Roger Penrose | The Next Universe and Before the Big Bang | Nobel Prize in Physics winner

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  • čas přidán 14. 05. 2024
  • What came before the Big Bang? What happens when our universe ends? Eminent theoretical physicist, Hawking collaborator and 2020 Nobel Prize in Physics winner, Roger Penrose, has a radical theory which proposes that another universe will follow our own. How could this be? Hear him put forward his case and review the latest evidence.
    #penrose #gravity #physics #iaitv #hawking
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    Roger Penrose: Roger Penrose is an English mathematical physicist, mathematician and philosopher of science. He is Emeritus Rouse Ball Professor of Mathematics in the University of Oxford and Emeritus Fellow of Wadham College, Oxford. He is author of The Road to Reality: A Complete Guide to the Laws of the Universe, a comprehensive guide to the Laws of Physics, as well his own theory on the Penrose Interpretation.
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Komentáře • 669

  • @raymondfung1612
    @raymondfung1612 Před 4 měsíci +22

    Based on Professor Penrose’s conformal cyclic cosmology theory, I would like to suggest a couple of modifications. Specifically, mass turns into radiation through fusion, fission and hawking radiation. As total mass in the universe reduces, space-time expands. After the last proton decays into radiation, only electromagnetic waves are left, and the universe becomes a system of pure energy. At this point, the universe reaches maximum entropy, and with no mass, there is no more space-time. Wavelengths of electromagnetic waves become meaningless as well. Interestingly, at this point, with no space-time, what was supposed to be the state with maximum entropy and volume suddenly also becomes the state of having no volume and the lowest entropy (this is hard to understand per Professor Penrose). This condition is similar to the state described in the 10^-43 second “Planck Epoch”.
    At Planck Epoch, the system has a pile of energy and has the minimum entropy. As prescribed by the second law of thermodynamics and the uncertainty principle, the stochastic nature and the need to get out of the state of minimum entropy suggest that some of the energy would suddenly convert into mass on a stochastic basis (remember e=mc^2), and with the emergence of mass, space-time would suddenly re-emerge. The key here is that the expansion process isn’t continuous, as suggested by the inflation process in the Big Bang Nucleosynthesis theory. Instead, it suddenly happens in a blink, and mass is distributed like the distribution of water droplets on a mirror after a splash, some big, some small, unevenly across the newly re-emerged space-time, with some energy not turning into mass and becoming background radiation we observe today. As mass turns into radiation through the fusion and fission processes, the total mass in the universe reduces, space-time expands, and the cycle repeats itself. This hypothesis presents a plausible alternative to the Big Bang Nucleosynthesis theory. The recent discovery of large galaxy systems at 400/500 million years post Big Bang supports this hypothesis. I hope this provides some food for thought and provokes further thinking. Cheers!

    • @Autonova
      @Autonova Před 15 dny

      Brilliant info thanks a lot! Just curious, could you please expand on this - "The recent discovery of large galaxy systems at 400/500 million years post Big Bang supports this hypothesis". I recently heard about these anomalous galaxy sightings, how do they validate the CCC theory?

  • @infinitel00p94
    @infinitel00p94 Před 8 měsíci +9

    0:42 ""Before I get to that, let me...describe the universe" delightful!

  • @suvrat
    @suvrat Před 3 lety +32

    90 years old and still so curious! :)

    • @espaciohexadimencionalsern3668
    • @cosmotalk7227
      @cosmotalk7227 Před 2 lety +2

      89, this year(2021) will be 90

    • @cosmotalk7227
      @cosmotalk7227 Před 2 lety

      @@espaciohexadimencionalsern3668 89, this year(2021) will be 90

    • @starwaving8857
      @starwaving8857 Před 3 měsíci

      Already occupied space is part of the equation that is a constant. I couldn’t give you the whole equation but at 90 you should know part of it.

  • @vorador4365
    @vorador4365 Před 4 lety +139

    Damn. You only get half the Penrose experience without an overhead projector. One of the greatest living minds

    • @caseywebb2793
      @caseywebb2793 Před 4 lety +3

      Agreed. When I didn't see an overhead projector, I was a little disappointed

    • @SergioDPerez-rm3dk
      @SergioDPerez-rm3dk Před 6 měsíci +1

      ridiculous

    • @je25ff
      @je25ff Před 6 měsíci +5

      It's made even worse that the camera doesn't even occasionally focus on the slide.

    • @juddbiggs
      @juddbiggs Před měsícem

      He might have a great mind, but he had a very narrow perspective in thinking there was nothing before the big bang...what a waste of time without infinity in the equation?
      Much more likely...William Blake was right. Often these incredible mathematicians seem to be horrible at theory. It is like they can't see the forest for the trees
      I would put things this way from a prophetic quote of Gibran......there is the infinitely small and the infinitely large...
      So....particles are containment....with containment there must be breach of containment...what goes in or down must come out or go up?
      The small creates the large making fields of containment...the large creates the small when the containment fields cannot hold the energy within...hence infinity.
      Energy cannot be created nor destroyed...it can only be contained and released. Is it a living infinity of conscious change...that is logical and defies logic at the same time? We call this God creation?
      Infinity appears to be illogical...how can reality exist ?...but non infinity is also not logical...how can something come from nothing?
      Maybe ii is 'Nothing' that has never existed and never will??
      Why did God create time?
      So everything does not happen all at once? 😁😁😁

    • @asdfoifhvjbkaos
      @asdfoifhvjbkaos Před 13 dny +1

      @@juddbiggs did you even watch the video

  • @threelionsonourshirt8259
    @threelionsonourshirt8259 Před 4 lety +198

    This guy needs to be listened to..Very clever man and at his age still going strong.I take my hat off to you sir Penrose

    • @malcolm9994
      @malcolm9994 Před 4 lety +5

      Sir Roger !!

    • @threelionsonourshirt8259
      @threelionsonourshirt8259 Před 3 lety

      @Ozymandias Heliogabal Nullifidian Its a song by The Lightening seeds for The England football team in 96

    • @aletheia161
      @aletheia161 Před 3 lety +1

      alexander roils tomorrow was the joy

    • @chewyjello1
      @chewyjello1 Před 3 lety +4

      And this year he won the Noble Prize in physics! :)

    • @laszlomesz2447
      @laszlomesz2447 Před 3 lety +2

      @William White He is much of a scientist as Einstein. They are kinda flat-earthers.

