The Maths of General Relativity (6/8) - Energy fluxes

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ScienceClic English

ScienceClic English

Күн бұрын

In this series, we build together the theory of general relativity. This sixth video focuses on the notion of energy, momentum, and how we describe their fluxes with the energy-momentum tensor.
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Alessandro Roussel,
For more info: www.alessandroroussel.com/en

Пікірлер: 255
@fyu1945
@fyu1945 3 жыл бұрын
I almost feel guilty that I can enjoy such incredible quality of videos for free.
@alwaysbored47
@alwaysbored47 3 жыл бұрын
Cherish it while it lasts
@elisei4ik
@elisei4ik Жыл бұрын
well, you pay for internet
@owen7185
@owen7185 Жыл бұрын
💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯
@areklasvegas
@areklasvegas 8 ай бұрын
​@@elisei4ik ❤
@DanSternofBeyer
@DanSternofBeyer 3 жыл бұрын
Let me just say, and I cannot stress this enough, you are blowing my mind. These are the explanations of general relativity I have been waiting for my entire life.
@nzuckman
@nzuckman 3 жыл бұрын
There's nothing like waking up in the morning to see another one of these videos uploaded! I can't imagine how helpful these are gonna be when I actually take GR 😁
@mohammedkhan4990
@mohammedkhan4990 3 жыл бұрын
Hands down, one of the best video series to take very complex ideas of relativity and simplify them such that they are more palatable......Thanks
@carlosgarcia3341
@carlosgarcia3341 3 жыл бұрын
I find it difficult to understand how anyone can dislike these videos.
@mahanstyle376
@mahanstyle376 3 жыл бұрын
he wanted to click on "like", but suddenly the spacetime got disturbed
@carlosgarcia3341
@carlosgarcia3341 3 жыл бұрын
@@mahanstyle376 I don't know about spacetime, but those unliker brains, surely got disturbed.
@ramyhhh
@ramyhhh 3 жыл бұрын
bots
@mahanstyle376
@mahanstyle376 3 жыл бұрын
@@carlosgarcia3341 this video series is about spacetime, and how it is bended by energy
@carlosgarcia3341
@carlosgarcia3341 3 жыл бұрын
@@mahanstyle376 well, my comment is about the bent minds of some people.
3 жыл бұрын
Who else got goosebumps from first moment of the background music?
@DaRios_Tristan
@DaRios_Tristan 3 жыл бұрын
amazing !
@jacobvandijk6525
@jacobvandijk6525 2 жыл бұрын
@@DaRios_Tristan Yep, great choice of sound. It doesn't irritate ... too much ... for me ;-)
@watsisname
@watsisname 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for putting these videos together! This is easily the best series for introducing the concepts of general relativity with mathematical rigor. I'm amazed you manage to balance this so well with enough substance to not feel grossly oversimplified, yet not so much as to be overwhelming. Great visualizations, too! Looking forward your next two. :)
@bean8287
@bean8287 3 жыл бұрын
Woke up to this video, couldn’t have asked for more!! Thanks for this series!!!
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
Glad you like it :)
@oatmongen4263
@oatmongen4263 3 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceClicEN I set reminders for each videos premiere. So far they have been released on a schedule that matches the amount of free time I have to study things unreleased to my course. I don't know if this was intentional, but it was helpful.
@hassanhachem8764
@hassanhachem8764 3 жыл бұрын
what is the unit of temporal speed??
@oatmongen4263
@oatmongen4263 3 жыл бұрын
@@hassanhachem8764 Rate of change of time in the current reference frame, with respect to proper time of the object you are tracking (in its own reference frame). The units are then time per unit spacetime.
@hassanhachem8764
@hassanhachem8764 3 жыл бұрын
@@oatmongen4263 plz .can u explain more ur answer . thank u a lot
@pacotaco1246
@pacotaco1246 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this series! My GR course begins next year and this is helping me get a glimpse of what's to come! 🧠❤
@pacotaco1246
@pacotaco1246 3 жыл бұрын
Update: it is helping
@aleksanderboci9059
@aleksanderboci9059 3 жыл бұрын
Already leaving a like. Im not studying physics but i love your content, makes me regret not doing it. You are the best!
@bean8287
@bean8287 3 жыл бұрын
Its never too late!!
@mellamofields4275
@mellamofields4275 3 жыл бұрын
You can always studyy physsics, physics isn't a profesionao degree its only knowledge, it never should be late to obtain more knowledge, go for it! If you don't have time to go to college just take 2 books and see how it goes!
@elkyubi4281
@elkyubi4281 3 жыл бұрын
Guiablo Bravo
@aleksanderboci9059
@aleksanderboci9059 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the kind words guys. Definitely never too late, especially when it comes to learning!
@mgcinitshwaku1457
@mgcinitshwaku1457 3 жыл бұрын
Brilliant lecture series please don’t stop them , we are learning a lot
@gasgg
@gasgg 3 жыл бұрын
this series deserves two likes
@jacobvandijk6525
@jacobvandijk6525 2 жыл бұрын
@ 1:59 Continuity-equation: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuity_equation @ 4:29 Pressure = energy per volume: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pressure#Units @ 5:15 Viscosity & momentum: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viscosity#Momentum_transport @ 6:58 Perfect fluid as dust particles: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dust_solution
@lrlrch8351
@lrlrch8351 3 жыл бұрын
Your videos are one of the most amazing things I found on youtube. Thank you!!!
@benjaminhinz2552
@benjaminhinz2552 3 жыл бұрын
That illustration of E=MC^2 is simply amazing.
@imagine.o.universo
@imagine.o.universo 3 жыл бұрын
Hello I am a bachelor and this was the first time I formally study general relativity. I can say that your work helped me a lot! It was brilliant! I believe this is the best material on the internet to explore the concepts behind this subject.
@raghu45
@raghu45 3 жыл бұрын
Wow! Thank you for throwing light on what a tensor really is & how it can be used to explain GR!
