The Cosmic Illusion No One Talks About

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  • čas přidán 9. 05. 2024
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    At about 9.6 billion light years, our intuition about angular diameter breaks down. Galaxies start getting larger the more distant they are. Let's find out why.
    Nick Lucid - Host/Writer/Editor/Animator
    Natalie Wells - Researcher
    ________________________________
    VIDEO ANNOTATIONS/CARDS
    The Speed of Light is Infinite... Kind Of:
    • The Speed of Light is ...
    Most Galaxies are Moving Faster than Light!
    • Most Galaxies are Movi...
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    ________________________________
    TIME CODES
    00:00 Cold Open
    00:28 What is Angular Diameter?
    01:56 Angular Diameter Turnaround
    02:52 Finite Speed of Light
    04:07 Time is a Major Factor
    06:02 Space is Expanding
    07:48 Cosmic Light Cone
    08:21 Summary
    09:09 Sponsor Message
    10:07 Outro
    10:26 Featured Comment

Komentáře • 1,6K

  • @impostered_human
    @impostered_human Před rokem +221

    Its a Light Drop

  • @rohitraghunathan
    @rohitraghunathan Před rokem +458

    It's been a while since a video blew my mind without giving me a migraine. Thanks Nick.

    • @z0nx
      @z0nx Před rokem +7

      Insanely helpful visualizations. I'm trying to wiggle my fingers so hard right now.

    • @Amuzic
      @Amuzic Před rokem +4

      I was about to write the exact same thing word by word(may be not the migraine).

    • @dvoiceotruth
      @dvoiceotruth Před rokem +1

      you didn't tell about the taj mahal

    • @Toefuy
      @Toefuy Před rokem +2

      I’m using this video to brain wash the people I love 💗

    • @lucbloom
      @lucbloom Před rokem +2

      Spot on review

  • @Hobo_X
    @Hobo_X Před rokem +243

    Wow, I'd consider myself a long time cosmology and astrophysics casual-learner and I've never actually known this was a thing - you're right that no one talks about it. It's always fascinating to learn something entirely new

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před rokem +42

      I'm not sure why barely anyone talks about this. Maybe because the information can't be used to solve any problems cosmologists are facing, so they see it as unimportant? I don't know.

    • @extremawesomazing
      @extremawesomazing Před rokem +5

      Makes me wonder whether the CMBR that we detect is actually ultra-zoomed-in relative to nearby galaxies. Could that be true? What might we see instead if the CMBR weren't so zoomed-in?

    • @dwpetrak
      @dwpetrak Před rokem +12

      @@ScienceAsylum I agree, topics that don't seem to address current issues or popular topics don't get much funding an any field. I quit studying particle physics when it became apparent I would be chasing grants for the rest of my life. I joined the dark side and became an engineer instead!

    • @eswing2153
      @eswing2153 Před rokem +5

      And he did a fantastic job teaching it. It’s the first time I’ve heard of this.

    • @threewheeler7
      @threewheeler7 Před rokem +3

      @@ScienceAsylum It kind of sounds like you were saying it's not seen as having a practical application. Coming from someone who doesn't really understand the application of cosmology, isn't it all about understanding how the universe works, (or worked rather 😉)? Is this something that you have to get an intuition for as a cosmologist so maybe it doesn't get talked about because it feels intuitive?

  • @eigenchris
    @eigenchris Před rokem +186

    Great video. I've learned some cosmology, but I never considered this effect before. The spacetime diagrams are especially helpful.

    • @peterburgess9735
      @peterburgess9735 Před rokem +6

      Same... I didn't see that twist coming! So now I'm wondering, how far away was the CMB light when it was emitted?

    • @nate5land
      @nate5land Před rokem +3

      It was everywhere, including here.

    • @peterburgess9735
      @peterburgess9735 Před rokem +3

      @@nate5land No I mean the light reaching us today

    • @X22GJP
      @X22GJP Před rokem +3

      When you don't know that you don't know, of course you never considered it.

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před rokem +13

      @@peterburgess9735 The plasma that emitted the CMB we're currently receiving today? It was (roughly) 40 _million_ lightyears away when it emitted that CMB. What that plasma ultimately became (i.e. a bunch of distant galaxies) is now 46.5 _billion_ lightyears away. However, the CMB itself has only traveled 13.8 _billion_ lightyears since it was emitted. Expanding space is weird.