  • @cfluff6716
    @cfluff6716 Před 3 lety +52

    Penrose seems so genuine and humble.

  • @sourcecode6467
    @sourcecode6467 Před 3 lety +122

    Roger's brain is working in a higher realm to most of us

    • @thebookofthesun884
      @thebookofthesun884 Před 3 lety +4

      Please look up the definition of 'word salad'.

    • @dbgsdc3913
      @dbgsdc3913 Před 3 lety +4

      He is one of the greatest mathematician in physics I mean in real physics,

    • @cosmotalk7227
      @cosmotalk7227 Před 2 lety +3

      No, It is Normal for Theoretical Physicists, well, except some of the Laypeople,
      If you try to Focus on the Subject & type of Matter or in this case Big Bang, then it'll be easy, just needs Interest, Passion & Dedication.

    • @kkandola9072
      @kkandola9072 Před 2 lety +15

      @@thebookofthesun884 haha people love to quote Einstein “ if you can’t explain it to a 5 year old you don’t understand it”. It’s much easier to blame the speaker than blame your own lack of comprehension.

    • @jararacavoadora5868
      @jararacavoadora5868 Před rokem +6

      @@thebookofthesun884 haha he just won a Nobel Prize

  • @deepaktripathi4417
    @deepaktripathi4417 Před rokem +5

    This humble Nobel laureate scientist calls himself an agnostic,he believes that to ask about the meaning of life is not a stupid question. He doesn't make me depressed.

  • @erniepomeroy2487
    @erniepomeroy2487 Před 4 lety +91

    this is a hell of a thing to try explaining in a 1/2 hour

    • @Feelthefx
      @Feelthefx Před 3 lety +1

      Shouldn’t need to take long. Einstein explained the universe with 3 variables

    • @eddie1975utube
      @eddie1975utube Před 3 lety +4

      @@Feelthefx 2 variables and one constant.

    • @starwaving8857
      @starwaving8857 Před 3 měsíci

      Easier when wrong because right is a lot more complicated and simple.

    • @AUniqueHandleName444
      @AUniqueHandleName444 Před měsícem

      @@Feelthefx lmao no. He explained one tiny tiny tiny facet of the behavior of the universe. e=mc^2 is not "explaining the universe".

  • @GokuBlack-yg5kc
    @GokuBlack-yg5kc Před 3 lety +94

    When you have a 74 and 77 year old battling it out and they both lack fundamental knowledge in a lot of things. And they are both running for president.
    Then you have Roger Penrose, 89 years old and is one of the most fluent physics speakers, and on of the smartest and ambitious physicist and mathematician in the entire world.

    • @Uubermensch
      @Uubermensch Před 2 lety +2

      Then there's you with too much time comparing a physicist to a politician. Good and evil exist in human culture, which is too heavy to change too quickly.

    • @kikodekliko1209
      @kikodekliko1209 Před 2 lety +2

      Luckily America isn't the only place with political leaders.

    • @johnlivorness2204
      @johnlivorness2204 Před 2 lety

      The world is not a classroom of lab, our political leaders need real world experience. That’s why Einstein refused any political position he was offered, including the president of Israel.

    • @justinmadrid8712
      @justinmadrid8712 Před rokem

      Yet the 89 year old man is wasting his intellect speculating about completely useless things that do not affect us in the slightest. (I suppose that is better than the 77 year old man destroying our economy on purpose)

    • @mattd6200
      @mattd6200 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Believe it or not he has denounced white nationalism and is now liberal.

  • @im415again
    @im415again Před 3 lety +14

    Glad they found the biggest 32” tv they could find to help these seniors see his presentation clearly.

  • @monkeytron5061
    @monkeytron5061 Před 3 lety +27

    Why have I only just discovered this man!?
    His stuff on consciousness is fascinating.

  • @zero15388
    @zero15388 Před 4 lety +8

    21:08 when he's talking about black holes and their eventual demise (going pop / exploding), I thought a google years sounded like a scary amount of time. But when he illustrated his point saying : the graph is not to scale and it would be towards the edge of the universe when they go boom, my head exploded too!

  • @Patrick77487
    @Patrick77487 Před 3 lety +16

    What a mind! Penrose becomes more animated / interesting / sometimes hilarious in lectures rather than sit-down discussions. "but don't worry about that right now..." lol

  • @WestOfEarth
    @WestOfEarth Před 4 lety +33

    what I appreciate about this hypothesis is that it makes predictions about what we should see - just as Einstein's equations do. It's rare though at this level of cosmology which often times borders on philosophy rather than science.

    • @SpaceCadet4Jesus
      @SpaceCadet4Jesus Před 6 měsíci +2

      The ideas make predictions which thus far haven't been observed nor found in the minutest details of volumous data.
      He conflagrates different ideas together like an MC Escher drawing, hoping someday they turn out to be reality.
      There is no science here when the postulates are incorrect and certainly he's performed no scientific tests to undergird his ideas.
      I agree he was a great thinker in the 60's and 70's regarding mathematical ideas relating to Einstein's theories and black hole formations, which Nobel Prize he recently shared between 2 other people. A 1965 recognition long overdue, if you ask me.

  • @Megan-ii4gf
    @Megan-ii4gf Před 3 lety +16

    Sir Roger may have just discovered a way to prove the previous universe. If his hypothesis is correct, this is simply HUGE! I'm so thankful, he truly deserves his Knighthood and Nobel Prize. Outstanding man.

    • @espaciohexadimencionalsern3668
      @espaciohexadimencionalsern3668 Před 3 lety +1

      On that he is right but not how he draws it due that all systems are one circle into a bigger one.

    • @briansmith3791
      @briansmith3791 Před 2 lety +2

      Spot on. Roger Penrose is a great scientist and a humble man. His "incredibly complex geometry" 1:10^10^124, before the Big Bang, is a big step in our understanding of the Universe. As he says this is a "demonstrable fact".

