The Arrow of Time - Wonders of the Universe - BBC Two

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 9. 03. 2011
  • Subscribe and 🔔 to the BBC 👉 bit.ly/BBCCZcamsSub
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    Professor Brian Cox uses the Perito Moreno glacier in Patagonia, Argentina to help explain the Arrow of Time; a concept that tells us why sequences happen in the order they do.
    #bbc
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáƙe • 342

  • @robertfindley921
    @robertfindley921 Pƙed 2 lety +41

    Huge fan of Brian Cox. He brings a child-like wonder to his content. I always learn and enjoy.

  • @itsmylife8639
    @itsmylife8639 Pƙed 9 lety +196

    Other than Physics there is one more thing that I like about Brian's videos, the beautiful nature that his videos shares. Just amazing.

    • @moxica6478
      @moxica6478 Pƙed 8 lety +5

      +Saurabh Banerjee also the musical score they use in his videos compliment the videos well

    • @AjarnSpencer
      @AjarnSpencer Pƙed 6 lety +4

      he is the david attenborough of the 21st century, with the difference that he is qualified in multiple topics from genetics and chemistry to astrophysics, and has done a lot to make new and emerging sciences and the scientific knowledge of the present day, interesting to the younger generation

    • @J5X7
      @J5X7 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      He's a pillock.

    • @shack8110
      @shack8110 Pƙed 2 lety +1

      isn't gravity a law that states ice can not go back up and affix itself again to the glacier?

    • @christosmakariou4574
      @christosmakariou4574 Pƙed 2 lety +1

      ITWORKS IN REVERSE TIME AS WELL SO THAT'S A NO.

  • @marykeohane200
    @marykeohane200 Pƙed 5 lety +73

    It’s official ... I’m obsessed with this brilliant dude & his soothing voice đŸ„°

  • @ploptart4649
    @ploptart4649 Pƙed 2 lety +11

    I'm sure it's very scary to hear in person, but on video the sound of the collapsing is pretty soothing, actually. It's like listening to a thunderstorm.

    • @franciswheatgerm2082
      @franciswheatgerm2082 Pƙed 2 lety

      He also taked about something else apart from the ice collapses. Glaciars make a very powerful and distinct sound when they move - also because of all the echoes they trigger. The first time i heard it i was all alone in one of the ice tentacles of Vatnajökull, in Iceland.
      For a very long moment i felt like reality had been stolen away from under my feet. The sound was so strange and unconceivable that i had no common reference to explain it. There was no time, no reason, just a mix of fear and irresistible wonder. It's like a crackling howl, like a mixture between a thunderstorm and a whale chant, that can last for many seconds - from my own humble experience, in one segment of a gigantic glaciar.
      Brian heard it, you can see it in his smile :)

  • @Ravakeksis
    @Ravakeksis Pƙed 3 lety +59

    Brian: Now thats something you'll never see in reverse
    Christopher Nolan: Challenge accepted!

  • @cannedmusic
    @cannedmusic Pƙed 3 lety +24

    I love watching Brian's presentations. It's like watching a kid in a candy store gleefully explain to the workers how candy is made, the hardening point of rock candy and the thermal temperature needed to achieve the crystallization of sugar and corn syrup-how, not enough will result in a somewhat mushy substance whereas too high a temperature can lead to burnt flavor or candy that's too brittle and won't harden properly, how it only takes one or two degrees of temperature to differentiate between the two temperatures, sometimes...and then, out of nowhere a team of Ice Warriors pop up from one of the glaciers and take Prof. Cox captive.

  • @libville
    @libville Pƙed 11 lety +11

    This guy is fantastic. He makes physics accessible by employing these amazing explanations that use our natural world as a prop, albeit a beautiful one. Hats off to the BBC for supporting these sorts of programs. BTW, is there really any need for anyone to disparage or get competitive with other countries about their documentary content? Really?! There are wonderful documentaries made the world over by people just as dedicated and talented as Brian Cox, so let's enjoy them.

  • @johnathanw2565
    @johnathanw2565 Pƙed 2 lety +1

    Brian Cox is the greatest Teacher, Presenter, Thinker, Soothing voice and friend there is...

  • @moxica6478
    @moxica6478 Pƙed 8 lety +14

    Such a great series this and the wonders of the Solar system. I don't know what I like more, the cinematography, the music or the way he makes everything understandable.