  • @Culando
    @Culando Před rokem +133

    Looks like a Light "Teardrop" to me. And dang. Space gets weirder and more confusing the more I learn about it. It hurts my brain. In a good way. There's so many cases where we taking 'seeing' for granted. Both in distant space and the quantum level.
    Thanks for all the great content!

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před rokem +24

      Yeah, there's a lot of "figuring out" to do after we get cosmological data before we can actually make sense of it.

    • @omwalia4475
      @omwalia4475 Před rokem +3

      @@ScienceAsylum when is your next video coming .

    • @SimonBrisbane
      @SimonBrisbane Před rokem +3

      What I was thinking too - 100% a teardrop shape

    • @besotoxicomusic
      @besotoxicomusic Před rokem +7

      @@omwalia4475 he just released this one. Be patient.

    • @dimitrispapadimitriou5622
      @dimitrispapadimitriou5622 Před rokem +2

      We can make it look like a normal past light cone, though, if we use , instead, a conformal spacetime diagram.

  • @OmateYayami
    @OmateYayami Před rokem +61

    The comments really show you hit the nail on the head with the topic choice. I've never heard or seen about this effect while it's mind bending. No other Phys channel i follow mentioned it. The amount of comments sharing the same sentiment just show how underrated this effect is. Kudos. And super big props for openly admitting all the shortcuts and omissions. Chapeau bas dear sir.

  • @hubertheiser
    @hubertheiser Před rokem +58

    Even though I'm interested in astronomy an cosmology since decades I learned something astounding today. Thank you Nick!

    • @marcuspradas1037
      @marcuspradas1037 Před rokem +1

      Me too

    • @tonytor5346
      @tonytor5346 Před rokem

      Please explain why spiral mirrors when used with a radiometer, allows us to observe Alcione in the Pleiades where it is currently compared with observation of light. This has been published in a couple of abstracts. What is special about a spiral mirror? Do they detect tachyons?
      That appears to be a plausible explanation. What are your thoughts?

  • @Vino3437
    @Vino3437 Před rokem +8

    These days it’s not perceived as special anymore to access science channels like this when being able to watch 100 of channels that are competing with each other. But I’m
    amazed by your way of presenting and explaining topics like this. Completely free and without self promoting. Thank you.

  • @bigwhitedwarf
    @bigwhitedwarf Před rokem +120

    Even though I know all these concepts and how it works basically, it still amazes me that even observing a single image has all these many factors impacting it.
    Still, there is always some great content from this channel. Thumbs up.

  • @jake_
    @jake_ Před rokem +29

    Usually, when something blows my mind, it takes some time and further researching to understand it. Somehow, you managed to blow my mind and make me understand the issue at the same time.. Kudos.

  • @Victor76661
    @Victor76661 Před rokem +15

    Amazing work, as always! As for the shape, in Brazil we have a chicken snack called "coxinha", which is fried. It has a potatoey carb, and ground chicken breast.
    It is delicious. Be sure to have one if you ever spend vacations here hahah

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před rokem +8

      I've been hearing this. The resemblance is uncanny! Even my digital texture matches 😮

  • @VictorJD
    @VictorJD Před rokem +16

    I would call it a teardrop shape. I knew about the lightcone and that early expansion was faster than lightspeed but I had never put the two concepts together before to get this turnabout point. The universe gets weirder every day.

    • @SolidSiren
      @SolidSiren Před rokem

      Same

    • @soaringeagle5418
      @soaringeagle5418 Před rokem

      Its called an ogive. In architecture its known as a gothic arch.

    • @SolidSiren
      @SolidSiren Před rokem

      @@soaringeagle5418 nah that shape shown is very different from an ogive. It's a teardrop.

    • @soaringeagle5418
      @soaringeagle5418 Před rokem

      @@SolidSiren By definition teardrop shape is an ogive.

  • @SomeshwarShegar
    @SomeshwarShegar Před rokem +31

    I just love the way u explain anything using spacetime Diagram ❤️
    It's Super Useful to understand counterintuitive things intuitively

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před rokem +9

      I don't know how anyone understands anything in relativity (or QFT) without a spacetime diagram.

