A new way to visualize General Relativity

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 6. 05. 2024
  • How to faithfully represent general relativity ? Is the image of the rubber sheet accurate ? What is the curvature of time ? All these answers in 11 minutes !
    For more videos, subscribe to the CZcams channel : / scienceclicen
    And if you liked this video, you can share it on social networks !
    To support me on Patreon : / scienceclic
    or on Tipeee : tipeee.com/ScienceClic
    Facebook Page : / scienceclic
    Twitter : / scienceclic
    Instagram : / scienceclic
    Alessandro Roussel,
    For more info: www.alessandroroussel.com/en
    _
    To learn more :
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General...
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 10K

  • @ScienceClicEN
    @ScienceClicEN  Před 3 lety +1079

    Some answers to the questions I have been asked:
    - Has this visualization not already been presented? No I don't think so : you may have already seen a visualization with a distorted 3D grid (like at 5:20), but the crucial point that distinguishes my new representation is its temporal dimension. It is the fact that the grid is perpetually contracting which allows us to better understand the way bodies fall (and which is more faithful to the equations). As far as I am aware this has never been represented in this way, surely because this is only possible with the video format. EDIT: I have since then discovered that this visualization does exist, at least a similar one called the "river model". It allows for an intuitive understanding of black holes for instance.
    - If space contracts, shouldn't there be an accumulation of space in the center? Beware no, it is not space which contracts : it is only the straight lines (geodesics) which get closer to each other due to the curvature of spacetime. In the same way that on the sphere the geometry does not change (see at 9:10)
    , the geometry of space-time is static, it does not vary. But this geometry gives a tendency for straight lines to come closer to the center
    - How to define a temporal speed? In relativity there are two different times: the time of the observer (the coordinate time / the time dimension), and the time of the object (proper time). Velocity in relativity is the derivative of the coordinates with respect to the proper time of the object. The "temporal speed" is therefore simply given by the rate at which the time of the observer passes compared to the proper time of the object. To find out more, check out my series about the Maths of General Relativity

    • @baileym4708
      @baileym4708 Před 3 lety +40

      The new representation of the temporal dimension was very helpful for me at least.

    • @brianmorin5547
      @brianmorin5547 Před 3 lety +19

      The only struggle I had was with the perpetually contracting grid “bunching up” an infinite amount of spacetime at the center of the earth. I’ve understood gravity to be the effect of time dilation with a slower running clock at the base of the Apple than the top. So if the perpetually contracting grid was representative of time - inertial frames of time constantly traveling the geodesic to the center of the earth then it works for me flawlessly

    • @dhirendrasingh2513
      @dhirendrasingh2513 Před 3 lety +26

      So the moon does not move in circular orbit ? It is just geodesic which are curved . Then this eliminates concept of centripetal force right???
      🙏🙏Pls respond me as I am having this question from a very long time????
      I always wonder what happen to centrifugal force if gravity is not force

    • @dhirendrasingh2513
      @dhirendrasingh2513 Před 3 lety +6

      @@whykoks yeah it's somewhat I was also thinking. Well thanks

    • @nesomalinar5662
      @nesomalinar5662 Před 3 lety +4

      this is a very nice explanation but we are dismissing one an important thing.
      There is no evidence of the curvature of galactic space and time but mathematical computes.
      And by the way, elastic sheet does not as same as space fabric in effect galactic empty space. The marbels onto elastic sheet are attracked to the center with bigger ball. Unlike planets such as Mercury, Venus and Earth that orbit around the Sun but are not attracked to it.
      It is the huge difference that suggests elastic sheet doesn't prove anything.
      Regard!

  • @andrewgonzalez9391
    @andrewgonzalez9391 Před 2 lety +6364

    Can we take a moment to appreciate that Einstein was able to picture this in his head without the 3D models. That's the part that blows my mind!

    • @pankeaux
      @pankeaux Před 2 lety +277

      he did, actually - "first, imagine a desk , full of a rectangular matches grid"

    • @arseneopirit9171
      @arseneopirit9171 Před 2 lety +810

      The fact that other scientist understood what Einstein was trying to say without 3D model is actually more mind blowing.

    • @jbrownjetmech-4783
      @jbrownjetmech-4783 Před 2 lety +146

      In the 1920's no less...0_0

    • @doncorleone7482
      @doncorleone7482 Před 2 lety +228

      @@FigNewton36 i sometimes thinks that how Newton would have felt if he were able read about General Relitivity.

    • @velhodementeastrolavo773
      @velhodementeastrolavo773 Před 2 lety +25

      @@FigNewton36 weren't there other metric theories of gravitation, like Nordstrom, but they were wrong as many assumed linearity?

  • @manonthedollar
    @manonthedollar Před 3 lety +2407

    03:27 "It is not acceptable to describe gravity *inside* space time, using gravity *outside* spacetime." THANK YOU. YES. This has annoyed me to no end.

  • @orinblank2056
    @orinblank2056 Před 7 měsíci +205

    The feeling of it clicking when you mentioned that even if the apple is sitting still in space, it's still moving at a velocity through time was crazy. I've often wondered how gravity could pull something in, but I hadn't even considered time as a vector of motion. Literally made my jaw drop, thank you

    • @tvao9010
      @tvao9010 Před 4 měsíci +15

      This gets amplified in black holes where time kind of swaps with a spacial dimension so hard making the center of the black hole a direction in time (once you pass the event horizon), it becomes the future.
      It’s weird but it’s like in weak gravity you can escape the tendency of the future by spatially moving away from the planet for example, while inside an event horizon, no spatial movement can make you go back in time, time is pushing you closer.

    • @bradmason4706
      @bradmason4706 Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@tvao9010 Let me not think about that.

    • @desmondsawyer1471
      @desmondsawyer1471 Před dnem

      Come on everybody knows that!

  • @hanifrahmani2913
    @hanifrahmani2913 Před 5 měsíci +158

    This model deserves a lot more credit and needs to be spread more widely. A lot of people studying general relativity are often troubled with the obsolete and underrepresenting rubber sheet model while others might think there is no problem with the concept which is actually not accurate enough.

    • @jambi5096
      @jambi5096 Před 4 měsíci +4

      This whole idea makes me feel like objects aren’t actually moving in space but rather they’re so massive that they’re pulling space around them. So spacetime is the only thing in motion in my head when I see these visuals.

    • @ElsaIrfan
      @ElsaIrfan Před 3 měsíci

      @@jambi5096how do u explain expansion of the universe then?

    • @jambi5096
      @jambi5096 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@ElsaIrfan What if something astronomically massive is pulling the fabric of spacetime to one point? Like an astronomically massive “black hole?” Then we perceive that as expansion? Idk I was just explaining how the model made me feel, I didn’t give it much thought.

    • @annihilation777
      @annihilation777 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@jambi5096 you could be onto something

    • @smithgov
      @smithgov Před 2 měsíci

      @@ElsaIrfan Big Bang

  • @brpark72
    @brpark72 Před 3 lety +6113

    The best visualization of something that can't be visualized I ever seen.. Great job.

    • @ScienceClicEN
      @ScienceClicEN  Před 3 lety +362

      Thank you very much 🙏

    • @Formula400Pontiac
      @Formula400Pontiac Před 3 lety +43

      Awesome work! A few years ago i had a similar idea but as i had no skills with video-production and the graphical tools needed for a job like this i never bothered to even try doing anything with my inner picture of this stuff. :P
      Since that moment i have been speculating on and of how the "flow of spacetime" influence the outer regions of spiral galaxy's in regard to the "Galaxy rotation curve problem". I feel fairly certain that Kepler's laws don't take into consideration the accumulating flow of spacetime inwards in the spiral arms direction and that this allows the higher rotational speed without the predicted "side effects" of solarsystems coming unbound and slingshot out into deep space.

    • @k7iq
      @k7iq Před 3 lety +17

      Ditto ! Excellent representation ! I sort of understood this but this helps a bunch to be even clearer !

    • @k7iq
      @k7iq Před 3 lety +26

      Enter the Bragn' Sure it does ! Just space itself has properties of magnetic permeability and electrical permittivity that allows light and electromagnetic waves to travel in a vacuum. This video's subject shows more complicated introducting space-time but now, it is just basic physics and has been proven over and over again. It is hard to see clearly though which is why videos like this are so important

    • @k7iq
      @k7iq Před 3 lety +10

      No particles necessary

  • @Ryan770
    @Ryan770 Před 2 lety +872

    I've been trying to find an explanation like this for years. The usual demonstrations in school using 3D distortions of a 2D plane never sat right with me. Thank you for this!

