The Physics of Black Holes - with Chris Impey

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  • čas přidán 8. 05. 2024
  • Black holes are the most extreme objects in the universe yet every galaxy has one at its centre.
    Buy Chris' book "Einstein's Monsters: The Life and Times of Black Holes" : geni.us/NL3M8Hu
    Chris Impey explores the questions this profound discovery can help answer and the role black holes have played in theoretical physics.
    Chris Impey is a University Distinguished Professor and deputy head of the astronomy department at the University of Arizona. His research has been supported by $18 million in grants from NASA and the National Science Foundation, and he has had 24 projects given time on astronomy's premier research facility, the Hubble Space Telescope.
    This talk was filmed in the Ri on 9 May 2019.
    ---
    A very special thank you to our Patreon supporters who help make these videos happen, especially:
    Andrew McGhee, Dave Ostler, David Lindo, David Schick, Erik Shepherd, Greg Nagel, Ivan Korolev, Joe Godenzi, Julia Stone, Lasse T. Stendan, Lester Su, Osian Gwyn Williams, Paul Brown, Radu Tizu, Rebecca Pan, Robert Hillier, Robert Reinecke and Roger Baker.
    ---
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Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @glarynth
    @glarynth Před 4 lety +1165

    I feel like I've watched enough videos about black holes by now, but somehow they keep pulling me in.

    • @TheRoyalInstitution
      @TheRoyalInstitution  Před 4 lety +257

      We see what you did there.

    • @SuperYtc1
      @SuperYtc1 Před 4 lety +70

      It’s an inescapable addiction.

    • @SlinkiestTortoise23
      @SlinkiestTortoise23 Před 4 lety +25

      Robert Price If you’ve watched that many videos and understand the subject matter you must be extremely bright!

    • @MrGodofcar
      @MrGodofcar Před 4 lety +4

      Plasmoids exist, not black holes.

    • @xebek
      @xebek Před 4 lety +10

      @@MrGodofcar Erm, plasmoids and black holes aren't remotely similar phenomenon. Why are plasmoids relevant here?

  • @alphacenturi8038
    @alphacenturi8038 Před 4 lety +46

    You are a born lecturer. At last I have stumbled on someone I can listen to learn and understand astronomy.

  • @Madchuck42
    @Madchuck42 Před 4 lety +119

    "Research is what i do, when i don't know what to do"
    I'm currently unemployed watching this at 5am!! love it!!!!

    • @aaron8kok
      @aaron8kok Před 4 lety +12

      Hey me too,dont have a job but I know alot about black holes.

    • @Brian.001
      @Brian.001 Před 4 lety +3

      @@aaron8kok You two should be getting some sleep, so that you can get out there later and job-hunt!!

    • @aaron8kok
      @aaron8kok Před 4 lety +2

      @@Brian.001 thanks skip will do.

    • @aaron8kok
      @aaron8kok Před 4 lety +1

      @frankos rooni I found one lol a good one too,unfortunately nothing to do with black holes oh well🤷‍♂️

    • @MarsLonsen
      @MarsLonsen Před 4 lety +2

      5:35 and unemployed😆

  • @Incognito-vc9wj
    @Incognito-vc9wj Před 4 lety +158

    THIS is how you give a lecture. No lip smacking and “uuhh’s”. Well done, concise and understandable. Thankyou!

    • @Xeno426
      @Xeno426 Před 4 lety

      Well, except for that smack at 21:45. :P

    • @Spaethon
      @Spaethon Před 4 lety +1

      Thank god the braindead liberals stayed home.

    • @tecwynjones6532
      @tecwynjones6532 Před 4 lety +8

      @@Spaethon What do the Liberals have to do with this?

    • @TravelerVolkriin
      @TravelerVolkriin Před 4 lety +8

      @@Spaethon Lol. He literally teaches at my school, a very liberal university.

    • @ericgraham8150
      @ericgraham8150 Před 4 lety +6

      @@Spaethon This comment also falls pretty flat when you consider that the majority of scientist and smart people swing liberal / democrat.

  • @mushkamusic
    @mushkamusic Před 4 lety +201

    Chris Impey has a gift for conveying information. Granted there's no math here , but the concepts are dealt with in such a way as to make them completely accessible. What a fantastic lecture, and what a fantastic lecturer.

    • @bennymarshall1320
      @bennymarshall1320 Před 4 lety +3

      You would not understand the math anyway

    • @BillAnt
      @BillAnt Před 4 lety +2

      You know, I was just thinking the same... a true "science professor" with great presentation skills with a dash of humor sprinkled in there. :)

    • @a_diamond
      @a_diamond Před 4 lety +4

      @@bennymarshall1320 the best way to learn a new language is exposure, and math is a language. Also, you don't know what people's level of understanding is or isn't. I would love to see the math on this.. as would others, obviously..

