Forget about Quantum Electrodynamics

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  • čas přidán 28. 05. 2024
  • Most popular journals talk about "New Physics"... yet there is probably another reason. See the recent papers by Oliver Consa:
    arxiv.org/abs/2010.10345
    vixra.org/abs/2002.0011
    arxiv.org/abs/2109.03301
    arxiv.org/abs/2110.02078
    Apologies for the sound problems between 2:30 and 3:50. 0:13 The slide title should be "Muon Anomalous..."
    Another great video about Consa's papers: • Quantum Electrodynamic...
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Komentáře • 929

  • @Embassy_of_Jupiter
    @Embassy_of_Jupiter Před rokem +8

    I love CZcams. The fact that you hear all arguments and not just the approved™ ones is amazing.

  • @lukeneville7081
    @lukeneville7081 Před rokem +11

    I have come back to this video a year later with some more comments on this video. Firstly you mention that Schwinger's paper is only an approximation. This is slightly untrue, Schwinger means that he is taking the first term in a series solution in the hopes that it is enough. Next, it is true that Dyson showed the perturbation series to diverge but this is now well understood as an asymptotic series, which generally diverge but still contain meaningful information (c.f. Carl Bender's Perturbation theory book) which can be extracted through techniques such as Borel Summation. Finally in Bethe's original work he does use a `fudge' numerical cut-off on the integral but people understood at the time that that would make a big difference, and these cut-offs were understood through Ken Wilson's work on the renormalisation group.

    • @philler8151
      @philler8151 Před 16 dny

      Thanks for mentioning this. I also know Benders book and think there is in some sense still hope its not totally bad. One point I think is important is that we have this big model and we stick to it when doing lots of different calculations (so we can test the same thing in lots of ways).
      I hope the community is not going down the wrong path but I think if someone can find out that its a hoax (or not) its physicists.

  • @Verschlungen
    @Verschlungen Před 2 lety +75

    If anyone is curious, the quote from Feynman about renormalization (at 13:18-13:40) is found in his book QED (1990[1985]) p. 128.
    I had certainly "noted it" myself when reading QED, but failed to grasp its full significance. Many thanks to Unzicker for putting it in the spotlight and giving a complete explanation of its context and implications!

    • @reaperinsaltbrine5211
      @reaperinsaltbrine5211 Před 2 lety +10

      QED reminds me to the case of Claude Shannon, to whom - when he ran to some thoretical problems about his information theory - Neumann said something along the lines of "just call it Entropy, nobody knows what it is, anyway".

    • @NondescriptMammal
      @NondescriptMammal Před rokem +5

      I like that Feynman had the scientific integrity to say, "I think I can safely say that nobody understands quantum dynamics", despite that he shared a Nobel prize for his work in that field.

    • @cunjoz
      @cunjoz Před rokem +1

      my 1st thought was that QED stood for quod erat demonstrandum

    • @jacobpeters5458
      @jacobpeters5458 Před rokem +6

      @@cunjoz Quit Eating Doritos

    • @Gunni1972
      @Gunni1972 Před rokem +4

      @@NondescriptMammal Well, did he give back that Nobel Prize? Just asking because i try to find out how far " Integrity" can be calculated.

  • @peterschaeffer
    @peterschaeffer Před 3 lety +48

    The presentation mentions Freeman Dyson in passing. I once met Freeman Dyson and his wife. I was (many years ago) helping a couple use AOL (that tells you how long ago it was). After a while, I realized who the couple was. I was astounded.

    • @TheMachian
      @TheMachian  Před 3 lety +10

      Thanks for this personal impression. Feel free to contact me via ChannelInfo.

    • @u.v.s.5583
      @u.v.s.5583 Před 2 lety +10

      Ah, yes, the old chap Freeman! When he ran out of gasoline, he used to throw nukes behind his car to accelerate!

    • @mlmimichaellucasmontereyin6765
      @mlmimichaellucasmontereyin6765 Před rokem +2

      @@u.v.s.5583 LOL!!! Yet, nobody's all bad. ;-)

    • @dougr.2398
      @dougr.2398 Před 10 měsíci

      I heard Dyson speak at the Gibbs Symposium at Yale. Terrific speaker and history, but alas, a climate change denier subsequently. My name is in the list of attendees, and I was the sole representative employed by an unallied (with physics) government department

    • @jackpatplod174
      @jackpatplod174 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@dougr.2398 Brilliant physicist AND a skeptic of Michael Mann’s Hockey Stick nonsense. Dyson has just risen to the tip-top of my top-ten. He can obviously sniff out the same questionable mathematical sleight of hand used by climate scientists as with QED. (He has knocked off Sir Fred Hoyle from the number one spot… another maverick who thanks to JWST will soon be proven right too)

  • @labsanta
    @labsanta Před 5 měsíci +6

    🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
    Introduction to *the Muon Anomaly and its significance (**00:09**)*
    QED's reputation *as the most precise theory in physics (**00:22**)*
    Invitation to *delve into the history of QED's development (**00:36**)*
    Postwar physics *conference with no participation from earlier generation (**01:02**)*
    Willis Lamb's *discovery of the Lamb shift in hydrogen (**01:30**)*
    Hans Bethe's *approximate calculation using QED (**01:59**)*
    Introduction of *the g-factor and its precise measurement (**02:28**)*
    Richard Feynman's *diagrams and their tantalizing resemblance to experiment (**02:58**)*
    Challenges with *Feynman's theory and its lack of mathematical rigor (**03:29**)*
    Julian Schwinger's *469-formula theory and its questionable accuracy (**04:25**)*
    Sin-Itiro Tomonaga's *seemingly incompatible third theory (**04:53**)*
    Freeman Dyson's *1950 paper unifying the theories and its impact (**04:53**)*
    Purcell and *Gardner's experimental g-factor value and its agreement with theory (**05:55**)*
    Karplus and *Kroll's correction calculations using Feynman diagrams (**05:55**)*
    The discovery *of errors in both the experimental value and theoretical calculations (**06:25**)*
    Peterman and *Sommerfeld's new calculations and their starkly different results (**06:53**)*
    The unprecedented *lack of scrutiny and unpublished nature of key calculations (**07:25**)*
    Oliver Consa's *discovery of deliberate falsification by Karplus and Kroll (**07:56**)*
    - The series used in QED calculations doesn't converge, making it unreliable and potentially yielding nonsensical results.
    - This undermines the theoretical basis of QED, known as perturbation theory, which is crucial for predicting particle behavior.
    - Dyson's discovery received little attention, with no significant impact on physicists' acceptance of QED.
    - This suggests a reluctance to challenge the prevailing orthodoxy within the physics community.
    - Dyson eventually expressed regret for his role in promoting QED, acknowledging its inherent inconsistencies.
    - This highlights the lack of transparency and critical examination within the field.
    - QED was originally conceived as a temporary solution, expected to be replaced by a more robust theory.
    - Its continued persistence, despite known flaws, raises questions about the scientific rigor of its validation.

  • @EddieVBlueIsland
    @EddieVBlueIsland Před rokem +16

    As Francis Bacon said "We learn more readly from error than from confusion" QED is a scafold that has done it's job - explain light at small level of detail -Glad the great Physicist of the past left many more things to be discovered.

    • @billoddy5637
      @billoddy5637 Před rokem

      But if they leave too much, they weren’t very useful were they?!

    • @DavidLoveMore
      @DavidLoveMore Před rokem

      The same problems plague all branches of science.

    • @googleyoutubechannel8554
      @googleyoutubechannel8554 Před 10 měsíci

      The problem is that the field of physics has written themselves into a corner over the past 70 years and they know it, and have created almost 'religious texts'. There is no way to get funding for the 'many thing to be discovered'. You have to throw away so much of the baby to get on solid footing, questioning QM, QED. It would be an insurmountable social, economic, and intellectual task for any newly minted PhD. We may not get out of this intellectual hole for hundreds or thousands of years, even AI can't save us if it doesn't have the right framework and data to evaluate.

  • @js7244
    @js7244 Před rokem +16

    thanks for been so open about it. I'm currently finishing my master's thesis in an extension of the Standard Model, and to be honest, after really trying to find some sense to the to QED I couldn't.. The information that you present closes a cicle for me. Now i'm looking for new horizons where to continue my passion for physics, it seem like going back to the lab is going to be way...

    • @sillymesilly
      @sillymesilly Před rokem

      Lab is always the way. Lab birthes and murders theories.

  • @n-da-bunka2650
    @n-da-bunka2650 Před rokem +2

    Well done. This is the second one of these I have seen in the last 2 days

  • @t.o.e.vry1247
    @t.o.e.vry1247 Před rokem +4

    Liked, subscribed, commented, and thank you. I luckily stumbled upon this video second in my search and so saving me! I look forward to hearing what fundamental physics are.

  • @JoseSilveira-newhandleforYT

    Thanks for a very interesting video. I will check Consa's papers.

