What is the ORIGIN of all MASS in the Universe? Physics of symmetry breaking

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Arvin Ash

Arvin Ash

Күн бұрын

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REFERENCES:
What is Symmetry?: • Is Symmetry Fundamenta...
Higgs mechanism: • How 2 Fundamental Forc...
Quantum Field Theory: • QFT: What is the unive...
Strong Force mechanism: • Why Don't Protons Fly ...
Visualizing quantum fields: • What Is A Particle? A ...
Research Papers on Chiral symmetry breaking:
tinyurl.com/2khglb9g
tinyurl.com/2m73bymc
tinyurl.com/2gczzn3k
tinyurl.com/2z6rzxx9
CHAPTERS:
0:00 No mass would exist without this
1:15 What is symmetry?
3:29 Why does the universe break symmetry?
4:56 Mass is a problem in the Standard Model
5:52 What is symmetry breaking?
6:12 What is expectation value?
8:15 How do fundamental particles gain rest mass?
8:45 How does ALL mass come from symmetry breaking?
9:45 Chiral symmetry breaking
11:55 Summary of the origin of mass
13:15 Chemistry and our universe
SUMMARY:
What is the origin of mass in the universe? Symmetry breaking. Symmetries in quantum mechanics result in 3 of the fundamental forces of nature - electromagnetic, weak and strong forces. However, the breaking of certain symmetries is just as important as symmetries. Without it no mass would exist in the universe and no life would exist.
What is symmetry in physics? it's when the properties of particles don’t change after being subjected to transformations. The simplest example is the fact that the laws of physics are the same whether you are here, or in China - this is space translation symmetry. Symmetries show us that mother nature has some simple rules it uses to build the universe.
Imagine a Mexican hat potential. Now if I asked you to place a ball such that you didn’t break symmetry, you would only have one choice - in the middle, at the maximum. What if instead, we put the ball in one of the minima? Now the symmetry would no longer exist. This is a representation of how the Higgs mechanism works to impart mass to fundamental particles. Certain fundamental particles break symmetry by not being in the center, by being in the non-zero potential of the Higgs field.
The issue with the standard model is that all particles must be massless according its equations. This is a demand from the symmetry of the equations. So how do masses of the fundamental particles come about? symmetry breaking.
What is symmetry breaking? Briefly, modern quantum theory shows that all particles are excitations in fields that permeate the entire universe. The lowest energy state of all the other fields is zero. This means that even though they are modulating and changing, meaning that particle and antiparticles are quickly coming in and out of existence forming and annihilating all the time, overall the energy used to create and annihilate these virtual particles has a net value of zero. But the Higgs field is different . It’s field is non zero, even in empty space.
This means our Higgs field becomes massive at a lower energy state, and any fundamental particle that interacts with it gains a rest mass. All the mass associated with the particles of the standard model is due to the fact that they interact with the Higgs field. Particles that don’t interact with the Higgs field remain massless, like the massless photon.
But symmetry breaking is responsible for all mass, not just the mass of fundamental particles. The mass of protons and neutrons comes mainly from the binding energy that keeps quarks glued together inside protons and neutrons, as well as the biding energy that keeps protons glued to other protons and neutrons in the nucleus. It comes from gluon interactions associated with the strong force.
What kind of symmetry breaking explains this binding energy? Chiral symmetry. A chiral symmetric theory treats left handed and right handed particles the same. But the standard model is not a chiral-symmetric theory. It does not treat left and right-handed particles the same.
Consider a left-handed up quark. It has a mass of about 2.3 MeV. The anti-particle of this quark will be right handed.
When these two quarks are bound together, this combination is called a meson. If left and right chirality were treated equally, this meson would annihilate with a net energy of roughly zero. The combination of a quark/anti-quark pair would result in zero mass.
However, if chiral symmetry is broken, they are not treated equally, and the net energy is NOT zero. In fact the total mass is 135 to 140 MeV. Where did this increase in mass come from? It comes about due to chiral symmetry breaking.
#symmetry
#mass
The gluons form a kind of cloud around the quarks. This confines the quarks, breaks chiral symmetry, and generates the binding energy that is measured as mass of the meson. The same phenomenon occurs in protons and neutrons. This is the origin of 99% of the visible mass in the universe. The other 1% is due to the Higgs boson.

Пікірлер: 810
@Rationalific
@Rationalific Жыл бұрын
I love it that you explain things in a clear way without hours of math formulae, but at the same time, treat us like we can handle these high-level concepts. Your unique style leads to us being able to gain a general overview of concepts that are at the cutting-edge of human knowledge. You go further than about any other person in explaining these in the most comprehensible ways possible.
@ArvinAsh
@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
Thanks for that. I appreciate it. And I'm glad you find my videos helpful.
@Rationalific
@Rationalific Жыл бұрын
@@ArvinAsh Thank you! 👍
@freefall9832
@freefall9832 Жыл бұрын
I don't see why the issue needs to be confused with this long winded symmetry, energy is binding the quarks and energy is mass
@stolearovigor281
@stolearovigor281 Жыл бұрын
Are you paid to make positive comments? Or you just little bit ignorant and believe all cartoons?
