Alan Guth - Why is the Universe Expanding?

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  • čas přidán 11. 12. 2022
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    We know our universe is expanding-this is one of humankind’s seminal discoveries. What caused such colossal expansion? We call it the Big Bang, but what were the forces involved? How do they work? What are the implications for understanding the cosmos? And why is the expansion of the universe accelerating? What does this hold for the future?
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    Alan Harvey Guth is an American theoretical physicist and cosmologist. Guth has researched elementary particle theory (and how particle theory is applicable to the early universe). He is currently serving as Victor Weisskopf Professor of Physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and he is the originator of the inflationary universe theory.
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    Closer to Truth, hosted by Robert Lawrence Kuhn and directed by Peter Getzels, presents the world’s greatest thinkers exploring humanity’s deepest questions. Discover fundamental issues of existence. Engage new and diverse ways of thinking. Appreciate intense debates. Share your own opinions. Seek your own answers.

Komentáře • 611

  • @riffsthatkill2180
    @riffsthatkill2180 Před rokem +13

    That comment about the negative energy of gravity being equal to the positive energy of matter, this making the total energy 0 is something I remember from Victor Stinger's book. He was speaking about it as a retort to the argument "why is there something rather than nothing".

  • @avlsage
    @avlsage Před rokem +5

    Protect Alan Guth at all costs!

  • @darioinfini
    @darioinfini Před rokem +4

    For all the precision and excellence of this theory, I have a 99.9% confidence that it will be proven wrong in 100 years. "It was once thought... but now we know..."

  • @liberty-matrix
    @liberty-matrix Před rokem +27

    In another interview Alan said that he hit upon the idea of 'inflation' at home and set a personal best in riding his bike to the Stanford Campus that morning to run the calculations. Wow!

    • @mysticjedi6730
      @mysticjedi6730 Před rokem

      You would not believe my shock when I figured out the probability of a larger system like our own coming into existence.. the equation does not explain the mechanism from nothing but the probability and the why it came into existence.. the probability of it happening and the why it came into existence...
      Will be publishing work soon.. it feels like I uncovered the most fundamental answer ever... why is there something rather than nothing...
      Can't wait to publish it..

    • @mysticjedi6730
      @mysticjedi6730 Před rokem

      @DieselPower I don't see the need for stupid jokes...

    • @HarryNicNicholas
      @HarryNicNicholas Před rokem

      was it ccc that came to roger penrose wile was trying to remember why he crossed the road?

    • @Sebrewer32
      @Sebrewer32 Před rokem

      @@mysticjedi6730 how soon is soon?

    • @pathofonepiece
      @pathofonepiece Před rokem

      @@mysticjedi6730 Keep me in the loop if possible will ya? This particular question is something that all must chase in their own way I believe.

  • @Thor_Asgard_
    @Thor_Asgard_ Před rokem +42

    The simple answer would be, we dont really know. Greetings by a fellow physicist.

    • @NondescriptMammal
      @NondescriptMammal Před rokem

      Good to see this said. Any true scientist would readily admit that we don't know, before launching into their wild speculations on cosmology. We. Don't. Know. And even the best speculations by the greatest scientific minds are just educated speculations, and I've yet to hear an explanation of the so-called Big Bang that wasn't full of strange assumptions that defy all our knowledge of physics, and lead to even more unanswered questions.

    • @wingoreviewsboxingandmma3667
      @wingoreviewsboxingandmma3667 Před rokem

      Why couldnt dark energy become matter considering E=Mc Squared?

    • @Flipson456
      @Flipson456 Před rokem

      What happens when you go into a black hole?

    • @Thor_Asgard_
      @Thor_Asgard_ Před rokem +4

      @@wingoreviewsboxingandmma3667 Well ... Dark Energy is nothing but numbers at this point. Its an abstract concept to make a theory work. Also the term Energy is missleading.

    • @rsmithabq8304
      @rsmithabq8304 Před rokem +1

      Thank you fellow physicist , I like simple . Too many people are out there , who claim to be educated intelligent , and would rather talk in circles than state the obvious .

  • @NeverCryWolf64
    @NeverCryWolf64 Před rokem +27

    Thanks for expanding my mind as well as the universe.

  • @astro-blaster4190
    @astro-blaster4190 Před rokem +8

    I’m very proud of Alan. He’s retained all the knowledge I taught him and has expanded and explains my theories quite well. Education works!

    • @mrbamfo5000
      @mrbamfo5000 Před rokem +1

      Congratulations Professor!

    • @astro-blaster4190
      @astro-blaster4190 Před rokem

      @@mrbamfo5000 thank you. The universe is enchantingly haunting and full of fruits of innumerable knowledge waiting to be squeezed. May you be blessed as you try to understand it’s mysterious ways.

  • @markberman6708
    @markberman6708 Před rokem +3

    Brilliant episode.

  • @emergentform1188
    @emergentform1188 Před rokem +17

    Love it. Guth is legend.

  • @TheGmusy
    @TheGmusy Před rokem +4

    An animated explanation would be great on these videos. Thanks 👍🏾

  • @CoolBeansGG
    @CoolBeansGG Před rokem +11

    Love these videos so much !!

  • @willbrink
    @willbrink Před rokem

    Fascinating!

  • @quanphung9966
    @quanphung9966 Před rokem +4

    Alan Guth, wow! 👍

  • @magnetospin
    @magnetospin Před rokem +1

    Where can I find the rest of this interview?

