The Wave Equation simplified

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ความคิดเห็น • 133

  • @endmercy
    @endmercy หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    Thanks Ali, I'm a high school student and I've been watching your videos for a while now. I used to want to be a network technician but I've always enjoyed playing with physics, so watching your videos basically influenced me into becoming a electrical engineer 💪💪

    • @endmercy
      @endmercy หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      love from Honduras brother♥

  • @Parth-i2n
    @Parth-i2n หลายเดือนก่อน +58

    Man do I understand anything at this point?

    • @alithedazzling
      @alithedazzling  หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      haha did the video help you understand it more?

    • @Oraki_salamat
      @Oraki_salamat หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Yes, Ali I understand it a bit, but thank you for taking your time teaching us 😊

    • @Parth-i2n
      @Parth-i2n หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@alithedazzling did help thanks

    • @sphakamisozondi
      @sphakamisozondi หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I was asking myself the same thing bro 😅

    • @treeross
      @treeross หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I have found the deeper you dive into research on a subject the more you understand how little you understand. In a good way, if that makes sense.

  • @carguy8902
    @carguy8902 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    I love this. I started learning this when I was a kid. And I’m still learning. Keep going like that Ali, I’m also an Arabic fellow. Greetings from Morocco

    • @vipx1n195
      @vipx1n195 27 วันที่ผ่านมา

      wach nta kayn db fi lmaghrib ola chi blad akhra

    • @vipx1n195
      @vipx1n195 27 วันที่ผ่านมา

      sarahatan 3jbni khona lanalogie liki3tiha lphysic olmath katkhalihom more sens

    • @carguy8902
      @carguy8902 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@vipx1n195 I live in Morocco. If you want I can tell you the city .

    • @carguy8902
      @carguy8902 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@vipx1n195 bon, moi j’aime les science depuis toujours mais j’ai une passion à la physique et l’ingénierie depuis de petit .

  • @juozasg
    @juozasg 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    really enjoying these videos for refreshing math i've learned ages ago and improving intuition in the process. looking forward to Euler equation and Fourier transform videos!

  • @Delan1994
    @Delan1994 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Thanks Dr Ali . Keep posting the videos. I Truly enjoy these videos

  • @tobiahbower1951
    @tobiahbower1951 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    yes! please talk about the harmonic equation! i am a BS-MS electrical engineering student from UCF, and these videos are really helpful!

  • @chisomobi1308
    @chisomobi1308 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I lovd the way you teach....i really appreciate!

  • @fuzailkhan9701
    @fuzailkhan9701 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    Hi Ali,
    When you press the button the circuit is completed and current flows due to which the electrons in LED or in screen gets into excited state and emit radiation/photons(which are alsoEM waves) of specific wavelength and frequency and corresponding to that frequency We see light of different colours More specifically we can see only visible region so all the light which we see we can say its wavelength and freq lie in visible region.

  • @mateuszkosinski7162
    @mateuszkosinski7162 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Yo! I am EE student from Wrocław Poland. I started same as you doing Mechanical degree but then I switched for EE engineering and rn going into microwaves topic. Not regretting it at all. You are doing great job, love your videos and wishes you best for your carrer!

    • @madeleininspace
      @madeleininspace หลายเดือนก่อน

      Super, że inni Polacy też tu są!

  • @Romain-wh9jd
    @Romain-wh9jd หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Many thanks from France, I'm a student in "classe prépa" and your videos are very interesting.

  • @crazychallenger6796
    @crazychallenger6796 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Hey ali! Thanks for your videos . I am currently completing my astrophysics from iisc india.
    Your videos are very very interesting.

  • @fardinshaan6957
    @fardinshaan6957 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Loved it. Pls make a video about Laplacian operator and its meaning and intuitive

  • @sirtajali5841
    @sirtajali5841 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Plz continue making such vedio this is what most students need

  • @adeltorjmen7508
    @adeltorjmen7508 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Really like your videos making complex physical phenomena intuitive to understand ! Please carry on…
    As per your watch, the initial cause was triggering an electrical change in the LED circuit causing a electromagnetic wave (4th Maxwell equation) which was a visible light wave; which when it hits your retina will cause an electric current in the optical nerf going to your brain and interpreted as such …
    All is a matter of causes causing effects .
    Time is of essence of course… otherwise all would be frozen and static 😂

    • @alithedazzling
      @alithedazzling  หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I'm glad you enjoyed the explanation. It's all about those cause-and-effect chains!

