A Crash Course In Particle Physics (2 of 2)

  Рет қаралды 574,824

powerphyzix

powerphyzix

12 жыл бұрын

Professor Brian Cox of the University of Manchester presents an educational walk, through the fundamentals of Particle Physics.
Disclaimer: The copyright owner provides this content for educational purposes.

Пікірлер: 609
@neildutoit5177
@neildutoit5177 4 жыл бұрын
My favorite part of this video was definitely the gym boi's demonstration of the strong force.
@bartdart3315
@bartdart3315 3 жыл бұрын
Its cool to see the Cox in his infancy as a presenter. Also, Higgs particle has been found, in case someone watching did not know.
@astrogirl1usa
@astrogirl1usa 11 жыл бұрын
Great video! My 15 year-old is going to love this! Thanks to Professor Cox, for making particle physics so interesting and easy for the lay person.
@sumit-qz7gj
@sumit-qz7gj 3 жыл бұрын
Ur right about that
@KungFoo1
@KungFoo1 8 жыл бұрын
They get you with the 13 min part one, and then BOOM part 2 27 minutes :)
@DownhillAllTheWay
@DownhillAllTheWay 5 жыл бұрын
Yup! It got me.
@uscovenant2350
@uscovenant2350 3 жыл бұрын
They drew me in, and really hooked me at the end of the first one with a deep example of stacking forces. I mean it's simple itself but when you apply that idea to other things, you make even more sense of things. Always increasing our understanding of the Universe. Little by little. The top physicist in the world are making progress more and more in particle physics. They are aware of things that they have to confirm and then later on, we hear about it.
@hedwegg
@hedwegg 11 жыл бұрын
Note: Continued: "It didn't cover gravity!" 1. To understand gravity by Brian Cox 2. Pleae go to "The Universe - Brian Cox Lecture. 3. Refer to 37:55 - 38:10 etcetera. Comment: 4. Brian Cox affirms Einstein's Theory of Relativity as the best way to understand gravity. 5. In other words Brian Cox affirms, "Symmetry". Love the Fundamental Point, Veritas, Jamieson (Peter)
@kesco5753
@kesco5753 6 жыл бұрын
When things are explained well they make alot of sense.
@leighbarton7064
@leighbarton7064 4 жыл бұрын
So we've gone from atomic physics to subatomic physics to particle physics to quantum physics. What if it turns out that our solar system is a single atom in a much larger structure? Or organism?
@rabahal-maini5704
@rabahal-maini5704 9 жыл бұрын
I'm A PhD student in Plasma Physics . this video is more interesting. I love it so much. I hope keep in touch with you @Brian Cox
@dead7380
@dead7380 9 жыл бұрын
Rabah Al-Maini That's incredible!!! I hope to become a particle physicist when I'm older and I agree that this video is excellent, I hope your future in the scientific world goes well!!!
@HappyfoxBiz
@HappyfoxBiz 5 жыл бұрын
it's surprising how you can see, touch feel and interact with results while having it explained on all levels from basic such as light gas it goes boom to the understanding of the molecules and understanding how decay works on the particle level so that you can truely understand things in a different level, when an experiment is run so much is happening all at once and it... entrances us
@sum2automation
@sum2automation 5 жыл бұрын
I'm reminded; That what's looking is truly what we are all looking for... Life is an amazing miracle. Fantastic information here but it's time we changed our outlook and rethink our actions today or we won't have a planet earth anymore... Very good upload, thanks!
@TruthThanks
@TruthThanks 11 жыл бұрын
i love how im watching this new video about how we need to find the bosom and we just found it 2 weeks ago hahahaha I love it
@sohamdave9184
@sohamdave9184 6 жыл бұрын
These two videos are GOAT. They're annoying and filmed at onemegapixxel but watching it is OP. It tells u everything u need to start off learning all the elementary particles. It's lit af.