    • @vhawk1951kl
      @vhawk1951kl Před 8 měsíci

      Plainly you simply canot understand that any thing that attracts the epithet the universe-everything everywhere Evrywhen must be definition be unique; it is axiomatic that the re can only be *One* everything everywhere everywhen or totality.
      If whatever you have in mind is not everything everywhere eveywhen and unique, hen it cannot possibly be the universe everything or totality. It is axiomatic that universals are unique; even a small imbecile child will tell you that there can *only be one* Everything, the universe or totality because by definition it is* All_Embracing* and if whatever you have in mind is not everything everywhere eveywhen and unique, then what you have in mind not only is not the universe, it is axiomatic that it*could not possibly* be the universe. In babytalk: there can only be One* Everything. If you struggle with that axiom try the shallow end of this particular pool. Similiter if you cannot grasp the idea of mutual exclusivity.

    • @SpaceCadet4Jesus
      @SpaceCadet4Jesus Před 6 měsíci

      He gets a Nobel Prize on a 1965 mathematical work on black holes as being complimentary to Einstein's Theory of Relativity.
      What he attempts to describe in this video, is not scientific or mathematical work and has several misunderstandings of astronomical proportions.
      Penrose was a mathematical physicist, professor and theorist, not an astronomer or astrophysicist nor an experimental physicist.
      He seems to cram the observed world into drawings by MC Escher.
      His hypothesis doesn't have any scientific evidence and is largely philosophical.

    • @Zephyr-wb4vo
      @Zephyr-wb4vo Před 4 měsíci

      @@SpaceCadet4Jesus says youtube rando with tiktok logic?

  • @Age_of_Apocalypse
    @Age_of_Apocalypse Před 3 lety +2

    Fascinating and so interesting! 👍👍👏👏
    Many, many Thanks for the video!

  • @dr_IkjyotSinghKohli
    @dr_IkjyotSinghKohli Před 4 lety +22

    Poor Roger was asked to bring the computer monitor on his desk as part of his presentation.

  • @ialrakis5173
    @ialrakis5173 Před rokem +2

    Never heard about his guy in my youth but man he's so worth listening to.

  • @roberthill9946
    @roberthill9946 Před 3 lety +3

    Passionately love this. Anything or anyone that provokes tantalising thought and thinking is just so profoundly wonderful.

  • @johnayres2303
    @johnayres2303 Před 4 lety +29

    It is a pity that full screen slides could not have been edited into the presentation.

    • @imgayasheck595
      @imgayasheck595 Před 4 lety

      They are the same slides he always uses in his lectures, check out any one of them

  • @catmandrew100
    @catmandrew100 Před 5 měsíci +2

    If you increase the volume the temp. And pressure goes down if you decrease the volume or " squish the volume" the temperature and pressure goes up.
    That reminds me of the Ideal Gas Law. V1 P1/T1 = V2 P2/T2 . That is an elegant equation.

  • @SuperLkelley
    @SuperLkelley Před 2 lety +4

    I was a biochem student at Oxford living with my maths friend in our rooms in the 90's. We were both interested in theories of the universe and I knew about Penrose. He was giving a lecture at the maths department way out of both of our leagues. But we decided to go. I sat in the front row. Roger had to write some text on the chalkboard - saying something like "Riemann sphere". It was illegible. He was struggling to write the simplest words. Then he needed to draw the 4 dimensional projection of an 8 dimensional complex space on a 2D blackboard - it was a work of art. The entire experience blew my mind and I have forever fascinated and studying all his work. I wish I could just drop him an email to say how he changed my life. Amazing, amazing man. He is a hero to me.

  • @KeithRowley418
    @KeithRowley418 Před 3 lety +18

    What an honor and privilege to listen to this great scientist. He's the only one who really fills me with awe at his intellect and imagination. Wonderful.

  • @caterinadelgalles8783
    @caterinadelgalles8783 Před 3 lety +2

    I understood this much better with his chat with Lex Freidman, without visuals. I just recently found out about Sir Penrose due to Richard Dawkins. Thank you for this Roger! :) I agree that the inflation theory seams a bit hard to imagine.

  • @matthewdolan5831
    @matthewdolan5831 Před rokem +1

    His work resembles the infinity symbol itself. Marvellous stuff.

  • @sweemok4995
    @sweemok4995 Před 4 měsíci

    Very interesting seminar. It would be wonderful if Professor Penrose can have a follow up seminar on how this might explain those larger than expected very early galaxies, among other things, observed by the James Webb telescope, in 2023.

  • @jeffreymartin8448
    @jeffreymartin8448 Před 2 lety

    Magnificent. Loved it!!!

  • @xxxsleepingawakexxx
    @xxxsleepingawakexxx Před 4 lety +2

    Awesome talk! Never knew about this guy until youtube feed preferences. I'll be researching more of his studies.
    I often thought the universe was a reflection of another when I was younger, thanks to multi-universe comic books. Do super massive black holes collapse into singularities? Can multi-universes operate as a uniform collective? Or would one universe have to die before another born?

    • @yendorelrae5476
      @yendorelrae5476 Před 3 lety +1

      Every black hole contains a singularity/ringularity, black holes don't collapse, a dying star collapses into a singularity causing the black hole.

    • @cosmotalk7227
      @cosmotalk7227 Před 2 lety

      Well, There are two Contexts of how we can believe on CCC(Conformal Cyclic Cosmology):-
      (1) Open Universe
      (2) Closed Universe
      in the Open Universe theory, the Universe would have to Expand Constantly according, to the Hubble's Constant(H0), it will be a challenge, Because, it would need a force to counter-attack the Force of Dark Matter/Gravity, to stable the Universe, or else it would expand Continuously(>H0) or collapse very Quickly.
      In a Closed universe it remains static or constant.

  • @espaciohexadimencionalsern3668

    At time 28:04 he shows 4 sets of 2 rings where one is inside the other one where he says there must to be a difference in temperature from the inside circle to the out circle. - For sure those circles are there since all systems are like that, you dont have to go that far just take a look to the 4 rocky planets inside the inner asteroid belt and this inside asteroide belt inside the outer asteroid belt after Neptune where my guess the inside should always be hotter than the out side due that is closer to the sun or the nucleous. - As a rule the inside in radius is half the out side, as well is in matter, and gravity like is you add the gravity from the inside rocky planets you get 26M/S2 while the out side is 52M/S2.

  • @seabeepirate
    @seabeepirate Před rokem

    Sir Roger, I believe the missing bit you are looking for is a rotational symmetry instead of a linear symmetry. At the end of the universe when black holes have doled out their last quanta of hawking radiation and the photons settle into a configuration where they cease to interact, the difference between complete entropy and total lack of entropy are a matter of scale. This reminds me of a Klein bottle in that entropy has returned to its origin without circling or crossing paths.