  • @dean532
    @dean532 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    14:05 this sounded like a good teacher having the cocky knack of preventing students who try heading out disrespectfully
    “…and just before you get lost..these are way more interesting than what you normally do to pass your time” 😅

  • @wdujsub7902
    @wdujsub7902 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    Good video, but I think the video does not give justice to the title . When somebody does not intuitively understand the wave equation this video just teaches him that not only displacement or mechanical waves for example in solid bodies, but also electric and magnetic fields propagate the same way being described with the same equation. But it adds nothing to the understanding of the wave equation itself. Okay, change in time and space, but why second derivative and not first? first derivatives describe changes too. Okay you have to describe curvature so you need at least the second spatial derivative, but why not the third? Why is the velocity term in them squared? An explanation like hey, a very high second time derivative means that the function changes a lot through time and it is equal to its curvature basically. Just like an example drawing of radio waves being long and slowly varying and not that curvy and xrays next to them by being way faster varying and way squigglier. squigglines is the curvature and their frequency is connected to their time variation. I think this approach would give more intuition to the average viewer.

  • @exo-580
    @exo-580 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    im a chemist and grateful for you my favourite creator Ali.My answer to your quesion is that the action of pressing the button completes the circuit in the watch and current flows i.e electrons and energises or gives the right amount of quantized or discrete amount of energy hf which causes excitation of the electrons in the different spectra where it emits light through release of the photons of corresponding amount of wavelength in the visible spectrum,ir or uv.but in our case it's visible spectrum.

    • @alithedazzling
      @alithedazzling  หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      you are a great chemist!

    • @exo-580
      @exo-580 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@alithedazzling thank your ,it's my pleasure to have you too

  • @shuvro6358
    @shuvro6358 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I need this right now . u saved me...

  • @alreadyghosts7727
    @alreadyghosts7727 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you for the terrific video! May I suggest that whenever you create a video, you post in the comments two additional resources. One would be a set of at least five textbook problems per concept for the curious to work through that you think would help to achieve a more thorough understanding (please be sure to include solutions). The other would be any lab experiments that you think really gave you a better feel for understanding the concepts. I know it is a big ask, but you seem to have a knack for actually being able to teach this stuff so I'd like to also see what problems and experiments you'd suggest to gain a greater mastery of this subject.

  • @amaabed
    @amaabed หลายเดือนก่อน

    No wonder you're called the dazzling. Great video, keep it going brother.

    • @alithedazzling
      @alithedazzling  หลายเดือนก่อน

      haha thank you! what did you like about the video?

  • @wyvern4597
    @wyvern4597 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Ali my bro im doing computer science but i love physics... Im lowkey binging your videos

  • @aidanvogel3757
    @aidanvogel3757 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Potentially projecting here, but as someone who’s never intuitively understood calculus until lately, here’s my $.02.
    Math is a language that corresponds to the abstract nature of what it describes. So my $.02 is be sure to really highlight what EACH aspect of the equations mean in terms of the picture. It’s practically a story(this is where most teachers seriously fail) and that story must be told in a way that gives the reader the image in their head.
    So for example: the C2 just recently made sense why the squared was there. To me(maybe I’m a bit slow..) the squared just meant the speed times its speed, which makes no sense. Now I understand it’s pointing to curvature.
    Hope this helps, coming from someone who’s smart enough to comprehend it, but too dumb to see how it all connects intuitively.

  • @Mushemkap
    @Mushemkap หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Yeah ... A videos please on harmonic waves
    thank you for your sharing

  • @Mahamations
    @Mahamations หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    why do u look older after every single vid u do
    btw thanks i understood the wave equation tdy :)

    • @alithedazzling
      @alithedazzling  หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      im gaining more wisdom

    • @Mahamations
      @Mahamations หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@alithedazzling kool

  • @smostars
    @smostars หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    The cause of an electromagnetic wave is an oscillating charge source, or an accelerating source of charge

  • @Rogertheripper07
    @Rogertheripper07 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Hey can you please talk about the theory of relativity and explain us how things work i just love your videos if possible ❤️

    • @Rogertheripper07
      @Rogertheripper07 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Btw this video was fantastic this led me thinking more into this topic the thing is I don't know how time passes by soo fast that's the reason I can't study things in depth 😅😂

  • @MatthewSuffidy
    @MatthewSuffidy หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I'm not an expert on the topic of LEDS, but my understanding is there is a excitation of silicon and then dropping through a junction so the electrical potential loss emits as light and heat.

