Dr. James Beacham - What's outside the universe? | The Conference 2019

2024 ж. 14 Мам.
717 100 Рет қаралды

Dr. James Beacham is a particle physicist searching for answers to the biggest open questions of physics using the largest experiment ever, the Large Hadron Collider at CERN. He hunts for dark matter, gravitons, quantum black holes and dark photons as a member of the ATLAS collaboration, one of the teams that discovered the Higgs boson in 2012. He ended The Conference 2019 with a science class out of this world and a reminder of that to physics - we're all the same.
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  • His hair style convince me that he knows what he's talking about.

    @selvammaniamawasi697@selvammaniamawasi6972 жыл бұрын
    • I think he was/is Melany.

      @emissarysisko9314@emissarysisko93142 жыл бұрын
    • @@emissarysisko9314 Bro, chill out

      @bariumselenided5152@bariumselenided51522 жыл бұрын
    • I LOLLED 😭

      @bmjw18@bmjw182 жыл бұрын
    • Another way of saying your iq at 189! Lol

      @CollDott@CollDott2 жыл бұрын
    • The title convinces me that he doesn’t know the answer. Im not going to spend 60 minutes listening to someone make a guess.

      @jamesleon4883@jamesleon48832 жыл бұрын
  • The 2 people men who won the Nobel prize are not just 2 old white men. Very rude, considering the amount of work and sacrifice those two must’ve made to earn that prize. Content of character my friend, content of character.

    @kasonf2176@kasonf2176 Жыл бұрын
    • his dismissal of white men achievements is what i expect from a university "professor" these days

      @bumblesquatt@bumblesquatt Жыл бұрын
    • What you talkin bout Willis? 🤔

      @shaggymcshaggison9751@shaggymcshaggison9751 Жыл бұрын
    • What comments do you expect from a flaming woke liberal?

      @carlosdanger947@carlosdanger947 Жыл бұрын
    • I just don't see why he mentioned that. It just didn't seem appropriate. It seemed racist. Is the fact that white males have contributed greatly to science, math, etc. a mark against them? If so, then what about the NBA? Is it wrong that it is dominated by black males? What does James say when he watches an NBA game and sees the starting lineup - "five black males?" The "white males" he referred to were brilliant. There's a wave of feeling today that white male = bad, all others = noble beings suppressed by white males.

      @billsmith7673@billsmith7673 Жыл бұрын
    • He is a strange one

      @herealittlewhile7448@herealittlewhile74483 ай бұрын
  • What did the two “white males” reference part have to do with anything? 🤔

    @joshredding9588@joshredding95889 ай бұрын
    • Cringe comment... Specially him being white

      @aztro187@aztro1876 ай бұрын
    • yea im pretty sure those guys won because of how smart they are not because of skin color.

      @benjames8211@benjames821111 күн бұрын
    • Nothing. But that little "ping" pales in comparison to his subjective sociopolitical speechmaking beginning at 42:28.

      @kellyrobinson1780@kellyrobinson17802 күн бұрын
  • I've never felt more emotionally moved by science talks than by Dr. Beacham's talks.

    @jerryhogsett@jerryhogsett Жыл бұрын
    • Beacham is a ding bat.

      @johnhanek167@johnhanek167 Жыл бұрын
    • @@andyburns8551 I like knobs.

      @jerryhogsett@jerryhogsett Жыл бұрын
    • OMG, I just noticed that he's the teacher Mr. Van Driessen.

      @tomasinacovell4293@tomasinacovell429311 ай бұрын
  • Absolutely fantastic presentation

    @dorincirca5337@dorincirca53372 жыл бұрын
    • Yea a bit too fantastic for a physics lecture.

      @BlacksmithTWD@BlacksmithTWD Жыл бұрын
    • This is like an Oniontalks. Pretentious, preachy, melodramatic, sulerficial, assinine, frivolous.