    • @WheelsRCool
      @WheelsRCool Před rokem +33

      I always thought that the 2D plane illustration was overly simplistic where you'd have to visualize that it was actually happening in 3D. However I didn't understand the time component. I knew time is the fourth dimension, but didn't understand the role it plays in gravity.

    • @markupton1417
      @markupton1417 Před rokem +13

      Same. This doesn't do it for me either.

    • @HenriqueBonadio
      @HenriqueBonadio Před rokem +5

      I was going to write the exact same comment. thank you too.

    • @ijidakinro
      @ijidakinro Před rokem +4

      Agree 100%

    • @gamefreak1904
      @gamefreak1904 Před rokem +7

      Same it doesn't sit right to me either

  • @RundFyrkant
    @RundFyrkant Před rokem +333

    I've always found the elastic cloth visualisation problematic and was very happy to see that someone made a better explanation. Thanks for sharing ☺️

    • @jesus4400
      @jesus4400 Před 7 měsíci

      Relativity has never been proven. There's a reason it's still called theory. No matter how much you add photoshop and CGI: it's all a hoax

    • @samilkafa3763
      @samilkafa3763 Před 6 měsíci +6

      I was exactly gonna say this. I always had to transform that 2D representation to 3D in my head.

    • @shubhamsharma8508
      @shubhamsharma8508 Před 6 měsíci

      Yeah me too

    • @SauhardaBista
      @SauhardaBista Před 6 měsíci +5

      for real tho it only created confusion for me i was more or less trying to imagine this but couldn't due to lack of proper concentration

    • @SimPilotMika
      @SimPilotMika Před 5 měsíci

      Same, it just seemed too 2D

  • @srinidhia5992
    @srinidhia5992 Před 11 měsíci +148

    That initial marbles on a fabric model is quite popular on the Internet for newbies like me who try to understand space-time curvature. Even though your final model differ a lot from that model, you didn't simply struck it down and put yours forward. Instead, you improvised it step by step and concluded with your model. This avoided unnecessary confusiom. Thanks for doing that. Really appreciate your work.

  • @pspaces
    @pspaces Před 3 lety +339

    Message for those watching this video at the end of January 2021. I highly recommend you to watch the videos related to “The maths of general relativity”. Believe me, despite being totally ignorant in mathematics, I was able to “visualize” the effects of space-time curvature much more clearly !! This channel deserves an Oscar !!

    • @Mavrik9000
      @Mavrik9000 Před 3 lety +11

      Also please watch the first video on this channel. That one made everything 'clic' for me, regarding relativity and the speed of light. "We all move at the Speed of Light" czcams.com/video/au0QJYISe4c/video.html

    • @keithmuset6510
      @keithmuset6510 Před 3 lety +6

      Challenge accepted

    • @williamblake7386
      @williamblake7386 Před 3 lety +8

      not enough transgender for oscar. lets think of another award.

    • @prateekbhatt89
      @prateekbhatt89 Před 3 lety +3

      Deserves Noble

    • @michel5281
      @michel5281 Před 3 lety +1

      yes, it must be explained to teenager, with Newton theory

  • @mattsmartin
    @mattsmartin Před 3 lety +642

    Finally someone has created a visual that describes ‘spacetime’ curvature and movement that makes sense. 🙏

    • @shrike6259
      @shrike6259 Před 3 lety +5

      umm just the same as the rubber sheet. don't get fooled by fancy eye candy

    • @JT-sv9bi
      @JT-sv9bi Před 3 lety +1

      right!?

    • @theoldhip
      @theoldhip Před 3 lety +2

      Here's another one by Nick Lucid. . . czcams.com/video/F5PfjsPdBzg/video.html

    • @SpokoSpoko
      @SpokoSpoko Před 3 lety +1

      @@theoldhip Ooo Nooo, just do not direct us to that kiddy videos of the teacher for kids with ADHD.

    • @mattsmartin
      @mattsmartin Před 3 lety

      @@shrike6259 its a step in the right direction

  • @majidsaab1297
    @majidsaab1297 Před 10 měsíci +37

    YOU ARE A STAR!
    I was taught the theory in college but never understood it, and therefore never sat right with me and knew there was a better way to explain it and that i was missing.
    and now 2 decades later, your explanation and visualization makes it all fit together.
    THANK YOU!!

  • @sephrinx4958
    @sephrinx4958 Před 9 měsíci +4

    The last 40 seconds of this video was such a huge insight. We aren't moving through space, more that we are on a trajectory through time. And the trajectory through time is dictated by the curvature of the space time grid. We're seemingly always moving in a straight path, just that the geometry is curved.

    • @saurinpatel6606
      @saurinpatel6606 Před 2 měsíci

      The more you think about this it just keeps blows our minds

    • @user-bf6gz8ej4o
      @user-bf6gz8ej4o Před měsícem

      Not quite. Time dictates the curvature of space, not the other way around. I don't know why though vause it's a complete mindfuck.

  • @gmrecneps
    @gmrecneps Před 3 lety +428

    Dude. Ditto everyone else. This is a masterpiece. I've been trying to understand gravity intuitively for as long as I was start enough to try. Many other videos got close. Yours sealed the deal. Keep doing what you are doing. You're a genius.

    • @danechegoyen3550
      @danechegoyen3550 Před 3 lety

      A better explanation. czcams.com/video/3KDS7HW5F8I/video.html

    • @nathansykes9267
      @nathansykes9267 Před 3 lety +5

      @@danechegoyen3550 dude that explanation is ass

    • @danechegoyen3550
      @danechegoyen3550 Před 3 lety +1

      @@nathansykes9267 thanks for watching. What didn't work for
      you?

    • @hvanmegen
      @hvanmegen Před 3 lety +1

      @@danechegoyen3550 I found it to be rather refreshing.. as a lay person, I cannot help but drift in thought towards a connection to the Gravitomagnetic London Moment.. do you have an explanation for that which fits into this model?

    • @ram5ramen582
      @ram5ramen582 Před 2 lety +1

      @@roberthelms1737 you really think general relativity is bs? give me your theory then genius.

  • @super_sigma_
    @super_sigma_ Před 3 lety +230

    High five to everybody who ended up here thinking the marble on a rubber sheet explanation just didn't quite cut it ✋
    And great video. Glad to see it's how I imagined it to be :)

    • @ishraknoor8992
      @ishraknoor8992 Před 2 lety +4

      🤚,I have always felt that and found the answer only today.

    • @greggianbayocboc
      @greggianbayocboc Před 2 lety +3

      hahaha ✋

    • @sawc.ma.bals.
      @sawc.ma.bals. Před 2 lety +3

      🖐️

    • @educationalvideos4151
      @educationalvideos4151 Před 2 lety +6

      There's a science museum where I grew up that has a big metal depression you can throw marbles into to supposedly demonstrate spacetime. I remember as a kid telling adults that didn't explain anything, and those adults confidently bullshitting that it was a great learning demonstration.

    • @Gunshinzero
      @Gunshinzero Před 2 lety +4

      Exactly. I'm glad he mentioned how gravity is used to explain gravity. That's was an instantly recognizable flaw to me.

  • @MikkoRantalainen
    @MikkoRantalainen Před rokem +48

    Using the longitude of a rotating sphere to explain how spacetime can be continuously contracting was very clever! That's the hardest part even for these animations because you have to repeatedly draw new gridlines out of nothing around 10:00 to visualize this with lines.

    • @marshallsweatherhiking1820
      @marshallsweatherhiking1820 Před rokem +4

      Yea. The actual curvature is,mathematically, the measure of the rate of deformation at a single instance. Extrapolating out in time is just a visualization aid.

    • @wernersbacher
      @wernersbacher Před 4 měsíci

      I still don't get it 😢

  • @RARufus
    @RARufus Před 7 měsíci +30

    This was a fantastic visual representation and explanation. Excellent work!

  • @NikhilPasricha
    @NikhilPasricha Před 3 lety +844

    This video needs to be a part of the school curriculum.

    • @AntonySimkin
      @AntonySimkin Před 3 lety +24

      @@fredericpool6754 Thank you for this! More people understanding physics = more possibility of advancing our civilization forward!