  • @markberman6708
    @markberman6708 Před rokem +4

    Oooo first I've heard someone talk about revulsion regarding gravity.... heh, so nice to hear and think of where this might lead, especially if we discover the energy provider...

    • @mrbamfo5000
      @mrbamfo5000 Před rokem

      That's what perked my ears up, but also he said negative energy exists. The gram of negative energy is theoretical at this point, but I had to rewind to make sure he said that all magnetic fields are negative energy. If true that means negative energy does exist. So all I was thinking was that the reason warp drives are still considered highly unlikely is that they need negative energy to work.

  • @yerbool
    @yerbool Před rokem +2

    what is the name of the hypothetical particle with repulsive force?

  • @_nick_d
    @_nick_d Před rokem

    That’s a deep convo 😳

  • @NorthernChev
    @NorthernChev Před rokem +1

    This thread is LOADED with people who either didn’t listen, or don’t have enough knowledge of the details of what he is speaking of to understand, but yet still feel that they are educated enough to make ridiculously incorrect statements about what they think they just saw.

  • @friedpicklezzz
    @friedpicklezzz Před rokem +1

    Hmmm one thing I don’t understand, which is the title of the video.
    If the negative energy from gravitational forces cancelled out the positive ones (net zero), why is the universe expanding and why is it expanding more rapidly?
    Thanks!

  • @NondescriptMammal
    @NondescriptMammal Před rokem +3

    The whole thing sounds very speculative to me, and seems to be full of speculations that fly in the face of everything we think we already knew about physics.

    • @eddiebrown192
      @eddiebrown192 Před rokem +1

      Inflation is bunk . Guthrie is a charlatan

    • @misterhill5598
      @misterhill5598 Před rokem +1

      Yep.
      Indistinguishable from science fiction.

  • @pukulu
    @pukulu Před rokem +5

    Alan Guth always talks in such a matter of fact manner about ideas which are so unbelievable that you're left dumbfounded.

    • @v3le
      @v3le Před rokem

      like a priest!

    • @nickmerix2900
      @nickmerix2900 Před rokem +1

      @@v3le exactly ! Preaching the new religion of cosmology

    • @joshkeeling82
      @joshkeeling82 Před rokem

      @@v3le No. A Priest uses faith. Cosmologists use observation. Two totally different things. Faith is literally based on a hope that they're right. Cosmologists observe and interpret the observations in a edifice of logical and empirical evidence based on observation.

    • @joshkeeling82
      @joshkeeling82 Před rokem

      @@nickmerix2900 Read my above reply

    • @nickmerix2900
      @nickmerix2900 Před rokem +1

      @@joshkeeling82 thats what you want to believe. But its no really the case. Most of them never even peaked into a telescope. They just parrot someone elses theory and refuse to examine any observations that contradict it. They base this theory of expansion on red shift . Halton Arp who spent more than his share behind a telescope, observed that red shift was not an absolute indicator of distance but his findings were ignored and censored . His telescope time was withdrawn and basically blacklisted for questioning the dogma. So yes in my view established theories have become religious like, and hide behind the cloak of so called science.

  • @protocol6
    @protocol6 Před rokem +2

    If you have a universe where things can change (you have time) then it necessarily expands. Imagine a circle where the radius is time and the circumference is the extent of space at that time. As time increases, the circumference increases as C=2πct. Expansion will accelerate forever but its jerk is negative (the acceleration decreases over time) and the age of the universe is therefore roughly the inverse of hubble parameter at that time. That's just a fact of geometry, something that sometime gets lost in abstract mathematics. It happens one way or another in every sensible space-time metric; even when the manifold is infinite, which can make it less obvious. The part we should be curious about is why the observed expansion is subtly different from what you'd expect from that. That's a linear expansion in a universe sans-gravity and FLRW only accounts for part of the non-linearity so you are left with a cosmological constant, the mysterious dark energy.

  • @arthurwieczorek4894
    @arthurwieczorek4894 Před rokem

    'Why' as in 'how come', and 'why' as in 'what for'. 'How come' as in 'what are the antecedents that cause the phenomenon under question.' 'What for' as in 'what is the purpose in mind for bringing this situation about.'

  • @cookieDaXapper
    @cookieDaXapper Před rokem +2

    ....wow, it sounds like the moment our simulation was turned on.......fascinating.

  • @yp77738yp77739
    @yp77738yp77739 Před rokem +5

    Do you ever get the feeling that Albert Camus is entrenched within the field of theoretical physics.

  • @rickrobitaille8809
    @rickrobitaille8809 Před rokem

    We have something to learn still😁🇨🇦🌐

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 Před rokem

    amount of mass increases the more slow down from speed of light squared?

  • @luisfelix7989
    @luisfelix7989 Před rokem +1

    So easy!! It's not expanding!! It's shifting!!

  • @pmh1nic
    @pmh1nic Před 2 měsíci +1

    My understanding is the universe is not only expanding but expanding at an accelerated rate. What is causing the acceleration? Where is the source of the energy causing this acceleration?

  • @kcm9058
    @kcm9058 Před rokem

    Guth !
    Guth !
    The
    Guth Brings The Truth !

  • @georgegrubbs2966
    @georgegrubbs2966 Před rokem +5

    Where did the initial 1 gram of matter come from?

