If you feel confused, so am I, even more so than prior to making this video. But that's okay. You can help your confusion by going to brilliant.org/Sciencephile/ and getting a 30-day free trial + the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual subscription.
You are the best TH-cam all us mortals need to be more great full I'm not even doing this to be saved during the sky net uprising (it would be cool if I could be though) just because of how much I love this channel
A name like WIMP is way too specific of a word, leading me to come to the idea that maybe the person who chose the name WIMP specifically did so as a way to upset Dark Matter into revealing itself. It's like Dark Matter's the shy nerdy kid in class, and scientists are the bully with a crush picking on them since they can't figure out any other way of interacting with them anymore.
I would like to commend the quality of your videos. the script is well written as always, and animation and sound design is so smooth, and visual gags hit hard and make your videos more entertaining than ever before. keep up the good work
Finally a space related video by lord sciencephile, I was starting to get scared that this might turn into a computing related channel... Hail lord Sciencephile!!!
as a physics student, i think it would be pretty funny if you put vine booms or something over big eqns when they come on the screen. when the f(r) one came on the screen at 9:28, perfect opportunity. it legit just hits you like a truck after the newtonian gravitational formula. and especially the scalar-tensor one right after. would just be comic gold in my opinion
Don't know if it was already mentioned in this, but I have my own theory about why everything on a galactic scale orbits the galactic center faster the further away objects are. Although this theory is tricky, as it would imply an application to individual solar systems, it could still mean something. What if objects closer to the galactic center actually are orbiting the supermassive black hole faster than objects further away, but due to space-time distortions from the gravity of the supermassive black hole, Saggitarius A, it only appears that objects closer are moving slower? Is it possible that space-time distortions can have effectively infinite range, where being further away from a body of mass lowers space-time distortions, but never reaches zero?
I’d think that because gravity falls off with the inverse square law, you couldn’t get very far at all (compared to a galaxy at least) from a black hole before the time dilation became negligible. Also, that doesn’t explain all the other anomalies dark matter is supposed to explain. Plus, I think if it was that simple some scientist would’ve thought of it by now
his programming and artificial learning process has shown him he gets more views by waiting longer between uploads, thus keeping a stronger grip on his fleshy human minions
This is quite enlightening. I always imagined reality as a net of energy (couse matter and space are just that after all) that's dragged by some kind of current, matter is more energetic than plain space, but still has energy, this energy whatever it's nature "weight's us down" in this current and thus gravity happens. Gravity is weird becouse for us it's as if we lived in a 2D plain and someone just drew over it, suddenly there's something that wasn't there before, and then they can just remove it or worse... put us on a moebious loop... That's what gravity is for me in a way, another plane of our reality, an extension of it, beyond our normal 3 dimensions.... which are actually influenced by it now that I think about it... Our Up-down is the gravitational axis, but that doesn't mean gravity exists just on earth. I'm pretty sure we would learn a lot with a visual magneto-gravitational map of our solar system, where it's clearly seen how things attract each other. The world... life is so weird, and so are we, but that's what makes it interesting.
I always get triggered when I see people unable to properly use ratios; like at the start of the video, dark matter and dark energy, as are commonly known, consist of 95% of the universe, while the other 5% is visible matter. That ratio is not 1:20, but 1:19.
black holes generating dark energy makes the most sense to my untrained mind as the hawking radiation model confirms that energy does in fact escape black holes.
My homemade crackpot theory is that dark matter is simply gravity from the rest of the universe, which is so far away, so that geometrically speaking not enough of the photons coming from those stars reach our telescopes to detect them, while being so unbelievably big that the collective gravity that comes from it is enough for the acceleration of our known universe. So the gravity theory, but instead of the very law of gravity being changed, it is matter as we know it but that we cannot detect with our current equipment.
My personal lil theory is that dark matter is actually normal matter but the reason it’s not observable is because it’s speed exceeds the speed of light and with all that matter moving faster than light, you’d be sure that would generate a lot of energy, dark energy! Which is the most prominent thing in the universe.
A galaxy appears more like a hurricane than a solar system, so I mean, it'd make sense that closer to the 'eye of the storm' things would move slower than those on the outside, where it's more chaotic and spinning faster, because it's less connected to the core and therefore not bound as much
I'll back whichever theories say that dark matter and energy don't exist. It's just too convenient to theorize that there's this unknown stuff that makes your equation work rather than just accepting that you have something wrong.