@vinodkadlaskar2028
@vinodkadlaskar2028 Жыл бұрын
@@freefall9832 Cos when the universe was created there was equal amount of matter and anti matter ie the symmetry
@n-da-bunka2650
@n-da-bunka2650 Жыл бұрын
i would LOVE to get involve with this particular study of science. I was the grade school geek who read about quarks in one of those early science magazines and argued with science teachers when they graded me WRONG for answering that protons, neutrons weren't the "smallest parts of an atom". I literally had to SHOW her the article before she would change my grade. Her answer was that "i wasn't supposed to know that" but the reality was that SHE did not (yet) know that so she was teaching what everyone taught back in the early 70's. Now that I am nearing retirement I can return to this original thirst for knowledge and constantly watch yours and other science and math videos. While I took calculus, discrete structures, statistics and all those other higher maths, I am not as good at them as I am with physics, QED and such so these fit well with my objectives. I'd much rather watch these videos so THANK YOU for continuing to bring us AWESOME content like this! Could you do a video on "penta" quarks?
@ExistenceUniversity
@ExistenceUniversity Жыл бұрын
Classical teacher, punishing students for "knowing more than they should". Sadly school is not for learning to think but for learning how to follow.
@Primitarian
@Primitarian Жыл бұрын
I'm glad she changed your grade, but at least she did do so once shown. Also, quarks were something of a novelty in the 70s, viewed then widely as mathematical conjecture, not necessarily physical reality. Indeed, even today no one has actually pulled out a quark as a separate part.
@gaopinghu7332
@gaopinghu7332 Жыл бұрын
@@Primitarian yeah, quarks when pulled apart just create another quark to bond with.
@ExistenceUniversity
@ExistenceUniversity Жыл бұрын
@@Parmenides7 What? Do you mean it is sad that school tells you how to feel/think, or did you think that I was saying you need school in order to think? 😆
@jamesbarlow6423
@jamesbarlow6423 Жыл бұрын
Go for it
@stevemonkey6666
@stevemonkey6666 Жыл бұрын
I'm really happy that you are going deeper into this subject than other channels. I'm just an ordinary guy and I want to understand this stuff better, and you're making it possible 😁👍
@yziib3578
@yziib3578 Жыл бұрын
Deeper than PBS Space Time?
@eddieroa291
@eddieroa291 Жыл бұрын
@@yziib3578 I was about to say lol
@aryanbansode1897
@aryanbansode1897 Жыл бұрын
Pbs?
@garffieldiscool1163
@garffieldiscool1163 Жыл бұрын
@@aryanbansode1897 What about, into the impossible or Sabine?
@bydlokun
@bydlokun Жыл бұрын
You may want to check Physics Explained channel if you wish go deeper into equations
@sebastianclarke2441
@sebastianclarke2441 Жыл бұрын
I'm once again truly humbled by your unparalleled ability to convey these mind blowing theories while continuously taking us closer to the core fundamentals. Thank you so much for these beautiful insights Arvin. What a video, keep up the good fight, kind sir!
@bdub8442
@bdub8442 Жыл бұрын
You can place the ball anywhere on graph as long as u change ur perspective postition to make the ball appear symmetrical
@aaronramsden1657
@aaronramsden1657 6 күн бұрын
What an amazing visual representation to help us learn
@sngash
@sngash Жыл бұрын
Thank you Arvin. This topic was always mysterious to me but the veil has been somewhat lifted by your explanation. I look forward to more breakthroughs that will further demystify the universe.
@ibrarkhan9878
@ibrarkhan9878 Жыл бұрын
I am watching your channel since 2019. Your channel and Pbs spacetime are outstanding.
@tayzonday
@tayzonday Жыл бұрын
This is the best explanation of mass.
@seanengler6423
@seanengler6423 9 ай бұрын
wtf hey
@atticuswalker8970
@atticuswalker8970 7 ай бұрын
If this is what causes mass. And it takes time for it to happen. Then wouldn't more mass take more time. . Wouldn't spacetime stretch to accommodate the interactions required for more mass. Wouldn't objects acelerating through spacetime have more interactions and gain mass. Would the mass at the center of a black hole have a constant connection to the Higgs field and require infinite time. Would that explain gravity.
@Bill-ou7zp
@Bill-ou7zp 3 ай бұрын
Bro don’t pretend like you understand it lmao
@dawnwatching6382
@dawnwatching6382 Жыл бұрын
Your visualizations are second to none, Arvin! Keep it up!
@sravanmulugu4702
@sravanmulugu4702 Жыл бұрын
@MrPeterPanos
@MrPeterPanos Жыл бұрын
I really enjoy your videos Arvin, I feel ever more enlightened with each one I watch. Thank you for making and sharing them🌌
@ArvinAsh
@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
My pleasure! Thank you for watching.
@domenicobarillari2046
@domenicobarillari2046 Жыл бұрын
Hi Arvin Just a trolling physicist who landed here again by accident and glad I did. As usual, a fabulous job done by you and your expert physics team. I have no reservations recommending you (and PBS Spacetime, etc.) to any of my students for the correct explanations, backed up by good "production values" (as they say), to go further than dry equations.
@fingtechnology1094
@fingtechnology1094 Жыл бұрын
I appreciate the way you explain and make complex ideas accessible. Thank you. Subscribed.