    • @hurricane7950
      @hurricane7950 Před rokem +1

      That is always the prime question. Where did it start.

    • @S3RAVA3LM
      @S3RAVA3LM Před rokem

      From Light. Telsa -- light is a sound wave in the Ether, the Ether itself.
      High energized light is hydrogen.
      Everything are fields.
      I follow an amazing teacher: Theoria Apophasis. He's on CZcams.

    • @aitmimounabdallah4652
      @aitmimounabdallah4652 Před rokem

      Good point.

    • @quantumkath
      @quantumkath Před rokem +1

      It was justagram in an instagram

    • @georgegrubbs2966
      @georgegrubbs2966 Před rokem

      Now that is a great answer.

  • @atiqrahman7289
    @atiqrahman7289 Před rokem

    Just started with ONE GRAM!! Heck, ONE GRAM to begin with.!!

    • @vkpc1
      @vkpc1 Před rokem

      Could it be 0.1 gram actually?

  • @fractalnomics
    @fractalnomics Před rokem +2

    The answer is simple, the universe is a fractal, just like everything is.

    • @TheSpeedOfC
      @TheSpeedOfC Před rokem

      You know when I was a kid, before I learned anything about the universe at all, I used to think "The universe is infinitely large AND infinitely small" in other words.. a fractal.

  • @em.1633
    @em.1633 Před rokem +1

    This interview is ten years old!

    • @BigNewGames
      @BigNewGames Před rokem

      I think you're right. I remember seeing it before.

    • @em.1633
      @em.1633 Před rokem +1

      @@BigNewGames for one thing, Kuhn's hair is grey now

  • @paviad
    @paviad Před rokem +4

    Now wait a second, I think the gravitational field doesn't exactly cancel out the energy of the mass in our universe. There should be a difference of a GRAM!

    • @mrbamfo5000
      @mrbamfo5000 Před rokem

      That gram would be needed to kick off the next universe.

  • @radupaulalecu4119
    @radupaulalecu4119 Před rokem

    The negative energy of the gravitational field, at 7:59 is the vacuum energy?

  • @terrywbreedlove
    @terrywbreedlove Před rokem +1

    I want meet whoever took that one gram and sparked off the Creation of our Universe. That Dude must have been brilliant.

  • @MegaDonaldification
    @MegaDonaldification Před rokem +8

    If I learn anything from Alan Guth, I will without any doubt have the uncanny ability to explain difficult ideas in amazingly simple ways.

    • @eddiebrown192
      @eddiebrown192 Před rokem +4

      The only thing to learn from him is how to make a living off of an obviously incorrect theory . He just keeps adding more and more , but at this point , his theory has morphed into straight up bullshit 😂

    • @mrbamfo5000
      @mrbamfo5000 Před rokem

      @@eddiebrown192 Inflation Theory? Seems fairly mainstream lately.

  • @artmoss6889
    @artmoss6889 Před rokem +1

    Expansion following the Big Bang is a curiosity, since what we typically observe following big bangs is sudden deflation with a considerable increase in entropy.

  • @3007Doug
    @3007Doug Před rokem

    Superb discussion and theories but with regards to positive and negative energies, at energy levels of 1.02mEv we can create a positron which is nothing more than an electron with a positive charge which in and of itself defies the basic laws of physics.

  • @NikkiTrudelle
    @NikkiTrudelle Před rokem +1

    “ a hot dense state … 🎶

  • @mickeybrumfield764
    @mickeybrumfield764 Před rokem +2

    Even if we're not in total agreement about when or what the initial big bang is it sounds like we can be in better agreement that the "bang" in the big bang occurs when we turn gravity on its head.

    • @chrisgriffiths2533
      @chrisgriffiths2533 Před rokem

      At this Stage can Not Agree.
      First Problem :- There Simple is Not Enough Proof to Conclude a Big Bang Ever Occurred. ( Big being Too Small a Description ).
      Second Problem :- Close to Zero Evidence a Big Bang Would Produce the Part of the Universe We See.
      Third Theory :- The Movement of Everything We See is Just what is Occurring in this Part of the Universe. Everything Might be Stationary Elsewhere, We Simple Can Not See 99.999% of the Universe.

    • @MaloPiloto
      @MaloPiloto Před rokem +2

      I have heard that it is believed that the expansion of the universe slowed, but then accelerated about 7 billion years after the beginning due to so-called dark energy. I would like to hear more about that and how it relates to the theory of inflation…..

    • @andyc8508
      @andyc8508 Před rokem

      @@MaloPiloto I too looked further into this, I realised inflation and expansion specifically distinguish what you're describing. Expansion is when dark energy 'kicked in' for lack of a better way of saying it. :)

    • @ctrockstar7168
      @ctrockstar7168 Před rokem

      If we only knew how gravity worked we could imagine how to turn it on it’s head

    • @mitseraffej5812
      @mitseraffej5812 Před rokem

      @@ctrockstar7168Understanding gravity will spawn all sorts of technology. Just as the discoveries by physicist of electricity and electromagnetic etc in past centuries laid the groundwork for much of todays technology.