  • @lazmotron
    @lazmotron Před rokem +2

    All the videos I click on your channel just keep getting better and better

  • @reframer8250
    @reframer8250 Před 3 lety +79

    Maybe I can contribute a little appraisement of the addressed topic. I do not want to claim, that I am able to finally assess the statements about QED. But I have specialized in quantum field theory within my master studies. I liked the concept very much, because it is very impressive and you really learn to calculate, when you deal with it! But there is one thing, that disturbed me about it from the beginning until today: It is not possible to fundamentally calculate the dynamics of a physical process using this theory. And by "not possible" I mean, that I did not find any person so far, that came up with a calculation about it. Nor have I been able to come up with such a calculation. In the beginning I thought this was the consequence of my incomprehension. But after years of studying and talking to other people, that are deeply within this topic and not finding any satisfying answer to simple questions like "how do electrons move, when repelling each other" I started to consider the idea, that the theory might not be fundamentally consistent/definable.
    The problem is, that people do not care about this. They only want to know how particles move out of the experiment after having hit each other. And they think that so called correlation functions, that can be calculated out of the theory, tell them something about the probability distribution of that process. Well, it might be that this works quiet well for certain processes. But in my opinion this does not provide us an explenation of fundamental processes. Because it is simply "not possible" to simulate or calculate such processes. You can only calculate probability distributions for the outcome of measurments (what ever that fundamentally means, no one can define this, really, no one can!).
    In contrast it is possible (on a very abstract level) to calculate constants like the gyromagnetic ratio. So it would be really remarkable, if even such calculations are on a dubious mathematical level. Therefore I consider the addressed topic of Dr. Unzicker to be very important. I think it is worth to investigate the mentioned papers further.

    • @TheMachian
      @TheMachian  Před 3 lety +31

      Thank you for this interesting perspective. It is truely remarkable that, though being involved in the "community", you have been able to maintain these important critical thoughts. My sincere compliments.

    • @Burevestnik9M730
      @Burevestnik9M730 Před 3 lety +3

      The best picture of electrons in my simple mind is that they are pinpricks in ether through which energy flows in and out.

    • @reframer8250
      @reframer8250 Před 3 lety +23

      @@TheMachian Thanks a lot! I think many people within the "community" have similar thoughts. But they often see them as own incomprehension and not as a problem of the concept. And sometimes it is actually difficult to distinguish between "I do not understand something" and "it is not understandable". But within the commuinty there is a current fashion to think that it is completely ok to not understand various things in detail. And therefore everything "dubious" can be hidden behind that "oh I do not understand, because it's very complicated" and "just go on and calculate some result". And that I see very problematic.

    • @TheMachian
      @TheMachian  Před 3 lety +9

      You made a very good point.

    • @stephenanastasi748
      @stephenanastasi748 Před 3 lety +4

      @@Burevestnik9M730 What do you mean when you refer to energy? What does it mean to say energy is flowing?

  • @bloodswacky94
    @bloodswacky94 Před rokem +14

    There is a very important fact is missing in the video: EVERYBODY in the field knows exactly that the mathematics is not on solid ground. This is true even for beginners, it is constantly made fun of in lectures etc.
    I think there is a misconception what a theory should be. Even if mathematical steps are not justified on a mathematical level, if you apply them and you get results that fit data with precision that chance can not explain (say 5 digits) then you are onto something. Of course general principles of logic have to be respected, for example circular reasoning has to be avoided.
    And it is very much so that you can compute different physical quantities with impressive precision using QED methods by yourself (at least if you spend a semester on the problem ;)).
    So there has to be something going right with QED but surely it's current form is not satisfactory at least for every mathematician who got a glimpse of it. But this is standard for new theories: A classic example would be classical mechanics with Newtons calculus. It was widely believed that infinitesimals are mathematically unjustified, and it took some centuries until a solid understanding of differentials emerged.

    • @spaceman4286
      @spaceman4286 Před rokem +2

      I agree with you. I think this video, although insightful, has a narrative more inflammatory. There isn't a big conspiracy and everyone realizes in their undergrad that a physicist's job is to describe nature as precisely as possible until someone else describes it just a tiny bit more accurate.Questioning is the correct way of going forward, and ultimately we may as well never truly learn how nature behaves fundamentally. Having theories that can predict results up to 5 decimal places is better than having no theory that can predict nothing.

    • @mayatrash
      @mayatrash Před rokem

      One point you glossed over:
      2 things:
      1. It could be, that renormalization hints to new mathematics, to be more precise, maybe infinities can be handled differently (sometimes it reminds me of projective geometry and mapping infinities to a single point of infinity - like a circle, maybe infinites can be regarded as “small” even if counterintuitive. But I’m not a mathematician, I can just imagine that mathematics is maybe a bit to bound do answer these kind of questions. This indeed would be the strongest version of your argument, but there is a different side:
      2. If this is not true, than using our intuition one can state this true fact: if numbers get reasonably large, mathematics becomes incoherent, terms can be cancelled in any way which leads to a whole different snake pit: ONE CAN FIT ANY DATA ONE NEEDS. Self energies are essentially (in my knowledge) basically dividing by 0, and the whole reason it’s algebraically forbidden in most scenarios is the incoherence of maths if one allows for this.
      So this can’t be the whole story either way. I.e. Dimensional redularization is exactly sus because of this.
      I’m quite happy that I switched from particle physics to condensed matter, at least one can measure useful stuff.

    • @OblateBede
      @OblateBede Před 10 měsíci

      Actually, these days, infinitesimals, both nilpotent and invertible, are perfectly well-defined and rigorous. See synthetic differential geometry for details.

    • @GillesSoulet
      @GillesSoulet Před 8 měsíci

      What can you expect from physicists, the very people pretending that PI*PI=g=10...

  • @GilesMcRiker
    @GilesMcRiker Před 2 lety +6

    The comments on this channel are internet gold👍🏻

  • @riadhalrabeh3783
    @riadhalrabeh3783 Před rokem +1

    Great efforts... many thanks and all the best.

  • @zeb1820
    @zeb1820 Před 2 lety +2

    Great perspective. Thank you.

  • @schwadevivre4158
    @schwadevivre4158 Před rokem +16

    I'm a complete layman with only the most superficial understanding of QED so came across this by accident.
    It is clear and concise but even more than this is outstandingly brave of Dr Unzicker considering his admitted prior support of the status quo

  • @TheBarowner
    @TheBarowner Před 3 lety +6

    This is one of your best videos!

  • @tinkeringtim7999
    @tinkeringtim7999 Před rokem +6

    Really well put together, quite decisive. I've spent hours trying to argue as you've argued more comprehensively and clearly in a matter if minutes. Brilliant, subscribed.

    • @jpenneymrcoin6851
      @jpenneymrcoin6851 Před rokem +2

      the trick is to find the keystone of the argument. once i knew that renormalization was a bunch of hocus-pocus as Feynman said, i knew this theory would be coming down eventually.

  • @weichen219
    @weichen219 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for the extraordinary presentation.

  • @rayoflight62
    @rayoflight62 Před rokem +4

    Simplifying infinities in calculations is like sweeping some big problem under the rug. ..

  • @OzzPhysicist
    @OzzPhysicist Před 3 měsíci +2

    I waited for this moment since I was a teenager. Since then I been convinced that QED don't make what I call "sense". My question now is: why I never seen other people talking about this?

  • @John_Smith__
    @John_Smith__ Před 3 měsíci +1

    I truly did not knew about this until I have seen your video! Dear Mr. Unzicker Thank you for your Work and Integrity by telling everyone the Scientific Truth as it is! Finally someone with Integrity talking about science and physics in particular!

  • @zyxzevn
    @zyxzevn Před 3 lety +13

    Re-normalization was the first indication to me that something was very wrong.
    The weird orbits of electrons around the nucleus seemed unreal to me, especially
    when Atomic Force Microscopes showed spherical atoms.
    Feynmann also pushed for a particle oriented theory, where fields were constructed with
    virtual particles and most particles were going backwards in time.
    The more it all seemed like fantasy to me, and that we needed a complete different approach to the problems.
    I do have some ideas of how we can solve this, but that is by approaching
    electromagnetism with only the electric field, and no photons.
    So magnetism comes from some kind of relativity effect, or whatever.
    And photons come from thresholds in the observer.
    Photon explained: The Electric vibrations cause a resonance in the electron band.
    So the electron band collects some of the energy.
    At a certain time the electron-band has so much vibration that the electron moves to a different band.
    And backwards the electron-band can vibrate towards a lower state, causing the emission of light.
    In lasers we can see that the electron bands can be phase-locked with the incoming light.
    And the delays in the transition between quantum states shows that something is going on.
    (Similarly in super-conductivity, superfluids, etc)
    But we still need to investigate more.

    • @TheMachian
      @TheMachian  Před 3 lety +8

      Evidently, you had a good gut feeling. I am grateful to Consa that he pointed out the deficiencies of QED in so much detail.