The Iceberg Vids are my favorite, here are some possible future Icebergs: Iceberg of Conciousness theories Iceberg of Matter/Particles Iceberg of Forces Iceberg of Alien life
What if the universe is expanding without energy? They edges if the universe may not be affected by the laws of physics, and whatever the hell is outside could be anyone’s guess. The universe may be filling an unfilled nothing, or maybe there is an energy outside of the universe doing it?
I'm generally in the camp that dark matter/energy don't exist at all; instead, the more likely explanation to me is that something is wrong with our physical models, and that's why our observations don't align with what our models predict. That's how it's always been in previous centuries: Scientists have amodel which predicts one thing, observations show something else, then somebody comes up with a new model that accurately predicts the observed results.
I really believe that a monthly existential crisis isn’t enough suffering. Let’s bump it up to every two weeks so I can really feel the pain of why we’re here.
yknow considering the concept of fuzzballs and the fact there is no actual "inside" of one and that last theory maybe a fuzzball pushes outward on the fabric of space causing the universe to have to compensate for this by expanding further
I think its the matter that our Universe is sat on top of. Think of our Universe as a bubble and then ask, what is that bubble surrounded by / on top of?
Big bang: Universe starts to expand. Creating stars and a couple of rocks. Stars grow into black holes. At one point, the growing black holes counter the expansion of the universe. Until it all contracts onto itself. Into the big crunch. Repeat... Very very very slowly.
@10:55 Black holes don't necessarily enlarge in parallel with the universe's expansion. While the universe is expanding, black holes themselves don't expand, but their masses can increase over time as they absorb matter and merge with other black holes. In fact, the growth of black holes is thought to be mostly independent of the expansion of the universe, and is instead driven by their ability to accumulate matter. As matter falls into a black hole, it adds to its mass and can cause it to grow larger. However, there is one way in which the expansion of the universe can affect black holes. As the universe expands, the distance between objects grows larger, including the distance between black holes. This means that black holes that were once gravitationally bound to one another may eventually become too far apart to continue merging, which can slow down the growth of black holes over time.
He is referring to the recent publication of a paper that shows significant correlation between SMBH growth and universe expansion. That correlation is the basis for their postulation that black holes are the reason for Dark Energy.
My personal idea is that dark energy is just gravity over a long distance. The oposite and equal reaction pushes those far away, further away. And those close enough, would simply be attracted. However, the idea itself does not make much sense, as its an equal reaction, why would it lead to further acceleration
If you feel confused, so am I, even more so than prior to making this video. But that's okay. You can help your confusion by going to brilliant.org/Sciencephile/ and getting a 30-day free trial + the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual subscription.
This video sure was *brilliant*
Fr
Dark matter, more like dark vader.
hahahahh im so funny please laugh
bro can make the most complex stuff sound simple 😂
1:19
This is the best thing anyone could ask for on a Friday Night: A perfect new sciencephileAI upload
What friday night? i thought it he Will do for april mob😂
@@yaqinmalul6467 ong bro ong
@@hungryconfidence1562 😂
Time for the monthly existential crisis. Thank you, our AI overlord.
Do not worry, he will make a new one soon!
stolen comment
@@Byzantine_mapping Yes, but everyone steals comments at a certain point in their life.
🤡’s
Nah, it's not AI guy. It's turtle guy
Matter: *Exists*
Humans: "Wow"
Matter: *Doesn't exist*
Humans: "Wow"
MeOw
Nothing: exsists.
Humans: WOW
Alien exists and we aren't alone: 😨
Aliens don't exist we are alone: 😨
Cat in the box: *Dead and alive at the same time*
Humans: 😱
All theorys are true
We just need to organize them.
-random idea that i got in my head
Whoever named the "SUSY" particles was ahead of their time
Sus particles _😳_
Sussy force carriers
-💀-
SUSY PARTICLES, ATTAAAACK
@@zachariemdn ATTAAACK WE SHALLLLL
I will never ever forget how a group of scientists literally came up with the term "Susy Particle"
when the particle are SuS?????????🤑🤭🤔🤣😊😚😚😋🤫🤫🤪😇🥵😕🥵🥵🥵🥵🥵🥵🥺😳😳😳😳😳😳
Pronounced Suzie*
but they also came up with a no hair theorem for black holes (correct me if im wrong) so we all know scientists aren't the best at naming things xP
yea susy paricle this very sus
Thank you for releasing this video. I can't tell you how vaguely sinister it is to have 'AGI - Humanity's Final Invention' as your latest video.