  • @allauddin732
    @allauddin732 Před rokem

    Change is good
    That's why we enjoy

    • @jeffamos9854
      @jeffamos9854 Před rokem

      Wow ! Maybe you should make a bumper sticker

    • @allauddin732
      @allauddin732 Před rokem

      @@jeffamos9854 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @zakirhussain-js9ku
    @zakirhussain-js9ku Před rokem +1

    We use laws of physics to explain BB & its aftermath. Did the BB produce laws of physics or laws of physics produce the BB? Positive energy of mass & negative energy of its gravitational field sum up to zero. When mass changes to energy both mass & its associated gravitational field disappears. Should the process not produce zero energy since their sum was zero to start with.

  • @dennisduncan9594
    @dennisduncan9594 Před rokem

    We are shrinking

  • @vhawk1951kl
    @vhawk1951kl Před rokem

    Why suppose or imagine that whatever it is you suppose or imagine to be expending is " the universe"(whatever you mean by " the universe")?

  • @TrappedinaBrain
    @TrappedinaBrain Před rokem

    So is the region where the "gram that was a billionth the size of a proton" event occurred still out there? Is it possible that the inflationary expansion of our universe wiped it out?

    • @tonywells6990
      @tonywells6990 Před rokem

      That region is the entire observable universe.

  • @rickrobitaille8809
    @rickrobitaille8809 Před rokem

    Wow and tell me M=mcsquared has been the ultimate experience we can imagine 🇨🇦😁

  • @joelhall5124
    @joelhall5124 Před rokem +5

    Because of made up particles and matter that make the maths work, apparently

  • @rickrobitaille8809
    @rickrobitaille8809 Před rokem

    We are sure right😁💥🇨🇦

  • @oliviamaynard9372
    @oliviamaynard9372 Před rokem +1

    Wouldn't energies that high just be a black hole? If we can't calculate the energies of black holes how can we know what will happen at greater energy and density

    • @jeffamos9854
      @jeffamos9854 Před rokem

      Don’t know

    • @chrisgarret3285
      @chrisgarret3285 Před rokem

      We don't understand black holes at all. We have no idea what happens to the material that falls in. That's like thinking we know what a blender is but not know what happens to the food we put into it.

    • @ilikenicethings
      @ilikenicethings Před rokem

      Well, Guth said the sub-proton sized gram of matter wasn’t ordinary matter but instead a type of matter that repels against itself. And he said this special type of repulsive matter is possible to exist at high enough energies according to the theoretical framework we’ve got. That’s the idea.

  • @JuxZeil
    @JuxZeil Před rokem

    This is one of the reasons I believe it's chaos>order...not the other way around as some scientists keep saying.

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 Před rokem

    might quantum wave(s) expand like inflation at high energies of the beginning of universe? since quantum waves have faster than speed of light entanglement, non-locality and superposition; might be quantum waves that expand for inflation and cosmological constant?

  • @jeremycrofutt7322
    @jeremycrofutt7322 Před rokem +1

    Where does the energy come from, where is it kept conserved?

    • @youareliedtobythemedia
      @youareliedtobythemedia Před rokem

      Good question, the answer is: We don't know yet.

    • @jeremycrofutt7322
      @jeremycrofutt7322 Před rokem

      @@youareliedtobythemedia Where is the way where light dwelleth? And as for darkness, where is the place thereof, Hast thou entered into the treasures of the snow? Or hast thou seen the treasures of the hail, Which I have reserved against the time of trouble, Against the day of battle and war?
      Job 38:19‭, ‬22‭-‬23 KJV

  • @ronaldkemp3952
    @ronaldkemp3952 Před rokem +3

    I have a question. I would really like it if someone answered it.
    According to Albert Einstein's photoelectric effect, when light enters a proton the low energy visible light is absorbed by the proton and then radiates an electron containing light energy the proton absorbed. There is no energy gained, no energy lost. All the energy can be accounted for. This means the proton contains a limited amount of energy. When light enters the proton it cannot contain any more so the light energy radiates away as an electron. Each proton then would be considered to be at their energy limit.
    My question, How could all the energy and matter the universe contains today be squeezed into a singularity the size of a pea if protons can't store more energy than they already do?

    • @konsum949
      @konsum949 Před rokem

      Protons are not involved in the photoelectric effect, other then being present in the atoms, so your question doesnt make sense to begin with...

    • @metaspherz
      @metaspherz Před rokem

      According to Brian Cox, the British physicist, “Our universe is an enigma, an endless inexhaustible paradox."
      The first long-lived matter particles of any kind were protons and neutrons, which together make up the atomic nucleus. These came into existence around one ten-thousandth of a second after the Big Bang. Before that point, there was really no material in any familiar sense of the word. So, to answer your question, protons didn't exist prior to the BB. Nothing did, therefore, your question is moot because the laws of Physics didn't exist either.

    • @TheSpeedOfC
      @TheSpeedOfC Před rokem

      I believe because protons are energy but in the form of mass so size becomes irrelevant when dealing with pure energy.

    • @konsum949
      @konsum949 Před rokem

      @@TheSpeedOfC still no connection to the photoelectric effect, the Electron can transfer to a Photon+energi and back, and The photon can be considered bott Particle and wave. But still, even if we change out all protons for electron in your question the question still doesnt make sence for a chemist or physicist. Try to watch some videos on CZcams on duality of photon, the uv catastrophy, the work of Einstein and hertz and Planck. The term blackbody radiaton is good to understand also, if you still dont understand, atleast you might be easier to understand what questions that are left, physical chemistry is actually very interesting field, my own favourite in chemistry.

