I subscribe to his column and podcast on Medium. While I enjoy Neil De Grasse Tyson, Dr. Siegal's writings are probably the best out there for the layperson because he forces you to think and know about basic concepts of physics, which are necessary to understand the topic matter. Great to see him here.
Super hyped that Ethan will be making videos regularly. I've been following him for years, and if Sabine Hossenfelder has taught us anything, there's a huge appetite for this kind of stuff!
I subscribed, the fundamental phenomenon of dilation perfectly explains galaxy rotation curves/dark matter. Mass that is dilated is smeared through spacetime relative to an outside observer. It's the phenomenon behind the phrase "mass becomes infinite at the speed of light". A graph illustrates its squared nature, dilation increases at an exponential rate the closer you get to the speed of light. A time dilation graph illustrates the same phenomenon, it's not just time that gets dilated. Dilation will occur wherever there is an astronomical quantity of mass because high mass means high momentum. This includes the centers of very high mass stars and the overwhelming majority of galaxy centers. The mass at the center of our own galaxy is dilated. This means that there is no valid XYZ coordinate we can attribute to it, you can't point your finger at something that is smeared through spacetime. More precisely, everywhere you point is equally valid. In other words that mass is all around us. Dilation does not occur in galaxies with low mass centers because they do not have enough mass to achieve relativistic velocities. It has recently been confirmed in 6 very low mass galaxies including NGC 1052-DF2 and DF4 to have no dark matter. In other words they have normal rotation rates. All binary stars have normal rotation rates for the same reason.
If cost were not a factor, then you would want to do all experiments possible. But some of the experiments take a large portion of available funding at the expense of other possible experiments. You need to have some way to decide how to allocate scarce resources.
Hi Timothy, I really enjoy your youtube channel. Would you be willing to make a video about ChatGPT, or any of the LLM that have been coming out lately, from a somewhat math / programming angle? Perhaps a similar format you use with guests but you doing a solo lecture?
Given how competitive and critical that technology is to my current employer, it's a topic for me to steer away from at the moment. Fortunately, there are plenty of other channels on this topic.
Loved this discussion, learned a lot! But to counter Ethan’s point near end, we can’t afford to do every possible experiment covering every possibility. The country is already bankrupt, this would throw in the towel. Therefore, we need to be very judicious with the selection of our experiments looking for justifications as to which have higher probability of providing a most useful result. And towards that end, the theorists still need to be out in front because on average theory is much cheaper than experiment.
Since Ethan didn’t give a proper steel-manning of MOND and the bullet cluster problem, I would like to give my understanding of Milgrom’s MOND response. After all, the question I submitted to Brian Keating about the bullet cluster was asked by Brian in his interview of Milgrom. Milgrom said that non-colliding galaxy clusters have always and admittedly been a problem for MOND. MOND works for galaxy rotation curves and when scaled up to clusters, MOND eliminates the need for much of the DM. However, there is still missing mass in the clusters (a factor of ~2, whereas lambda CDM requires a factor of ~5 DM to normal matter). Milgrom supposes that there is some unexplained/unknown baryonic matter in galaxy clusters. Milgrom says this unknown baryonic matter in clusters (that MOND has always assumed is missing) continues its travel with the galaxies in the cluster (i.e. it is not slowed by some kind of self-interaction the way the gas is slowed as shown by the x-rays). So in Milgrom’s view, it is this unknown baryonic matter that explains why we see that most of the mass/gravity in the bullet clusters is with the galaxies and not the gas. Milgrom’s response seems reasonable to me, and I think Ethan should respond to this explanation instead of saying the Modified Gravity community “say things [about the bullet cluster problem], but those things don’t address this point” because Milgrom clearly understands and addresses the point. As an aside, Sabine Hossenfelder repeatedly says that the bullet cluster is a huge problem for both MOND and lambda CDM (possibly an equivalent problem though I don’t want to speak for her). Since Tim Nguyen has connections to Sabine and Ethan, it would be awesome if you could have them both on for a short discussion. I think a lot of people would be really interested. Curt Jaimungal does a good job of hosting these types of discussions and frames them as theolocutions instead of debates, which I think is helpful.
Hi Tim. That's an interesting proposal for a scientific debate, but I suspect the nature of scientific disagreements are so technical that a debate isn't an illuminating forum for them (unlike religious, philosophical, or political). It is difficult enough to convert a technical subject into a performance. Adding to that, the starting point of a meaningful scientific debate would be right at the cutting edge of the science, which thus would involve mainly the experts. It's unfortunate in my episode with Ethan that we ran up against Ethan's time limit, else we would have certainly covered MOND more or topics relating to problems with dark matter.
Ethan @29:18 asks a mathematician (Timothy) if he wants to see the math LOL!!!!! It's like asking a dental hygienist if you should quit drinking soda or coffee.