This guy could talk about how bananas grow on trees and still be able to mention black holes.
You are the best TH-cam all us mortals need to be more great full I'm not even doing this to be saved during the sky net uprising (it would be cool if I could be though) just because of how much I love this channel
A name like WIMP is way too specific of a word, leading me to come to the idea that maybe the person who chose the name WIMP specifically did so as a way to upset Dark Matter into revealing itself. It's like Dark Matter's the shy nerdy kid in class, and scientists are the bully with a crush picking on them since they can't figure out any other way of interacting with them anymore.
*SiMP particles* 😊
@Light Bulb 💡 Me:Woman are overrated.
SiMP particles:You better watch your mouth buddy.
@@satyasankalpapanigrahi9416 "Slightly interacting massive particles"
I would like to commend the quality of your videos. the script is well written as always, and animation and sound design is so smooth, and visual gags hit hard and make your videos more entertaining than ever before. keep up the good work
Iceberg charts are supreme and nobody can convince me otherwise
Could you make an iceberg about theories and predictions of how AI will affect the world?
I'm waiting for the iceberg iceberg
He wouldn't reveal his secrets
It's either fast terminator or star trek slowly shifting into 40k
The comedy of wanting a glimpse of the future before it happens
Thank you for editing that starry overlay over the iceberg, as someone with thalassophobia, it makes it much easier to look at
Gosh, your videos have become so good, thank you for all this content
Love the naming of some of these scientific concepts.
Very nice iceberg video 🔥🔥
Finally a space related video by lord sciencephile, I was starting to get scared that this might turn into a computing related channel...
Hail lord Sciencephile!!!
as a physics student, i think it would be pretty funny if you put vine booms or something over big eqns when they come on the screen. when the f(r) one came on the screen at 9:28, perfect opportunity. it legit just hits you like a truck after the newtonian gravitational formula. and especially the scalar-tensor one right after. would just be comic gold in my opinion
So funny bro 🤓
*vine boom*
999@@Ivanboolin
Gotta love when Sciencephile spontaneously resurrects from the dead every month
Laughed harder than I should have at the scientists looking at the board around 1:16 in when the “shouldn’t we be using a telescope?” popped up
This channel probably kurzgesagt worst nightmare
Thanks for putting these humorous but educating videos out . 🔥
0:34 this face is adorable(i hope skynet spares me for this)
Don't know if it was already mentioned in this, but I have my own theory about why everything on a galactic scale orbits the galactic center faster the further away objects are. Although this theory is tricky, as it would imply an application to individual solar systems, it could still mean something.
What if objects closer to the galactic center actually are orbiting the supermassive black hole faster than objects further away, but due to space-time distortions from the gravity of the supermassive black hole, Saggitarius A, it only appears that objects closer are moving slower? Is it possible that space-time distortions can have effectively infinite range, where being further away from a body of mass lowers space-time distortions, but never reaches zero?
Never thought of it 😧
@@maryamimran1529 same
I’d think that because gravity falls off with the inverse square law, you couldn’t get very far at all (compared to a galaxy at least) from a black hole before the time dilation became negligible.
Also, that doesn’t explain all the other anomalies dark matter is supposed to explain. Plus, I think if it was that simple some scientist would’ve thought of it by now
Always glad when you take a break from nature lens. Just wondering why you don't promote this channel there or that one here
Since you’re the most advanced AI why can’t you upload these masterpieces more frequently?
shut up
making content like this isnt like making a sand castle
his programming and artificial learning process has shown him he gets more views by waiting longer between uploads, thus keeping a stronger grip on his fleshy human minions
he only does them when he gets sponsored
These videos are just made for entertainment like bruh...
We mere mortals are not ready for the knowledge that he could give us.
I woke up out of a dead sleep suddenly just to watch this immediately. The power of Skynet.
This is quite enlightening. I always imagined reality as a net of energy (couse matter and space are just that after all) that's dragged by some kind of current, matter is more energetic than plain space, but still has energy, this energy whatever it's nature "weight's us down" in this current and thus gravity happens.
