How Can SPACE and TIME be part of the SAME THING?

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 29 เม.ย. 2024
  • Go to brilliant.org/ArvinAsh to get a 30-day free trial + the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual subscription. Be sure to check out the course called "Special Relativity" to get a deeper understanding of the concepts discussed in this video.
    TALK TO ME on Patreon:
    / arvinash
    REFERENCES
    Visualizing 4D spacetime (Arvin Ash): • 4D Spacetime and Relat...
    Minkowski spacetime calculations: tinyurl.com/2bft4pw6
    What is spacetime article: tinyurl.com/23mzynkj
    Paul Ehrenfest paper on more than 3 dimensions: tinyurl.com/27jma7j6
    Why we are stuck with 3 dimensions: tinyurl.com/23oseuup
    Sean Carroll video on spacetime: tinyurl.com/27srn5ez
    CHAPTERS
    0:00 The most important concept in Physics?
    2:00 Defining spacetime
    3:15 The math of space vs math of spacetime
    7:41 Let's answer your questions
    8:41 How the heck can you add time and space in the formula?
    10:12 The implications of combining space and time
    11:10 Why not more than 3 spatial and 1 time dimension?
    13:27 How to learn spacetime more deeply
    SUMMARY
    What is Spacetime? Are space and time the same thing? Space was thought to be nothing, an empty void with no matter in it. In 1908, Hermann Minkowski postulated that time could be thought of as a 4th dimension along with the three dimensions of space. Einstein later showed that this spacetime is a kind of geometry that can bend, affecting the trajectory and passage of time for objects. How can space and time be part of the same canvas? Space is measured in meters, while time is measured in seconds. How are the two interchangeable?
    The definition of spacetime is the set of points in space and time, located with 4 numbers. This would be the location in 3 dimensional space and a time. You can also call these events.
    In ordinary Euclidean space, the distance between two point A and B is fairly simple to figure out. The straight line between them is the shortest path. And it’s obvious also that any other path, from A to B will be longer.
    If we change one of the coordinates to time, the math that we need is not based on Euclidean geometry, but Minkowskian geometry (or Minkowski Geometry). The straight line between A and B does not represent distance but time elapsed between two events. A straight line represents traveling at a constant velocity between the two events, and is the MAXIMUM duration. So for example, in spacetime, if you took a curved path from event A to event B, or a zig zag path, then the elapsed time would be lower compared to the straight line between A and B, because you will have traveled more in space than in time.
    Einstein showed that there is no such thing as absolute time, and so that’s why we have a new formulation. But how do you add time and distance together, since the units are completely different? The key is that there in important conversion factor between time and space, that allows us to convert one to the other. And that conversion factor is, the maximum speed limit of the universe, that is, as far as we know, is the speed of light. The speed of light is the key to uniting space and time. We call this maximum speed “c” in physics.
    And c is 299,792,458 meters per second. As you know speed is distance over time. If we multiply this speed by time, we get a distance. So now we can convert time in the same equation to distance - distance = c*t. Thus, the equation works by using this conversion factor.
    This formulation for a 2 dimensional spacetime can be extended to the real 4 dimensional spacetime we live in. And that 4 dimensional geometry is the foundation for understanding General Relativity, with the addition that this spacetime is no longer flat, but can curve and contort. So the math gets complicated in General Relativity. The consequence of a curving spacetime is that this results in gravity.
    Why do we have only 3 dimensions, why not more? And why not more than one time dimension? First, large spatial dimensions probably don’t exist because we would have detected them if they did. And more than one dimension of time could result in closed time-like loops, in other words it would allow travel to the past. This is considered an impossibility because it would break causality.
    More than 3 spatial dimensions would also likely have fatal consequences. In 1920 Paul Ehrenfest showed that our orbit around the sun would be impossible if we had an additional spatial dimension. Other problems have also been identified, for example the orbit of the electron in atoms would become unstable.
    #spacetime
    If we had fewer spatial dimensions, then spacetime would be too simple for life. For example if we had only one spatial dimension, then orbits could not form. Two dimension would also probably be too simple to result in life.
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  • @meghjoshi
    @meghjoshi 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +337

    Space and time are relative, the more time I spend with my relatives the more space I need

    • @hooked4215
      @hooked4215 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      In fact, the ratio is inverse. Wrong.

    • @hooked4215
      @hooked4215 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That is precisely an inverse ratio.@@richardparker1338

    • @scorelessbow128
      @scorelessbow128 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      ​ "Actually" kid in the comments. It's a joke, let it be.

    • @ashhole03
      @ashhole03 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      ​@@hooked4215It's a joke. Stop.

    • @hooked4215
      @hooked4215 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I have stopped a long time ago but you have kept moving so you think that I am the moving one.@@ashhole03

  • @wayneyadams
    @wayneyadams 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +98

    My favorite concept which I read way back when I was in Junior High school is that "when you travel at any speed you trade space for time." You gain time (time dilation) and you lose space (length contraction).

    • @Rampada
      @Rampada 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Continuous acceleration 🤔, as it makes no sense if the graph is constant

    • @dalecollins477
      @dalecollins477 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Good explanation. In my opinion, space does not contract, but rather the travelling object simply viisits less places the faster it goes. If it had to visit all places between the start and end it would have to visit anifinite number of them (because you can always sub divide between two points), which would take forever. Zenos paradox about the movement of an arrow first highlighted the infinite number of points between any two places. Modern maths makes a pathetic attempt, by inventing the concept of limits (where the crux phrase is 'at infinity', which of course can't happen), to show movement is possible if you draw a line of ink on paper, the ink will not be contigous, and the faster you draw the line, the less places the ink will mark the paper. I think it's the same for spacetime. The faster you go, the less places iyou 'visit. It works the other way too. The faster you go the less points of time you vist, so it seems time contracts. Time dialation is (in my opinion) when points in time are skipped over just like the points in space. 🙂

    • @Rampada
      @Rampada 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @nswanberg replying to whom? Please mention

    • @RedNomster
      @RedNomster 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @nswanberg not moving at all isn't the slowest you can go in space, correct? Extreme curvature of the space you're not moving in also plays a role in how "still" you are to outside observers. I propose you are more still relative to the rest of the universe while you are falling into a black hole, despite the presumption that falling is moving. It isn't in this case -- let me explain. When you swap space and time coordinates is when you're most still in my opinion, as falling towards and reaching the singularity is as inevitable as "falling" into the future in any given moment. So movement towards the singularity in a black hole isn't through 3 dimensional space, but through 1 dimensional time. The singularity IS your future, and there's no way to avoid it. You can move out of its way no more than you can move back in time.
      So I would say the singularity is the slowest you could move, but what do I know

    • @dalecollins477
      @dalecollins477 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@RedNomster Good stuff! Also, the more still an object is it seems, the cooler it is. The cooler something is the less engery it has. So perhaps black holes are the coldest places in the unviverse, with the least energy? Just outside the event horizon then (too adhere to the conservation of energy), there should be all the engery of the particles that pass across it, and hence this would be very 'hot'?

  • @comatronic
    @comatronic 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +114

    No one can make me understand, or believe to understand, complex physics like Arvin.

    • @mickcools4191
      @mickcools4191 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      came here to say the same thing

    • @autopilot3176
      @autopilot3176 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      He is dumb. There's no "time". "Time" is not involved in reality, in any shape or form.

    • @oldbatwit5102
      @oldbatwit5102 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      No one can make me understand, or believe to understand, complex physics.
      I really should stick to funny cats videos, and drain unblocking.

    • @oldbatwit5102
      @oldbatwit5102 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@FIFIEGUK1975 Hilarious.
      Thanks for the laugh.

    • @chrisstevens-xq2vb
      @chrisstevens-xq2vb 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      This isn’t complex it’s just nonsense

  • @binhta
    @binhta 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Wow, I just happened to come across this video and I found the explaination super helpful with such a complex concept (you can tell that I'm not a science major here). The use of interactive graphics really helps guide the viewers to have a better understanding of the talk. But the real genius is how Mr. Arnold breaks the concept down and use simple languages to clarify the complexities of space-time (I'm still not there yet but may be I will someday). STEM students can truly benefit from this type of education. I'll definitely keep following this and hope my granddaughter will benefit from this someday, should she chooses to go into science/engineering. Thank you.

  • @Yewbzee
    @Yewbzee 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

    The bigger question revolves around whether spacetime, the foundation of our current physics models, can still be considered the fundamental layer of reality, or if it instead originates from a more foundational underlying structure. While our current models have thrived on the spacetime framework, recent challenges and breakdowns in certain areas have prompted us to question whether spacetime alone can continue to provide a comprehensive explanation.

    • @bluevalentine2009
      @bluevalentine2009 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      That's why so many physicists have spent their lives trying to formulate one equation for the entire universe. Einstein has been the closest with E=mc2. But that only says energy must have mass and vice versa. It doesn't account for time, which is relative to the observer. So easy to understand yet so hard to grasp until you grasp it.