    • @a_diamond
      @a_diamond Před 4 lety +4

      Look for Walter Lewin's lectures. He *does* go into math ;)

    • @bennymarshall1320
      @bennymarshall1320 Před 4 lety

      @@a_diamond Math is not a language, as much as you might like it to be. Have you ever met a six year old becoming competent at math? It is a series of logical operations. Just because it is written down and it is not English does not make it another language.

  • @Deathadder90
    @Deathadder90 Před 4 lety +10

    I love how he uses such rare words in almost a nonchalant manner, yet I have to go and google these words to see the intricately layered meaning behind them. Blasé, quiescent.. to name a few. This man is a treasure!

    • @wiseguy8828
      @wiseguy8828 Před 3 lety +1

      Well...the best communicators use plain language. Otherwise they’re showing off and it gets in the way of the ideas.
      But I give this guy a pass.

    • @BlastinRope
      @BlastinRope Před rokem

      Those arent rare words, public education has failed you. Purposefully left you dumb so that you will be unable to resist.

  • @qqb0t
    @qqb0t Před 4 lety +16

    Thank you so much for uploading these Videos

  • @barrygreen4202
    @barrygreen4202 Před 4 lety +24

    Good luck finding it now but Chris Impey's Essential Astronomy series of lectures is one of the modt fascinating things ive ever seen

  • @Dr10Jeeps
    @Dr10Jeeps Před 4 lety +31

    Like others have said, I hate when I start watching these RI talks late at night. I end up staying up most of the night. I enjoy them that much!

    • @TheRoyalInstitution
      @TheRoyalInstitution  Před 4 lety +22

      We can't possibly condone you losing sleep but we are secretly very pleased.

  • @SlowToe
    @SlowToe Před 4 lety +26

    Fantastic lecture. Thanks Ri

  • @billyaustin5317
    @billyaustin5317 Před 2 lety +2

    A great lecture - one of those where almost every word went over my head, yet I was still absolutely captivated. Bravo Mr Impey 👏

  • @coniccinoc
    @coniccinoc Před 4 lety +5

    Lovely! Thank you for providing this video.

  • @MrBitterman75
    @MrBitterman75 Před 4 lety +34

    What an amazing lecture! Many thanks for the upload.

  • @1612ydraw
    @1612ydraw Před 4 lety +4

    Wonderful lecture. One of the best yet.

  • @seraphik
    @seraphik Před 4 měsíci +2

    fantastic lecture. also, that's the first time I've seen Hawking's grave. what an absolutely perfect, badass tribute - and such a flex, that you're so synonymous with black holes that you get to put one on your headstone.

  • @artoffugue333
    @artoffugue333 Před 4 lety +8

    This is easily the best lecture I've seen on black holes... and more. I think it's because it's easy to understand!

    • @antonystringfellow5152
      @antonystringfellow5152 Před 4 lety

      It's also the only video I've seen where the presenter doesn't claim to know more than is known.
      I was considering the possibility that nothing exists inside a black hole before I watched this, after thinking of the problem of time dilation at the event horizon, and this guy is the first I've ever heard mention it as a possibility.
      The thing is, time pretty much stops at the horizon, at least from our perspective, so how has anything had time to fall beyond the event horizon?
      Doesn't make sense, does it?
      I suspect everything that's ever fallen into it is on a two-dimensional surface. Maybe there is no "inside" as such.
      Great talk anyway!

    • @V3rP
      @V3rP Před 2 lety

      @@antonystringfellow5152 He did make some bold claims though. Most notable at the end with the assumption that the heat death of the universe is correct.

  • @davidkennerly
    @davidkennerly Před 4 lety +8

    This guy is great! I learned several new things about black holes and I've been reading about them for decades.

  • @TraneFrancks
    @TraneFrancks Před 4 lety +10

    Fantastic presentation. One of the best I've ever seen.

    • @carlz28
      @carlz28 Před 4 lety

      Trane Francks you obviously don’t get out much.

  • @siryoda200
    @siryoda200 Před rokem +1

    This will be forever one of the most amazing videos on CZcams. The "holy crap" value is completely off the chart!

  • @Khemakalkris666
    @Khemakalkris666 Před 4 lety +4

    Truly stunning.

  • @MeissnerEffect
    @MeissnerEffect Před 4 lety +3

    Brilliant. Thank you!

  • @klaasklapsigaar1081
    @klaasklapsigaar1081 Před 3 lety +21

    Now I know why time passes so slowly when sitting next to my mother-in-law.

  • @kengallagher9047
    @kengallagher9047 Před 4 lety +6

    Fantastic lecture. remarkable!

  • @MoriKitsune
    @MoriKitsune Před 4 lety +2

    28:00 gave me goosebumps. Absolutely beautiful and humbling

  • @brucehayman4206
    @brucehayman4206 Před 3 lety +9

    great lecture! I have been following Chris for years. He is a pleasure to listen to

  • @StephensEFRC
    @StephensEFRC Před 4 lety +6

    The best science talk I’ve seen in 50 years.