@kshitishp3662
@kshitishp3662 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much sir , I was waiting for this video since the last video release (curvature). I have recommended this channel to all my friends..they all loved it ..
@maxwellsequation4887
@maxwellsequation4887 3 жыл бұрын
This was sooooooooooo beautiful!!!!! This is one of the best videos i have ever seen!
@samuelkloumanstoknes3740
@samuelkloumanstoknes3740 3 жыл бұрын
I have a feeling your following will be quite large in a year or so! Really high quality content, and oficially my first patreon "suportee".
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for the support 🙏
@Yormahmad
@Yormahmad 3 жыл бұрын
Very, very illustrative and simplified to understand! Greate!
@frankbholle
@frankbholle 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks a lot for all your work. You are a great teacher!
@cboniefbr
@cboniefbr 3 жыл бұрын
Great series!!
@adilahmahjan4685
@adilahmahjan4685 3 жыл бұрын
.thnx for making this wonderful series ....make such series for other topics as well ...for deep inside in them as well
@hippomanxxl
@hippomanxxl 3 жыл бұрын
Excelent, very very good explanation, i found your videos the the exact level i find interesting with maths and real examples and visual explanations, many thanks
@luiskatterbach6503
@luiskatterbach6503 3 жыл бұрын
this is some genius content. Thank you very much for posting this.
@santoshkumar-gj5gh
@santoshkumar-gj5gh 3 жыл бұрын
Super explaination with good animation Hatts off...👏👏👏👏.
@pietrolenner5540
@pietrolenner5540 3 жыл бұрын
amazing series
@carlosgarcia3341
@carlosgarcia3341 3 жыл бұрын
Wonderful, thanks a lot for your work.
@vishalmishra3046
@vishalmishra3046 3 жыл бұрын
Energy (E), momentum (p), wave-length (λ), frequency (ν) and mass (m) of particles and waves are all related through direct and inverse proportionality and connected through universal constants - like speed of light (c) and plank's constant (h) - e.g. E = hv = pc (photon), E = mc^2 (electron) => E^2 = (pc)^2 + (mc^2)^2. λν = c and λp = h (de-Broglie). A lot of complexity can emerge out of simplicity through simple compositions.
@richardfeynman556
@richardfeynman556 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks a very lotzzzz .... I have been waiting for this lecture today all day
@aniketeuler6443
@aniketeuler6443 3 жыл бұрын
Sir eagerly waiting for the next. Please upload it soon sir. We're enjoying it a lot .☺👍👍👍👍👍
@ksrao0701
@ksrao0701 3 жыл бұрын
Awesome work Guys 👍💪
@dragos.m
@dragos.m 3 жыл бұрын
you make a grate work, ty so much
@viktoriaelisabeth467
@viktoriaelisabeth467 3 жыл бұрын
great video thanks for your effort to make such great video...
@Handelsbilanzdefizit
@Handelsbilanzdefizit 3 жыл бұрын
I'm wondering if you can apply this kind of math to other things. The work-laziness-Tensor: G_ww = The work I do during worktime G_fW = The laziness during worktime G_wf = The work I do in freetime G_ff = The laziness/relaxing during freetime. Maybe there's a way to optimize the components by changing the environment. Reducing disturbance and nonsense-influx from colleagues (reachability during vacation and so on). However, the important thing is, that the overall work is done. The work demanded from your employer. And that leads to my question: If the components of stress-energy-tensor change by coordinate-transform, then overall energy has to be invariant, or not? Because energy can not be created and destroyed (conservation of energy and momentum).
@earthlife4564
@earthlife4564 3 жыл бұрын
Can be
@ZsomborZsombibi
@ZsomborZsombibi 2 жыл бұрын
The viscosity property of the energy is so amazing. It had a meaning at matter for me so far.
@sethrenville798
@sethrenville798 Жыл бұрын
I think more fundamentally than even energy is information, with energy being a particular manifestation of it, Mass being a particular manifestation of it, and all the various quality of anything we can experience being nothing more than information encoded within various aspects of our reality. This was the big understanding from "Maxwell's Demon" thought experiment, with energy being able to be put in what entropy would consider a disordered state, so long as information is still following entropic potential.
@massimoacerbis8138
@massimoacerbis8138 3 жыл бұрын
This series is really interesting
@ozzymandius666
@ozzymandius666 3 жыл бұрын
Man, that was excellent! Now I know why the also call that tensor the stress/energy tensor; its those viscosity/pressure components. I guess the "stress" referred to is analogous to shearing, compression and stretching stresses in elastic media, another field of study in which tensors are used.
@youneselhachi9221
@youneselhachi9221 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, exactly like Continuum Mechanics
@Arseniy_Afanasyev
@Arseniy_Afanasyev 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much!) 2:55 Why is the red vestor (Txt, Txx) pointing to the left? I could understand if it had a negative x-component (Txx
@Sicandar12
@Sicandar12 Жыл бұрын
Iam not that smart but Richard Feynman used to say if you cannot explain something in a simple way you don't understand it. Thank you for forcing my mind i have learned things for my capacity to understand :) keep doing it professor.
@pmiecz
@pmiecz 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you, great video!
@cerwe8861
@cerwe8861 3 жыл бұрын
A bit confusing, that the space-time-diagram has time on the horizontal axis, because it is mostly the vertical axis.
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
I understand, I was a bit worried about this. I chose this way because it's easier for taking advantage of the longer side of the 16:9 video format. Also I thought it might be more intuitive for people who never saw spacetime diagrams, because this is how we perceive time when reading, from left to right.
@abhiramcd
@abhiramcd 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, but this is a good explanation
@breveennkukan3603
@breveennkukan3603 17 күн бұрын
Everyone in the world should know about this. Everything is interconnected.
