I followed Simon Clark's vlogs for years during his PhD and I felt kind of sad when he actually got it because I knew the PhD vlogs would end. I hope to see videos of you going through it because it's really entertaining.
@@AndrewDotsonvideos Related to this, Simon did more timelapses of him coding and I think this could break up some of the transitions in your vlog pretty nicely.
He's just talking about his research, there's no need to speculate if he's "actually smart". I've done QCD research and everything he's talking about is legit.
Anyone in current times that commits their life resources to fundamental particle physics isn't very bright economically, but must be funded so 99% of Humanity will survive beyond the swamp.
don't be scare to go more into the details, I assume that most people who watch your channel is familiar with the fundamentals and have a genuine interest in the field
Even as a mathematician with limited training in advanced physics I’m always interested in seeing what people are working on, which includes the details!
Even then, learning passively by listening is a thing. There's also an added mysticism when you don't fully understand what's going on. Cédric Villani takes advantage of this in his "Birth of a Theorem", which is essentially a journal he kept while writing the paper that got him the Fields Medal -- it's a good read even if you barely understand the math for the same reasons this phlog is enjoyable. :D
It felt like yesterday that I saw your first video on kinematic equations and I haven't missed an upload since. Now you are about to finish grad school and I will be attending UT Austin to start my dream of studying physics. You have inspired me Andrew in ways you can't imagine and you are a idol I look up too. Please continue making videos because each one is amazing. Are you proud of me Andrew ? :)
Most excellent, Andrew! I'm curious to see more of what its like being a PhD student. I was just accepted to a PhD Engineering program and I am VERY excited!
I’ve been deliberately avoiding “vlogs” for years, but this one was pitched just right! Thanks so much for this insight into a phD, you’re a very natural presenter and balance in just enough day-to-day triviality/music montages to break up heavy physics without it getting obnoxious - u have great judgement so will certainly be tuning in again!
As a Nobleman, I can appreciate the sophisticated play on words of "Phlog" as it refers to the more peasantry "vlog", but the "Wenesday" wHaT cOuLd ThAt PoSsIbLy MeAn?!? These puzzles are awfully lucrative Andrew!
"I only have this very abstract understanding of what it is that I do at the moment.." Me as an MSc. student in quantum information / quantum computing right now..
@Shivanshu Siyanwal I'll be honest, I'm not sure if I'm even ready to explain things myself yet. I'd recommend referring to Quantum Computer Science by David Mermin and Introduction to Quantum Computing by Philip Kaye, Raymond LaFlamme, and Michael Mosca (I'm associated with their group at Perimeter Institute and they seem to know how to explain things fairly well)
Jurgen He might not answer, but I hope I can take the offer: in what ways does Quantum computing still relate to the classical Turing machine computing? I can‘t help but think of it as some sort of hypercomputational oracle machine...
That lovely period of time before your life becomes a never ending series of abstract deadline submissions and article submissions that requires you to pull all nighters.
Don’t quit making videos bro!!! I love your work! It’s cool to see someone as passionate as you are being involved in physics. You make it easier for the rest of us to go all the way through
This is my first time watching one of your videos and it actually gets me so excited to study physics in college and going as far as a phd. I’m really passionate about it and i’m always trying to wrap my head around the different perplexing puzzles in the physics world. Great video man , i’m subbing for sure !
"Find out exactly what the answer almost is" If I'd been able to convince PreCal and OrgChem instructors that was good enough I wouldn't have ended up a History major. : ) Thank you forgotten Math TA and Prof. Carrico.
You know, there are some videos in this universe, which upon looking at the notification of, you instantly click on it and like them. I am proud to say that this channel is one of those channels for me that come in the above category. PS: wish me luck, I'm going to uni in 2 months for my undergrad physics program!
Incredible vlog, always fascinating to see the day to day for ya. Also loving the in-depth, well as in-depth as you can get, research dive you’ve shown us.
I am studying to do physics in uni at the moment and I was feeling a bit down and this really helped me cheer up and made me a lot more motivated so thank you ❤️
Of course, you should include this. You're a rockstar, baby! Making physics fun and accessible to the average joe.. inspiring 100s of thousands. Good on you, mate!
Hey Andrew, Your videos are very informative especially for me as a senior physics student. I’m planning to apply to a physics grad school in December of this year. I’d love to see more videos about grad school and any tips you would give to undergrad physics students! Thank you again:)
Whenever I see these videos, I get extremely hyped for college (high school student) and it feels like the research I dream to one day be part of is not that far and that makes me very happy. Thank you for that.