@relaxingnature2617
@relaxingnature2617 8 ай бұрын
1 megapixel is 720HD. ..what's wrong with that. ..? ..I watched this at 144p on a phone
@Spacefrog76
@Spacefrog76 11 жыл бұрын
This guy is awesome. I love his enthusiasm.
@Evghenios79
@Evghenios79 11 жыл бұрын
Science needs more Brian Coxes who can take complicated concepts and present them to non-physicists.
@cloudricklloyd1
@cloudricklloyd1 8 жыл бұрын
This is so awesome! gets me so excited!
@SJ-to3dt
@SJ-to3dt 5 жыл бұрын
Just a question. How can two "protons" colliding together in the LHC represent the conditions that existed during the creation of the universe? The latter of which might have had a complex combination of a lot of such particles.
@acarpentersson8271
@acarpentersson8271 6 жыл бұрын
If all forces are particles then is there a string of these force particles that connects the electrons to the nucleus? What would cause the force particle to connect or interact to one another and the other particles? Would there then be another particle that explains that? If the Higgs interacts with some particles and not others does this mean there is another set of particles that then connects the Higgs to the particles it interacts with? And why would it not connect to the other particles? I had one question before I found the answer in this 2 part series. Now I have more questions that are pretty much the exact same question but just about more things.
@uscovenant2350
@uscovenant2350 3 жыл бұрын
Like I mentioned in part 1, the stacking of forces really clicks well with me. Like gravity being one of the top 4 forces we know of besides the 2 nuclear forces, gravity is stacked at every level of the universal structure- for example we can start in the middle- here on earth. (And if things are indeed infinitely small or big, then there's no real "middle". We have only set ourselves as a "zeroing" kinda like we gauge our distance from the Sun as 1 AU. A reference to start from. On our level and then on to galactic scales and light years.
@arohanuikeahi
@arohanuikeahi 11 жыл бұрын
Shari, they don't "trap" them at CERN, they use detectors to trace their trajectories in the nanoseconds before they're annihilated, somewhat like taking a photograph of the collision. Trapping them for use as, say, rocket fuel, is a much, much, much harder problem.
@matt3505
@matt3505 8 жыл бұрын
Shoutout to the chase future A-level physics students
@morgancoe2424
@morgancoe2424 7 жыл бұрын
Matthew Sherriff hi there
@jimmyfong2202
@jimmyfong2202 6 жыл бұрын
hello
@chaotix5820
@chaotix5820 5 жыл бұрын
Howdy
@sonlink7170
@sonlink7170 5 жыл бұрын
Hi
@dwinsemius
@dwinsemius 5 жыл бұрын
You might think that there was a hierarchy where the force carrying particles might be massless at the lowest level (the electron and EM fields) and then get more massive as the strengths increased from weak (with the W and Z's) to the strong force (with quark and gluon fields). But the gluons are massless and the protons get most of their their mass from the virtual gluon clouds that surround them. Seems kind of "irregular".
@WormulonDCP
@WormulonDCP 11 жыл бұрын
Does anyone know the name of the theme played at the very beginning of the video?
@user-ec6kt2fg7m
@user-ec6kt2fg7m 6 жыл бұрын
Damn I love him so much.
@KalaRaja313
@KalaRaja313 11 жыл бұрын
So is it safe to suggest these othere particles where finding could makeup other dimensions????
@stevetrimingham6711
@stevetrimingham6711 3 жыл бұрын
Really good documentary.
@rickquest6385
@rickquest6385 4 жыл бұрын
I like Brian Cox but not only is this video very old it repeats it's self for the first few minutes of part 2. I may do a search to see if Brian has anything newer.
@Roedygr
@Roedygr 5 жыл бұрын
Since this video was made we have discovered the Higgs Particle.