      @jamesbarlow6423@jamesbarlow6423 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jamesbarlow6423 sßssßzzzzzzzzzsßzzzzzzzzázzzzzzazzzzzzzzzzzzzzzá ZZ zzz zzz zzz zzz zzz zzz azZzzzazzzzzzzZzzzzzazzZzzzzzzzzzzzzzZzZazzazzzza zzz zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzZz zzz zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzaazzzzzazzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzZzzzzazzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzZZzaazZz as zzzzzZzzzzzzzzzzzzZzazzzzzazzAzZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzazzzZzZzazzzzzZzzazzzzazZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzazzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzZZzzzzzazzzzzzz zzz zzzzzzzZzzzZzzzzzzZzZzZZZzzzzzzzZzz Zzz zzzzzzzzzzazzzzzzZzzZzzzzzzZzzzzzzzZzZZZZzzzzZZZzzzzzazZzzzzZZZZZZZzzzzzzzzzzazzzazzzZzzzzz ZZZ zzzzzzZzzzZzZzZzzzzzzazzzzzZzzZZZZzzzzzzzzZzzzZzzzzazZzZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzZzzzZzzzzZzzzzZZZzzzzZzZzzzzzzzzzzz zzzzzzZzzzZzZzZzzzzzzazzzzzZzzZZZZzzzzzzzzZzzzZzzzzazZzZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzZzzzZzzzzZzzzzZZZzzzzZzZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzZzzzzzZzzZzzzzzzzzzAzzZzzzzzzzzZzZzzzzzazzzzZAZZzzZZZzzzzaZzzzzZzzzzZzzZzzzzzzzzzZzz zzz zZzzzzzzzzzzzZZzzzzzzzzZzzzZzzzzz zzz zZzzZzzZzzzzzzAzzZzzzzzzzzZzzzz Zzz zzzZZZZZzzzzzzzAzZzZZ ZZZ ZzzzzzzzZZZAZzzzzzzzzzzzzZz zzz zzzzzz zzz zzzzzzzz ZZZ Z ZZZ ZZZZZZZZZZ ZZZ ZZZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzZzZzzZZZZ ZZZ ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZzzzzzzzzzzzzZZZz zzz zZzzzZzzzzz zzz zzz zzz zzzzzzzZ zzzzzzZzzzZzZzZzzzzzzazzzzzZzzZZZZzzzzzzzzZzzzZzzzzazZzZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzZzzzZzzzzZzzzzZZZzzzzZzZzzzzzzzzzzz zzzzzZzzzzZzzZzzzzZzzzzzzzzZzzzzzzzZZZZZZzzzzz zzz zZzzzZzzzzz zzz zzz zzz zzz zzzzz zzz zzZzZZzZzzzzZzzzzzZzzzzZzZzzZZzZZzzzzzZzzZZzzzZzzzzzZz zzz zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzZzzZzZZZZZzzZzZzzZZzzzzzzzz ZZZ zzzZZz zzz zzz Zzz zzzzZzzzzzzzZzzz Za ZZz zzz Zzz zZzzz Zzz zZZz Zzz zzzzZzzzzzzzZzzz zzz zzz zzzzZ ZZZ ZZzzZzzzzZZZZzzzZzzzZz zzz zzz zzz ZzzZZZZZzzzzzzzzZzzzZzz zzz ZZzzzZZzzzz ZZZ ZzzzZZZ zzz zzzZ ZZZ ZzzzZzZZzZZZZZZzzzZZZZZZzzz Zzz ZzZZzzzZzz ZZZ zZwz zzz ZzZZZz zzz zzz zzz Zzz zzz zzzzzZZZZ ZZZ zzZ zzz z zzz zzz zzz zzz zzz z zzz, zzz zzz ZZZ ZZ ZZZ zzZZZ ZZZ ZZ ZZZ ZZZ ZZZ ZZZ z ZZZ z Zzz zZzzZZZzz zzz z ZZZ ZZZ ZZZ ZZZ zzz zzz zZzzZZZZZZzZZz zzz zzzZ ZZZ zzz zzz ZZ TOP Zzz zzz ZZZ Z ZZZ ZzzZzZZz ZZZ ZZZ ZzZz ZZZ Z ZZZ Z Z ZZZ ZZ ZzZ zzz zZZZZ zzz zzz zzz Zzz z zzz zzz zZzzZZ ZZZ ZZZ ZZ zzz ZZz ZZZ ZZZ ZZ zzz zzzzzz zzz ZzZZz zzz ZZZ zzzZZ zzz zzz zZz zzz ZZz Zzz ZzzzZZZzzZz ZZZ Z ZZZ z zzz zzZZzzZZZzZZzzzz ZZZ zZZZz zzz ZZZZ ZZZ Z ZZZ ZZ zzZZzz zzz zzz Zzz zzz zzzzzzZZZZ,z,zZzz,ZZZZ ZZZ z zzz z zzz zzz,ZzZzz ZZZ ZZZ ZZ Z,ZZzzzzzz ZZZ ZZ zzz Zz

      @hurricanReno123@hurricanReno123 Жыл бұрын
    • What is so fantastic? He said nothing finally! If I say that the bible says God created space matter and time (Genesis chapter 1, verse 1) wouldn't it be fantastic also? If not, why?

      @donaldgodin3491@donaldgodin3491 Жыл бұрын
  • James sir, you are an incredible lecturer, and educator. You make your lecturing come alive! Your articulating and the knack of making extremely complicated science classes, understandable to thick empty headed people like me, is a gift! You are special, my friend!! Thanks for educating me in the workings of the Universe! 😊

    @kevincasson9848@kevincasson9848 Жыл бұрын
    • OMG, I just noticed that he's the teacher Mr. Van Driessen.

      @tomasinacovell4293@tomasinacovell429311 ай бұрын
    • @@tomasinacovell4293 don't understand bab lol

      @kevincasson9848@kevincasson984811 ай бұрын
    • He sucks, dry mouth and injecting hes dumb liberal comments here an there... Passssss

      @aztro187@aztro1876 ай бұрын
  • universe is everything, then what is outside of it? This is a question that has been asked for centuries, and even today, we don't have a definitive answer. But as this video shows, the universe is not just a static, unchanging entity. It's expanding and evolving, and we're just starting to scratch the surface of understanding its mysteries. Melody, the narrator's childhood friend, was unafraid to ask the big questions, and it's that kind of curiosity and willingness to explore that has driven us to make so many incredible discoveries about the universe. Who knows what we'll uncover next

    @dylan_curious@dylan_curious Жыл бұрын
    • its a question for selft volunteer ignorants and brainwashed, sadly most of the stupid masses. Research Satans/God FLAT EARTH

      @feth7747@feth77473 ай бұрын
  • You nailed it at the 27minute mark m8 when you said :You might think I'm Crazy???" - You can bet on it fella- I think you're Crazy.

    @peterkerruish8136@peterkerruish813616 сағат бұрын
  • Get this guy a cup of water lol

    @britneyystaples91@britneyystaples91 Жыл бұрын
  • This has made me wonder and I want to wake up early every day to make a change to other folks lives

    @shazanali692@shazanali692 Жыл бұрын
  • in college, I took a black holes, relativity and cosmology course.. and asked my professor this very question.. what was outside the edge.. He laughed it off and said I was stupid for asking it and no idea what I was talking about. If this guy had been my professor.. I would have gotten an A in that course.. he explained it in 30 seconds.. even if it is just a theory because we really don't know.. it satisfies that question.

    @Robert_Prather@Robert_Prather Жыл бұрын
    • Retired teacher/prof/tech analyst here I have always thought that the brightest people are those who ask a LOT of questions.

      @williamwatts4790@williamwatts4790 Жыл бұрын
    • @@williamwatts4790 thank you.