  • @metafuel
    @metafuel Před 4 lety +3

    Fascinating. Thank you.

  • @fanzhang3291
    @fanzhang3291 Před 3 lety +2

    Amazing talk, I really enjoyed it!

  • @anwarsansari
    @anwarsansari Před 4 lety +20

    THE SMOOTHEST EXPLANATION, HE MADE ME UNDERSTAND AS IF I WAS STUDYING NEWTONS FIRST LAW OF MOTION.. CHRIS IS REALLY GREAT. HATS OFF

    • @carlz28
      @carlz28 Před 4 lety +1

      anwar ansari you must have a weak brain.

  • @sorcerykid
    @sorcerykid Před 4 lety +53

    Impressive lecture! I was just waiting for him to gloss over some key details, yet he literally covered every point from start to finish -- even touching upon nuances like the conservation of angular momentum while the star collapses and the dissipation of Hawking radiation for the black hole to evaporate and the paradox of information loss at the event horizon.

    • @chrisw.4661
      @chrisw.4661 Před 4 lety +3

      You had me at impressive

    • @YodaWhat
      @YodaWhat Před 4 lety

      And yet, we still know _almost nothing._ Gives us something to do during those long, looooong ages until even the black holes die!

    • @eyeheisenberg2278
      @eyeheisenberg2278 Před 4 lety +1

      And yet it was still largely wrong. Nice video but a fail all the same.

    • @janiselmeris5705
      @janiselmeris5705 Před 4 lety

      In the beginning, he mentioned that black holes may be very small, theoretically, but didn't expand on that, addressing only black holes starting from several Sun masses.

    • @aurelienyonrac
      @aurelienyonrac Před 3 lety +1

      I just don't see how Hawkins radiation makes the black hole smaller as there is as much virtual particle falling in the black hole as there is falling out of the black hole.
      Maybe i am missing some information...

  • @athishprajwalgr2703
    @athishprajwalgr2703 Před 3 lety

    It was a remarkable speech by chris. And we request please still make like this more speeches about these things

  • @lastadolkgGM
    @lastadolkgGM Před 4 lety +25

    What an amazing lecture! Thanks for sharing this video, giving me the opportunity to learn a bit more about black holes and it's mysterious properties with a great talk by Chris Impey.

  • @rogerwelsh2335
    @rogerwelsh2335 Před 4 lety +3

    This is a wonderful video. Someone would be hard pressed to describe and explain this subject matter any better.

  • @hubertg7100
    @hubertg7100 Před 4 lety +5

    Easily understood , great lecture.

  • @TheDisabledGamersChannel
    @TheDisabledGamersChannel Před 4 lety +2

    Amazing lecture as always.

  • @MiriamOhara
    @MiriamOhara Před 4 lety +2

    Fantastic information and splendid professor!

  • @serpent12
    @serpent12 Před 4 lety +293

    I need to stop watching these before bed

    • @jrrm_
      @jrrm_ Před 4 lety +41

      serpent12 that's how I fall asleep everynight

    • @carlz28
      @carlz28 Před 4 lety +3

      serpent12 just stay off of CZcams. You’ll do us all a favor.

    • @SeanTimberlake
      @SeanTimberlake Před 4 lety +15

      @@jrrm_wow. i fall asleep to it every night too. Its so soothing. Space, physics, quantum mechanics

    • @Biskawow
      @Biskawow Před 4 lety +4

      @@jrrm_ lol me too... Headphones are annoying tho

    • @danielsima7015
      @danielsima7015 Před 4 lety +2

      2.32 am buddy

  • @buffectomorph9657
    @buffectomorph9657 Před 4 lety +117

    10^100 years. We had a good run.

    • @TheConqueror009
      @TheConqueror009 Před 4 lety +1

      Dont worry your muscles could stop the black holes. Not.

    • @TheSpartan3669
      @TheSpartan3669 Před 4 lety +9

      @@TheConqueror009 lol. Insecure much?

    • @Biskawow
      @Biskawow Před 4 lety

      Christians be like: not long enough!

    • @TheConqueror009
      @TheConqueror009 Před 4 lety +1

      No not really. Nice try though pal you get 1 kudos. But not good enough for 2 kudos.

    • @beastmaster415
      @beastmaster415 Před 3 lety

      @@TheConqueror009 I literally was gonna say the same thing before I saw you're comment..🤣😂🤣 like dude you could flex and rip space-time ..I got what I meant

  • @H4rd5tyl3
    @H4rd5tyl3 Před 4 lety +2

    This man makes listening easy! Great stuff. Thank you.