@flatdepth
@flatdepth 3 жыл бұрын
Excellent job guys ;)
@kaiserahmed2629
@kaiserahmed2629 2 жыл бұрын
Great explanation of greatest masterpiece
@Dr.RiccoMastermind
@Dr.RiccoMastermind 2 жыл бұрын
Das ist m. E. die coolste und anschaulicher Folge bislang 😊😎
@aniksamiurrahman6365
@aniksamiurrahman6365 3 жыл бұрын
Noether's theorem describes energy as just a thing that is conserved in a "Time translation invariant" world. That is the explanation of mass energy equivalence in the light of that? Also, GM predicts that our Universe is not a "Time translation invariant" world. So where does it leave the concept of energy and stress tensor in GM?
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
What is ill defined in GR is the total energy contained within a "slice" of spacetime. This can only be defined for certain spacetimes (namely those with time invariance at infinity, or more technically with a Killing vector field, an isommetry, which is timelike at null infinity for an asymptotically flat spacetime) But if you consider only one object and its associated energy-momentum tensor then it is well defined, its "energy" is in a way simply its mass, which propagates through the dimensions of space and time. Or rather what we usually call the "energy" is the time component of the momentum of the object.
@smileifyoudontexist6320
@smileifyoudontexist6320 3 жыл бұрын
We have to recognize our Awareness is a computation/input/output Gate in a quantum system. We Space/Time is the Answer.. We are trying to understand the question.... Or Unknown Invariants ?
@aniksamiurrahman6365
@aniksamiurrahman6365 3 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceClicEN The only thing I understood that I need to study further. No problem. Just I might poke with more stupid questions like this. Here's one already. As far as I know, the inertial mass is an emergent phenomenon that results from confinement, imposed by strong nuclear interaction on the gluons in the nucleus or by the Higgs field. I know this thing mainly has to do with momentum transfer. But this is also how E=mc^2 is derived. So what is that with the pov Emmy Noether left us with?
@aniksamiurrahman6365
@aniksamiurrahman6365 3 жыл бұрын
@@smileifyoudontexist6320 No probably didn't grow such awareness. Just self-studying the math underlying QM and GR so that I can actually understand them.
@smileifyoudontexist6320
@smileifyoudontexist6320 3 жыл бұрын
@@aniksamiurrahman6365 ​ If it didnt grow? what size were you 100 years Ago? Yes True. When all or enough of the Math is understood.. One will say "Something very strange is happening!" To think of how would SpaceTime Twist and curl and bend on our local scales? In relation to Individual world lines. In relation to Celestial reference ponts, and then to Cosmic Reference Points . considor the actual Topographic transformations Its probably 1 singular worldLine this planet. Surrounded by electromagnetic field. When a spaceship enters the atmosphere its like cutting into the sheath of a wire. Thats a hint to the nature of quantum Cosmology?maybe
@TiberiusMoon
@TiberiusMoon 3 жыл бұрын
Hmm im still wondering if time is real, so far its just an observation of matter traveling through space. In order for something to travel through space energy needs to be applied before anything else in some form. To say time exists is hard to believe because we could be in a timeless space that observes energies moving through it, we as observers run on energy moving through space in the same way. So an accurate measurement of "time" or movement through space is calculating the energy required to move matter through space with other variables like size, density, weight, gravity and other forces that can act on matter when traveling through space.
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
In physics it's quite hard to say that whether something "exists" or not. In a way you could even argue that the word "exist" does not really make sense. "Time", just like "space" is a concept invented to describe our world. Just like you need 3 numbers to describe the position of something, you also need 1 number to describe *when* an event takes place. This is crucial, you cannot describe the universe without this 4th parameter. It's this parameter that we (usually) call time in physics. In other words its not something that "exists" or not, but simply a necessary ingredient in the descriptions that model our world. On the other hand, if you are talking about the "passing of time", asking the question of whether of not time really "goes by", then the standard answer according to modern physics (in my opinion) would be that the passing of time is simply something that we experience, a perception issue, it can be related to the increase in entropy inside our brains for example. But "outside our head" it would not really make sense to talk about the "passing of time". In particular in general relativity we consider the universe as a whole 4 dimensional object, in which the "past" and the "future" coexist. We are simply experiencing successive slices of this geometry, hence our impression of the "passing" of time.
@sorincarstea6219
@sorincarstea6219 3 жыл бұрын
Excuse my eng. Suppose that time is real. In time-space fabric it is assumed to be one of the two axes. For us human, it is a measure of our life. Ett it is an "time areal"density (volume density = E/m3). Time areal density variations =dE/d(tt) are in fact a measure of steady or unsteady state, i think. In one dimension, if dE/dt = 0 it is a steady state procces. If dE/dt < 0, or dE/dt > 0 it is a unstady state proc.
@roblaquiere8220
@roblaquiere8220 3 жыл бұрын
@@colfrancis9725 In some sense, the question about determinism has already been answered by General Relativity. The Past and Future are real and exist, and therefore the universe is deterministic. Now, don't get me wrong! Deterministic is not the same thing as predictable. We can know for certain that "something" will happen in the future but we cannot predict exactly what that something is. We can place limits, such as no FTL causality, but we cannot make accurate predictions without perfect particle knowledge and that is forbidden in Quantum Mechanics. Free Will can still be saved by attributing some aspect of consciousness to this fundamentally unpredictable quantum mechanics.
@feynstein1004
@feynstein1004 3 жыл бұрын
Wow, I didn't know so much information could be packed into a single tensor.
@Sagivbh
@Sagivbh 2 жыл бұрын
This is gold.
@EiD248
@EiD248 3 жыл бұрын
I give a like before watching the video. On trust. Great job. Thanks E2-c2p2 = m2 c4 isn't it?