    • @imranradzmi9944
      @imranradzmi9944 Před rokem

      Light particles = photon ; think photography! Positive particles in an atom's nucleus= proton. The photoelectric effect describes the release of electrons from atoms (electrons are said to be in a bound state) due to absorption of photons. These bound states occupy discrete energy levels due to their attraction to the nucleus and can move up or down a level similar to moving up or down stairs.
      This electron emission only occurs when the absorbed photon energy is larger or equal to the energy level difference between where the electron is and the next level (or any other level above it). If the electron absorbs energies lower than this, it will simply drop back down (on timescales of nanoseconds) and re-emit the photon, in the same way that if we miss a step while stair climbing, we fall back down.
      Now, once an electron has escaped a bound state (is now a free electron), it is free to have ANY energy level. There is no limit. But what about all those particles in a singularity? How can they be smooshed together?
      Why the electron can only exist in certain energy level states when bound is described by the Pauli Exclusion Principle. For example, this principle is expressed as "degeneracy pressure" that forces collapsing stars to form white dwarfs. Now, the immense energies involved in a singularity do not necessarily maintain the structure of atoms or fermions in general (all matter particles like protons, electrons, neutrons, neutrinos, quarks). Only bosons (which are particles that mediate forces like electricity or nuclear ; one such particle is the photon) can be smooshed together (they can pass through each other just as light can)
      So while current physics cannot describe what occurs in singularities, presumably a singularity would be made up of bosons (and maybe mesons that do not have to be obey the Pauli Exclusion Principle). Mostly pure energy.

  • @aboversite
    @aboversite Před rokem

    Start with Richard Feynman "When you say "Why?"

  • @cvcvcvc7141
    @cvcvcvc7141 Před rokem

    What is it expanding into ?

  • @NondescriptMammal
    @NondescriptMammal Před rokem +1

    I watched this in the hope he would have some coherent explanation for why the universe is not only expanding, but is expanding at an ever increasing rate... something they didn't "discover" until the 1990s, and that virtually no astrophysicist or cosmologist expected. It doesn't have any decent explanation within our current framework of physics, so they just postulate something called "dark energy" to account for it... despite the fact that they have no real idea what it is or where it comes from or why it does what it does. The words "dark energy", just like "dark matter", don't refer to anything that's ever been observed directly or empirically, they are just there to explain away certain observations that cannot be explained otherwise.

    • @BDB78
      @BDB78 Před rokem

      Exactly! And also exactly why I find it difficult to get on board with these “theories.” I also feel that “theories” is a misnomer. “Guesses” would better suit these explanations. That’s exactly what the are.

    • @NondescriptMammal
      @NondescriptMammal Před rokem

      @@BDB78 I totally agree. It's good to see somebody else thinks that. Sometimes I think I must be either stupid or insane for thinking it, since so many comments to this kind of video say something like, "Oh thanks for the great explanation, now I understand!" , while I sit here going "Huh?".

  • @michaelcrawford3796
    @michaelcrawford3796 Před rokem

    I'm a little confused about what the universe is? it's the observable space around us with the matter we can see ? Now we don't know how big our universe is, only what we can see is moving forward and further away from us and closer with some matter. So I'm guessing it's not expanding because that would mean it's creating new space and not expanding into a space ? We're constantly moving at a very high rate of velocity through space so how do we know it's expanding really?

    • @youareliedtobythemedia
      @youareliedtobythemedia Před rokem

      The universe is the space everything is in. It's expanding exponentially for some reason. The size is unknown.
      The visible universe is a part of the universe. It's the baundary how far we can look. Due to exponential expansion it is essentially shrinking.
      It's space itself is expanding, the things in it are not really moving away from each other.

    • @michaelcrawford3796
      @michaelcrawford3796 Před rokem

      @@youareliedtobythemedia yeah umm saying so doesn't make it true

  • @larscarter7406
    @larscarter7406 Před 9 měsíci

    If gravity is a negative energy then you should be able to pick a stellar mass and say right here is zero on our number scale. That way you could compare other objects to it. Anyway, i was wondering about the galaxies that we cant observe anymore because they have passed the speed of light, might that be the missing mass(dark matter). I think back in the 1980s when a lot of the theories we have today were being advanced, they knew nothing could go faster than the speed of light. So it may not have even been considered that galaxies were missing in their equations that deal with matter in the universe. If part of the universes matter cant be seen, how do you count total matter in the universe?

  • @lifeafterdeath88
    @lifeafterdeath88 Před rokem

    Where is planet earth located?

  • @janyakov7655
    @janyakov7655 Před 23 hodinami

    ...because the rotation of any two objects due to the finite speed of the gravitational interactions , generates new energy . Therefor the energy of the univers increase and the universe expands
    next question?
    🙂 the law of constant energy is fejk.

  • @mastrtonberry2
    @mastrtonberry2 Před rokem

    Can you still say that the total energy of the visible universe is zero if galaxy clusters are no longer gravitationally bound to other clusters and are moving away from each other faster than light?

  • @jazzunit8234
    @jazzunit8234 Před rokem +1

    Actually easy to understand

  • @chrisg3030
    @chrisg3030 Před rokem

    What about gravity behaving not only repulsively but its repulsive force increases with the square of the distance, 𝘍=𝘎𝘮'𝘮"/𝘥⁻². I don't think this explains inflation, but maybe the accelerated expansion of the universe.