@nichharp
@nichharp 11 жыл бұрын
Can anyone tell me the name of this Show and what channel it was on? Thanks
@dennisjohnson8753
@dennisjohnson8753 2 жыл бұрын
Great introduction to the subject - thanks
@dmar9658
@dmar9658 6 жыл бұрын
SOUTH CAROLINA WAS HERE TOO. GOOD STUFF
@hankcardinal8069
@hankcardinal8069 10 жыл бұрын
antimatter energy harnessed could enable mankind to travel the stars. I am very interested in it's development. One must fist understand that everything we see around us is actually floating matter with lots of space between each particle. Only then would you want to know how these particles are arranged together to form certain objects, like lets say the human body.
@andrewpickering5180
@andrewpickering5180 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your ability to make the very mind-boggling something the world can understand. Could the space between the smallest rotating ' things ' be dark matter? Stay safe and thanks...again
@relaxingnature2617
@relaxingnature2617 4 жыл бұрын
What was that jibberish on the blackboard ?
@corneliusdrvanderbilt822
@corneliusdrvanderbilt822 5 жыл бұрын
It has been more than 6 years since LHC proved that Higgs Boson converts Energy to Matter. It has raised more questions of How and Why and When?
@umarfarook1208
@umarfarook1208 6 жыл бұрын
im not physicist but his explanations is very easy to understand
@stanf4610
@stanf4610 6 жыл бұрын
Why are the detectors so large? Are the subatomic particles tracked many meters from the collision, or are the electronics just that massive and the collisions are really quite tiny.
@nathijomac
@nathijomac 5 жыл бұрын
Particles are travelling close to the speed of light upon collision (3 x 10^8 m/s), so the produced particles will also be travelling pretty fast. If the detector is 30m thick then it will take the particles 0.1 microseconds to exit (assuming this speed). Also, the detectors are constructed in layers that are design to capture/absorb different types of particles. Generally electrons and photons will get absorbed closer to the center of the detector, then hadrons after that and finally muons towards the exterior (neutrinos are also produced, but these interact extremely weakly and so it's unlikely that these will be captured). There are also different types of detectors to fit in, some detect the trajectories of the particles, others detect the energy deposited by them. All this allows physicists to reconstruct the collisions that happen.
@101megamax
@101megamax 10 жыл бұрын
Is it just me or is the sound effect at 12:22 the same sound as when energy balls explode in Half Life 2?
@JDKnight65
@JDKnight65 12 жыл бұрын
Am I wrong in thinking that the uncertainty principle means that light itself changes the behavior of things? What I mean is that you cannot observe the actions of a particle on the subatomic level because the photons that hit it and bounce off (allowing you to see it) cause it's actions to change.
@Graham6762
@Graham6762 12 жыл бұрын
Are protons bigger in mass than a neutron?
@WormulonDCP
@WormulonDCP 11 жыл бұрын
Like electrons, photons are responsible for conveying the electromagnetic charge between constituent quarks as well as leptons. The electromagnetic force has greater range than the strong nuclear force. In order for two protons to overcome electrostatic repulsion, they must have enough kinetic energy to break the coulomb barrier and settle into the range of the strong nuclear force.
@AppleOrPc
@AppleOrPc 11 жыл бұрын
You will cry even more when you relies that it is the same people who watch it again that make up most of the views.
@rashaseden7062
@rashaseden7062 5 жыл бұрын
13:34 Does anyone else expect a minstrel to jump out, singing, and be chased by Professor Cox, a la “Blackadder”?
@TheAmericasarmy
@TheAmericasarmy 12 жыл бұрын
By north and south poles you mean positive and negative charged poles?
@BangMaster96
@BangMaster96 5 жыл бұрын
Apparently, there are lots of geniuses in the comment section who are particle physics expert. I wonder what they are doing in a KZfaq video, they seem to have so much free time to comment and reply to other comments, its almost as if they are jobless particle physicists.
@renecastro5356
@renecastro5356 5 жыл бұрын
Amazing how this is already considered a bit "old" but ...wow. Very brilliant individuals interviewed. I couldn't help but FEEL some of their excitement and anticipation about what CERN and the LHC's first firing up and first eventual results would unearth. These two little vids left me awestruck and humbled and made all the subjects covered "click" so well for me.