@jaybingham3711
@jaybingham3711 Жыл бұрын
Home run episode right there! Kudos. Side note: The bi-lateral symmetry of the human face can be nearly perfect. Yet, by far, those faces with noticeable minor asymmetries (like in this photo 2:16) consistently score the highest beauty-wise in aggregated results. Though totally subjective, might it be that it's our (lower conscious) way of paying homage to the universe's solid move of breaking symmetry? Pretty sure that needs to be a new Netflix series.
@nathanwalker1424
@nathanwalker1424 Жыл бұрын
Every single one of Arvin’s videos is incredible.
@vishalmishra3046
@vishalmishra3046 Жыл бұрын
Exceptionally awesome visualizations in your Video @Arvin 🙂
@saintott
@saintott 3 ай бұрын
Really appreciate the description.❤
@philippefossier7178
@philippefossier7178 Жыл бұрын
Excellent content and presentations. Such high quality. I am a big fan.
@frankgaertner9021
@frankgaertner9021 Жыл бұрын
Your work is so wonderful. You are a top reference in the first and now the second Volume of my “Our Self Assembling Universe” AWTbook(tm) Series. The second one is in final stages of writing. It’s subtitled “Who is Us? The nanoscale answer to that question is so incredible and you nail so much of it with your beautifully clear answers. Whether my efforts make any difference remains to be seen. But I do think I am onto something with my new, may I say it, literary art form in which you were first featured in OSAU-2, C&I&L&E=mc2.
@williejohnson487
@williejohnson487 Жыл бұрын
That was clear vision and gave me understanding of the Higgs field.
@thenameisshubhamsingh.
@thenameisshubhamsingh. Жыл бұрын
Loved your videos as always!!
@euginrobinson
@euginrobinson Жыл бұрын
Wow, amazing, though some of it went above my head, it is presented in an as simple as it can get manner. But what a lot to know about the universe, and you are doing a wonderful job communicating these extremely hard concepts in simple terms. I've signed up to you channel already.
@ArvinAsh
@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
Welcome aboard!
@qtcollect4608
@qtcollect4608 Жыл бұрын
I just subbed to Wondrium and I'm loving it so far with Understanding Electronics course.
@ArvinAsh
@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
Wonderful. I love the app myself.
@NovaCosmo-uz6tn
@NovaCosmo-uz6tn Жыл бұрын
Thanks very much for Wondrium. The multitude of courses in the natural sciences were fascinating.
@camellkachour4112
@camellkachour4112 Жыл бұрын
Arvin, you are an incredible teacher ! Myself I am mathematician very frustrated to not had good theoretical physics understanding, probably due to bad teaching of physics when I was student in Paris, 25 years ago. My dream would be to meet people like you who can explain me physics simply !
@DaellusKnights
@DaellusKnights Жыл бұрын
The Higgs Field is probably one of the most fascinating aspects of physics to me. Especially when discussing Vacuum Decay. Which I couldn't help thinking about watching the animations illustrating the non-zero energy expectations. Any chance you could do a deep-dive on the whole Higgs/mass/vacuum decay topic?
@ArvinAsh
@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
I did make a video on that here: kzfaq.info/get/bejne/sL9mfK5htMioiYk.html
@tcarr349
@tcarr349 Жыл бұрын
Great job! Great video! Great graphics! You might be the best science communicator in the world?! 👍
@ArvinAsh
@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
Wow, thanks!
@ashwanipandey7668
@ashwanipandey7668 Жыл бұрын
I love the fact that you bring some very fundamental question ,like this video,never thaught about this thing... But amazing video love your videos.
@Thedanishundertaker
@Thedanishundertaker Жыл бұрын
Love the channel, the mass comes from the strongforce, and interaction between the gluons and the Quarks :)
@manicmadpanickedman2249
@manicmadpanickedman2249 Жыл бұрын
Check the link for example kzfaq.infoFxE-V3JN-EE?feature=share
@kipponi
@kipponi Жыл бұрын
Yes...
@kenwhitfield219
@kenwhitfield219 Жыл бұрын
And the gravitational force gives mass weight.
@freefall9832
@freefall9832 Жыл бұрын
The Mass comes from the energy binding the quarks together
@TD-iy8us
@TD-iy8us Жыл бұрын
That's only for composite particles, fundamental particles( except neutrinos) get their mass from the higgs field
@arjun33as
@arjun33as Жыл бұрын
Whoaaaat a legend. Explained one of the most complex part in particle physics in just 15 minutes. Science teacher in my school would take 500 years to explain this. 😂😂
@luudest
@luudest Жыл бұрын
The chiral symmetry breaking in the proton is very interesting. I wonder how expirements have to be set up in order prove these theories?
@NikkiTrudelle
@NikkiTrudelle Жыл бұрын
Thanks for doing what you do
@mattiasaxner9841
@mattiasaxner9841 5 ай бұрын
A great explaination that increased my understanding of this.
@akostarkanyi825
@akostarkanyi825 Жыл бұрын
This video cannot be commended enough. It is best of the best.
@lookmath4582
@lookmath4582 Жыл бұрын
The fastest growing physics channel and so informative ❤ .