    • @ericephemetherson3964
      @ericephemetherson3964 Před rokem

      @@TheMachian Mr. Unzicker! I am responding to the writings of the man (zyxzevn) you answered above and I think he has a point. Something going backwards in time is unrealistic unless we consider another force (you call it fifth force) which is time that possesses a force. Not in the sense of our psycholgical perception of it but time which is not force but has a force. We cannot detect this force because man has not constructed a contraption to ''feel'' this force nor have we got a mechanism that ''feels'' time. A clock is the worst kind of man made construct to measure time for it does not measure time at all. Time equipped with a force is not one directional but omnidirectional and it pushes and pulls in infinite angles of directions in Universe.
      Also, the man above points to electron jumps in orbital bands in the atom. Since every atom in the Universe has a different energy level (however minute), none of these electrons falls exactly to the same level of energy after losing it in the process of emitting a photon. The difference in these levels of energy of an electron is what keeps the Universe running. It is like imagining Misters Unzickers and only Unzickers existing in the Universe that is filled only with one kind of an entity. There must be a constant exchange in energy for a machine to keep running.
      These phycisists you describe who made calculations in error are only presenting conjectures and in approximate manner. On mircroscopic level we do not know on what level of energy an electron is unless we measure it right then in right place. But how do we know what that electron is doing one second after the measurement? Uncertainty principle is bowing here. All is in constant motion and erroneous data may be coming just from the fact that man cannot subdue small things as atoms.
      This renormalization tricks is just a crutch that saves phycisists from embarassement of their deeds. They don't know what they are talking about sometimes. Mathematicians are even worse.
      I will be looking for your books to buy to read because you have hit upon a very disgusting topic about these scandals for which some guys got Nobel prize. And a question for the end: what causes the speed of light?

    • @ericephemetherson3964
      @ericephemetherson3964 Před rokem

      Mr. Unzicker! I am responding to the writings of the man (zyxzevn) you answered above and I think he has a point. Something going backwards in time is unrealistic unless we consider another force (you call it fifth force) which is time that possesses a force. Not in the sense of our psycholgical perception of it but time which is not force but has a force. We cannot detect this force because man has not constructed a contraption to ''feel'' this force nor have we got a mechanism that ''feels'' time. A clock is the worst kind of man made construct to measure time for it does not measure time at all. Time equipped with a force is not one directional but omnidirectional and it pushes and pulls in infinite angles of directions in Universe.
      Also, the man above points to electron jumps in orbital bands in the atom. Since every atom in the Universe has a different energy level (however minute), none of these electrons falls exactly to the same level of energy after losing it in the process of emitting a photon. The difference in these levels of energy of an electron is what keeps the Universe running. It is like imagining Misters Unzickers and only Unzickers existing in the Universe that is filled only with one kind of an entity. There must be a constant exchange in energy for a machine to keep running.
      These phycisists you describe who made calculations in error are only presenting conjectures and in approximate manner. On mircroscopic level we do not know on what level of energy an electron is unless we measure it right then in right place. But how do we know what that electron is doing one second after the measurement? Uncertainty principle is bowing here. All is in constant motion and erroneous data may be coming just from the fact that man cannot subdue small things as atoms.
      This renormalization tricks is just a crutch that saves phycisists from embarassement of their deeds. They don't know what they are talking about sometimes. Mathematicians are even worse.
      I will be looking for your books to buy to read because you have hit upon a very disgusting topic about these scandals for which some guys got Nobel prize. And a question for the end: what causes the speed of light?

    • @crabcrab2024
      @crabcrab2024 Před rokem

      @@ericephemetherson3964 U can’t even comprehend how wrong you are.

    • @ericephemetherson3964
      @ericephemetherson3964 Před rokem

      @@crabcrab2024 Correct. I cannot comprehend how wrong I am. But I can comprehend when I am right.

  • @benjaminfrank9294
    @benjaminfrank9294 Před rokem +12

    Very interesting ! Though i remember that many divergences are not a problem at all, since we have an error typically of (N/137)^N.
    Ok this error diverges. But if we take N=100, the error is tiny and that's all we need.

  • @fredmoss3515
    @fredmoss3515 Před rokem +2

    This world is beyond me is so many ways ..... but I get the feeling the same thing has happened with Pharmacology ...... Thank you for standing up & questioning ...... so important.

  • @hillstrong715
    @hillstrong715 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Unpublished computer code is the bane of any research area. From my own experience over 40 years doing actual analysis and correction and maintenance of computer applications, it has been common during that time for the actual code to be shown as rubbish. I am particularly sceptical of all systems for which we have no access to the code.

  • @GH-oi2jf
    @GH-oi2jf Před rokem +3

    I’d rather hear Feynman’s assessment of QED in retrospect, but, alas, he is not here to give us one. I’m not taking sides, though. I’m not a physicist but know a little physics as an engineer. QED is something for physicists to debate. It doesn’t affect anyone else whichever way it turns out.
    My outsider’s question is: If QED is still an accepted theory, doesn’t it have some utility? If not, why wouldn’t it be discarded?

  • @illogicmath
    @illogicmath Před 2 lety +130

    It would be extraordinary if Unzicker could team up with Sabine Hossenfelder and make a series of videos where they review all those suspicious achievements in physics like the ones mentioned in Wolfgang Kundt"s book

    • @MiguelGarcia-zx1qj
      @MiguelGarcia-zx1qj Před 2 lety +11

      I was thinking along similar lines. But Sabine Hossenfelder votes for the intrinsic ugliness of the Real World (or, at least, to not request that it be beauty), and Unzicker favors the opposite point of view ...

    • @TheMachian
      @TheMachian  Před 2 lety +53

      @@MiguelGarcia-zx1qj Not exactly the opposite. My claim is that good physics is simple - which is backed by historical evidence. Sabine Hossenfelder does a great job, yet I wish she would look more deeply into history.

    • @mlmimichaellucasmontereyin6765
      @mlmimichaellucasmontereyin6765 Před rokem +1

      AB - Unfortunately, neither can be bothered to even respond to my contributions to simplifying QM & physics with logically & holistically realistic alternatives to self-obsoleting theory & the deficient paradigm that supports what Alex (& Einsterin) eventually diagnosed as insanity.

    • @santerisatama5409
      @santerisatama5409 Před rokem +3

      @@MiguelGarcia-zx1qj The problem is that the math theory (axiomatic set theory and so called "real numbers") that Sabine etc. work with is butt ugly and deeply dishonest...

    • @davidwilkie9551
      @davidwilkie9551 Před rokem +2

      @@TheMachian no matter how you look at the past-future presence of holographic history, the transparency and reflection properties are confusing. We rely on looking both ways at once, as Physicists look at Mathematics and the Modulation Mechanism Singularity inside-outside presence here-now-forever positioning for QM-TIME Completeness.

  • @MGMG-kf3wq
    @MGMG-kf3wq Před 4 měsíci +2

    I am much older and wiser now, than when I was at university and soon after, and my B.S. meter is much more finely tuned. As well is my understanding of human nature, and the need of many, otherwise fine people of the mind, to pursue fame and fortune at the expense of integrity. I find it strange and so out of the ordinary to me . . . but such is life. I am saddened, but at the same time glad that you made this video.

  • @nemosenpai
    @nemosenpai Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for this forensics!

  • @charlesmain9938
    @charlesmain9938 Před 3 lety +4

    Having stumbled upon this channel for the first time today, and not having viewed any other of your presentations, I'm curious as to what your feelings are as to the use of the concept "emergent" in physics, cosmology, and the like. Would you agree that the scale at which a process is viewed determines what rules apply? (not a physicist or mathematician)

    • @TheMachian
      @TheMachian  Před 3 lety +4

      There are people pondering about fundamental physics phenomena emerging from complex dynamics. Sounds interesting, yet I follow other paths. Consider reading Robert Laughlin.

  • @loulasher
    @loulasher Před 3 lety +14

    Thank you for putting this into a proper context context. The lengths to which they stretch their bad assumptions is ridiculous.

    • @Eris123451
      @Eris123451 Před rokem

      I'm not convinced, far from it ?

  • @muskyoxes
    @muskyoxes Před rokem +2

    "That ramshackle structure" keeps solving real problems. Any replacement will only be on the margins

    • @TheMachian
      @TheMachian  Před rokem

      Imaginary problems. Name a real one.

    • @muskyoxes
      @muskyoxes Před rokem +2

      @@TheMachian Building really small electronics and knowing what we're doing. If it turns out that QED is not involved with that and has had zero practical use in any engineering to this day, that would be something that popular science really should have mentioned.
      Failing that, simply the wikipedia on "precision tests of qed" has more on it than a 1950 paper.

  • @michaelwallace4298
    @michaelwallace4298 Před měsícem

    Shelldrake pointed out the inconsistencies with the history of measurement with the speed of light. When so-called 'constants' vary, how can anyone possibly trust calculations based on these constants. He got booted off the TED talk program for such dire suggestions. Paracelsus asked, "What to do when doctors disagree?" Alexander Unzicker asks, "What if the Speed of Light varies?" Love what you do Dr. Unzicker!

  • @andrewburbidge
    @andrewburbidge Před 2 lety +3

    Maybe it is best to say that there has been a lot of channeled thinking; with the use of words that some find convenient because they are more consistent with a preferred view.
    For example, saying that a molecule has zero-point energy avoids saying that there is a transmission medium with enormous zero-point energy. Some physicists don't accept that there is a transmission medium.
    What is the best way to model the transmission medium?
    A packing of spheres with gaps such that a displacement of a sphere - a clove - gives an enormous restoring force produced by the frame energy, tending to equalise the clove density.
    Modeling a neutron as a spinning 4-ring and the proton as a spinning 6-ring, how does their stored Force x distance compare with the frame energy?
    Minimal influence at distance.
    Gravity is from the contribution of particles to the frame energy, causing the slowing of the motions of all mutually-influencing particles and the recentring of their motions. It is a very small force compared to the charge force. That is a great discovery of Clove Theory.
    All particles are wave systems and in the frame they continually undergo interference, propagating with all the energy-dependent excitations available, Why don't they dissipate completely?
    Spin condenses.
    Spin condensation counters all the mathematically doubtful, infinite-like energy claimed for electrodynamics. A linear-like excitation may be modelled reasonably as oscillating opposed spins.
    To be fair about it, Stückelberg's theory, an extension of Huygens' theory for any such wave system, does seem to work.
    What excitations are accepted in a computation may depend on the basic model, from photons, then onward through the energy scales.
    Once started, with some good guessing, it could be tightly constrained, leading to the depth of belief in electrodynamics that there is today.

