This Particle Breaks Time Symmetry

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  • čas přidán 11. 12. 2017
  • Increasing entropy is NOT the only process that's asymmetric in time.
    Check out the book: WeHaveNoIdea.com
    This video was co-written by Daniel Whiteson and Jorge Cham
    You can also check out PhD Comics: phdcomics.com
    Special thanks to Patreon supporters:
    Tony Fadell, Donal Botkin, Michael Krugman, Jeff Straathof, Zach Mueller, Ron Neal, Nathan Hansen, Joshua Abenir
    Support Veritasium on Patreon: ve42.co/patreon
    Original paper on parity violation by the weak force by Lee and Yang:
    www.physics.utah.edu/~belz/phy...
    More on B-meson oscillations and time reversal violation:
    Physics World Article: ve42.co/TimeReversal
    Original paper: arxiv.org/pdf/1410.1742.pdf
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B_meson
    Physics consultant: Prof. Stephen Bartlett
    Studio filming by Raquel Nuno

Komentáře • 6K

  • @tomow7566
    @tomow7566 Před 2 lety +4916

    The guy rocking up to the nobel prize ceremony after violating CPT symmetry:
    Announcer: Congratulations. You've destroyed half of physics. Here's your prize.

    • @cazzone
      @cazzone Před 2 lety +487

      "but inverted. You owe us a million dollars"

    • @mladen7641
      @mladen7641 Před 2 lety +104

      The other half is still fine... Because you destroyed half of physics.

    • @zacyquack
      @zacyquack Před 2 lety +238

      I would prefer someone broke CPT symmetry instead of not, or leaving it uncertain. If we break it, it means our current theories will need to be changed, and as such we get a more accurate perception of the universe.

    • @pablopereyra7126
      @pablopereyra7126 Před 2 lety +166

      @@zacyquack Of course, breaking the symmetry isnt a choice. If it is possible to break, we can't just ignore it to preserve our current theories. We MUST understand the universe.

    • @robertnett9793
      @robertnett9793 Před 2 lety +63

      Well... 'you showed us, that a lot of assumptions about reality might be wrong and needs to get re-examined. Thanks a lot mate. Her's a medal and a coffer of money.'
      As it should be.

  • @aawagga7099
    @aawagga7099 Před 3 lety +5992

    "she and a team of low temperature scientists" is that a nerdy way to call them cool?

    • @k.harmon
      @k.harmon Před 3 lety +164

      ohhhhh yes!!

    • @bryandelahoz6063
      @bryandelahoz6063 Před 2 lety +113

      Well, yes, and no.

    • @alexisrosalesruiz7334
      @alexisrosalesruiz7334 Před 2 lety +65

      That they are dead?

    • @jakenolan2572
      @jakenolan2572 Před 2 lety +30

      @The Monster Under Your Bed if Marie Curie was a renowned scientist before then, it makes sense that women were in physics

    • @Hh-nf8nk
      @Hh-nf8nk Před 2 lety +12

      No, they should be very cool

  • @CharlesGouin
    @CharlesGouin Před 3 lety +3690

    I think Nolan liked this video so much, he made a movie about it.

    • @thefluffyrobot
      @thefluffyrobot Před 3 lety +527

      Nah bro veritasium got the idea for this video from tenet. You just see it inverted

    • @CharlesGouin
      @CharlesGouin Před 3 lety +95

      @@thefluffyrobot 🅿️e®️h🅰️🅿️s.

    • @anthonyrussano
      @anthonyrussano Před 3 lety +91

      he even mentioned another Nolan movie, inception

    • @SomenathGarai
      @SomenathGarai Před 3 lety +29

      No he didn't, but should make a movie about the mirror world!

    • @anthonyrussano
      @anthonyrussano Před 3 lety +13

      @@SomenathGarai yes he mentioned inception

  • @PhysicsHonors
    @PhysicsHonors Před 3 lety +549

    Salute to those people who don't understand a single thing here but still come back for every veritasium video

    • @gagemcmahon9485
      @gagemcmahon9485 Před 2 lety +10

      Some of his videos, like this one, I feel like he doesn't even understand what he's saying. Felt like he was just reading wiki definitions and giving their examples

    • @jatinbangar4371
      @jatinbangar4371 Před 2 lety +19

      @@gagemcmahon9485 Just type latest standard model of particle physics. You'll understand this video with ease 💯

    • @sloppydog4831
      @sloppydog4831 Před 2 lety +2

      Yay! Here we are!

    • @myemail1402
      @myemail1402 Před 2 lety +2

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @hoogreen
      @hoogreen Před 2 lety +9

      @@gagemcmahon9485 well he has a phd in physics so he definitely knows more stuff than some people

  • @user-xq5og9lt8p
    @user-xq5og9lt8p Před 6 lety +1868

    - Honey, are you ready for a vacation?
    -Sorry, dear, I have some fundamental physics principles to topple!

    • @Kirealta
      @Kirealta Před 5 lety +86

      Women can never be ready on time!

    • @baoleviet8549
      @baoleviet8549 Před 4 lety +40

      Poor man got cucked by physic :v

    • @TheCrystalBlood
      @TheCrystalBlood Před 4 lety +33

      Again? Remember the last time you tried doing that? I think the cat still has nightmares from being stuck in that box.

    • @tyralexander
      @tyralexander Před 3 lety +3

      @@TheCrystalBlood What cat?

    • @vavlo813
      @vavlo813 Před 3 lety +3

      @@tyralexander He's referencing Schrodinger's Cat Experiment

  • @dunn0r
    @dunn0r Před 5 lety +2474

    "The parity's over, guys."
    That nerdy dad joke made me laugh way harder than it should have.

    • @liebesleid
      @liebesleid Před 5 lety +12

      I tried to not laught at that, but then I saw your comment and burst into laugther lmfao

    • @therandomcommentor6228
      @therandomcommentor6228 Před 4 lety +3

      I don't get it.

    • @nothayley
      @nothayley Před 4 lety +35

      @@therandomcommentor6228 it's similar to the phrase "the party's over"

    • @jerrygreenest
      @jerrygreenest Před 4 lety

      ​@@nothayley if you actually pronounce that, then it becomes funny lol :D

    • @anurag5565
      @anurag5565 Před 3 lety +1

      It sounds like Doofenshmirtz talking

  • @nitinchaudhary8914
    @nitinchaudhary8914 Před 4 lety +1934

    Imagine two people playing chess and the one observer who is observing that doesn't knows the rules of chess before hand
    As the game proceeds the observer keeps learning and
    Now when he sees a pawn walking single step straight way he writes down that pawn walks forward and now when pawn goes diagonaly to attack some other opponent piece.
    The observer is in surprise thinking that it broke the laws of chess
    Same applies here
    Nature is chess player and scientists are observer in this never ending chess game
    Always discovering new moves
    - Feynman

    • @irrelevantme8158
      @irrelevantme8158 Před 3 lety +71

      Ah feynman

    • @BladeRunner-td8be
      @BladeRunner-td8be Před 3 lety +85

      Not bad except that nature is SO much more complicated than a chess player learning new moves. The way chess pieces move and the rules of chess are exponentially (and "exponentially" the biggest understatement of all time) easier to discover than nature.

    • @benedani9580
      @benedani9580 Před 3 lety +121

      ​@@BladeRunner-td8be You could also make the same argument with glitches in video games. When Pokemon Red/Blue came out, I don't think anyone had any idea that you could just, somehow manage to scroll down past your inventory to find some strange item that executes your Pokemon data as code. But technically, it's still within the rules of the game's programming.
      Thus, I wonder if there are "glitches" in the very universe we live in.