@Olegsky
@Olegsky 3 жыл бұрын
So forgive my ignorance, if higgs bosons are everywhere why cant the same detector at CERN detect them all around us?
@colinhume5164
@colinhume5164 11 жыл бұрын
The basic process is to shoot a proton beam traveling near the speed of light into a block of dense metal. When the protons collide with the nuclei of the metal enough energy is created for positrons to spontaneously form. These positrons are traveling near the speed of light in all directions and very hard to trap. Go to CERN's website - a great place to learn about this and other particle phisics - to find out more.
@lesjohnson9740
@lesjohnson9740 8 жыл бұрын
Thank you Brian, just force gravity, to explain, ( the theory of everything), Se Ved rai, Brian.
@MeesterG
@MeesterG 11 жыл бұрын
It's awesome how we, particles, try to understand ourselves.. I'm trying my best, but I think the information and questions will soon explode my brain =p I'm studying only to become a simple teacher in a primary school, but hope to share my curiosity with the students and teach them how to ask questions.
@adamrspears1981
@adamrspears1981 11 жыл бұрын
photons carry the electromagnetic force. When 2 electrons come near to each other, they swap photons. The swapping is responsible for the 2 like charged electrons to repel. Question: The nucleus of an atom is comprised of multiple protons. I know gluons carry the Strong Nuclear Force and hold the nucleus together. Because the like charged protons repel each other & without the gluons counteract this... If swapping photons cause electrons to repel, then what is swapped causing protons to repel?
@davidwilkie9551
@davidwilkie9551 5 жыл бұрын
@14:00 min, the wave-package/particle or phase envelopes, Spinfoam bubbles of probability in an extended version of Maxwell's Equations to the Quantum Operator Fields Modulation Mechanism of numerically differentiated probabilities from e-Pi-i resonance imaging, (close enough). Look, perceive, experience, understand the content in terms of the context to see how the event is phased/compounded.., before the theory and reiterative experiments resulting in the understanding of why the concept matches the physical conception of a particular state of in-form-ation. Dirac's preference for reciprocals in mathematical equations, applied to the Polar-Cartesian i-reflection -> transverse orthogonal projection positioning of e-Pi-i resonance imaging, constant creation connection-> holo-graphic pivotal principle as the Universal wave-package, is another version/angle on temporal Superposition-point Singularity/unity... ("a Rose by any other name would smell as sweet", etc etc.. philosophically, that's why the analytical methodology of Science has to define specific elemental meanings to the available/accessible information)
@jaxxx0101
@jaxxx0101 4 жыл бұрын
LSD?
@gman9997
@gman9997 12 жыл бұрын
@ windbringer im not wrong dude antineutrons polairty and up and down quarks is different from regular neutrons i wasent saying that they were the same. with out the the neutron the gluons wouldnt be able to bind any of the quarks or excange color charge between the protons and neutrons anti and so forth, so the difference in polarity do matter
@bonniebabird
@bonniebabird 6 жыл бұрын
A month before this video was posted, Nassim Haramein submitted his theory of what the "strong force" actually IS. He proposed a property of protons that not only unifies both classical physics and quantum physics and mathematically proves the relation of gravity functioning on a quantum level to properties of black hole energy. For his explanations, you should look for the video "'The Connected Universe". Not on You Tube anymore, but maybe you can research his work and obtain access thru The Resonance Science Project.
@alkharam9832
@alkharam9832 5 жыл бұрын
I was learned that the very first person who figured out that electricity and magnetism are actually the same force was James Maxwell. Faraday wasn't good mathematician and he asked James to present his discoveries into mathematics language and when he tried to do that, the equations pointed it is the different manifestation of the very same force. Both Maxwell and Faraday were surprised with this discovery.
@rhemorigher
@rhemorigher 11 жыл бұрын
Add to that his intelligence, his traveling the world, his working in places like CERN where people would kill to be and the fact he used to be in relatively successful bands. He exists to make me feel inadequate.