@milihun7619
@milihun7619 3 жыл бұрын
When someone moves on a CTC (in a Kerr-Carter time machine or in Gödel's rotating universe, etc...) "counterstreaming" the "regular" entropic flow of time, or in the case of the "old-school" interpretation of the negative energy particles of the Dirac equation (John Wheeler's one electron universe, where a positron was just an electron moving backwards in time), does T00 become negative for these objects/observers? I assume that can not be the case, because from their point of view, everything else "moves" now "in the wrong temporal direction" and has negative energy density, that causes a negative spacetime curvature/gravitationally repulsive geometry. Observers have to agree on the Riemannian curvature, right? (everyone observes the backward moving particle to posses negative mass/repulsive gravity in the "right frame", and that particle observes that everything else has got negative mass/repulsive gravity in it's own frame) My reasoning/assumptions may be completely wrong, but I am quite a layman :D
@smileifyoudontexist6320
@smileifyoudontexist6320 3 жыл бұрын
Contemplate these things... then you can live on the energy of your brain "melting down"
@DaRios_Tristan
@DaRios_Tristan 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks !!!
@mellamofields4275
@mellamofields4275 3 жыл бұрын
Meeen, this video couldn't came in better moment last night i was studiyng the canonical energy-momentum tensor lel
@mmunz
@mmunz 3 жыл бұрын
So at 2:55 you add components to those vectors, and I'm having some trouble understanding how to think about these vectors and what their components represent. I'm used to thinking about vectors in terms of magnitude and direction. Based on how they were put into the table a couple seconds later, I feel like it's implying the vectors of energy flowing through time and through x, both have components of time and x(space). Also what would it mean for the apple to have a larger space vector than time vector? I'm having a hard time visualizing what it would mean to have more of your energy moving through space than time. I thought your total energy was always passing through time at a fixed rate, but changing relative to an observer. Does this mean you change your rate of evolution of time based on your speed? Sorry the for the confusing questions, I'm kinda confused myself haha - Any guidance you or anyone can give is greatly appreciated! Excellent video series btw! Absolutely love the structure, animation, and approach to explaining these difficult concepts
@dritemolawzbks8574
@dritemolawzbks8574 3 жыл бұрын
Have you had experience using 3d vectors in Newtonian/classical physics?
@pritamkarmokar3674
@pritamkarmokar3674 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you..
@giskavlad
@giskavlad 3 жыл бұрын
Hello the best people ever, tell me please which program the author use to create videos?
@vaibhavSharma-tg7ue
@vaibhavSharma-tg7ue 3 жыл бұрын
I have question when or in which stamdard i will satrt lerning about these concept
@ozzymandius666
@ozzymandius666 3 жыл бұрын
Dark energy is so counter-intuitive. It has energy, so it contributes to slowing down the expansion(making spacetime curvature more positive), but negative pressure, so its net contribution actually speeds up expansion(making spacetime more flat, I think, as opposed to hyperbolic). I'd like to see the math done so far on that particular type of quantum field (known as an inflaton field, I believe.) Keep up the great work!
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
It is counter-intuitive indeed ! The "inflaton" field is a postulate for describing inflation, but dark energy is described by the "cosmological constant" which is not the same thing. It is a constant that we can add to Einstein's equation without breaking the theory. This constant can either be interpreted as a "background curvature" for spacetime, or as a "dark energy" (whether we put it on the left side or on the right side of the Einstein equations). The energy-momentum tensor associated with dark energy is simply proportional to the metric, which means that this is completely isotropic and homogeneous.
@ozzymandius666
@ozzymandius666 3 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceClicEN Yes, Einstein was right, even when he thought he was wrong. That being said, I've seen presentations where the potential of the inflaton field was much higher in the past (causing rapid inflation in the early universe) and then a phase change, or tunneling to a lower potential of the order of 10^-120 occured (ie the current cosmological constant), implying that dark energy is the same field as the inflaton field, just at a much lower potential, another case of a spontaneously broken symmetry. As I see it, it's just the quantum-mechanical explanation of the same phenomenon. Dark energy exists, therefore it must have a quantum (the inflaton) and a quantum field (the inflaton field)
@user-yw7lj4oe2l
@user-yw7lj4oe2l 2 жыл бұрын
What is title of the books from which you prepare this content? Thanks
@wmumbra
@wmumbra 3 жыл бұрын
What a pity that such high-quality videos are gaining such a small number of views.
@lilyh4467
@lilyh4467 3 жыл бұрын
Where do you get the music in these videos? Do you make it?
@jacobvandijk6525
@jacobvandijk6525 2 жыл бұрын
Once upon a time Einstein took a balloon and observed it carefully. After a few minutes he realised that the air-molecules in the balloon had an average velocity and thus the inside of the balloon had to have a certain energy-density (Joule/Volume). He also realised that these molecules kept bumping into the surface of the balloon. Thus the surface experienced a pressure from within, called stress (Newton/Area). All these stresses can be decomposed in normal and shear stresses. That's what he had learned at the ETH in Zurich. But he wasn't satisfied yet, because all his balloons deflated after some time. Giving this some thought he came up with this great idea that there has to be a flow of particles through the surface! This kind of dynamics is introduced in physics through momentum and flux, he remembered. Well, that's easy, Einstein thought. Momentum-density = energy-density / velocity, and energy-flux = energy-density x velocity. Great, Einstein yelled. Now I've got all the components of my Stress-Energy-Tensor! Then he grabbed the balloon and popped it, lol.
@DanSternofBeyer
@DanSternofBeyer 3 жыл бұрын
Maybe a silly question : After looking through the wikipedia of the metric tensor, ...why is the energy density of Minkowski Space -c^2 ? How can this be negative? In the previous video you show a 2D Minkowski spacetime with a positive c value in the energy density. How does this flip negative when moving to 4D?
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
Beware these are two different tensors : On the one hand you have the energy-momentum tensor, which contains in the upper left corner the "energy density". This tensor is zero for the Minkowski spacetime, because it describes an empty universe. On the other hand you have the metric tensor, which describes the geometry of spacetime. This is what you were refering to. There is actually a choice of convention in General Relativity, in the metric tensor we can choose to put the negative sign either in front of the time component, or in front of the 3 spatial components. In my series I decided to go with the convention that time is positive, and space negative, but you will also find the opposite convention quite often.