      @Robert_Prather@Robert_Prather Жыл бұрын
    • how can there Be an edge , when everything moves away from each other every galaxy is moving away from every other galaxy at the speed of light ... trust me , there's No edge or we would see waves coming back in the background radiation picture there isn't a center Because there is no edge , when you get That statement , you'll get the point

      @ThermaL-ty7bw@ThermaL-ty7bw Жыл бұрын
    • @@ThermaL-ty7bw back then and now.. I didn't come up with the idea of the "edge" I just asked if there was an edge, what would be beyond it.. so you're response isn't needed.. yet again youtube strikes!

      @Robert_Prather@Robert_Prather Жыл бұрын
    • Thank you

      @helmuthosborne7028@helmuthosborne7028 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you Dr Beachman!

    @shawntalley7676@shawntalley7676 Жыл бұрын
  • Going to 43 minutes tells us who he really is....someone who wants what he wants, and knows better what you need. Sound familiar?

    @terrific804@terrific804 Жыл бұрын
  • Great presentation...but I certainly did not expect a morality lecture on conclusion. Sadly we cannot dictate morality nor location and speed of an electron...

    @erniedee6324@erniedee6324 Жыл бұрын
    • Oh and that's just the tip of the iceberg if the things you can't explain.

      @user-ni2ki2wx7t@user-ni2ki2wx7t3 ай бұрын
    • Hey, let's talk about science, but I also have to let everyone know I'm a liberal too.

      @d.b.s.6381@d.b.s.63812 ай бұрын
    • @@d.b.s.6381that’s because they are usually the educated ones that don’t believe in conspiracy theories or that the world was created by a mysterious man in the sky. Also they are the ones that don’t condone fascism.

      @ivangomezguitar9518@ivangomezguitar95182 ай бұрын
    • He’s not dictating anything. He’s letting you know objetive facts.

      @kokygonzalez@kokygonzalezАй бұрын
  • What a moving "talk". How much have a learnt from you. Thanks, a thousend thanks. Send my love to my sister in this universe, Melody.

    @leofranssen@leofranssen Жыл бұрын
  • Man I love these subjects so much I wish I had the math skills to enter this field. Dr. James is amazing at these lectures just dropping gems left and right.

    @mitchellbrown1425@mitchellbrown14252 ай бұрын
  • I don't know what's outside but there is a great diner at the edge

    @butterchuggins5409@butterchuggins54092 жыл бұрын
    • I’ll have a table for two at that restaurant…:- )

      @sync7660@sync76602 жыл бұрын
    • A giant microscope and a bunch of aliens watching us. Laughing.

      @otbricki@otbricki Жыл бұрын
    • Carl's Diner

      @rednecked7462@rednecked7462 Жыл бұрын
    • Table for one lonly guy?

      @jamesdaniels3699@jamesdaniels3699 Жыл бұрын
    • 🤣😎 underrated comment! #42

      @ladydragon111@ladydragon111 Жыл бұрын
  • Everybody should just watch the videos about the double split experiment to vaguely understand what quantum physics is trying to deal with. And then watch a video on Entanglement and your head will just explode.

    @redmed10@redmed103 жыл бұрын
  • Fascinating discussion as it warms my being that i am all things ,great and small in the notion of infinite universes

    @tarkineWild@tarkineWild Жыл бұрын
  • Great guy... Explains vividly and easily explained. Following him at "the royal institute" which, by the way, is a fantastic "place" with many fantastic people with fantastic lectures.

    @tuben0001@tuben00014 ай бұрын
  • Can anyone explain to me: How do we know its the entirety of space that's expanding? How do we know the big bang isn't just an expansion of matter and energy into a pre-existing - and possibly infinite - void?

    @EASYTIGER10@EASYTIGER102 жыл бұрын
    • Part of it is that - assuming we accept the theory of relativity, which I would say is a healthy assumption given the massive experimental evidence - it is the only explanation of the fact that the further away objects are from us, the faster they appear to recede. That can only be explained by assuming space itself expands. If 'stuff' just kept on moving in all directions 'in space' from 'some explosion' this would not be the case. Try to visualise both concepts in your head and you can actually understand this. The confusing comment in the talk about that the space that makes up you is also inflating leaves out that inflation is overcome by gravity, which is why local galaxies don't recede for example. One is actually on a collision course with our Milky Way. Why it happens is a different question entirely of course, but the inflation of space is simply an observable fact, assuming (again) that Relativity is really a thing.

      @berendharmsen@berendharmsen2 жыл бұрын
    • We dont. Its just the accepted theory on existence because the past few hundred years and we've decided that based on what we can see now must be absolute truth. I'm sure it wont change based on another few hundred years when we detect even farther out.... Oh also being unable to describe over 80% of the mass and gravity of the universe as just invisible matter isnt a factor whatsoever either. Its just fact. Even if we cant see, or interact or even prove what it actually is

      @nelson_rebel3907@nelson_rebel39072 жыл бұрын
    • @@nelson_rebel3907 GR has been tested over and over and has yet to fail in any of its predictions- bending of space-time due to massive objects, frame dragging, gravitational waves, time dilation, etc. That doesn’t mean a new theory couldn’t explain dark matter and dark energy, that’s just scientific progression. Just like Newton’s laws aren’t “wrong” Einstein just came up with a more complete theory

      @twt1524@twt15242 жыл бұрын
    • If the universe is expanding there has to be an edge orbit can’t be growing.

      @lordzedd3297@lordzedd32972 жыл бұрын
    • That’s what scientists are trying to discover. What might cause this expansion? Is the universe truly infinite, and what would that mean? There are many such unanswered questions.

      @TheSwiftMagician@TheSwiftMagician Жыл бұрын
  • I reckon somewhere in the universe, there was also a particle physicist delivering a talk on social justice.

    @C.D.J.Burton@C.D.J.Burton3 жыл бұрын
    • Why.

      @williamgraham8840@williamgraham88403 жыл бұрын
    • Hahahaha. That's cute!