    • @misterlau5246
      @misterlau5246 Před rokem +1

      Oh Lucid... QFT, the cool part is couplings and the deltas, the transients and renormalisation so no infinity 😈🖖

    • @localverse
      @localverse Před rokem

      @@ScienceAsylum wow had no idea that QFT uses spacetime diagrams, would love to see that in s video!

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před rokem +1

      @@localverse Yep! Feynman diagrams are (secretly) spacetime diagrams.

  • @kingatheist7231
    @kingatheist7231 Před rokem +11

    I love how almost every video I watch of yours I think, "oh no I'm not going to understand this" and somehow you explain it so that I do. I haven't been notified of your videos in a while so I need to keep a lookout.

  • @oOHiggsFieldOo
    @oOHiggsFieldOo Před rokem +19

    I've never heard of that and trust me, i watch tons of content in cosmology and physics.
    You did a very good job at explaining it, this channel really shines on many levels.
    all my respect!

  • @markzambelli
    @markzambelli Před rokem +2

    Wow...thanks Nick.
    The thing that made it click for me was realising that at 8:51 the overly-large past galaxies at the bottom of the 'teardrop' were closer, on the horizontal axis, to the vertical line running up the centre with the Earth on it... and it makes me smile realising that for the bottom 2/3rds of that light'cone' the Earth doesn't even exist yet and I sub-in the term 'closer to the _Milky way'_ rather than 'closer to _us'_ .
    Brilliant explanation, thanks again.

  • @rev68
    @rev68 Před rokem +8

    “Space is big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's just peanuts to space.”
    ― Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

    • @johnbennett1465
      @johnbennett1465 Před rokem +2

      I assume you saw the Hitchhiker image in the background when he referenced this. 🙂

    • @rev68
      @rev68 Před rokem +1

      @@johnbennett1465 I was actually just listening mostly as I was doing other things, but any time I hear the words space and big, I automatically think HHGTTG.

  • @nbooth
    @nbooth Před rokem +6

    You gave enough clues at the beginning that I figured out it's because of expansion by 3:30. I definitely didn't expect the effect to be big enough to make distant galaxies appear to be the same size as close ones. Amazing. Thank you!

  • @elejelly3986
    @elejelly3986 Před rokem +4

    XKCD did a comic about this effect, and I'm glad that finally someone on YT talks about it.

  • @gthakur17
    @gthakur17 Před rokem +30

    Wow just wow. Never knew this was a problem. But the way you explained it with one small digestible fact at a time to bring it all together was really amazing 👏

  • @the_one_eyed_man_is_cursed

    Not an easy concept to explain - really well done, Mr Lucid.
    I've never heard of this angular diameter effect before, so you not only introduced a new detail (to me) but I understood the 'why' of it in less than eleven minutes! Kudos.

  • @joeteichert6821
    @joeteichert6821 Před rokem +6

    So if I understand earth's past light teardrop correctly, the reason distant equal-sized objects appear larger the more distant they are from us is this: we're seeing them when they were closer, and closer objects appear larger. And we may not be able to see the most distant objects for the same reason we can't see our own galaxy: we are (were?) inside them! And the big bang happened right here, a long time ago. Pretty cool stuff!

  • @seanspartan2023
    @seanspartan2023 Před rokem +7

    And I thought the different horizons were complicated. My mind is officially blown 🤯

  • @deanfehribach
    @deanfehribach Před rokem +12

    Mind=blown. Great video, Nick. I haven't enjoyed my mind getting stretched so well since I took quantum physics 30 years ago. Thanks for the wonderful work.

  • @Teufeltusken
    @Teufeltusken Před rokem +4

    I've followed cosmology as an amateur for 40 years. All the pieces you put together such as light-cones and expanding universe, I'm familiar with those. This particular implication, based on how these things work together? This is new to me. Thank you!

  • @ajhokie130
    @ajhokie130 Před rokem +34

    Awesome! Thank you! I had often tried to think of how light was affected from an expanding early universe. I knew it wouldn't be straight forward, but I could never really visualize it. (Of course I never tried to, you know, actually research it either. ) This was a great visualization.