@DanSternofBeyer
@DanSternofBeyer 3 жыл бұрын
​@@ScienceClicEN thanks for the reply. That clears up my confusion, and gives me more questions. Looking back at the Metric Tensor wiki I do now see where it eventually is related to the stress-energy tensor... and now I'm sorta understanding the old saying 'Space-time tells matter how to move; matter tells space-time how to curve.'
@kseriousr
@kseriousr 3 жыл бұрын
"Concrete example." "Satellite inside the sun." 🤔
@dritemolawzbks8574
@dritemolawzbks8574 3 жыл бұрын
He should have said "cement inside the sun."
@vitovittucci9801
@vitovittucci9801 3 жыл бұрын
The T tensor is the source of gravitation, and it is based on the idea of a sort energy flux going through the source in stationary conditions. However , in the case of a black hole I can not see which kind of energy, or physical entity may get into and out of a black hole at the same time. Of course we may say that this entity is the gravity itself, but that appears to be a tautology. So the G.R. equations tell nothing about the physical reality of gravity, but seem to be only a powreful mathematical tool ?
@user-bf6jx7hq4z
@user-bf6jx7hq4z 3 жыл бұрын
What means your expression that energy (not information?) "travel through space Δx over time Δt" ? E.g. what would be the answer on this question if we use an oblique rectangle with an dilation or constraction of its sides for more accuracy of presentation of your curved two-dimensional space-time here?
@skillsandhonor4640
@skillsandhonor4640 3 жыл бұрын
awesome
@smileifyoudontexist6320
@smileifyoudontexist6320 3 жыл бұрын
I was just looking at how to crop/edit in Lumafusion and apply animated vector art over video images.... But then i saw this Video.The KZfaq algorithm has hacked my superpositions !!! hahahhahaha Thankyou for the GREAT VIDEOS . Ill watch it 10 ore times and see if i can make any sense of it? ( :
@tjtuber1721
@tjtuber1721 2 жыл бұрын
How exactly do we define that an object is moving in space or not? What is the frame of reference?
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 2 жыл бұрын
Good question, there is no preferred frame of reference. The power of general relativity is that we can choose any frame we want (and even any coordinate system, which is a more general choice), and it will always be consistent.
@juanclaver
@juanclaver 3 жыл бұрын
I can't wait for this ahhhhhhhh
@saudzahirr
@saudzahirr 3 жыл бұрын
Exactly
@nesomalinar5662
@nesomalinar5662 3 жыл бұрын
Very an interesting topic yet very arguable 👍🍵🐙
@nickblogger5060
@nickblogger5060 3 жыл бұрын
amazing
@aniruddhachakrabortyindia
@aniruddhachakrabortyindia 3 жыл бұрын
I think it would be a better representation if the arrows were perpendicular to space and time surfaces at 2:55, that combinedly give the total flux
@kyleheadley7527
@kyleheadley7527 3 жыл бұрын
When you showed a similar matrix in (4/8), it was to show a change in position in a non-rectangular coordinate frame. Here you describe energy moving through space-time, which is a change in "position" so I assume the same thing is being described. But you're showing a rectangular coordinate frame. Is this to simplify the visuals? And why do we need to interpret the components as anything more than the math of describing a single vector? I look forward to the next video (and perhaps answers), but this one left me more confused than the others.
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
Indeed, you don't need a rectangular coordinate system (you can choose whichever you prefer) but it was simpler for the visuals. What is described by the energy-momentum tensor of *a single object* is the flux of momentum through each surface corresponding to a coordinate on the grid. This is therefore a collection of vectors which are all proportional (for a single object) to the object's velocity vector. However for multiple objects, or for a "fluid", you sum the energy-momentum tensors of everything, and therefore it becomes more complex. In a way this is closely related to statistical mechanics and how we describe fluids. This is why we try to give an intuitive understanding for each term in the tensor, as density, pressure, momentum, and viscosity.
@kyleheadley7527
@kyleheadley7527 3 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceClicEN Oh, so the energy-momentum tensor does not describe a single (velocity) vector, but helps compute something else based on it? In that case, where do we get the values in the matrix? Are there different types of energy such that their velocity affects spacetime differently? (Or just one type but it's filled with constants in a convenient form?) I guess I was confused since the prior videos described where their numbers came from and I assumed energy only came in one form, so it would be fully described by the velocity vector
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
For a single particle / point-like object you can compute its energy-momentum tensor only with the components of its velocity, and its mass "m". It's given by : T_mu_nu = m * v_mu * v_nu, with a Dirac function such that the tensor vanishes everywhere other than on the object's worldline. However the idea is that the total energy-momentum is usually the sum of the energy-momentum tensors of many objects moving in all directions (think of a gas for example). Also we can also define the energy-momentum tensor for the electromagnetic field, or for dark energy for example, so it's not always defined using the velocity of a point-like object.
@kyleheadley7527
@kyleheadley7527 3 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceClicEN Ok, I get it now. The components of the matrix in the example are (easily computed from) the worldline, but you're interpreting the components more broadly to prepare us for additional forms of energy, like a point within an EM field, or a combination of sources. Thanks! I'm looking forward to the rest of the series.
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
Exactly ! I hope you'll like it :)
@pilliozoltan6918
@pilliozoltan6918 3 жыл бұрын
The components of the energy-momentum tensor depends on the coordinate systems we are choosing. Is it possible in general to choose a coordinate system where it's diagonal? If not, what's the requirements for such a transformation?
@dritemolawzbks8574
@dritemolawzbks8574 3 жыл бұрын
Did you mean like transforming the stress-energy tensor to spherical coordinates?