  • @ggg148g
    @ggg148g Před 4 lety +16

    I really wish that more scientists were like Roger Penrose. Don't misunderstand me, science rocks, quackery doesn't (I made it short). But science could rock even faster and harder.

    • @davidwright8432
      @davidwright8432 Před 4 lety +3

      Agreed! Roger's 'visualizations' (as I therm them) have a great charm of their own - I'd claim they're artworks - but can you imagine what full-bore Hollywood computer Generated Imagery could do?!

    • @aliensarerealttsa6198
      @aliensarerealttsa6198 Před 11 měsíci

      Physicists: Antimatter.
      Sane person: You mean matter? Or a specific and unique counter particle that can cause annihilation(another illiterate word from physicists)?

  • @daquion7830
    @daquion7830 Před 4 lety +5

    Great lecture! I am still reading Emperors new mind.

    • @walterbishop3668
      @walterbishop3668 Před 4 lety +1

      I should read it. Been on my desk for the past 5 years

  • @lockeisback
    @lockeisback Před 4 lety

    since one of the arguments for dark matter is that its needed to provide the initial variation after the big bang, who else thinks the rest of his slides are about how these previous universe fluctuations might be dark matter?

  • @daspacechoechechoz9028
    @daspacechoechechoz9028 Před 3 lety +20

    Penrose is a brilliant guy with a great way of communicating, clearly on a path to answer the ultimate question. The nature of the universe beginning (or however it came to be) and...whatever the heck is happening after that in this sheet of space-time. Presenting to what appears to be an audience that wandered in for a low budget planetarium at a town fair. Mommy where's the stars?? I want to see Neptune! It looks rather uncomfortable in there, especially Sly Stallone. Penrose has produced some "very technical" fascinating work on physics and consciousness worth investigating as well. Awesome.

    • @williammarzano872
      @williammarzano872 Před rokem

      All very well. I think these scientists really exercise their imaginations to create ideas to avoid the reality of a Creator.

    • @SPDLand
      @SPDLand Před rokem

      @@williammarzano872 Almost. The Creator has by now been found to not have created a gazillion of things that have been found explainable by science only. In 100% of all solved cases sofar. So God - Science = 0 - Gazillion and therefore a 100% score. Expressed in wisdom and ability of logical reason, how wise would someone be with this background info and no proof what so ever of the existence of a Creator, that 'yes but apart from that, all the other stuff science has not quite explained yet, comes from the Creator!' -statement will actually stand strong 'next time'?

    • @Joe-ym6bw
      @Joe-ym6bw Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@williammarzano872 god is a delusional concept of man's mind there is no god face reality

    • @sadderwhiskeymann
      @sadderwhiskeymann Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@williammarzano872 you'll never get, will you? Scientists do all the hard work to come up with every *possible* explanation, try even harder to find ways to test their hypothesis' and are HAPPY to venture where the evidence leads (YES, even your skydaddy)
      And then, they come forward to claim their *hard* earn spot in recognition.

  • @woufff_
    @woufff_ Před rokem +2

    When you listen to Roger Penrose, fasten your seat belt. World's greatest mind at the moment.

  • @pavelholub4206
    @pavelholub4206 Před 4 lety +6

    Clocks that beats once per eon- maybe you don´t need to wait them to break...

  • @PedroOnOrder-kr4fr
    @PedroOnOrder-kr4fr Před 8 měsíci

    Here Here!!!

  • @brendawilliams8062
    @brendawilliams8062 Před 3 lety +1

    Thankyou.

  • @siriosstar4789
    @siriosstar4789 Před 3 lety +4

    one idea about "infinity" . It's not infinite if it has a starting point as in observing the physical universe through a telescope and seeing no apparent limit or end.

  • @jari2018
    @jari2018 Před 4 lety +1

    Does the Black holes or formers stars on bygone Eon have a names? I suggest two names Penrose and Roger . But then again the black holes seen there are not from invidual stars but homongous black holes bigger? than anything now or are they shrunk to ..what size ?

  • @alexobed4252
    @alexobed4252 Před rokem +11

    I couldn't love this man more.

  • @onemediuminmotion
    @onemediuminmotion Před 3 lety

    Electrons, like atoms, and black holes, and the universe as a whole, are horn toroidal fluid vortices (hence "point-particles") in/of the single, scale-uniform 'super-fluid' medium (I call it the SUM, a.k.a. "space-time") whose self-relative motion (a.k.a. "acceleration"; "momentum"; "push") as vortices and waves, comprises the evolving (hence "time") structure of the universe and all of its content "physical objects". Therefore we can say that the "material universe" is 'pure motion' (primarily point-radial in trajectory). The Einsteinian "time dilation/ length contraction" principle applies to the SUM itself, meaning that its self-relative motion ("acceleration" as 'motion relative to itself') is the mechanism by which the otherwise absolutely homogenous SUM 'self-differentiates' into the structural diversity of the observable universe, including our own bodies.
    Also, therefore, not only do massive objects "curve spacetime", massive objects ARE "curved spacetime". The inflow of the SUM equals the point-radial outflow "expansion" of the SUM compression wavefront that is the surface of the mass-object (e.g. the Earth). Ergo the "gravitational (and smaller scale) field(s)". Since SUM fluid vortices, and every complex manifold thereof, including ourselves, constitute 'I/O devices' (inflow/outflow; input/output; positive/negative; "yin/yang"; etc.), we can say that the physical universe is comprised by an otherwise, absolutely continuous SUM "simulating" (by means of its self-differentiating, self-relative motion) a "discrete particle" - based "material universe" as "a universal self-organizing network of distributed I/O devices" which are manifested in terms of their inter-communication by means of the specific sequence of SUM 'vibrational acceleration waves' traveling at the "constant, finite, but asymptotic limit for all mass-objects" speed of light which they emit and absorb. We "human beings" are momentum routers ("pushers" of "things") in that network. In order for there to be a "push", there must be a "something else" to "push against". "Yin/Yang". Consider that every "sensation" - i.e. that you are "conscious" of - is comprised of a "push" (or vibrational series of "pushes") at some scale, at some amplitude, in some 'direction', as a "transfer of momentum"; a displacement of a mass object from its otherwise geodesic path. So the "material universe" is apparently a self-configuring momentum-routing circuit /network. "Consciousness" is 'a self-configuring momentum waveform' in/of the SUM.
    P.S. "Dark matter" is the SUM itself concentrated around its "material" vortices, and "dark energy" is its larger-scale flow.
    @ @/@ They are being carried along by the outwardly expanding flow of the SUM (scale-uniform medium) itself from its horn toroidal fluid vortexual architecture "output". They are not, themselves "accelerating" (undergoing "proper acceleration") by means of an 'on-board' power supply. Thus, in this case, they are not moving "through space over time", they are moving "with space over time". Light waves are the universal 'CPU clock ticks' of 'time'. They make up the 'Cartesian coordinate system' of the 'space-time epic' in which we are taking place. ...
    Call the Y axis "time", and the X axis "space". Let your eye be at 0 looking in the positive Y direction, and let any other detector be placed anywhere else along the X axis. The photon (or physical increment of "time") is propagating toward your eye, or other detector, as a spread-out 'shock wave' front, and collapsing point radially toward its detector, only being "detected" when the momentum (acceleration) pulse it is transferring through the SUM (scale-uniform medium, or "space-time") literally from its horn toroidal 'point' of origin is transferred to its corresponding destination point of detection.
    The universe might be described as a 'self-calculating quantum computer'.
    Let's discuss: @emediuminmotion/discussion