    • @remaincalm2
      @remaincalm2 Před 3 lety +20

      @@fredericpool6754 But the Newtonian explanation of "gravity" is much easier to understand for young students (and most adults!). Einstein's explanation is a real minder bender to get to grips with. It's funny to think he told the world about it 100 years ago, but only now people other than scientists have started to listen. Thanks mostly to amazing CZcams videos like this one, and maybe a few teachers who are willing to acknowledge limitations of the curriculum and give their students the opportunity to expand their minds that bit further. Good luck Frederic. Let us know how your students react!

    • @MidnightSt
      @MidnightSt Před 3 lety +2

      chng.it/g5kZBmLN4Q
      Here you go, change.org petition. you're welcome.

    • @dadisman6731
      @dadisman6731 Před 3 lety +4

      Remember this video is not fact Just theory.

    • @AntonySimkin
      @AntonySimkin Před 3 lety +3

      Remember, double check the meaning of words you are using...

  • @vimtyr1181
    @vimtyr1181 Před 3 lety +272

    10:26 so a black hole is just collapsed matter that couldnt withstand the pressure of constantly accelerating upwards, and instead follows the natural movement of the grid

    • @ScienceClicEN
      @ScienceClicEN  Před 3 lety +130

      Exactly ;)

    • @mortenfransrud7676
      @mortenfransrud7676 Před 3 lety +61

      @@ScienceClicEN i thought I understood black holes.. but now I think I understand it even better

    • @n3onis
      @n3onis Před 3 lety +57

      @@mortenfransrud7676 nobody _really_ understands black holes, because all our theories break down once you get to the singularity

    • @m.r.9127
      @m.r.9127 Před 3 lety +5

      @@n3onis
      Well that’s how universes are born

    • @stormnr2
      @stormnr2 Před 3 lety +4

      wow really smart thought. thank you

  • @Concavenator128
    @Concavenator128 Před rokem +40

    What a fantastic explanation! I had given up on ever understanding how this spacetime curvature was supposed to work, and here it is! Many thanks!

  • @arnavdevangan5595
    @arnavdevangan5595 Před 5 měsíci +10

    i dont know if anyone beleives it or not.. but while in my school i imagined it exactly like this in my mind.. i thought it was normal anybody can imagine it this way.. i tried explaining it to my friend at school but i couldnt he didnt understand.. and after a few months here i am looking at this video.. im so proud of myself... considering the fact that i want to be a theoretical physicist.. this is giving me so much motivation to move forward in my aim that i can do it

  • @syntaera
    @syntaera Před 3 lety +377

    Great way to touch on Special Relativity too - "c" is not the speed of light, but instead is the "c"onversion factor between meters and seconds. One thing I always liked to demonstrate the 4-dimensionality of spacetime is a thought experiment: If you describe the motion of an apple with a 3-dimensional vector (up/down, left/right and forward/back), then when it's at relative rest, the direction of that vector is undefined. Stopping an object shouldn't break the math behind physics, nor should it leave us with a hidden direction variable - so something else has to be going on. Adding a fourth dimension means that when at rest in 3-space, the object is at maximum speed in the fourth dimension - time. Speeding up in one of the other 3 space dimensions necessarily means slowing down in the time direction, and you no longer need to use the magnitude of the vector to describe speed, it can be used for energy instead - plus the orthogonal space directions to the object's own time direction are no longer tied to the observer's space directions, so even time rate and dimensional length can change with the object's relative speed - therefore you get all the effects of Special Relativity for free.

    • @KevinMarquette
      @KevinMarquette Před 3 lety +23

      Thank you. I have been thinking about it in this way for a while now. I like the way you put it

    • @czyruszamora5309
      @czyruszamora5309 Před 3 lety +2

      Yah

    • @me.unpredictable280
      @me.unpredictable280 Před 3 lety +17

      I am 18 now and I had the same idea as you and this video, exactly the same for 3 years now, I am amazed thoughts can be so common.

    • @barefootalien
      @barefootalien Před 3 lety +4

      That is a good analogy, though it can be slightly misleading if we're not careful to remember (as best we can) to apply hyperbolic intuition to the time dimensionality of the analogy.
      Dr. Don Lincoln points out why in one of his videos on Fermilab's channel, "Why can't you go faster than light?": czcams.com/video/A2JCoIGyGxc/video.html

    • @ofsinope
      @ofsinope Před 3 lety +1

      What a great little paragraph. Thanks.

  • @dexzoyp
    @dexzoyp Před 3 lety +120

    Don't stop making animation like this, youtube education is more than everything... Well done!

    • @xivilius.
      @xivilius. Před 2 lety +1

      @@mehmeteking well the title is only says how to "visualize" general relativity not what is general relativity

  • @edonslow1456
    @edonslow1456 Před měsícem +3

    I've been waiting decades for satisfying visualisation of space-time that didn't rely on the "ball on a sheet" analogy, which never quite sat right. Thank you.

  • @MayBT7274
    @MayBT7274 Před 7 měsíci +6

    Absolutely brilliant!
    I always wondered in which direction the elastic fabric "bent" and just could not understand how that would work without a 4th spatial dimension.
    Your visualisation completely solved that!
    Thank you very much!

  • @massimax2325
    @massimax2325 Před 3 lety +2794

    117 dislikes are by flat space-timers

    • @stephen70edwards
      @stephen70edwards Před 3 lety +96

      Poor folks who can't afford to travel outside their own localized Euclidean patch...

    • @BertoldSzekeres
      @BertoldSzekeres Před 3 lety +12

      By far the best comment

    • @afnanbogey
      @afnanbogey Před 3 lety +4

      wow

    • @ABaumstumpf
      @ABaumstumpf Před 3 lety +32

      Or people that notice that this animation is rather horribly complicated for how little information it conveys - less than the simple sheet analogy even.

    • @afnanbogey
      @afnanbogey Před 3 lety +57

      @@ABaumstumpf Dude it’s just a video representation that takes advantage of the properties of video. With a step by step explanation of the differences. Why so mad?

  • @PerpetualPrograstinator
    @PerpetualPrograstinator Před 3 lety +87

    I love the little pauses that allowes what you're saying to set in

    • @veraanna5111
      @veraanna5111 Před 3 lety +1

      Me too! I really need those to comprehend everything.

  • @jmcsquared18
    @jmcsquared18 Před měsícem +1

    This is by far the best no-nonsense clear-language depiction of how gravitation works in general relativity that I've seen on CZcams. Bravo for this excellent animation and clarification, and for putting the nail in the coffin for the trampoline analogy!

  • @malswansky3376
    @malswansky3376 Před 4 měsíci +4

    This is by far the best intuitive explanation of how the perceived "force of gravity" actually works! I've seen dozens of videos, and they all stop several steps short of a useful explanation -- but in this one, the beautiful visualization of movement through time makes all the difference, and IMO gets one as close as possible (realistically) to getting some semblance of an actual grasp of how "free-falling"/inertial objects behave in spacetime.

  • @sachiperez
    @sachiperez Před 3 lety +450

    2:54 “I f’n knew it!” - flat earthers

  • @SuperNovaJinckUFO
    @SuperNovaJinckUFO Před 2 lety +473

    You know, I feel as though my understanding of relativity has been hampered by the "balls on a sheet" representation. I've been learning about relativity since I was basically a kid, and was eventually able to gather a decent understanding of the math behind it, but the warping of spacetime never made intuitive sense to be because through the entire process everyone was saying to imagine it like balls on a sheet (even legitimate academic textbooks). But finally after seeing this, I get what the math has been trying to tell me all this time. It's so simple and elegant. It's a travesty that relativity isn't taught this way.

    • @houserhouse
      @houserhouse Před 2 lety +18

      This^ is absolute truth. This could've been explained earlier with videos. Had to think of the words to search myself

    • @corgicottage8578
      @corgicottage8578 Před 2 lety +17

      It makes sense to you because you know the math and are familiar with the concepts .
      I'm a nurse for 38 years. Temporal to me means the area of the temples on your head. I know he doesn't mean the medical definition of temporal, right? But how can I understand the without explaining to me what "temporal" means! How can I then understand the concept if he doesn't make certain I understand the definition of a word?
      THIS IS WHY EGGHEADS CANNOT BE GOOD TEACHERS. They can teach people with a preexisting knowledge of the subject, but not to someone like me.
      I so want to understand special relativity, but there is no one to explain it to a neophyte.

    • @hueytlatoani1177
      @hueytlatoani1177 Před 2 lety +11

      The representation of the balls on a sheet is a good one, the problen is that it's represented on a 2 dimentional "model".
      Use this representation but this time, apply it in all directions and you have what this video is discribing.