  • @debbietimm9397
    @debbietimm9397 Pƙed 3 lety +6

    I could listen to his voice explaining the Wonders of
    The Universe for eternity 😀 So relaxing!

  • @Primaate
    @Primaate Pƙed 7 lety +9

    The definition of Genius - to solve and reveal the complex, simply. Well done BBC and BC.

  • @vitalalive69
    @vitalalive69 Pƙed 5 lety +5

    What he is telling is actually what we all know and 0have known for a long time now, nothing new to anyone. But the way he gets the message over is simply brilliant and epic.

  • @nicholasmrobinson
    @nicholasmrobinson Pƙed 7 lety +114

    "...we all age..." - do we Brian? I know I do.

  • @arnobghosh265
    @arnobghosh265 Pƙed 6 lety

    I really really loved this tv show. These gave me a dream of becoming a scientists. Thanks to BBC and Brain Cox.
    Hope in this year i mean 2018, there will be another tv show like this.......

  • @saadsalman1650
    @saadsalman1650 Pƙed 2 lety +4

    How is it that I have been watching Brian Cox since I was a kid and now I am a grown man and he hasn't aged a day?

  • @alexanderhopkins2807
    @alexanderhopkins2807 Pƙed 3 lety +3

    I went to see that glacier on a warmer sunny day. A fabulous spectacle. đŸ€“

  • @kalidouba7706
    @kalidouba7706 Pƙed rokem

    I really like your videos, they are great and simple.
    I only pick the ones where you are casual.

  • @LizardYup
    @LizardYup Pƙed 12 lety +12

    Sweet! I love everything about the universe, so beautiful. :)
    And Brian Cox, you're a legend ;)

  • @ezequiels3293
    @ezequiels3293 Pƙed 3 lety +2

    I live close to that park, one of the purest airs i ever breathe for sure.

  • @AnikHalder
    @AnikHalder Pƙed 11 lety +5

    From what I could make out,
    Arrow of Time = Second law of Thermodynamics in terms of entropy(disorder).
    In other words,
    Universe likes disorder and time moves in direction of entropy increase.
    Prof. Brian...Hats off to you as always.

    • @RtB68
      @RtB68 Pƙed 3 lety

      Remember, disorder is a human definition...I'm sure the universe thinks it's quite ordered, thank-you very much.

    • @naomisbrainjunk578
      @naomisbrainjunk578 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci

      @@RtB68I’ve heard it described as energy becoming more spread out, like through friction or low energy heat radiation :0

  • @gustavoritterstein4644
    @gustavoritterstein4644 Pƙed 3 lety

    Simple, yet very profound

  • @thealmightytiddles5427
    @thealmightytiddles5427 Pƙed 6 lety +2

    Beautifully poetic in a way isn't it?

  • @PatRedstone
    @PatRedstone Pƙed 12 lety +5

    Love the BBC - thanks for posting this.

  • @toonu
    @toonu Pƙed 13 lety +8

    "glacialy slow" is the new description I will be using for my workmates.

  • @typim
    @typim Pƙed 3 lety

    wow, those are deep thoughts! appreciate it!

  • @helipeek2736
    @helipeek2736 Pƙed 3 lety +2

    “1000km that way is the Antarctic and today it feels like June in Wythenshawe”

  • @reinforcedpenisstem
    @reinforcedpenisstem Pƙed 3 lety

    Beautiful.

  • @sinprelic
    @sinprelic Pƙed 9 lety +18

    this video is about the second law of thermodynamics.
    too bad BBC only uploads these snippets!

  • @elliebrown181
    @elliebrown181 Pƙed 2 lety

    Amazing photography

  • @musicshanky
    @musicshanky Pƙed 13 lety +1

    amazing is the word!!!

  • @vigneshrb1626
    @vigneshrb1626 Pƙed rokem +1

    Brian Cox:"There's nothing in the laws of physics that prevents the ice from jumping from Lake and gluing back to its original place"
    Chris Nolan: that's great!!

  • @ivanpostnikov5517
    @ivanpostnikov5517 Pƙed 3 lety

    that's my favorite science series for sure

  • @ausria9swan
    @ausria9swan Pƙed 12 lety +1

    So true.

  • @chrisgriffiths2533
    @chrisgriffiths2533 Pƙed 5 lety

    Amazing Glacier.

  • @TheMightsparrow
    @TheMightsparrow Pƙed 3 lety +1

    Things can only get better ✹

  • @scurrie42
    @scurrie42 Pƙed 11 lety

    Superb...