@mpsibi
@mpsibi Жыл бұрын
Well explained, thanks
@manicmadpanickedman2249
@manicmadpanickedman2249 Жыл бұрын
You should check this out kzfaq.infoFxE-V3JN-EE?feature=share
@001firebrand
@001firebrand 10 ай бұрын
Mind-blowing. Just outstanding! 💖
@ArvinAsh
@ArvinAsh 10 ай бұрын
Thank you! Cheers!
@danielduarte5073
@danielduarte5073 Жыл бұрын
Amazing information !
@kevindooley5934
@kevindooley5934 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for doing this. The Goldstone mechanism is a tricky concept.
@suvalaki
@suvalaki Жыл бұрын
So much respect for the attitude to “why” questions. This is a needed disclaimer for people
@kmash8716
@kmash8716 Жыл бұрын
Great info, Thank you
@m.alisiddiqui5802
@m.alisiddiqui5802 Жыл бұрын
Thanks, you are doing great job, making things easier is not easier
@lyiusapangolin
@lyiusapangolin Жыл бұрын
Hey! I'm wondering if the equations for the mass of things like the W, Z bosons, Higgs Boson, and Top Quark can be covered since I'm really interested in the math that goes into those particles. Even if it's really simplified equations I'd love to see any articles that cover this topic or even videos - since I still don't entirely know how these things are calculated - just that they are, and I wanna know the "how?" that goes into it. Love your videos and they're quite helpful for understanding our world and sciences better.
@thedouglasw.lippchannel5546
@thedouglasw.lippchannel5546 5 ай бұрын
A fabulous video - great job again! Could you do a video on CIG Theory?
@stevendashley6209
@stevendashley6209 Жыл бұрын
I love your videos!!
@jimmorris5328
@jimmorris5328 Жыл бұрын
This explanation of symmetry breaking has cleared up my understanding of dark matter theories for WIMPs being a likely candidate as the spontaneous field fluctuations cause particles to pop into and out of existence. Thanks for another great video
@ArvinAsh
@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
Great to hear that the video was helpful. Thank you for watching.
@AlbartBilal
@AlbartBilal Жыл бұрын
no words for appreciation....God blessing you sir for all times.......
@enzocussuol
@enzocussuol Жыл бұрын
great as always 👏🏻🇧🇷
@muahmuah4135
@muahmuah4135 Жыл бұрын
Im glad to say that I've learned about a few of the things mentioned in this video during my physics classes and its really² hard involving a lot of equations that are really² long😅😅
@hiiamjustacoolrandomuser168
@hiiamjustacoolrandomuser168 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting and well explains vidoe. Arvin Ash being one of the best to explain complicated things much simplified.
@aprylvanryn5898
@aprylvanryn5898 Жыл бұрын
You answered so many questions without answering any questions lol. I'm gonna have to watch this again to fully get what u mean
@judgeomega
@judgeomega Жыл бұрын
the way i see it; the 'symmetry' breaking and conversion are because we assembled the model in this way so its not really answering a 'why'. its like trying to explain the why by saying because there is addition done... symmetry is just a more complex addition. if we had a full and complete model of the universe we would have no breaking of symmetry given a similar model to what we have now because everything would be accounted for in the equations.
@ProactiveForce
@ProactiveForce Жыл бұрын
One of you most important videos. To me it would seem there are keys or paths in this video as to how gravity works that we currently are missing. The big bang potential working time clock machine first law of thermodynamics resulting in the recorded second law of thermodynamics including all resulting paths and consistent symmetries within time space and mass gravity causality pathways or E=mc2. Sort of a algebra puzzle with lot's of pieces.
@gualbertovega3218
@gualbertovega3218 Жыл бұрын
Your videos should be part of home schooling.👏 I think it would be a great idea to create a home schooling series, for you have an excellent way of explaining advanced concepts in a way that are easy to understand. Thanks
@KillsAll.
@KillsAll. Жыл бұрын
You have done well
@jamesnasmith984
@jamesnasmith984 Жыл бұрын
This high quality narrative and graphics bring me tantalizingly close to grasping these notions but the maths I encountered in my biochem and medical career weren’t enough for a proper understanding. I wonder if a math course catch-up is a feasible goal in retirement.
@joegeorge3889
@joegeorge3889 Жыл бұрын
He is definitely very interesting in his talks about the universe
@joedizzelfoerizle
@joedizzelfoerizle Жыл бұрын
Great stuff man, thanks! Keep it up 💪😎🇺🇸
@JKDVIPER
@JKDVIPER Жыл бұрын
Hi ARVIN. If you think about it right. A black hole is a good or perfect example of what an atom probably looks like in realty. On an atom, the electron would be compared to the event horizon on a black hole. A certain section or volume is filled with a fluid or gas or an electrical field, on or near the nucleus. So the pulp or the core would be a supermassive black hole made of heavier elements in subatomic particles. SUBCOOLED and LIQUID STATE these volumes break the atom and resemble our smallest interactions. Whilst the MACRO SENSE looks very similar.
@yeshagarwal431
@yeshagarwal431 Жыл бұрын
I have a little off topic question but we know due to entropy time travel is not possible because entropy always increases or remains same but that is for the closed system what if we create a system in which one sides entropy is getting transferred to the other side something like a huge refrigerater, can then time travel (in backwards direction) be possible?