      @Belialith@Belialith3 жыл бұрын
    • You mean except for this one? "Two white males won the Nobel prize... what a surprise" I wanted to here about physics not sjw mentalities.

      @j.dmetalhead7517@j.dmetalhead75173 жыл бұрын
    • @@j.dmetalhead7517 he is a sjw delivering a talk on particle physics

      @C.D.J.Burton@C.D.J.Burton3 жыл бұрын
    • @@C.D.J.Burton I was enjoying the video until I heard him say those words. Its a shame. I had to rewind the youtube video because I was suprised tbh. For someone in His position to revert to that is shocking espeshialy when science itslef should be represented regardless of skin colour. I was about to share His video on social media but after that statement he made I am declining.

      @zark212@zark2123 жыл бұрын
  • Thank you sir for educating us in the manner that you do. Truly appreciate you.

    @AmericanPatriot447@AmericanPatriot44711 ай бұрын
  • This is just great information congrats on this talk

    @Marioramirez666alberto@Marioramirez666alberto Жыл бұрын
    • He said a lot, but answered nothing finally. Now if I say that God created space matter and time, would you congratulate me? If not, why? What I said also comes from a book, the bible. Genesis chapter 1, verse 1.

      @donaldgodin3491@donaldgodin3491 Жыл бұрын
    • Who had created the God? It's us only.. for the sake of not going insane by taking about an infinity, in a number of infinities for an infinite answer.

      @snovite11@snovite11 Жыл бұрын
    • @@snovite11 If there is no God, we would not be here to talk about it. No God. No world. No creature. No life of any kind. I we are here, and conscious about it, it is because we have been created by someone who is not of this world. And God is not from this world, and has no beginning and no end. Or then, how could nothing create something??? I'll wait for your answer.

      @donaldgodin3491@donaldgodin3491 Жыл бұрын
  • A captivating and inspired speaker

    @banditthedog6268@banditthedog6268 Жыл бұрын
    • A superficial monologist. This is like an Oniontalks. Pretentious, preachy, melodramatic, superficial, assinine, frivolous.

      @jamesbarlow6423@jamesbarlow6423 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jamesbarlow6423 learn to spell before you use big words

      @banditthedog6268@banditthedog6268 Жыл бұрын
    • @@banditthedog6268 . Uh-huh....and which word was misspelled?😂

      @jamesbarlow6423@jamesbarlow6423 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jamesbarlow6423 asinine

      @banditthedog6268@banditthedog6268 Жыл бұрын
    • @@banditthedog6268 . Ah, thank you. I kept my thumb on the "s" key too long.... Or as Hemingway said, "You'll always find a phony ready to help you out with the language."🙄

      @jamesbarlow6423@jamesbarlow6423 Жыл бұрын
  • I used to lay in bed as a kid looking through the cracks in my bedroom curtains wondering about all this. My brain did the same thing then as it is doing now, overload and lock up.

    @GudieveNing@GudieveNing Жыл бұрын
  • Brilliant explanation - thank you....

    @mattscott8961@mattscott8961 Жыл бұрын
  • I don't why he suddenly pivoted to completely abstract discussion of life's existence with picking up the tablet and just reading off the script. Until then I was totally immersed in his lecture.

    @reckz420@reckz420 Жыл бұрын
    • I agree you wouldn't understand

      @11vshank@11vshank Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah him suddenly holding and reading off the tablet was odd and shows he didnt fully prepare for this lecture. The whole portion of him reading off about how all electrons are the same and they are just part of the electron field not tobe viewed as individual entities was strange as well. I can rattle that off without having to read it off a screen.

      @fitnesspoint2006@fitnesspoint2006 Жыл бұрын
    • I notice that too, I was engaged till he start reading from that tablet. But in my mind I totally understand that. I guess he wanted to choose his words carefully especially when it meant a lot more philosophy and in morality. Look how he get back to the tablet at 44:40 It seems obviously he is avoiding any misconception might be taking out of context.

      @capitalx101@capitalx10111 ай бұрын
  • One of the most compelling words ever spoken that i have ever encountered. In the scheme of our universe our mother Earth is so insignificant, too small to be even noticed and we think we are big and mighty. we are not. What does it take for us humans to realise this Fact.

    @franklinadams7826@franklinadams78263 жыл бұрын
    • Question: Assume humans DO realise this and internalize it. How does this knowledge change the way humans live, work and act here on Earth?

      @flightssights953@flightssights9533 жыл бұрын
    • Earth is special and it is insignificant. It can be both things at the same time. Life may only exist on Earth out of the whole universe. But then again life may be abundant across the universe. But then again the universe is so big contact between life forms across the universe may be impossible. So we may be in effect alone.

      @redmed10@redmed103 жыл бұрын
    • @@redmed10 Exactly what I thought. We maybe alone. We maybe not. But we are effectively alone, 100%. Unless we see evidence for us to believe otherwise.

      @impeccablevoicewangpingdiary@impeccablevoicewangpingdiary Жыл бұрын
  • I watched this twice. I love it James is the bomb. KZhead needs to invent a double-thumbs up icon thingamajig

    @patrickardahalian1@patrickardahalian12 жыл бұрын
    • Agreeable

      @khizzard_069@khizzard_069 Жыл бұрын
  • In the last decade or so I've often thought about how humans (& possibly other animals) may possibly experience the expansion of the universe & then that may possibly affect our experience of nostalgia. Most of us may usually agree that even independently of family life, we nearly always look back more fondly of our younger years and regard those times as being better back then & usually associate it only with different stages & ages in life. But what if; That is driven, at least in part, by an ability we may have to sense how the expansion of everything including in our bodies and around us progresses. Then as the years & decades pass we at least subconciously perceive & remember the relative differences in how close together things are & since it's always expanding, things seemed better years ago because everything was closer together !? There is at least a couple of ways that I can think of that we could perceive this & that's primarily; if light moves at a constant speed then everything takes longer & longer to percieve visually as time goes on &; electical signals would also take longer to get around our body and brain leaving us thinking (& maybe moving) slower than in the past. This possible ability of humans to perceive this could also affect or at least be partly responsible for our perception of time speeding up as we get older which I think nearly all of us would say it does. If there is any truth to that, I think our usually somewhat bias nostalgia is also naturally affected by other obvious factors such as levels of pollution, chaos & other things & events negativly, positively or neutrally percieved in our world around us & how we remember them. I'm aware of course that nearly all of our bias nostalgia may just stem from our lives usually being a bit easier to live to the fullest when we were younger. (1/Jan/2023-12:19pm🇦🇺EST)