  • @johncurtis920
    @johncurtis920 Před 3 lety +12

    Marvelous.
    And from the (statistically relevant) discovery of those rings, as pointed out by Penrose at the end of this discussion, I get the sense that his idea may have just nailed the whole concept of the Universe. His insight is worthy of Einstein, so now to solidify the proving of it.
    We exist, are emergent, out of an MC Escher print. Who knew? Heh!
    But regardless, to get right down to it I think it comes to this. To borrow from the Hindu....it's Turtles all the way down, and up, there Roger. BRILLIANT!
    John~
    American Net'Zen

    • @SpaceCadet4Jesus
      @SpaceCadet4Jesus Před 6 měsíci

      The supposed "Penrose rings" are large scale "random distribution" areas of very very small ( ± 0.00003 K) temperature differences in the cosmic microwave background (CMB). Best estimates are that 300,000 years had to pass before the universe experienced light and the CMB is a product of that time. There are NO rings, NO prior universe fingerprints except in Penrose aging mind.

  • @Dr.scottcase88
    @Dr.scottcase88 Před 9 dny +1

    I equate the graphical and artistic genius of ESCHER to the mathematical genius of Sir Roger. What a team :-)! Peace.

  • @thealternative9319
    @thealternative9319 Před 3 dny

    When i am thinking about this topic, i often come to the conclusion that it could be a „torus“ of one black holes where the matter is constantly exchanging…

  • @alexanderealley9992
    @alexanderealley9992 Před 3 lety

    A bit off topic but concerning the quantum physics of black holes (to include the beginning of the universe as we know it), why are black holes not considered as a collapsed neutron star that has unfolded a multi-dimensional area of space to a singularly-dimensional area of space? As the three+ dimensional collapses it unfolds to a two dimensional space (the black hole as a 2-dimensional sphere) to a singularly-dimensional are of space (the singularity as a 1-dimensional sphere). Why is this not talked about more and why aren’t we talking about the inverse of unfolding multi-dimensional space (folding an area of space)? Your thoughts?

  • @sergiomanzetti1021
    @sergiomanzetti1021 Před rokem +1

    What a genius, to put it mildly.

  • @markl9808
    @markl9808 Před 3 lety

    What date and where is this talk?

  • @anaphaxeton
    @anaphaxeton Před 11 měsíci

    Mind blowing, indeed. I've heard of it before now I got the chance to see it. But... if someone one could answer me. How about black energy, the apparent expansion and the fate of matter becoming photons, without counting for that black energy that we cannot describe yet?

  • @johndelong5574
    @johndelong5574 Před 3 lety +2

    One can hear the universe put-putting across eternity like a cosmic motor boat.

  • @mcsquared4319
    @mcsquared4319 Před 4 lety +6

    If all matter and black holes decay, we are left with photons. For photons, there is no time. So at that point, space-like and time-like intervals could potentially swap. The entire universe could potentially collapse into a Schwarzschild black hole. In my opinion, such a non rotating black hole can only be made of the entire universe due to its symmetry, that's why you may have only one in the universe. At the event horizon of a black hole, time-like and space-like intervals swap. This leads to a pure singularity unless you still have a residual asymmetry (maybe both space and time intervals have a bottom limit which is not null). This would potentially cause a big bang. But no circles in the CMB are to be observed...

    • @brian-kt1rc
      @brian-kt1rc Před 4 lety +5

      The laws of physics as we observe them only apply to our universe, they do not apply to anything besides our universe. Therefore no hypothesis within our universe can be formed to hypothesisze where our universe comes from.

    • @PopulationBirthCtrl
      @PopulationBirthCtrl Před 4 lety

      @@brian-kt1rc hell yeah brian
      Godel knew whats up

    • @davidwright8432
      @davidwright8432 Před 4 lety +1

      Surely if you have only photons, there are neither spacelike nor timelike intervals, but only lightlike ones? You need some mass to regain the other two kinds of interval.

    • @mcsquared4319
      @mcsquared4319 Před 4 lety +2

      Where the universe comes from is not a valid question in the first place... I don't see the link to what I wrote. You think of a multiverse, I think of the Universe (the possibility of a multiverse is still there though). You can make a hypothesis but you can't prove it... The multiverse is just a hypothesis. I supposed the universe as a whole with just one big bang, no leftovers...

    • @RogueElement.
      @RogueElement. Před měsícem

      @@mcsquared4319 u were on to something bruh💯👌🏾

  • @bubbathelonepotato2208
    @bubbathelonepotato2208 Před 2 lety +1

    The idea of the the universe being perpetual could be part of our problem understanding the whole issue. What if their is no beginning or ending to the universe? The Universe just transitions between stages? If we do detect evidence of supermassive black hold decay from before the so-called Big Bang then how are we going to explain it? Interesting physics.

  • @BOOGY110011
    @BOOGY110011 Před 4 lety +22

    Is that 32 inch screen?
    That's a argument killer.