@colfrancis9725
@colfrancis9725 3 жыл бұрын
I don't know. If you find out, please write a comment here. Rough ideas: Go from the basic, intuitive, definition of the stress-energy tensor. Off-diagonal components represent a flux of the x-component of momentum in the y-direction, which is often considered as something like a shear term for a viscous fluid. So, for an ideal fluid all off-diagonals certainly are 0. If we model the content of spacetime as a fluid (which is often done), your question is then effectively asking - can we find co-ordinates in which the fluid behaves as an ideal fluid. I suspect the asnwer is NO, since viscosity seems to be an intrinsic property of the fluid and not of the co-ordinates. But I don't know. There should also be some unusual configurations of space which will effectively prevent transfers of momentum in certain directions anyway. Consider, for example, a spacetime which has a degenerate y-co-ordinate. Let's say that all matter is confined to a finite set of y-co-ordinate values. The situation is then like forcing all matter to flow through narrow pipes at fixed y-values, keeping those pipes narrow (reaching 0 width in the limit) effectively prevents any transfer of momentum in the y-direction. Anyway, why do you want the stress-energy tensor to be diagonalised?
@overlordprincekhan
@overlordprincekhan 11 ай бұрын
No, this cannot be! Such high quality videos shouldn't exist!
@neonblack211
@neonblack211 3 жыл бұрын
Can't wait to see a concrete example of something like light passing a massive body
@luudest
@luudest Жыл бұрын
3:55 Does a fast moving object curve space more compared to the same object moving slower? Or can a proton moving almost moving at the speed of light curve spacetime so much that it can for instance attract a human body?
@ritemolawbks8012
@ritemolawbks8012 Жыл бұрын
A proton has *rest* *mass,* so it can't be accelerated to *c.* It requires an infinite amount of energy. It could be an *active* *mass* and source of spacetime curvature and a gravitational force, but the *passive* *mass;* e.g. if it's a simple hydrogen atom, the electron would be dominated by the effects of the electromagnetic force and binding energy between the nucleus (proton + neutron) and the electron. The particle colliders conduct experiments accelerating protons near *c* to study the collision. Gravity is too weak on those scales, so a better example of local energy and momentum density/flux creating more gravity would be to add energy to a gravitational system. In the earth-moon system, if energy were added to increase the rotational velocity of the earth and everything else remained constant, the increase in angular momentum and energy density would curve more spacetime. The opposite over time is true because as the earth slows in rotation the gravitational binding energy between the earth and the moon will decrease.
@elwitkauesa4148
@elwitkauesa4148 3 жыл бұрын
🤔... I might be wrong. Alessandro, did you just give us indirectly a glimpse of a black hole using Energy Momentum Tensor @ 07:40? Interesting!!!!
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
;)
@valkaran8865
@valkaran8865 3 жыл бұрын
I'm confused, how can components of a energy current vector have two lower indices, because if you multiply them by a basis vector that has lower indices you need to sum in all the coordinates to get the energy current vector, but you can't do that with Einstein notation anymore because you have two lower indices (It is the same thing with cristoffel simbols which are too components of vectors and have upper indices denoting which component of the vector it is) . So maybe you can help me get over this. By the way great video, I watched them all and this series made general relativity waaaay clearer, thank you.
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
Glad you like the series ! I'd say not to worry about the position of indices. The only thing that matters is that when you write an equation, the indices that are present on both sides must be either both up, or both down. But otherwise you can always "raise" or "lower" indices, using the metric tensor. For example T_mu_nu (with indices downstairs) is g_mu_alpha*T^alpha_nu (so now you have T with one index up and one down) which is also g_mu_alpha*g_nu_beta*T^alpha^beta (which is now T with both indices upstairs)
@kafuuchino3236
@kafuuchino3236 3 жыл бұрын
If motion is relative, does this mean the energy-momentum tensor is relative too? I know we haven't yet gotten to the Einstein equations and linking the energy-momentum tensor with the Riemann tensor, but does that also mean the curvature of spacetime is relative? And if so, do different observers disagree over how strong a gravitational field a body has? That doesn't seem right to me - if a neutron star is moving past me at high velocity, it will have a lot of kinetic energy from my perspective - perhaps enough to tip it over the mass limit and become a black hole. But from its own perspective, it's stationary and has no kinetic energy, so it's still a neutron star. We can't disagree about whether it's a neutron star or a black hole! Is it the case that the various components of the energy-momentum tensor change in such a way when viewed from different reference frames that they all balance out and have the same effect on spacetime curvature/gravity no matter where you measure them from?
@narfwhals7843
@narfwhals7843 3 жыл бұрын
I asked basically the same question and here is his answer kzfaq.info/get/bejne/gLGBgNWWksjelWg.html&lc=UgyVajCNfDxpnTuiD0J4AaABAg.9HrGGBI3A-k9HrNu30vdjJ A tensor, by definition, can't be relative. But its components can be as long as they represent the same object. The curvature is also a tensor, so all observers will agree on how those two tensors relate to each other, even if they don't agree on their components. That is part of the power of a tensor equation.
@kafuuchino3236
@kafuuchino3236 3 жыл бұрын
@@narfwhals7843 Thanks! The electricity/magnetism analogy helped me grasp the idea of different components appearing as different things to different observers.
@marioalessandrini7405
@marioalessandrini7405 2 жыл бұрын
2:55 a flux is a scalar not a vector right? How can we obtain a vector calculating a flux?
@JWentu
@JWentu 3 жыл бұрын
According to the first 5 videos, this series is watched 69.5017*x^-0.7039606 times, where x is the index in the series. So this video should arrive at approximately 19.6K views by the time the next one will be published. The last episode will be watched 16K times
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
Ahah have you tried running the regression on the original series on the French channel ? I wonder if it would be the same curve
@praeclarum
@praeclarum 3 жыл бұрын
“Energy is an abstract notion which indicates the presence of disturbances in the universe” 😂
@TheBigBanggggg
@TheBigBanggggg 2 жыл бұрын
@ 6:32 A satellite in empty spacetime? Isn't it using the curvature or gravity of the Earth?
@spider66isaac
@spider66isaac 3 жыл бұрын
Is gravitation a good textbook to use after this video series or would that be a bit too difficult?