    • @GrandKai9
      @GrandKai9 Před rokem

      Yes, however, why hasn't Orion's belt become fatter? Also, why where they able to use stars to navigate for thousands of years. That's thousands of light years, this should have made that impossible if space is expanding at such a rapid pace. This video gives me more questions than answers, sorry that I choose you to ask, but care to take a stab?

    • @numbersix8919
      @numbersix8919 Před rokem +1

      @@GrandKai9 If you don't mind my butting in, all the stars we can see are in our region of our galaxy, the Milky Way, and the stars in our galaxy will never recede from us. Also, none of the galaxies in our galactic cluster, the Local Cluster will ever recede from us due to cosmological expansion.
      The stars do move in their individual orbits around the center of the Milky Way, but so slowly (in angular dimension) that it takes thousands of years for the constellations (like the Big Dipper) to change their shapes.

    • @GrandKai9
      @GrandKai9 Před rokem

      @@numbersix8919 Thank you so much for your input, I was honestly just looking for anyone to explain, because I knew I was wrong somewhere and didn't even know where to begin to look into it.
      However, from your answer, I have another question, and if you don't mind me asking. wouldn't the consultations only change as we enter into the accelerated orbit of the center of our galaxy? What I mean is we will be accelerated and tossed to the other side of a very large black hole, in theory, so wouldn't the light that we see instantly be affected? I mean we orbit every 200 to 350 million years, but I would have to assume that would hugely affect our view of the cosmos.

    • @KuK137
      @KuK137 Před rokem +1

      @@numbersix8919 Technically they will recede away eventually, but it will take a really long time. Much longer than universe has existed so far. Scientists are now debating if the recession will eventually mean the Earth will be alone in dead, black space or its forces will overcome even that (big rip) and individual atoms will be all that is left...

    • @KuK137
      @KuK137 Před rokem +1

      @@GrandKai9 And to answer your question, thousands of LY is nothing on the scale of expansion. It is 'rapid' when measured on a scale of millions to billions of LY, trying to measure it to Orion's Belt would be like you checking if your cup of tea moved away from you by 0.0001 millimeter.

  • @SimplyDudeFace
    @SimplyDudeFace Před rokem +2

    I followed the idea, that space is dragging light along with it and that produces the tear drop shape and the fact that really distant objects start to look bigger.
    But I missed on the geometry. Why does the tear drop shape the galaxies to look bigger? I could use another diagram showing the size increase.

  • @justaguy4real
    @justaguy4real Před rokem +1

    7:37 i love the concept of island universes. Being galaxies are exponentially farther apart than star systems within them, that's a mindboggler.

  • @shama_k2604
    @shama_k2604 Před rokem +3

    It's been quite some time since an educational video literally blew my mind🤯 your explanation is sooo good I mean you clearly connected the dots by mentioning each point one after the other...

  • @hikingpete
    @hikingpete Před rokem +3

    I'd heard of this, but never believed it. Thanks for the clear and thorough explanation.

  • @johnbennett1465
    @johnbennett1465 Před rokem +2

    It has always bothered me that no one talks about this issue. Thanks for changing that.

  • @Shirsh
    @Shirsh Před rokem +2

    I am an astrophysics student. My mind blew off when I first came across this. I immediately thought that if I'm getting this right, how come I haven't heard anyone talk about it. You put a very apt title to the video. Good job. 🌹

  • @ParadoxProblems
    @ParadoxProblems Před rokem +3

    Nice! You often hear about redshift but very rarely about how the expansion of the universe effects light as its traveling.

  • @josebarria3233
    @josebarria3233 Před rokem +6

    Finally someone made a video about this topic that has been on my head since I took extragalactic astronomy 3 years ago.
    Nice!

  • @josephsalomone
    @josephsalomone Před rokem +1

    I do appreciate how this video explains why we think the universe is expanding, more than just waving around redshift as the cause.

  • @agentdarkboote
    @agentdarkboote Před rokem +1

    I wish this had been longer and more in depth! This is fascinating. Really, not many people talk about this, I've never heard it mentioned!

  • @oisnowy5368
    @oisnowy5368 Před rokem +3

    This is by far one of the greatest science video's on CZcams. Some people might think observing is just looking. But what do you really see?