  • @Arcsfinx
    @Arcsfinx Před rokem +3

    Oliver Consa’s “Something is wrong in the state of QED” is misleading, and the state of the muon g - 2 calculation has been historically controversial. (another side: the quote about fermi’s reaction to dyson is misattributed to renormalization when it is really about a well-known erroneous calculation in meson theory which was subsequently amended) The techniques used to calculate the newest theoretical /experimental value are still under scrutiny, and should not be taken wholesale as fact. Science is a human endeavor, and error (as shown in consa’s paper) followed by subsequent correction is part of the process. Physics is not always “simple,” the messiness is part of the process and we shouldn’t expect the most elegant theory to be the most “correct” one (most elegant is subjective anyway).

  • @I_dreamed_my_name_was_Brandon

    Thanks for speaking out! There is a general worship of science as being able to accurately explain the universe from macro to micro that alarms me... it doesnt take terribly long to realize that opinions are all over the place, are usually completely contrary to one another, and that generally an astounding amount of "science" is quite frankly bunk.

  • @Jack_Dikian
    @Jack_Dikian Před rokem +15

    This is a great video - Thank you! These offending theories (QED and QFT) are still actively used and serious replacements are not in sight. What has happened instead is that the "embarrassment" has gone away. We have learned to accommodate renormalization and the removal of infinities as just one of the rules of the game.
    Jack Dikian

    • @santerisatama5409
      @santerisatama5409 Před rokem

      No replacements in sight? Hmm... Wolfram's (who knew Feynman well) multicomputational paradigm is actually a non-local hidden variable theory, when you give it some thought....

    • @tictacX1
      @tictacX1 Před rokem +2

      The claim by Unzicker seems to be that the calculation were either fudged by mistake or on purpose to give the right result and that was that, nobody repeated it which is disingenuous. What do you think?

    • @matsab7930
      @matsab7930 Před rokem

      How do you explain the fact that they work? It's not like scientists are just fucking around with theories that don't map on to reality at all, if that were the case there would be no use for this branch of theoretical physics. No, unfortunately you've been entirely duped by this charlatan.

    • @santerisatama5409
      @santerisatama5409 Před rokem +1

      @@matsab7930 Physicist are indeed just fucking around with theories that don't map. They are wanking point-reductionistic "real numbers" which make any and all movement impossible, Zeno on steroids.
      So, most physicists are crazy, because most basic empirism goes: eppur si muove.

    • @matsab7930
      @matsab7930 Před rokem +1

      @@santerisatama5409 that’s exactly how we are able to predict the movement of celestial bodies accurately, plan satellite trajectories through space and precisely control the strength of an electron beam; because physics is just ‘making things up’.
      You clearly have no understanding of physics.

  • @DavidBensonActor
    @DavidBensonActor Před 3 lety +6

    As a newcomer to all this, a physics novice, I am finding your talks extremely interesting. I am being liberated of many of my preconceptions about everything. I have ordered your book and look forward to exploring your channel content.

    • @TheMachian
      @TheMachian  Před 3 lety +3

      Welcome aboard! :-)

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Před 2 lety +3

      @@TheMachian Why are you lying to these people? If you read Dyson's paper, the order at which the QED series diverges is roughly the inverse of the fine-structure constant, so around 130, and we are calculating to order 4 or 5. There is no sense in your complaints, there are pure propaganda.

    • @2tehnik
      @2tehnik Před 2 lety +4

      @@annaclarafenyo8185 and is there a good reason to not take the series beyond the 137th factor?

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Před 2 lety +2

      @@2tehnik To that accuracy, quantum electrodynamics, to the best of our knowledge today, is inconsistent. But that inconsistency is UNDERSTOOD, it isn't something mysterious. It's the "moscow zero" reinterpreted by Wilson to be the degree to which you can approach a continuum limit. Long before the 130th term, you find other effects creep in, strong interactions, weak interactions, finally gravitational interactions, and the theory is replaced. When you use a string theory perturbation theory, there are no more divergences or those type of inconsistencies (there are others).

    • @2tehnik
      @2tehnik Před 2 lety +2

      @@annaclarafenyo8185 > Long before the 130th term, you find other effects creep in, strong interactions, weak interactions, finally gravitational interactions, and the theory is replaced.
      wasn't the dyson series supposed to be for a free electron? I'm just not very familiar with QED so I'm not sure what to make of this.
      > When you use a string theory perturbation theory, there are no more divergences or those type of inconsistencies (there are others).
      Is that the only way to avoid reliance on the Dyson series?

  • @Obladgolated
    @Obladgolated Před 2 lety +4

    Perhaps it is also useful to recall the era in which QED emerged. In the post-WWII atomic physics boom period. physicists were suddenly superstars, with unlimited funding opportunities and the attention of the most powerful political personalities in the world.
    In such an environment, confirmation bias and group-think becomes a survival mechanism. Or, in the words of Guido, a character in the 1983 American teen coming-of-age movie _Risky_ _Business:_ "In times of economic uncertainty, never ever f*** with another man's livelihood."
    The physicists of Richard Feynman's time were smart enough to figure that one out, just as they are today.

    • @mlmimichaellucasmontereyin6765
      @mlmimichaellucasmontereyin6765 Před rokem

      OMG!!! This is equivalent to the best of all possible confirmations & explanations of why Alex's diagnosis is valid (mass-insanity). Yet, Alex failed to cover the pandemic-systemic corruption factor endemic to materialistic capitalist kleptocracy. Thanks & bravo O!!!

  • @TheJara123
    @TheJara123 Před rokem +1

    Hmmm very truely spoken...thank you.

  • @brandonb5075
    @brandonb5075 Před 3 měsíci +1

    At what point do we call this what it is? A Conspiracy Against HUMANITY!
    It is still happening and anyone over, say approximately 50yo+, with a 401k is highly invested in maintaining the destruction of this knowledge.
    Thank you again Alexander…job well done.✌🏼🤙🏼😊

  • @joethestack3894
    @joethestack3894 Před 2 lety +7

    The Stern Gerlach experiment used a beam of silver ions and a non uniform magnetic field to demonstrate quantization of spatial orientation. The interpretation involves the interaction of the orbital electron’s intrinsic angular momentum or magnetic moment with the magnetic field. But a magnetic field is a consequence of the relativistic motion of electrons , or so it can be shown. The magnetic field is a secondary effect of the electric field, but the way it arises is complex compared with the electric field. How the relativistic motion of electrons can give rise to quantization of spatial orientation relative to any arbitrary axis I find quite baffling.

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Před 2 lety +5

      Good that you are mystified! That's indeed the fundamental mystery that leads to quantum mechanics. This was also baffling to Bohr and Sommerfeld. The modern theory of angular momentum explains how this works, the angular momentum is quantized about any axis, but you can consistently rotate the electron, it just gets quantum amplitudes to be spinning one way or the other around the new axis. This is explained well in Feynman's Lectures volume 3, from first principles, toward the middle of the book.

  • @Bankoru
    @Bankoru Před rokem +4

    All physicists understand that all models are temporary. There's always the one problem, the one experiment, that will lead us to new insights, and ignoring them halts progress towards better understanding. The fear is in the inability to figure these things out. QED already required genius breakthroughs in how to handle complex math. There are lots of new theories around, but we may be reaching the limits of what is humanly possible to understand and experimentally verify.

    • @TheMachian
      @TheMachian  Před rokem +7

      Not all physicists understand that some models are nonsense.

  • @AllToDevNull
    @AllToDevNull Před 3 měsíci +1

    So true. Stoyan Sarg rescued me from thes mathematical nonsense. The real genius nobody talks about - his model is brillaint.

  • @james618
    @james618 Před 10 měsíci

    Great video. Thank you.

  • @shreyadas5065
    @shreyadas5065 Před rokem +22

    Thank you very much for explaining patiently with facts and figures (as much as possible without a pen and paper). I am not a physicist. I am an engineer and PhD researcher in medical imaging. But what you mentioned at time point 11:39 about no published code really resonates with me. This is something I also find in my field, medical imaging and engineering. Increasingly, I find in current literature, there is no way of checking someone's models and findings because the codes for the algorithm are not available. Not only that, the Methods section in scientific articles are becoming less and less detailed to the point of being almost eliminated. I do not understand how the reviewers are even reviewing without knowing about the Methods?! In spite of this feeling, I have been also almost forced into reducing details (which I thought were very important) from my own articles.