    • @mahikannakiham2477
      @mahikannakiham2477 Před 3 lety +156

      @@benedani9580 A glitch is when a program doesn't behave in the intended way. If the universe has glitches, it would mean it doesn't behave in the intended way. What is the intended way?

    • @harshvithlani9399
      @harshvithlani9399 Před 3 lety +6

      I am the 70th like

  • @yyattt
    @yyattt Před 2 lety +112

    Pauli: That's nonsense!
    Wu: Yes, but also true.

    • @nah9585
      @nah9585 Před 2 lety +7

      GP: "how can that be?"...
      M2: "I don't know man, I didn't do it"

  • @whiz8569
    @whiz8569 Před 6 lety +2335

    Low temperature scientists? Those guys sound pretty cool.

  • @aisysvideos1447
    @aisysvideos1447 Před 6 lety +733

    "Low Temperature Scientists" as in "Cool Scientists"

    • @Saintzel
      @Saintzel Před 6 lety +9

      Bill Nye is a low temperature scientist

    • @Nimbus3690
      @Nimbus3690 Před 6 lety +4

      that's what I thought he meant but I looked it up and it's actually a field, as I suspected.

    • @KnifeataGUNFYT1
      @KnifeataGUNFYT1 Před 6 lety +4

      Bill Nye is a lie...biological binary genders-4-life. Idc how much money you throw at a real scientist, truth is truth and lies are lies.

    • @atranas6018
      @atranas6018 Před 6 lety +1

      maybe their body temperature lower than normal

    • @HW-ct1iq
      @HW-ct1iq Před 6 lety +5

      @Merc E.Z. The science literally disagrees with you. Go do some googling. Nye didn't make up those claims off the top of his head, he's just basing his views off of the scientific work he's engaged with, the same he does with any other topic.

  • @jsward96
    @jsward96 Před 3 lety +636

    Mentions Inception in video.
    Three years later: TENET

  • @silver_3552
    @silver_3552 Před rokem +29

    I love how, after getting a bit started on subnuclear physics with my first nuclear and subnuclear physics course, i can now see this and not only properly understand what he's talking about but also seeing where some things are slightly simplified to make it easier to understand
    It's really nice learning and finding evidence that you've learnt

  • @rullestaden
    @rullestaden Před 4 lety +1465

    Known ways to break a CP law:
    - super freeze a particle and add magnetic spin
    - refuse to "pick up that can, citizen"

  • @garethdean6382
    @garethdean6382 Před 6 lety +508

    "Hey, so, ready for that vacation?"
    "I can't, the weak force may violate p-symmetry."
    "Then there's only one thing we can do!"
    "Stare at cold metal atoms!"
    -A physic(s)al relationship.

  • @KirbyMobile1
    @KirbyMobile1 Před 2 lety +361

    This really makes me want to find an example that breaks CPT symmetry to see the entire science world implode. That would be funny *laughs in super villian*

    • @captaineflowchapka5535
      @captaineflowchapka5535 Před 2 lety +83

      i mean every single scientist will be thankfull to you to have shown a path to a truther truth

    • @LiborTinka
      @LiborTinka Před 2 lety +37

      @@captaineflowchapka5535 reminds me of the faster-than-light neutrinos "discovery" few years ago ... there were lots of interesting debates until they found it was just the systematic error
      it looks like all the low hanging fruit were already taken in physics

    • @decivillain9216
      @decivillain9216 Před 2 lety +27

      @@LiborTinka It’s probably better that we keep picking the lowest fruit,
      rather than pick the higher fruit and have no idea where the others are.

    • @brianabraham8726
      @brianabraham8726 Před 2 lety +1

      A truther truth 😂👍🏻

    • @prateeksharma6756
      @prateeksharma6756 Před 2 lety +3

      It won't really break any laws it would just mean that the same laws would have to be written again with considering the fact that cpt symmetry is not a thing which a lot of physist assumed back in the day while making these laws like Einstein. The symmetry only makes physics easier that's why it will be a hell a lot of work to complete all the theories of the past for unsymmetrical systems.

  • @actualRocketScientist
    @actualRocketScientist Před 2 lety +119

    Also I wanted to say thank you for making these videos I really do enjoy them. You are awesome! I am blind so I can't see the graphics unfortunately but your explanations are very nice and I love doing math in my head so it's enjoyable to see you theorize in my head about all the things that you explain

    • @yashaswikulshreshtha1588
      @yashaswikulshreshtha1588 Před rokem +1

      Interesting, how did you manage to type the comment then cuz you need a cursor for that. How do you see what you type?

    • @actualRocketScientist
      @actualRocketScientist Před rokem +8

      @@yashaswikulshreshtha1588 I use dictation and I just talk back or voiceover based on the device it reads me things on the screen.

    • @theendisnai
      @theendisnai Před 11 měsíci +1

      it must be soo interesting being blind i often fantasise about it! visible light is only one part of the energy spectrum anyway and can limit a person's perception of reality so i imagine eye blindness removes reality blindness lol. like when you think about it youre conscious of two dimensions at once because you interact with this physical dimension while perceiving it in a 4th dimension (imagination) at the same time. people without eye blindness only do this on occasion while you use it pretty much constantly so i'd assume are a master of it by this point!

    • @actualRocketScientist
      @actualRocketScientist Před 11 měsíci +5

      @@theendisnai I don't recommend it lol. However I've learned to deal with it and there are some things that are better like understanding a person in the characteristic just by hearing them so you can look past there facade. Unfortunately I get discriminated quite a bit. I wasn't even allowed to finish my PhD because I lost my eyesight The school denied me even though I only had a year left.

    • @watema3381
      @watema3381 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@actualRocketScientist I'm pretty sure you could sue

  • @Alec-rh7dm
    @Alec-rh7dm Před 5 lety +1722

    His hair changes direction at 8:18 😂😂😂

    • @_modernmage
      @_modernmage Před 5 lety +761

      His video violated Hair Direction Symmetry

    • @chasebh89
      @chasebh89 Před 5 lety +110

      but does it change direction in the same time forwards or backwards??

    • @_modernmage
      @_modernmage Před 5 lety +156

      @@chasebh89 Nope, the part of the video where his hair is parted to the left is much longer than where his hair is parted to the right, meaning that you could notice a difference between the video being played forwards or backwards. Q.E.D., his hair violates Hair Direction + Time Symmetry.

    • @chasebh89
      @chasebh89 Před 5 lety +66

      @@_modernmage one more step in figuring out whether his hair proves we live in a mirror universe

    • @bricedickerson6438
      @bricedickerson6438 Před 5 lety +50

      His collar stripe also flips

  • @dThineni
    @dThineni Před 6 lety +831

    "Absolutely eye-opening video, you've done it again!" - Mirror me
    ?? ! ? - Real me

    • @roopasharma7909
      @roopasharma7909 Před 6 lety +2

      😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂

    • @jonw8764
      @jonw8764 Před 6 lety +35

      the letters are backwards but in forwards order.
      "!niɒǫɒ ƚi ɘnob ɘv'uoy ,oɘbiv ǫninɘpo-ɘyɘ ylɘluloƨdA"

    • @MarcusAndersonsBlog
      @MarcusAndersonsBlog Před 6 lety +3

      How quaint. :-) Anyone got a mirror?

    • @shaunscotland8099
      @shaunscotland8099 Před 6 lety

      close your left hand

    • @bionickchief
      @bionickchief Před 5 lety

      Jonathan Newsome how you guys type these texts???

  • @pablocardona8158
    @pablocardona8158 Před 2 lety +64

    How does this man manages to make every single topic so interesting and enjoyable in each video?