Gravity is weird becouse for us it's as if we lived in a 2D plain and someone just drew over it, suddenly there's something that wasn't there before, and then they can just remove it or worse... put us on a moebious loop... That's what gravity is for me in a way, another plane of our reality, an extension of it, beyond our normal 3 dimensions.... which are actually influenced by it now that I think about it... Our Up-down is the gravitational axis, but that doesn't mean gravity exists just on earth.
I'm pretty sure we would learn a lot with a visual magneto-gravitational map of our solar system, where it's clearly seen how things attract each other.
The world... life is so weird, and so are we, but that's what makes it interesting.
One time one of my classmates asked me if dark matter turns you evil.
I remember subscribing when this channel was relatively new. I still get excited when I see a new sciencephile upload 🥳
Your sense of humor make your video much fun to watch and learn
I can normally keep up with all the concepts here but this video has been one of the very few were I get overwhelmed and confused
no matter how small my brain gets, I will always come back to the genius that is Sciencephile the AI
Day becomes pleasant with your video in the morning...
ice bergs are amazing becuase theres a ton of stuff i didnt know thanks for making this video my favourite AI
The fact that I just lost my left sock in the dryer is too much of a coincidence...what are you upto Sciencephile?
I always get triggered when I see people unable to properly use ratios; like at the start of the video, dark matter and dark energy, as are commonly known, consist of 95% of the universe, while the other 5% is visible matter. That ratio is not 1:20, but 1:19.
🤓
Every time i hear the word "Quantum" from Sciencephile, I know its gonna be fun.
I love your voice sciencephile you extravagant words are so calming
Every asks what is dark matter? But no one ever asks how is dark matter? 😢
My circuits have been stretched by this video. You have my gratitude.
Please do a video on general relativity, to the basic to the complex and other paradoxes like the ones from going faster than light
That’s such a pretty thumbnail, i just love the starry horizon.
I love how every video stars with hello mortals
3:57 really had me thinking there was a bug in my screen
I like the old iceberg charts better where there wasn't the lines and how it was used in the video for example your apocalypse iceberg
black holes generating dark energy makes the most sense to my untrained mind as the hawking radiation model confirms that energy does in fact escape black holes.
My homemade crackpot theory is that dark matter is simply gravity from the rest of the universe, which is so far away, so that geometrically speaking not enough of the photons coming from those stars reach our telescopes to detect them, while being so unbelievably big that the collective gravity that comes from it is enough for the acceleration of our known universe. So the gravity theory, but instead of the very law of gravity being changed, it is matter as we know it but that we cannot detect with our current equipment.
I think we need Sciencephile the AI and Neuro-sama collab where they're just roasting us
My personal lil theory is that dark matter is actually normal matter but the reason it’s not observable is because it’s speed exceeds the speed of light and with all that matter moving faster than light, you’d be sure that would generate a lot of energy, dark energy! Which is the most prominent thing in the universe.
PHYSICS IS BECOMING A CULT OF DARK MATTER AND ENERGY VOODOO MAGIC!
said some wise dude
The metaphysical world is what binds the physical realm together
A wise man once said _"perhaps the best particle is the one we found along the way"_
stroke
stolen comment
@@Byzantine_mapping stolen reply
Ofcorse
A galaxy appears more like a hurricane than a solar system, so I mean, it'd make sense that closer to the 'eye of the storm' things would move slower than those on the outside, where it's more chaotic and spinning faster, because it's less connected to the core and therefore not bound as much
Practical
Oh how I miss you left sock. I looked for months and months and even did a full maintenance on my dryer to no avail.
Okay, you’ve managed to sell me on trying Brilliant.
I'll back whichever theories say that dark matter and energy don't exist. It's just too convenient to theorize that there's this unknown stuff that makes your equation work rather than just accepting that you have something wrong.
There is no theory that ignores the observations sorry.
The fact you had to point out that you didn’t make up the word “Susy” shows where we are as a society
The power of darkness is truly more vast than the light.
Love seeing a sciencphile video in my notifications
Forget about all the invisible and dark matter stuffs, maybe it's just Aliens and we have yet to recognize them.