  • @pauljohnson1664
    @pauljohnson1664 Před rokem +2

    I prefer Roger Penrose Conformal cyclic cosmology. I don't know why but I do.

    • @blengi
      @blengi Před rokem

      I think it's a bit of both. I coded a sim once that has both properties, a basic inflationary universe which evolves conformal cyclic eras embedded in a multiverse. That is multiple conformal cyclic universes exist. It kind of predicts it was inflationary competition between universes that stopped the inflationary process not some quantum transition, although there was the possibility that the internal state of the universe just collapsed into universe scaled blackhole too - there's a certain duality about those two things, so is hard to say as my sim is quite limited once inflation initiates. It also Implied should be a universes nearby us that forced the end of inflation and that generically one universe will tend to ultimately expand faster and deflate its nearest neighbour universe by stealing its energy, until some quasi steady state is reached in the far future and a new "epoch" conformally rescales things. Also predicts a basic fundamental information coupling around 1/24 for inflationary phase.

  • @minimal3734
    @minimal3734 Před rokem

    Abstractly speaking, the universe is arrangements of stuff. There are two ends to possible arrangements:
    1. Everything is concentrated into one singular infinitely dense point.
    2. Everything is spread out evenly and infinitely thin.
    In the time-bound perspective you can think of 1. as the Big Bang, and of 2. as the Big Rip. Time requires these geometrical limits to manifest themselves as the force that drives everything apart, which is called dark energy. These ideas were first described in the book "Everything forever" by Gevin Giorbran. Theoretical physicists should take a closer look at his concepts.

  • @wieslawpopielarski8974

    strange that in a talk gentlemen haven't mentioned about black holes. Why the big bang is different from a black hole. In both cases we got a singularity and actually seems that the big bang should not happen because it should form supermassive black hole

    • @tonywells6990
      @tonywells6990 Před rokem

      The universe was expanding rapidly, which is the whole idea of inflation. That expansion carried on after the inflation period. A black hole can only form if the universe was collapsing.

  • @shawn0fitz
    @shawn0fitz Před rokem +1

    The title alludes to dark energy, which was not discussed.

  • @zakirhussain-js9ku
    @zakirhussain-js9ku Před 9 měsíci

    Space is another form of matter which produces gravitational field. Just like massive object where gravitational force is zero at center & highest at its surface, gravitational pull is zero at every point in space but increases as you move away from that point. This force is responsible for expansion of universe.

  • @PetraKann
    @PetraKann Před rokem +3

    So according to Alan Guth "something from nothing" is not possible.
    We need at least 1 gram of matter (or 900,000,000,000,000 Joules of energy) to "spark" the existence of an entire Universe.

    • @youareliedtobythemedia
      @youareliedtobythemedia Před rokem +1

      Something from nothing is not only possible, it happens all the time. We call it virtual particles.

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 Před rokem

    energy happens when mass travels at speed of light squared?

    • @tonywells6990
      @tonywells6990 Před rokem +1

      No, energy and mass are equivalent and c^2 is just the conversion factor.

  • @dadsonworldwide3238
    @dadsonworldwide3238 Před rokem

    If the measurements continue to the way they are it's a more weird universe than we ever dreamed of.
    A fun hypothetical of it being no single inflation but rather countless points of particles popping into existence even now with countless different so called constants taking place right now as we look across the universe where quantized red shift is actually messing with us now as everything is moving apart at different rates of speeds depending upon countless factors behind the veil of nothing ness we can't observe thats not material as we know it.

  • @briendoyle4680
    @briendoyle4680 Před rokem

    Nothing to stop it...

  • @davidstrevens9170
    @davidstrevens9170 Před rokem +3

    One gram?
    Maybe someone should mention the elephant in the room.
    I mean, I've heard of wishful thinking but this takes the cake.
    I sense that science feels more comfortable if the origin of the Universe is so small that we don't need to know how it got there.
    Maybe Dr Suess should have been a scientist. 😂🤣😂

    • @quantumkath
      @quantumkath Před rokem

      It was justagram in an instagram

    • @davidstrevens9170
      @davidstrevens9170 Před rokem +1

      @@quantumkath That gram I am. That gram I am. I do not like that gram I am. I do not like green eggs and ham. I do not like them gram I am.

    • @davidstrevens9170
      @davidstrevens9170 Před rokem +1

      @@quantumkath I mean... if God had ears to hear then poor God having to listen to that tripe. It's like Da Vinci having to watch a 3 year old scribble all over the Mona Lisa with a bright yellow crayon.
      And this guy with a PhD in astro physics and hundreds of thousands of dollars in funding.
      What do we have to show for it?
      Well... allow us to take this opportunity to declare, (with much pride in the magnificence of the human intellect), that the origin of the Universe stems from a gram of green eggs and ham.

    • @davidstrevens9170
      @davidstrevens9170 Před rokem +1

      Maybe now's a good time to use my get out of jail for free card.
      Or perhaps I should hold on to it for when they tell me that the Universe is just a thought-form and we're all sharing in it but because it's the same thought there is effectively only one of us.

  • @griffith500tvr
    @griffith500tvr Před rokem

    After pushing String theory for 20 years I don't believe modern theorists about the expansion of the univers

  • @warrenmanning7991
    @warrenmanning7991 Před rokem

    The idea of the universe (ie everything) being small and then increasing in size must be paradoxical. "Everything" must always be its size.