    • @larrymerkle1672
      @larrymerkle1672 Před 2 lety

      You are absolutely spot on!......about trying to visualize "balls on a sheet". And also about understanding how time can be 'bent'.

    • @brainstemriff
      @brainstemriff Před 2 lety +3

      @@corgicottage8578 start with classical mechanics then learn that there are types and classes of subatomic (subatomic means any particle smaller than atom size) particles, next study the nuclear periodic table and isotope number, lastly and most importantly know that scientists revise the "standard model" of an accepted idea every ten years or so and standard models are there to describe to us the general public how something like general relativity or atomic structure works or looks at the cost of further intuitive knowledge or learning by giving us a simpler but sometimes inaccurate representation of a more complex set of factors 😉

  • @EduardRoehrich
    @EduardRoehrich Před rokem +4

    Thank you so much for this video!
    Every time I saw those typical visualizations and demonstrations that you show in the beginning of the video, it always made me wonder why the moon doesn't crash into the earth, why the earth doesn't crash into the sun, and so forth. Now I FINALLY understand that the earth doesn't actually orbit the sun, the earth is just travelling on a straight trajectory and because of conservation of momentum, no forces acting on the earth, and spacetime being distorted by the mass of the sun, it just APPEARS as if the earth is orbiting the sun. The earth is just travelling in a straight line; wow, I can't express how profound it feels to me to FINALLY understand this!

    • @saurinpatel6606
      @saurinpatel6606 Před 2 měsíci +1

      The more i think about this it just keeps me up at night just insane

  • @Fritz0id
    @Fritz0id Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you for this. I've noticed videos pop on CZcams rehashing this. Did a little search, and as far as I can see, this was the first CZcams video with this visualisation. I am both in awe of the new gained understanding this has given me, and the talent behind this channel. Props!

  • @leot7
    @leot7 Před 3 lety +40

    The way you start out with a simple model and visualization, and then build on it bit-by-bit to make it more and more accurate and detailed is really elucidating.

  • @inverse_of_zero
    @inverse_of_zero Před rokem +511

    Finally, the best visualisation of spacetime curvature due to mass-energy density on the Internet. I wish I had the benefit of seeing and understanding this when I was a student. Thank you! I have saved this video, and I will share it with my students should the need arise :)

    • @geometricart7851
      @geometricart7851 Před rokem +4

      not sure I still fully understand it. I might have to rewatch it. Kinda reminds me of fluid dynamics with a ball whose mass is being displaced underwater. If you were to pop the ball so to speak would gravity behave similarly to water in that it would rush back into itself or does it have a finite speed like light? My guess is gravity has no speed since spacetime itself is what is being altered not the distance within it.

    • @ZigSputnik
      @ZigSputnik Před rokem +5

      @@geometricart7851 Gravity has been shown, by the results from gravitational wave detectors, to travel at the universal speed limit c.

    • @wolphramjonny7751
      @wolphramjonny7751 Před rokem +2

      @@geometricart7851 Spacetime and the metric tensor (distances between spacetime points of given coordinates) are the same thing.

    • @denale_17
      @denale_17 Před rokem +1

      “Should the need arise.” 🙏🏾Should be saying, thank YOU!

    • @VTOLKits
      @VTOLKits Před rokem +2

      I want to spend also, but to see you get no "thank you" from the channel, changed my minds....

  • @mweave
    @mweave Před 3 měsíci

    I keep coming back to this video as such an elegant and well structured way to describe relativity without a single math equation being required. Really world class. As an After Effects animator myself, you've done an amazing job leveraging 3D without being cluttered or distracting, that's extremely hard to do. Could you please tackle simultaneity and the twins paradox and shut down the all the competing explanations that never seem to quite nail it

  • @orangemittai9251
    @orangemittai9251 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Hands down the most accurate and informative video about general relativity on youtube

  • @360.Tapestry
    @360.Tapestry Před 3 lety +130

    i never liked that flat sheet representation. the three-dimensional representation is how i personally like to visualize space. but the frame-by-frame representation of time adds another necessary dimension

    • @-SUM1-
      @-SUM1- Před 3 lety +4

      Exactly. I never understood the predominance of that stupid 2D visualisation. I'd always visualised it as a warped 3D grid in my head.

    • @360.Tapestry
      @360.Tapestry Před 3 lety +3

      @@-SUM1- it's similar to the example of the black hole using a two-dimensional sheet coming to a pin-point at the bottom. that would be somewhat challenging to visualize in a three-dimensional manner while remaining round. it would take computer imagery to represent that the pull is taking place from all directions

    • @AionAeon
      @AionAeon Před 3 lety

      That's the key
      Time (in some future) casts shadows on the past and is pulling everything forward.
      That's it!

    • @360.Tapestry
      @360.Tapestry Před 3 lety

      @@AionAeon what implications does that have on freewill?

    • @AionAeon
      @AionAeon Před 3 lety

      @@360.Tapestry within common sense & rules making this universe as it is; all the forces (eg of gravity, weak & strong nuclear forces and electromagnetism) we have the path that we (every '"I"') can choose
      or
      leave this choice to the Universe, Cosmos, God, Mother Nature, Coincidance, "just chemical reaction" - but it IS still our choice
      probably not 100% fate
      probably not 100% free will (thus is only for Compassionate Almighty Intelligence; probably out of this universe)

  • @ClemensAlive
    @ClemensAlive Před 3 lety +746

    When you are so used to english speakers saying "Einstein" the english way, that you are surpries hearing a good german pronounciation.
    Hats off to you

    • @luminescentlion
      @luminescentlion Před 3 lety +27

      I've lived in New England all my life and this is the only pronunciation I've heard

    • @justinlodge2475
      @justinlodge2475 Před 3 lety +7

      @@luminescentlion that’s because it’s the Yiddish pronunciation

    • @skylineuk1485
      @skylineuk1485 Před 3 lety

      m.czcams.com/video/WamF64GFPzg/video.html

    • @michaelkirschner7471
      @michaelkirschner7471 Před 2 lety

      Schoonds like Tony Soprano talking

    • @excuseyou7198
      @excuseyou7198 Před 2 lety +1

      @@roberthelms1737 how so?

  • @larisonyponcho
    @larisonyponcho Před 5 měsíci +4

    This is by far the best representation of space time that I have ever seen. Thank you!

  • @ron.v
    @ron.v Před 9 měsíci +3

    I've never really understood this principle. It is beyond my grasp, however, all other explanations I've seen weren't nearly as clear as yours. Although I still don't comprehend it, I believe I've understood more of it thanks to youj.

  • @trimalchio7336
    @trimalchio7336 Před 2 lety +619

    My man even pronounced the name "Einstein" correctly

  • @BatBrakesBones
    @BatBrakesBones Před 3 lety +287

    This is how I imagined it. That 2d model always felt incomplete because celestial bodies aren't sitting on a sheet of spacetime.

    • @ABaumstumpf
      @ABaumstumpf Před 3 lety +7

      Yeah, but the Sheet-analogy is more accurate. It is a single 2D slice through space, showing the time-distortion as a distortion into the 3D dimension and doing so without the need for an animation even.

    • @mnguyen4684
      @mnguyen4684 Před 3 lety

      Yeah I know there's something wrong with the sheet of spacetime. But aren't the planets in our solar system orbit the sun on a fairly flat plane? What do you think of that?

    • @yasseindahshan3556
      @yasseindahshan3556 Před 3 lety +4

      yeah, I was always confused why they would explain gravity by gravity to the point where I was sure that either the representation is wrong or general relativity is wrong. While this video made me realize that the representation is not actually what general relativity says, I still think general relativity is very wrong and far from reality.

    • @steveletterman7121
      @steveletterman7121 Před 3 lety +2

      @@mnguyen4684 the planets formed from the same gas cloud. So, unless some external force acted upon one of them, it makes perfect sense that they all belong to the same plane.

    • @steveletterman7121
      @steveletterman7121 Před 3 lety +10

      @@yasseindahshan3556 why? because it's not intuitive? the universe is under no obligation to make sense to you as NDT said.
      Our brains and senses are adapted to the natural world we evolved in and that's it. Denying something because it just seems wrong is just ignorant.
      Same case with quantum mechanics. the interactions on the micro scale seem so bizarre to us. But, if we were atom-sized they would be the norm. Quantum mechanics would be called 'classical mechanics'.
      I hope you get my point. I urge you to dive into the mathand logic behind science before ruling it out as an improbable solution just because it seems odd.