  • @harrywhittaker7563
    @harrywhittaker7563 Před 2 lety +2

    I remember attending a RI Christmas science lecture as a kid and seeing myself in the audience on TV, back in the day when TV had 5 channels and being on TV was a big deal lol

  • @MarkLucasProductions
    @MarkLucasProductions Před 4 lety +26

    That lecture was an exceedingly pleasant experience all round.

  • @ferkinskin
    @ferkinskin Před 4 lety +4

    excellent. thank you

  • @mwindasaboi6039
    @mwindasaboi6039 Před 3 lety

    Amazing presentation! Even exceptional scientist and presenter! Reality of everything in existence, in a nutshell. Wow!

  • @normanstewart7130
    @normanstewart7130 Před 4 lety +17

    Thanks Chris, great talk. Haven't seen you since Edinburgh, about 1979!

  • @Tossphate
    @Tossphate Před 4 lety +4

    Well done RI, this one was absolutely fantastic.

  • @ArielScync
    @ArielScync Před 4 lety +34

    I never though about how Edinburgh sounds like "Edinbruh". Amazing lecture, too.

    • @theradgegadgie6352
      @theradgegadgie6352 Před 4 lety +10

      @M. de k. More like Gren-itch.

    • @theradgegadgie6352
      @theradgegadgie6352 Před 4 lety +1

      You think those are bizarre, how do you think you should pronounce "Loughbrough"? One clue, it isn't Lewga-bar-oo-gah, as one American I know suggested.

    • @theradgegadgie6352
      @theradgegadgie6352 Před 4 lety +1

      @M. de k. Definitely not the "bro" bit, as that is distinctly American. We never say bro to rhyme with hoe in a place name. You didn't do badly with the first syllable though, as that combination of letters has about four different possible pronunciations in British English.
      For example:
      Plough: A tool for farming. Plow. (Which is exactly how Americans spell it, of course.)
      Thorough: To do something very carefully and/or in great detail. Thuh-rugh.
      Chough: A bird. Chuff.
      Through: To pass through something. Threw.
      Thought: A person's inner musings. Thawt.
      Loughborough is pronounced luff-bruh.

    • @Brian.001
      @Brian.001 Před 4 lety

      @M. de k. Weird pronunciations for their own cities? LOL. You were expecting Ed'nburrow, weren't you. :-D

    • @Shahpo
      @Shahpo Před 3 lety

      @@theradgegadgie6352 Someone watches too much James Acaster :P

  • @klong4128
    @klong4128 Před 3 lety

    When i first saw the Blackhole picture , it was just a donut ring! .After your elaboration based on Hawkin Radiation simple mathematical formula , it revealed Astrophysicist painstaking hardwork and knowledge sharing . Very good job done !

  • @justgame5508
    @justgame5508 Před 4 lety +1

    What a fantastic lecture

  • @migfed
    @migfed Před 4 lety +25

    It's just my impression or his English is just exquisite

    • @stephanieparker1250
      @stephanieparker1250 Před 2 lety +1

      I’m in shock over it, seriously. I have friends from the UK who lived here in the US for 30 years and still sound like 18th century chimney sweeps Lol

  • @ovdtogt1
    @ovdtogt1 Před 4 lety +4

    9:35 Would an observer in an expanding building experience the same red-shift and sense of acceleration similar to gravity?

  • @fighterabhi3165
    @fighterabhi3165 Před 4 lety +1

    Wow, what a nice lecture Sir 🙏

  • @Djzaamir
    @Djzaamir Před 4 lety +2

    That was a very interesting presentation, quite a subtle ride

    • @slamrn9689
      @slamrn9689 Před 4 lety +1

      I agree, one of the best ones from the Royal Institution that I've seen.

  • @arekkrolak6320
    @arekkrolak6320 Před 3 lety +17

    amazing lecture, such natural flow, such deep understanding and passion - bring more of those!

  • @personalpc7439
    @personalpc7439 Před 4 lety +12

    Fascinating lecture...

  • @MrKangdon
    @MrKangdon Před 4 lety +2

    "I took a relativity course and it wasn't much fun"?!
    GR the single most elegant and beautiful theory in all of science.

    • @JC_923
      @JC_923 Před 4 lety +2

      I think he meant the maths. Mathematicians, theoretical physicists and cosmologists might not find GR maths challenging but I bet many physicists do.

    • @antonystringfellow5152
      @antonystringfellow5152 Před 4 lety

      "GR the single most elegant and beautiful theory in all of science."
      But not as elegant and beautiful as the theory that will eventually replace it.
      The thing is, GR doesn't explain the universe in which we live... it only goes so far. As did the Newtonian physics that came before it.
      A better theory will be routed in the quantum world. After all, that's what the universe is made of. That's what we are made of (quantum stuff).

  • @teejay818
    @teejay818 Před 4 lety +1

    Man, that animation of the stars boomeranging around the center of the Milky Way was special, thanks.