    • @tuckergary1516
      @tuckergary1516 Před 9 měsíci

      me to brain stretched

    • @lurkingfriend
      @lurkingfriend Před 3 měsíci

      and a great salesman, I want to buy most of the things he is sponsored

  • @elmerlandaverde1
    @elmerlandaverde1 Před 3 lety +171

    It’s crazy that Chien-Shiung Wu didn’t receive the Nobel price for her work!!

    • @kingp1n817
      @kingp1n817 Před 2 lety +75

      An Asian and a woman, not a good mix in racist male supremacist world of 60s. They would feel ashamed if they gave a prize to a non European or a woman.

    • @kingp1n817
      @kingp1n817 Před 2 lety +23

      @@l1mbo69 the two other guys got the noble for it. Not her. She got Wolf prize 20 years after this discovery.

    • @BaalTomekk
      @BaalTomekk Před 2 lety +25

      @@kingp1n817 They gave the prize to two non-europeans, but not to the woman who deserved it.

    • @kingp1n817
      @kingp1n817 Před 2 lety +9

      @@BaalTomekk Yeah, they were really scared of women I guess

    • @russellalesi5715
      @russellalesi5715 Před 2 lety +22

      She absolutely deserved it...they should award it posthumously (they should amend their rules to allow posthumous awards).

  • @herrreinsch
    @herrreinsch Před 6 lety +5340

    *pretends to understand.*

    • @matthewisrail
      @matthewisrail Před 6 lety +36

      herrreinsch this gave me a chuckle. Thanks.

    • @user-vz3lu1ek1t
      @user-vz3lu1ek1t Před 6 lety +3

      herrreinsch No need to mention it.

    • @WheatleyOS
      @WheatleyOS Před 6 lety +58

      The resolution here is that, as it stands, we believe that if you mirrored something, flipped its charge, and reversed time, it would otherwise be experimentally indistinguishable from the point of view of the fundamental laws of physics.
      If this is not the case, it would seriously threaten the integrity of some major theories we use to this day to explain, on a fundamental level, the fundamental interactions of forces, [wave-]particles, and space-time.

    • @undearwearman654
      @undearwearman654 Před 6 lety +127

      Only rick and Morty fans can understand this

    • @matthewisrail
      @matthewisrail Před 6 lety +3

      Joe Mama LMAO

  • @malcite
    @malcite Před 6 lety +864

    Physicists aren't lawmakers. I would be more inclined to say translators. The laws of physics can't be broken because physics itself writes them, so if we mistranslate something we observe, the translation becomes wrong, however the more we learn the more accurate that translation becomes.

    • @swiftoooo
      @swiftoooo Před 5 lety +10

      As with many laws, there can be multiple interpretations.

    • @MrFlameRad
      @MrFlameRad Před 5 lety +58

      @Ryan Vigus i think you missed the point he was making. He wasn't doubting the validity of physicists and the laws they discover. He was just criticising the use of terminology such as "it broke this law of physics", inputting that it's more accurate to say "we misinterpreted this law of physics" because no law of physics can actually be broken

    • @slayerphoenix6307
      @slayerphoenix6307 Před 5 lety +5

      @@MrFlameRad You are mistaken in believing that there are any laws at all

    • @lucashiroshins
      @lucashiroshins Před 5 lety +2

      Doesn't it bother you that he talks about that as if a particle had destroyed a laboratory and killed thousands of people. Really, this things happens from time to time, it's no big deal. And he repeats the same thing lots of time in a very fast speed and in the most complicated manner he can to make it sound more complex.

    • @zainabm809
      @zainabm809 Před 5 lety +2

      That is GOLDEN speach there

  • @alejandrortorres
    @alejandrortorres Před 2 lety +5

    These just keep getting better made and easier to understand. Veritasium rocks more than ever.

  • @IchHeisseKabelstrassenbahn
    @IchHeisseKabelstrassenbahn Před 2 lety +257

    A comment

    • @angelinephilo2005
      @angelinephilo2005 Před 2 lety +34

      @@Handsome_Thanos it has a mass number of 42, which is between those of calcium and scandium :)

    • @utsgotnoguts
      @utsgotnoguts Před 2 lety +17

      @@angelinephilo2005 wait... the modern periodic table isnt based on mass number but atomic number.

    • @angelinephilo2005
      @angelinephilo2005 Před 2 lety +11

      @@utsgotnoguts that's true but i was trying to think of the logic behind the original comment
      actually it may be that veritasium has an atomic number of i (imaginary unit) and mass number of 42.0

    • @j.hawkins8779
      @j.hawkins8779 Před rokem +3

      @@angelinephilo2005 what would an imaginary atomic number look like?

    • @tweshasaini7957
      @tweshasaini7957 Před rokem +2

      @@j.hawkins8779 maybe having a proton with negative mass

  • @kabenitezguy
    @kabenitezguy Před 5 lety +1314

    I love watching videos like these and pretending to know exactly what hes saying.
    "What?! The weak force?! CP? Preposterous!"

    • @Boog1137
      @Boog1137 Před 4 lety +59

      You have the entirety of human knowledge at your fingertips. Learn about it
      Edit: yeah i definitely came off as more arrogant here than intended y'all, sorry for that. I must've been in a mood.
      To be clear, all i meant is that anyone with internet access has the means to learn just about anything they could think of. Historically, access to knowledge has been a resource of only a few, so we're beyond privileged to have that access now. As for the grammar, i mean, i tend to fat finger everything i type so idk what to tell y'all about that.

    • @byz88
      @byz88 Před 3 lety +65

      @@Boog1137 no u

    • @thekillingsol
      @thekillingsol Před 3 lety +3

      500th like 👍

    • @CxF_MxH
      @CxF_MxH Před 3 lety +1

      Omg same!

    • @GMPranav
      @GMPranav Před 3 lety +25

      @@Boog1137 Which includes social skills, just saying.

  • @shifatrahman9181
    @shifatrahman9181 Před 6 lety +1065

    May the strong force be with you!!!!

  • @SacsachCCABP
    @SacsachCCABP Před 8 měsíci +8

    Lightning must be really scary in reverse. Like, imagine a bunch of charge inside the earth just _r i s e_ to one particular place before *ascending*

  • @mrsozez
    @mrsozez Před 3 lety +3

    Thank you for all of this. You are inspiring me, and I'm sure millions of other. For that I truly thank you.

  • @paulhuffman7093
    @paulhuffman7093 Před 6 lety +320

    Your video covers up the fact that Wu's work did NOT win HER the Nobel Prize, but won it for the two theorists, Lee and Yang. Her contribution to the discovery was largely overlooked until she was awared the Wolf Prize about 20 years later.

    • @TheSecondVersion
      @TheSecondVersion Před 5 lety +55

      Add Lisa Meitner (nuclear fission) and Rosalind Franklin (DNA) who also made discoveries that their male colleagues were given more credit for AND received Nobel Prizes for

    • @PHeMoX
      @PHeMoX Před 5 lety +37

      Honestly, and I say this unironically, most noble prize winners are somewhat undeserving of the prize anyway, as science is the sum of all of its parts, discoveries, changes and paradigm shifts. It's like Eurovision song festival winners, it's not a matter of the 'best song' winning. There is way more politics involved with these prizes as one might assume. Keep in mind Henri Poincare , Josiah Willard Gibbs (on par with someone like Lorentz ) , Ludwig Boltzmann , Wilhelm Sommerfield , Lise Meitner , Emmy Noether , Edwin Hubble , George Gamow , Robert Dicke , James E Peebles , Stephen Hawking etc. etc. never ever got a Noble Prize, despite being just as deserving of one, arguably more than any/some of the winners. Long story short, Nobel prizes themselves aren't that great of an indication of someone's true contribution to science. (It reminds me of how a lot of people who actually have a PhD in anything, aren't at all the people with the absolute highest IQs. In my mind this reveals how our scientific communities are broken when it comes to the potential progress, assuming intelligence itself plays a significant role.)