@@colin8923 (European experience) Great. Tough (the option to sign up for as many classes outside of your curriculum as you want is deceptively dangerous) but great. I'm slowly getting integrated into my PI's research group, first (genuinely mine) paper coming out soon
All the best of luck in the phD. I never regretted doing mine. Your videos are like a trip down memory lane and great revision too after all the years. FWIW, if there is one tip I could give is to learn mathematica instead of/or alongside python, particularly for symbolic stuff mathematica is superb. I had to do loads of calculus in my PhD. Doing very long derivatives by hand is error prone and tedious, mathematica just spews out the code and can even be exported as Fortran or C/C++, cut and paste :) Once again, all the best.
Congratulations man on your journey. I’m happy for you to made it through the hard and painful road. Wish best for you. Good content and love it. Have a nice semester. 🥂✌🏻
it's been 4 years since i last commented, i have grown a lot and your videos never fail to inspire me to pursuit a PhD or even a masters degree. I sincerely wish you well and i hope you are still laughing and smilling like always :) and maybe touching your hair hahaha
Im a nursing student and came across this video and I’m just like what in the world is this genius talking about.7 min in and I don’t even know what he’s doing but its super interesting. Props to smart people like you 🙌🏽
Gosh how am I binge watching his channel, I’m not even interested in being a STEM major. I almost failed physics in high school and probably will end up in Humanities
Wow I wasn't quite expecting how different your weeks would be as an advanced graduate student than as an undergrad. Maybe a first week of grad school video in the future like the one you did for freshman year of undergrad?
Thats a bit of a complicated question. The best analogy I can think of is a basketball spinning on someones finger. The basketball is any particle with spin; either clockwise or counterclockwise. Now, mind you, that the particle isn't physically spinning on an axis of any kind, its just the best word we have to describe it.
You sound way more productive than I am! If I did a PhD vlog at the moment, it would be me writing a review paper for a week straight with some procrastination in between.
Just curious, other than legacy reasons, how come upper academics don't hop over to matlab? Iirc, wasn't matlab written in fortran (but later rewritten in C)? Feels like you'd have much of the same benefits as fortran, but the convenience of the environment matlab offers. Curious if there are technical reasons why people prefer fortran. i'm not really to familiar with either language however.
"we can exactly find out what the answere almost is" -Andrew Dotson 2020
Lmaoo 😂
Haha
How to explain "perturbative" in 1 sentence.
@@akshaj7011" Approximatly equals equals... Approximately" Major prep now know as Zach star
Zyterio this cracked me up
"That's probably just boring detail that you don't wanna see."
Bro do you even know what kind of people watch your videos? Of course want to see that.
Definitely
I read that just as he said it.
Yes please
I am a history student and I would definitely like to see that
Same here actually wish he explained it
Funny enough I have been called “weak as a physics student” by multiple tutors at this point
James McCloskey lmao
@@AndrewDotsonvideos what's funny in that? I didn't get it.
@@sahilbaori9052 "weak" as a physics student
@@drandrewsanchez a weak physics student, or weak like a physics student ?
@@sahilbaori9052 it was a pun referencing the title lol
I’m gonna be honest with you, when you didn’t call it “E&M2: Electric Boogaloo” I just about shed a tear
As a Physics Student Control Your Emotions
Grian
How many people will get that reference lol. Grian!!
It's E&M2: Dielectric boogaloo, sorry
I followed Simon Clark's vlogs for years during his PhD and I felt kind of sad when he actually got it because I knew the PhD vlogs would end.
I hope to see videos of you going through it because it's really entertaining.
Kirby thanks a lot!
@@AndrewDotsonvideos Make phlogs as a postdoc ;)
@@AndrewDotsonvideos Related to this, Simon did more timelapses of him coding and I think this could break up some of the transitions in your vlog pretty nicely.
I can’t tell if he’s actually smart or just talking smart
He's just talking about his research, there's no need to speculate if he's "actually smart". I've done QCD research and everything he's talking about is legit.
That's exactly how a post graduate PhD sounds too.
@@MarkMcDaniel And the crunky bunch
Anyone in current times that commits their life resources to fundamental particle physics isn't very bright economically, but must be funded so 99% of Humanity will survive beyond the swamp.
his beard is smarter than all of us(united states) together
"You just can't ask to record kids and look like me." same
LOL
"You just can't ask to record kids and look like male"
Love this content! Just got accepted into a physics PhD program in the fall.
David Beckwitt congrats!
Congrats❤
Nice bro im happy for you
Only in physics does anyone say "so my advisor gave me several thousand lines of Fortran to read"
that's only 200 100-lines of code
I just had a gag reflex when I heard Fortran.
Why FORTRAN?