@kafalonitis
@kafalonitis Жыл бұрын
The meaning of mass has been deciphered in the "Novel quantitative push gravity/electricity theory poised for verification". It provides an alternative platform to map out existing experimental data. Hopefully, there may be a correspondence between the outlined ideas in the above video and the ideas on mass, force fields, black holes and much more derived by the proposed novel theory. It is much easier to conceptualize with palpable explanations. The examination of alternatives is always a fruitful exercise. Please give it a try.
@stephanieparker1250
@stephanieparker1250 Жыл бұрын
I learned a lot from this video, thanks! The graphics were very helpful 🙌
@spiralsun1
@spiralsun1 Жыл бұрын
Awesome!! Thanks-been thinking about chirality and symmetries for years and this really helped.
@freefall9832
@freefall9832 Жыл бұрын
Symmetry seemed like something thrown in to complicate the subject
@TD-iy8us
@TD-iy8us Жыл бұрын
​@@freefall9832 it's not
@freefall9832
@freefall9832 Жыл бұрын
@TD haha comment from the past, I looked into it, and I'm not buying symmetry. Physicists found their rabbit hole and they might be lost to us forever hahaha
@TD-iy8us
@TD-iy8us Жыл бұрын
@@freefall9832 why aren't you buying symmetry?
@freefall9832
@freefall9832 Жыл бұрын
@TD I see modern physics built on shaky foundations. The misuse of math to predict future or past events has led to the current state where things aren't adding up. Symmetry, entanglement, red shift are all in doubt and on the chopping block
@Erik_Swiger
@Erik_Swiger Жыл бұрын
Lately, I've really been spending some time trying to wrap my head around this stuff. Like, a photon is neutral, yet it contains (apparently) a negative and a positive charge, and magnetic north and south poles which alternate? And at 90 degrees - what's that about? I'm sure someone could refer me to a textbook of fundamentals, but I can already see that bottomless rabbit hole. I know life isn't "simple" but it seems as if there's a basic truth I'm not understanding. And photons can become electron/positron pairs...and I haven't even got to hadrons. It makes my head hurt, in a sort of good way.
@cademosley4886
@cademosley4886 Жыл бұрын
As I understand it, a charged particle is a field source and a non-charged particle is a field carrier, but not itself a source. So a photon is an EM field carrier, but not an EM field source. That's why it's not charged. If you want the most basic of analogies or images to imagine, imagine a charged particle like an electron is like a little propeller that induces a vortex motion in the water around it that creates this rotating system, sort of like the electric field in 2D. That's like how a field source works. The photon would be a component of that moving system itself. In the whirlpool image, they are arbitrary points of the rotating water. (The vortex motion is more complex, but this gets the idea across.) A photon is "carrying" the rotating motion of the EM field (it is the motion), but it itself is not a little propeller creating its own vortex with it at the center. So it is not a charged particle. It's a field carrier but not a field source. When two vortex systems like whirlpools approach, which gives a rough analogy for the electric field in 2D, if they're spinning the opposite direction, opposite charge, they'll drag each other into each other where they intersect, if there's enough energy at that place. If they're spinning the same direction, same charge, they'll push each other back where they intersect. We can model where those two field components intersect and push at each other as a "photon exchange", as two photons mediating the electric "force". They're "field carriers" and "force carriers", but again they're not little propellers spinning up the field themselves. They're just carrying that field motion that the charged particle, the electron, created as the field source. Contrast all of this to gluons, which are both field carriers and field sources. A color charged quark is a little propeller inducing a vortex motion in the color field as a source, the carrying components of which we call the gluon field, so it's making gluons. But the difference is each component of that field motion, the gluons, are also little propellers themselves that create their own vortexes with themselves at the center, and the whole thing quickly cascades into these runaway propellers making propellers quickly sucking in the whole system back into the low energy state. I think that's right as a really crude but useful analogy, but anybody can feel free to correct it or make it better as a crude but useful analogy.
@XEinstein
@XEinstein Жыл бұрын
@@cademosley4886 wow... that was the most amazing analogy I have ever read
@dipling.pitzler7650
@dipling.pitzler7650 Жыл бұрын
That explains in my opinion where the energy comes from when the bond is broken by fission !The Gluon binding force AKA Mass of approx 1000 MeV / proton is released via radiation as it is no longer needed reducing the measured mass each time this happens. Does any body agree or is this TBS ?
@rajeevyelkur7568
@rajeevyelkur7568 Жыл бұрын
both the weak force and strong force are invovled in nuclear fission. if the nm,ber of nuetrons and protons is not the same then weak force is also involved. otherwise you could say its just the strong force (ie gluons)
@zahidaminbhat5934
@zahidaminbhat5934 Жыл бұрын
great job👍👍👍👍👍👍
@nisheethrastogi
@nisheethrastogi Жыл бұрын
Most accurate but, simplified easy to understand physics!
@KaliFissure
@KaliFissure Жыл бұрын
Mass units such as a neutron or proton have, are photons of wavelength 2pi Planck length trapped over their own gravity with the help of a neutrino m=E/c² mass is energy in orbit over a sphere, trapped by its own gravity creating classical inertia c² (v²) creating inertia.