    @CashIsKing_UseItOrLoseIt@CashIsKing_UseItOrLoseIt Жыл бұрын
  • Nobel prize-winner Leon Lederman: "The expansion of the universe doesn't actually affect the spaces between particles. The universe's expansion is not a force that will rip particles, molecules or even objects apart. The 'fabric of space' is not stretching - just the distances between really large things like galaxies. So while the distance between the milky way and its nearest neighbor may increase over the next billion years, the distance between the proton and neutron in a deuterium atom's nucleus will not.

    @DiscoGreen@DiscoGreen Жыл бұрын
  • Would it make sense that the interaction between energy and dark matter is what makes this plane of existence possible? That the universe (bubble) we live in is just that? Can it pop? Is it a snowglobe waiting to be shaken up again? Is the multiverse balanced or slightly askew to keep the perpetual motion going? Are we on the big turtle? I only possess a high school diploma I earned over 20 years ago, so the fact he was reading off a tablet and I'm watching him on my computer now, saying things my half-educated ass thought in 1996 is bonkers.

    @DeadBeatSage@DeadBeatSage2 жыл бұрын
    • While physics isn't my field of study, from what I understand, the universe wouldn't exist as it does without dark matter. At the very least, galaxies wouldn't have formed without the concentrating and binding effect of dark matter. As far as the universe "popping," the closest to a consensus we currently have doesn't suggest a definitive end beyond the universe eventually expanding to the point at which even protons are torn apart in a process referred to as the "heat-death of the universe." Stars will exhaust their supplies of Hydrogen, Helium, and eventually every fusible element until only blackholes remain; at which point, they will slowly evaporate due to Hawking radiation over unfathomable spans of time and blink out of existence. That's currently the most popular view, at least, but like all science, it's provisional and liable to change. Oh, and _yes,_ it's turtles all the way down. Edit: Fixed some typos and awkward wording.

      @Len124@Len124 Жыл бұрын
  • Why did he feel the need to specify the color of two men who won the prize?

    @DP-ym4dg@DP-ym4dg Жыл бұрын
    • suggestion.?

      @CalsTube@CalsTube Жыл бұрын
    • Racism?

      @MarCuseus@MarCuseus Жыл бұрын
  • Love his style and his voice

    @veeherreraJanecka@veeherreraJanecka Жыл бұрын
  • One of the Best speach I heard , bravo ! Lots of info and even make s me Wonder about a bright future

    @guyxmas7519@guyxmas75196 ай бұрын
  • 47:42 why get political? Biden will fix things yea ?

    @charlesantwan3946@charlesantwan39463 жыл бұрын
    • He really just went on a massive fucking rant. The white male comment was a little eye brow raising not to mention racist, but at that time stamp he almost loses his shit.

      @h83301@h833013 жыл бұрын
  • Always a pleasure listening to him speak. I have so much adoration for James 😌🤩

    @leti261@leti2612 жыл бұрын
    • Agree!

      @caroliensche13@caroliensche13 Жыл бұрын
  • "It would be scarier if I were out here by myself" wow, that one hit hard.

    @uberdork1337@uberdork13372 ай бұрын
  • Very informative, easy to unerstand

    @joydeepsengupta1521@joydeepsengupta1521 Жыл бұрын
  • Absolutely beautiful. Thank you.

    @ThomperBeThompin@ThomperBeThompin Жыл бұрын
    • Why is it so beautiful? If I say God made space, matter and time, (Genesis chapter 1, verse 1)is this beautiful to you? If not, why?

      @donaldgodin3491@donaldgodin3491 Жыл бұрын
  • James Beacham, you have composed a poem, an epic, a symphony, which is the universe, our universe. I always thought that the universe, by definition, is all inclusive, and thus, there cannot be any "outside the universe". But then, we run into the problem of infinity. There is no way for finite beings to grasp infinity, not even the concept. Word is that, as you put it, infinity means repetition, and thus the existence of multiverse. We may need a different terminology, but, even within the current definition, multiverse need to break out of the traditional spatial confine to have any claim to existence. Multiverse is a dimensional concept, not a separate spatial existence, that inhabits within our own universe, within ourselves.

    @ficfab5252@ficfab5252 Жыл бұрын
    • I can grasp infinity going forward. I completely comprehend an infinite amount of time from this point forward. I have a hard time grasping an infinite past. Obviously that comes from our idea that everything has a beginning.

      @checkmate79@checkmate79 Жыл бұрын
    • he has watched too many Marvel films it seems!

      @Tomsm8@Tomsm8 Жыл бұрын
    • @@checkmate79 Instead of hyper-sphere topology, with implication of big bang........ consider a hyper-torus topology, which allows locally observable less than uniform expansion, permits unobservable ( to us ) contraction elsewhere, accepts the possibility of saddle shaped spacetime, in which time is a circle with an ever moving "now" 180 degrees removed from an ever moving "eternity" ....... Big bang was never more than an implication of an assumption, anyway, and always raised more questions than it answered.