  • @patrickmayer9566
    @patrickmayer9566 Pƙed 2 lety

    ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,....... . . . Always watching here ! ......from land o' lakes,wi........DooooooooooD ! .....the best!

  • @johnniemjamaica3089
    @johnniemjamaica3089 Pƙed 10 lety

    very nice my friend I like it

  • @S2Cents
    @S2Cents Pƙed 11 lety +1

    Brian Cox is living up to the legacy of public science teacher of the great Carl Sagan I think.

  • @RelDavi103
    @RelDavi103 Pƙed 12 lety

    Awesome

  • @craigrobinson8160
    @craigrobinson8160 Pƙed rokem

    I think I would enjoy him telling me off lol , Could listen to him all day..

  • @Douglas-Murad
    @Douglas-Murad Pƙed 2 lety +1

    Reminds me 2011, early teenage years.

  • @Andyachinhead
    @Andyachinhead Pƙed měsĂ­cem

    2:44 Hell yeah!

  • @RobinOfTheWest
    @RobinOfTheWest Pƙed 11 lety +1

    Entropy prevents water from jumping back up and reforming into the glacier. Things always move towards a lower energy state.

  • @arpitkulshreshtha3513
    @arpitkulshreshtha3513 Pƙed měsĂ­cem

    4:27 is where idea of Tenet was born!

  • @wkb9683
    @wkb9683 Pƙed 6 lety +3

    Things can only get better 💓

  • @arboldechorizos
    @arboldechorizos Pƙed 8 lety +2

    Hey, is there any chance to get this fragment subtitled in spanish??? it would be great to have this amazing quality content available for the understanding of a wider audience. I can help if given the opportunity!

  • @virginiaconnor8350
    @virginiaconnor8350 Pƙed 2 lety

    "The Vulcan Directorate has determined that there's no such thing as time travel " Sub-Cdr. T'Pol

  • @Ken7663
    @Ken7663 Pƙed 6 lety

    I remember once seeing a documentary where an arrow in flight was used to illustrate the forward movement of time. Any responses ?

  • @8nansky528
    @8nansky528 Pƙed 3 lety +2

    I ADORE READING

  • @alistairhales9179
    @alistairhales9179 Pƙed 6 lety +6

    This separation between Past, Present and Future is only an illusion - Albert Einstein

    • @pseudonymousbeing987
      @pseudonymousbeing987 Pƙed 4 lety +1

      Only a stubbornly persistent illusion* is the correct, full quote.

    • @kephalopod3054
      @kephalopod3054 Pƙed 3 lety

      The present is the most phenomenal illusion.

    • @dennisgalvin2521
      @dennisgalvin2521 Pƙed 3 lety

      "It's just the present we're in that's always changing that seems to make time appear'

  • @jakemorrison8507
    @jakemorrison8507 Pƙed 5 lety +1

    Can anyone point me to the video where Brian Cox references somewhere in spacetime is 'your first Christmas with your grandparents' long shot, but if anyone has a vague idea of what I'm talking about let me know please

  • @protic4
    @protic4 Pƙed 3 lety

    Add to bucket list: see glacier.

  • @redmigold370
    @redmigold370 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    I'm in love with this person 💞😍😍

  • @martinleck
    @martinleck Pƙed 6 lety +2

    Time exists because of a singularity that occurred billions of years ago (the big bang). Before that, our entire universe was smaller than a pin prick but contained all of space, time and matter. It is the most highly ordered state known to science (or you could say it had the lowest entropy ever known).
    Then something happened inside our tiny, highly ordered universe that gave particles mass. We don't yet know exactly why it happened yet (possibly due to a very slight imbalace/spin in the universe's highly ordered particles interacting with the Higgs field) but we do know that it gave birth to both time and space, releasing incomprehensible amounts of energy in the process.
    The energy, motion, time and space created all move from a highly ordered state to a lower ordered state and eventually all energy space and time will dissipate from the unvierse. Entropy calculates that this is the most overwhelmingly probable outcome.
    At that point, all possible past present and futures will coexist simultaneously and time will have no meaning.
    So it's true to say that entropy and therfore time do exist but the past, present and future are just explanations of how we humans perceive the universal forces that change matter to a less ordered state.
    Its just dumb humans... observing entropy... relative to us.

  • @srinivasagan
    @srinivasagan Pƙed 9 lety

    Change is permanent and irreversible. How true and universal!