  • @leonlee8524
    @leonlee8524 Před rokem +3

    I used to always ponder about how energy is Mass and now I ponder about the role time plays and how wave-like matter can be, I saw an image of a rock that had been weathered by the wind over centuries or more and the image made it seem as if the Wind and The Rock where a still photo of fluid dynamics at play. I don't know what this means, but videos like yours help me pursue it even more and discover even more fun insights so thank you. I never went to college and this is what I've always wanted to check out 🙌🏿🙏🏿😄

    • @leonlee8524
      @leonlee8524 Před rokem

      Shout out to text to speech for reminding me that "The Rock" is a force of nature as well*

    • @christinebeames712
      @christinebeames712 Před rokem +1

      Hi have a look at Jon Levi on YTUBE , there are two , this one shows pics of old rocks buildings etc m unmissable ,will have you questioning our give history timelines,

  • @slimyduck2140
    @slimyduck2140 Před rokem +1

    I love this video so much much, not only because it's amazing but also because all concept talked about in it (like light cones, the expansion of space faster than light, ) I already knew about but they all ties in each other to form something I had no idea about. And that's so cool to me

  • @woofowl2408
    @woofowl2408 Před rokem +1

    "Images of the distant past filled with illusions of cosmic proportion." A beautiful summary for a great video, this one felt as profound to me as your circuit energy video (among others).

  • @TheHumanHades
    @TheHumanHades Před rokem +5

    I had seen this "cone/Taj Mahal" diagram before but today I understood it 😁.

    • @RedRocket4000
      @RedRocket4000 Před rokem

      They doing some great math work to build that illusion into the Taj Mahal by making the minarets (the outside structures) at a angle so they appear to go straight up at a distance. I assume people had noticed the towers seaming to lean at a distance in other structures before this.

  • @chrisbecke2793
    @chrisbecke2793 Před rokem +7

    If we could see all the way to the Big Bang, there would be a single dot that fills the entire sky. That always freaked me out. Love this video. First time I've ever seen this unintuitive result addressed.

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před rokem

      *"...there would be a single dot that fills the entire sky. "*
      I've never thought about it that way 😱

    • @rockets4kids
      @rockets4kids Před rokem

      That single dot is cosmic microwave background.

    • @chrisbecke2793
      @chrisbecke2793 Před rokem

      @@rockets4kids Nah, that's hundreds of millions of years in front of a potential singularity point that's stretched all around.

  • @XEinstein
    @XEinstein Před rokem +2

    3:25 loved the Adam Douglas Easter egg!

  • @HyperFocusMarshmallow
    @HyperFocusMarshmallow Před rokem +2

    Great video! I’ve read papers on this but your clear way of explaining makes it very vivid and simple! Great work as always!

  • @KeithCooper-Albuquerque
    @KeithCooper-Albuquerque Před rokem +3

    Great job, Nick! I learn so much from you!

  • @honesthammer8737
    @honesthammer8737 Před rokem +8

    Fantastic video, it made my Saturday! Your channel helped inspire me to peruse a physics degree, so thank you for all the incredible content and showing me to the subject which I enjoy more than any other

  • @CJ-111
    @CJ-111 Před rokem +1

    Taken something I never knew anything about and helped me understand everything I need to know for a basic grasp on it. Well done on this.

  • @robertomainetti4434
    @robertomainetti4434 Před rokem +1

    It's amazing the way you can explain such a complicated matter so easily

  • @jbtownsend9535
    @jbtownsend9535 Před rokem +3

    I’ve been thinking and wondering about these phenomena very recently and the explanations herein have begun to satiate my curiosity, and for that I thank you.

  • @jonathandawson3091
    @jonathandawson3091 Před rokem +3

    Really nice video! It's amazing how much I learn from you. And now I'll wait for Veritasium to remake this with half as much understanding, some experiment gimmick and more arrogance without crediting you.

  • @greatPretender79
    @greatPretender79 Před rokem +2

    Good one, I really learned something today that I never would have thought of before, but it makes perfect sense! Thanks again, Nick!

  • @xDR1TeK
    @xDR1TeK Před rokem +1

    Jaw dropping as usual. Why would anyone not share this so often today? It's relevant in every way. Thanks man.