    • @wiseguy8828
      @wiseguy8828 Před 3 lety

      It comes from a Ted Talk of one of the scientists that spent a decade tracking the stars and producing the visualization including the music. But agreed it’s wonderful.

  • @Slimm2240
    @Slimm2240 Před 4 lety +21

    He's good at explaining things simply

  • @gaspersrsen5011
    @gaspersrsen5011 Před 4 lety +3

    I have a coupe of questions:
    If gravity spreads outward at the speed of light, can gravity have an effect on a gravitational wave?
    Graviational lensing couses the light from galaxies behind them to get stronger, could that be the case also with gravity (reffering to the first question that the gravity would have been bent)?
    And if that is the case would it be possible due to the superpostions of gravitational waves to create a "gravity tsunami"?

  • @aidanlevy2841
    @aidanlevy2841 Před 4 lety

    This is the first time I really understood evaporation from a black hole. There has always been a voice in the back of my head that said that the number of escaping virtual particles should be 50/50 and I didn't understand the asymmetry. When he explicitly mentioned mass OR energy loss it clicked that an anti-particle that escapes from its pair could hit a real particle and some of the energy from that interaction could be radiated away.

  • @moneymp3
    @moneymp3 Před 4 měsíci

    Incredible lecture. 10/10

  • @jeanbigboute
    @jeanbigboute Před 4 lety +5

    17:00m The Oppenheimer/Snyder paper on black holes was published the day WW2 started for Europe (9/1/39). It was well before the US entry into the war and the Manhattan Project.

    • @meh583
      @meh583 Před 4 lety +1

      100% correct, I cringed a bit when I heard that, I don't think Meitner and Frisch had even proposed fission at that point. Oppenheimer was mostly just an administrator for Manhattan Project, Szilárd and Fermi are most responsible for the core idea. Fermi also proposed fusion to Teller if I recall.

    • @jeanbigboute
      @jeanbigboute Před 4 lety

      ​@@meh583I remember that Szilard had done calculations on self-sustaining nuclear reactions in the early 1930s and was present when Fermi's group got it to work in 1942. I can recommend the Web of Stories channel which has lengthy interviews with Bethe, Teller, and Dyson from ~1997. Fascinating stuff including but not limited to their weapons work.

  • @Erik-rp1hi
    @Erik-rp1hi Před 4 lety +17

    Good clear explanation. I can see he writes books.

    • @Erik-rp1hi
      @Erik-rp1hi Před 4 lety

      @@StonedDragons You know all this info he talks about is in equations. Do you also have equations for your explanation?

    • @atmclick
      @atmclick Před 4 lety +1

      @@StonedDragons Wow. Aren't you a smarty pants. Maybe you should take over as the deputy head of astronomy at the University of Arizona

    • @xebek
      @xebek Před 4 lety

      @@StonedDragons He clearly mentioned that the largest black holes will be the last ones to evaporate (smallest surface area to volume ratio). Also, you haven't provided a shred of independently verified, falsifiable, nor peer-reviewed data demonstrating your claims as valid and sound. Why is that? It's easy to make bald assertions. Not claiming you are necessarily wrong, just that you've fractally failed to meet your burden of proof. Odd.
      Lastly, this lecture was designed FOR LAY PEOPLE, intentionally, so your criticisms about "dumbing down" are ludicrous and fallacious. C'mon now. Begin to care whether or not your beliefs comport with reality.

  • @thomas.moerman
    @thomas.moerman Před 4 lety +1

    What a terrific teacher.

  • @mikeheyburn9716
    @mikeheyburn9716 Před 3 lety

    Brilliantly give lecture

  • @Boulos-cb2un
    @Boulos-cb2un Před 4 lety +3

    My brain hurts but that was awesome 👏👏👏

  • @kaollahina5479
    @kaollahina5479 Před 4 lety +27

    That visual of 20B solar masses made me feel like I got hit by one punchman

  • @tims.2832
    @tims.2832 Před 3 lety +2

    If time is standing still at the event horizon, a black hole could be a violent explosion, going off right now. From outside, it must appear as an almost eternal thing. Why do we imagine black holes as something, that are "doing" anything at all? If time is slowed down to zero, there is no cause and no effect anymore.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před 2 lety

      Time isn't standing still at the event horizon. The classical analysis breaks down.

    • @tims.2832
      @tims.2832 Před 2 lety

      @@schmetterling4477 On earth, we can measure the influence of earth´s gravitational effect on time. Our clocks are good enough today, to measure a time difference between objects, that are 1 meter higher than a reference object. I would assume, that the gravitational effect is basically maximal at an event horizon. Shouldn´t the effect on time then be correlating?

  • @audiodiwhy2195
    @audiodiwhy2195 Před 4 lety +1

    Excellent presentation--clear and interesting for a non-physicist

  • @AllCarsUnited
    @AllCarsUnited Před 3 lety +8

    Yup another day another black hole video. Who else wishes they could just take off on a space ship and explore the universe?