@Regularsshorts
@Regularsshorts Жыл бұрын
Dimensions increases with characteristics. 0D has no characteristics 1D gains length 2D gains width and 3D gains height. But what comes next? What does the 4th dimension gains? Time. The Universe expands and the space expands with it, space expands in the 4th dimension and since the 4th dimension is time it flows forward as the expansion. Gravity affects the flow of time. Why? Because mass slows down the rate of expansion of the 4th dimension. Since we are 3D beings it is hard for us to think about time as a spacial dimension. Think of a hypercube, it is made of two cubes with its corners joined by lines. Those lines represents time and the expansion of that line represents the forward flow of time
@florianschneider3982
@florianschneider3982 Жыл бұрын
A hypercube is made of 8 cubes
@c.s.4273
@c.s.4273 Жыл бұрын
How much LSD does it need to think that way? 😉 PS: I do not want to imply you are wrong.
@Vitamin.Z
@Vitamin.Z Жыл бұрын
What is the universe expanding into?
@florianschneider3982
@florianschneider3982 Жыл бұрын
@@Vitamin.Z Nothing
@c.s.4273
@c.s.4273 Жыл бұрын
@@Vitamin.Z There is no "into" as into implies an already given space. The space expansion happens in the fourth dimension, in time. If you would stop time you would also stop space expansion and if you would turn back the "clock" the existing space would shrink until there is no more time and space. There is an entity called "spacetime" that is hard to grasp. The separation of space and time is our illusion. It is like separating the second dimension from the third dimension or the separation of the first dimension from the second dimension. They are an essential part of each other. Try to see it this way, imagine us living in a universe with only one dimension. If you want to meet me there you need just 1 information like the distance on a ruler, for example the house number if the world would be a street. Now imagine living in a two dimensional world, you would need 2 informations to meet me on a surface (the x- and the y-axes), it would be like living in a town, you also need the street name and house number. Now imagine living in a three dimensional world, like for example a big city with skyscrapers, you would need 3 informations, the street, the house number and the floor number. Is this enough to meet me? No, because we live in a four dimensional world, therefore in order to meet me you need also the time or you would miss me. Therefore to locate me you need 4 informations, time including. This should be proof enough that we live in a four dimensional world.
@onemediuminmotion
@onemediuminmotion 8 ай бұрын
1. First "kinetic energy", as the linear momentum of a particulate mass-object that is in motion relative to another (e.g. 'observer') mass-object, as imparted to it by an initial 'pulse' of accelerating force; and the "potential energy" we say a mass-object has that is being held aloft in a (say) gravitational field, are in fact the same thing - the "held aloft" object being, in fact, subjected to a sustained (or you might say, not yet completed pulse of) accelerating force point-radially with respect to the center of mass of the system under consideration. 2. Second, all "motion" is - ultimately - point-radial, originating from "The Big Bang", and still proceeding from it we must assume - no matter which 'direction' a given particulate mass-object is "pushed" by one of its fellows. What distinguishes a bounded region (such as a "proton") of confined motion (such as that of its "quarks") from the "empty space" (defined by the propagation of EMR photons through it at "the speed of light") surrounding such a region, is precisely that property it exhibits that we call "mass", and which is more accurately described (I propose) as the point-radial (and 'still spinning') fluid vortexual acceleration-flow (complete with 'length contraction' and 'time dilation') imparted to the spacetime contained in that region by some initial point-radially 'explosive' event like "The Big Bang" or a stellar supernova "event". 3. "Spacetime", the 'stuff' we perceive as being "curved" by the presence of a gravitating mass, is an otherwise scale-uniform superfluid medium (SUM) whose self-relative motion -- a.k.a. "acceleration" -- is what endows it with structure (geometric and otherwise).
@astrophysicist9222
@astrophysicist9222 Жыл бұрын
Question: in high school i learned that the mass of neutron is higher than the mass of proton because a neutron has 2 down quarks whereas a proton has a single down quark but according to this video quarks are responsible for only 1% of the mass so could it be that the gluon cloud formed by down quark is heavier than that of the gluon cloud formed by up quark
@migs192
@migs192 3 ай бұрын
Huh things are clearer now. Thank you for the best explanation I have yet to see.
@LowellBoggs
@LowellBoggs Жыл бұрын
Love this video. Thanks. How come the interactions with the higgs field don't count as measurements?
@AnilKumar-xl2te
@AnilKumar-xl2te Жыл бұрын
I appreciate the efforts of all scientists over the thousands of years We need more scientists to understand this vast universe We need more scientists like Einstein
@b.s.7693
@b.s.7693 Жыл бұрын
Nick picking question: 12:57 the y-axis represents the energy level, but what is the meaning of the x-axis?
@ArvinAsh
@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
Y axis is potential energy. X axis is the expectation value of the field. I talked about what expectation value is in the video. It has to do with the overall energy of particle/anti-particle creation and annihilation in the field.
@valkyrie_592
@valkyrie_592 7 ай бұрын
I am glad that some people that are not dancing on tiktok, do something actually highly productive to propel our existence into the future
@timjohnson979
@timjohnson979 Жыл бұрын
This must be mass week. Anton Petrov also had a video on his KZfaq channel this week called "But What Exactly Is Mass And How Is It Formed?"