  • @macronencer
    @macronencer Před rokem +3

    My mind is officially blown. You're dead right that no-one talks about this! I've been following science as a lay person for decades, and this is the first time I've heard of the phenomenon.

  • @jonathanspruance4502
    @jonathanspruance4502 Před rokem +4

    I love this channel - super informative and great sense of humor : D

  • @insta_visor3846
    @insta_visor3846 Před rokem +2

    Hey Nick, I just discovered your channel and I watched all of your 100+ videos (a little crazy, but now I know that's ok). Thank you for explaining complicated problems in simple terms and for all the simulations you make, they help a lot. Until now I didn't really understand how we could observe galaxies as they were billions of years ago. And I learned more than that, great job! I hope one day you get to use metric units in your everyday life, though my American friends think it's too late now. Good luck to you and all your clones ;)

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před rokem

      Thanks! Glad you like my work. I would _love_ to switch to metric here, but I don't think it'll ever happen.

  • @justbplz
    @justbplz Před rokem +2

    You did great job explaining, the last diagram showing the tear drop shape still showed the red shift, that helped visualize the concept of what you were describing

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před rokem +1

      Thanks for letting me know. Attention to detail (like the redshift) is important to me. It's nice to know it's appreciated.

  • @fep_ptcp883
    @fep_ptcp883 Před rokem +3

    7:54 if you were Brazilian you would know EXACTLY what to call that shape: that is an unmistakable COXINHA. Even the color is spot-on

  • @kasroa
    @kasroa Před rokem +4

    I like videos like this that explain how we solve problems that seem impossible to solve. Also, on the subject of judging distance, humans also use our binocular vision which can be tricked with things like magic eye pictures.

  • @user-lc8yc4cq5n
    @user-lc8yc4cq5n Před rokem

    The title says it all. Thanks for making it visually easy to grasp.
    And without referring to that non-luminiferous, I mean, dark something or rather.

  • @boriskourt
    @boriskourt Před rokem +1

    I like this, and its very well delivered. And I definitely didn't think about this before! Its really nice to hit on topics that feel fresh!

  • @pjaworek6793
    @pjaworek6793 Před rokem +3

    Angular Diameter Turnaround Point. That does blow my mind, literally. Why isn't this plastered all over cosmology discourse? I feel like I've been imagining the universe wrong until now where every object fades in optical diameter as it recedes into the distance. Everything starts to come closer, that is crazy,!! Thank you for sharing this and all the great new-to-me terms. I think it's a huge thing to know.

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před rokem +1

      🤷‍♂️ I'm not sure why barely anyone talks about this. Maybe because the information can't be used to solve any problems cosmologists are facing, so they see it as unimportant? I don't know.

  • @CamiloSanchez1979
    @CamiloSanchez1979 Před rokem +6

    Awesome video Nick, it reminds me more of your videos from earlier times. Please make a video on quantum locality and the Nobel prize for 2022. PBS made a video as well but maybe you can dumb it down for us a bit.

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před rokem +2

      As I was editing this, I was feeling the same way. It felt a bit like the olden days.
      As for the Nobel, I made a video about entanglement earlier this year: czcams.com/video/hiyKxhETXd8/video.html I don't think I have any more to say about it at the moment.

    • @CamiloSanchez1979
      @CamiloSanchez1979 Před rokem +1

      @@ScienceAsylum Sir, thank you Sir!

  • @petslittleworld
    @petslittleworld Před rokem +2

    That was an awesome video and as always 'Lucidly' explained, Thanks Nick!!🙂

  • @mattkerle81
    @mattkerle81 Před rokem +1

    The angular turnaround is the most incredible thing I never knew before watching this video! Thanks!

  • @pedroff_1
    @pedroff_1 Před rokem +5

    That shape resembles quite a lot the Brazilian snack "coxinha" (which means "little thigh" as it supposedly was meant to resemble a chicken drumstick). Thus, I name it, the time coxinha!

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před rokem +3

      Oh wow! The resemblance is uncanny! Even my digital texture matches 😮

    • @rlaranjo
      @rlaranjo Před rokem +1

      @@ScienceAsylum IT'S A COXINHA!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @VictorD264
      @VictorD264 Před rokem +1

      I'm brazilian and I was searching for this comment. The shape made me remember a coxinha too lol.