@@umbra3324 fast, really really fast, and the code is probably old
@@koktszfung FORTRAN is still actively updated to this day btw, so it's not certain the code is old.
I want more of that "boring detail" please. I had no idea you would be coding in Pysics Ph.D., that's really cool!
You didn't label your axes nor did you give your graph a title. -50.
Logan H is that the equivalence of forgetting your name in grade school
My son also did this, but he was in grade 5.
don't be scare to go more into the details, I assume that most people who watch your channel is familiar with the fundamentals and have a genuine interest in the field
Even as a mathematician with limited training in advanced physics I’m always interested in seeing what people are working on, which includes the details!
Even then, learning passively by listening is a thing. There's also an added mysticism when you don't fully understand what's going on. Cédric Villani takes advantage of this in his "Birth of a Theorem", which is essentially a journal he kept while writing the paper that got him the Fields Medal -- it's a good read even if you barely understand the math for the same reasons this phlog is enjoyable. :D
Im only a sophmore, but I'd still love to hear more about in-depth stuff, even if I won't understand most of it
Nah bro, I have no fucking clue. I'm a mechanical engineer student peasant xD
Im just a 10th grader vibing over here
It felt like yesterday that I saw your first video on kinematic equations and I haven't missed an upload since. Now you are about to finish grad school and I will be attending UT Austin to start my dream of studying physics. You have inspired me Andrew in ways you can't imagine and you are a idol I look up too. Please continue making videos because each one is amazing. Are you proud of me Andrew ? :)
Angel Martinez I’m so proud!
Hey he was also the reason i chose to study Physics instead of Math,
I am a puny second semester Bachelor student, but hey, gotta start somewhere.
Hey! How have classes been? You still following your dream?
@@brendene3189 Yeah I currently still attend UT and do research in two labs
-no white hair
-no eyeglass
-no wrinkle skin
-fast speaking
-knows how to drive
kinda sus
😂
Most excellent, Andrew! I'm curious to see more of what its like being a PhD student. I was just accepted to a PhD Engineering program and I am VERY excited!
Erock Romulan congrats!
I’m a medical student and your videos are entertaining even though my physics knowledge is pretty laughable.
I’ve been deliberately avoiding “vlogs” for years, but this one was pitched just right! Thanks so much for this insight into a phD, you’re a very natural presenter and balance in just enough day-to-day triviality/music montages to break up heavy physics without it getting obnoxious - u have great judgement so will certainly be tuning in again!
I watched you get into the car with the mug on the roof...
Me: "NO WAIT-"
Then next scene... it is smushed.
RIP YETI MUG
As a Nobleman, I can appreciate the sophisticated play on words of "Phlog" as it refers to the more peasantry "vlog", but the "Wenesday" wHaT cOuLd ThAt PoSsIbLy MeAn?!?
These puzzles are awfully lucrative Andrew!
oh man, half of those words do not mean what you think they mean.
It is a secret code to summon all the dudes
"I only have this very abstract understanding of what it is that I do at the moment.." Me as an MSc. student in quantum information / quantum computing right now..
@Jonas Schäfer where was this hackathon?
@Shivanshu Siyanwal I'll be honest, I'm not sure if I'm even ready to explain things myself yet. I'd recommend referring to Quantum Computer Science by David Mermin and Introduction to Quantum Computing by Philip Kaye, Raymond LaFlamme, and Michael Mosca (I'm associated with their group at Perimeter Institute and they seem to know how to explain things fairly well)
Shivanshu Siyanwal hey man, im actually doing a PhD in quantum computation right now, id be very happy to answer some of your questions!
Jurgen He might not answer, but I hope I can take the offer: in what ways does Quantum computing still relate to the classical Turing machine computing? I can‘t help but think of it as some sort of hypercomputational oracle machine...
Is there anyway an engineer can get into quantum computing?
The difference between having a casual interest in this stuff and a PhD student actually learning it is pretty vast lol.
That lovely period of time before your life becomes a never ending series of abstract deadline submissions and article submissions that requires you to pull all nighters.
When it's just an ending series of assignment deadline submissions and tests that require you to pull all-nighters :P
Andrew: "We've all seen this diagram before" referring to the proton and quarks
Me, a bio major: HA YEAH WE HAVE *laughs nervously*
He pulled a classic physics professor move right there
15:04
"Why you always wet, dude."
i find these videos incredibly motivating. it's like, "if andrew can do this complicated physics, i can do my heat transfer hw"
Don’t quit making videos bro!!! I love your work! It’s cool to see someone as passionate as you are being involved in physics. You make it easier for the rest of us to go all the way through
“You can’t ask to record kids and look like me.” I lost it there.