  • @2007Jordan1991
    @2007Jordan1991 Pƙed 12 lety

    yea thats exactly what i was thinking thats why we have waterfalls not water rises but im sure he has some sort of explanation for it he's the man

  • @AppleAssassin
    @AppleAssassin Pƙed 12 lety +4

    I used to travel in time, but then I took an arrow to the knee

  • @davidbobbiejohnson6214
    @davidbobbiejohnson6214 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    Fascinating my name is Bobby Johnson

  • @TheScottoline19
    @TheScottoline19 Pƙed 11 lety +1

    This guy is today's Sagan

  • @mrityunjoysen10
    @mrityunjoysen10 Pƙed 2 lety

    4:22 Nolan's behind the camera cameo.

  • @jakemiller7682
    @jakemiller7682 Pƙed rokem

    everyone in awe at this guy - the way he talks and makes amazing videos - oooh aaah - unfortunately they fail to see - he's wrong

  • @MohammedAhmed-yo8pe
    @MohammedAhmed-yo8pe Pƙed 3 lety

    After Sir David Attenborough Brian Cox defo has the best narration voice.

  • @stizzulka
    @stizzulka Pƙed 13 lety

    cool.

  • @danielsmartie
    @danielsmartie Pƙed 11 lety

    urrrg the way he keeps saying glacier hehehe

  • @arnorrian1
    @arnorrian1 Pƙed 13 lety

    @callumdoyle2 Not just you, everybody is. They're the global standard of quality

  • @inox1ck
    @inox1ck Pƙed 6 lety

    I think, we don't see things in reverse because of the laws of physics not because time goes in one direction. At some point some things may appear as happening in reverse but the same rules hold as before.
    The world is a made of fields that propagate like waves and interfere or interact and emerge or collapse.

  • @swimon
    @swimon Pƙed 5 lety +1

    There's nothing in the laws of physics which prevents the ice from jumping out of the water and back onto the glacier ? Gravity, maybe?

  • @Kenneth_James
    @Kenneth_James Pƙed 4 lety

    As far as I'm concerned, no other man should be allowed to talk about science and the universe. Only Professor Cox.

  • @GreenAmigos
    @GreenAmigos Pƙed 12 lety

    @VerucaBucket
    Maybe DireTheDecadent is the Host's CZcams username, and your comment about James Blunt really got to him... it would to me!

  • @1800ghostdance
    @1800ghostdance Pƙed 12 lety +1

    THE GLASSIER

  • @stilettosandshades
    @stilettosandshades Pƙed 13 lety

    @arna11420 totally agree... (whispers) and I'm an American...

  • @hackajim
    @hackajim Pƙed 12 lety

    in this episode he said order to disorder.... light to dark, the universe will burn out into stale dark... but in the next he marvels at the "endless cycle of life" you cant have it both ways pal.

  • @TheInfinityGhost
    @TheInfinityGhost Pƙed 11 lety +2

    Anyway - America isn't too bad with it's own shows about nature and the universe, but I do agree that there should definitely be more consistent programming, not just one show about the universe and then 10 showings of "Ice-Road Truckers"

  • @chrisroor
    @chrisroor Pƙed 12 lety +1

    @luckyluke013
    And that's what makes entropy so interesting :P

  • @stilettosandshades
    @stilettosandshades Pƙed 13 lety

    @jegr38 haha - damn you were right. you probably didn't even see how right you were about that....

  • @vargasbasti
    @vargasbasti Pƙed 3 lety

    Though Perito Moreno is an Argentine glaciar, Northen and Southern ice fields are Chilean

  • @luckyluke013
    @luckyluke013 Pƙed 12 lety

    Its the extremely simple and basic stuff that dumbfounds me, like how destruction of an object can be put into entropy and a mathematical equation. I just think of it like its just there or just happens. Never thought why. Its like asking what the definition of "the" or "is" is.

  • @aluisious
    @aluisious Pƙed 12 lety

    @Graham6762 Frontline and Nova. What are you talking about?

  • @aabmmd
    @aabmmd Pƙed 11 lety

    got a link?

  • @SuperBrma
    @SuperBrma Pƙed 12 lety

    hoi leuk filmpje man:) xx emmy

  • @arbonne1805
    @arbonne1805 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

    You can throw all the phyisics known to mankind into explaining this arrow of time malarkey, but it doesn't explain the paradox of how Prof Brian Cox fails to age.