@manicmadpanickedman2249
@manicmadpanickedman2249 Жыл бұрын
Hey check this example out kzfaq.infoFxE-V3JN-EE?feature=share
@nixdorfbrazil
@nixdorfbrazil Жыл бұрын
PBS Space Time released one also commeting on QCED and gluon energy to be causing the rest of the mass.
@amanvijayjindal5742
@amanvijayjindal5742 Жыл бұрын
This is bestest explanation of MASS in KZfaq universe, many alternate universes exist in minds of those 1 percent Scientists.. who actually actually reached these MIND BENDING conclusions.. ie mass comes from energy, the gluon clouds.. whoa.. a BIG WHOA
@MC-wg3fm
@MC-wg3fm Жыл бұрын
At 11:59, the proton example showing the actual measured mass (938 MeV) vs the quarks(9.4MeV). That total is due to the interactions of the quarks, bosons and fermions with the difference of the total mass (99%) and individual quarks mass (1%). Energy equals mass. The closer to the speed of light something with mass get the more energy required. Stands to reason the opposite might be true. If something can start out as massless energy traveling the speed light, interacts with something else that also started out as massless energy, the energy from the interaction would force the particles to slow and in turn form mass. 🤔
@alternative1999
@alternative1999 Жыл бұрын
This is very important for me to understand. I've watched this a few times. My question is: what is the constraint of the symmetry model, in that you focus on the mirror image, like copying what's next to it?. I wonder if up down similarities are a form of symmetry. Of course I'm talking about Fractals. They definitely exist. Please what is your take on them?
@JackSanders7777
@JackSanders7777 Жыл бұрын
4D & 3D particle ages as Universe contains the 2nd dimension or Higgs Field stores information in 2 dimensions and allows faster than light, left handed neutrinos by mirroring these particles in the 3rd dimension which annihilate giving mass to the particles that pass through ths 2D layer of Universe.
@gwentchamp8720
@gwentchamp8720 Жыл бұрын
You mentioned that the "Net energy of virtual particle creation/annihilation adds up to zero" Is that the same things as saying the net energy of the Universe is zero?
@ArvinAsh
@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
No, my statement was regarding expectation value. The expectation value of all the fields (except the Higgs field) is zero. This means that the lowest energy state of the fields is zero, meaning that virtual particles that are coming in and out of existence in these fields in totality add up to zero. This video I made might make this virtual particle issue clearer: kzfaq.info/get/bejne/i9V8ms-h1tOzomQ.html
@blonkasnootch7850
@blonkasnootch7850 3 ай бұрын
Theory: 1. We did never produce anti matter in the labs. It was something else but no anti matter! 2. We and all galaxys visible to us are in "local" spots of regular matter which we can see and where gravity works attracting. 3. Between this galaxies is anti matter which we can not interact with and which negated gravity forces are pushing the galaxies apart. 4. this was not like this in the early universe, it is a result of the attracting and pushing forces of matter and anti matter it self.
@Shamans09
@Shamans09 Жыл бұрын
I do wonder why we chose 3D-BOWL representation of Higgs field. Higgs field is not even in our 4 dimensional plane, right? also, can we even track down the position of particle in the bowl?
@samuelbendayan2235
@samuelbendayan2235 10 ай бұрын
Inside the Meson, since quark and anti-quark have opposite charge, why do you need gluons to bind them together? Don't they naturally attract?
@JamesWilson-ve9zi
@JamesWilson-ve9zi Жыл бұрын
The Universe is not just expanding the whole Universe is also rotating which started with the big bang.
@mskEduTech
@mskEduTech Жыл бұрын
Excellent
@jamesallison9725
@jamesallison9725 2 ай бұрын
Thanks, now I know what the big deal about the Higgs field and the Higgs boson was all about. Nice explanation!!
@XEinstein
@XEinstein Жыл бұрын
4:19 Is there a correlation between the number of the symmetry groups and the amount of bosons? In SU1 I notice that there is one boson: the photon. In SU2 there is the W and Z boson, so that seems to give 2 bosons, however there are two W bosons, so why is that? And in SU3 there are three color charges, but I believe there are 8 (?) different gluons? Still 8 is 2³, so is there a correlation between the symmetry group number and the amount of bosons? If so, why?
@ArvinAsh
@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
Yes indeed. See the rest of the video, where I talk about it.
@ministerofjoy
@ministerofjoy Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@tresajessygeorge210
@tresajessygeorge210 Жыл бұрын
THANK YOU... DR. ARVIN ASH...!!!
@manicmadpanickedman2249
@manicmadpanickedman2249 Жыл бұрын
You sir should see this kzfaq.infoFxE-V3JN-EE?feature=share
@NaturalFuture
@NaturalFuture 7 ай бұрын
Why do people keep insisting that the origin of mass is the Higgs boson? The mass of a visible material object is the manifestation of the energy of the creation and annihilation of quarks and antiquarks (kaons) in the nucleus of an atom. The Higgs field is a velocity-regulation mechanism that Spacetime uses to keep massive visible matter objects from reaching light-speed by using their intrinsic masses to generate a resistance to further increases in velocity.