  • @shelley-anneharrisberg7409

    Super video - although I've attended some basic cosmology courses, I didn't actually know about the angular diameter turnaround. Makes sense though - especially from the clear way you explain it!

  • @creaturalshade7054
    @creaturalshade7054 Před rokem +1

    This is pretty incredible. It's something I never thought about, still don't completely understand, but also somehow makes sense in light of this explanation.
    Cool video. 🤘

  • @vryusvin3905
    @vryusvin3905 Před rokem +1

    Thank you Nick, and thank you Question Clone! Question Clone is awesome. This was an amazingly detailed, but not scary, explanation of an interesting phenomenon!

  • @MrPooPooJohn
    @MrPooPooJohn Před rokem +5

    This was PERFECTLY explained. These visuals and graphs were amazing. And I would call the past light cone The Past Lemongrab cone.

  • @aqa5794
    @aqa5794 Před rokem +4

    welcome back bro - happy to see your new video .. always a delight 😇😇😇 .. Love from India (BTW maybe second or third or fourth - missed by a Pico second 🤣 or it took a diagonal path for ur video to reach india -D~universal~delay)

  • @ChrisWalshZX
    @ChrisWalshZX Před rokem +1

    You've done it again Nick! Mind blown by something I've not come across before! Well done 😊

  • @savagesarethebest7251
    @savagesarethebest7251 Před rokem +1

    I guessed this was the case as soon as I heard that galaxies get bigger the further they are after a certain distance. Good video. Have never thought of this before.

  • @calyodelphi124
    @calyodelphi124 Před rokem +3

    Oh wow this is SUCH a cool concept that so many other astrophysics channels haven't even talked about yet!

    • @vast634
      @vast634 Před rokem

      True, first time anyone has pointed that out. Nick often picks up science-ed topics first.

  • @feynstein1004
    @feynstein1004 Před rokem +3

    Ah yes. Another quirk of living in a 4D universe.

  • @vrgamestudio294
    @vrgamestudio294 Před rokem +2

    Fascinating! I never seem to learn anything new from videos about the cosmos, but in this case I did and whats so interesting is that not only was this phenomena unknown to me it represents a tangible proof of the big bang itself, you're actually looking at evidence of it. Well done indeed, a really great video, thank you!

  • @nekoimouto4639
    @nekoimouto4639 Před rokem +1

    okay i knew about looking at distant stars means looking at past images of them because of light speed. but i did not consider the expanding universe thing causing those stars to have different distances to be in the same equation. now i feel REALLY melancholically nostalgic for a universe that i didnt even exist in.

  • @NoNameAtAll2
    @NoNameAtAll2 Před rokem +4

    oh yeah, there's xkcd comic about that!

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před rokem +1

      Yep... and that XKCD comic was inspired by a Twitter post from Katie Mack.

  • @EyMannMachHin
    @EyMannMachHin Před rokem +4

    I guess the real brainbreaker is realizing that any object (in the loosest sense, particles, waves, etc) can only move a lightspeed, while space is not limited by such constraints. I really love these seemingly ADHD fueled explanation, they just tickle my brain at the right buttons.

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před rokem +1

      Space is also limited by those constraints... locally. It's the cummulative effect of many tiny and relatively slow stretchings of local space which causes the overall space/Universe to expand faster than light.
      That also happens with other peculiar situations like when you (theoretically) point a super laser at the moon and move it around: the (again theoretical) "object" (reflection) that your laser makes on the Moon's surface can perfectly move faster than light... but it's not any real object, it's just an effect.

  • @SaebaRyo21
    @SaebaRyo21 Před rokem +1

    I knew that you'd use that scary existential music in the end of the video... And yeah that real cone shape looked like to me line an almond (seriously).
    Apart from this, you crazy, I really thank you for your knowledge-rich videos because only because of these videos, my understanding evolved... I thank that random summer day back then 2-3 years ago where for the first time I watched your video (where you mentioned Fermi Lab's professor 😅 via his smiling snap).