    • @alphagt62
      @alphagt62 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I’m wondering if, and how, fields play into this structure? As he has demonstrated in other videos, space is made up of fields, like the Higgs field, and other boson fields. Is there any connection between these fields and the 4 dimensions that our universe appears to have? Matter cannot exist without these fields, so, can we have three dimensions without these fields? I’m not even sure I’m asking the right question.

    • @altrag
      @altrag 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@alphagt62 > Is there any connection between these fields and the 4 dimensions that our universe appears to have?
      Yes, they're deeply connected. The fields that we describe in the Standard Model only work in 4 dimensions. (Of course you can create fields in other numbers of dimensions, but they would not be the fields of the Standard Model. They would be something completely different.)
      > Matter cannot exist without these fields
      Matter _as we know it._ That's a very important caveat to always keep in mind when we're discussing these kind of philosophical topics that we can't prove (or disprove) using any known science.
      > can we have three dimensions without these fields?
      Fields are a mathematical model we humans use to describe what we've learned about reality, but they don't define reality. Reality just is what it is. It existed long before we invented the concept of "fields" and it will continue to exist long after we and our knowledge of fields has gone extinct.
      > I’m not even sure I’m asking the right question
      You are, you're just asking it in the wrong frame of mind. You need to dissociate what the universe is from how we mere mortals understand the universe (and that's not particularly easy - don't feel bad about it!)
      One thing to always remember is that these questions cannot be answered (at least not without a view of the universe from outside the universe, which we're unlikely to ever get). They're philosophical questions rather than scientific, and they're questions philosophers have been struggling with for as long as humanity has existed. Each era within the framework of their own knowledge of course - the ancient Greeks for example pondered their "celestial spheres" rather than our current conceptualization of fields within the Standard Model - but the underlying questions are essentially the same.
      Anyway that's enough rambling from me. I'll say you're off to a good start! Happy philosophizing! :D

    • @theharwizard8093
      @theharwizard8093 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@alphagt62so the fields actually are space time. The 3 physical dimensions are just those fields all stacked on one another and that forms the “fabric” of reality

    • @Yewbzee
      @Yewbzee 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Considering the longstanding emphasis on spacetime as the foundation of reality, it's worth pondering if we've got it reversed. What if consciousness is the true fundamental layer, from which spacetime and all its intricacies emerge? Challenges in our current models might be pointing us towards such a profound paradigm shift. There are many scientists now seriously considering this. Look up Prof. Donald Hoffman and his work on this.

  • @life_score
    @life_score หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    That’s a lot of difficult key concepts packed into one easier to understand video, bravo! 👏

  • @shethtejas104
    @shethtejas104 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

    Hello Arvin. You should be made the education minister for the whole world owing to your exceptional pedagogic skills. Schools in general tend to repress creative questions from children. Someone like you would reverse that and then we will not just be finding new answers, but we will also be finding new questions, both of which are paramount for scientific progress.
    Excellent video as always. I especially liked you putting a very obvious question 'how can two quantities with different dimensions be equated'. One question: In the video you mentioned that multi dimensional time would allow time loops to exist. How is it then that we humans are trying to invent a time machine in a space-time which has only one dimension for time? Shouldn't it be outrageously impossible?

    • @chrisstevens-xq2vb
      @chrisstevens-xq2vb 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yep time travel is impossible just like bending space is impossible

    • @shethtejas104
      @shethtejas104 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@chrisstevens-xq2vb what do you think about the proposed alcubierre drive?

    • @chrisstevens-xq2vb
      @chrisstevens-xq2vb 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@shethtejas104 Funny asf. You can’t bend space.

    • @shethtejas104
      @shethtejas104 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@chrisstevens-xq2vb Ok chill. I was just asking your thoughts on it. Relax.

    • @chrisstevens-xq2vb
      @chrisstevens-xq2vb 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@shethtejas104 it’s called being direct….

  • @dougg1075
    @dougg1075 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    Time adjusts itself for each person to make sure light speed is the same for each person/observer ( whatever that is). Crazy

    • @steveco1800
      @steveco1800 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Well I guess that’s to say time is relative to the perspective of each person because it’s limited by the speed of light? So somebody in another galaxy is existing in our future, but at the same time from their perspective we are existing in their future…I need to watch the video again 🧐

    • @smlanka4u
      @smlanka4u 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Einstein's relativity didn't prove that time is relative. Relative time is only a principle in it.

    • @juliavixen176
      @juliavixen176 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      It's because of inertia. Moving at a constant velocity is exactly the same as standing still. Everyone and everything is standing still with respect to itself, and so relative to itself, it emits light at the speed of light.

    • @gaopinghu7332
      @gaopinghu7332 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@smlanka4u you are right. There have been, however, experiments that proved it.

    • @smlanka4u
      @smlanka4u 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@gaopinghu7332, High-energy muons decay slowly because they are not similar to the low-energy muons. It doesn't mean that speed changes the time. Also, photons experience time even if they don't decay faster, and their wavelenth increases with time. Planck time is not relative.

  • @kthwkr
    @kthwkr 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    I think the oddest, weirdest, and most significant science discovery was by Maxwell. His differential equations showed the speed of light was constant to all observers. That's told us that the universe was one weird place.

  • @vijaysahani3464
    @vijaysahani3464 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Dear Arvin sir, you have simplified complex topic to a great extent. Love you.

  • @rva11
    @rva11 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    This is such an amazing encapsulation of a difficult topic. I could have skipped dozens of videos by simply starting here!

    • @chrisstevens-xq2vb
      @chrisstevens-xq2vb 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      So how does space bend?🤣

    • @leeg8461
      @leeg8461 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@chrisstevens-xq2vb
      Over backwards.😉

    • @chrisstevens-xq2vb
      @chrisstevens-xq2vb 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@leeg8461 People actually believe nothing can bend🤦🏼‍♂️

    • @-blaire-
      @-blaire- 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@chrisstevens-xq2vb space isnt ''nothing''

  • @hahahasan
    @hahahasan 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +59

    I love that you casually gave one of the most intuitive explanations for the twin paradox as an aside for your main subject matter. Your talent and hard work as an educator is so incredibly rare. Thank you.

    • @yziib3578
      @yziib3578 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      The video did not cover the twin paradox. It only showed what observer A would see about observer B time. It did not show what observer B would see of observer A time. So it did not show the paradox, that from observer A perspective B time is slower and from observer B perspective A time is slower.

    • @hahahasan
      @hahahasan 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@yziib3578 it showed that whomever travels in space and returns to that point is younger. How does this not show the twin paradox?

    • @Va1demar
      @Va1demar 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      if we consider time as a part of space, then how can the speed of light be the same everywhere if they say that time is relative, then the speed of light should be relative and not defined constant, or if space itself is expanding with acceleration, it is obvious to me that all ideas about the world are flawed

    • @juliavixen176
      @juliavixen176 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@Va1demar This is literally the very first thing covered by every single explanation of Special Relativity. Admittedly, some of the explanations suck, but to summarize... actually, I'm just going to go to bed, there are dozens of good videos about this on TH-cam that you can watch, here, for free.

    • @juliavixen176
      @juliavixen176 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@yziib3578 Both observers agree with each other about the spacetime interval each traveled. If one twin only travels on one side of the triangle, then the other twin *must* travel along the two other sides of the triangle. Spacetime intervals are invariant. Two sides of a triangle are always longer than the third side.
      Do the Twin (so-called) "Paradox" with triplets or quadruplets and it should make more sense.

  • @peakxv13
    @peakxv13 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    What a brilliant video!!! you answered some of my most fundamental questions. Thank you.

  • @idrisarab5110
    @idrisarab5110 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Eagerly awaiting for your the simplest explanations for very difficult problems.❤

  • @ericwilson5203
    @ericwilson5203 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Great video! I find it helpful to think speed is converted from time. We are all moving through time at the speed of light. You hinted at the conversion factor… borrowing just a little time and can give you a lot of extra speed
    Gravity is constant acceleration so we need speed to overcome that and appear stationary. So we convert some of our time to speed so our time goes a little slower.

    • @thedeemon
      @thedeemon 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      No constant speed can "overcome" non-zero acceleration, this part doesn't check out. To compensate for acceleration and appear stationary you need another acceleration, i.e. changing speed, but it would mean changing time dilation.

    • @ExistenceUniversity
      @ExistenceUniversity 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Nor are we all travelling at light speed lol

    • @Name-js5uq
      @Name-js5uq 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@ExistenceUniversity yes we are all traveling at the speed of light. Sorry, but you are wrong. Here is the proof:
      th-cam.com/video/au0QJYISe4c/w-d-xo.html
      From science clic English.