  • @haryr_
    @haryr_ หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great video man, this really recalled my vector calculus knowledge! Do you think you could one day make a video on how to derive the Maxwell Equations? (Mathematically)

  • @glenmarkdublin5081
    @glenmarkdublin5081 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I don't have broad knowledge about the topic, so I'll just answer based on what I understand from your lesson. I see the problem as a system. In the pond analogy, the source of the force is the act of letting go of the object from a higher position, so the object becomes the source of the force. In the watch problem, I see the watch and the button-clicking as a system. Initially, the watch isn't lit but has the potential to light up. By clicking the button, that potential is released, so I would say the source for the light is the clicking of the button.

  • @2122届-罗睿喆
    @2122届-罗睿喆 หลายเดือนก่อน

    yes
    do more of these
    please and thank you

  • @marcocardinale7800
    @marcocardinale7800 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I have wave exam next week, thank you ;)

  • @lupino652
    @lupino652 หลายเดือนก่อน

    It is a special type of equation that models a type of process where a local perturbation (partial derivative of the perturbed field in time) spreads in space (partial derivative of the perturbed field in space).
    Other type of equation like transport phenomena, models that spatial spreqd in a different, but similar way (transient steady process generally) until it stabilizes
    Wave: acceleration of the perturbation related to the concavity of the spatial spreqd
    Tranport phenomena: acceleration of the perturbation to the steepness of the spatual spread (the steepness finally gets stabilized) and the phenomen is sustained

  • @JeffreyNColeman
    @JeffreyNColeman หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    The cause of the emission of light is the acceleration of charges.

  • @jimbritt8175
    @jimbritt8175 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Question, I have not used my EE degree in 20 yrs. Very much enjoyed the video. So, if instead of a rock dropping in a pond, what if I call it a packet of energy. When that packet of energy interacts with the medium, the pond, or space time through Maxwells equations we can derive the wave function of that packet of energy. I assume we could go backwards too, and from the wave function, do the process in reverse and come up with a force, or a mass, point particle with acceleration. It seems like a linked duality, just depending on how we look at it, or observe it, is my theoretical packet of energy a particle or a wave? Is that a way to look at it as well, the duality of light, depending on the observation or am I stretching my thought too much?

  • @bikeros77
    @bikeros77 หลายเดือนก่อน

    you are speeding on chalk bro :) , great video , thanks

  • @georgemolnar7344
    @georgemolnar7344 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I admire your efforts and appreciate your dedication. You have a very nice way of not "dumbing down" too much. And I realize the limitations of concepts and detail.BUT at approximately 2:20 into the video, you define "v" as the velocity of the wave. Realizing the you are referring to an one-dimensional wave, What exactly is this 'velocity''
    a scalar, a vector, the velocity of WHAT? as you have already defined it as the 2nd D of position. Please clarify. Thanks,

    • @alithedazzling
      @alithedazzling  4 วันที่ผ่านมา

      velocity (speed and direction) of the traveling wave along the dimension

  • @jalsiddharth
    @jalsiddharth หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Mate NASA post doc buddy, people are struggling with equations in general and most people will live their lives without hearing about the wave equation because apparently we have all failed everyone but the zeroth and first order students with basic mathematics lol. (globally speaking)
    But thank you so much for the video. 😊subbed.

  • @jamiewalker329
    @jamiewalker329 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I dunno. I think it's easiest to describe by consider a function u = f(x), this could be a snap shot of a wave at t=0. If it's a travelling wave we could have this wave form travelling to the right, and it would displace by vt units in t seconds giving u = f(x - vt). It could also be moving to the left. Or any superposition of the two such waves. So u = Af(x - vt) + Bg(x+vt). differentiating twice with respect to x using the chain rule gives a multiplication by 1^2 whereas differentiating twice with respect to t causes a multiplication of v^2. This gives the wave equation.
    You could also just say that the vertical acceleration (d^2 y /dt^2) (considering a transverse wave) is proportional to concavity (d^2y / d^x) of the wave, i.e how much the wave is bending spatially. If the wave is barely bending at a point, e.g. when a sinusoidal wave passes through the x axis, the acceleration is 0 - this makes sense as we are at the equilibrium in this case. At peaks and troughs, then the more sharp the peak, the greater the acceleration back to the equilibrium.