@JoshuaSmithNZ
@JoshuaSmithNZ 3 жыл бұрын
Assuming no physics backgrund before these brilliant videos, and a self-study approach, I'd recommend Leonard Susskind's "The Theoretical Minimum" series - Book 1 Classical Mechanics then Book 3 Special Relativity and Classical Field Theory (both absolutely essential prerequisites). You don't need the Quantum Mechanics book. These books are pitched at a perfect level, they don't skip any mathematics but they have tons of explanations. Then to start on GR, I don't think MTW Gravitation is ideal, probably a friendlier book like Carroll "Spacetime and Geometry" or D'Inverno. Unfortunately even these are hard going and you'd ideally want a friendly GR tutor to answer the inevitable million questions. Unfortunately I don't think anyone's yet written a friendly book on GR - Susskind has vague plans to do it one day. Maybe ScienceClic Alessandro could do it? He's probably already done it in French! French is easier to learn than GR...
@JoshuaSmithNZ
@JoshuaSmithNZ 3 жыл бұрын
Incidentally, Sean Carroll also has some amazing videos on GR in the "Biggest Ideas in the Universe" series on KZfaq.
@spider66isaac
@spider66isaac 3 жыл бұрын
@@JoshuaSmithNZ Thankyou for your reply! this is really helpful I have those books on my list and will surely get them now and it's a good thing I'm learning french then...
@spider66isaac
@spider66isaac 3 жыл бұрын
@planet42 Something to work towards then
@dns911
@dns911 3 жыл бұрын
*One question* : The purple stuff moving, in the example of the apple, is that the energy of the apple itself or all the energy of the universe that passes this point of spacetime? I mean here: 3:32 And 3:57
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
In a way it's both. The energy which is described by the energy-momentum tensor is the energy of all the objects that the universe contains. So if the universe contains only an apple, the energy contained in the universe is the energy of the apple. But if the universe contains multiple objects, the purple stuff represents the total energy of all these objects combined. For example you might have an electromagnetic field which fills your spacetime. In this case, there would be purple everywhere on the grid, with more or less intensity depending on whether or not the EM field has a lot of energy at each point.
@dns911
@dns911 3 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceClicEN Firstly: thanks for that extensive answer! So, just that I got it right: If it is also the apple, then it would be maybe more correct (but less instructive) to make that box fully purple as the Apple fills basically the whole box. If it would for example get shot by an arrow right through, it would get even more purple (higher energy density and also momentum density). Adding an electromagnetic field would make it _even more_ purple than the apple itself. Did I get this right? Thanks a ton, you saved my life man.
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
Yes basically you can just think of this as a fluid, like water that we would see from the top. And the more "purple" it gets, it means the more energy/mass/objects is passing through the point. Inside the Sun for example, the plasma of hydrogen which constitues the star is made up of many atoms, but to describe it we "sum" all the atoms together, thinking of them as a fluid, with a density (which is greater when more atoms are stacked into a same volume), a pressure, a momentum, etc
@dns911
@dns911 3 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceClicEN Alright, I got it! So even the apple contributes! I was first confused because it would "block" other massive objects from entering the box, leading me to the false idea that if the box is inside the apple, the energy density would remain constant as long as the apple persists. But you had a point with the energy of the electromagnetic field for example which disproves this:) Man, you're a really good guy, I searched for something like that for days (literally). I'll become a patron right away, you deserve it! Keep it up, you're helping me and others more than you can imagine ❤️
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the support I am very glad you like the series !
@navneetmishra3208
@navneetmishra3208 3 жыл бұрын
Can you recommend us some books that you're reading for making such great videos?
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
It might be a bit unusual but I actually never used books in my academic background, I always preferred watching explanatory videos or online lectures. That's how I first learned GR (watching the lecture videos from the amazing Richard Taillet, which are in French) just before making this series. However I did recently use the lecture notes from David Tong who was my GR professor last year, they are really good, but this is already quite advanced : www.damtp.cam.ac.uk/user/tong/gr/gr.pdf
@navneetmishra3208
@navneetmishra3208 3 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceClicEN That's great ! Thank you so much.
@AmitKumar-xw5gp
@AmitKumar-xw5gp 3 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceClicEN Which software do you use to make animations in your videos..?
3 жыл бұрын
I think you might like this book - "A Most Incomprehensible Thing: Notes Towards a Very Gentle Introduction to the Mathematics of Relativity" by Peter Collier. Start reading it for free: a.co/3NcCkk4 The book starts easy, and goes all the way.
3 жыл бұрын
But you need the physical book, it doesn't work on Kindle.
@nikzchannel
@nikzchannel 2 жыл бұрын
Last remark about pressure preventing collapse of the Sun left me confused. Isn't it (thermo-)nuclear energy that prevents it from collapse? Great series though. Thank you very much!
@aidenwinter1117
@aidenwinter1117 2 жыл бұрын
Is viscosity the same as momentum flux, or is there a difference?
@Mysoi123
@Mysoi123 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, the viscosity is momentum flux and shear stress. because, shear stress contains Txy Txz Tyz, and momentum flux are Tyx Tzx Tzy . they're equivalence, which means, the component ended up to be the same by the symmetry.
@ericsu4667
@ericsu4667 3 жыл бұрын
The energy tensor of vacuum in Schwarzschild manifold is not always zero. Detail in "81 Contracted Bianchi Identities and Energy Tensor" on the website, sites.google.com/view/physics-news/home/updates
@lilyh4467
@lilyh4467 3 жыл бұрын
When's the next video in the series coming out?
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
Next tuesday (the 5th I think) ! And the final one will be on tuesday the week after
@lilyh4467
@lilyh4467 3 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceClicEN Nice! :) Can't wait :D!
@narfwhals7843
@narfwhals7843 3 жыл бұрын
is the 00 component the rest energy density or does it include kinetic energy? I'm having trouble understanding how the tensor stays invariant under lorentz transformations since some components depend on the velocity.