      @sciencedavedunning3415@sciencedavedunning3415 Жыл бұрын
    • @@checkmate79 "I completely comprehend an infinite amount of time . . . " Do you? Do you, really? That's like, a termite, in Missouri, (no offense), saying, "I completely comprehend the total expanse, and depth, of the pacific ocean. . . . " Do you? Do you, really? No. No one can 'comprehend' eternity, going forward, or past; because, the one, is the same as the other. When it comes to eternity, there is no future or past, it all, just; IS. Sitting in the Doctor's Waiting Room may seem like forever; but, we can't immagine, the Doctor never appearing. Never! Ever, appearing! There would he no 'purpose' in our waiting. We can't comprehend Forever! We can try to immagine it. But anything we can articulate, will be mere speculation and assumption. Not comprehension. Not a full understanding.

      @crossbowmd61@crossbowmd61 Жыл бұрын
    • In the beginning, God created the Heavens and the earth. Genesis chapter 1, verse 1. Time began , space and matter was created. God is the Creator of everything, as the bible says. Why not believe this?

      @donaldgodin3491@donaldgodin3491 Жыл бұрын
  • I will love to hear more about Quantum Field Theory.

    @potshangbamkhangamcha9927@potshangbamkhangamcha9927 Жыл бұрын
    • Check out KZhead lecture by David Tong - another excellent presentation

      @danielsnyder2288@danielsnyder2288 Жыл бұрын
  • Dr James' views of scientific truth is quite wholesome and satisfying as his notion of fear leaves the things quite open for the future possibilities of human desire to know in the decades to come.

    @potshangbamkhangamcha9927@potshangbamkhangamcha9927 Жыл бұрын
  • Talk about having some weird dreams after falling sleep listening to this lecture!

    @pnayeri@pnayeri2 жыл бұрын
    • Maybe your dreams were the normal part

      @adamhuskey5306@adamhuskey5306 Жыл бұрын
  • Great Speach James, a delight to listen to you with much attention.

    @PurnamadaPurnamidam@PurnamadaPurnamidam Жыл бұрын
  • Wonderful presentation

    @bernadettemitchell1872@bernadettemitchell1872 Жыл бұрын
  • His hair cut does indeed demonstrate that he knows what he’s talking about. At the same time I don’t know what he’s talking about.

    @jameslee5520@jameslee5520 Жыл бұрын
  • The universe is everywhere. There is no "outside".

    @tedgrant2@tedgrant23 жыл бұрын
    • so the universe is infinite? the universe is expanding into its self? moron

      @DrSbaitsojr@DrSbaitsojr3 жыл бұрын
    • @@DrSbaitsojr Even when the universe was very small, it was still everywhere ! You need to imagine the concept "null". Null is not a thing or empty space. It's not even nothing !

      @tedgrant2@tedgrant23 жыл бұрын
    • Wow! You rock Tony! Keep telling it like it is.

      @craigfordyce4645@craigfordyce46452 жыл бұрын
  • his explanation of how to give a example of higgs field standing on the bridge has made me realise the importance of the higgs particle,

    @anthonycollins5671@anthonycollins5671 Жыл бұрын
  • There is An Universe Observed By An Observer But There is Another Universe Felt By Heart Which is Much Profound Bigger Real Indestructible The Universe Melody And U Were Happily Facing the odds With Courage... U are A Philosopher Sir Along with Physics...

    @Rio-bl2dz@Rio-bl2dz Жыл бұрын
  • You want to have this dude at the collider. Super smart. Huge brain. Made me feel smart.

    @jimmycox9292@jimmycox9292 Жыл бұрын
  • I know NOTHING and I have accepted that wholeheartedly, but having heard James speak a few times, I am just fascinated by his brain and ideas. Go big or go home is his motto and I am here for it!

    @katherined1886@katherined1886 Жыл бұрын
  • I am surprised this guy is actually a physicist at CERN. He has just turned a science presentation into a political rally.

    @redsky1433@redsky1433 Жыл бұрын
    • @Redsky So a brilliant thinker isn’t supposed to have human feelings? Put your red hat on and leave.

      @jeffreylehman1159@jeffreylehman1159 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jeffreylehman1159 Trying to cancel me? Misrepresenting what I said. You seem to be the classic lefty.

      @redsky1433@redsky1433 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jeffreylehman1159 so the only human feelings are the ones that agree with you typical socialist leftist put your blue hat on get on your donkey and ride away

      @stephenshanebeaty@stephenshanebeaty Жыл бұрын
    • @@redsky1433 how dare u have an opinion of ur own. That's not allowed around here so ur going to need to leave buddy. We have an agenda here and don't need u spoiling it......hahaha totally being sarcastic. Can't believe some people take an online comment so seriously where they think they have the authority to tell someone else to leave. When's it going to end? If a person is telling someone else to leave that their not welcome is cuz that someone else is saying something or doing something that doesn't fit the narrative. I don't even care really just have to point stuff out when people don't get how it works. Which doesnt make me mad or tell people to leave no it's called educate don't discriminate. I have to admit tho it is quite funny and I do get a good laugh at those types of comments that's why I'll end up mentioning something usually along the lines of common sense and being logical usually leaving the person with no room to argue unless their arguing with themselves in their own room which that's funny also but at least that's a start but that's the only person they can so call win against arguing lol. That was a total surprise to hear how he included his political beliefs on something that those are not required on stick to the subject matter. After the lady talks at the then he talks again listen and look at how his body language is & hear how his voice is so different when he was up there giving his staged speech. He's all tense and stuff and nervous then the 2nd time he talks he's all comfortable casual and gets to explain his own words n opinions n knowing those are his own he's more comfortable n relaxed explaining n answering the questions..... Just my own opinion on what I noticed.

      @dreit7293@dreit7293 Жыл бұрын
    • This shit is garbage to me,Tbh. Glad everyone’s excited that the LHC is about to rip open a portal & let ancient demons pour in. Jesus Christ is real & science was invented to disprove spirituality.