  • @LilDoubleMo
    @LilDoubleMo หลายเดือนก่อน

    Do you have a discord where we can ask questions?

  • @nyliveechay-so3ps
    @nyliveechay-so3ps 7 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

    Cause of the EM wave to START propagating (maybe) is the light emitted, energy in the battery, finger pressing the button, your action... or that light (naturally) propagates 'outwards'..¿?

  • @OpticalOpp
    @OpticalOpp หลายเดือนก่อน

    can you make a video explaining what an electrical engineer actually does in all the different subfields at the bachelor's, masters, and then PhD level. I'm interested in knowing how much of the stuff that they learn in school is actually used at the job, and also just what it is each on actually does. Thank you so much!

  • @syed_zaid7
    @syed_zaid7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The cause is in pressing the button .... which sends signal to the led which is in the form of electric charges.
    Basically a whole electric circuit is completed.

  • @JustQoutes26
    @JustQoutes26 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thankyu allot man fro your efforts now i am confident that i can might become a physics professor in future or maybe a quantum physicist wow such big term 😂 well thankyu lets see where the wind takes me

  • @Abhimanyukushwahamp2uo
    @Abhimanyukushwahamp2uo หลายเดือนก่อน

    The cause of EMW is the jump of electrons from higher energy levels to lower energy levels in atoms and this radiates energy in form of EMWs. 👍

  • @Cirwlos
    @Cirwlos หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This is incorrect because x represents a position, while u represents a shape.
    You cannot treat d²u/dt² as if it were d²x/dt² and equate d²u/dt² to a force.
    Also, you are confusing x(t), the function with x, the parameter. Although you have named both as x, they represent different concepts.

    • @alithedazzling
      @alithedazzling  หลายเดือนก่อน

      which part of the video are you referring to? when describing force?

  • @pcdeveloper9154
    @pcdeveloper9154 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Great video btw, I did see that you quickly skimmed through the curl on curl at 14:15 and it wasn't explained clearly. You did not show what ∇ = Del , Nabla or upside down Delta does or represents. - The Grad operator will turn scaler into a vector field. While ∇· = Div or divergence defined as Dot Product - returns a scaler field. The rule for taking the curl of a curl in mathematics is that the curl of the curl of a vector field is essentially equivalent to applying the Laplacian operator to each component of the vector field, with a slight adjustment to account for the vector nature of the operation; mathematically, it can be written as: curl(curl(F)) = ∇(∇ · F) - ∇²F where ∇ is the gradient operator, ∇· is the divergence operator, and ∇² is the Laplacian operator.

  • @Sh1-Sama
    @Sh1-Sama หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Plz make a video about freelancing as an Electrical and electronics engineering graduate.

  • @lowersaxon
    @lowersaxon หลายเดือนก่อน

    What is interesting and seldom discussed is:
    where did epsilon and mu ( permittivity ….) come from and what does it mean exactly. The speed of light c can be derived from it like Maxwell did. So what determines both those values?

  • @JeffreyNColeman
    @JeffreyNColeman หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thanks very much for this explanation, and for putting it together so quickly! I have a related question. Physicists generally seem to believe that gravitational waves also propagate at C, which has been supported by recent observations of gravitational waves and EM radiation from the same stellar event arriving at approximately the same time. Looking at it without a background in General Relativity, it would seem a curious coincidence that both electromagnetic waves and gravitational waves propagate at the same velocity, especially considering that for EM waves, the values of the constants of permittivity and permeability determine C. But those are electrical and magnetic constants seemingly unrelated to the spacetime curvature of General Relativity. Why do disturbances in spacetime curvature propagate at exactly the same speed as disturbances in the electromagnetic field?

  • @theosky7162
    @theosky7162 หลายเดือนก่อน

    17:33 HOW do we know identity of ( c ) ?
    Thanks and Regards !

  • @pimpilikaa
    @pimpilikaa หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Cuteness, cuteness, cuteness ❤❤

  • @trevoncowen9198
    @trevoncowen9198 หลายเดือนก่อน

    So it waves are disturbance in a medium heat is such a disturbance that it causes other things to have the same disturbance?