    • @ExistenceUniversity
      @ExistenceUniversity 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Name-js5uq Science clic is wrong. If you were traveling at the speed of light then you'd have no experience of time or space. You wouldn't exist as you do.
      In fact you can find my 2 year old debunking of his video in that comment section lol

    • @BenjaminMilekowsky
      @BenjaminMilekowsky 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The short answer is our world is perfect and balanced in any terms,

  • @philjamieson5572
    @philjamieson5572 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    I love your commentary; it's so concise and ultra clear. Those two things really help me to grasp these complex ideas.

  • @John777Revelation
    @John777Revelation 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Scientists now believe that empty space is actually filled with Quantum or Vacuum Fluctuations. _"Vacuum fluctuations appear as virtual (i.e. non-material) particles, which are always created in particle-antiparticle pairs. Since they are created spontaneously without a source of energy, vacuum fluctuations and virtual particles are said to violate the conservation of energy. This is theoretically allowable because the particles annihilate each other within a time limit determined by the uncertainty principle so _*_they are not directly observable._*_ "_ (Source: Wikipedia) Despite its name, Virtual “Particles" are *immaterial.*

  • @petergreen5337
    @petergreen5337 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Thank you very much for your professional insight and helpful advice.

  • @herbertattema9890
    @herbertattema9890 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I just stumbled upon your channel and I am blown away by your relatively indepth review

  • @akashparua4606
    @akashparua4606 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    As a ML engineer who works with multidimensional tensors all the time , this felt surprisingly easy

  • @dactylntrochee
    @dactylntrochee 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    On one hand, this is the closest I've ever come to grasping the concept, so bravo for Arvin. On the other hand, if C is distance/time, then C squared would be distance squared over time squared. Well, I know what a distance squared is (three inches on the sides of a square yields nine square inches), but I can't grasp the meaning of a time squared. What's a square second? This continues to flummox me.
    Still, it's the clearest demonstration of the concept I've seen so far, and my livelihood doesn't depend on my understanding it, so I'm satisfied for today.

    • @Pedro_MVS_Lima
      @Pedro_MVS_Lima 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Maybe this won't help you, but a squared second would be something we cannot intuitively understand, as we don't have the practical experience. Said otherwise, in the practical sense, it has no meaning. Like a meter to the fourth, we don't have the practical experience. What we can do is process it analytically, and maybe it's easier to figure out what a fourth dimension of space might be as we already deal with three of them. Other than that, a fourth dimension of space has no practical meaning.
      Another possible way of looking at it, although again it may not be helpful at all, is to consider acceleration. If velocity is the rate of change of distance per time unit (second) and acceleration is the rate of change of velocity per time unit, then acceleration would be the rate of change of distance per time unit squared (squared second).
      Or, maybe more properly said, the rate of change, per time unit, of the rate of change, per time unit, of the distance. The analytical meaning(?) here would be that we had to consider twice independent variations in time.

    • @36on22
      @36on22 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Good explanation. The acceleration example was what occurred to me as well: change in velocity per change in time or change in distance per second per second. Like the gravitational acceleration at MSL on earth, 9.8 m/s^2 for a free falling mass in a vacuum.

  • @aftabjaved3726
    @aftabjaved3726 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I am so impressed my the way you explained that i hit like button and subscribed spontaneously. Hats off to you sir. You are by far better than many as i keep watching such content.
    From Pakistan

  • @JSSTyger
    @JSSTyger 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    "Space time" is what an astronaut exclaims when he's suiting up for a space walk.

  • @ridethecurve55
    @ridethecurve55 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +90

    Back in ancient Greece, the big things were Earth, Air, Fire, Water. To me, these should be changed to Space, Time, Matter and Energy, with the first two and second two interchangeable with one another. It's a really interesting topic to me, so I'll be back to watch more of these videos, for sure! Thanks.

    • @grandlotus1
      @grandlotus1 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Consider adding "pattern," that is the relationships (relative arrangements) that are, per Arvin, played out by matter / energy on the stage of spacetime. A warning though, "pattern" is meta-physical and requires adding the dimension of consciousness. 😀

    • @jakublizon6375
      @jakublizon6375 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Matter and and energy are distinguished by one property: Spin.
      So we should say spacetime/and spin/charge

    • @reidflemingworldstoughestm1394
      @reidflemingworldstoughestm1394 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Matter is energy.

    • @jgreen2015
      @jgreen2015 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      But they were thought of as the elements which make up all matter. They have been updated. To the periodic table

    • @nairobi203
      @nairobi203 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      No, they were earth, wind and fire.

  • @henrytjernlund
    @henrytjernlund 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I've been wondering if divisional algebras which work only in 1, 2, 4, and 8 dimensions has something to do with space time. Also I read something, not sure where, that in hyperbolic geometry that what might be time dimensions have to be smaller in number than space dimensions, that the smallest number of dimensions which works is 4 dimensions. And perhaps why space-time is 3 dimensions of space and 1 dimension of time. Now that might be just the geometry of space-time. But does that still tell us what space-time IS? What it's made out of?

    • @lunam7249
      @lunam7249 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      there is NON-EUCLIDIAN GEOMETRY math which answers alot of your questions, also N-DIMENSIONAL GEOMETRY both are upper division class math 700s

  • @xizilionyizzexeliqer3897
    @xizilionyizzexeliqer3897 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Wow that yellow box @13:10 could be an idea for a whole video to attempt for us to grasp the concept alone.

  • @user-ng7sw5he5u
    @user-ng7sw5he5u หลายเดือนก่อน

    You made this complex concept super easy & understandable 👍

  • @LowellBoggs
    @LowellBoggs 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Another gorgeous and informative video, Arvin, thank you! It is my understanding that the vector cross product, which is key to maxwell's equations, does not work in 4 or more spatial dimensions. No one ever seems to bring this up as an explanation for why we experience 3 dimensions. It's this a valid argument as to why, or is there an out for higher dimensions for electromagnetism?

    • @axeman2638
      @axeman2638 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      there are 3 and only 3 spatial dimensions, time is not a spatial dimension, "spacetime" is nonsense.

    • @altrag
      @altrag 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@axeman2638 "Spacetime" does not imply that time is a spatial dimension. In fact it explicitly states otherwise, as they have opposite signs in the equations. You can kind of interpret that as stating time is an "imaginary" spatial dimension, but its certainly not stating that "time is a spatial dimension" in any meaningful way. It might behoove you to try understanding concepts before arbitrarily calling them nonsense.

    • @altrag
      @altrag 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      > No one ever seems to bring this up as an explanation for why we experience 3 dimensions
      Because we don't control the universe. If the universe had chosen to give us 4 spatial dimensions, certainly Maxwell's equations would be meaningless. But intelligent beings in such a universe would simply come up with some other equations that describe their own forces (electromagnetism as we understand it wouldn't exist, but some other force that follows 4D-enabled rules would exist in its place).
      Of course that's all speculative philosophy. The universe does have three dimensions and our equations do work, so its little more than a thought experiment to imagine higher dimension universes. But the first step to such an exercise is realizing that _everything_ we know would be different - the particles, the forces, and the math we use to describe them. Everything The ones we know of in our 3+1 universe all explicitly require a 3+1 universe and wouldn't work in any other universe. But some other completely different particles and forces (and math) might.
      People have of course tried to formulate such things, with middling success. There's a general thought that its not possible because we can't make the math work but that in itself is exactly the problem I'm pointing out - just because _we_ can't do it doesn't mean the universe couldn't have. But its very hard for us to separate the idea of a universe that can't exist (based on the fact that it doesn't) from a universe that "can't" exist (based us fallible humans being unable to figure out how to make our equally human mathematics work for it).

    • @axeman2638
      @axeman2638 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @altrag yeah you can stick your condescending smug face where the sun don't shine mate. I know the official story pretty well thanks, perhaps even better than you, it's rubbish, Space does not warp, it has no substance or properties, it's no more or less than the distance between things, it's flat and euclidean. Einstein is bunk.
      Equations are not reality.

  • @Marmots4reFun
    @Marmots4reFun 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Really great video! There were moments where I felt like I might actually be able to understand some of iat a novice level. Maybe watch a 10 or 20 more times. Not being cheeky here… I’ve been banging my head against this wall for years, just a really hard concept to a simile. May just have to check out that brilliant course.

    • @Yasmin-pi5pr
      @Yasmin-pi5pr 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      you can do it!

  • @topg1084
    @topg1084 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    absolute amazing video im 35 yrs old and always was wondering about space time since school no one explained it better than this video.

  • @danielhoran8416
    @danielhoran8416 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    This video was very informative and explained so well. Thanks for sharing

  • @djdigital3806
    @djdigital3806 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    You are so smart.
    I’m an Electrical Engineering Technician and fully understand what time is now.
    Great Video and excellent special effects. 🤗
    Subscribed ✔️

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thanks for watching!