      @AnnieHardyFullPsycho@AnnieHardyFullPsycho Жыл бұрын
  • Somebody get this man a glass of water please

    @andromedaiscoming185@andromedaiscoming185 Жыл бұрын
  • He does a very good job explaining hwy and hwere and hwich.

    @joesweeney6152@joesweeney6152 Жыл бұрын
    • Dyslexic?

      @lordfancourt2879@lordfancourt2879 Жыл бұрын
  • Honestly if anybody is nerdy on this kind of information like me you've seen this guy before I don't really know him but I love the way he tells his stories it's so gripping. Man and I thought Brian Greene was intriguing and regular- knowledge people friendly. I will dig deeper in this man's work

    @real_DrDummkopf@real_DrDummkopf Жыл бұрын
    • Only watched 20minutes and this guy caught me up already even listening and reading tons of Mr. Green lectures.

      @Mr.Cerera69@Mr.Cerera694 ай бұрын
  • truly grateful for your insight and knowledge

    @BloodravenRivers@BloodravenRivers Жыл бұрын
    • This is like an Oniontalks. Pretentious, preachy, melodramatic, sulerficial, assinine, frivolous.

      @jamesbarlow6423@jamesbarlow6423 Жыл бұрын
    • Knowledge? What knowledge? That guy knows only what is written in books. No more than that. He has no answer on what's outside the Universe. And if he ever knew, what would be outside his answer? He wouldn't know either! So, he spoke for an hour, for no answer at all. And most people commented that he is a great speaker. Now the bible says that God created, space matter and time. Many believers in God teach this. But the same people listening to this guy in the video, and saying how awesome he is, would say that believing in a Creator is completely crazy. How would you explain this?

      @donaldgodin3491@donaldgodin3491 Жыл бұрын
  • I’m glad this cosmologist/physicist is skeptical of some of modern science insofar as he opines that much of what we don’t know is unknowable to humanity at least in our current condition. What lies beyond, if anything, may be revealed to us in some time, condition or space made known to us either in life or after death

    @ocsplc@ocsplc Жыл бұрын
  • It’s more fun to think about the meaning behind it all, why do we exist, and try to focus on your breathing as you try to fall asleep, all without making yourself insane or wondering what happens to you after death and what this all means.

    @joeyhunter842@joeyhunter842 Жыл бұрын
  • Fascinating! The idea that I am part of a quantum field that IS the universe is really cool.

    @2011littleguy@2011littleguy2 жыл бұрын
    • Quantum fields

      @twt1524@twt15242 жыл бұрын
    • Scientific Spirituality or Spiritual Science?

      @jennifersimpson4061@jennifersimpson4061 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jennifersimpson4061 neither.

      @itsROMPERS...@itsROMPERS... Жыл бұрын
  • I asked the same type of questions at the age of 8 about 50 years ago about the universe and the problems of people being treated badly in the world. We have vastly developed our technology since then. It's a pity a lot of the problems of the world for most of the people on it still remain. Which is sad.

    @redmed10@redmed103 жыл бұрын
    • Were you able to come up with any solutions to these problems?

      @MonarchsOfBrotherhood@MonarchsOfBrotherhood2 жыл бұрын
    • @@MonarchsOfBrotherhood Nope but at least more people are talking about these things now or at least I am now aware of them talking about these things.

      @redmed10@redmed102 жыл бұрын
    • ​@@redmed10 at least we (humanity) are moving forward at knowledge 😊💜

      @furiousinsects6386@furiousinsects6386 Жыл бұрын
    • And then everyone clapped.

      @shutupandshave1926@shutupandshave1926 Жыл бұрын
    • Makes you wonder why we haven't been back to the moon... You'd of thought we would of colonized it by now.

      @garyh.8082@garyh.8082 Жыл бұрын
  • After the first few things he said about the expansion, I keep picturing the universe as a drop of gasoline falling into a puddle of water and doing that thing where it rapidly disperses on the surface but then forms a sort of slowly expanding blob after the initial dispersal

    @michaelg8642@michaelg8642 Жыл бұрын
    • How the energy from a drop can create concentric circles in a liquid showing the dispersion of kinetic energy.

      @andrew6658@andrew6658 Жыл бұрын
  • Two questions. 1 if a particle and antipartical collide a massless photon is created. What happens to the mass? 2 If you observe a galaxy 10 billion lightyears away the light has been traveling for 10 billion years, but if you included time dilation might the galaxy much younger and thus much farther away than it appears even at that time. If so, how would time dilation change the calculation of space expansion?

    @freedem41@freedem41 Жыл бұрын
  • If the universe is expanding away from us in all directions, wouldn't that put us at the center? Also, if that's the case, how is it possible for the Milky-Way galaxy to collide with the Andromeda galaxy or any galaxies to collide. To see pictures of galaxies colliding makes ya think. 🤔

    @2121beastmode@2121beastmode Жыл бұрын
    • Because locally these rules dont apply. It's averaged out.

      @shutupandshave1926@shutupandshave1926 Жыл бұрын
    • Our planet must too expanding

      @hyyyyu5346@hyyyyu5346 Жыл бұрын
  • Understanding in any field, along any direction will always required us to re-equip our conscience accordingly and I am thankful some scientists see this as a co-nature of their efforts. Children, in particular, should benefit tremendously given this mixture of understanding and a much wider, more universal attitude. Gratefully appreciating the value of this talk.

    @tommyspillen604@tommyspillen6042 жыл бұрын
    • A lot said here, but no answer. The bible says that God is the Creator of everything. Space, matter and time. Why not teach this? It is surely worth an hour of talking for nothing!

      @donaldgodin3491@donaldgodin3491 Жыл бұрын
  • You are so good at explaining, l am 75 this month.