    • @asdfasdfasdf383
      @asdfasdfasdf383 Před rokem +1

      I can't imagine not publishing the source code. I'm a software engineer, this just seems ridiculous. Completly bogus. Are these people froced to not publish somehow by authority, or do they make this decision by themselves? Whatever the case may be, it speaks against the fundamental principles of science itself. Liberate our World, Free All Information!

    • @tacca2747
      @tacca2747 Před rokem

      I am also an engineer. I would just comment that at least in all the engineering I ever did the end result had to work.

    • @yash1152
      @yash1152 Před rokem

      > _i am also an engineer ...._
      @Tacca engineers lol... but remember, engineering is based in scientific journal papers and theories developed henceforth, not the other way around....
      engineering is just a bunch of coorporate work where u HAVE to show that this stuff works. this did not used to be true for science.
      but alas, coorporate *hit is ever bleaching and creeping in all areas of life.

  • @sklingberg
    @sklingberg Před 3 lety +15

    In Feynman's book QED, a transcript from his lectures, he starts by saying the lecture is about a part of physics that we now about, "that has been very thoroughly analyzed". But in the last chapter he discuss loose ends, giving a feeling that there is much we don't know. The book ends with proofreader's ("fact checkers") comments, smoothing over the problems. My concern is, can we rely on QED? What part can we trust, and where should we be suspicious?

    • @TheMachian
      @TheMachian  Před 3 lety +16

      After carefully examining Consa's papers, the conclusion is: there is nothing in QED we can rely on - something I had suspected, but Consa backed this with a brillant investigation.

    • @KigenEkeson
      @KigenEkeson Před 2 lety +4

      @@TheMachian I haven't read Consa's papers, but surely notions set forth in QED such as the 'sum of all probabilities' contributing to final probabilities as well as the explanations/calculations concerning the degree of reflection of light on translucent surfaces has some validity. Do you disagree?

    • @mlmimichaellucasmontereyin6765
      @mlmimichaellucasmontereyin6765 Před rokem +2

      Alex's insight into Feynman's brilliance & deficiencies & the defects of QED, QM 'physics'/maths, etc., is spot on. There is much that materialistic QMs ('quantum mechanics') don't know because they limit themselves to thinking & talking about a tiny fraction of 5% of the realities of the 'field' of being (the cosmos). Why? Review Alex's final assessment of the psychosocial problem.

    • @sinfinite7516
      @sinfinite7516 Před rokem

      @@KigenEkeson bruh just read Consa’s papers 🗿

  • @doffmoffin
    @doffmoffin Před rokem +2

    In that case I will scratch learning QED off my bucket list of things to do.

  • @solapowsj25
    @solapowsj25 Před 2 lety

    Musings into history, and a ride via photons to the electron shell and positrons, the neutron-new-shell layer and proton, quarks and graviton, and finally into vacuum and antimatter.
    One Atom.

  • @tacca2747
    @tacca2747 Před rokem +3

    Thank you for your very interesting videos. It's about time someone calls out the almost 100 years of seemingly getting nowhere in physics.

    • @yash1152
      @yash1152 Před rokem +2

      ppl are calling out... this video is an example... now it seems its about turning the tables...

  • @Burevestnik9M730
    @Burevestnik9M730 Před 3 lety +8

    Those equations are really nice. If only I could understand them

    • @TerryJLaRue
      @TerryJLaRue Před 2 lety +2

      Don't worry. The writers of the equations apparently didn't understand them either.

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Před 2 lety +3

      @@TerryJLaRue Every competent physicist understands this elementary nonsense. It doesn't take that long to learn it, a year or so, not as long as it took you to learn to read.

    • @Burevestnik9M730
      @Burevestnik9M730 Před 2 lety +4

      @@annaclarafenyo8185 between going after equations and going after skirts I chose the later. not everyone can be Feynman to have both

  • @brunkonjaa
    @brunkonjaa Před rokem +1

    Maybe it would help to consider crazy idea that removes bottom size limit on matter. No bottom limit. Any interaction measurable with any instrument demands physical carrier which means "that" we call field is in fact a lot of currently invisible (due to inadequate technological advances)smaller building blocks of matter.
    Actually, it makes perfect sense to only speak in terms of actual 3d objects interacting with each other. Energy and field are two concepts, or to be more precise two names given to phenomena we currently can't directly observe - we only perceive "it's" influence on other particles of matter that are big enough to be perceived.
    Allowing for size to go on indefinitely "down" can only make sense of many observed interactions. Smaller it is, more powerful it gets - consider force difference between handgranade and and equally sized atomic bomb.
    So, no bottom limit, strictly 3d object interaction, speeds way faster than speed of light to explain billions and billions of interactions before it becomes noticable on our scale size as for example push between magnets.
    So there, crazy idea.

  • @user-it1fi8dn3z
    @user-it1fi8dn3z Před 6 měsíci

    My congratulations, Unzicker! Judging by the comments below, you are the king of Frickland!

  • @NovaWarrior77
    @NovaWarrior77 Před rokem +18

    How do we bring this to people's attention in an intelligent way? It's so unglamorous, it casts some fan-favorite physicists in a bad light and it's already hard to understand what they're proposing let alone the errors in it. But it's absolutely necessary.

    • @ericephemetherson3964
      @ericephemetherson3964 Před rokem

      One must understand that all these caculations are conjectures and are approximate. Hence errors. Sometimes even phycisists don't know what they are talking about. Mathematicians are even worse.

    • @jccusell
      @jccusell Před rokem

      How does it shine a bad light on Scientists?

    • @NovaWarrior77
      @NovaWarrior77 Před rokem

      @@jccusell It showcases that some of them didn't do their due diligence. The techniques used to force the theory to make predictions can give any result you want. That is the same thing as not making any good predictions. A few physicists tied to cheat to make their theory the accepted one.

    • @smallpeople172
      @smallpeople172 Před rokem +2

      @@jccusell they lied about how the equations were done

  • @jameswalters8755
    @jameswalters8755 Před 2 lety +3

    "A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it." - Max Planck QED refutes even Planck's

  • @TerryJLaRue
    @TerryJLaRue Před 2 lety +40

    Finally, someone competent to say the things I have thinking for a long time. While I spent my career in law, I always enjoyed science, and especially physics/math. I have used much of my retirement time in that study.
    I have often read "explanations" in physics that have the ring of a fudge factor. Sometimes after reading something on the inflation theory, dark matter, dark energy or quantum mechanics, I think, "Seriously? Do you guys just make up this crap as you go along?"
    Sabine Hossenfelder wrote a book called "Lost in Math", which looks at much of the unprovable rabbit hole theories of modern physics. It is a good, if depressing, read.

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Před 2 lety +12

      You are wrong, and so is this commentator. He doesn't understand how field theory calculations work, or how asymptotic series work. The calculations in QED are also relatively easy to check, you can automate the lowest orders in symbolic packages, and the integrals are not that hard to do. You can calculate the lowest order correction by hand in an afternoon, like Schwinger did.
      This stuff isn't easy, but it isn't nonsense.

    • @phumgwatenagala6606
      @phumgwatenagala6606 Před 2 lety +3

      @@annaclarafenyo8185 you haven’t convinced anyone - let me guess “it’s too complicated to understand” lol good luck with that, history will tell us how great these approximations are

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Před 2 lety +11

      @@phumgwatenagala6606 It's not "too complicated to understand", if you dedicate yourself, you can learn it quickly, and it's extremely interesting.

    • @secretagent7888
      @secretagent7888 Před 2 lety +1

      Particularly dark matter and enrgy I see as epicycles. I'm glad I came across Unzicker, at least I am nt alone in being at least a bit suspicious sometimes. QED was just too neat a name for this branch of physics and I just didn't believe how neat and tidy it all was. It was rather like assuming a spherical horse.

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Před 2 lety +1

      @@secretagent7888 Your opinions are ignorant of the experimental and theoretical situation, you just are going by your gut feelings. Dark matter and 'dark energy' (cosmological constant) are both real and measured, they are not mathematical artifacts. QED is NOT "too neat", it's INCONSISTENT. The propaganda about 'good match to experiment' (which it is) was to DISGUISE THAT IT IS INCONSISTENT.
      Also, everyone knew QED was inconsistent since the 1950s when Landau argued it. But they also knew it was insanely accurate, because the charge on the electron is so small. This was the shouting match in physics in the 60s: "It's inconsistent!" "But it's ACCURATE", "But it's INCONSISTENT!", "BUT IT'S ACCURATE!!" and so on to ever louder volume. That was the debate on quantum field theory which lasted until 1974.
      Modern field theory was born in 1974 with QCD. Unlike QED, which is inconsistent, QCD is FULLY CONSISNTENT, but our calculations so far inside them are horribly inaccurate. That's because of lousy mathematical methods.

  • @waynelast1685
    @waynelast1685 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Fascinating thanks

  • @Tim-Kaa
    @Tim-Kaa Před rokem +1

    Excellent video. Time to grab a new generation of quants, roll back into 1947 conference and science settings and start over.

  • @christophershelton8155
    @christophershelton8155 Před 2 lety +3

    The amount of energy an electron gives off at any given moment is definitely not infinite, but the total energy an electron has the potential to give off over its lifetime can definitely be quite large for some scenarios? and what is the electron's energy source? other than the relationship it has with photons through the photoelectric effect

    • @mlmimichaellucasmontereyin6765
      @mlmimichaellucasmontereyin6765 Před rokem +1

      Why imagine an "electron" -- as a separate, discreet, independent thing? Why not get real, and consider all forms & modes & effects of E as inseparable, interdependent, interactive 'field-effects'?