The fundamental phenomenon of dilation perfectly explains galaxy rotation curves/dark matter. Mass that is dilated is smeared through spacetime relative to an outside observer. It's the phenomenon behind the phrase "mass becomes infinite at the speed of light". A graph illustrates its squared nature, dilation increases at an exponential rate the closer you get to the speed of light. A time dilation graph illustrates the same phenomenon, it's not just time that gets dilated. Dilation will occur wherever there is an astronomical quantity of mass because high mass means high momentum. This includes the centers of very high mass stars and the overwhelming majority of galaxy centers. The mass at the center of our own galaxy is dilated. This means that there is no valid XYZ coordinate we can attribute to it, you can't point your finger at something that is smeared through spacetime. More precisely, everywhere you point is equally valid. In other words that mass is all around us. Dilation does not occur in galaxies with low mass centers because they do not have enough mass to achieve relativistic velocities. It has recently been confirmed in 6 very low mass galaxies including NGC 1052-DF2 and DF4 to have no dark matter. In other words they have normal rotation rates. All binary stars have normal rotation rates for the same reason.
In the bullet cluster frames, red is where the mass is, blue is where the gravitation is. Don't fall into the trap Einstein did with his greatest blunder. Gravitation in the absence of mass is the tale dark matter tells.
When physics figures out that the ether (the Alasha, the space element) is real, they will throw their ideas about dark energy and dark matter in the trash can. Etheric physics will be the basis for TOE. I would like to see physicists responds to the ideas presented by Ken Wheeler at his youTube channel Theoria Apophasis, and in his book "Uncovering the Missing Secrets of Magnetism: Exploring the nature of Magnetism, with regards to the true model of atomic geometry and field mechanics by means of rational physics & logic."
Would love to see more of Ethan Siegel.
These interviews are excellent. Great encountering this caliber of discussion. Admiration from a fellow data scientist here Tim 👍🏽
This channel will be exploded in few months....Really such a high quality content I ever seen
Great talk. Ethan is a great scientific communicator. Thank you both.
I subscribe to his column and podcast on Medium. While I enjoy Neil De Grasse Tyson, Dr. Siegal's writings are probably the best out there for the layperson because he forces you to think and know about basic concepts of physics, which are necessary to understand the topic matter. Great to see him here.
Super hyped that Ethan will be making videos regularly. I've been following him for years, and if Sabine Hossenfelder has taught us anything, there's a huge appetite for this kind of stuff!
Love these videos thank you for curating!
Amazing podcast, thanks!
I subscribed, the fundamental phenomenon of dilation perfectly explains galaxy rotation curves/dark matter. Mass that is dilated is smeared through spacetime relative to an outside observer. It's the phenomenon behind the phrase "mass becomes infinite at the speed of light". A graph illustrates its squared nature, dilation increases at an exponential rate the closer you get to the speed of light. A time dilation graph illustrates the same phenomenon, it's not just time that gets dilated.
Dilation will occur wherever there is an astronomical quantity of mass because high mass means high momentum. This includes the centers of very high mass stars and the overwhelming majority of galaxy centers.
The mass at the center of our own galaxy is dilated. This means that there is no valid XYZ coordinate we can attribute to it, you can't point your finger at something that is smeared through spacetime. More precisely, everywhere you point is equally valid. In other words that mass is all around us.
Dilation does not occur in galaxies with low mass centers because they do not have enough mass to achieve relativistic velocities. It has recently been confirmed in 6 very low mass galaxies including NGC 1052-DF2 and DF4 to have no dark matter. In other words they have normal rotation rates. All binary stars have normal rotation rates for the same reason.
This is truly amazing ! Thank you very much !
Mr Siegel is doing an awesome job at explaining science to non scientific people
If cost were not a factor, then you would want to do all experiments possible. But some of the experiments take a large portion of available funding at the expense of other possible experiments. You need to have some way to decide how to allocate scarce resources.
Core-cusp tension sets a limit on cross-section under some assumptions about dark matter.
Hi Timothy, I really enjoy your youtube channel. Would you be willing to make a video about ChatGPT, or any of the LLM that have been coming out lately, from a somewhat math / programming angle? Perhaps a similar format you use with guests but you doing a solo lecture?
Given how competitive and critical that technology is to my current employer, it's a topic for me to steer away from at the moment. Fortunately, there are plenty of other channels on this topic.
@@TimothyNguyen Of course, I should have thought of that. Maybe you can talk about some of the stuff you’re doing at Google? Anyways, thanks!
Dark matter and energy sound like cosmological phlogiston. Can any testable predictions be derived from the idea?
Loved this discussion, learned a lot! But to counter Ethan’s point near end, we can’t afford to do every possible experiment covering every possibility. The country is already bankrupt, this would throw in the towel. Therefore, we need to be very judicious with the selection of our experiments looking for justifications as to which have higher probability of providing a most useful result. And towards that end, the theorists still need to be out in front because on average theory is much cheaper than experiment.