@txlish
@txlish Жыл бұрын
Appreciate Arvin, for peeling 1 layer at a time for a person interested in topic But minimal acedemic knowledge of high school physics of 70s -:)
@jessewilliams6459
@jessewilliams6459 Жыл бұрын
Can someone tell me what the symbols in the bottom left at 1:15 (intro screen with text: Arvin Ash Complex Questions Explained Simply) are from or are called?
@alternative1999
@alternative1999 Жыл бұрын
I know I'm being dim not stopping at the link that'll untrip me understanding this, but I just watched it again, and couldn't find the right link! You kindly recommended me looking at the link explaining strong forces as I'm struggling with Gluons, but links kept popping up and going like quarks. I didn't know which one to follow. Can you be really kind and tell me the time info for the link? Second viewing just confused me more. You're terrific at explaining, but I overthink in Physics which messes with my listening and following. Thanks so much. I don't want to press the wrong link, I'll just get lost further .
@ArvinAsh
@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
If you're looking to find out more about the strong force how quarks and gluons interact, then my video on QCD is probably what you are looking for: kzfaq.info/get/bejne/gdSSpbWZ0LCngp8.html Or this new one on how quarks stay glued together: kzfaq.info/get/bejne/jaxilsKb38vKe5c.html
@alternative1999
@alternative1999 Жыл бұрын
@@ArvinAsh Thanks 👍
@barryzeeberg3672
@barryzeeberg3672 Жыл бұрын
At 6:03 The video states: "Modern quantum theory shows that all particles are excitations in fields that permeate the entire universe." My question (that I have asked many times but never has been answered) is: Consider the (x,y,z,t) location of a particle in the "real" everyday world that we experience. How is that location determined by (or related to) the excitation in the quantum field? For instance, I am familiar with Fourier Transforms and Inverse Fourier Transforms. In this case, there is a very clear way to compute the real-world coordinates of an object from the Fourier Transform. I guess I am asking how this inversion is done for the case of an excitation in a quantum field. Also, how can we in the every-day world move a particle? That is, when we "think" we are moving an ordinary object, it must be that we are "really" changing the excitations in the quantum field. Please help me to understand this. I feel that if the theory is not easily seen to function in the ordinary world, it is not a very "useful" or "realistic" theory. Or is the underlying reality the quantum field, and we just are under the illusion that we live in what we call the "ordinary" world? Is our "reality" entirely an illusion, just our brain tricking us?
@ArvinAsh
@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
Our brains are not tricking us. At their root, everything is fields. However for macro objects the waves and uncertainties are so small that we don't notice them. If it were possible to shrink to the size of atoms, you would perceive the quantum reality of all things.
@regentword
@regentword Жыл бұрын
the actions in the fields are ultimately the result of our actions ... not the other way round ..... therfire we are creating what we call reality
@barryzeeberg3672
@barryzeeberg3672 Жыл бұрын
@@ArvinAsh Thank you so much for your response. But I still do not have an intuitive understanding. Perhaps my conceptual problem is that I am assuming that the excitation in the quantum field is a rather "delocalized" wave that permeates through the entire field (much like the Fourier transform of a real object). But maybe my conception is incorrect, and the excitation is really just at one point in the quantum field, right where the real object is? If I use my hand to move a real object, then presumably this would "cause" the position of the excitation in the quantum field to move? Does this movement happen instantaneously, or is there some delay, perhaps related to the finite speed of light?
@johnsmith-ol9qj
@johnsmith-ol9qj Жыл бұрын
Sometimes I think we overthink the universe. While the fine mechanics are hard it can be easily explained as a type of battery. A battery only works when it is out of equilibrium. The voltage is highest when the ions are as separate as can be in the electrolyte. Once entropy runs it's course the battery is considered "dead" because there isn't a working voltage anymore for it's application. Now apply this thinking to the Higgs field. On a cosmic scale all of existence is because of a small amount of imbalance due to probabilities generated in singularity with the collapsing of the wave function that dictates the rules of our universe.
@adifferentkennybaker
@adifferentkennybaker Жыл бұрын
Good one.
@alphalunamare
@alphalunamare Жыл бұрын
I have a problem with Symmetries being causal agents. I believe it to be an incorrect description. Quite simply these symmetries are exhibited by the systems under inspection. Likewise with symmetry breaking. It is useful to have metaphors that can be expressed as symmetries but that does not demand that causal agencies should exist, they are merely descriptions in human understandable text. On a minor point, if Chirality is so important why is it so little talked about?
@dannydandaniel8040
@dannydandaniel8040 Жыл бұрын
I think Emmy Noether might disagree.. causality is an expression of symmetry
@alphalunamare
@alphalunamare Жыл бұрын
@@dannydandaniel8040 I doubt that very much, She knew what She was talking about. Correspondence does not mean in 'English' that there exists a causality and it certainly does not imply 'direction'. It merely means that there is a relationship of sorts.
@vitr1916
@vitr1916 Жыл бұрын
I am thinking the nature of symmetry is usefully to connect things or exchange information like those micro particles from different nucleus. These particles may exchange from one to others. If those particles (like electrons) don’t exchange or move from one to others. The system may be exploding soon like stars are no longer to support their cores.
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