  • @DavidRexGlenn
    @DavidRexGlenn Před 4 lety +21

    I miss the jumbled mess of transparencies

    • @everything777
      @everything777 Před 3 lety

      A 40 inch TV with a picture that only uses half the screen isn't any better lol

  • @joeroganjosh9333
    @joeroganjosh9333 Před 3 lety +2

    “........you can understand this by looking at the picture and thinking a lot about it........” We’ll try sir, we will try.

  • @deanhill4874
    @deanhill4874 Před 4 lety +10

    Of all the strange theories of what might have been Physically at The Begining & The End, this is the one which makes the most sense to me and if Sir Rog is Right I'm thinking he might be as The Maths Worx...

    • @jasonwiley798
      @jasonwiley798 Před rokem +1

      From a purely aesthetic standpoint I prefer his hypothesis of a repeating universe. I admit I don't understand the details, but it is comforting to think that if we humans screw up this iteration, there will be more opportunities to get it right in the future. The sad thing is it we may have figured it out in a past iteration but don't remember what it was. This is all reminiscent of Hoyle's great contraction which I guess got disproved by that stinker Hubble. We all have our disappointments in life

  • @HTen-gl5di
    @HTen-gl5di Před 10 měsíci

    I have been a fan of Sir Roger, from the time I was introduced to his connecting shapes. I never supported string theory or the big bang or dark matter. I like his train of thought here, but would substitute a torus a representational model.

  • @davidwright8432
    @davidwright8432 Před 4 lety +6

    Fascinating and provocative! Also, I've always loved his - diagrams is too clinical a term; visualizations, of what he's describing. You can find them in his books,too, unfortunately not in color. So according to this model, it's not turtles all the way down (and up), but conformal transformations! Much easier on the turtles.

    • @chrisgibson5267
      @chrisgibson5267 Před 3 lety

      Ah! So it's Turtles. All the way down?

    • @briansmith3791
      @briansmith3791 Před 2 lety

      haha. Or..."incredibly complex geometry" all the way down!

  • @mrandersong1
    @mrandersong1 Před 3 lety

    Well spoken man..

  • @berttheace
    @berttheace Před 3 lety

    Roger is really an excellent genius and the NobelPrize for his work was overdue 👍🏾🌏
    Black Macro- and Micro- Holes are as well as Big- Bangs SINGULARITIES: Already defined by Karl Schwarzschild in 1916 mathematically and as a physical reality as well. Within the CENTER of Black- Holes are SINGULARITIES as we now since 1916. And we 'suppose', that there was ONE Big- Bang out of a SINGULARITY, where Time and Space were created 14 Billion Years ago. Roger Penrose is really a great Genius and his recent awarding with the Nobel Prize was overdue. HE is able to separate between the 'Beauty' of the Imagination of 'deep' Mathematics and the Existance of 'deep' Physical 'Reality'.... Respect ! And he concedes, that INFINITY exists within Mathematics - which is the most beautiful type of Philosophy - as well as in Physical REALITY. This gives me hope, that my Theory of an INFINITE Universe, which I call the INFINIVERSE really exists:
    ''Our INFINIVERSE is an INFINITE OVERALLPROCESS of an infinite simultaneous VARIATION of infinite many SINGULARITIES like Big- Bangs and like Black- Holes within an INFINITE CHAOTIC STRUCTURE of an INFINITE DIMENSIONAL MATRIX .''
    Hard to understand, but that's our Physical Reality. I'm BertTheAce and I'm sure Roger Penrose can understand, what I mean. And this NEW Standard Model of Physics finally solves the inconsistency of 'Dark Matter' and 'Dark Energy' within the classical Standard Model of Physics. I did propose my INFINIVERSE- Theory to the scientific Springer magazine 'Nature' some months ago and may be it will be published soon.

  • @kirillvourlakidis6796
    @kirillvourlakidis6796 Před 2 měsíci

    Roger Penrose is a powerhouse of geometry and physics, past and present (time invariant, of course)!

  • @robertdobosz9681
    @robertdobosz9681 Před 3 lety +3

    It's about time the international physics community seriously consider Penrose's CCC model.

  • @arunavadasgupta2147
    @arunavadasgupta2147 Před 10 měsíci

    I can calculate
    Hawking point
    In
    A
    Road
    Where in
    Breakeven
    Point
    Cracks line
    Due to
    Positive pressure of
    Gravitational force

  • @joehelmick1057
    @joehelmick1057 Před 3 lety +1

    Reminds me of Georg Cantor's infinite sets...

  • @EugeneGaufman
    @EugeneGaufman Před 4 měsíci

    The problem lies in the nature of Time as a physical, material attribute and therefore what Reality, in itself, means

  • @someoneinmyhead
    @someoneinmyhead Před 8 měsíci +5

    An honor to listen to this man. It's sad he has to use that miniature screen to share such a profound vision.

  • @Yourefreekinbrilliant
    @Yourefreekinbrilliant Před 5 měsíci

    Finally getting to the point where I’ll actually listen. I always figured that big bang stuff was a load of hooey. I see no beginning or end.

  • @colinwright5157
    @colinwright5157 Před 9 měsíci

    there are time frames and strings are what binds the time frames together.
    x = R*cosA
    R = xy
    y = R*sineA
    x = xy*cosA
    y = 1/cosA
    x = 1/sineA
    z = R = xy
    xyz = (1/sineA)^2 * (1/cosA)^2
    Velocity.
    V = c(xyz)
    String.
    f = 1/2L * Sqrt(Tension / string density)
    f = 1/2L * xyz*c
    E = hf
    First string vibration.
    f = 6.4*10^8Hz
    M = 4.44*10^-42kg

  • @butterchuggins5409
    @butterchuggins5409 Před 4 lety +17

    Man I wish I wasn't dumb

    • @panosvrionis8548
      @panosvrionis8548 Před 3 lety

      You just don't know astronomy etc😊
      Not a big thing!
      You can play it smart if you follow science 😉😉

    • @randomTVSWE
      @randomTVSWE Před 3 lety

      you can raise your iq by atleast 10 points my friend.