This is my first time watching one of your videos and it actually gets me so excited to study physics in college and going as far as a phd. I’m really passionate about it and i’m always trying to wrap my head around the different perplexing puzzles in the physics world. Great video man , i’m subbing for sure !
I don't have much to say except thank you for uploading today. It always a highlight to watch your vids.
P. Lenz thank you!
the genuine happiness makes me smile. i can’t wait to start on my Ph.D
"Find out exactly what the answer almost is" If I'd been able to convince PreCal and OrgChem instructors that was good enough I wouldn't have ended up a History major. : )
Thank you forgotten Math TA and Prof. Carrico.
We history gotta stick together. I can relate though I was going to try for a physics major but it was unlikely complicated. I feel for you Andrew
I love the rocket books for physics/math homework bc it’s so good for scrap
I dont even know what this is about but I watched the whole video with joy
As a fellow physics PhD student I really enjoyed hearing about your research day to day
New Mexico State!!! I just found you yesterday and it makes me so happy to see a TH-camr in my home state.
You know, there are some videos in this universe, which upon looking at the notification of, you instantly click on it and like them. I am proud to say that this channel is one of those channels for me that come in the above category.
PS: wish me luck, I'm going to uni in 2 months for my undergrad physics program!
Your not alone!!
~dream~
Prit Khatri :) good luck!
@ThisNerd Talks good luck to you too then!
@@myrddinwyllt3383 thank you!
I love watching these videos, it fuels me with motivation to pursue my physics degree
I don't know anything about physics and I'm terrible at math but I still really enjoy your videos!
There is something very soothing about Andrew's videos that cannot be put into words...
Incredible vlog, always fascinating to see the day to day for ya. Also loving the in-depth, well as in-depth as you can get, research dive you’ve shown us.
I am studying to do physics in uni at the moment and I was feeling a bit down and this really helped me cheer up and made me a lot more motivated so thank you ❤️
I feel bad for never knowing what the hell he’s talking about but, I always remind myself that I’ll get there eventually.
The new Simon Clark
Of course, you should include this. You're a rockstar, baby! Making physics fun and accessible to the average joe.. inspiring 100s of thousands. Good on you, mate!
Hey Andrew, Your videos are very informative especially for me as a senior physics student. I’m planning to apply to a physics grad school in December of this year. I’d love to see more videos about grad school and any tips you would give to undergrad physics students! Thank you again:)
looks like you had fun making this video! - Also congratulations on you qualifying
Whenever I see these videos, I get extremely hyped for college (high school student) and it feels like the research I dream to one day be part of is not that far and that makes me very happy. Thank you for that.
Same
Same
Are you there yet? If so, how is it?
@@colin8923 (European experience) Great. Tough (the option to sign up for as many classes outside of your curriculum as you want is deceptively dangerous) but great. I'm slowly getting integrated into my PI's research group, first (genuinely mine) paper coming out soon
All the best of luck in the phD. I never regretted doing mine.
Your videos are like a trip down memory lane and great revision too after all the years.
FWIW, if there is one tip I could give is to learn mathematica instead of/or alongside python, particularly for symbolic stuff mathematica is superb.
I had to do loads of calculus in my PhD. Doing very long derivatives by hand is error prone and tedious, mathematica just spews out the code and can even be exported as Fortran or C/C++, cut and paste :)
Once again, all the best.
Alexander Borro oh yeah Mathematica is great. I do need to get a bit more comfortable with it though
I am starting out my Ph.D. in Physics during COVID and so much is different lol. I really enjoy this channel.
"Phlog" Iconic. Here is a Physics Masters student🙋♀️
5:45 Lofi hip hop beats to study to
As someone who does a lot of computational chemistry, debuggers are a wildly underrated tool in science communities
Congratulations man on your journey. I’m happy for you to made it through the hard and painful road. Wish best for you. Good content and love it. Have a nice semester. 🥂✌🏻
it's been 4 years since i last commented, i have grown a lot and your videos never fail to inspire me to pursuit a PhD or even a masters degree.
I sincerely wish you well and i hope you are still laughing and smilling like always :) and maybe touching your hair hahaha
Im a nursing student and came across this video and I’m just like what in the world is this genius talking about.7 min in and I don’t even know what he’s doing but its super interesting. Props to smart people like you 🙌🏽
Loved this video, look forward to more. Good format, and also look forward to others talking a bit too.
I don’t even like math. This was recommended and I watched every second of it.
It’s both frightening and reassuring that there are ppl out there who are this smart and who’s lives are this intellectual and complicated lol
it is mind blowing how smart he actually is. It definitely makes me feel like I know just about nothing.