  • @ShauriePvs
    @ShauriePvs Před rokem +2

    So from the Space-time diagram, it's like light and earth both started from singularity , then light and earth started moving away from each other in space while travelling equal distance in time and after turnaround point, distance between us and light keeps decreasing (while still we are moving equally in time) and at some point our space and time coordinates again meet each other...wow...great video Nick

  • @christopherpoperszky2449

    That teardrop shaped light cone reminds me of the shape of certain electron orbital diagrams. This jigsaw puzzle (physics) is infinitely large, with infinite shaped pieces. I predict that there will NEVER be an end to physics. Thank you Nick!

  • @TheDrydenman
    @TheDrydenman Před rokem +2

    "Would you call this shape a cone? I wouldn't. Thanks to our sponsor, I would call it Earth's Beautyblender!" But seriously, I love your videos Nick. Thanks for taking highly advanced topics and dumbing them down for me!

  • @jamesdonaghy9143
    @jamesdonaghy9143 Před rokem +1

    It's a tear drop.
    The science asylum is so sad, but its the only place where i feel safe.

  • @EmceeJoseph
    @EmceeJoseph Před rokem +1

    Even before you mentioned the light cone woud be a different shape I intuited that it might bend inwards which was so cool to see later in the video that it did!

  • @extremawesomazing
    @extremawesomazing Před rokem +1

    Amazing. Visuals and explanations are on point!. Thank you.

  • @SeanGeeE
    @SeanGeeE Před rokem +1

    Universe expansion & space diagram are counter-intuitive and fascinating. I hope Nic would talk about that more in the future. Thanks for the brilliant demonstration

  • @bryandraughn9830
    @bryandraughn9830 Před rokem +1

    THANK YOU for pointing this out!
    Another thing that's hard to visualize is the light cone actually being a sphere. I know!?!?
    More stuff like this please!

  • @terrylandess6072
    @terrylandess6072 Před rokem +1

    This helps me understand the Cosmic Microwave Background much better.

  • @haloboy777
    @haloboy777 Před rokem +1

    This video is so great!
    explained me a totally new concept with such elegance
    I love it!

  • @tommylakindasorta3068
    @tommylakindasorta3068 Před rokem +2

    This is one of my favorite episodes so far. I had to watch it twice.

  • @Konchok_Dawa
    @Konchok_Dawa Před rokem +1

    Omg this totally clears up something i've thought about! I never quite knew how to put it into words, but the universe we see as we look out is a skewed version that only we can see, like we dont see *the* universe as it is *now* we're seeing images based on our perspective

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před rokem

      Yeah, there's a lot of "figuring out" to do after we get cosmological data before we can actually make sense of it. Thankfully, cosmologists have that under control 👍

  • @pedroadonish
    @pedroadonish Před rokem +1

    Oh my god, this light cone is a COXINHA!
    It's a very popular street food here in Brasil.
    You even put a coxinha texture on the light cone like somehow you knew it! That's amazing.
    It needs to be officialy named The Coxinha of Light.

  • @rosieroti4063
    @rosieroti4063 Před rokem +2

    This is something I didn't know that I didn't know and didn't know that I would love so much!
    Thanks again Nick👍

  • @matthiaswille8641
    @matthiaswille8641 Před 9 dny +1

    One of the most brilliant science channels.

  • @MrMineHeads.
    @MrMineHeads. Před rokem +1

    That last part is truly amazing. Thanks so much for this video!

  • @adityachk2002
    @adityachk2002 Před rokem +2

    Been a watcher for so many years still learn something new regularly

  • @portalsandmagicghostnumbercube

    Believe it or not, I used to think about this illusion a lot in trying to formulate an Invisible/Holographic Principle. But you've given me some very useful ideas I've never thought to consider. Thank you, crazy man!!!

  • @seanmccaul3034
    @seanmccaul3034 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Man, this was great! It brought together a lot of ideas I understand, or thought I did, in a way that puts all of the puzzle pieces together! Impressive!

  • @rogerrabbit3200
    @rogerrabbit3200 Před rokem +1

    Great episode. Definitely need to watch it again in order to be able to tell someone else about it.

  • @ddmarty
    @ddmarty Před rokem

    I never thought of this. Amazing. Thanks for explaining it in a way I can understand. Who knew.