@VladimirZharkov
@VladimirZharkov 12 жыл бұрын
@Hank520Tube because the higgs is a massive particle and for particles with mass to just appear, excluding virtual particles, it takes a massive amount of energy because E=MC^2 (Energy = Mass X Speed of Light squared)
@MrNINTENDONITUS
@MrNINTENDONITUS 12 жыл бұрын
i didn't claim them to be, though i would argue they're both probably better thinkers and scientists then either of us. they have earned respect by being so inspirational to millions of people. Tyson is one of the only people left on the planet, who is in the public sphere and fighting for NASA. that alone earns my respect, never mind how beautifully he speaks about the cosmos. i'd ask you show me some respect too please, if you continue cursing towards me i'll end this conversation.
@JesusGonzalez-gr9wz
@JesusGonzalez-gr9wz 2 жыл бұрын
Where is part (3/2)? :( This is too good.
@a2zhandi
@a2zhandi 11 жыл бұрын
great analogy.
@doc2590
@doc2590 Жыл бұрын
I heard someone say once. When we understand the rules of the game then we can start playing.
@dhimanroy1671
@dhimanroy1671 8 жыл бұрын
Amazing
@bakersfieldmusicnow
@bakersfieldmusicnow 11 жыл бұрын
amazing pass it on.
@una_10bananas
@una_10bananas 5 жыл бұрын
Take a drink every time he says "you need one of these" about the LHC
@kepler-444f3
@kepler-444f3 3 жыл бұрын
it's funny how the LHC found the Higgs Particle and that the Gluon interaction actually accounts for mass more than the Higgs Particle/ Field itself.
@IAmTheNoodleFish
@IAmTheNoodleFish 12 жыл бұрын
This is completely off topic, but my god, Brian Cox has beautiful hands.
@danielfletcher6628
@danielfletcher6628 8 жыл бұрын
So, can anyone tell me their best guess as to what forces are in Dark Matter and Dark Energy...Their must be more than 4 in my opinion
@gman9997
@gman9997 12 жыл бұрын
i wonder why people don't realize that even though neutrons don't have an electric charge that they still are responsible for keeping the nucleus together even though neutrons don't have an electric charge they still have a north and south poll and that's what keeps the protons together their attraction to the opposite polarity of the north or south poll of the neutrons ....with out the neutrons the protons wouldn't be able to stay together
@DominicHill
@DominicHill 12 жыл бұрын
If you watched part 1 you can skip to 1:56 or you can admire those two minutes of Brian all over again.
@The_Boiyo
@The_Boiyo 3 жыл бұрын
7:48 What about heaviside
@oddviews
@oddviews 11 жыл бұрын
You are right. I live in Thailand and talk to many monks for more than ten years. They joke that Buddhism is only registered as a religion for tax purposes. They have a philosphy of life arising from the teachings of Buddha from 2500 years ago that understands human behaviour. What is interesting is that human behaviour is the same today as it was then. Perceiving and understanding reality is its main goal. Long live common sense!
@sushobhankumarmandal9103
@sushobhankumarmandal9103 3 жыл бұрын
Had fun the way he introduced massless particle by describing himself as less popular lecturer @21:50
@cunijoeme
@cunijoeme 4 жыл бұрын
why does this video feel like a presure sales tactik trying to get me to buy an accelerator
@SCPF
@SCPF 12 жыл бұрын
Where are those debates?
@wmike82
@wmike82 11 жыл бұрын
Glad I'm one of them.
@baruchben-david4196
@baruchben-david4196 5 жыл бұрын
It's a shame that all the geniuses who comment here aren't doing science. They could straighten out the confused working scientists and solve all the problems right away.
@frost1947
@frost1947 9 жыл бұрын
Is the apple being "pulled" down to the ground, or pushed?