  • @Phoenix-rb4bf
    @Phoenix-rb4bf หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Make videos on mechanics and multivariable calculus

  • @EmmanuelMatabaro
    @EmmanuelMatabaro หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Answer: It is the force of the finger pressing on the button that closes the electrical circuit and the lamp is lit in the watch🤷 No electromagnetic courant without an external force or energie🤓.

  • @parinose6163
    @parinose6163 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I cannot answer about the watch's light. A ray of white light (electromagnetic waves) from outside causes the color to change on the glass. In the darkness, there will be zero light, so there will be zero disturbance of electromagnetic waves. So, you cause energy, therefore light, by the accumulator (battery). More equations harmonic waves...

  • @OneLine122
    @OneLine122 หลายเดือนก่อน

    If I follow your methodology, the cause would be the electro-magnetic fields moving through empty space, c2 being the reverse of empty space.
    I would suggest something else though. Look at what you did to derive this, you took out electric charges, so it can't create a magnetic field anymore. However, you did not change the magnetic field equations. So maybe your watch can be seen as a magnetic charge that you said previously could not be caused and did not exist. It's the only way to start the system.
    So you could consider "c2" as an magnetic field that is at rest, which is the case in empty space. Then you cause a disturbance in the force by dropping a magnetic charge in it. So now it ripples in every direction through the same medium that offers no resistance to it because there are no particles of magnetism. It just propagates it locally. The equations only describe the mechanism of that propagation, the electric component feeding the magnetic one, and vice versa, which creates inertia that conserves the original charge's energy, just like in an electric field which needs particles to propagate.
    Now what causes that magnetic charge, is the electricity running in your watch. If it goes around the watch, it should create a magnetic current, but since it can't go out of the watch, it creates a charge that kind of explodes. Light bulbs are like that. The energy goes through a circuit that can't go back to the source, so it needs to go somewhere and I would suggest it creates a magnetic charge that creates light. No reason you can't conceptualize it this way, the result is compatible with experience.
    It's also interesting in explaining the curvature of space time. Consider a ray of light, it has the magnetic wave on a 2d plane, so that ray of light isn't going anywhere except on that plane. It's why when it comes near a mass, which also has a c2 factor when converted to mass, it will curve a ray of light, just like if it were a resistance. Gravity is just another wave that may interfere with the one of the light and maybe could be seen as another magnetic charge but caused by something else than electricity. Maybe they act like electric dipoles, just with no need for positive and negative charges, just the space-time distortion.

  • @inferno9378
    @inferno9378 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Wtachong you from France

  • @rumatalukder7220
    @rumatalukder7220 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Bro can you make a detailed video on coding and programming languages also it would be better if you talk about a bit of python and c++ as well

  • @saidctbb
    @saidctbb หลายเดือนก่อน

    can you do the same for the Navier-Stokes equations?

  • @ergo6450
    @ergo6450 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Love from 🇧🇷 brazil

  • @rahulsinghmahar9480
    @rahulsinghmahar9480 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Brother can you please please explain the meaning of wave form
    Y=aSin(wt-kx)
    Intuitively please

  • @ee-036g.raghuveer2
    @ee-036g.raghuveer2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Hey bro I'm an a eletrical student.I also want to became as you.But i think i have a problem.That i can understand and imagine all the laws of Eletromagnetic laws and analyse also..i cant put all this imagined concepts into a mathematical equations.
    Could you help me out from this problem 🦋

  • @MrTNT49
    @MrTNT49 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Yay! Wave equation!

  • @riderpaul
    @riderpaul 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

    From my understanding I'd say when energy is added or removed from a valence electron, it can only happen in discreet steps. This is because the shape of the waveform that that electron can live in only has distinct patterns. Each pattern is associated with an energy level. When the energy level changes, conservation of energy says that that change has to result in something with equal energy. That something can electromagnetic or mechanical with that specific energy. Mechanical equals heat and electromagnetic equals a photon.
    The photon of energy can either be admitted or absorbed depending if you're adding energy or removing it. Often times when you add energy to a valence electrons it moves into a higher state and then quickly drops down releasing a photon of light. That process can turn heat energy caused by a moving electron disturbing a valence electron into a photon through the process described above.
    An LED has atoms or molecules with very specific energy states. When those states are disturbed by a passing charge they convert the heat energy into a photon by moving up and energy level and then dropping back down thereby converting the heat energy into a photon.
    That's my guess. Please tell me if I'm wrong.