  • @datachief7093
    @datachief7093 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    This is EXCELLENT! I have tried to come to terms with spacetime for ages, but Arvin has shed light where no-one else has been able to. Thank you!

  • @myBestWishes677
    @myBestWishes677 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    It would interesting to understand the notion of spacetime from a LQG perspective or a quantized fields approach, for example the notion of "points in spacetime" would be replaced by what? Traditional Minkowsky spacetime would have any meaning at all in LQG? Or it would it be replaced by a spinfoam where the traditional notion of points in space would cease to have any meaning at all?

  • @Craznar
    @Craznar 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I've always wondered why no-one considers the steady state idea for time loops (like analog computers), rather than assuming a paradox would occur.

  • @drit84
    @drit84 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Joy of learning. Thank you much so dear Arvin.

  • @oldmechanic5744
    @oldmechanic5744 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    If spacetime can expand and contact, the forces contained in it could also be larger or smaller. Perhaps explaining dark matter and energy

  • @royalminstrel
    @royalminstrel 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +52

    Some physicists think it's possible that the reason gravity appears so much weaker than the other fundamental forces is because there are more than three spatial dimensions. The idea being that gravity is actually approximately as strong as the other forces, but "leaks" into the other spatial dimensions that we don't perceive with our brains and so the gravity we see in our three perceived spatial dimensions seems weak.

    • @magicmulder
      @magicmulder 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      M theory requires 10 spatial dimensions, with 4-10 being so small we cannot perceive them (like a piece of paper looks indistinguishable from a 2-dimensional object from a distance).

    • @anywallsocket
      @anywallsocket 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      Too bad gravity is not a force

    • @Rodrilechan
      @Rodrilechan 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Gravity does affect every other thing in space. Time doesn't exist, only space. If an atom goes back to a previous position in space, it went back in our made up time, but the quantum realm doesn't care about time.

    • @Rodrilechan
      @Rodrilechan 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Electrons fluctuate so fast in space, that ripples into other forces like if you swir a bucket of water, it would create momentum.

    • @anywallsocket
      @anywallsocket 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@Rodrilechan just because QM is T symmetric - minus weak force decays, doesn’t mean “time doesn’t exist”. You have to explain the 2nd law if you want to connect QM with GR.

  • @aanchaallllllll
    @aanchaallllllll 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    0:08: 🌌 The concept of space-time is essential for the existence of the universe and all physical phenomena.
    2:54: 🌐 The concept of combining space and time into a 4-dimensional continuum called spacetime is not intuitive, but can be understood by comparing it to the geometry of space.
    5:31: ⏳ Time and space have an inverse relationship, as shown by the equation E^2 = t^2 - x^2.
    8:21: ⏳ The concept of time and its relationship with space explained, including the conversion between the two using the speed of light.
    11:09: 🌌 The existence of 3 spatial dimensions and 1 temporal dimension is crucial for the existence of life and to avoid paradoxes.
    13:53: 📚 Brilliant offers a practical course on Special Relativity with interactive learning tools and monthly new content.
    Recap by Tammy AI

  • @kkrauter1
    @kkrauter1 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you, Dr. Ash...I kind of get it now! The causality example was REALLY helpful...

  • @Dxeus
    @Dxeus 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    The beauty of Arvin Ash's video is that after watching it for just a few minutes, I immerse myself in the experience, likening myself to a subatomic particle, and attempt to truly grasp what Arvin is conveying, and that's why it takes a couple of hours to watch the full video.

  • @ronmexico5908
    @ronmexico5908 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Does space*time have the same tension and compression resistant force? Does it have a quantitative force in it at neutral rest?

    • @user-ky5dy5hl4d
      @user-ky5dy5hl4d 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Nobody has constructed the definition of time, therefore we cannot apply ''time'' to physical bodies and using this enigmatic a ''time'' is an erroneous approach to explanation in this video. Clocks do not measure ''time''. I repeat; a clock is not a mechanism to measure time at all. Clocks do not measure anything; there is no sentient contraption in the World that measures ''time'' or feels ''time''. Therefore, by squaring '''time'' or bringing it to any power is meaningless. Space on the other hand has a physical meaning and by marrying space with time we are making a mistake by combining a ''body'' with emptiness. Time, as we know it, is not measurable but rather experienced psychologically. But I believe that we can find it ''somewhere'' externally where mind and time meet half-way. And even by relating time in terms of psychology, time cannot be explained in conveying words of what it is and when somethig was, is or will be. Until we define time the usage of this ''entity' as a dimension is wrong because time may have constituents or have a force by not being a force itself which makes it static. Time is static entropy is not.

  • @eljcd
    @eljcd 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Nicely put, although it should be mentioned that c equivales to the speed of massless particles, not especially photons. If would happen that photons have mass, then their speed wouldn't be c.

  • @martinaee
    @martinaee 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I literally have a “Space-Time” playlist … I think I’ll put this on it 😊💜💫

  • @hahahasan
    @hahahasan 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    I do wonder a little about the extra time dimensions sometimes. It seems permissable for string theorists to posit extra spatial dimensions that loop back on themselves on small scales. So why not posit extra time dimensions on very small and/or fast scales? anti particles already kinda look like they go back in time from a certain perspective. I know there is so much I'm missing in this conjecture but would appreciate what avenues to go down to understand why it wouldn't be feasible.

    • @GokulRaamthelegend
      @GokulRaamthelegend 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      They probably exist on a quantum level, based on string theory. As mentioned in this video, they might be unstable on a large scale. Thus higher dimensional life forms might exist on a quantum level based on particles we haven't discovered yet. Those life forms may not exist as how we know it, they might have a different concept of existence that we yet do not understand

    • @hahahasan
      @hahahasan 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@GokulRaamthelegend I wouldn't go as far as life forms. All of our current understanding of life necessitates macroscopic structures well beyond the remit of QM.

    • @juliavixen176
      @juliavixen176 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Having two time-like coordinates will make it so that energy is no longer conserved, and you will never be able to get two things to stand still (be at rest) with respect to each other. There are at least two string theories with multiple time-like dimensions, and they predict things like protons decaying into heavier neutrons and stuff. Also atoms can't form, because you can't get protons and neutrons to stick together (stand still with respect to each other).

    • @hahahasan
      @hahahasan 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@juliavixen176 we already know from GR energy isn't strictly conserved. E.g. redshift photons. I mean it's still conserved as far as time translation symmetry is upheld, by Noether's theorem, but GR breaks that symmetry routinely.
      Also AFAIK zero-point energy of the vacuum is still an unsolved problem and potentially linked to the negative pressure required for the spacetime expansions we currently observe.

    • @hahahasan
      @hahahasan 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@juliavixen176
      I mention zero point energy in response to your statement about not being to get two things to stand still w.r.t each other. As in by Heisenberg uncertainty we can't get things to stand still period! And the energy associated with this is somewhat poorly understood atm and leaves room for zany theories such as extra time dimensions. Well I guess people that know more than me can rule it out, but I'd like to be pointed to resources that tell me why.
      also sorry for the somewhat unclear initial reply, I'm responding on my phone and the app doesn't let me see your comment as I reply

  • @davivify
    @davivify 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    When we speak of _space curviture_ it seems to me that this implies higher dimensionalty. That is, how can you curve something if you don't have at least one extra dimension to curve it in? One of the seminal books I grew up with was Flatland. Which explored a people constrained to a 2D plane. That plane may very well be curved, but the Flatlanders would never know it. But we, from our 3D perspective, could plainly see that.

    • @Pedro_MVS_Lima
      @Pedro_MVS_Lima 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      A space can be curve, meaning it may have curvature properties, without requiring the existence of further dimensions. However, it may eventually be simpler to describe it if one does consider further dimensions. I mean, what's so special about orthogonal straight lines but their simplicity of use by our minds?
      The issue is that the concepts we use to describe reality should not be confused with reality itself. In that sense, Earth may very well be the center of the Universe, it's a possible but highly inconvenient description that would only go against the Occam's Razor Principle.

  • @Nilicha
    @Nilicha 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Arvin, you are the best. And all the followers who post thought provoking comments are super best. 👍

  • @celiogouvea
    @celiogouvea 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I can't find videos about the contraction of spacetime. Recently, the confirmation of gravitational waves suggests the possibility of manipulating spacetime to adjust the speed of light in contracted or expanded spaces, something similar to creating another dimension of space within space itself. This could allow the creation of repulsive gravity or antigravity, although the creation of negative mass still seems improbable. However, it now appears possible to produce a form of negative spacetime. I suggest investigating the idea of generating gravitational waves with alternating momentums between positive and negative. By harnessing the energy of one of these momentums, virtual particles could be generated, resulting in the contraction of spacetime. Additionally, it's also possible to consider the idea of colliding a particle on the surface of a heavy material that could generate some momentum in space. I believe that waves within a heavy material propagate more slowly, which could alter the symmetry of space outside of this material.