    • @observerjoe4292
      @observerjoe4292 Před rokem

      Injury

    • @observerjoe4292
      @observerjoe4292 Před rokem

      HubbyanddadHubbybhHubbyh56yHubbyisdoinggreatHubbybuuandhyh6yHubbyĥĥbuhhủyhibytugHubbyuubHubbyhuhuuuuHubbyhuh😅7ťÿ3yt4ťgg5ty3gyygy5g5tgy3ttyyyg

    • @observerjoe4292
      @observerjoe4292 Před rokem

      4tht

    • @observerjoe4292
      @observerjoe4292 Před rokem

      Try3tþ5ttryrffryerrtrgetyytfgtftytyfftrrfGTG3EggerttyrVTtytgtVTtygf3teffectstygeRty5fftRty5feetcfrrrGTGgyftrftfygTtttycygfþeggedfCTfcryyverytgeffttygf3rft2Rty5trþrergetterþrftretryrgettyftþttrugyfdGTG4thYtgyyTttgrugtreyþTttfrþt2Tttte4thft4thetRty5Tryftř4ťyþgetty3tTtt4thYt

  • @DiscoGreen
    @DiscoGreen Před 3 lety +3

    25.56 implies the information is lost to the external viewer in relation to viewing from the outside of the horizon. But the information is not lost to the observer relative to the information. Relativity doesn't disappear at the horizon. Just because an observer would be spagettified doesn't break the rules.. the observer would be frozen in time to outside observers but would see the information .. the socks falling across the horizon with his self... In his timeframe.... No paradox.. just not easy to visualize.

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 Před 2 lety

      The information isn't lost until the black hole evaporates. The paradox doesn't appear until we make the assumption that Hawking radiation is purely thermal in nature. In the meantime they have proven that it is not and can not be. Most of the "information" simply comes out as highly correlated radiation late in the evaporation process under proper quantum mechanical analysis.

  • @johnwinward2421
    @johnwinward2421 Před 4 lety +1

    I did Prof. Impey's Astronomy MOOC (very good, BTW). IT's interesting to see him in this different context.

  • @shibainuherald8363
    @shibainuherald8363 Před 3 lety +1

    I must get that scifi book of this gentleman. The ending of this lecture is so deep and hopeful.

  • @Asdayasman
    @Asdayasman Před 4 lety +65

    Excellent, a good lecture, rather than a bunch of big words and advertising.

  • @juzoli
    @juzoli Před 4 lety +7

    I have an idea about how black holes work, which seems to be a straightforward consequence of all the relevant theories in physics, but I’ve never saw it being explained in a such way, so I might be wrong. Did I miss something?
    Here is the idea:
    Matter falling into the black hole NEVER reaches its center, it doesn’t accumulate in a single point, but it is frozen i to the surface.
    To explain it, let’s review how matter falls into the black hole from 2 different point of view:
    POV of an outside observer: An object falls towards the event horizont. But since the object’s clock slows down in the presence of strong gravitational field, we see this falling object slowing down as it is getting close, and effectively freezing on the event horizont (which we don’t literally see, because light doesn’t escape there).
    POV of the falling object: Our internal clock has constant speed, so we don’t experience any slowdown, so we keep falling through the event horizont towards the center. Or do we? Our time slows down from outer perspective, so the outside world’s time speeds up from our perspective. The entire life of the universe is happening in fast forward, before we are even getting fully throuh the event horizont. In infinite time, we would reach the center eventually, but black holes doesn’t live forever. It evaprates through Hawking radiation, so basically just as we reach the event horizont, we evaporate back to space skipping zillions of years, while the universe is dying around us.
    So basically we are frozen into the surface of the black hole throughout the entire life of the black hole, until it is evaporated. However since we add mass to the black hole, it also gots a bit bigger by our mass, and the event horizont moves out.
    And that’s how information is encoded into the black hole. Every particle, which has ever fallen into it, just adds a new layer to it, and the particle is encoded into that layer, until that layer evaporates.
    Does that sound right?

    • @qingyangzhang887
      @qingyangzhang887 Před 4 lety

      I think he hints towards you theory at 26:10

    • @juzoli
      @juzoli Před 4 lety

      Q&science Yes, but the conclusion is missing, which is my point. We don’t fall “into” the black hole. We are frozen on the surface, thus information is not lost. And then it spits us back into space through Hawking radiation.

    • @JDLuke
      @JDLuke Před 4 lety

      @@juzoli That is indeed one slice at resolving the apparent paradox, and I'm partial to it myself.