    • @michaelsommers2356
      @michaelsommers2356 Před 5 lety +29

      @@TheSecondVersion _"... Rosalind Franklin (DNA) who also made discoveries that their male colleagues were given more credit for AND received Nobel Prizes for[.]"_
      By the time Watson, Crick, and Wilkins got their Nobel, Franklin was dead, and the Nobel rules do not allow posthumous awards.

    • @givecamichips
      @givecamichips Před 5 lety +8

      @@TheSecondVersion On the bright side, most people agree since the 60s that she should have gotten the Nobel Prize as well, including being invited to a meeting of Nobel laureates and, something which is a much bigger accomplishment, Lise Meitner has an element named after her.

    • @jojololo9157
      @jojololo9157 Před 5 lety +2

      No Wu, Wu pissed on my rug.

  • @zeromailss
    @zeromailss Před 6 lety +1240

    I don't understand half of it but cool video man! 👍

    • @mooe20
      @mooe20 Před 6 lety +17

      It means the "reality" is not what you think it is. Our basic assumptions are wrong :)

    • @XtreeM_FaiL
      @XtreeM_FaiL Před 6 lety +4

      MeowAlien にゃあエイリアン Mirror you don't understand the other half. That means zero understanding.

    • @miksuko
      @miksuko Před 6 lety +1

      mooe20 pretty sure it misunderstood the video more than they did

    • @zradek
      @zradek Před 6 lety +6

      I like watching these videos while high and his red eyes really fit in :)

    • @geckoo9190
      @geckoo9190 Před 6 lety +2

      Yea basically is like saying that your image in the mirror turns on the same direction than you instead of the oposite, is just something that was not supposed to happen and it would challenge you your conseption of of the world or at least about how mirrors work

  • @sohinibasu3335
    @sohinibasu3335 Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent video. The way you explain such difficult things in such a cool way is really commendable. 👍👍👍

  • @ZimoNitrome
    @ZimoNitrome Před 6 dny

    I've come back to this video 4 times because it's such a cool concept.

  • @aadithyanjr1382
    @aadithyanjr1382 Před 6 lety +298

    Low temperature scientists are really cool!!!
    (I'll see myself out)

  • @MsKakashi2012
    @MsKakashi2012 Před 6 lety +257

    Thanks for the mini heart-attack 0:56

    • @iiismooo
      @iiismooo Před 6 lety +4

      haha read it the same time and got jump scared

    • @kiro9291
      @kiro9291 Před 6 lety

      same

    • @Lexa833Flash
      @Lexa833Flash Před 6 lety +5

      Veritasium you are fake

    • @aaayaaay5741
      @aaayaaay5741 Před 6 lety +5

      Don't click on those links, they're fake.

    • @aaayaaay5741
      @aaayaaay5741 Před 6 lety

      (and the javascript makes no sense)

  • @ohiocitydave
    @ohiocitydave Před 2 lety

    I have listened to every episode of "Daniel & Jorge Explain the Universe" and yet only from this 3.5 year old video can I now put a face to the voice!

  • @ashroskell
    @ashroskell Před 2 lety +7

    I have that audiobook, We Have No Idea. It’s really entertaining, groaningly funny, and deeply fascinating. It really does explain clever, complex ideas in a manner that anyone can understand.

  • @YunisRajab
    @YunisRajab Před 6 lety +436

    Physicists need to give up their vacations more often

  • @FutureNow
    @FutureNow Před 6 lety +812

    Sounds like my individual particles are better at time management than "I" am. It's like reverse emergence.

    • @daicon2k6
      @daicon2k6 Před 6 lety +1

      Nice. :)

    • @mortlet5180
      @mortlet5180 Před 6 lety +29

      And thus, having proven 'reverse emergence' is possible, the 2nd Law Of Thermodynamics has finally been broken!

    • @AnEvolvingApe
      @AnEvolvingApe Před 6 lety +4

      Nothing more humbling than being bested by atomic particles... FML true for me too.

    • @moisesbessalle
      @moisesbessalle Před 6 lety +5

      how about...revergence?

    • @mortlet5180
      @mortlet5180 Před 6 lety +2

      moises bessalle; That's actually really good, I like it a lot. :)

  • @GlitchedBlox
    @GlitchedBlox Před 3 lety +16

    Einstein: **heavily sweating**

  • @actualRocketScientist
    @actualRocketScientist Před 2 lety +13

    It would be very interesting to have CPT broken require a lot of rethinking a fundamental laws of physics. I think it would be fun a whole world of discovery and begin again

  • @minttea99
    @minttea99 Před 6 lety +119

    8:18 - 8:20 has anyone noticed he actually flipped? No? Okay, I'm back to my mirror world.

    • @oreole9608
      @oreole9608 Před 6 lety

      *It's called common sense*

    • @6884
      @6884 Před 6 lety +1

      OHHH SHIIIII that was fine!!

    • @WalterSmithPhysics
      @WalterSmithPhysics Před 6 lety +8

      Whoa! That's really cute! Thanks for pointing it out.

    • @bradirv
      @bradirv Před 5 lety +4

      Or maybe everything else was flipped

    • @ziadmohamad1445
      @ziadmohamad1445 Před 5 lety

      Just find his iron ring. Always on his right hand.

  • @Laezar1
    @Laezar1 Před 6 lety +34

    At this point I'm convinced the universe is a fictional work and scientist are just people in this fiction trying to justify the plot holes they live through.

  • @adriankos150
    @adriankos150 Před 2 lety +40

    If anyone could explain the correlation between disproving CPT and how it would affect our beliefs on special relativity, that would be well apriciated.

    • @schrodingerrocks7807
      @schrodingerrocks7807 Před 2 lety +4

      All fundamental physics have conditions that time , charge is symmetric throughout universe

    • @V1ND1E
      @V1ND1E Před 2 lety +18

      All conservation laws depend on symmetries. For example in special relativity, the reason why an object with no resultant force acting on it has a constant velocity, is because the universe shouldn't care about where we set the origin of the 4D coordinate grid (metric) we use to map the objects motion (Lorentz invariance), and as such nothing should change - the conservation of (four) momentum depends on this being true. Since the frame of reference we choose to define as absolute rest (for say an experiment) is arbitrary, the laws of physics (the equations we use) must be invariant under changes in the velocity of our reference frame. Thus your 4D velocity is constant (c). So special relativity depends on CPT symmetry for its axioms to be valid (so that there is a way to reverse time and the laws of physics upholding). It also turns out that quantum mechanics depends on this being true for bosons and fermions to be distinguished, but at a fundamental level CPT violation would destroy basic assumptions like that the universe doesn't care about which charges are positive and negative - which if true means that charge is not fundamental, or even that the assumption that forces are definable by symmetries is not valid (which basically all physical theories assume).

    • @erawanpencil
      @erawanpencil Před rokem

      @@V1ND1E Would violation of CPT violate the equivalence principle too?

  • @darianleyer5777
    @darianleyer5777 Před 3 lety +19

    In order to test CPT for violations, I would first suggest testing CT and PT symmetries.