  • @StaticBlaster
    @StaticBlaster 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I've been having to make various appointments recently, and the point is when you make an appointment, you need four pieces of information: the cross streets, the floor number and the time. So, they must be part of the same thing.

    • @Yasmin-pi5pr
      @Yasmin-pi5pr 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      lol the variables of an event, excellent.

  • @Alex-Riel
    @Alex-Riel 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    A lot on how spacetime works but what is the ontology of spacetime itself?

    • @jeffreyjdesir
      @jeffreyjdesir 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Obviously it's grounded in consciousness, which is grounded in God, the global identity of reality. 😂

  • @victordelmastro8264
    @victordelmastro8264 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'd like to point out that Modelling Causality as a Poisson Process (events on a time line w/ exponentially distributed inter arrival times) we are transforming from the Bayesian into an exponential form of causality (np=t*lambda), e^mean*variance and plotting 'open point' on the timeline allows for a least Paths solution to A QM Model of Causality I refer to as the 'Temple Model of the QM of Causality'. The open point on the timeline represents the 'Temple' State Space Model itself. It allows the 'user' to apply the same exponential transform to the 'other parts' of the model. We can manipulate causality even w/ a pair of dice.

  • @JoeSchmoer
    @JoeSchmoer 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Just discovered your channel and I love it. If I could offer a little constructive criticism, the stock footage sometimes feels a little too "stock," if you will.

  • @infidelcastro5129
    @infidelcastro5129 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    The (very simplistic) way I look at spacetime is that space is a computer monitor and time is the ‘refresh’ key which allows more than one thing to happen in any given point on that monitor. Imagine how much bigger the monitor would need to be if we needed a new section of it for each new window we open.

    • @rootyroot
      @rootyroot 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The way I visulise it (if comparing to a computer) is, 1 plank time unit = 1 CPU cycle.

    • @Jake-rj4dx
      @Jake-rj4dx 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      simulation argument is getting waaay strong.

    • @pallypaw5460
      @pallypaw5460 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Jake-rj4dx simulation argument is really an escape clause for those that dont believe in god. Basically confirming that a superior being has created this idealistic program / universe / reality.

  • @4verse79
    @4verse79 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Really, I have never seen/heard an explanation less clear and comprehensible than this.

    • @CD-SU
      @CD-SU 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I am no novice of the subject and I always click on videos that look like it could help me understand a bit more: this was a mistake as I am a little bit confused now. I have to go elsewhere to get some understanding back.

    • @RedNomster
      @RedNomster 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      The key is understanding 4:40 and 6:40. In space, the *shortest* route is a straight line. In time, the *quickest* route is anything but a straight line, BECAUSE, moving slows down time relative to the traveler themself. It's only misleading if you're assuming slow velocities like walking (it's mathematically still true, just a negligible difference), or more apparently, that the traveler in greater motion meets the non-moving traveler at a later time. They both meet at the same exact time, but one took a longer path through space, and motion through space slows time for that person relative to a stationary observer. The closer you are to the speed of light, the slower time passes for you, relative to a stationary observer. Light itself experiences no time, because it travels at the fastest possible velocity in the universe. This is special relativity. General relativity on the other hand paints the opposite scenario, depicting the slowest possible velocity in the universe. When falling into a blackhole, the dimensions of time and space flip. Instead of 3 dimensions of space, there is only 1, because no matter how fast you're going in any "direction" you'll always end up falling into the singularity of the black hole. It is physically the only location in 3 dimensional space you can head towards, and there's nothing you can do to stop it, which is synonymous with 1 dimensional time. AKA, the future.

    • @steveco1800
      @steveco1800 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@RedNomsterSo time is slower the closer you are to the speed of light - what if you’re moving away from each other at the speed of light, would time appear stopped from each person’s perspective when looking back at the other person?
      But then if you’re travelling towards each other at the speed of light you would collide at twice the speed of light, so speed is relative as well? And because you need light to see, it would be like someone killed you in your past?🧐😅

    • @RedNomster
      @RedNomster 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@steveco1800 moving at light speed would require you to be massless. Like a photon (light), if you reach lightspeed, you wouldn't see anything, because you would have 0 time to experience during your travels.
      But, if you're traveling very near the speed of light, according to special relativity, you experience light like ever before. Meaning a person in a car traveling near the speed of light would actually see their headlights shine and illuminate what's in front of them like ever before. Light is the same for all observers, stationary or not. It seems unintuitive, but it's experimentally proven!
      It would look different, though. As you're traveling near light speed, light coming in your direction, aka the universe and objects you see would be blue shifted. The same way cosmic expansion causes redshift by expanding the space and thereby light waves traveling in space, light waves from behind you would be redshifted. It's called the doppler affect, and is the same as sirens 🚨 sounding louder as they approach, but quieter after they pass you, even if they're the same distance from you at both moments.
      Faster than light speeds is when you start seeing yourself in the past and such! But that's a theoretically impossible velocity through space.

  • @joerarey8496
    @joerarey8496 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I like that you point out that 'time' on the surface of earth is slower compared to an identical clock in unaccelerated space.
    However, gravity doesnt 'curve' spacetime, it pinches it in to the core of the gravity well (the earth in this case). Any 'curves' or orbits have to do with the other object's speed relative to the earth's gravity well.
    Light gets bent very little as it races by our dimple of a gravity well. As a contrast, a person standing on the surface has their curved spaacetime starting at the top of their head, out their feet and running straight to the core. Our way there is blocked and that's why we feel 'weight'
    The way to the center of the core is blocked because matter under acceleration stratifies by density with the heavy dense stuff at the bottom and the light atmosspheric gasses at the top.
    What would have been a nice touch in the video would be to further the explanation that time is fastest in unaccelerated spacetime, it's slower on the surface of the earth with our meager 9.8m/s2 acceleration and it is most definitely slowest at the core.
    assumptions of Newtonian weightlessness at the core are not considering this reality. The densest elements migrate to the core, while gasses go up. Acceleration is greatest at the core and time is slowest.

  • @RGF19651
    @RGF19651 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    The explanations in this video as to why there are exactly 3 spatial dimensions and one time dimension in space/time seems to provide an argument against string theory, which requires either 11 or 26 spatial dimensions depending on symmetry considerations.

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      String theory theorizes dimensions that are small and curled up inside the large 3 spatial dimensions. Such dimensions could exist, but 4 or more large spatial dimensions are essentially ruled out.

    • @RGF19651
      @RGF19651 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      If these small “extra” dimensions are curled up to smaller than the Planck length, can we ever perceive them, or are they just a mathematical construct (convenience) to allow string theory to “work”?

  • @sjpeckham1
    @sjpeckham1 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Your work just keeps getting better and better! You are priceless sir

  • @AndreaZzzXXX
    @AndreaZzzXXX 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Arvin, another great video. Thank you for the english subtitles, is a great help! I am from Italy, I can speak english but subjects like this are very complicated and sometime I miss a word (or two :-) ) and I can pause the video and read. Grazie 1000

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Awesome. thank you. BTW, I also have Italian subtitles on this and most of my newer videos.

    • @AndreaZzzXXX
      @AndreaZzzXXX 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ArvinAsh yes I know, it's great ! But I prefer the english one, for my exercise (kind of :-) )

  • @Sfbaytech
    @Sfbaytech 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Spacetime being one thing makes sense because it takes time to move through space. Conversely it takes space to move through time. Which is why time supposedly stops in a black hole where there are no dimensions.

  • @martinhernandez6579
    @martinhernandez6579 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Correct me if I’m wrong, but with the muon g-2 experiment and the probability of many different particles existing, is it probable that shows that extra dimensions exist and that they have different values so when they briefly interact in our space time universe, they can be measured with these out of the ordinary values?

  • @binbots
    @binbots 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    General relativity and quantum mechanics will never be combined until we realize that they take place at different moments in time. Because causality has a speed limit (c) every point in space where you observe it from will be the closest to the present moment. When we look out into the universe, we see the past which is made of particles (GR). When we try to look at smaller and smaller sizes and distances, we are actually looking closer and closer to the present moment (QM). The wave property of particles appears when we start looking into the future of that particle. It is a probability wave because the future is probabilistic. Wave function collapse happens when we bring a particle into the present/past. GR is making measurements in the predictable past. QM is trying to make measurements of the probabilistic future.

    • @c.s.4273
      @c.s.4273 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I don't understand your second sentence, can you please elaborate?