    • @riderpaul
      @riderpaul 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      The reason I think it's heat that is then converted is because I'm thinking of a resistive process. It's also possible that there is a direct electromagnetic interaction between the moving charge and valence electron state it's interacting with, without the intermediate heat state I don't know. Either way the energy is removed by the photon so if it is heat the heat doesn't remain in the system. I'd really like to know the answer.
      Please do tell.

  • @vanditseksaria5897
    @vanditseksaria5897 หลายเดือนก่อน

    hey ali, can you make a vid proving that earth's axis can be assumed to be approximate inertial frame of reference for objects in its orbit.

  • @sidstam
    @sidstam หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The cause of the EM wave to start propagating? An energy source: be it a cell in a watch or nuclear fusion in a star causing the emission of photons.

  • @shibdassarkar9357
    @shibdassarkar9357 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Sir how much a postdoctoral fellow at your position earns a year? Plz reply. Thanks a lot.

  • @RobertoCarlos-tn1iq
    @RobertoCarlos-tn1iq หลายเดือนก่อน

    So many places when you apply the Laplacian you don't have a second order derivative in the denominator. confusing. 17:05 and 19:05

  • @alex79suited
    @alex79suited หลายเดือนก่อน

    Preach, what ya got. Peace ✌️ 😎.

  • @fingeroffang
    @fingeroffang หลายเดือนก่อน

    But what is u? is it a single point on a wave? Is it the wavefront moving in the x direction? And what does taking its second differential with respect to t mean? Does that mean just considering what is going on at a fixed x point i.e up and down movement? Otherwise x is changing as well.

    • @alithedazzling
      @alithedazzling  หลายเดือนก่อน

      u is the displacement of the medium in Y axis for a wave travelling in X axis in this example

    • @fingeroffang
      @fingeroffang หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@alithedazzling Thanks for replying. So the time derivative is d**2y/dt**2 at a fixed position in x?

    • @alithedazzling
      @alithedazzling  หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@fingeroffang yes you can replace u with y if that is easier to get it in the 2d form

  • @lupino652
    @lupino652 หลายเดือนก่อน

    5:02 you are wrong. The wave does not varies in time (if it follows the wave equation, other wise is another phenomena like damping or transport phenomena like mass transport or viscocity) the time term discribes the chabge in velocity of the perturbation at its source or origin. In that example it should be analyzed only the point where the drop falls. And the displacement in that point is what is propagated, so linkinh the acceleration of that displacement, and the capacity of repeating that movement in the medium (space)

  • @EmmanuelMatabaro
    @EmmanuelMatabaro หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thanks dear

  • @foxbat888
    @foxbat888 หลายเดือนก่อน

    But an electromagnetic wave doesn't propagate in a medium, also the light from the LED in your watch is modelled as a particle, a photon, not a continuous wave so Quantum mechanics and Maxwells equations don't really mix

  • @ezkil1759
    @ezkil1759 หลายเดือนก่อน

    R u originally iraqi?

  • @AdityaChabukswar-i5w
    @AdityaChabukswar-i5w หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hey brother please can you solve jee advance exam paper physic 2016

  • @gerardsagliocca6292
    @gerardsagliocca6292 22 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Why do you cross out the equation ?? I saw you do it in another video.
    Crossing out an equation implies the equation is wrong ! Maybe put a circle or red box around it to emphasize your point.

  • @Manoj-w7c4y
    @Manoj-w7c4y หลายเดือนก่อน

    I think The cause of light in the watch ⌚ is the electron jump to Higher energy State and go back to lower energy state and the difference in energy is emitted a photon in the LED , did i got it right 👍

    • @Manoj-w7c4y
      @Manoj-w7c4y หลายเดือนก่อน

      The cause is electron jumps in different energy level

  • @polarkerr
    @polarkerr หลายเดือนก่อน

    I love you Ali, now I know I'm not stupid, just had bad physics teachers hhhhh

  • @lachlanrob1511
    @lachlanrob1511 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    allegedly?