    • @wren_.
      @wren_. Před rokem +2

      Then why don’t you test them? (genuinely)

    • @Alfamon717
      @Alfamon717 Před rokem

      Violating CT (under CPT invariance) is the same as violating P which, as Derek explained, has already been observed. Similarly, violating PT is equivalent to violating C, which happens in the weak nuclear force too

  • @plasmahead2
    @plasmahead2 Před 6 lety +197

    I kinda want someone to break CPT just for the chaos it will bring. Chaos is good for innovation and breakthroughs, and I want a lightsaber and tricorder damnit...

    • @elbioKoen
      @elbioKoen Před 5 lety +8

      I want a holo-deck and teleportation. :-)

    • @AbdulWahid-ru4ru
      @AbdulWahid-ru4ru Před 5 lety +6

      Chaos is a ladder

    • @obviouslymatt6452
      @obviouslymatt6452 Před 4 lety

      Lord Waluigi he’s not an animal (in ‘spirit animal’ context). He’s a person with a similar ideology to yours.

    • @feynstein1004
      @feynstein1004 Před 4 lety +1

      Chaos is a ladder :)

    • @tauhid9983
      @tauhid9983 Před 4 lety

      bruh.....AT THIS POINT IMMA QUOTE "vision"
      "I'm saying there may be a causality. Our very strength invites challenge. Challenge incites conflict. And conflict... breeds catastrophe."

  • @AbudBakri
    @AbudBakri Před 6 lety +515

    Entropy: AKA the comment section of CZcams videos.

    • @ratsratsratsratsrats
      @ratsratsratsratsrats Před 6 lety +9

      You're thinking of choas. Two different ideas.
      Edit: I was mistaken.

    • @rph_redacted
      @rph_redacted Před 6 lety +11

      The mess of CZcams comments only increases over time. Ami rite

    • @tjeulink
      @tjeulink Před 6 lety +4

      +Minick64 complexity arises before for it ultimately collapses into an state of activity-death.

    • @d_wang9836
      @d_wang9836 Před 6 lety +3

      Dr.StickFigure You are back

    • @AbudBakri
      @AbudBakri Před 6 lety +5

      Mininick64 the longer you leave these comments, the more disorder you create. Chaos aside.

  • @progamer36
    @progamer36 Před 2 lety +14

    Everytime something's discovered, it destroys a ton of things with it😂

    • @--.._
      @--.._ Před 2 lety +1

      damn thats actually deep tho

  • @giorapeniakov3153
    @giorapeniakov3153 Před rokem +4

    Exquisite summary, as always.

  • @canibaloxide
    @canibaloxide Před 6 lety +106

    You can tell if you are in the mirror universe if Spock has facial hair or not

  • @cwrigh13
    @cwrigh13 Před 6 lety +70

    I wish I could go back in time and pay attention in my high school physics classes.

    • @danshylboodhoo2455
      @danshylboodhoo2455 Před 6 lety +12

      Meh, high school physics is terribly taught and presented. It's extremely difficult to do well on high school physics exams using just high school knowledge, because they make the matter unnecessarily complicated. Undergrad physics covers most of the same material generally, but does it in a much better way. If you have the calculus, the Feynman Lectures are perfect for this, and are available online. Else, you could always get a freshman non-calculus textbook.

    • @MsSomeonenew
      @MsSomeonenew Před 6 lety +10

      I had a perfect score in high school physics, doesn't mean I remember much after all these years. So if you want to know what is going on today your best bet is to learn it today.

    • @udaykishor9586
      @udaykishor9586 Před 6 lety

      Me too.

  • @pnewell
    @pnewell Před 4 lety +2

    URGENT Semantic Complaint:
    At 7:12 both sequences are actually symmetrical about a dimension of time, if you were to treat 'time symmetry' consistently as with symmetry for any other dimensions (has a negative and positive direction from a starting point).
    The 'Rewind' sequence is symmetrical to the positive progression through time if you consider that the time axis is flipped if you were to actually rewind time.
    I think better semantics for what is being described as 'Breaking Time Symmetry' is something like:
    'Event Duration Asymmetry'
    Because one event is taking longer than the other in the SAME direction of time.

  • @MasterClassComments
    @MasterClassComments Před 3 lety +18

    Welp I've finally found the most difficult-to-understand video on CZcams to date. Gonna have to watch this one 20x over smh

    • @Gogglesofkrome
      @Gogglesofkrome Před 3 lety +3

      the concept comes down to parity, and how the universe is not as symmetrical as we once thought; in regards to the parity of time, you can tell whether we're moving backwards or forwards through time (thus violating parity of time) through the interactions of the quarks in the strong force, since this interaction takes longer to occur in one direction through time rather than another. Apply this asymmetry to the other forms of parity in the video and voila you have the general conception of the topic at hand.

    • @adlex1212
      @adlex1212 Před 3 lety +3

      Try pbs spacetime videos.

  • @theginginator1488
    @theginginator1488 Před 6 lety +148

    Just ask Dr. Strange if you’re in the Mirror Dimension.

    • @rowesawyer4533
      @rowesawyer4533 Před 6 lety +4

      TheGinginator14 DORMAMMU! I’ve come to bargain.

    • @trashedeggnog3858
      @trashedeggnog3858 Před 6 lety

      DORMMAMU I'M COME TO BARGAIN

    • @cheese1ak
      @cheese1ak Před 6 lety

      Eggnog Trashed "What is this, what is happening?!?"

    • @silentbob267
      @silentbob267 Před 6 lety

      Coincidentally, there is a Dr. Strange that teaches biology at my university.

  • @jocabulous
    @jocabulous Před 5 lety +32

    Particle man, particle man.
    Doing the things a particle can

  • @devamjani8041
    @devamjani8041 Před 3 lety +1

    Some of the best content creators out there

  • @antonnym214
    @antonnym214 Před 2 lety +13

    CPT just means I have a good excuse for being late to any event. [that was a joke!] Good video! Hey, if I understand it this well, then you did an awesome job explaining it. Thank you!

  • @MDTravisYT
    @MDTravisYT Před 5 lety +18

    "And you can't tell you're in the mirror world." That got deep quick

  • @CS-W
    @CS-W Před 4 lety +7

    All the videos Veritasium made never failed to, overall, satisfy our thoughts on understanding the conundrums of science, if one is yet to be proved then they always backed it up by recalling another temporary consideration for what's going on with it. It was nicely done as always!

  • @mr.winter538
    @mr.winter538 Před 3 lety +9

    Though I don't know much about them compared to what there is to know, I love quantum field theory as well as special relativity.
    This means that the possibility that both of them are wrog because CPT "breaks" (if you can put it that way) has become one of my greatest fears.

  • @shreeshakr5939
    @shreeshakr5939 Před 2 lety +3

    Sir you are very brilliant! I am extremely motivated by you and I want to become like you 👍🏾🙏

  • @Jone952
    @Jone952 Před 5 lety +322

    If there's charge parity then why do I have to put batteries in the right way

    • @thewhizkid3937
      @thewhizkid3937 Před 4 lety +8

      Thank You.

    • @TheVergile
      @TheVergile Před 4 lety +96

      because this is actually hell and you are supposed to suffer. same deal with usb ports

    • @onetwothree4148
      @onetwothree4148 Před 4 lety +27

      @@nathan5160 No, that is not correct. You can't "flip" the charge of a device, even with alternating current. The electricity still has the same movement relative to charge. Electricity is the movement of electrons. Electrons cannot be positive.
      Charge parity means that if metals had free protons which moved like electrons, you could recreate any electrical device utilizing the same phenomena with opposite, positive charge.