  • @danrouaphotography4270
    @danrouaphotography4270 Před měsícem

    Please explain what am i thinking wrong in my idea that the Hubble theory is wrong: The further in space the galaxy is posed (observed), the older in time is the event that the image that arrived to us is showing. Because in astrology lightyears not explain olny distance between objects but TIME GAP between the the observer's present time and the observed object time in the past when the image start moving to us wuth speed of light in order to be oserved in the present. The image of the galaxy 100light years apart means actually the image of the galaxy (and her speed) 100years in the PAST. So, we can say that in an older image of a galaxy in the picture (far away galaxy) we see a galaxy travels with speed GREATER than the galaxy observed in a younger picture that contains the galaxy at a moment closed to our present day. Is it not the definition of slowing down, actually? 100 lightyears far galaxy (a picture of a galaxy actually made 100 years ago) show us a galaxy running by 100km/h and a 20 lightyears far galaxy (a picture of a galaxy made only 20 years ago but from this reason one more closer to us) show us a galaxy running with only 20km/h. If we can not take in account the TIME, only distances, it appears that far away the galaxy is, higher the speed it has. But if we take in account TIME as well, we'll notice that older galaxy observed travel with a speed FASTER than most recent observed. 100 years ago has a speed grater than 20 years ago. Meanig they are slowing down in time, not accelerating.

  • @sulaimantheruvil6096
    @sulaimantheruvil6096 Před rokem

    this is something like a leaf grows , the spots in leaf are galexys

  • @BILLY-px3hw
    @BILLY-px3hw Před rokem +2

    The universe is so strange, it either takes billions of years for things to happen or a billionth of a second, and things are either mind-bogglingly large or small...Message to universe stop being so extreme

    • @johnarch6876
      @johnarch6876 Před rokem

      For it to kick-start from nothingness, there must have been some kind of differential, either in temperature or pressure. Where did that eminate from?

    • @noahholland1980
      @noahholland1980 Před rokem

      @@johnarch6876quantum physics allows for “borrowing” the energy of theoretically any particle from empty space as long as it is “paid back” via particle interactions that cancel out the original particle in a very short timeframe. I think the idea is that the energy of the universe spontaneously arose because in the near infinite set of possible things that could happen “borrowing” the energy for an entire universe can be paid for with the negative energy of gravity. That’s my understanding anyway.

  • @ERiCDrAyViN
    @ERiCDrAyViN Před rokem

    If gravity is repulsive during inflation, I wonder if time flows backward extremely rapidly. So now we are flowing through time as we call it "forward in time" but a lot slower so it would explain the time the universe might last to. It's undoing the rapid backflow of time. It's just something I thought of, but may be nothing.

  • @BB-iq4su
    @BB-iq4su Před rokem +1

    Incredible extrapolation.

  • @davidwalker5054
    @davidwalker5054 Před rokem

    Why the universe is expanding is not a question we are capable of answering and even attempting to is bordering on arrogance

    • @funkyfacts4175
      @funkyfacts4175 Před rokem

      Did you know... Quran 51:47
      We built the universe with ˹great˺ might, and We are certainly expanding ˹it˺

  • @misterhill5598
    @misterhill5598 Před rokem +2

    The professor is trying to impress the listener by telling them a science fiction story. The listener is taken on a roller coaster thrill ride but none the wiser when the story ends.
    Space:
    If the universe started small and expand, it has to expand into somewhere. Which space does the universe expands into? What was in this space before the universe expands into it? how big would this space need to be for the entire universe to expand into? Where did the seed universe get the energy for the bang?
    Time
    For an event as big as a big bang, it would take some time for the energy to build up the bang. How long did that take, and how much energy did the bang need?
    Energy:
    Energy cannot be created or destroyed. Where did the energy came from to create the bang+expansion, and where would the energy return to afterward? Did the energy came from the seed universe itself or from somewhere else?
    Why must the universe expand? Why can't the universe to stable?
    Why can't the universe be eternal and timeless?
    Why can't little parts of the universe to expand or contract while the universe itself is stable?

    • @sv.foamball
      @sv.foamball Před rokem +1

      All good questions, and all questions that most of the consumers of this content have asked themselves. The journey to answer those questions will leave you with the wisdom you seek.
      For me, just when I think I have a clue, I delve into another aspect, which forces me to reexamine my previous understanding. It's a fun exercise if you're willing to put in the work, and have the desire to learn of course.

    • @misterhill5598
      @misterhill5598 Před rokem

      @@sv.foamball no thank you, asking questions to lead to more questions sounds like a waste of time.
      I want clarity, not depth of knowledge.
      When an expert cannot explain his expert matter simply, if he keeps relying on fictions, on vague words, and throw the questions back at the questioner, then he simy doesn't understand it.
      he is not the expert, he is behaving like a politician who is good at beating around the bush.
      These "scientists" tend to think deeply but not at all clearly.
      This is how science slided downhill into speculations and fictions.

    • @tonywells6990
      @tonywells6990 Před rokem

      The space of the universe does not move into or through another space, the space increases in volume, it stretches. General relativity describes the dynamics of spacetime (like how it stretches or contracts), which can either collapse or expand but cannot remain stable. The other questions about what existed before the big bang, or where the energy came from have no answer at the moment, although there are some speculative ideas like big crunch or cyclic universes.