    • @mattblack6736
      @mattblack6736 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Whats stopping you using GR to make measurements of the probabilistic future?... Nothing, your statement is wrong. I feel like you're getting hung up on the time aspect when the forces involved are at different magnitudes of strength. A tiny magnet can overcome the gravity of earth etc

    • @drbuckley1
      @drbuckley1 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      A "predictable past" is an oxymoron. Maybe you mean the "observable" past? There is no such thing as "the present moment" because your present is not my present. The differences may be imperceptible but they are nevertheless measurable. Every observer has a unique world-line because of "locality" (two particles may not occupy the same space at the same time). Quantum observations are never "instantaneous" but are measurements of things that already happened.

    • @MrADAM0021
      @MrADAM0021 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Time and Space are an illusion humans are wasting their time by studying the observable universe,,the thing is that we cannot imagine and define things that are out of this world similar to computer AI whatever data you give to computer ,it only play and give information within that limit ,computer can give you new insight but within the range of data we provided but can not generate new ideas beyond the scope of data provided ,similarly this world is our box(data) we are only creating new information by combining the information that are within this world ,,we can not define and explain things that we have not seen before.

  • @jimk8520
    @jimk8520 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    If space is expanding faster than light can travel through it and matter cannot travel faster than light, would this mean that if there are objects traveling toward us originating from outside our visible space time envelope, those objects would never be seen?

    • @magicmulder
      @magicmulder 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes.

    • @altrag
      @altrag 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Worse, it means there are objects within our visible space time envelope that will eventually disappear from our sight. At some point in the far, far, far distant future our galaxy will be left alone in the universe.
      (Though if I recall the timelines correctly, the Milky Way will have burned out its last star long before _everything_ is beyond our visible horizon so there won't be anyone around to "observe" the seemingly-empty universe. Probably. Our black hole will still be kicking so I suppose if there's a type III civilization by that time who can harness sufficient energy from that without needing stars then maybe they can witness a completely dark sky?)

    • @goldwhitedragon
      @goldwhitedragon 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes. That is why Einstein was wrong. He forgot the conspansion and rescaling constants.

    • @Pedro_MVS_Lima
      @Pedro_MVS_Lima 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      No, they would never be seen by us.

  • @onebylandtwoifbysearunifby5475
    @onebylandtwoifbysearunifby5475 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    10:55 Just for clarity, the time dilation of the Earth gravity is _larger_ than for the velocity of satellites in orbit (17,000 mph). Time on Earth ticks slower than for that orbiting body (by about 43 miliseconds). So the satellite clock will run _FASTER_ than the Earth clock, not slower.
    (The graphics may have implied the reverse to some people, but you need much higher velocities than orbital to match what Earth gravity does for time dilation).
    Both velocity and gravity show time dilation effects, but it depends which is higher in each individual case. Both are hyperbolic curves, and so the calculation must be done for each case individually, (there is no blanket "velocity beats mass" rule for space-time.)
    Another great video (i just found that one graphic a bit confusing, and perhaps others may have wanted clarification. )

    • @chriskennedy2846
      @chriskennedy2846 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      The other difference (according to Einstein's theory) is that velocity-related time dilation is reciprocal (or symmetrical) so each twin will actually see the other's clock running slower.
      Gravity on the other hand creates an equal but opposite effect. If you are atop a tall building, you will see my clock on the ground running a little slower, but when I look up, I will see your clock at the top of the building running faster.
      Also - the "time running slower as you are moving through space" comment contracts the entire point of Einstein's 1905 paper. For example: during inertial motion - the traveler has every right to consider himself stationary while considering the Earth twin in motion. If "spacetime" is a grid of some sort, that objects move through, then 1905 relativity goes out the window.

    • @onebylandtwoifbysearunifby5475
      @onebylandtwoifbysearunifby5475 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@chriskennedy2846Yes, and generally gravity on Earth can be considered rotations in time due to gradient differences; same as actual fluid mechanics. Whereas velocity changes can be considered without rotations (at least for some cases, although Wigner rotations are certainly not to be ignored).
      It's an interesting case where orbiting objects do have a slower clock rate compared to stationary Earth, yet the gravity well outweighs this difference by a large margin. So the slower clock is the "stationary" Earth clock closest to the ground (or core). Odd really, when you consider how _ALMOST_ flat space is around Earth. Mass just has so much more energy than can be gained by human-scale velocity changes. Puts humans in their place, i would say. (And about time too.)

  • @Viveckan
    @Viveckan 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Before watching this video, I thought we need to consider the velocity of the object along with time and distance. So we need time as fourth dimension. But now I clearly understood how it is related and used. Thank you.

  • @YashKumar-xc7fj
    @YashKumar-xc7fj 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Arvin, Magnetars would be very interesting topic to explore. BTW very nice work in this one. 👍

  • @photon434
    @photon434 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Your Minkowski graph of the math of spacetime is a powerful teaching tool. I wonder if space or time can exist at all without each other. If there was no time, how could a place exist? If there was no place, would time have meaning? Are time and space inseparable? 🕳

    • @byamboy
      @byamboy 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I always thought about that. I came to the conclusion that no, they can't be separated, but at the same time, space is more important and central than Time. Time is a consequence of energy. To reach that conclusion, I used my naked imagination: Imagine you have a superpower: you can freeze everything to the quantum level. Now I want you to freeze this universe completely, until no electron can move, no virtual particle pops up in the quantum field forever. In this scenario, you'd still have space, wouldn't you? With your mind's eye, you can still see the oceans and forest and planets completely static. But time would be gone because it would literally never be capable of passing. Now, try to begin to imagine anything to conceptualize time without space. You can't even begin. You can't even think or imagine a superpower or anything. A vaccum? That's would be a space. A true vacuum? That would be space again. A black universe devoid of anything? Still a location in the grand scheme of things. So space is the basis and time is the property.

    • @ASTROPLANET13
      @ASTROPLANET13 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@byamboy It's this type of reasoning that makes me think Roger Penrose's idea of a cyclic universe is the most likely theory (ofc my opinion means little lol.)
      When true heat death finally happens and all the blackholes evaporate, time will be meaningless. No how matter how unlikely something is, any possibility of it happening will mean it will eventually happen. Even if takes 100^1000^100000 years to happen.

    • @WhitefirePL
      @WhitefirePL 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Well you can think of them separately, as you can think about x or y direction in space. Space without time dimension would be just a frozen moment of the universe. Time without space would be a blank and EXTREMALY boring existence with nothing to see or touch or experience.

    • @juancarlosdiazsalgado9644
      @juancarlosdiazsalgado9644 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      La elementalidad de las ideas de tiempo y espacio, nos impide o dificulta hablar de ellos. No se pueden definir sin caer en redundancias o círculos viciosos. Así, el tiempo es el intervalo que transcurre entre dos eventos. Espacio es el ámbito que habitamos. Propongo un nuevo término designar tres cosas fundamentales, que no tienen definición, es el término EXTENSIÓN, para esas tres magnitudes fundamentales, o magnitudes dimensionales fundamentales, ya que de la EXTENSIÓN, se derivan, el espacio, el tiempo y la masa. Que son tres cosas extensas. Porque pueden existir en el Universo y podemos referirnos a ellas como existentes. Porque los podemos estudiar porque muestran propiedades diferenciables, de una con respecto de las otras. Porque las podemos medir usando instrumentos diferentes. Porque acceden, de alguna manera a ser percibidas. Porque podemos cuantificarlas y los cálculos.que hacemos son congruentes. Pero que nos intrigan cuando tratamos de verlas individualmente; es decir, darles calidad absoluta de existencia. Porque, aunque no se haya dicho, la masa también es relativa al espacio y al tiempo, ya que incrementa con la velocidad o energía cinética. Incluso, se origina de la velocidad misma, se genera a partir de bosones que corren a la velocidad de la luz. Entonces la EXTENSIÓN, puede asumir el papel arquetípico o primordial, con respecto de esas tres modalidades de entes diferenciados pero relativísticamente asociados.

    • @amaliaantonopoulou2644
      @amaliaantonopoulou2644 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@byamboy I can easily imagine a black universe devoided of anything, but I can still suspect there is some kind of time, since even this dark universe devoid of nothing, is something. So Space is the bases and time follows as a property.

  • @Pureexhiliration
    @Pureexhiliration 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    first time in my life really understanding space time , thank you😊

  • @incognitospider330
    @incognitospider330 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Can you make a video on how the math on GR is interpreted so its visualised as a curved spacetime

  • @platyp1999
    @platyp1999 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Can you please make a video about the leading theories of what there was before the big bang? If there are any notable ones, that is

    • @bvrfrog
      @bvrfrog 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      MgT: Yes, Please!!

    • @Pedro_MVS_Lima
      @Pedro_MVS_Lima 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      As time began with the Big Bang, what's the meaning of "before" in that question?

  • @nelsonclub7722
    @nelsonclub7722 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Space and time are indeed relative, the more time I spend with my relatives, the more space I need

    • @AnnO-qk8ep
      @AnnO-qk8ep 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      😂😂😂

    • @Yasmin-pi5pr
      @Yasmin-pi5pr 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      xD

    • @ChopperChad
      @ChopperChad 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      This joke is just old and over done.