    • @DDvargas123
      @DDvargas123 Před 4 lety +16

      @@onetwothree4148 flipping all charges means making electrons positrons, and protons antiprotons, etc. So we cant physically flip the charges no. But we expect it to work the same way even if charges /were/ flipped. of course because charge by itself isnt a real symmetry of the universe theres no saying what would really happen.

    • @onetwothree4148
      @onetwothree4148 Před 4 lety +7

      @@DDvargas123 actually opposite charge would not be a positron. The difference between electrons and positrons is more complicated than that, and that's not really what charge parity is about.

  • @Lazerblade95
    @Lazerblade95 Před 6 lety +12

    I initially thought the thumbnail was a person who had given up and had their head on a desk.

  • @yohankam4381
    @yohankam4381 Před 2 lety

    Amazing video ,it was so different for everything I've seen before

  • @gracemarotta2769
    @gracemarotta2769 Před 2 lety

    Understanding you're words is so good for me.

  • @acetate909
    @acetate909 Před 5 lety +119

    @7:34 "the second law of thermodynamics is not the only physical process that prefers one direction in time".
    At no time have I ever preferred One Direction.

  • @InskayDanork
    @InskayDanork Před 6 lety +9

    We did CPT-Symmetry in theoretical electrodynamics just a week ago, very interesting to have it put into a larger context.

  • @debbiechan8657
    @debbiechan8657 Před 2 lety

    I‘m just happy that you mentioned Prof. Chien-Shiung Wu, one of the physicists I truly admire

  • @DeadBeastPriest
    @DeadBeastPriest Před 6 lety +305

    It's scarry that the universe prefers One direction... but some of their songs are actually good ;-)

    • @TheDboi96
      @TheDboi96 Před 6 lety +7

      Uroš Sedmak bravo

    • @michaels4340
      @michaels4340 Před 6 lety +16

      Wu and her students showed weak force breaks parity
      Time and charge have to balance for symmetry
      So you won't know-oh-oh if you're in the mirror world, oh, oh,
      That's why it's a mirror world

    • @posadist681
      @posadist681 Před 6 lety +4

      if only the mainstream radio got flooded with science lyrics lol

    • @cosmicdarkmatter1128
      @cosmicdarkmatter1128 Před 6 lety

      +Uros Sedmak. Ha Ha, that's a good one...

    • @ISenjaya71
      @ISenjaya71 Před 6 lety +6

      Then 1D didn't break up, they're just increasing their entropy

  • @Natchuw
    @Natchuw Před 6 lety +123

    "..who is also a physicist.."
    And her grandma.. and her daughter.. and her son.. and her cousins.. also her ancestors..

  • @IMOLDIN
    @IMOLDIN Před 2 lety

    Cheers for the book link excellent work on the video.

  • @konozrashid887
    @konozrashid887 Před 2 lety +3

    I must say Derek that, I'm really inspired by all of your research and, as a true fan of physics since the age of 15, I would say, what if you and me together break the last remaining symmetry?😅 Anyways, another brilliant video.

  • @Gatsefy
    @Gatsefy Před 6 lety +13

    0:56 Startled the hell out of me.

  • @torybio13
    @torybio13 Před 6 lety +157

    0:56 that sound was so anti climatic

    • @DJ-Ophidian
      @DJ-Ophidian Před 5 lety +5

      Totally a white president Proof that sound effects break time symmetry.

    • @Kaei7
      @Kaei7 Před 5 lety

      yeah, it spooked me

  • @anshikarathore6013
    @anshikarathore6013 Před 3 lety

    Hello Jorge
    I listen to your podcast Explain The Universe
    You & Daniel are the Best!!

  • @pd3788
    @pd3788 Před 4 lety +1

    @veritasium At 3.07 both the particles are not actually in the same spin because you are measuring their spin according to the right hand thumb rule with your perspective being +z axis for one particle while being - z axis for another. This itself is like viewing a current carrying loop from its two different faces and arguing that they must have the same polarity. In conclusion the symmetry inevitably exist if the frame of reference or the perspective was getting inverted in the same phase ( or in the same manner) as all other fundamental particles. Which means that if the c.p.t. symmetry were to consider each and every fundamental particle and all 7 dimension, then symmetry would never ever be broken and the special relativity or the quantum theory would never ever fail. The time symmetry actually never gets broken because if you were to invert time ( ie. reverse it) and even invert the definition of clockwise movement of the pair of quarks, the symmetry as an absolute measure never gets broken. Whether or not in mirror dimension, it's just about perspective!

    • @pd3788
      @pd3788 Před 4 lety

      @veritasium plz reply your opinion

  • @deceo2119
    @deceo2119 Před 4 lety +6

    This is one of my favourite videos ever. I first saw it a few years ago and it still baffles me.

  • @Coco111s2
    @Coco111s2 Před 6 lety +273

    Science doesn't mean its right, it just means its the closest thing we know of to being right at any moment.

    • @blykgod
      @blykgod Před 6 lety +1

      ya and your god is absolutely right/correct

    • @skepticmoderate5790
      @skepticmoderate5790 Před 6 lety

      EXACTLY

    • @skepticmoderate5790
      @skepticmoderate5790 Před 6 lety +4

      A R G O N Λ U T I'm fairly certain Corkas_ was saying that was an advantage.

    • @firebornliger
      @firebornliger Před 6 lety +23

      Careful there Argonaut, you almost dropped your fedora.
      Science is not the body of knowledge, science is a process for testing ideas. At least when conducted honestly. It is when a hypothesis that is expected to come true (for all the body of knowledge would put forward) but does not, as is presented in this video, that the value of science becomes strongest.
      Unfortunately, when science is not done honestly, we have experiments repeated until the hypothesis is confirmed, and then that data set alone being published. Regardless of how many times it took.

    • @deon6045
      @deon6045 Před 6 lety +1

      I don't think that's quite right. The essence of Science is knowledge, in the sense of knowing what is and what isn't, or the difference between fact and fiction.
      Science is more like a tool. If it produces the "wrong answer" it's human error, like how the scientists in the video keep trying to save their preconceptions instead of genuinely trying to understand. It's why I hate things like theories. They look to me more like people trying to force their ideas onto the universe instead of searching for truth. And that kind of human arrogance is why we have the dogmatic pseudo-religion of "because science," and why education tries to indoctrinate children into believing things that aren't proven instead of focusing solely on what we know. I think it ultimately dilutes science over time.
      edit: Kind of like what firebornliger said, yea. I was just replying to OP, sorry.

  • @jebooiii6462
    @jebooiii6462 Před 3 lety +20

    My head hurts.
    If you pause at 7:01, you see a weird smiley face

    • @FoxywithaRubikscube
      @FoxywithaRubikscube Před 3 lety +1

      I am not unable to unsee it.
      Why is his grin so dastardly

    • @TheDeanvaz
      @TheDeanvaz Před 3 lety +1

      Wow! Sir/Mam, your definitely a genius 😂😂😂😂

  • @sergetheijspartner2005
    @sergetheijspartner2005 Před 2 lety +3

    You are amazed by breaking time symmetry while I am still trying to wrap my head around how on earth they can measure the movement of quarks while they are still inside an atom, like HOW??? Who does these measurements, how can you see, follow and exactly measure subatomic particles still formed as an atom moving at the speed of light...mind blown. You should make a video where you explain the processes of HOW THE HELL THEY DO THIS? Like how does CERN work, how can they see collisions?, what does that look like? What can they see in those pictures they always show us of particles flying in every direction? how do you derive, spin, speed, mass and momentum? To me they look like fireworks but to them it tells them how the universe works on a quantum level. What do they see? How do they see it? I know how a multimeter works, I know how an oscilloscope works...but this woosh right over my head, could you make a video or a series of video's that goes in to depth and explains in laymens terms?