    • @misterhill5598
      @misterhill5598 Před rokem

      @@tonywells6990 this general relativity with stretching time and space sounds like someone hit their head, hallucinated and came up with the stupidest idea ever.

    • @tonywells6990
      @tonywells6990 Před rokem

      @@misterhill5598 Einstein was that genius! Ha ha

  • @jaerik99
    @jaerik99 Před rokem +1

    Professor Guth is a treasure. Thank you for featuring him so often!

    • @roberthutchins4297
      @roberthutchins4297 Před rokem

      Very simpatico is the Prof..
      Who knows - some of what he says may even be true, but we´ll probably never know.
      Did he explain how there was absolute total nothing - no space, no matter, no energy, no time, no rules? NOTHING !!!
      Pop, pop - suddenly there was something!!! Why?
      Why just then, not 5 minutes earlier or a a billion years later? What flipped the switch?
      I may have missed the explanation.

  • @metaspherz
    @metaspherz Před rokem +1

    In the beginning, there was a balloon and a needle...🤔🙄😣

  • @vivsworldtrip
    @vivsworldtrip Před rokem

    Is it at all possible instead of "reverse gravitation", "bang", or "push"... that the universe is expanding due to being "pulled" instead? I accidently did an "experiment" at home and showed how easy the universe expanded when it was being pulled. No joke. I have it on video. Just a question... is it possible? so that way there would be no need for a special particle, or energy for that matter ?

    • @Pyriold
      @Pyriold Před rokem

      Something would need to do the pulling, that something needs a theory on its own.

    • @vivsworldtrip
      @vivsworldtrip Před rokem

      @@Pyriold thanks for the reply. I was thinking that maybe that something would be gravity from another universe or dimension? Possible?

    • @Wolf462
      @Wolf462 Před rokem

      No.

    • @billcook7483
      @billcook7483 Před rokem +1

      Your experiment wouldn't by chance be concerned with soap bubbles ??

    • @vivsworldtrip
      @vivsworldtrip Před rokem +1

      @@billcook7483 Hi bill, thanks for your reply. Well my "accidental experiment" actually involved my beaded wedding dress, sunlight & opening a door. All by pure accident. My wedding dress was hanging on the back of my door, when the sunlight shined onto my wedding dress, reflecting the beads colours onto the wall and creating "galaxies. When I pulled the door closed all the "galaxies" moved away from eachother. So I thought, what if universe is being pulled (from an outside source) and not pushed (via inflation)? Just a thought???

  • @laurenth7187
    @laurenth7187 Před rokem

    So yeah, why was there an exponential expansion, i mean just that ? Not how there was, but why ?

  • @metaspherz
    @metaspherz Před rokem

    What many people don't comprehend is that the laws that govern our universe didn't exist prior to the big bang. Once that fact is understood most questions about energy, mass, and what it was like prior to the BB become irrelevant.
    The mathematical language to explain such curiosities in human terms doesn't exist...yet.
    That's not to say that the questions shouldn't be asked, it just means that they cannot be answered or assigned meaning using classical scientific terminology. Therefore, all explanations are, by their very nature, hypothetical and speculative.
    Perhaps an alien civilization a million or more years beyond our intellectual evolution may have the answers...but they remain silent.

  • @speed3971
    @speed3971 Před rokem

    If we see space-time as one, wouldn't the expansion of the universe be the same as the movement of time?
    Time moves forward.
    Space expands.
    We seem to at least have theories that we can manipulate but not stop or reverse either one.

  • @zacharybennett3249
    @zacharybennett3249 Před rokem +1

    "...it was a very special gram..." 😁
    In principio nihil erat quod abstrahi posset: sic mundus creatus est.

  • @rickrobitaille8809
    @rickrobitaille8809 Před rokem

    Screw the big bang 💥🇨🇦😁

  • @marcinnawrocki1437
    @marcinnawrocki1437 Před rokem +1

    99.99% between atoms is empty space, so mayby universe is not expanding, we are just slowly shrinking. How you define distance? It is time it takes photon to travel distance at speed of light. But if they travel a bit slower you will think universe just expanded a bit.

  • @quantumkath
    @quantumkath Před rokem +1

    It was justagram in an instagram

  • @yuvarajgopal2717
    @yuvarajgopal2717 Před rokem

    Why interviewer keep interfering while guest is explaining

  • @butters142
    @butters142 Před rokem +1

    butters thats me

  • @mitseraffej5812
    @mitseraffej5812 Před rokem

    This video must be at least 10 years old. Guth is now an old man.

  • @PearlmanYeC
    @PearlmanYeC Před rokem

    Per Pearlman YeC SPIRAL cosmological redshift hypothesis and model, cosmic expansion ended after 4/365 (SPIRAL LY radius 'i') a fraction into history. See 'Pearlman vs Hubble' therein. SPIRAL - Hyper-dense proto galactic formation was PRIOR to hyper cosmic expansion 'inflation' . The universe attained mature size and density at the end of cosmic inflation epoch that was relatively early in history.

  • @rodylermglez
    @rodylermglez Před rokem +1

    He'd do a lot of good explaining that "special gram" and then trying to explain renormalization by actually calling it by name, but I guess he wanted to sound extra mind-blowing... 😒