  • @sundareshvenugopal6575
    @sundareshvenugopal6575 Pƙed 3 lety

    If there was no change in state would there be time ? If there was no activity at all but perfect endless stillness, would there be time, or the passage of time ? Are all these changes caused and brought about by time ?

  • @stilettosandshades
    @stilettosandshades Pƙed 13 lety

    @jegr38 i just meant that im sure you didn't come back and see the big huge argument that started between cruelty2 and the other person commenting after you left your comment.... But, good definition of trolling :)

  • @bipinshahi9830
    @bipinshahi9830 Pƙed 3 lety

    I need here my palace

  • @davidwinfield4948
    @davidwinfield4948 Pƙed 3 lety

    Iv got a Question.....? But in a Multyverse Could there be not only the posabilty but the Probability of A universe running Backwards ✹.?....?

  • @cpndSimyule
    @cpndSimyule Pƙed 3 lety

    my pocket is full of permanent change

  • @rsvcaptin
    @rsvcaptin Pƙed 12 lety +3

    Me watching these 5 minutes videos ive become cleverer than my teacher

  • @joanmanalang8375
    @joanmanalang8375 Pƙed 5 lety

    He kinda look like the Australian stand up comedian James Smith :)

  • @TransoceanicOutreach
    @TransoceanicOutreach Pƙed rokem +1

    4:20 is where he actually starts talking about it. Brian really knows how to waffle.
    EDIT: oh wait a minute, he doesn't actually explain anything at all, he just says we can only travel forwards in time without explaining why. WELL THANKS A LOT FOR THAT BRI, YOU REALLY HELPED ME OUT WITH THAT ONE.

    • @alanhunt3772
      @alanhunt3772 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

      It’s called storytelling and thinking critically for yourself.

    • @Alex-mj5dv
      @Alex-mj5dv Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

      It’s a science / entertainment programme for prime time BBC.. it’s not in depth lecturing. It’s a layman’s explanation of difficult to grasp concepts, delivered in an easy accessible way. Which Brian is great at. Same with Attenborough - he’s not going into DNA sequencing on Planet Earth

  • @darrelstickler
    @darrelstickler Pƙed 3 lety

    Entropy, baby!

  • @Robert399
    @Robert399 Pƙed 5 lety +3

    3:47 This confused me a bit. Sure, there's no law in physics saying "water molecules can't move away from the centre of the Earth" but they can't just spontaneously do that because they'd be moving from a low energy state to a high energy state; it would require a source of energy to make that happen. I know that's kind of his point but it's just a weird way of expressing it. He makes it sound like "ice doesn't fly because entropy"... well no, ice doesn't fly because gravity.

    • @Wolves2314
      @Wolves2314 Pƙed 3 lety

      Well you can't really put the ice back into the position it was in before. I think he meant that also, not just to "make ice fly" but to actually undo it

  • @dylan110896
    @dylan110896 Pƙed 11 lety

    Do you have the science channel?

  • @aluisious
    @aluisious Pƙed 12 lety

    @daeamarth Part of the whole deal is that the entire universe is aging irreversibly. It's not a continual cycle. Eventually the galaxies will drift apart and no galaxy will be able to see any other galaxy. Stars will generally all become old and cold, with very few new stars born. You could say that even now we are at the stage of the universe where no new galaxies are formed, they only collide to form amalgamations, and one day even that will stop.

  • @chrisroor
    @chrisroor Pƙed 12 lety

    @hackajim
    The universe does move from order to disorder. He talks of the "endless cycle of life" because the unimaginable scale of time makes it seem as if it is endless. The "heat death" of the Universe will theoretically happen in ten trillion, trillion, trillion, trillion, trillion, trillion, trillion years. Human beings can't really comprehend that amount of time.

  • @dowelly450
    @dowelly450 Pƙed 13 lety

    Wooo :D

  • @ydirani29
    @ydirani29 Pƙed 5 lety

    I'ma pronounce glaciers like him now

  • @phat1234
    @phat1234 Pƙed 10 lety

    change is the only constant in the universe...
    sadly we and things around us must adapt or perish....

    • @Luke-ev7vz
      @Luke-ev7vz Pƙed 5 lety

      There are multiple physics constants...

  • @meesalikeu
    @meesalikeu Pƙed 3 lety

    the glassy air

  • @stuartparkinson6061
    @stuartparkinson6061 Pƙed 3 lety

    Time is responsible for the existence of matter,, one of the major factors is a positive infinite number. Time is a reassertion so a past is known, movement isn’t required.