@trunc8
@trunc8 9 жыл бұрын
Dwight Frost Pulled
@philips20001
@philips20001 9 жыл бұрын
Dwight Frost pushed, since gravity is caused by the curvature of space being pulled in towards the mass, then the apple is being pushed along with it, because if that apple had no mass the molecules of space moving in towards the earth wouldn't have any effect on the apple and the apple would be weightless ;-) Simples
@philips20001
@philips20001 9 жыл бұрын
i could put that better. the apple is being pulled yes. imagine an apple, floating towards a waterfall. now the water is falling, being pulled by gravity. the apple isnt, if the water wasn't pushing it, it wouldnt move. it does not extend to the waterfalls edge and so cant be being pulled, the water does, so thats being pulled, while it is, its carrying the apple. if asked, pushed or pulled, you would have to say pulled, technically though, its being carried ;-)
@amramjose
@amramjose 9 жыл бұрын
Dwight Frost It is acted upon by the force of gravity. Pulling and pushing depend on one's point of view or perspective. The ground "pulls" the apple? Does a punch outward push the target away or do the muscles pull the fist away from the body? F=ma...
@philips20001
@philips20001 9 жыл бұрын
Since the fist is in front of the muscles, a punch pushes the fist. try pinching with a 5 kilo weight like i do, you'll see what i mean. first you lift, then punch. unless you're swinging your arms to punch, then you're using centrifugal force, to start that, you certainly do pull, just at the start.
@jdavidrhea
@jdavidrhea 2 жыл бұрын
Cool! This is from before they confirmed the Higgs.
@jakeyw11
@jakeyw11 11 жыл бұрын
having a large Hardon Collider is a good way to get kicked out of a wrestling match.
@PshhDean
@PshhDean 11 жыл бұрын
I wonder how far we would have come if that amount of people were introduced to physics.
@imarsenalman
@imarsenalman 11 жыл бұрын
I get it now, Sheldon Cooper is not crazy after all!
@izaaguilo
@izaaguilo 3 ай бұрын
I'll loved to visit CERNs❤❣
@zodiacastro1
@zodiacastro1 12 жыл бұрын
great.
@skwiggsskytower2517
@skwiggsskytower2517 11 жыл бұрын
I hope an updated version of this video is made soon. Now that the higgs has been found I'd like to know if the standard model is actually complete or if it has unlocked a new set of problems to explore.
@utl94
@utl94 Жыл бұрын
PhD student in particle physics here. The Standard model of particle physics could in some sense be thought of as complete nowadays. To some, this is a provocative view but the justification is that the model no longer offers any clear path to solve the additional questions we have about the Universe. The Standard model explains to a remarkable degree every single experiment and experience that has ever taken place on this planet. With one possible exception, the anomalous magnetic dipole moment of the muon worth reading up on, the Standard model seems capable of explaining everything. Yet, it does not explain everything. Gravity is not part of the Standard model and the Theory of gravity holds its own ground that is vastly different from the Standard model way of doing things. Dark matter and dark energy that seems to make up a lot of this Universe has no explanation within the Standard model. The issue is, unlike the problem of how particles acquire mass which was solved by the Higgs mechanism, these problems have no obvious solution within the Standard model framework nor does the model clearly point to a direction in which to look. This is despite a lot of effort from a lot of researchers, of course. Questions remain and the answer may very well lie beyond the Standard model or we simply need to make some additions. We do not know yet.
@skwiggsskytower2517
@skwiggsskytower2517 Жыл бұрын
@@utl94 So the standard model has become Schrödingers model. both complete and not complete. XD kidding. Thanks for the response. Not sure which is more shocking. The idea that we have questions that we can't fit into this "complete" model, or that I got a response 9 years later :)
@dreamperpetual
@dreamperpetual Жыл бұрын
@@skwiggsskytower2517 😂
@cptawesome11
@cptawesome11 Жыл бұрын
So awesome that the Higgs was found since the creation of this video
@Halo_people
@Halo_people 6 жыл бұрын
Nobel prize winner on the way.
@KRT054
@KRT054 8 жыл бұрын
Why would I want to travel throughout the universe at the speed of light when I could travel so fast that I could arrive at any other point in the universe at the very same moment that I departed irrespective of distance?