  • @petrajaros8637
    @petrajaros8637 Před rokem +1

    This is incredible. Thank you! I've always hated the rubber sheet model for exactly these reasons, and this makes so much more sense to me.
    One thing I still don't understand, though: the spacetime is curved by the presence of mass, but the path of the mass is determined by the curvature of the spacetime. How can that be? They seem to be defined circularly. Is it accurate to think of each time-slice of spacetime as being "generated" by the world state within the time-slice before it (which is how we generally think of cause and effect from within our human perspective), or is there some way to understand the whole spacetime without generating "frames" one at a time? Or am I asking a question without a meaningful distinction?

  • @cristianmarinescu3053
    @cristianmarinescu3053 Před rokem +2

    Man, this is the single coolest explanation (plus visualisation) of GR! Congrats and keep up the great work!

  • @ariaden
    @ariaden Před 3 lety +141

    Some ideas for further renders:
    0. Expanding universe.
    1. Planar gravitational wave.
    2. Rotating black hole.
    3. Merger of two neutron stars.
    4. Krasnikov tube.

    • @Jaredvotesforpedro
      @Jaredvotesforpedro Před 3 lety +4

      @@vzlfkr The speed of light in a vacuum is the same for all observers, regardless of the motion of the light source or observer. You can never catch up with the speed of light. Even if you manage to travel at the speed of light, light will still travel at the speed of light relative to your observation. Time will move differently for you, compared to outside observers.

    • @MortyrSC2
      @MortyrSC2 Před 3 lety

      @@vzlfkr I think you should watch this: czcams.com/video/au0QJYISe4c/video.html

    • @psibarpsi
      @psibarpsi Před 3 lety +1

      @@vzlfkr You should watch the video "Will we ever visit other stars" by VSauce. In the last few seconds of that video, they have shown the animation for the situation that you are describing.

    • @ujjwalbhattarai8670
      @ujjwalbhattarai8670 Před 3 lety

      @@Jaredvotesforpedro you are absolutely wrong.
      Light is moving slow than time. Even light is to much slow than your imagination.

    • @Jaredvotesforpedro
      @Jaredvotesforpedro Před 3 lety

      @@ujjwalbhattarai8670 lmao wtf are you even trying to say

  • @omarvgaga
    @omarvgaga Před 3 lety +188

    I’ve literally always imagined that space time looks like a warped 3D grid in motion but I’ve never seen someone so accurately depict it thank you!!

    • @bklanyon176
      @bklanyon176 Před 3 lety +5

      Ditto. Got told I was mistaken for visualizing it this way. Glad to know I wasn't cracked lol

    • @fallendown8828
      @fallendown8828 Před 3 lety +1

      same :D this video was awsome!

    • @h00db01i
      @h00db01i Před 3 lety

      @@bklanyon176 visualising it the right way, you might still be wrong about reality

    • @basti4655
      @basti4655 Před 3 lety +1

      Same

    • @sleepingwarrior4618
      @sleepingwarrior4618 Před 3 lety

      *"I’ve literally always imagined that space time looks like a warped 3D grid in motion but I’ve never seen someone so accurately depict it thank you!!I’ve literally always imagined that space time looks like a warped 3D grid in motion but I’ve never seen someone so accurately depict it thank you!!"* Yet he has it backwards.

  • @jackwelsh4896
    @jackwelsh4896 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Kudos to you!! This is the first video that correctly explains and visualizes space-time curvature and its manifestation as gravity! I am a theoretical physician and with good conscience I can tell anybody who watches this video: This explanation is 100% correct and Alessandro Roussel found a clever way of visualization. This video should be part of any lecture about General Relativity.

  • @josephmbimbi
    @josephmbimbi Před 8 měsíci

    500K ?! This channel is criminally underrated.
    This is bloody brilliant, thank you a lot for your content

  • @atarixle
    @atarixle Před 3 lety +97

    When I was little, I always had the problem that gravity was explained with gravity. This video showed me that I never was alone.

    • @bluesfallt5732
      @bluesfallt5732 Před 3 lety +9

      Exactly! And I was so confused that no one talked about this serious flaw in that model.

    • @ojushkataiya4657
      @ojushkataiya4657 Před 3 lety +3

      Same here .

    • @Pikachu-vo7qb
      @Pikachu-vo7qb Před 3 lety +3

      Whenever I heard that explanation I always asked that question
      Why is it falling down ...which force is pulling it down !!

    • @EliteTeamKiller2.0
      @EliteTeamKiller2.0 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Pikachu-vo7qb I imagine the teachers telling you might have had trouble explaining lol

    • @juliusklugi7430
      @juliusklugi7430 Před 3 lety

      @Muckin 4on Ah but nothing is actually contracting - It’s the geometry of time that is being affected by a massive body. If you sat on a chair for 3 days and didn’t move, you are actually still moving through time in a given direction, it’s just that we don’t perceive this as a motion. If I then stick a massive body by you, the direction of this motion will curve towards it as the direction of this time’s journey has been influenced by a change in the geometry of the space in which it’s travelling. The model showing perpetual contraction is just a way of showing how every object is making a journey through time in a given direction.

  • @espressojourney5646
    @espressojourney5646 Před 3 lety +145

    Einstein watches this and starts yelling: “Finally, finally!!!!...”

  • @gayfrogsociety
    @gayfrogsociety Před rokem

    My dad used to explain things like this all the time, so I had always imagined a web much like you've described here.
    But I never considered the bend of space time in the way we're falling in a straight line.
    Now when people say "We're falling through space time" I can understand what they mean.
    Thank you, you've made my day.

  • @abidashaheen3079
    @abidashaheen3079 Před rokem +2

    I ve seen many illustrations but this one is by far belief shattering. Thank you!

  • @rineeshparai1780
    @rineeshparai1780 Před 2 lety +160

    That temporal part visualisation was fantastic. Never thought of it that way.

    • @jakovteskera7521
      @jakovteskera7521 Před 2 lety +12

      @@milyantsevmilyantsev3388 why do all russians assume the whole world speaks russian?

    • @veronicagorosito187
      @veronicagorosito187 Před 2 lety +2

      Someone told me that reality is quantized, it happens in frames, like in a film, 60 fps, and matter does the same but at quantum level and light speeds.

    • @melodyparker3485
      @melodyparker3485 Před 2 lety +5

      @@jakovteskera7521 Why do all Americans expect that everyone speaks English?

    • @jakovteskera7521
      @jakovteskera7521 Před 2 lety +4

      @@melodyparker3485 well its officialy the international language. Also, thr video is in english. Btw i dont even care what he said im just baffled by the idea of commenting in your native language, whats the point?

    • @melodyparker3485
      @melodyparker3485 Před 2 lety

      @@jakovteskera7521 Fair enough.

  • @ethitlan
    @ethitlan Před 3 lety +583

    I like how you pronounced Einstein the German way.

    • @agrimarora1522
      @agrimarora1522 Před 3 lety +12

      Something I was about to comment upon!

    • @Aurimas97
      @Aurimas97 Před 3 lety +19

      it's furstrating when i mention Einstein in the UK and people try to correct me when i use the true pronunciation...... people just wanna butcher names and call you incorrect XD

    • @krankerkarpfen
      @krankerkarpfen Před 3 lety +14

      first time in the internet i heared his name pronounced right

    • @ethitlan
      @ethitlan Před 3 lety +2

      @@Aurimas97 Same! They look at me weird and never believe me.

    • @ethitlan
      @ethitlan Před 3 lety

      @@agrimarora1522 Sorry I did it before you. There's probably someone who did it before me though

  • @victorcox9059
    @victorcox9059 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Thank you so much for making this video. I’ve always been so frustrated by the traditional sheet model that is usually utilized. This is brilliant. Keep up the good work!

  • @MrJeffrey938
    @MrJeffrey938 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Since I saw this video, i keep thinking "Any day now everyone will start using this obviously superior graphic". They're not. That old blanket one is really starting to annoy me.

  • @drewscampfire
    @drewscampfire Před 2 lety +270

    The animations are superb! This is definitive proof that well-made visualizations are really good at facilitating the transfer of knowledge. Congrats!

  • @DoctorMustafaSaad
    @DoctorMustafaSaad Před 3 lety +275

    "the apple is travelling through time, but the curved spacetime is bending towards the earth and..." HOLY SHİT!
    mind f'n blowing!