    • @panosvrionis8548
      @panosvrionis8548 Před 3 lety

      @@randomTVSWE
      I smell an irony 🧐
      It doesn't work that way!!
      I think Smart people 'miss' information to explain things
      that's why this fellow watch the video.
      Try to find how the universe works😉

    • @randomTVSWE
      @randomTVSWE Před 3 lety

      @@panosvrionis8548 Well he might not be as dumb as he thinks.

  • @cosmicsoccer4370
    @cosmicsoccer4370 Před 3 lety

    The stretching of univers is necessity..because space time is like stretched rubber band due to this gravity comes along.

  • @leastmostly
    @leastmostly Před rokem

    In an idealized far future hypothetical state of the universe in which there is nothing but photons, so no mass, no time, no space-time, no space, does Penrose suggest that all the photons in the universe would effectively be superimposed into a single entity, and that this absolute idealized final state is not a precondition for being indistinguishable from the big bang, that the state is close enough to initiate expansion before this idealized state is reached, thus introducing anisotropies from whatever mass remains? To what degree do the CMB anisotropies reflect seed universe matter versus seed universe photon distribution? Would it make sense to say this superimposition of photons is NOT like a collapse where all the photons end up in one spot, but more like "one spot" by not having dimensions simply "encompasses" all the photons that would otherwise have continued on their merry way if there were still some evaporating blackholes around?
    I have been afflicted with the idea there could be a superimposed time frame in which time is speeding up over time universally, over and above effects of mass and relative velocities on space-time. In other words, like the "rate" of time is always increasing but it is hard to detect because all clocks change right along with it. It would however manifest as increasing redshift with distance due to apparent lengthening in wavelength as measured with our "faster" present clocks, similarly to how expansion manifests as increasing redshift with distance. Some preliminary thought experiments make me think this superimposed increasing time rate would also tend towards fitting lensing and galactic rotation data which can also be explained in terms of dark matter and dark energy. Penrose's theory that an eventual universe with nothing but photons in it would at some point be indistinguishable from the big bang makes me wonder if said superimposed time compression, if a thing, could be tied to the mass/radiation ratio of the universe, so over time as time speeds up and the ratio shifts more and more to photons, a limit is reached where the direction and "rate" of the arrow of time concurrently cease to have any meaning, as the superimposed time quanta get smaller and smaller, but don't see the horizon, like Escher's angels and devils.
    I'm not smart enough to know if this superimposed universal time rate concept would be deemed preposterous nonsense or intriguing brainstorming by the average cosmologist. I'm hoping someone sciency will eventually read this and give me a clue.

  • @Jman21UK
    @Jman21UK Před 3 lety

    I like the block universe theory better although both are fascinating.

  • @noprivacyleft
    @noprivacyleft Před rokem

    In an idealized far future hypothetical state of the universe in which there is nothing but photons, so no mass, and no space-time, does Penrose's theory imply that all the photons in the universe would effectively be superimposed into a single entity, and that this absolute idealized state is not a necessary precondition for being indistinguishable from the big bang, and the state gets close enough to initiate expansion before this idealized state is reached, thus introducing anisotropies from the remaining matter and/or photon distribution? If yes, it seems this superimposition of photons is not a collapse of space-time, but the rug getting pulled out from under the photons as space-time ceases to exist or have any arrows.
    I have been afflicted with the idea that there could be a universal superimposed time frame in which time is speeding up over time universally, over and above the effects of mass and relative velocity on space-time, in other words, like the "rate" of time is always increasing but it is hard to detect because all clocks change right along with it. It would however manifest as increasing redshift with distance due to apparent lengthening in wavelength as measured with our faster present clocks, similarly to how expansion manifests as increasing redshift with distance. Some preliminary thought experiments make me think this superimposed increasing time rate would also tend towards fitting lensing and galactic rotation data which can also be explained in terms of dark matter and dark energy. Penrose's theory that an eventual universe with nothing but photons in it would at some point be indistinguishable from the big bang makes me wonder if said superimposed time compression, if a thing, could be tied to the mass/radiation ratio of the universe, so as time speeds up over time, and the balance shifts more and more to photons, a limit is reached where the direction and "rate" of the arrow of time concurrently cease to have any meaning, as the superimposed time quanta get smaller and smaller but don't see the horizon, like Escher's angels and devils.
    I'm not smart enough to know if this superimposed universal time rate concept would be deemed preposterous nonsense or intriguing brainstorming by the average cosmologist, so I'm hoping somebody sciency will read this and give me a clue.

  • @Killer_Kovacs
    @Killer_Kovacs Před 7 měsíci

    I surprised at how much I agree with this.
    I had the cones together so they were square.

  • @robclark4626
    @robclark4626 Před 2 lety

    woman, man, tv, dog - I mean, how can Roger ever compete with that! That takes a stable genius! Seriously, Roger Penrose is absolutely brilliant!

  • @austinpittman1599
    @austinpittman1599 Před měsícem

    2:54
    I think this largely has to do with the fact that we can conceptualize gravitational waves as 4th dimensional. When we have a 2-dimensional plane of length and width, like a rigid sheet, influencing that plane with gravitational force, say by dropping a baseball on it, would allow for depth to occur. Gravitational waves on a 3-dimensional plane could send influence to the dimension above by the same principle. We may just be seeing 3-dimensional slivers of those 4-dimensional waves from black hole formations and collisions from other aeons, portions that are effectively "in frequency" with the 3 dimensional plane at that particular moment in time.

  • @alanzom1503
    @alanzom1503 Před 2 lety

    This makes much more sense to me than the multiverse-inflation theory.

  • @mp-kq3vc
    @mp-kq3vc Před dnem

    Science will lose a true Titan when age catches up with the incredible Roger Penrose.

  • @JorcobusMaximos
    @JorcobusMaximos Před rokem +1

    Everything that can happen, will happen, will continue to happen, forever.

  • @milwac
    @milwac Před 6 měsíci

    Infinite cyclical time periods consisting of a Big Bang and a Big Crunch without any beginning or end is a well known concept from the Vedas. One such cycle is known as Brahmas Day / Night each consisting of 4.32 billion earth years. Very interesting that Penrose is coming to similar conclusions.

  • @hg6996
    @hg6996 Před rokem +4

    Roger Penrose always reminds me of Carl Friedrich Gauss.
    They resemble each other physically but also in the topics they studied.