@sherlock_norris
@sherlock_norris 3 жыл бұрын
Edit: this is wrong. I'm not fully understanding it myself, but I think the 00 component is associated with rest mass and the 0i / i0 components ("momentum components") are associated with the kinetic energy or the momentum of the object. Also as he said in the video the tensor is *not* invariant under coordinate transformations, so the motion (and thus the energy/momentum) of a massive object is dependent on the coordinate system.
@narfwhals7843
@narfwhals7843 3 жыл бұрын
@@sherlock_norris A tensor _has_ to be invariant under coordinate transformations by definition. The components may change, but the object they represent must not change. According to wikipedia the 00 component is relativistic mass density, which contains all energy including kinetic. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stress%E2%80%93energy_tensor#Identifying_the_components_of_the_tensor So what i think this means is that while observers may disagree on the numbers, they will agree on the consequences(like the fact that there is, or is not, a black hole. You can't create a black hole transforming to a higher velicity observer). I'm just not quite seeing how that works out.
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
The 00 component for a point-like object is its "total" energy density, so it also includes its kinetic energy. Actually in GR you don't really have a clear separation between the different kinds of energy (mass / gravitational / kinetic). They all come from a same term. But you could interpret that : - the rest mass energy comes from the inertia of the object through spacetime - the kinetic energy comes from special relativity time dilation (as the "temporal velocity" of an object changes when it moves through space, so the 00 term of its energy-momentum tensor is affected) - the gravitationnal energy comes from the "curvature of time" (since the 00 term of the metric also affects how the temporal velocity of the object changes) The tensor is Lorentz invariant, in the sense that it's a geometrical object in spacetime. But the interpretation of its components may vary : something could be said to be "energy" in one frame, but "momentum" in another frame. It's very much like the electric and magnetic fields. In one frame you may have an electric field, and in another frame this same field might be interpreted as a magnetic field. Also, note that *all* components of the energy-momentum tensor will affect the curvature of spacetime, not just the 00 term.
@sherlock_norris
@sherlock_norris 3 жыл бұрын
@@narfwhals7843 Ah, so I have made the classic mistake of confusing the tensor with its matrix representation. I guess I can't answer your question myself then, but I found a video kzfaq.info/get/bejne/i7uVitaX2LC3iGQ.html that goes much deeper into the math than this one, especially regarding the transformation of the tensor under coordinate transform. I guess while these ScienceClick videos give a great surface level/intuitive understanding, the maths beneath it stays hard...
@narfwhals7843
@narfwhals7843 3 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceClicEN "Also, note that all components of the energy-momentum tensor will affect the curvature of spacetime" That is my point. I'm having trouble understanding how two observers can see the same curvature when they disagree on the components. But they don't have to see the same curvature, do they? They can disagree on which dimension is which as long as it leads to the same result. Thanks for your reply!
@georgegrubbs2966
@georgegrubbs2966 Жыл бұрын
Can the shape of spacetime be known at each point in space? Is there some element of probability in spacetime?
@Mysoi123
@Mysoi123 Жыл бұрын
Yes, the Ricci tensor component takes input coordinate positions and outputs the curvature at those positions.
@akhilanr1233
@akhilanr1233 2 жыл бұрын
In the video flux is represented by a vector, but flux is a scalar right? Also I have learnt that flux is a surface integral of a * vector field * . But energy is a scalar field, i do not understand what the flux of a scalar field is. Or is energy flux the flux of the velocity of the moving energy? , i.e. the flux of a velocity field?
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 2 жыл бұрын
The energy-momentum tensor is the flux of 4-momentum, so it is indeed the flux of a vector field. The 4-momentum can be considered to be the product of the energy density with the 4-velocity of the energy. Basically it's like the flux of 4 scalar fields, one for each component of the vector field (which is why it makes a 4x4 matrix, instead of just a 4-vector)
@akhilanr1233
@akhilanr1233 2 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceClicEN OH ok, Thank you so much!!
@alejandrol8735
@alejandrol8735 3 жыл бұрын
I really hate cliffhangers. How long until the last two videos are uploaded?
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
A week each ;)
@momchi98
@momchi98 3 жыл бұрын
This tensor is so hard to understand. What does it mean for the i component of momentum to go through a surface with constant j? I feel like it's at the tip of my tongue, but not really.
@ScienceClicEN
@ScienceClicEN 3 жыл бұрын
I agree it's quite hard to get an intuition for it. Personally I think of it this way : the i,j component tells us how much motion in the i direction gets "transferred" to points nearby in the j direction. For example, the x,x component tells us how much spatial motion along x gets transferred in the same direction : it's pressure, telling us how matter "pushes" (i.e. transfers its motion) in the x direction. The x,y component tells us how motion along x is transferred to points nearby in the y direction : this is viscosity, transverse transmission of motion. The time components can be interpreted in the same way : The t,x term tells us how much motion through time (i.e. how much energy) gets transmitted to points nearby in the x direction. This is momentum, it tells us how energy "moves" in the x direction.
@momchi98
@momchi98 3 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceClicEN Yeah, I rewatched a few times and googled abit for more info and think I am starting to understand the logic. I was especially impressed with how you made an analogy of x, y component with viscosity, it is brilliant and it contributed the most to me understanding it. And x, x component really was the most difficult, but even that started to click with a few rewatches. I still don't have it completely understood, but your video helped. Also, thanks for making this series, it is fantastic and I really hoped all professors explained and motivated ideas like this before jumping into mathematics and abstractions. If you aren't already, you would be a tremendous teacher/professor.
@tokajileo5928
@tokajileo5928 2 жыл бұрын
2:46 the particles of the apple move and fluctuate because they have temperature above absolute zero.Therefore there is no matter that rests in space. The whole apple may not move but its particles do.
@Mysoi123
@Mysoi123 2 жыл бұрын
That’s exactly what it mean to be moving through time at the speed of light. The rate of change caused by individual particles inside the collection is maximized. If the collection begin to move through space, this rate of change slows down, and that’s what we called time dilation.
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