    • @tdcfc
      @tdcfc Před 2 lety +15

      Yeah, it really hits differently once you realize it's not just space (or travelling through it) that makes the apple fall but also time. Gives a sense of inevitability. It's not just a matter of space but also a matter of time.

    • @jkjkjkjkjk537
      @jkjkjkjkjk537 Před 2 lety +15

      @@tdcfc It is a matter of perception really. If you study Einstein's field equations, Space-Time is a single continuum. A single function but because the arrow of time or the effect of time is the same for all of us, objects with no spatial velocity appear motionless. All of us might study the mathematical significance of an equation but to intuitively grasp what it actually means is another thing entirely. Nonetheless, this is perhaps the best explanation of relativity that I have come across on CZcams.

    • @l1mbo69
      @l1mbo69 Před 2 lety +3

      @@tdcfc it's literally inevitable here because in GR spacetime is one quantity, the future and past predetermined as a block universe

    • @Dan_Kanerva
      @Dan_Kanerva Před 2 lety

      @@tdcfc now you know why beings that can tap into the 5th dimension are soo overpowered

    • @veronicagorosito187
      @veronicagorosito187 Před 2 lety +1

      @@tdcfc it gets difficult following the old 2D graphics.
      Time is a result, of matter in motion, time is an illusion.
      Matter "happens" and moves, thus, creating the illusion of time
      I think I saw two more channel that covers this, the science asylum, and Pbs spacetime.

  • @user-mg6ml6uf9w
    @user-mg6ml6uf9w Před 4 měsíci +4

    Absolutely brilliant video and great explanation of the subject for someone who is not a physicist

  • @Deprived.drifter
    @Deprived.drifter Před rokem +4

    This had to be one of the best explanations on relativity so far! Beautiful!

  • @rhlsx
    @rhlsx Před 3 lety +307

    This deserves an infinitely large number of likes !🔥

    • @ScienceClicEN
      @ScienceClicEN  Před 3 lety +17

      Thanks 🙏

    • @beenaplumber8379
      @beenaplumber8379 Před 3 lety +9

      @@ScienceClicEN I have never seen or heard something as complex and counter-intuitive explained so clearly! Thank you from a science geek in Minnesota who can now tick off one more box on my "what to do during the pandemic" list!

    • @grandunification6226
      @grandunification6226 Před 3 lety +2

      and zero dislikes

    • @Aman-br1ph
      @Aman-br1ph Před 3 lety +1

      But how would you define infinity

    • @grandunification6226
      @grandunification6226 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Aman-br1ph infinity is a really large number whose value cannot be estimated
      So if the no.of likes goes on increasing without a particular value at a particular instant
      It's like a simple exaggeration of the value that every single person who has an account in youtube shall like it ,then no.of likes is infinite as it will never stop increasing

  • @yoitsjust
    @yoitsjust Před rokem +123

    I have not felt this way since childhood but you genuinely blew my mind at 7:18 with that intuitive explanation

    • @gregs3791
      @gregs3791 Před rokem +2

      exact feeling im having right now

    • @RafaelMunizYT
      @RafaelMunizYT Před rokem +6

      if you liked this concept watch their video called "why time and space swap in a black hole". it's even more eye opening since not many people know how space-time works inside a black hole

    • @nunomartins2209
      @nunomartins2209 Před rokem

      If u want get more mind blown search KcIndustry or Jeranism

    • @melissasalasblair5273
      @melissasalasblair5273 Před rokem +1

      @@RafaelMunizYT Thank you for this reco, and the other person as well Anything on White Holes that you've seen that's worth the time? TIA.

    • @ElectronFieldPulse
      @ElectronFieldPulse Před 9 měsíci

      Any physicists here want to tell me if an idea I have is right? Not sure if there are any here.

  • @andreic1755
    @andreic1755 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I watched dozens of videos trying to understand these concepts, and so far, this is the best one. How is it that the balance between the gravitational field and centripetal force has been maintained for billions of years, preventing any derailment?

  • @adilzainulsyed6685
    @adilzainulsyed6685 Před 6 měsíci +3

    OMG thank you! I am a 12th grader and I have always had a particular interest in space and astrophysics since third grade. I always kept wondering where the 4th dimension (time) would get placed on the 3D graph lol. After watching this video I think I understand the space time curvature much better than before. I personally think it's the most appealing way to describe the theory of relativity and the space time fabric in an animated video.

  • @BobStein
    @BobStein Před 3 lety +106

    7:37 "The curvature of spacetime, generated by the Earth, has merely converted its temporal speed into a spatial speed."

    • @RichardWilkin
      @RichardWilkin Před 3 lety +3

      But speed always involves both space and time: speed = distance/time. So it doesn't make sense to say "temporal speed" or "spatial speed". Speed (or movement) is always both temporal and spatial.

    • @ScienceClicEN
      @ScienceClicEN  Před 3 lety +15

      In relativity you can also define a distance in time (time is a dimension just like the 3 dimensions of space). The "speed" is calculated with respect to the proper time of the object, while the "distance in time" is calculated with the time of the observer (it's a coordinate)

    • @RichardWilkin
      @RichardWilkin Před 3 lety

      @@ScienceClicEN Are you saying that in the statement about converting "temporal speed into a spatial speed", the two speeds relate to different times: proper time and coordinate time?

    • @ScienceClicEN
      @ScienceClicEN  Před 3 lety +10

      Both speeds are measured with respect to proper time. Spatial speed is the change in the spatial coordinate as proper time goes by, and temporal speed is the change in the time coordinate (the time measured by the observer) as proper time goes by

    • @RichardWilkin
      @RichardWilkin Před 3 lety +2

      @@ScienceClicEN OK, clearer; thanks.

  • @0dWHOHWb0
    @0dWHOHWb0 Před 3 lety +116

    I struggled with this for a long time, and eventually wound up with more or less this same model in my head. I just wish this video had existed back then to save me all that trouble. I'll probably refer people here for whenever I'm trying to convey how GR works to someone.

  • @anastasiosmitropoulos1989
    @anastasiosmitropoulos1989 Před měsícem +1

    The best visualisation of general relativity I've ever seen!!! Congratulations!!!

  • @TairnKA
    @TairnKA Před 9 měsíci

    Thank-you for sharing, I've been curious how space/time approximately works, though where does space/time end, in the center of a mass (gravity well), its surface or does it end?

  • @WhisperedDreams951
    @WhisperedDreams951 Před 3 lety +92

    The best graphical explanation of relativity I've seen. Simple and intuitive.

  • @vindas777
    @vindas777 Před 2 lety +99

    I can't say thank you enough for making this video. For decades I have struggled to try to visualize a way to reconcile gravity, time, and space and you have helped me make a breakthrough. I'm so grateful for your intellect and willingness to teach and share!

    • @timothyfountain3399
      @timothyfountain3399 Před 2 lety +1

      Don't get too excited. This video is as flawed as all the others. It is well made, but the reason it seems so much 'clearer and easier to understand' is that it is pretty wrong, and quite inaccurate in many ways and simply appeals to those craving s better visual understanding.

    • @keepcalmycarryon
      @keepcalmycarryon Před 2 lety

      @@timothyfountain3399 But what of Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings??
      _Please refrain from replying to this Comment._

    • @timothyfountain3399
      @timothyfountain3399 Před 2 lety +1

      @@keepcalmycarryon I'm sorry but your comment makes no sense.

    • @keepcalmycarryon
      @keepcalmycarryon Před 2 lety +2

      @@timothyfountain3399 That is because you refused to abide by my clear instructions. Must the hoi polloi be so obstinate?? _Le Sigh._
      Related, my gender-fluid & hetero-flexible friend "Chocolate" is seeking an ironic arranged marriage to a CZcams Commenter immediately, & your choice of patronym would suit him & myself well with the subsequent risible name combination. What say you? Need I spell it out for you? Also, what is your shoe size?
      _Good Day & God Save the Queen._

    • @nckfrmthapnw
      @nckfrmthapnw Před rokem +1

      Awesome isnt it?. And good to see trip 7s floating around! Best number 😉

  • @eeydabez2169
    @eeydabez2169 Před 16 dny

    It's so rare when something genuinely new comes along in the relativity / visualization area. I'm 3 years late (depending on your relative velocity :) but today was exactly such a day! Fantastic video, superbly done.