  • @radiofun232
    @radiofun232 Před 3 lety +4

    A very interesting video. I like your idea's and have subscribed to your channel. One advice: use a better microphone and/or do something regarding the audio quality of your video's; the audio "drowns" in a certain way.

  • @preis55
    @preis55 Před rokem +1

    The extension of the diagram techniques to Condensed Matter Physics by the Russians in the late 50s early 60s seem to predict the superconducting, magnetic and the Kondo transition, and associated thermodynamics of these phases, starting with the correct Hamiltonian. Feynman also said in 64, "that no theory can be proven right, because tomorrow's experiments can prove what you thought right to be wrong, we can only be sure that our guesses are wrong."

  • @danielesantospirito5743
    @danielesantospirito5743 Před rokem +2

    I found this really interesting, and I'm sure I will look for more evidence regarding your insightful ideas. I gotta admit, as I like mathematics, I have always been skeptical ever since I heard of renormalization, but of course I always thought I should not comment on a theory I haven't studied yet (I'm 16). I will try to dive into QFT keeping in mind your view, because this theory still seems somewhat intriguing to me. (I'm on the way to read the book "quantum field theory in curved spacetime" by Parker and Toms)

  • @antoinebrgt
    @antoinebrgt Před rokem +43

    I don't know is this video is some kind of hoax or if it meant to be taken seriously... In the latter case, I would like to make a few comments for those who might watch it and think that indeed QED is flawed in some way. First, the fact that the series is divergent is well known, and it's not a problem, the concept of asymptotic series explains why it's still useful and provides the right answer. Second, renormalization is now well understood, and the quotes from 50 years ago mean nothing in this respect (they simply reflect the status of the field as viewed by their author at the time). Finally, for possible errors in the computation of magnetic moments, I have not checked myself and there might have been errors in the past, but this computation has been checked several times by independent teams by now, so I consider it very unlikely that there remain such mistakes as the omission of a diagram.
    Globally a very deceptive video...

    • @TheMachian
      @TheMachian  Před rokem +6

      People who claim that something is "now well understood" usually do not understand it. Good luck with further parroting then.

    • @ndiaz9676
      @ndiaz9676 Před rokem +18

      I was searching for a comment like this..As a physicist my self I can only support your comment and strongly suggest nobody takes this extremely deceptive video seriously

    • @antoinebrgt
      @antoinebrgt Před rokem +8

      @@TheMachian I don't think I'm parroting, I just say renormalization is well understood because I understand it, in the case of QED it's at the level of a graduate course (for non abelian gauge theories it's technically harder).

    • @stratm
      @stratm Před rokem +10

      I am truly inclined to agree with you, but I always come back to the fact that it is non falsifiable. There is something missing, and we are deceiving ourselves If we think our current understanding is even close to what is actually going on.

    • @cunjoz
      @cunjoz Před rokem +5

      @@stratm thank you for approaching science with epistemology. this is sorely lacking.

  • @observing_paradoxes
    @observing_paradoxes Před rokem +3

    I personally see renormalization as a (poor) way to localize a fundamentally non-local theory. I believe it is possible that all the divergences in QED arise from the electromagnetic vacuum (and thus the whole field) being described as a global manifold in energy space. Renormalization just "localizes" the energy space. Arbitrarily selecting the ball over which the energy is localized is not a good way to select an appropriate neighborhood. QFT needs to be localized and GR needs to be delocalized a little. The boundaries need to be well defined somehow. I don't agree that renormalization is nonsense...it arises out of necessity. Is it good? No. Is it not physical? No. Infinite spaces are hard to deal with. That doesn't make it wrong, it is just not quite right.

    • @Littleprinceleon
      @Littleprinceleon Před rokem +1

      The end of your pondering with the questions "Is it good? Is it not physical?" reminds me of Hindu mā-jā:
      "Is the world real?" Not that!
      "Is the world an illusion?" Not that!
      Just replace "world" with "wavefunction"....

  • @Bankoru
    @Bankoru Před rokem

    And what about analytic continuation of the Riemann Zeta function methods used in cases like the Casimir effect?

    • @1997CWR
      @1997CWR Před rokem

      Are you sure the Casimir effect derivation needs to use the analytic contineation of the Zeta function?

  • @walrustrent2001
    @walrustrent2001 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Someone has to say that the emperor is naked. Truth will prevail.
    I also liked Feynman's character very much, and he was certainly a good teacher. But I won't give up on science because of him, and we have to admit that we were fooled by his charm - a telegenic physicist more adapted to the era of media fame than his grumpy dust-collecting predecessors.
    Let's listen to grumpy old men once again, even if they are not going to tell us wonderful news.

  • @sdwone
    @sdwone Před rokem +4

    To be honest, when I was grappling with QED renomalization techniques for the first time, during my MSc course at Imperial College in the late 1990s, I had this nagging feeling that this was all just a mathematical fudge! And that we only got "accurate" results based on a fluke! Well, when you're combining infinite quantities that magically cancel out to give you the result you wanted... What else can you call it?!
    And now with these new muon anomalies? Time to go back to the black board methinks!!!

    • @spaceman4286
      @spaceman4286 Před rokem +1

      I think that's pretty standard otherwise we wouldn't make any progress. Physics' history is more or less of eventually going back to the blackboard. Remember the luminiferous aether fiasco? That theory began in its infancy back at 17th century in order to explain the propagation of light, even Newton argued for it, and the final shot was given by Michelson and Morley with their experiment. Was it truly over? Of course not, it took 10 more years until we got a theory of relativity that could explain more coherently and agree better with the experimental results.
      QCD might have its weaknesses but so does every theory in physics, at least as far back as the 17th century.

    • @chanrasjid8688
      @chanrasjid8688 Před rokem +2

      The algebraic operators operate only on operands. Infinities are not algebraic operands.
      Chan Rasjid Kah Chew.

  • @jostpuur
    @jostpuur Před 6 měsíci

    What about the cross sections of particle collisions? Have the theoretical predictions from QED ever been compared to empirical cross sections? When speaking about tests of QED, people always speak about anomalous magnetic dipole moment or Lamb shift, but what about the particle collisions?

  • @jdalton4552
    @jdalton4552 Před měsícem

    Alexander Unzicker is a true patriot of science and very brave and astute.

  • @DKFX1
    @DKFX1 Před rokem +4

    Hello Mr Unzicker. I just revisited your video and mused myself reading the comments. I just wanted to let you know that all your efforts of raising concern about these theories is well appreciated and well-founded.
    I am among one of those individuals that have put great effort and energy into building a serious alternative model of atomic physics. The work has been on hold for a period of time, but great strides have been made, probably much beyond your reasonable expectation. You seem like a rare breed of physicist with healthy skepticism towards modern particle physics approaches.
    You are a leading physics expert of our time. Why - you might ask. It is because you have a great talent for recognizing what good physics is what it is supposed to do, and simultaneously you easily recognize what bad physics looks like and have a willingness to be frank about it when you observe it.
    This combination of attributes is seemingly very rare and makes you a very valuable voice in the conversation about modern theoretical particle physics.

  • @ZeroOskul
    @ZeroOskul Před 2 lety +3

    Hello, Professor,
    Have I invited you to look at "Lightning in Super Duper Slow Motion"?
    This and similar videos seem to show instrument recordings of the atmosphere's reaction to the activity of a quantum Gamma Photon.
    You can apparently watch the photon spread as a wave of nodes and then collapse to a definite state and sometimes (in other videos) into two definite states.
    If we saw no wave we could assume that alternative pathays were being written in alternate worlds and this would give reason to trust "Many Worlds".
    But seeing a wave and its collapse seems to really strongly buttresses "Copenhagen".
    Ciao!
    Allex

    • @mlmimichaellucasmontereyin6765
      @mlmimichaellucasmontereyin6765 Před rokem +1

      Definitions, terms, maps, and models are not the territories, nor the realities they fractionally seem to represent. Also, what you "See" is what you get. So, what you "do" with maps, models, and EWAGs is your own affair (and/or personal mental fiction, or whatever). Rite?

  • @RupecPupec
    @RupecPupec Před 2 lety +2

    Did Mr. Unzicker hear about Kenneth Wilson? Maybe he could make a video about him and the renormalization group?

  • @mykofreder1682
    @mykofreder1682 Před rokem +1

    The continuation of the series without feedback from experiments for doing this is just creating equations to fit the numbers, string theory seems to have taken the same approach. At the large scale with interaction that have been proven is good for an estimate, all the additional interactions no one has created and proven is just a series of fudge factors. There are things going on that no one will ever understand, but you can't assign fake numbers and explanations to things you don't know about or have measure. A lot of the interactions are with gravitational plasma which may be separate from atomic physics, may never be measured and be in a different dimension. Everything with mas produces an additive gravitational effect that travels out in all directions at the speed of light and even black holes can contain it, obviously something is going on with every subatomic particle and it changes when particles get together, are the particles drawing their energy in an exchange with this this plasma.