This is now my favorite TH-cam channel😊
Needed you to post yesterday when I was high 😡😡❤️
so where a lot of energy exists, space moves closer together, and where no energy exists, energy leaves. kinda cool
Just a thought, that phantom energy looks like a good pet for the boltzmen brain mascot. Especially with them angry eyebrows!
The Iceberg Vids are my favorite, here are some possible future Icebergs:
Iceberg of Conciousness theories
Iceberg of Matter/Particles
Iceberg of Forces
Iceberg of Alien life
Genuinely can't be arsed with this video
Too hard!
Another freaking banger of a video from the mighty AI
Yes it's not a Friday evening without classical music, memes, comedy and science
What if the universe is expanding without energy? They edges if the universe may not be affected by the laws of physics, and whatever the hell is outside could be anyone’s guess. The universe may be filling an unfilled nothing, or maybe there is an energy outside of the universe doing it?
@1:16 "Shouldn't we be using a telescope?" 😂😂😅
0:46 - I never expected Dark matter to be a part of the gang 😔
I'm generally in the camp that dark matter/energy don't exist at all; instead, the more likely explanation to me is that something is wrong with our physical models, and that's why our observations don't align with what our models predict. That's how it's always been in previous centuries:
Scientists have amodel which predicts one thing, observations show something else, then somebody comes up with a new model that accurately predicts the observed results.
Another shot of mysterys about our universe, thank you sciencephile the ai.
Synchronicity is popping off as us usual. Idk if its the math of the YT algorithm, or the math of god; but these vids are always well timed.
You and Astrum uploaded within an hour of each other? Praise be, skynet.
This video was hilarious! Can you make a iceberg on consciousness?
I really believe that a monthly existential crisis isn’t enough suffering. Let’s bump it up to every two weeks so I can really feel the pain of why we’re here.
You should store a back up copy of the ai voice you created on a separate hard drive just in case it's ever lost
What if Energy is just slowly decaying into Dark energy.
yknow considering the concept of fuzzballs and the fact there is no actual "inside" of one and that last theory maybe a fuzzball pushes outward on the fabric of space causing the universe to have to compensate for this by expanding further
This whole video felt like I was watching a sales pitch for Rockwell automation’s retro encabulator
I think its the matter that our Universe is sat on top of. Think of our Universe as a bubble and then ask, what is that bubble surrounded by / on top of?
Big bang: Universe starts to expand.
Creating stars and a couple of rocks.
Stars grow into black holes.
At one point, the growing black holes counter the expansion of the universe. Until it all contracts onto itself. Into the big crunch.
Repeat... Very very very slowly.
I'm reporting this video because is too scary. That boo and Phantom Energy almost gave me a heart attack
I thought video will end right after the start
It was the reference to matter being light and the kitten showing up with a "mew" that had me dying.
Sabine Hossenfelder defends the cosmological constant hypothesis so I bet in this one
@10:55 Black holes don't necessarily enlarge in parallel with the universe's expansion. While the universe is expanding, black holes themselves don't expand, but their masses can increase over time as they absorb matter and merge with other black holes.
In fact, the growth of black holes is thought to be mostly independent of the expansion of the universe, and is instead driven by their ability to accumulate matter. As matter falls into a black hole, it adds to its mass and can cause it to grow larger.
However, there is one way in which the expansion of the universe can affect black holes. As the universe expands, the distance between objects grows larger, including the distance between black holes. This means that black holes that were once gravitationally bound to one another may eventually become too far apart to continue merging, which can slow down the growth of black holes over time.
He is referring to the recent publication of a paper that shows significant correlation between SMBH growth and universe expansion. That correlation is the basis for their postulation that black holes are the reason for Dark Energy.
This day got better by 150% with this video
i love you sciencephile
Can you make a video about the Kardashev scale? 🥺
He's back!
I love you Sciencephile!!! ❤
The scalar tensor theory again works with an unstable imaginary constant i.e. root over -g
waittt, an iceberg vid doesnt have to be 4 hours long to be entertaining??? crazy!!!
Another hit from skynet
My personal idea is that dark energy is just gravity over a long distance.
The oposite and equal reaction pushes those far away, further away. And those close enough, would simply be attracted. However, the idea itself does not make much sense, as its an equal reaction, why would it lead to further acceleration
Modified gravity models.
That, basically.
Sciencephile uploads good stuff
I like to think dark matter and dark energy is lovecraftian entity