  • @tariq.mehmood
    @tariq.mehmood Před rokem +3

    what an impeccable visualization!! truly mind boggling phenomenon demonstrated with a beautiful combination of animation and music 👍

  • @danunpronounceable8559
    @danunpronounceable8559 Před 3 lety +139

    Students need to see this when learning about gravity. Incredible how it makes so much sense with this context

    • @amir_hamzah
      @amir_hamzah Před 2 lety

      You understand this? Kudos to your superior IQ

    • @nathanb011
      @nathanb011 Před 2 lety +10

      @@amir_hamzah it's really not that difficult. You just have to recognize that it is impossible to truly visualize, and instead process what it is trying to represent as your own visualization within your mind.

    • @andradas9688
      @andradas9688 Před 2 lety +1

      @@nathanb011 it is very difficult as this explanation is in fact an hypothesis. It is not that it is impossible to truly visualize general relativity, it is impossible to determine what the fabric of the universe really is in the first place. Dark matter is a possibility, but it has not been observed. In other words, it is really difficult if you are really looking for an answer.

    • @nathanb011
      @nathanb011 Před 2 lety +1

      @@andradas9688 dark matter has been observed in the sense that we know for certain it is there, we just don't know what it is.

    • @andradas9688
      @andradas9688 Před 2 lety

      @@nathanb011 well, yes, i did simplify my comment using the concept of dark matter. I didn't want to mention dark energy, for instance. The point was just to have an alternative take on the idea of "it is really not that difficult". I was not attacking your comment, btw. It is just that complexity is inherently difficult.

  • @Amigaudio
    @Amigaudio Před 3 lety +103

    Einstein would have cryed had he seen this explanation through this animation.
    Thank you!!!

    • @Chicken_Little_Syndrome
      @Chicken_Little_Syndrome Před 3 lety +12

      I think Einstein would have dyed. Perhaps he'd be green with envy.

    • @mskiptr
      @mskiptr Před 3 lety +8

      Well, back then it was probably your best bet to only target people with good understanding of non-euclidean geometry and give them mostly formal definitions.
      Even now, without formalisms you can easily get lost in reasoning, but thankfully we can also get nice intuitions from others (through visualizations like this one).

    • @thinkingoutloud6741
      @thinkingoutloud6741 Před 3 lety +3

      I’m pretty sure he would have looked at it and said “Of course! Exactly”

    • @flumpyhumpy
      @flumpyhumpy Před 3 lety +3

      I crie when I see spelling like your'es

    • @amouramarie
      @amouramarie Před 3 lety +2

      That's a beautiful thought! How pleased he would be to see this.

  • @kenilnisar4960
    @kenilnisar4960 Před rokem +2

    The explanation is phenomenal 👏 A satisfied approach for basic understanding and which will not distort things when learnt in detail

  • @cristiantalero96
    @cristiantalero96 Před 9 měsíci

    Wonderful graphics and beautifully explained. Thanks!

  • @rhlsx
    @rhlsx Před 3 lety +267

    This was the best video on GR ever seen. Was searching for this kinda video since I've got to know about GR. Thanks alot. The makers deserve alot of respect. ❤️. Thanks again. Keep going. This channel is a must follow science channel. ❤️ Please upload more English versions of your videos.
    Love and Respect from India. 🔥👍🙏

    • @MrBendybruce
      @MrBendybruce Před 3 lety +2

      @@stridedeck Talk about misleading. What I object most to is the "better" claim. It's not better, because it is not about GR so can't be compared. It's a 5 minute infomercial about a theory called One Source Universe.

    • @isiisorisiaint
      @isiisorisiaint Před 3 lety

      @@stridedeck uh oh, you's suuuuuuuuuuuch a moron!

    • @nedisawegoyogya
      @nedisawegoyogya Před 3 lety

      to that I say czcams.com/video/AowtGDM9naU/video.html

    • @Mono_Autophobic
      @Mono_Autophobic Před 3 lety

      Thanos - Mogambo🤣🤣

  • @Heliophobos
    @Heliophobos Před 3 lety +306

    Props for pronouncing "Einstein" correctly.
    Sincerely, a German

    • @Nameru26
      @Nameru26 Před 3 lety +4

      Just thought the same :D

    • @ethitlan
      @ethitlan Před 3 lety +2

      Just said the same thing

    • @Nameru26
      @Nameru26 Před 3 lety +20

      @@radoslawszymula6560 small brain time

    • @ethitlan
      @ethitlan Před 3 lety +1

      @@radoslawszymula6560 What? You mean WW2?

    • @skylarkesselring6075
      @skylarkesselring6075 Před 3 lety +6

      @@radoslawszymula6560 Uhhh, he's from Germany, so you say his name with a German accent... You good?

  • @GustavoFil350
    @GustavoFil350 Před 8 měsíci

    This is one of the best videos in the entire platform.

  • @ShashankBhardwaj
    @ShashankBhardwaj Před rokem

    11:02 is the intuitive visualisation I have searched for, for like a decade. Thank you

  • @jasmineirwin7166
    @jasmineirwin7166 Před 2 lety +160

    I have been trying to wrap my head around gravity not being a force for a while now and you’re Video is what finally brought me some clarification.

    • @lawliet2263
      @lawliet2263 Před 2 lety

      Says a woman 😑

    • @dish7877
      @dish7877 Před 2 lety +2

      @@lawliet2263 what?

    • @lawliet2263
      @lawliet2263 Před 2 lety

      @@dish7877 women don't have brains and then there's this woman trynna wrap her head around physics stuff lol

  • @zalphero618
    @zalphero618 Před 3 lety +220

    This is so mind blowing. Never seen a more better explanation.

    • @guccihorsepiss2406
      @guccihorsepiss2406 Před 3 lety +18

      u should look up a more better adjective for more better

    • @CountofSerenno
      @CountofSerenno Před 3 lety +8

      @@guccihorsepiss2406 You should use the word you, not u.

    • @gregorguru3576
      @gregorguru3576 Před 3 lety +5

      @Gucci Horsepiss u should look up a more better spelling for u

    • @megustaelfalonegro
      @megustaelfalonegro Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/Xc4xYacTu-E/video.html

    • @dattebayo81
      @dattebayo81 Před 3 lety +1

      @@CountofSerenno in informal communication and that too social media use of pronouns can be different and can be anything but it can be used until the person can undersatnd what u r saying so here I used u , r means you are and you took it same way so it doesn't matter but the word more better matters as he can use best
      Don't talk much if u don't know what can be used at respective places

  • @lorenzweiler4850
    @lorenzweiler4850 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Well this is the best visualization I encountered so far but I ponder what happens to the ever contracting grid beyond the massive surface. Will it expand again until it reaches the center where gravity is zero? Or what if we assume a hollow mass where beyond the shell inside the hollow effectively cancels out at every point according to the shell theorem. This is still challenging to imagine. But thanks for the excellent work!

  • @PatricioCamus-by4tf
    @PatricioCamus-by4tf Před rokem +2

    An excellent and long-awaited visualization. Thank you very much.

  • @MajorasWrath1
    @MajorasWrath1 Před 2 lety +128

    The short version: you blew my mind
    The long version:
    When time was invoked and the temporal speed was being explained with the sliced views, I legitimately felt a pang inside my head. Like a phantom adrenaline rush solely from brain activity.
    This felt like receiving eldritch knowledge (the kind that would supernaturally drive humans mad if not kill outright) at 1/10,000 the potency.
    I felt a rush of understanding for a few seconds but then lost it trying to process it. Like a car failing to start but still making the noise of attempt.

    • @matijagrivic3810
      @matijagrivic3810 Před 2 lety +14

      Bro, same! At the same part of the video, same rush of joy was building up inside me, then I lost it

    • @TheLazyVideo
      @TheLazyVideo Před rokem +9

      I like the way you expressed it in words. “Eldritch knowledge”, haha, I love that! I feel tingles and my hairs stand up on end, goose bumps, and I too get a rush of adrenaline as a feeling of epiphany flows through me.
      For me it’s like getting a glimpse into the ancient Hindu god Brahma, and his fabric of reality called Brahman. I truly believe physics and cosmology are “religion done right”. The questions are the same, “what are we? Where do we come from? How was all this made?” But instead of snake oil we have a rigorous scientific method and falsifiable hypotheses. No dogma, no blind faith. I think religion was just astronomy and cosmology at one point in the past, but somehow veered into snake oil and dogma from that.
      With the right visualization tools we are peering into the objective reality that underpins our existence. It’s a type of communion with the ultimate.