  • @justmehere_
    @justmehere_ Před 4 lety +16

    imagine breaking the symmetry and literally throwing the two best theories collected and experimented and proven through over 100 years with many scientists contributing their lives to prove and build on them.
    lol

  • @rickardrocks2160
    @rickardrocks2160 Před 6 lety +56

    The cool thing was that they acctually had to travel to the "mirror" world to do this experiment, just like they travled to pandora to shoot avatar! great video and well explained!

    • @thstroyur
      @thstroyur Před 6 lety +4

      XD Not really; they knew where the spin was pointing (say 'up') - then all they had to do was measure if there was an excess of particles coming upwards or backwards, boom! P was broken

    • @lkhfrank
      @lkhfrank Před 6 lety

      Rickard Rocks was w

    • @gauharhayat3461
      @gauharhayat3461 Před 6 lety +2

      mirror world makes the better doughnut holes, ironically enough

    • @jongyon7192p
      @jongyon7192p Před 6 lety +1

      whats the mirror world? how do you know itll act differently there?

    • @daksh8747
      @daksh8747 Před 6 lety +3

      The joke
      Your head

  • @moizuddinahmed7764
    @moizuddinahmed7764 Před 2 lety

    You just explained Inception and Tenet in single video! 🙌

  • @cavecan7532
    @cavecan7532 Před 3 lety

    I wish we had more people like you i listen more than my ussual teacher cause they only give me 1 explanation 2 sub lessons an assignment and 6 billion papers

  • @Racnive
    @Racnive Před 6 lety +18

    I always thought that the "right hand rule" of magnetism demonstrated that the forces of our universe are not symmetric, but I suppose in the mirror it would just be the left hand rule.

    • @DeathBringer769
      @DeathBringer769 Před 6 lety

      Everything's relative after all, lol...

    • @thstroyur
      @thstroyur Před 6 lety +15

      The 'right hand rule' you learned is actually a handy way to explain _pseudovectors_ to people: see, the 'spin' in the vid has basically the same behavior of a vector *L* = *r* x m *v* , with *r* the position (say of a point particle, for simplicity) and *v* just the velocity d/dt ( *r* ); as you put *L* in front of a 'mirror' (i.e., change _vectors_ *V* by - *V* ), both *r* _and_ *v* swap sign, so *L* - or spin - doesn't change sign at all!

    • @SSGranor
      @SSGranor Před 6 lety +5

      As +thstroyur pointed out, the right hand rule is always related to pseudovectors.
      A good way to think about this is that pseudovectors require a sign convention. They're like vectors in the sense that the have both a magnitude and a directional axis; but, they're unlike vectors in that there's nothing intrinsic that picks an orientation along that axis. However, the _relative_ orientation of pseudovectors is meaningful; so, it's useful to create a convention by which we can just assign orientations in a self-consistent way. And, that's what the right hand rule does. Everything would work just as well if we chose the left hand rule convention and applied it universally; but, we didn't.

    • @Racnive
      @Racnive Před 6 lety +2

      Ah! So it's sort of like how we arbitrarily assign "i" and "-i" (the positive/negative direction along the imaginary axis), in that if we replaced every instance of one with the other (conjugating everything) nothing would break. Or how we always draw circles determined by (cos(theta), sin(theta)) in the counterclockwise direction simply because of how we orient the axes on our paper.

    • @junokuborocks
      @junokuborocks Před 6 lety +1

      Not too related to your comment but it reminded me of a funny moment in hs. We were learning about the right hand rule in class and one of my friend raised his hand and asked the teacher "what if you are left handed?" Man... the amount of face palms that day xD Can never forget that moment LMAO

  • @Mattteus
    @Mattteus Před 6 lety +63

    this is what I'm subscribed for!

  • @Nae_Ayy
    @Nae_Ayy Před 3 lety

    Seriously the single best thumbnail in CZcams history

  • @lunareclipse07
    @lunareclipse07 Před 2 lety +3

    Hey @Veritasium! love your videos, I just wanted to ask, which software do you use for these amazing animations?

  • @shivakumargujjari
    @shivakumargujjari Před 5 lety +64

    And boom!! You got yourself another Nobel prize 😂 5:55

  • @ajaykumar-ve5oq
    @ajaykumar-ve5oq Před 6 lety +33

    summery : there is no going back

  • @btgggggggggg55
    @btgggggggggg55 Před 2 lety

    I like how you switched mirror world with your shirt lining, mustache shave and hair comb as a clue.

  • @arvalve7659
    @arvalve7659 Před 3 lety +4

    I really don't get 3:10, as to how the object rotating in the mirror would still be going clockwise, I mean, The axial direction of rotation, is usually given by the right hand rule, so going by that, the Co in the real world, rotated in an axis going into the mirror. But when we switch to the mirror world, we have to switch perspectives too, so looking from the mirror version of you, and using the 'right hand' of the mirror you, that is, the left hand of the real you, the mirror Co, spins again in an axis going through the mirror.

  • @mitchjr77
    @mitchjr77 Před 4 lety +165

    You mentioned the Nobel Prize for Proving the “Handedness” of Nature. Yes, that was True. And it’s also True that it was a TOTAL SHAME that “The First Lady of Physics”, Chinen-Shiung Wu was looked over and DID NOT get the Award or recognized!
    I found it curious that you omitted that part out of your presentation; leaving it vague so your audience would assume that Chinen-Shiung Wu, “of course” got the Nobel Prize, when in fact she didn’t! It’s like another injustice to her to not, at the bare minimum, mention how she was wronged and wasn’t one of the physicists who was Awarded after making such a major discovery.

    • @adamfreese
      @adamfreese Před 4 lety +17

      Indeed. I'm very disappointed in Veritasium for this omission.

    • @mrmustache2039
      @mrmustache2039 Před 4 lety +33

      I dont think its fair to judge Veritasium for this, considering that he did give her credit, it was the past people who didnt give her credit, he is respecting and giving her credit which is exactly what should have happened in the first place.

    • @mitchjr77
      @mitchjr77 Před 3 lety +32

      mr mustache yes, it was people from the past whom didn’t give Chinen-Shiung Wu the Nobel Peace Prize because women weren’t taken as seriously back then. Hedy Lamarr is another one of these women that comes to mind...
      However, if Veritasium wanted to truly Honor Chinen-Shiung Wu, when bringing up the significant impact of her discovery to be able to win the Nobel Peace Prize, he then SHOULD have AT LEAST mentioned that she wasn’t even the recipient w/no credit given to her back then.
      Instead, he left it pretty ambiguous, letting everyone assume or THINK that History was all fine and dandy with a healthy respect towards Women or Minority Scholars. Unfortunately, that isn’t so.
      Things like this NEEDS to be mentioned. If not, we will never learn from our past mistakes and never will think to ask, who else have we not given the proper recognition for their major scientific discoveries? What other major scientific breakthroughs would we ALREADY would have known if we didn’t just blatantly dismiss a scientist/inventor/Scholar? All just because they happened to be a woman... Again, look at Hedy Lamarr or Joan Curran!
      But to be fair to me, I DID say that despite my criticism, Veritasium did a really well put-together presentation with a production quality that can rival major TV Studios! 😁👍

    • @SammiChimi
      @SammiChimi Před 3 lety +13

      Its just a prize mate. Im sure what mattered to her is the expanded collective knowledge we have about the universe.