    • @otis2337
      @otis2337 Před 4 lety +1

      @@juzoli you do fall into it though...it is only relative to a bystander that you are frozen in place. The point is that the person falling is in fact consumed by the black hole, it's just because of relativity and the time difference that it appears to us that they never actually disappear. If an outsider was to watch for an infinite amount of time, the person would eventually disappear. When speaking about "encoding," one is implying that, yes, the object has been consumed by the black hole, but perhaps the object's information- not the object itself- is stored at the event horizon.

    • @juzoli
      @juzoli Před 4 lety

      Otis Simmons But that fall takes infinite time, while the black hole evaporates in FINITE amount of time. So the black hole’s life ends before the fall could happen.

  • @pankajnegi9795
    @pankajnegi9795 Před 4 lety

    Wow...this is awesome

  • @MartinPurvis
    @MartinPurvis Před 4 lety +1

    Really interesting talk!

  • @climbeverest
    @climbeverest Před 4 lety +9

    A Brit with an American accent, nice!

  • @bartbarry2662
    @bartbarry2662 Před 4 lety +6

    What would be a better lecture would be discussion of all the failures in the math and physics when it comes to black holes

    • @gammaraygem
      @gammaraygem Před 4 lety +2

      not to mention the invention of dark matter and dark energy ,making up 96% of the universe after the theory did not fit the facts.
      Science has gone astray very badly.
      Ligo, CMB and Higgs Nobel prizes were not even peer reviewed .
      these headless chickens do not even control their primary instrument: Thought, mind, and they havent got a clue what Consciousness is.
      Try stop your thoughtflow for 5 minutes and it is obvious that these "scientists" are anything but methodical.
      And then there is the awkward problem of GR not being compatible with QM.
      "we need a new einstein" said Michiu Kaku. Nope, we need honest scientists that stick to the rulebook, of being methodical and observation based.

  • @dream19992000
    @dream19992000 Před 4 lety +1

    I am not a students of Astronomy but I have finished the lecture with pin drop silence and great interest...
    Thanks a lot for expressing the critical objects in Simple words...Hope Mankind will survive to 10^100 years :)
    ***Hail Human***

  • @kasperadamson4654
    @kasperadamson4654 Před 3 lety

    What a fantastic lecture and lecturer. 👨‍🏫

  • @jmctigret
    @jmctigret Před 4 lety +4

    Just finished watching this, going outside to make mud pies.

  • @FighterFred
    @FighterFred Před 4 lety +3

    Exactly these concepts that produced my PhD in astrophysics a long time ago. And you don't have to wait for the end to use BH as energy sources. Close to the horizon they act like one-way time machines, sitting there for a while will propel you into the far future after the cultural marxists are long gone.

    • @rexremedy1733
      @rexremedy1733 Před 4 lety

      Fredrik Wallinder haha, so there is an escape? Would love to hear what you think about my suggestion... :-)

  • @absolutemadlad6340
    @absolutemadlad6340 Před 4 lety

    Nice video. Very informative.

  • @qunningStunts
    @qunningStunts Před 9 měsíci

    I'm only halfway through and had to start up my pc to write this. He seems to have perfected the intellect of a brit with the subtle bluntness of an american scientist living in the south. What a great listen this is

  • @froop2393
    @froop2393 Před 4 lety +6

    24:40 i thought that all the socks lost in our washing machines are contributing to the dark matter 😎

    • @you2tooyou2too
      @you2tooyou2too Před 4 lety

      not yet.

    • @MJ-zx7hn
      @MJ-zx7hn Před 4 lety +1

      Is this a thing? Do people really lose socks inside washers?

  • @enlongchiou
    @enlongchiou Před 4 lety +3

    Einstein's ER=EPR limit worm hole at Planck's scale l=gm/c^2 by entanglement.

  • @Gorguruga
    @Gorguruga Před 4 lety +1

    Brilliant video!

  • @danm7298
    @danm7298 Před 2 lety +1

    The one thing im still wanting to understand is what is space time? how can it bend to create gravity? its really weird that space, which seems like nothing, is actually some kind of field that is connected to everything or something? you always see the heavy balls on a blanket analagy but an object that is below it will still be attracted so that just doesnt do it much justice

  • @MrBendybruce
    @MrBendybruce Před 4 lety +5

    Imagine a day when you walk into wallmart, and right next to the Toaster and Microwave ovens; is a small Black Hole Generator, which has a small red warning label on it saying, not suitable for children or people who want to cause the world to end.

    • @surfingbilly9654
      @surfingbilly9654 Před 4 lety +2

      The only thing that can stop a bad guy with a Black Hole Generator is a good guy with a Black Hole Generator.

    • @kevinshort3943
      @kevinshort3943 Před 3 lety +1

      Some theorise that a washing machine is a Black hole generator.
      Where do you think all your odd socks go?