    • @palasta
      @palasta Před rokem +2

      Yea. One might getting a little obsessed with it.
      When i was pondering about how our reality could be simulated i had a "relative" idea. Spacetime as simple 3d energy grid, not curving or bending around matter or inwards, but is absorbed by matter. Matter itself determines how much spacetime, whereas the concentration of spacetime determines the "curvature", gravity. Like clay clumping within fine 3D netting, deforming it.

    • @mclilzenthepoet2331
      @mclilzenthepoet2331 Před rokem

      @@palasta bro check the math for that you might be unto something

    • @palasta
      @palasta Před rokem

      @@mclilzenthepoet2331 If i had a much better understanding, sure. But i don't. Besides it might sound like a neat idea, but human intuition usually isn't helpful with these things. It prbly violates whatever laws...

  • @just33timepass9
    @just33timepass9 Před 2 lety +380

    Physicist explaining theories
    Apples:- Dont forget us

    • @maxwellsequation4887
      @maxwellsequation4887 Před 2 lety +17

      Apples are the most influential fruit of all time.

    • @markuspfeifer8473
      @markuspfeifer8473 Před 2 lety +4

      On the German Language CZcams channel Urknall Weltall und das Leben they do everything with oranges. I guess they're Leibnizians.

    • @amankajla8921
      @amankajla8921 Před 2 lety

      best meme ever.😂

    • @5TimesWCC
      @5TimesWCC Před 2 lety +3

      Physicists use apples because they hate doctors.

    • @qa38o54
      @qa38o54 Před 2 lety +2

      Steve Jobs: Stonks

  • @pisspee2099
    @pisspee2099 Před rokem +1

    6:35 Repeat 500 times :) When an object remains stationary relative to us, its spatial velocity(Like the velocity of a rocket) is zero and temporal velocity(Is the velocity of time) is c(speed of light). The apple does not move through space but moves through time at the maximum speed c. Temporal means time....

  • @user-pm5tm5mz2n
    @user-pm5tm5mz2n Před rokem +1

    To anyone having a hard time understanding all this talk about time, maybe this little perspective can help a bit:
    This all deals with the 4th dimension, that being time. If that doesn't exactly seem right think of it like this.
    The 1st dimension is length.
    The 2nd is height
    The 3rd is depth
    The 4th is duration
    (Beyond that it gets 10 times weirder so don't ask)
    I hope this can at least help someone q little bit

  • @Heioshi
    @Heioshi Před 3 lety +28

    Finally, after a million videos on GR, i finally understand it. The creator of this video deserves an award

  • @michaelstreeter3125
    @michaelstreeter3125 Před 3 lety +61

    The only single improvement I can imagine is to create a 3D side-by-side video version I can watch with a VR headset. No idea how to create one though! This is an excellent video. Thank you.

    • @ScienceClicEN
      @ScienceClicEN  Před 3 lety +30

      Would be really cool ! I am going to try that ahah

    • @iamjimgroth
      @iamjimgroth Před 3 lety +1

      Sounds like something fairly easy to throw together in Unity.

  • @jimmywatson7950
    @jimmywatson7950 Před rokem +1

    this is the best video on general relativity on youtube

  • @bangtipen
    @bangtipen Před rokem +1

    Thank you for the video, beautiful animations and clear explanations. It opens up my mind to a whole new level.

  • @jimkika
    @jimkika Před 3 lety +441

    Einstein: damn it! This is what I was trying to explain 80 years ago.

    • @willemesterhuyse2547
      @willemesterhuyse2547 Před 3 lety +6

      How is space expanding visualized given this visualization?

    • @spec_wasted
      @spec_wasted Před 3 lety +33

      @@abdulqadirahmedli610 I was born in a muslim family, but now an atheist and hate people who push religion and God into everything

    • @bullpuppy7455
      @bullpuppy7455 Před 3 lety +7

      @@spec_wasted Why hate? To some, God is everything. The Alpha and the Omega. The beginning until the end. In that sense, another name for God could easily be 'The Universe'. And when one of such belief tries to understand the universe, are they not also trying to understand God? All that exists? That is, unless one believes that God is a creepy old man, sitting on a throne ready to dole out punishment on the imperfect children he (she?) created. I dunno. To me, the concept of 'hate' just reeks of the Dark Side of 'The Force'...

    • @spec_wasted
      @spec_wasted Před 3 lety +19

      @@bullpuppy7455 Religion and God is used to run societies and build common places for a particular religion where people can attend and learn to hate other religions

    • @bullpuppy7455
      @bullpuppy7455 Před 3 lety +5

      @@spec_wasted One might say the same about 'borders', 'countries', 'states', 'flags', and the like. Either we are children of the Universe (or of God - whatever you want to call it), which makes us each brothers and sisters, or we are not...

  • @roccovergoglini7670
    @roccovergoglini7670 Před rokem +36

    Finally. A truly 3- and 4-dimensional description of gravity and General Relativity. I, too, have always felt that those "rubber sheet" descriptions were not telling us the whole story. This is an excellent video, and I am saving it to my favorites. Very well done!

    • @jesus4400
      @jesus4400 Před 7 měsíci

      Relativity has never been proven. There's a reason it's still called theory. No matter how much you add photoshop and CGI: it's all a hoax

    • @muhammadyudhaperwira6178
      @muhammadyudhaperwira6178 Před 7 měsíci +1

      this is truly remarkable visualization of gravity, it blows my mind

  • @damianmedina8888
    @damianmedina8888 Před rokem +1

    Of thousands of videos and text books made, this is the greatest in explaining gravity phenomena, simple complex understandable and in a short time, you guys deserve an award in vísual science & education if such existed.

  • @cW-jk1sw
    @cW-jk1sw Před 8 měsíci +1

    Sciencechicen, I'm not the sharpest tool in the shed but love everything about space. I got a lot of knowledge out of this and actually follow a lot of it because you are a very good teacher

  • @fabiorota9661
    @fabiorota9661 Před 3 lety +27

    Saying that the grid is constantly pulled towards the centre of the mass, is essentially the same of saying that a force is constantly acting on the body: by pulling the grid the body itself is pulled too, on the other hand the video had very beautifull animations.

    • @by9diz8
      @by9diz8 Před 3 lety +5

      We can still only visualize and calculate gravity. I think you're looking for a answer to *why* gravity exists which we don't know yet.

    • @jonaslundqvist1724
      @jonaslundqvist1724 Před 3 lety +3

      @@by9diz8 consider every particle has a small field of space time around it to start. Two clump together and stretch the spacetime around as there cant be gaps i spacetime as it is also "reality". More and more particles clump up and the space time around them are stretched even further. Soon enough we have planets pulling in wayward space faring apples.

    • @AC-hs1sj
      @AC-hs1sj Před 3 lety

      It 100% is not the same thing. F=ma defines the word "force" in this context, and there is no mass for spacetime. The only force acting on a object at rest in an area of curved spacetime are the forces that keep it at rest spatially despite the passing of time. If what you said was true, Einstein and other's wouldn't had to have explained Mercury's precession, which was the first thing stated in this video...

    • @trollmcclure1884
      @trollmcclure1884 Před 3 lety +3

      Not to mention that if the lines, the fabric was like a cordage it would be pulled all the way beyond Pluto. Then between two stars the string would be elongated or not moving only at one point in space. Why is everyone ignoring the shape of the net that we see as magnetic field lines? Particles follow these lines. Describing gravity outside of electromagnetism is lame

  • @Bethesolution
    @Bethesolution Před 2 lety +45

    Thank you for a very effective “visualization.” The beauty of nature is that it has no obligation to make itself understandable to any one intelligent animal using any one of their limited senses. A critical nod to the importance of role of the observer. Einstein, and any observer who can rise above their known limits, understands that we can’t actually “visualize “ what is going on! Artificial senses like mathematics and physics are tools that give us a tiny glimpse into these miracles by creating a junction between the reality and our wiring. Meanwhile, the average conscious human, and rabbits, etc, think nothing of it because it can’t be observed by their given senses. The apple falls………. And we just eat it.

  • @mohkazmoh
    @mohkazmoh Před 2 měsíci

    Finally I could understand the concept and definition of the gravity with this simple and illustrative animation! I've watched too many videos in CZcams, but this one explained the gravity and bending the space-time directly without using gravity to define the gravity like the other videos do! Thank you very much.