  • @lizbmusic11
    @lizbmusic11 Před 3 lety +1

    Wish camera would zoom to his drawings

  • @Lincoln_Bio
    @Lincoln_Bio Před 3 lety

    Mass isn't removed from the universe by black holes, the mass is in the black hole, which is in the universe. I also don't understand how the photons are supposed to have escaped the black holes when they've swallowed everything else, they gobble up light almost as easily as matter. I love Roger Penrose, and I've always believed in an oscillating universe since I was about ten years old tbh, but I'm not super convinced about the details here. Dark matter as a sort of echo of the previous universe is a fun idea though!

  • @anthonymccarthy4164
    @anthonymccarthy4164 Před 5 měsíci

    Fun to think about, where's the observational evidence?

  • @Davemmmason
    @Davemmmason Před rokem +1

    No beginning no end only change

  • @derekpoulin2482
    @derekpoulin2482 Před rokem

    The largest amount of energy that enters our system is at the equator at some point it has to leave the stars are quantumly entangled to here on earth and explains why every electron has the same mass when you stand on the equator being the largest amount of entering energy into our system and look up the stars move in a clockwise counterclockwise rotation due to this effects as gravity rolls out of the planet as the sun continues to shine into the system year after year. Please Roger please do dive more into entropy while trying to explain the cosmos It just may help you while applying the micro to the macro. What if it's not expanding it's just the angle of entry as we wobble changes into our system linking more points throughout space under our feet and increasing the chances of fission. These ley lines fulcrum at some point above our head and kick photons back into our system for us to observe with gravitational lensing across its travels. Twinkles are an illusion of mass. It's energy tied to the past across space time. Dark matter is the amount of quantumly entangled matter left over to the present time in the evolutionary law of the twinkles movement. The dark energy is the amount of energy that is being passed from the quantumly entangled electrons to a point of zero energy to be illuminated in the now as actually something... And then you have your visible matter spectrum. At some point in the CMB the energy is leaving and at some points in the CMB the energy is returning towards the planet to come in as the sun again... What goes up must come down what goes in must come out and all the meteors formed in space or from right here on earth like a hail in the sky... When you stand on the equator you have more gravitational waves leaving at that point in an upward angle rolling out of the air through entropy as new energy comes into the system changing angles with the wobble...

    • @derekpoulin2482
      @derekpoulin2482 Před rokem

      Oops I thought it was centrifugal force from spinning It's just gravity being a localized effect through nature mathematically equated for and the stars come after it pins you to the ground go figure It's never created nor destroyed just like Al said.

  • @bretnetherton9273
    @bretnetherton9273 Před 3 lety

    Awareness is known by awareness alone...

  • @gtsguitartuitionservices2878

    Non scientific observation: great to see Sly Stallone attending at 0:09

  • @CybeleCotter
    @CybeleCotter Před 4 měsíci

    It seems as though an expanding and increasingly colder universe would lose entropy rather than its increasing; that would imply that a big bang began at maximum entropy, considering heat and pressure and mass all at a max, as with potential energy; and yet expansion implies an increasing number of mass objects within a given space, so wouldn't that increase entropy?

  • @ConnorMurdock
    @ConnorMurdock Před 4 lety

    Are we certain clocks don’t keep a universal time? Unedited are clocks not a measure of position?

    • @epajarjestys9981
      @epajarjestys9981 Před 4 lety

      My clock keeps a universal time. Others do not.

    • @kingwillie206
      @kingwillie206 Před 4 lety

      Yes, we are certain. Gravity, speed, and location over vast distances impact time, therefore, no clock, no matter how accurate, can ever be universal. In addition, cause and effect is limited by the speed of light, and as long as there is a cosmic speed limit time itself cannot be universal. So, it stands to reason that if time cannot be universal, clocks that tell time cannot be universal. Does that make sense?

  • @sirpancho
    @sirpancho Před 4 měsíci

    Who organized thia that was not able to provide a bigger screen?

  • @Nleal123X
    @Nleal123X Před 3 měsíci

    Is the ring of galaxies recently discovered associated with the rings mentioned by Pfr. Penrose?

  • @user-wv2kn2lz5s
    @user-wv2kn2lz5s Před 6 měsíci

    Cyclic Conformity. No Multiverse infinity! Very Enlightening!🎈

    • @SpaceCadet4Jesus
      @SpaceCadet4Jesus Před 6 měsíci

      No Cyclic Conformity either.
      Sadly, his non scientific idea is an MC Escher drawing which scientists today have already thoroughly debunked and debunked it with observable and tested data.
      His premises are faulty and that's one reason early in this video, he says his ideas are not shared by the scientifc community and he's an odd man out.

  • @robinsarchiz
    @robinsarchiz Před 3 lety

    On that thing about E=hf=mc^2, since light has frequency and will exist in the distant future, doesn't that count as a scale of time?

    • @vhawk1951kl
      @vhawk1951kl Před 8 měsíci

      Being very much both old and a duffer, I cannot grasp how or why the energy of X might be a a function of the speed of something that has absolutely nothing to do with X and little different from asserting that the Energy of X is its mass multiplied by the number of times penguins consider suicide, which for all I know it may indeed be E==mc^2 appearing to be the lords prayer of the religion scientism

  • @joeroganjosh9333
    @joeroganjosh9333 Před 3 lety

    @ 25:56 that pissed off looking kuia on the marae when the kaumatua is droning on and on holding the hangi up.

  • @johnweir1217
    @johnweir1217 Před rokem

    Cannot see the pictures on his screen.

  • @TheChroniclesOfTheEclipse
    @TheChroniclesOfTheEclipse Před 5 měsíci

    Love this guy

  • @johncostello3174
    @johncostello3174 Před 3 lety +2

    " Hi dear, what was the lecture like ? "
    " Well I'm not entirely sure. It was something about Angels and devils......Cones......Ten numbers......a CMB Power Spectrum.....oscillating balloons and fake skys "
    " Oh ....that's nice.....was it about Harry Potter ? "
    I think Roger Penrose is a very intelligent guy but almost presents it as though we're all scientists. Some people don't know the first thing about cosmology.
    He also needs a bigger screen.

    • @briansmith3791
      @briansmith3791 Před 2 lety

      Haha, yeah, it's over my head. I much prefer hearing Penrose and others in an interview. They speak more to the layman then and explain their theory in terms non-scientists like me can grasp.

  • @amirouchebouremani1213

    I can not seen the slight, why 😢😢😢