Unfortunately Planck mass black holes have an effectively zero scattering cross-section!
Since Ethan didn’t give a proper steel-manning of MOND and the bullet cluster problem, I would like to give my understanding of Milgrom’s MOND response. After all, the question I submitted to Brian Keating about the bullet cluster was asked by Brian in his interview of Milgrom.
Milgrom said that non-colliding galaxy clusters have always and admittedly been a problem for MOND. MOND works for galaxy rotation curves and when scaled up to clusters, MOND eliminates the need for much of the DM. However, there is still missing mass in the clusters (a factor of ~2, whereas lambda CDM requires a factor of ~5 DM to normal matter). Milgrom supposes that there is some unexplained/unknown baryonic matter in galaxy clusters.
Milgrom says this unknown baryonic matter in clusters (that MOND has always assumed is missing) continues its travel with the galaxies in the cluster (i.e. it is not slowed by some kind of self-interaction the way the gas is slowed as shown by the x-rays). So in Milgrom’s view, it is this unknown baryonic matter that explains why we see that most of the mass/gravity in the bullet clusters is with the galaxies and not the gas. Milgrom’s response seems reasonable to me, and I think Ethan should respond to this explanation instead of saying the Modified Gravity community “say things [about the bullet cluster problem], but those things don’t address this point” because Milgrom clearly understands and addresses the point.
As an aside, Sabine Hossenfelder repeatedly says that the bullet cluster is a huge problem for both MOND and lambda CDM (possibly an equivalent problem though I don’t want to speak for her). Since Tim Nguyen has connections to Sabine and Ethan, it would be awesome if you could have them both on for a short discussion. I think a lot of people would be really interested. Curt Jaimungal does a good job of hosting these types of discussions and frames them as theolocutions instead of debates, which I think is helpful.
Hi Tim. That's an interesting proposal for a scientific debate, but I suspect the nature of scientific disagreements are so technical that a debate isn't an illuminating forum for them (unlike religious, philosophical, or political). It is difficult enough to convert a technical subject into a performance. Adding to that, the starting point of a meaningful scientific debate would be right at the cutting edge of the science, which thus would involve mainly the experts. It's unfortunate in my episode with Ethan that we ran up against Ethan's time limit, else we would have certainly covered MOND more or topics relating to problems with dark matter.
Ethan @29:18 asks a mathematician (Timothy) if he wants to see the math LOL!!!!! It's like asking a dental hygienist if you should quit drinking soda or coffee.
Sería genial que estubieran subtitulados en español
I wish Eric would do this with you. That would be huge. Can’t we all just get along. ? Maybe DM each other.
So long as he's getting enough vitamin D , it's all good
A good white balance is hard to achieve on the web. He's healthy.
Try CIG Theory as an explanation of Dark Matter. May solve it and the Measurement Problem as well, and more.
The fundamental phenomenon of dilation perfectly explains galaxy rotation curves/dark matter. Mass that is dilated is smeared through spacetime relative to an outside observer. It's the phenomenon behind the phrase "mass becomes infinite at the speed of light". A graph illustrates its squared nature, dilation increases at an exponential rate the closer you get to the speed of light. A time dilation graph illustrates the same phenomenon, it's not just time that gets dilated.
Dilation will occur wherever there is an astronomical quantity of mass because high mass means high momentum. This includes the centers of very high mass stars and the overwhelming majority of galaxy centers.
The mass at the center of our own galaxy is dilated. This means that there is no valid XYZ coordinate we can attribute to it, you can't point your finger at something that is smeared through spacetime. More precisely, everywhere you point is equally valid. In other words that mass is all around us.
Dilation does not occur in galaxies with low mass centers because they do not have enough mass to achieve relativistic velocities. It has recently been confirmed in 6 very low mass galaxies including NGC 1052-DF2 and DF4 to have no dark matter. In other words they have normal rotation rates. All binary stars have normal rotation rates for the same reason.
Damn Ethan’s ability to write and draw are almost as bad a my own. I’m almost encouraged that I’m not the only one.
Gas=ready to burn?
Dust=already burnt?
TLDR it's a theory because we can't balance our current theory to observations.
Ethan no Aircule poirow yeaa😊. Those leeteel grey cells..
In the bullet cluster frames, red is where the mass is, blue is where the gravitation is. Don't fall into the trap Einstein did with his greatest blunder. Gravitation in the absence of mass is the tale dark matter tells.
What is going on here?
When physics figures out that the ether (the Alasha, the space element) is real, they will throw their ideas about dark energy and dark matter in the trash can. Etheric physics will be the basis for TOE. I would like to see physicists responds to the ideas presented by Ken Wheeler at his youTube channel Theoria Apophasis, and in his book "Uncovering the Missing Secrets of Magnetism: Exploring the nature of Magnetism, with regards to the true model of atomic geometry and field mechanics by means of rational physics & logic."