  • @ThugginGame-sb3du
    @ThugginGame-sb3du หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Hardly give any intuitive examples.

  • @edkideys8953
    @edkideys8953 หลายเดือนก่อน

    So light is a wave, not a particle:)

    • @alithedazzling
      @alithedazzling  หลายเดือนก่อน

      yes

    • @edkideys8953
      @edkideys8953 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@alithedazzling light is a wave that has momentum, angular momentum (spin), and has discrete energies (quanta)?

  • @lumpyspaceprincess6335
    @lumpyspaceprincess6335 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Okay i can understand why you hate greece but why th you also hate the greek alphabet common man it's just an innocent alphabet

  • @Stan_Castan
    @Stan_Castan หลายเดือนก่อน

    5:25 those who know 💀

  • @atandritabhattacharyya3882
    @atandritabhattacharyya3882 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hurting your ego is how he earns views

  • @AriosJentu
    @AriosJentu หลายเดือนก่อน

    Partial* :(

  • @Mushemkap
    @Mushemkap หลายเดือนก่อน

    Bro looks changed ... maybe is the shaved beard that gives me this impression

  • @pascal2745
    @pascal2745 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Only valid in linear homogeneous media.

  • @MilosVuksanovic-sj8kj
    @MilosVuksanovic-sj8kj หลายเดือนก่อน

    in my opinion this video is very superficial. you didn't even mentioned general solution for wave equation ie if you have:
    c (d^2/dx^2)u = d^2/dt^2 u general solution is u(x,t) = F(x-ct) + G(x+ct). F is sometimes called "retarded" solution and G is "advanced".
    2: you explanation of light propagation. it is true that E, B and c-"direction of light propagation" are all mutually perpendicular, that came for poynting theorem. wave equation doesn't implies this.
    3: be very very careful when you change dimensions in wave equation, because this equation have quite different behavior in odd versus even dimensions.
    in spatial odd dimensions 1,3,.. after disturbance passes you location you don't "see" any disturbance.
    however in even dimensions 2,4,.. after disturbance reaches your location you will see/fell some disturbance from that wave to infinite time. if you are floating on water after leading edge of wave reaches your location, after that you will go up and down to infinity! but amplitude shrinks. (that is mathematically correct description for solution of wave equation)

  • @jacoboribilik3253
    @jacoboribilik3253 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I like the videos but I don't like the cocky titles to them.

  • @robertgivens2586
    @robertgivens2586 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Im 67 slow down and just make the video longer lol

  • @Egyptianlayman-kp6ki
    @Egyptianlayman-kp6ki 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Beautiful explanation Ali and I am also a fan of maxwell's equations.
    I myself have made a video explaining wave equation in a very simple layman way.
    check it below 🔽
    th-cam.com/video/lbG4jrtrE8w/w-d-xo.html

  • @albertomontecarlo6231
    @albertomontecarlo6231 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I’ve been watching your video lately, like you don’t’ understand Maxwell equations , now you don’t understand the wave function… honestly , and you are not alone this is the worst method to give people interest in watching your physic.
    First the way you explain physics it doesn’t add to something we already know and saying things like “ think as a Nasa engineer think “ it’s even worse in promoting your science.. nothing personal,

    • @alithedazzling
      @alithedazzling  หลายเดือนก่อน

      thanks for the feedback -- at which point in the video do I say think as a nasa engineer?

    • @RSingh_26
      @RSingh_26 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I disagree

    • @albertomontecarlo6231
      @albertomontecarlo6231 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@alithedazzling Hi Alithedazzling… I don’t want to get misunderstood. I like your videos,,, I like also the way you explain things, mine it’s just a suggestion. Those topics are already not very accessible for most people because not everyone knows calculus and stuff like that, not talking about a subject like quantum mechanics where things are mostly explained by probabilities.. I will try to capture people interest not making they feel they don’t understand but somehow in a different way because it could be intimidating. Ps…the way Nasa engineers think was regarded a couple of video you posted days ago…

    • @fuzailkhan9701
      @fuzailkhan9701 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Bro i think you have not understood what Ali said in this video i think you have little knowledge of physics. First go and study.

    • @EmmanuelMatabaro
      @EmmanuelMatabaro หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I think here the teacher gives the essential for us to have the intuition. It's supposed that those who watch his videos know already enough maths and physics basics notions.🤷