    • @mitchjr77
      @mitchjr77 Před 3 lety +23

      Erick Lujan the Nobel Prize is not the point mate. Her not getting the proper recognition and validation by the Scientific Community at the time is!
      Sure, there are now videos about Chien-Shiung Wu so we can NOW know about her and what she did for Science. However, when talking about her or other Women in Science, we should also point out that those considered to be the Scientific Authorities have had a VERY long History (even happens today) of not recognizing, completely dismissing, and/or over even outright taking credit for Scientific discoveries or breakthrough made by Women and Minorities.
      IMAGINE how FAR ahead with WiFi Technology we would be if the Military and Scientists took Hedy Lamarr seriously? Instead, they all just thought of her as their era’s THOT and brushed her aside.... Could you imagine if she or other female Scientists was instead encouraged to come up with more ideas and discoveries? I’m pretty sure our advancement in Science and Technology would be that much faster!
      If we don’t call it out these injustices in Science or any other fields, then no one knows it’s a problem (again, even in some cases today), that definitely NEEDS to be fixed. If we don’t, you know the saying, “Silence ensures History repeats itself.” ~Erin Gruwell
      I highly suggest checking this article from the Smithsonian Magazine about Women In Science to begin get an understanding why this is a problem. You’d be surprised to learn how many Women were written out of Science history!
      www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/unheralded-women-scientists-finally-getting-their-due-180973082/

  • @an_annoying_cat
    @an_annoying_cat Před 4 lety +75

    “The laws of physics shouldn’t care. They should work exactly the same in the mirror world as they do in real life.”
    Illuso: *laughs*

    • @g-smith4466
      @g-smith4466 Před 3 lety +5

      Your post just made me realize that law of physics working differently in the mirror world sound like a good idea for ANY movie haha

    • @troytaylor4719
      @troytaylor4719 Před 2 lety

      jojo referemce

  • @Verschlungen
    @Verschlungen Před 2 lety +10

    At 3:00-3:03 we hear this: "In the mirror, the direction of the z-axis is flipped, but the direction of nuclear spin is NOT."
    Actually, what Whiteson and Cham show us is just one of three ways that such an illustration can be be set up. In the other two ways, the direction of the nuclear spin WOULD be flipped in the mirror. (Granted, this is how 'everyone' always presents these Wu experiment cartoons, implicitly choosing just one of the three possible starting orientations, then proceeding as if it were the only possible starting orientation. No doubt they took this approach to avoid an overly long video, but still it needs to be pointed out.)
    Second point: All such mirror-cartoons actually tell us nothing about the Wu experiment itself, whose results are very straightforward (never mind how fabulously complex its design and implementation were). The mirror-cartoons silently change the subject to: WHY-the-experiment-was-important, away from WHAT-the-experiment-was.

    • @trinanjan26
      @trinanjan26 Před 2 lety

      I appreciate you for sharing your knowledge

  • @calebhuston6747
    @calebhuston6747 Před 2 lety +1

    I’m watching this video at about 1:45 AM, 4inches from my face and found that when I look at the top-middle particle at 2:30 the top left particle is in my left-eye’s blindspot. Also my right eye is closed. Phenomenal.

  • @AndDiracisHisProphet
    @AndDiracisHisProphet Před 6 lety +63

    5:07 yes, but it didn't went to Chien-Shiung Wu

    • @Roescoe
      @Roescoe Před 6 lety +10

      go*

    • @AndDiracisHisProphet
      @AndDiracisHisProphet Před 6 lety

      Well, I didn't know that. And since it is the idea that counts, imho...

    • @Nimbus3690
      @Nimbus3690 Před 6 lety +16

      THAT'S WHY WE NEED FEMINI... oh, logic has already reached these parts of the land, there is no room for ideological conquests...I'll be leaving now

    • @abdelarmstr5173
      @abdelarmstr5173 Před 6 lety +3

      Conducting an experiment is sufficient. The guys who accidentally dicovered the CMB got iT.

    • @DoctorYammy
      @DoctorYammy Před 6 lety +4

      The idea doesn't count because the Nobel prize is awarded to active labs for further research work. They don't fund ideas, they fund the teams/people who conduct experiments so they can perform more. There have been plenty of Nobel Prize winners who received their prize after someone else told them what to do. Ultimately, the one that does it, is the one that gets the money

  • @Adam-zt4cn
    @Adam-zt4cn Před 6 lety +15

    I understood most of this, but can someone explain to me, how does the experiment at 3:50 tell you if you are in the normal, or in the mirrored world? I thought about this and i see a problem with it:
    Let's say, you have a friend, and that friend tells you: "if electrons of cobalt atoms are emitted in the same direction as the spin of the atom, you have just been put into a mirrored world".
    And, because a divine higher dimensional being really hated you in particular, your entire universe has been mirrored over night while you were sleeping and you didn't notice.
    So, just out of curiosity, and because you are a huge nerd, you try out if you haven't been just mirrored randomly. You grab a microscope (a large one) and study cold cobalt atoms. You use the Right Hand Rule™ (google it) to find the direction of atom's spin.
    And, what do you see? Electrons are emitting in the wrong direction! Oh no! Panic!
    Except not.
    Remember, you have been mirrored. Your right and left hands have been switched, so by doing the Right Hand Rule™, you estimate the atom's spin wrongly - in the opposite direction.
    So because the electrons are going the wrong way, and you have estimated the spin the wrong way, it cancels out and everything seems normal, and thus you can not tell you have just been mirrored, so the Parity symmetry has been conserved.
    Am I missing something important here?

    • @enderyu
      @enderyu Před 6 lety +1

      Exactly what I was thinking.
      I'm posting this comment to see the responses

    • @fuxpremier2097
      @fuxpremier2097 Před 6 lety +10

      Very good remark on a very common mistake, actually made in this video. A mirror would invert forward and backward, not left and right. The right hand rule would work the same in a mirror.
      I think there was a video on Physics girl on this issue.
      Hope it helps!

    • @adryanvalhallatier5259
      @adryanvalhallatier5259 Před 6 lety +3

      I find your comment confusing, but let me help. This video is about the symmetry of particle. No such thing as mirrored world. The video clearly explains that parity is a way that all particle behave the same way IF you mirror 2 'axis'. Like if its x y z, its now y x z, hence why it is called mirrored. The thing is, as explained in the vid also, some particle looks different when mirrored, when people think it would be the same for every particle. You might have mistaken it as everything being in opposite direction. Now i have no idea what right hand rule have to do with this. I googled it and it's about magnetic fields.

    • @Adam-zt4cn
      @Adam-zt4cn Před 6 lety +2

      Fux Premier
      I know how mirror works, but the fact that it reflects front/back and not left/right (actualy it's more like towards/away from the mirror) is irrelevant. It doesn't matter which way you get flipped, your hands WILL switch places (well, only for an outside observer).
      It's like flipping a transparent paper with some text on it.
      It doesn't matter which way you flip it, the text will become unreadable.

    • @Adam-zt4cn
      @Adam-zt4cn Před 6 lety +2

      Adryan Valhallatier
      Right hand rule is used to find the direction of the rotational vector.
      Put your right hand in a facebook "like" pose. Your thumb marks the vector direction, and other fingers mark the positive (anticlockwise) spin direction.

  • @austinrtyler
    @austinrtyler Před 2 lety +2

    I was wondering who to complain to about the horseshoe magnet animation generating a uniform magnetic field. Glad I found out by the end of the video.

  • @gracemarotta2769
    @gracemarotta2769 Před 2 lety

    I love the way your brain works you make it so underable.

  • @cush6827
    @cush6827 Před 4 lety +24

    5:11 Chien-Shiung Wu did not get the Nobel prize, however