  • @ameliuslantea1789
    @ameliuslantea1789 Před 4 lety +4

    What would be the implications if we'd absolutely fail to measure
    1) Hawking-Radiation, only Unruh
    2) Unruh-Radiation, only Hawking
    3) Both instead of just one of the two?
    Not only by starting from the premise that we'd use today's top-notch knowledge, tech, materials etc. but also assuming that even if we got more advanced technology (some bordering on new physics/Science Fiction) which would enable us to directly observe a Black Hole like a space probe/spaceship equipped with a Fusion-Drive capable of reaching 0.5c or more (Time Dilation kicks in), Warp-Drive or even a Wormhole-Observatory (whatever you can imagine) we'd fail to observe 1, 2 or 3?
    ps: the methods mentioned above just serve as plot-devices no matter if possible or not, it's about the implications of my question and a "What If?" Scenario

    • @thechrisgrice
      @thechrisgrice Před 4 lety +2

      In the case of 1) It would mean that black holes are eternal, and this would actually fundamentally rip up a lot of current physics, particularly the heisenberg uncertainty principle. This is unlikely to be the case though - the evidence for the latter is substantial.

    • @333STONE
      @333STONE Před 4 lety

      @@thechrisgricewhat if the Black hole is the center of all things.
      Maybe ( fractalized) in us and called the heart of our matter.
      7 layers of muscle 7 houses of the lord. Huh?

    • @realitycheck3363
      @realitycheck3363 Před 4 lety

      @@333STONE Nothing is impossible.
      We exist as electrical impulses. By invocation, we believe.
      It can be difficult to know where to begin.
      Today, science tells us that the essence of nature is starfire. The goal of ultra-sentient particles is to plant the seeds of learning rather than ego. Purpose is the driver of sharing.
      Starfire is a constant. The planet is bursting with pulses. You and I are dreamweavers of the universe.
      Visitor, look within and awaken yourself. If you have never experienced this paradigm shift at the quantum level, it can be difficult to live. Have you found your journey?
      The biosphere is calling to you via atomic ionization. Can you hear it?It is time to take knowledge to the next level. Parvati will become our stepping-stone to unified aspiration. It is in blossoming that we are guided.

    • @333STONE
      @333STONE Před 4 lety

      @@realitycheck3363 beautiful! Have you seen Phil Langdon on yt if not please do I'd love for you to hang in my reality for a spell. Lol seriously though you will fit in nicely . Thank you btw

  • @Trinidandian
    @Trinidandian Před 4 lety

    This was a truly enjoyable lecture

    • @carlz28
      @carlz28 Před 4 lety

      Trinidandian I’m sure the drugs helped it to be more enjoyable.

  • @realcygnus
    @realcygnus Před rokem

    A particularly good one !

  • @thechrisgrice
    @thechrisgrice Před 4 lety +3

    @35:54 XKCD!
    Actually... almost all the videos in this presentation are from various free internet sources, including youtube.

  • @juniorballs6025
    @juniorballs6025 Před 4 lety +12

    I volunteer to be catapulted into Sag A*. Not sure how I report back (leave that detail for the boffins) but the offer is on the table 👍 Let me know asap before I get another cat or some other type of pet please.

    • @thechrisgrice
      @thechrisgrice Před 4 lety +1

      Even travelling at the speed of light, you'd take several tens of thousands of years to get there. Nobody would be alive to remember you.

    • @cholulahotsauce6166
      @cholulahotsauce6166 Před 4 lety +1

      1) I will remember you.
      2) You’ll need a Nokia phone to contact out, only a Nokia can survive a black hole.

    • @theadel8591
      @theadel8591 Před 4 lety

      Cholula Hot Sauce WTF

    • @juniorballs6025
      @juniorballs6025 Před 4 lety

      @@cholulahotsauce6166 Nice one, I'll get my underwear washed so I'm ready to go 😎

    • @realitycheck3363
      @realitycheck3363 Před 4 lety

      @@juniorballs6025 Don't bother, they won't stay clean that long.

  • @timwalling3101
    @timwalling3101 Před 2 měsíci +1

    he said if you watched your friend fall into a black hole you would never see him go inside the black hole because of time running infinitely slow ...does that mean you can come back 10 years later and still see your friend not go past the event horizon.

  • @rajbhanawat5654
    @rajbhanawat5654 Před 3 lety

    Terrific !!

  • @redandblue323
    @redandblue323 Před 4 lety +5

    Who thought the music during the visual aids was a good idea?

  • @Astares9
    @Astares9 Před 4 lety +3

    i can kinda still hear the brit in his voice

    • @carlz28
      @carlz28 Před 4 lety

      Astares probably just the drugs in your system.

    • @Astares9
      @Astares9 Před 2 lety

      @@carlz28

  • @angermanager2116
    @angermanager2116 Před 3 lety

    Well done.

  • @johnghilduta3016
    @johnghilduta3016 Před 3 lety +1

    Before black hole pull me in I will like to say:I do like so much your presentation Professor Chris.
    I got a simple question:what is the black hole role in the universe?