    • @nelsonclub7722
      @nelsonclub7722 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ChopperChad time for a new one?

  • @Ebaybbq
    @Ebaybbq 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thx for making it easy for us to understand it.

  • @maximusquietus
    @maximusquietus 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Time dilation IS the detection of an addition spatial dimension. Here is a great video about it: Chapter 1-4: Rethinking General Relativity as 5 Dimensions of Physics - A Unifying Theory of Gravity

  • @punditgi
    @punditgi 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Excellent video! 😊

  • @michaelwhalan9783
    @michaelwhalan9783 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    There should be an extra dimension we call information.

    • @mbmast1
      @mbmast1 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Maybe “state” is a better choice than “information,” as information is limited in speed to c.

  • @oflameo8927
    @oflameo8927 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I know Chris "The Brain" said in his video on space time, "Chapter 5: What is Time? Special Relativity, Inertia, Wormholes, Anti-Gravity, Time Travel, and FTL" That the relationship between space and time were contridicular, and that there is an absolute zero velocity that we should build a unit to find.

  • @kerycktotebag8164
    @kerycktotebag8164 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    can the shortest line for time be intuitively visualized as a conic section swept out over a complex plane in minnkowski representations as well? where the conversion factor (or another factor im not aware of?) is the imaginary part?
    i just don't know how to positivistically visualize an inverse relation that seems negative to me (the minus sign).
    i don't even know how to ask this, bc i don't know what or if I'm misunderstanding important concepts in the field im inquiring about, which is a problem i had in school too....

  • @3zdayz
    @3zdayz 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Clocks running slow doesn't mean time is different. There is only one 'now'. Calculating a difference your clock shows doesn't show anything about time.

    • @magicmulder
      @magicmulder 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      There cannot be “only one now” if the twin experiment has them both subjectively experience time the same yet one ages significantly faster.

    • @3zdayz
      @3zdayz 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@magicmulder clocks and systems ticking ay different rates only require one now. Even on earth clocks in various places drift from one another

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      There is no such thing as "one now" -- the "one now" that someone on Pluto describes would be different than the "one now" you describe because Pluto is moving faster than earth. When you say, my now is "now" - what does that even mean, because there is no way for you to communicate in the very instant that you say the word "now." Even when you are talking to a person across the room, the "nows" are different for the two individuals because it takes a small amount of time for you to see the light reflecting off of them. This does not make any practical difference because the time difference is so small that you do not notice it. But on cosmological scales, this communication speed limit makes a difference in what you can possibly describe as a "now."

    • @3zdayz
      @3zdayz 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ArvinAsh Just because you can't perceive every point in space at the same moment doesn't mean it's not currently experiencing the same now as a current observer - heck you don't even get to see 'now' since it takes time to propagate through neurons...
      At some point in the future you will observe its state that occurred at the time in the past that it experienced the same now as you (again not that you would see that) There's no evidence to support that there is any more than the current instant happening in the universe - observation of that is of course limited by propagation delays of that information. There's certainly nothing that has already happened tomorrow or at any time after 'now'... everything that is perceived is from a time in the past from any observers point of view, but that again doesn't mean it hasn't already had many more interactions already between the time you see it at, and the time it is at when you are seeing it.
      It's actually observable... light travels about 1 foot in 1 nano second. Computer clocks tick at 1Ghz+... 1Ghz is 1 cycle per nano second... so every N feet of distance is also N nanoseconds in the past from your point of view... When dealing with a hardware device in the 90's I got to learn just how long a nanosecond is... putting the card on 6 inch extender on an ISA bus delays the signal about a nanosecond (since electric signals really only go about half the speed of light maybe more, i've seen more recent approximations that it's 70-80% of the speed of light, but given the amount of capacitance a signal has to fill before a signal can actually be detected 50% is good enough; that short distance started causing it to fail on certain motherboards. But certainly every signal that went 6 inches was perceived from a ( it's not 'now' at that point it's a past now that the signal was generated, before it is observable at a time after it was generated... but still that card is generating signals in the 'now' that will be seen later).
      There's certainly no evidence that anyone is stuck in the past, any more than that events have already happened after now.

  • @noidontthinksolol
    @noidontthinksolol 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    time is movement, which is the simplest way to put it

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Motion doesn't create time. Only clocks create time. ;-)

    • @noidontthinksolol
      @noidontthinksolol 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@schmetterling4477 im not talking about clock time. clock time is just based on earths rotation. it is meaningless in space

    • @schmetterling4477
      @schmetterling4477 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@noidontthinksolol There is nothing else than clock time. The rotation of Earth alone doesn't create time. Time requires the communication of the state of the clock to an external system, i.e. an energy transfer. In case of a rotating planet that's a very, very small loss of energy, which makes rotating planets reasonably good clocks.

  • @JosephTrott-md1ei
    @JosephTrott-md1ei 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    With every physics video I watch, I still think my spacetime cells idea has a shot. SpacetimeCells and then the normal domain name.

  • @rsaunders57
    @rsaunders57 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    While it's simple to just say "large dimensions" to exclude the compact dimensions of things like string theory, it really raises the question of how spatial dimensions can come in a variety of "sizes".

  • @John777Revelation
    @John777Revelation 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    "How Can SPACE and TIME be part of the SAME THING?" "SPACE and TIME" or Space-Time are *Information* within a construct which follow pre-established Universal Laws as Space-Time unfolds into existance.

    • @JoeDeglman
      @JoeDeglman 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Both are fictitious and both are artifacts of the mathematical nonsense of the Special and General Theories of Relativity.
      Time dilation is an artifact of the mathematical errors in the Einstein derivation in his Special Theory.
      Space, when represented as a real object, comes from division by zero in the General Theory.

  • @biplabkar8737
    @biplabkar8737 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    It's one of the best videos on the subject.

  • @TheLeoFoss
    @TheLeoFoss 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    So two questions:
    1. How is Fermat's principle of least time to the discussion of the time elapsed between distance traveled between two points? and 2: I can move up or down, back or forth, forward or backward, but I can only move in one direction in time. So what makes time a different dimension?

  • @nsbd90now
    @nsbd90now 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    It's just so totally weird that anything even exists, and we're aware of it.

  • @Peter-uk6pt
    @Peter-uk6pt 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you for making this video. I have been wondering about units of measurement in Minkowski space. It seems the units, oblique to the time and space axes, would be units of length such as meters or light seconds. What about along the time axis. Would that still be in meters or would it be in seconds. Thanks again.

  • @domari9459
    @domari9459 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Great video. Thank you arvin. 👍

  • @rossholst5315
    @rossholst5315 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Now having this curved time makes sense for reference frames that are not co-moving together. Like if we are in London and want to travel to New York, we could just float a while until the earth brought New York to where London was and land.
    However that only makes sense if we are floating with respect to the day/night cycle, but are still traveling around the sun with the earth. If we were to just float and have no movement, we would quickly find ourselves in a void between galaxies.
    So it would seem that the frame of reference would need to be established. And that would be what we might seem to call “perspective.”
    And holding the speed of light constant seems fine. But can energy be conserved, if time is not constant?
    If we send information via light, but you are traveling away from the source the light would be redshifted. Thus the wavelength is longer, meaning a lower frequency and therefore the energy of the signal would appear to be weaker.
    However we could also assume that the light has the same amount of energy, and that time has been stretched. Meaning a second when it left might now be 1.2 or 2 seconds.
    Just some thoughts…not sure the answers, but it seems to relate to how transforming 1 variable to be constant changes the shapes of the other variables…

  • @MD-md4th
    @MD-md4th 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The illustrations showing how objects warp space-time, the indentations caused by a cannon ball on a trampoline for instance, are very effective at showing how movement of objects is affected, but I have yet to see an explanation of the actual mechanism.

  • @jayski9410
    @jayski9410 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Whenever I hear that time slows down between a twin on earth verses a twin in orbit, I have to compare it to the motion of the planets. The earth is moving around the sun at a certain speed (the ground based twin's speed) but the orbiting twin would only be going faster during the forward part of his orbit. For the other half of his orbit, he would be in retrograde and undoing his speed gain assuming an equatorial orbit. So wouldn't that be a wash in terms of time differences?

    • @Yasmin-pi5pr
      @Yasmin-pi5pr 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Well, that's a good question.. this is my attempt xD The Earth rotates, making the twin on Earth rotate but at surface level. But the twin orbiting the Earth in space, travels a greater distance (more circumference). And if Speed is Distance/Time, and he is moving more in the same amount of time, then he has a greater speed, therefore, time runs slower from his point of view.