This is literally what every STEM PhD student's lives look like !! 🤣🤣🤣
thank you for filling the simon clark PhD vlogs sized hole in my heart
1:03 is the absolute reason im looking forward to a better day
nice video and very chill vibe. Im doing my bachelors and cant wait to be a grad student ! :)
Gosh how am I binge watching his channel, I’m not even interested in being a STEM major. I almost failed physics in high school and probably will end up in Humanities
I'm exactly the same. Also don't know what I'm doing here, but at least now we have humanities solidarity
Finally finished this video, do more of these please!
I’m in grad school for nuclear engineering. I also use LaTeX for my hw’s. Everyone thinks it’s weird that I do that. Glad to see you do it too!
You know how much I love the vlogs Andrew!
Damn I kinda wanted to see those python graphs you were teasing all phlog long
How did I just now find you channel?! I subbed. Granted this video was posted so long ago. Just being happy on my late struggle bus.
Professor beginning lecture: "... has to do with where the proton gets it's spin."
Me: "Professor, can you repeat that? I'm totally lost."
*God releases Electromagnetism II*
If Electromagnetism II is so good why isn't there Electromagnetism II II ?
R3lay big brain moment
@@R3lay0 if electromagnetism II is so good why isnt there Electromagnetism II two?? checkmate atheists
Blox117 so Dotson is an atheist????
Oh MAN I forgot how much I loved these vlogs
Wow I wasn't quite expecting how different your weeks would be as an advanced graduate student than as an undergrad. Maybe a first week of grad school video in the future like the one you did for freshman year of undergrad?
Keep em coming! I’m a med student and love seeing content like this!
Eagerly waiting for ur Ph.D. vlogs.
15:06 I got that O_O.
It is so cool to get a look into the PhD life! not something you see everyday
This might be a stupid question, but, what exactly IS spin?
its a setting on the old washing machine, duh
Thats a bit of a complicated question. The best analogy I can think of is a basketball spinning on someones finger. The basketball is any particle with spin; either clockwise or counterclockwise. Now, mind you, that the particle isn't physically spinning on an axis of any kind, its just the best word we have to describe it.
Genius
it is a fundamental property of matter, just like mass or charge. you just know its effects and accept its existence
A car ride?
The whole fortan bit had me, I don't miss tracing out line after line of someone else's code
I cant wait to follow along this journey with you!!
These vlogs are getting better and better. The camera is really nice btw
Ok you are the funniest PHD student ever! I heart it bruh.
ya know, when he put the mug up there I thought "I wonder if he remembered he put the yeti on the roof." My suspicions were rapidly confirmed.
You get funnier by every video. Good luck on your phD!!
I am really jealous of your grasp of theoretical physics
Hey I’m a nuclear engineering undergrad so it’s super cool that you’re working on nuclear physics right now!
Bro you're so cool, being an undergrad eng. student you inspire me alot :D, i know its weird, but yeah, you rock!
“Yeti mug was like a father to me, i loved him like a son”
Me: oh, i see you’re a man of culture as well
Just watching you do all your phd stuff motivates me to stop procrastinating and go study :')
Basically this is Simon Clark, but half as long and twice as dull, love it :3
Enjoying your content! Been binging.
I am preparing for my Phd entrance exam. Seeing you making videos related to Phd ,I get excited 😁
"You can't ask to record kids and look like me."
I just had an epiphanic moment realizing this probably now applied to me as well..
yes andrew i do really enjoy your videos
This phlog was very entertaing to watch I hope there will be more in the future !
Keep up the great work. Thanks for interesting videos.
oh boy, we need more channels like this,
I'm not even a physics major and I love your videos (for the record, I used to be but it just did not drive me as much as other subjects do).
This video was so good. Like the best you’ve ever made
Harrison Kendall thank you!
You sound way more productive than I am! If I did a PhD vlog at the moment, it would be me writing a review paper for a week straight with some procrastination in between.
Deinitely enjoyed the video, please do more!
"You're doing God's work Andrew" - Feynman
Nobody:
Physicists: still using Fortran in 2020
Hey that's why he is gonna redo it in Python, right?
@Sionn5 It might be because I come from a CS perspective, but python only has like 4-5 libraries that are necessarily for most numerical computations
Fortran to make simulations and obtain data
and Python to analyze the data obtained
simple enough
🤣🤣
Just curious, other than legacy reasons, how come upper academics don't hop over to matlab? Iirc, wasn't matlab written in fortran (but later rewritten in C)? Feels like you'd have much of the same benefits as fortran, but the convenience of the environment matlab offers. Curious if there are technical reasons why people prefer fortran. i'm not really to familiar with either language however.