@BlueCosmology
@BlueCosmology 8 жыл бұрын
because you can't do that.
@ConfectionerCat
@ConfectionerCat 7 жыл бұрын
If you'd travel by the speed of light, in your perspective, you'd be travelling an ∞ distance in (1÷∞) time, because in your perspective space itself would completely cease to exist. As you travel faster from A to B, the distance itself in between A & B shortens, because of an event called "Lorentz contraction". What I'm trying to say is: from your perspective, it doesn't really matter which one you choose: teleportation or the ability to travel as fast as you want.
@frost1947
@frost1947 8 жыл бұрын
I flirted with the idea of gravity having a familiarity with perspective, in a manner, not unlike that of Einstein's relativity, regarding the "pull" or "push" of its effect and evidenced in the recent observation of a reversal in gravity's effect at the periphery of space, would one see a credulity in this?
@TotalKaosEntertainment
@TotalKaosEntertainment 11 жыл бұрын
As our knowledge of the universe expands, and our technology, we'll have new ways of thinking and looking at the universe and what we learn. 1000 years ago the universe was looked at with the filter/analogies of the time. The same will be done in 3000 years. We shape the universe with our thoughts, ideas and imagination - the universe is probably not static - so if we computer/think/ect with different views the universe will be different. For example if we were to compute with roman numerals.
@MatthewBendyna
@MatthewBendyna 12 жыл бұрын
Oh, I do love the questions. That doesn't mean I won't try to answer them though.:) I don't yet know enough to say that I can't find more information. We'll see if I have to remain content with only this question. Of course, any new discovery will raise yet more questions. I don't know who said this, but "the known is finite, the unknown infinite."
@stevet9864
@stevet9864 7 жыл бұрын
A crash course in particle physics. And even one of the simplest ideas, like electron shells, is never mentioned. When two electrons get close together, a photon is exchanged, pushing them apart. Damned over-simplification, and that's the ultimate in complexity we find in this video.
@TheOskay00
@TheOskay00 7 жыл бұрын
Electron shells are mentioned in part 1 (as well as probability densities, which is far more correct than "shells"). And yes, electrons repel by the exchange of a pair of virtual photons according to QED... do you want the mathematical derivation or something? Read a postgraduate textbook. The aim of this series is to introduce lay people to particle physics (and possibly convince them that LHC wasn't a waste of money etc...), not to be an undergraduate lecture. :)
@baruchben-david4196
@baruchben-david4196 5 жыл бұрын
It's inevitable, if you don't use the math.
@gman9997
@gman9997 12 жыл бұрын
what made me figure that out was anti neutrons. I was like well if neutrons don't have an electric charge then how can it possibly have a counterpart if it too has a charge of nothing pretty much. well the answer to that is even though both the matter and anti-matter neutrons have a charge of zero they are still different because their north and south polls are opposite to one another ...it took me a long damn time to figure out that all particles have north and south polls.
@granskare
@granskare 5 жыл бұрын
I had a Finnish friend who studied nuclear engineering at cern.
@petercnm
@petercnm 7 жыл бұрын
that the Higgs is called the Higgs boson, that's something we cannot change anymore. But if Prof. Cox mentions the theory behind it, i feel it is appropriate to mention Belgian physicists François Englert and Robert Brout, who presented the theory a short time before Higgs, and were awarded the Nobel prize together with Peter Higgs. (actually Robert Brout already passed away by that time). A bit too much of British chauvinis here...
@MrNINTENDONITUS
@MrNINTENDONITUS 12 жыл бұрын
it exists because particles react differently with the higgs field, particles that react a lot get greater mass. as for a cause, well that's a bit more complex. our macro plain of existence is full of cause and effect, but when you shrink down to sub atomic levels quantum law takes over. reality becomes less certain, it becomes probability, because of this, completely random events can occur. so it's actually possible that there's no cause. mind blowing right? :)
@ronromeo9914
@ronromeo9914 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you Brian, absorbingly enjoyable.