  • @Nogill0
    @Nogill0 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Unified Spacetime decomposes uniquely into 3 spatial dimensions and 1 temporal dimension for every observer. It brings up the interesting problems again of what constitutes an observer, and what constitutes an "event". Intersection of world lines? How does that work in QM? Surely not point-like. An "event" has to be extended in some sense, with dimensions in space and time. And it's hard to imagine a point-like observer. Things seem to get blurry. The way Spacetime decomposes seems to be necessarily blurry. So at some scale the three spatial dimensions are difficult to quantify, and so too for the temporal dimension.

  • @Google_Does_Evil_Now
    @Google_Does_Evil_Now 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Very nice explanation using the speed of light, time and distance equation to show space time.
    Time Dilation effect: gravity effect is weaker than speed effect. Could that be related to gravity being the much weaker force compared to the weak nuclear force and the strong nuclear force, which is where photons and speed of light come from? The forces are different, so their effect will be different.
    Is that why gravity has a weaker effect on time than speed has on time
    Looks like all the things are directly related: forces, time, distance, mass, energy.

    • @stewiesaidthat
      @stewiesaidthat 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Gravity is not a force. It's a measurement. It's like saying temperature is a force. Non-static measurements are measurements of acceleration/motion.
      The law for determining the amount of force in the system is Newton's Law of Motion F=ma.
      Mass is static. It's length, width, height, volume. Acceleration is what gives mass force. Gravity is the measurement of the force being applied to accelerate the mass in space. Temperature is the amount of acceleration the mass has in time. For time, you can use E=mc. Atomic energy converts to radiant energy with acceleration.
      When an atom gets to c, it becomes a photon. It still has mass, radiant mass that is, in the form of length. The photon's wavelength is its mass factor. (c) is the speed of light and E or F is the Force factor. As the photon's wavelength increases, it's force factor decreases since force decreases with distance (longer wavelength).

    • @Google_Does_Evil_Now
      @Google_Does_Evil_Now 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@stewiesaidthat if gravity is not a force then why is it measured as F = ma, where you can measure gravity as mass x acceleration due to g (gravity)?
      I see that Einstein spent 10 years struggling with whether gravity is a force or not, and eventually said it's a result of the effect of 2 body's mass acting upon each other and the amount of space-time they curved. Something like that.
      It's taught in school as a force. In every day life it's treated as a force. Where do you use it not as a force but as a curvature of space-time?

    • @stewiesaidthat
      @stewiesaidthat 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Google_Does_Evil_Now Gravity and Temperature are measurements of acceleration. Gravity is the measurement of how much force is being applied to accelerate the mass in space while Temperature is the measurement of how much acceleration the mass has in Time.
      F=ma/E=mc. Acceleration in Space/Acceleration in Time. Mass is just stored energy so F=a/E=c or Force equals Acceleration/Energy equals Acceleration. The difference between Atomic energy and radiant energy is its Acceleration factor.
      Everything in the universe is then defined by its Acceleration factor. Which means the Proper frame of reference is the acceleration factor.
      The earth spinning on its axis, the frame of reference is the zero acceleration factor or its axis. Because the earth is spinning, it's mass is being accelerated not only outward but also forward causing curved space. As the radius from the center increases, so does the acceleration factor. F=ma. Since the Force (Earth's rotational speed) remains the same, the mass the must decrease in value. This can be observed by the thinning atmosphere with an increase in altitude. The Earth's mass is not being pulled inward but accelerated outward.
      This has been verified with synchronized clock experiments showing that as the radius increases, so does the acceleration factor. The earth rotating on its axis creates curved space.
      If mass does no create Acceleration, then what does?
      If you go back to the big bang, you will see that its an acceleration event. Current theory says its both space and time but logic dictates that it was a Time event. The point that un-accelerated energy transitioned to an accelerated state. Energy can be neither created nor destroyed, only transformed. That means space always was and that the current state of energy (accelerated) was in a different state.
      What causes planets to orbit stars, stars to orbit black holes, galaxies to move through space? The logical explanation is an energy imbalance. The same energy imbalance that creates hurricanes, tornadoes, typhoons. Space is an ocean of energy. Planets and stars are just clumps of that energy that became attracted by electromagnetism.
      The laws of physics are the same for all frames of reference. As QM has shown, packets of energy react to differences in electromagnetism. Electromagnetism is the attractive force. Gravity is the result of an object being accelerated on space. An object that accelerates itself does not experience gravity as there is no outside force acting upon it. This was shown by the hammer&feather drop tests. The mass of each object had no influence on the acceleration factor. The object in the air has a +5 acceleration factor than what the ground has. When the hammer is released, it is no longer being accelerated at the +5 Frame of Reference. Since an object in motion stays in motion unless acted upon by an outside force, the ground (moving through curved space) is following behind and Impacts the hammer. The same as when an object falls off the back of the truck and hits the trailing vehicle.
      Newton was right about the apple falling being a difference in Acceleration factors. What he didn't understand is why. The mass of the earth doesn't curve space, the motion of the earth (spinning on its axis) is what creates curved space. This is something Einstein never understand. If you listen to Sean Carroll's podcast on Einstein, you will see that Einstein didn't really understand physics. His biography is littered with examples of plagiarism. He stole other people's ideas, had no clue how they worked, and cobbled together his Spacetime fantasy universe using relativity as the basis for his physics.
      If you check, using acceleration as the proper frame of reference, you will see that relativity is 180 degrees from reality.

  • @sheersalmanbaig3375
    @sheersalmanbaig3375 หลายเดือนก่อน

    As you said, how the time and space can be the same while the units are different. At the same time you have also said that the concept of time is developed by us humans.
    In my local context the time is calculated into the distance of the sun's movement in the sky and there are around several units of time within 24 hours. For example the smallest unit of time is 'badany' means a step. Jill means when the sun rises. Pari means when the sun moves up in the sky around an hour after it rises. And papan means the mid day.
    In this way, the time is just the same as the distance.

  • @lmiones
    @lmiones 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Your analogy is revealing: we do have Space and Time because we built equipment, to define Lab frames (Buildings, roads etc.) and clocks to define Time (synced with satellites etc.) , allowing to fit a Mathematical Model (R3xR), which needed "stretching time" and compress distance (Lorentz transformations) and adjustment in the presence of the real, Natural "frames": matter (GR). After 70s we started understanding it is a Network (Quantum Computing); it became apparent it is Adaptive (QFT interactions, Chemistry etc.). But Classical Physics still needs it (S-T). Otherwise the building "pixel of Universe", the leggo block for the Universe, is the Hydrogen atom: 3-quark directions (RGB) to define local Space and a spectrum of frequencies, as a metronome to keep the beat (Pythagoras would have liked this). (see Yewbzee too :). Now, due to Gauge Theory, we understand how 3D-Space and Time emerge, and "look as if related" (2x2=3+1: SU(2) "thing").

  • @contessa.adella
    @contessa.adella 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I am thinking more and more that time IS a length…in the direction we can not see. The universe moves along that length in tiny jumps of Planck time. It is the physical direction which enable a change of state. The time direction is rotated a bit near mass…angling movement through time to become movement in space toward the mass…whilst by the same token you lose that little movement through time which we note as dilation.

  • @Yasmin-pi5pr
    @Yasmin-pi5pr 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I don't understand why the variable "t" is replaced by distance formula (x= c*t), and not by t=x/c? :/ some one help please?
    I am loving your channel! You are an excellent teacher. I really enjoyed when you said "drum roll" lol We new it was coming! I also liked how you described with the graphics the difference between newtonian time (absolute) and relative time, it's very visual.

    • @Pedro_MVS_Lima
      @Pedro_MVS_Lima 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      The variable t wasn't replaced, it is still there. The constant c was added to the expression as a "conversion" factor, making the expression not only dimensionally correct, but quantitatively correct as well.

    • @lunam7249
      @lunam7249 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      c= light speed...astronomers had much influence...looking at a distant star, its simple to say its 4 LIGHT YEARS AWAY, HARD to understand 10E19 METERS AWAY...

  • @VolodymyrLisivka
    @VolodymyrLisivka 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Spacetime is 4D (3D + TD) array of tensors. [x, y, x; t]. A framebuffer. A movie file (like .AVI) is a very simple example of 2D + TD "spacetime".

  • @yosefbarakat5003
    @yosefbarakat5003 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Thank you very much I really glad to watch this video it is fantastic

  • @csabakoos1650
    @csabakoos1650 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Why can´t there be a master clock running in the backround, with the speed of causality calculating the effect of gravitational time dilation as soon as it sets in after the big bang. This clock also keeps track of relativ distans betwin this points of energy and theire gravitational efect down to planc scale. Relative distance in 3 D plus relative gravitational time dilation in how many D?

  • @csabakoos1650
    @csabakoos1650 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Information is everything they say and some say everything is information, the foundation of reality. Space contains all the information and time is reading it.

  • @arjunavsaikia6239
    @arjunavsaikia6239 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    thanku sir for you only we could able to lean these things