci +17

    Perfect timing for my EM theory class starting magnetism today

    • @hattielankford4775
      @hattielankford4775 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Commenting hoping for an update about how you asked about this in class.

  • @stevenklinden
    @stevenklinden Před 3 měsíci +2

    Huh, I always took it for granted that Griffith's E&M book was meant to be addressing solely classical electrodynamics. I remember my E&M class in undergrad, using this book, was taught by a professor with a thick German accent and somewhat broken English, and he wrote on the board, "Magnetic forces DO NOT WORK!"
    The bit about a classical theory including intrinsic dipoles is interesting. I know Jacob Barandes very slightly - he runs a seminar series on the foundations of physics that I've attended. Sounds like an interesting thought experiment to consider a semi-classical theory like that.

  • @user-le6lt1jz9m
    @user-le6lt1jz9m Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you very much for making this video! The frustration that you elucidate is exactly the same as my own. I appreciate your humor and the effort you took to look into such things as Griffith's interview. 🙂

  • @technocore1591
    @technocore1591 Před 3 měsíci +5

    Ahhh, sunday morning coffee and a ACollierAstro video. Perfect combo!

    • @jjsanchez2
      @jjsanchez2 Před 3 měsíci

      *checks to make sure its monday... yep have to go to work...

    • @technocore1591
      @technocore1591 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@jjsanchez2 Ahh holiday for me. It feels sunday!

    • @Pingviinimursu
      @Pingviinimursu Před 3 měsíci

      Reading this on a monday night, knowing full well it was posted a few hours ago, I wondered for a second if I know anything about timezones after all

    • @EinsteinsHair
      @EinsteinsHair Před 3 měsíci

      The name of the channel is not ACollierAstro anymore, it is Angela Collier. I did not notice until last time when someone mentioned it in the comments.

  • @SaberTail
    @SaberTail Před 3 měsíci +7

    Working on a classical theory of electrodynamics with intrinsic spin because he's sick of people writing letters is an amazing energy.
    I dug out my copy of the 3rd edition and it does explain on the next couple pages (Example 5.3) what is doing work in the example of a current-carrying wire being picked up. The way I handwave it away is "the electric force is ultimately what is confining the charge carriers in the conductor, and it can do work against the magnetic force keeping them there".

    • @i-am-linja
      @i-am-linja Před 3 měsíci +2

      As a rule, anything described as an "energy", "vibe", or "mood" is better described as "being an asshole".

  • @russellchido
    @russellchido Před 3 měsíci +1

    I watched the Asylum video first, and I have to say you made worthwhile additions to the topic. Thank you.

  • @senorgato9386
    @senorgato9386 Před 3 měsíci +1

    As someone who knows nothing about physics past barely understanding my highschool chemistry class and nearly failing geometry( but ive got basic algebra down i think) i would love a video explaining how exactly magnets work on atomic and/or molecular level. I know so much about molecular structures and because im interested in cooking, computers, and metallurgy ( because of my work at a non-ferrous metals recycler), the things i dont know bother me so much more. Magnets are one of them. I use them everyday, ive killed them with heat, ive charged them back up with a machine. Ive owned so many different kinds.
    Thank you for your videos and time!

    • @senorgato9386
      @senorgato9386 Před 3 měsíci

      And hey i wouldnt mind an explaination of superconductors either if theyre connected the way i think they are.

  • @GreenGiant400
    @GreenGiant400 Před 3 měsíci +6

    I too remember learning this in Griffiths and being confused. That confusion was later made worse by the fact that magnetic work appears explicitly in some thermodynamic calculations such as the cooling process known as adiabatic demagnetization. Interestingly this technique only works because of intrinsic spin (either nuclear, or unpaired electrons) and cannot be understood in terms of small current loops.

  • @donovanschlekat2221
    @donovanschlekat2221 Před 3 měsíci +4

    This is literally perfect timing, I have an electrodynamics exam tmr lol

  • @zactron1997
    @zactron1997 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I really love this style of video. It reminds me of my uni days where one of us would learn something first and be able to explain it to the others as colleagues rather than a strict tutor/student relationship.

  • @laioren
    @laioren Před 3 měsíci +1

    Thanks for making this. Sadly, there are a LOT of similar issues I've encountered in education. Many in the sciences and math, but the phenomena is not exclusive to just those fields. Seems to happen everywhere, actually. I suspect the issue stems from how the human brain works. As our neurons connect, those networks are always relative to some other part of the local network. When we attempt to explain something to others, we are often conveying information stored in one network and have no awareness of the other networks required to contextualize that information.
    The part I find most interesting is the resistance some people have to making the small update to contextualize the information once it's been pointed out to them. Like you mentioned, homeboy should just add a sentence to clarify that the "work" can be explained by quantum mechanics, and is outside of the field of the classical scope of the book.

  • @Lunar0Strain
    @Lunar0Strain Před 3 měsíci +3

    Always worried about this ever since doing homework for another class while my professor devoted an entire 1-hour lecture to this topic. But I was chugging through my PhD thesis which heavily featured solving how atoms evolve in magnetic fields and it never seemed to come up, so I never went back and looked into it (quite the opposite,since as you say I've been implicitly allowing my magnetic fields to do work the whole time)
    Now I can rest easier knowing I wasn't making some egregious mistake the whole time and nobody was calling me out on it.

  • @door-ek3hf
    @door-ek3hf Před 3 měsíci +3

    I LOVE THIS CHANNEL SO MUCH

  • @niallsulcer600
    @niallsulcer600 Před 2 měsíci

    Is there any chance you might upload these videos as a podcast? I’d like to have them saved for offline playing

  • @burtbackattack
    @burtbackattack Před 3 měsíci +2

    Angela, we come here for the detail, the tangents and whole “Angela Collier vibe”. I like Science Asylum too but I’ll take the long version from you any day.

  • @razoras
    @razoras Před 3 měsíci +9

    This video has awakened memories of my Sophmore (High School) physics teacher, who had a habit of dropping statements like this casually mid sentence. I am almost positive he asserted this mid-explanation of Work.
    He casually did things like this all the time, such as when we blew up a balloon once and then said "now, this balloon is filled with a fluid and..." and then I stopped remembering anything he was saying because my early high school brain was "Wait... isn't air a gas? Is it a fluid, too? Aren't fluids liquids??? Why did no one ever mention this before!?"

    • @i-am-linja
      @i-am-linja Před 3 měsíci

      My physics teacher was mostly pretty good, but he had this whiteboard outside his classroom, and one time he drew a right triangle on it: the orthogonal sides were the same length, and all three sides were labeled with the numeric value of the Planck length. I didn't really understand quantum gravity at the time, but I knew that that was wrong, and the best argument he could summon in his defence was "we just have to accept it, even if it doesn't make sense".
      He never did that with any of the actual course material, thankfully. He had that all straight.