@samuelj5890
@samuelj5890 5 жыл бұрын
so photons are just introverts?
@ASMRBully
@ASMRBully 11 жыл бұрын
Colin Hume, please come to the podium to accept you award.
@hbunnyo
@hbunnyo 12 жыл бұрын
We knew that energy and mass are the same thing. Only matter is a really dense form of energy. That's what we get from E=mc^2. We don't know why mass can only move very slowly through space-time. What separates mass from energy in this sense? The Higgs Field. To prove that, we need the Higgs particle. Perhaps if we understood it enough we could create a bubble of sorts that can allow mass to move at the speed of light. Probably a whole bunch of other stuff too.
@zipsteri
@zipsteri 5 жыл бұрын
They are building a special linear accelerator in Japan to specifically rediscover the Higgs boson! Can someone comment on this? thank you.
@arjanstam78
@arjanstam78 5 жыл бұрын
Linear?! How long will THAT thing be?! At CERN, they are hoping to find four more, say, Higgs-like particles, and maybe even particles beyond the standard model of particle physics (WIMPs, the elusive dark matter, perhaps), although these might currently be difficult to detect.
@arjanstam78
@arjanstam78 5 жыл бұрын
Update on that: You must be referring to the ILC, that *was* planned to be 33.5 km long. www.scientificamerican.com/article/physicists-shrink-plans-for-next-major-collider/
@MrNINTENDONITUS
@MrNINTENDONITUS 12 жыл бұрын
To quote Neil deGrasse Tyson "when i reach for the edge of the universe, i do so knowing that along some paths of cosmic discovery, there are times when, at least for now, one must be content to love the questions themselves" :)
@hedwegg
@hedwegg 11 жыл бұрын
Note: The video covered electroweak & electromagnetic. It didn't cover gravity! Why? hmm,
A Crash Course In Particle Physics (1 of 2)
13:01
powerphyzix
Рет қаралды 1,2 МЛН
Professor Brian Cox Particle Physics Lecture at CERN
54:49
Muon Ray
Рет қаралды 578 М.
What it feels like cleaning up after a toddler.
00:40
Daniel LaBelle
Рет қаралды 91 МЛН
Slow motion boy #shorts by Tsuriki Show
00:14
Tsuriki Show
Рет қаралды 10 МЛН
لااا! هذه البرتقالة مزعجة جدًا #قصير
00:15
One More Arabic
Рет қаралды 14 МЛН
How Small Is It - 05 - The Higgs Boson (4K)
44:39
David Butler
Рет қаралды 425 М.
What Is the Higgs Boson? | Sean Carroll Discusses the God Particle
30:58
The Great Courses
Рет қаралды 942 М.
The Crazy Mass-Giving Mechanism of the Higgs Field Simplified
13:03
Arvin Ash
Рет қаралды 1,2 МЛН
The Most Misunderstood Concept in Physics
27:15
Veritasium
Рет қаралды 14 МЛН
5 Lesser Known (But Fascinating) Facts about Quantum Mechanics
14:42
Quantum Theory Made Easy [2]
35:25
King Crocoduck
Рет қаралды 995 М.
Particle physics made easy - with Pauline Gagnon
1:06:03
The Royal Institution
Рет қаралды 83 М.
Richard Feynman's Story of Particle Physics - 1973 Lecture
41:31
All Fundamental Forces and Particles Visually Explained
17:32
Arvin Ash
Рет қаралды 595 М.
CERN's supercollider | Brian Cox
16:26
TED
Рет қаралды 1,2 МЛН
#samsung #retrophone #nostalgia #x100
0:14
mobijunk
Рет қаралды 14 МЛН
Это - iPhone 16!
16:29
Rozetked
Рет қаралды 419 М.
تجربة أغرب توصيلة شحن ضد القطع تماما
0:56
صدام العزي
Рет қаралды 64 МЛН