  • @tomnoyb8301
    @tomnoyb8301 Před 2 lety +6

    Yes, go back to the beginning and start over. Step-1 Derive (wave) equations for single photons. electrons, protons and neutrons. No statistical functions allowed. Use only directly measurable quantities, such as E and H. It is incomprehensible that physics has no equation of a single photon? Nor any curiosity whatsoever to discover the equation?

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Před 2 lety +2

      The wave equation for a single photon depends on the gauge you choose for the field, and in the most convenient gauges, there are extra polarizations, some with negative norm as quantum states. That's why people don't write it down. The Feynman propagator is actually a wave equation (inverted, and in k-space). It depends on the gauge, and you can't use E and H, because photons are all vector potential.

    • @bryanroland9402
      @bryanroland9402 Před 2 lety

      @@annaclarafenyo8185 Nice to see a comment from someone who knows something about the subject or knows someone who does. Most people like you wouldn't waste their time with this channel but the audience that its designed for should have the opportunity to see comments like yours.

  • @jupytr1
    @jupytr1 Před rokem +3

    Consa says in his paper "However, the Riemann function is defined only for positive values, since for negative values the Riemann function
    diverges to infinity. The Riemann function of -1 is equal to
    the sum of all positive integers. " however that is false as the "Riemann function" is defined everywhere except for a simple pole at 1.

    • @TheMachian
      @TheMachian  Před rokem

      I guess this is just a typo; however, it does not affect the validit of his argument.

  • @dsm5d723
    @dsm5d723 Před rokem +2

    I'm glad the You Tube algorithm suggested your channel. All of the rebel, rational physics people who are brave and rational enough to object to bs deserve praise. Societally, we are watching the breakdown of trust in all manners of "scientific" endeavors. If you go back to Von Neumann, he said that nobody understands entropy, so you can use it to win arguments. None of the theoretical physicists involved with QED theory really understand or understood magnetism and di-electricity. Tesla, Steinmetz and their peers did, but communicating the monistic concept of counterspace was virtually impossible. From the very beginning of electrical engineering, there was a divergence between the monistic designers of functioning physical systems and the atomistic theoreticians who never interacted with or designed anything in the real world (Einstein).

  • @RandomGuyOnYoutube601
    @RandomGuyOnYoutube601 Před rokem +2

    I took QED course at my university about 10 years ago. I am not ashamed to admit that I did not understand almost anything. Now it turns out it was even bigger waste of time then I thought.

  • @rafitiki
    @rafitiki Před 2 lety +3

    I’m not commenting about the rest, but wkb series are usually divergent yet Borel summable so Dyson’s argument does not quite hold ;)

  • @GordIsKing
    @GordIsKing Před rokem +5

    Your assertions remind me of the work of Mendel Sachs. I'm wondering if you've heard of him. He was a theoretical physicist at University at Buffalo whose opinions of QED were similar to your own. He developed his own nonlinear field theory inspired by Einstein's own work and made many remarkable claims for it. It did not suffer from infinities and he was able to show that QED was a
    linear approximation to it. He was widely seen as a "crackpot" but I haven't come across anyone who has formally refuted him. I think he did make some claims though that have turned out to be wrong regarding black holes, the twin paradox, gravitational waves. But I'm not sure these wrong predictions are a necessary outcome of his ideas.

  • @brainxyz
    @brainxyz Před rokem

    Because of Computational irreducibility, for observers like us, Re-normalization and Coarse-graining may be a necessary abstraction to understand the world around us even with imperfect precision as long as that "understanding" is useful for our survival.

  • @augustoenriquebarretoreyes6735

    447 previous comments : very, very interesting article. As a totally "outsider", just a curious person, thank you. Vaguely remember having read "Superforce" something like "conveniently packed all those infinities that plagued the theory, were disposed off" "renormalization" .... togheter with "superinflation" epoch ---- well that kind of "physics" do not generate food nor its distribution to people who dies of starvation, but ....

    • @GreenEarth20
      @GreenEarth20 Před rokem

      Yeah exactly, "I know almost nothing about this field but will take everything you said at face value. QED is wrong, thank you sir!"
      Really bro?

  • @theoreticalphysicsnickharv7683

    It is a sad story, I am dyslexic and outside of mainstream physics maybe that is a good thing! Math should represent the geometry of a three dimensional process in my opinion. It is a good idea to look all the way back to the ideas of Ancient Greece, Plato, Aristotle and Pythagoras. Equations are a great tool, but geometry is real!

    • @fukikobryant5067
      @fukikobryant5067 Před 3 lety

      four dimensions is possible Kaluza had 4 space dimensions plus time..
      it helps squeeze the energy into small volumes as in a proton.

  • @walterblanc9708
    @walterblanc9708 Před rokem +5

    I remember hearing stuff about QED being built on sand at the start of my working life in the 80's and it sounds like it still is today. How on earth can these physicists get away with it and why has nobody corrected it from the ground up, surely with so many years and advances in technology they could work out something that did not rely on this Carte Blanche Maths? I also from time to time read about Physicists that suppossedly put Re-normalisation on a secure bedrock of respectability unfortunately nobody seems to be able to explain it in simple english. Thankyou for a very interesting video. Happy New Year.

  • @parthabanerjee1234
    @parthabanerjee1234 Před rokem +2

    From the unquenchable thirst to understand the nature of nature in the 19th and early 20th centuries in Europe, physics evolved into a subject of computation in the United States, in which a mathematical framework could predict with high precision what would or could happen, but it was least interested in the mechanism. Feynman himself once talked about this phenomenon. In a lecture, he said that a Mayan priest could say with a lot of precision when such and such planet would be seen in such and such position in the sky because of his ability to calculate, without having any idea how the planet moved. I can calculate the distance my car will cover if it moves at a certain velocity for a certain time. But I don't know anything about the engine or the inner functioning of the car. The ability to predict is very nice to have. But I do not understand quantum mechanics. Nobody can claim to do so. And, the point is to understand. Else, quantum mechanics will remain very useful. Technologies are useful. Science is much more than just being useful. It is food for thought. It is the passion of the curious. It is the romance with the unknown.
    Perhaps the difference lies in what has driven physics in these two continents. Physics in Europe has been philosophy motivated while physics in America has been technology motivated. This is why quantum mechanics brought a revolution in technology. But all we know is this bizarre thing called the standard model that makes no sense. Let alone anything, we can't even explain the double-slit experiment.

    • @sidviscous5959
      @sidviscous5959 Před rokem

      and wasn't the first version of the double-slit experiment performed by Young in 1802?

  • @philiprose5895
    @philiprose5895 Před 2 lety +2

    This zigzagging would be Zitterbewegung as found by Schroedinger and explains the anomalies without virtual particles and vacuum energy (apart from Higgs expectation value). Puzzles me that neither Penrose or current Fachleute have spotted this. It would be nice to have a theory explaining inertia, mass and anomalies without recourse to magic particles and misuse of Heisenberg indeterminancy. Hestense studied Zitter closely and produced an elegant phenomenology but missed the connection to electro-weak theory. Appreciate your view. Sorry for truncation!

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Před 2 lety

      Zitterbewegung isn't from Schrodinger, it's from a bad interpretation of the Dirac equation in the 1930s. The high frequency components are positrons.

    • @max_mel1
      @max_mel1 Před rokem

      @@annaclarafenyo8185 Interesting! You have a source?

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Před rokem

      @@max_mel1 This is well known from the 1930s, I genuinely forget the authors, but this is why "Zitterbewegung" disappears from the literature, people understood that the one-particle interpretation was untenable. Probably the best source for this change is Klein, but the 1930s field theory papers are nowadays unreadable, because they are pre-Feynman, pre-Schwinger.

  • @nking4584
    @nking4584 Před 2 lety +4

    Oh dear... oh dear... oh dear ! ... now there is just NOTHING left which is sacred !!!
    STRANGE... as I went to hit the like button I saw the current number of likes was '666' ... oh dear, oh dear, oh dear... Nosmo.

  • @rubenanthonymartinez7034
    @rubenanthonymartinez7034 Před 3 lety +19

    Boy, these theoretical physicist have become cult like. And you my friend is exposing the cult, and for that, I thank you

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 Před 2 lety

      My thoughts are they don’t know how to read a math book similar to the Indus script. They jump in trying to grab something almost within their grasp. It should be simple. The go from harder to harder like the effort is justified. Simple elegant and truthful just gets farther and farther away. Not one person seems to say it will ever be any different.

    • @joshuascholar3220
      @joshuascholar3220 Před 2 lety

      This one is too emotional. You need some skepticism of the people whose egos are so hurt that they talk the way he does. The emotion is one of the reason they're called "cranks."

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Před 2 lety +2

      Hmmm.... perhaps the cult leader is the one making this video?

    • @brendawilliams8062
      @brendawilliams8062 Před 2 lety +1

      @@annaclarafenyo8185 hands down. I quit

    • @rubenanthonymartinez7034
      @rubenanthonymartinez7034 Před 2 lety

      @@brendawilliams8062 coward!

  • @alwaysfourfun1671
    @alwaysfourfun1671 Před 4 měsíci +1

    What a message! Something that a new generation has to chew on. In a time where people earn billions with the applied physics and material science to do "bad" and a little bit of "good", is it still relevant? Or is it just for the "purists", those that do not want to give in to believe. Is there any funding for such science? No? Then, it has to come from just a few, too smart for their adminstrators, to be exhonerated from the pursuit of funding acquisition. I really like your presentations! Thank you.

  • @thedouglasw.lippchannel5546

    Quantum Electrodynamics - "Fughetaboutit". Try CIG Theory by clicking on the link above.

  • @haroldhamburgler
    @haroldhamburgler Před rokem +3

    Another one of these videos that make a stink about renormalization that does not cover or even mention the work by Weinberg and Salem that demonstrated that all quantum field theories are effective field theories, which explained why renormalization was required to remove these infinities. As for the early papers in QED, it not a surprise to me at least that they were some what fudged to match the experiment.
    As for the agreement with experiment, yes it seems that Karplus and Kroll manipulated there results to better match experiment, but results for g after them both moved the number closer and further from the experimental value at different times. Also, it is clear that any publication accepting a QFT result should require a supplement containing all diagrams used and their value whether computed by human or computer.
    Lastly, the Dyson paper where he proves that all Dyson series (actually for phi 4 theory not QED, but it turned out the same was true in QED) also had a latter development that dealt with this issue. It is called Borel re-summation and it is somewhat obscure, so I don’t think you excluded this fact out of malice. Borel re-summation allows you to take a divergent perturbative expansion at a non-analytic point like free field theory and turn it into a good approximation of the underlying function. It sees standard use in high order Dyson expansions. More generally, the first terms of a divergent power series can actually provide a good approximation of the underlying function if their magnitude decreases to a minimum before increasing. The magnitude of the minimum term in series sets the order of the error in the result. This is exactly the situation in QED. You can calculate that the terms in included in the series for g are decreasing in all of the examples you show.

    • @TheMachian
      @TheMachian  Před rokem

      If you want to continue living in your illusion by inventing ever more mathematical sophistication that is physically nonsensical, then good luck with that. But do not tell me you have done the calculations.

    • @haroldhamburgler
      @haroldhamburgler Před rokem +2

      @@TheMachian you cannot simultaneously demand mathematical rigor and shun mathematical sophistication.

    • @haroldhamburgler
      @haroldhamburgler Před rokem +2

      @@TheMachian btw what calculation would you like to see? The g factor to second order? Since said you don’t believe I can do the calculation.

    • @TheMachian
      @TheMachian  Před rokem

      Ok, I suggest you get the Feynman IIc graph published in a good journal first, since nobody has done it yet.

  • @ChrisSmith-vq4wu
    @ChrisSmith-vq4wu Před 3 lety +5

    It is so refreshing to see some truth in this field, please keep making videos. Physics is beautiful in itself as it is a reflection of the Creator.

    • @michaelpieters1844
      @michaelpieters1844 Před 2 lety

      @@annaclarafenyo8185 I would advice you to stop trolling these fora.

    • @JosephStalin-yk2hd
      @JosephStalin-yk2hd Před 2 lety +1

      @@michaelpieters1844 I would advise to to trust another source, other then this channels’ unfounded, and unbacked evidence, regarding the ‘soundness’ of theoretical physics.

    • @michaelpieters1844
      @michaelpieters1844 Před 2 lety +1

      @@JosephStalin-yk2hd So instead of thinking for myself, I have to 'trust' the soundness of theoretical physics. And this comes from someone who names himself 'Joseph Stalin'. Right ....

    • @JosephStalin-yk2hd
      @JosephStalin-yk2hd Před 2 lety

      @@michaelpieters1844 then I would recommend you keep debating the soundness of physics, with ANNA.

    • @gibbogle
      @gibbogle Před rokem

      You mean creators - there have been many contributors to physics.

  • @yr0
    @yr0 Před rokem

    14:55 are these “E” not all different, like one is electric field one is the energy in all the mass?

  • @barryispuzzled
    @barryispuzzled Před rokem

    Wonderful!

  • @rubenanthonymartinez7034
    @rubenanthonymartinez7034 Před 2 lety +3

    The collective quackery!

    • @thereligionofrationality8257
      @thereligionofrationality8257 Před 2 lety +1

      @@annaclarafenyo8185 Could you direct me to your contributions in the field of Physics? So far I haven't been able to find them in the literature.

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Před 2 lety

      @@thereligionofrationality8257 How would you know how to look?

    • @thereligionofrationality8257
      @thereligionofrationality8257 Před 2 lety +2

      @@annaclarafenyo8185 Riiiiight. You could have provided a link. But you can't. You're a charlatan.

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Před 2 lety

      @@thereligionofrationality8257 I could have provided a link were I to wish to break my anonymity.

    • @thereligionofrationality8257
      @thereligionofrationality8257 Před 2 lety

      @@annaclarafenyo8185 🤣🤣🤣 Why? Are you a secret frigging agent? OMG, I am pissing my pants laughing, here! 🤣🤣🤣

  • @paulwolf3302
    @paulwolf3302 Před 3 lety +4

    The math in QED is too difficult for me.

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Před 2 lety +1

      It's not THAT difficult, just learn perturbation theory from any quantum mechanics book, and apply the formalism to the electromagnetic field. It's not mysterious, it's straightforward. The tough part is getting good relativistic results, that's what Feynman Schwinger and Stueckelberg did.

  • @onderozenc4470
    @onderozenc4470 Před 2 lety +1

    QED theory is only consistent in nuclear dimensions where the Electromagnetic interactions among the quarks are confined into nuclear dimensions (similar to general theory of relativity) resulting in the field condensation called "gluons".

    • @TheMachian
      @TheMachian  Před 2 lety +1

      By this stage, the quark-parton model was in danger to becoming more elaborate than the data which it was intended to explain. A critic could easily assert that the sea quark and gluon components were simply ad hoc devices, designed to reconcile the expected properties of quarks with experimental findings. Field theorists could argue that the sea and glue would be required in any sensible field theory of quarks (although they had no actual candidate for such a theory...). (Andrew Pickering)

    • @onderozenc4470
      @onderozenc4470 Před 2 lety

      @@TheMachian OK buddy, by all means I believe that nuclear force can be best explained by the General Theory of Relativity"s paradigm of energy density which results in the condensation of the electrostatic energy in the form of "gluons".
      Yes, the gluons are indeed the condensed form of the energy that will soon be called the "sixth form of matter".

  • @Antediluvian137
    @Antediluvian137 Před rokem +1

    Maybe it's possible that the development of science at the time was promising to be so groundbreaking for humanity, and therefore a threat to established power structures, that there was a desire to hijack the leading edge of science, and steer it into inconsistency ... Just a hypothesis.

  • @haushofer100
    @haushofer100 Před rokem +4

    Look, QFT is mathematically-formally ill-defined. I think no sane physicist thinks otherwise. But it agrees spectacularly with experiment. The fact that renormalization works, is kind of a miracle and certainly not a matter of underconstraining and having the freedom of tuning parameters to agree with experiment. Once you've fixed, with your favourite regularization scheme, one process, the theory should predict processes along all the other energy scales. And surprise: it does. We understand this miracle nowadays in terms of the effective field theory paradigm, which is nowhere mentioned in this whole video! Claiming that this process is trivial is a misunderstanding of the theory. If Unzicker does not agree: make a video, perform a specific renormalization and show us where things go wrong instead of pointing to works of other people. That's dishonest and lazy.
    QFT is already a dippy framework on its own. We quantize a classical theory, like the electromagnetic field, because we humans are classical creatures. But nature isn't. So it's highly unnatural to start from a classical theory and "quantize it". The reason it works, is basically the highly succesful divide-and-conquer strategy and separation of energy scales in nature. So thank you for that, Kenneth Wilson. Apart from that, we integrate in all those Feynman diagrams up to infinity, pretending that spacetime remains smooth at arbitrarily small length-scales. It's not, of course. We even start like that in a background dependent matter in String Theory, because we don't know how to do it differently (exceptions: non-commutative spacetimes or Loop Quantum Gravity, coming with their own problems).
    So with all those caveats it's not surprising that QFT is ill-defined. But that doesn't mean we cannot extract physically measurable properties from this approximation! Again: this is highly non-trivial. If Unzicker claims this is merely a question of tuning parameters or wishfull thinking: show us mathematically in a video. Perform the math. Do the calculations. That's how you do physics. You're not doing physics. You're doing a populistic history review to backup your own agenda. That's dishonest.

    • @TheMachian
      @TheMachian  Před rokem

      If something is dishonest and lazy it is refuse to read Consa's papers and continuing to parrot how spectacularly QED agrees with experiment.

    • @haushofer100
      @haushofer100 Před rokem +4

      @@TheMachian I don't parrot. I do calculations. Unlike you.

    • @orthoplex64
      @orthoplex64 Před rokem

      @@haushofer100 Please make some QFT videos with calculations. I, like many, have been starving for a better understanding of QFT. Your piano videos from several years ago are quite nice but I'm sure explanatory physics videos would be widely appreciated as well. I subscribed to you just now, so I'll be notified and will watch any coming videos.

    • @haushofer100
      @haushofer100 Před rokem

      @@orthoplex64 I've thought about making some YT content on my own, so who knows! Funny you remember my piano pieces, I haven't l listened to them for many years :D