    @kayflynn7851@kayflynn7851 Жыл бұрын
  • Melody sounds amazing... I'm glad you got to be her friend 🙂❤️

    @a_diamond@a_diamond Жыл бұрын
  • Beautifully poetic and brilliant! I love how you weave the connection of humanity and the universe. You are right! We are in it together. Under the veil of love and light, we whole heartedly and instinctively know that destruction and greed serves no good purpose and money is useless. We must navigate our way out of the fears and darkness of the ego's sinister prison and abolish destruction and selfishness. Enter into majestic wonders and find the gift of love and light where we recall, we always loved each other with all our might. It's beautiful deep stuff that the universe honors within every soul. Peace all you majestic souls of love and light!🕊🙏💞💞💞🕊

    @heavencrownwhitelilies9599@heavencrownwhitelilies9599 Жыл бұрын
    • Here are possibilities. 1.Universe come from nothing 2.It created itself 3 Was created by something created 4.Was created by something uncreated Now using our brains which one sounds the most logical 1.Universe came from nothing (This is absurd because nothing is the absence of something. 0+0=0) 2. The universe created itself ( absurd because you're saying something exist and not exist at the same time. Example is the mother who gave birth to herself) 3. The universe was created by something else that was created, perhaps a chain of multiverses. ( here you run into infinite regress fallacy. If we say who created the creator then the following question is who created the creator that created the creator, and so on and on......to infinity. This is impossible because we run into infinite regression fallacy. let me give you an example. Let's say a sniper aquire his target (a deer) on the crosshaire, in order to shoot he needs a permission from the guy behind him, and the guy behind him needs a permission from another guy behind him, and so on and on in a never ending chain to infinity... Now here is the question? Will the sniper ever shoot the deer? Why or why not. The answer is NO, because any given moment the request for permission is moving backwards OK, but if the deer gets shot? This means the request ended with someone who gave the order, who doesn't need a permission from anyone else. 4. So God is the uncreated eternal being. He is the explanation to creation. kzhead.info/sun/aa2Se8OFanN5e4E/bejne.html

      @YMe-hp7hi@YMe-hp7hi Жыл бұрын
  • Love this guy. All the gleeful, child-like enthusiasm you want and need from a boffin. He looks like coffee is the only thing passes through his body for days at a time as he baffles over questions he already knows he cant answer. Brilliant speaker. Brian Cox + Carl Sagan + woody Allen = James Beacham

    @youngandrew66@youngandrew662 жыл бұрын
    • Well put

      @ElevenWholeBeans@ElevenWholeBeans Жыл бұрын
  • Why did the universe expand to the size it is and not some other size? What encouraged or limited the rate/amount of expansion?

    @ianbattles7290@ianbattles72903 ай бұрын
  • Great presentation. Didn't quite get all of it but I'll go back as I usually do. Never took 'hard science' courses.( Bane of my life that I just wasn't able to grasp the math for the task. Just wondering though. You mentioned that, 'no surprise', two white men were awarded the Prize. I know that Henrietta Swan Leavitt (and others such as Cecilia Payne) had done extensive, very precise work on "studied photographic plates for fundamental properties of stars" that was instrumental in the work done by Edwin Hubble on galaxies outside our own. In your opinion were there POC/women who were overlooked that should have been awarded the Prize in 2013?

    @josepha.r5839@josepha.r5839 Жыл бұрын
  • This is one of The greatest talks i have ever heard

    @TheBuzzs1@TheBuzzs1 Жыл бұрын
    • I 've got it. He is Peter Sellers as professor Strangelove !

      @charlesreid1311@charlesreid1311 Жыл бұрын
  • NICE THAT A SCIENTIST IS ABLE TO CONVEY “COMPLICATED SUBJECTS” INTO PLAIN LANGUAGE FOR THE GENERAL PUBLIC ….THANK YOU SIR ‼️.

    @gails.newberg2945@gails.newberg2945 Жыл бұрын
  • What he described from 36:00 onwards is also what is known as the Tao by the ancient Chinese sages in Tao Te Ching.

    @livelifegalaxy@livelifegalaxy Жыл бұрын
  • 🙏 THANK YOU FOR SAYING THIS !🙏👍❤️💕❤️💕❤️

    @lightingnabottle6065@lightingnabottle6065 Жыл бұрын
  • Bosons were hypothesised by Indian Scientist Dr Bose and were named after him. Whenever you mention HiggsBosons no one seem to mention the name of Dr Bose . It is always Higgs , a British scientist Dr Higgs particularly when coming to awarding Nobel Prize.

    @truthsayer5824@truthsayer58242 жыл бұрын
    • To be fair, dead people aren’t eligible for the Nobel prize. But I’m with you...Bose-Einstein condensates could be very important future technologies. He should be a household name

      @twt1524@twt15242 жыл бұрын
    • And he also lived at a time when almost credit was given to euro-centric scientists

      @twt1524@twt15242 жыл бұрын
    • @@twt1524 - What has changed? A lot to f foreign exchange students solve problems and contribute vast amounts of knowledge only for their famous professors to receive the credit.

      @kingwillie206@kingwillie206 Жыл бұрын
    • @@kingwillie206 Vae victis.

      @cristianm7097@cristianm7097 Жыл бұрын
    • Would you be more satisfied if the particle was called the Bosehiggson? Besides, you can make the same point of many scientists, like Gunnar Nordström vs Einstein, or Tesla vs Edison. At least history is acknowledging their scientific contributions, even if its long after the fact.

      @1112viggo@1112viggo3 ай бұрын
  • He knows what's he's talking about in Physics, why would he dare to go into other fields without being the expert. His lack of knowledge in Economics, makes him against the very system that makes possible the Large Hadron Collider. He should remake this without trying to give an opinion in what happens at this level of reality. Other than that, great explanation of where is physics nowadays.

    @gamorro@gamorro2 жыл бұрын
    • What

      @freelancerAM@freelancerAM2 жыл бұрын
    • Science can't work without capitalism? Possibly the stupidest thing I've ever heard.

      @Jimi_Lee@Jimi_Lee2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Jimi_Lee did I say that? I said that capitalism is the system that creates enough wealth to create this huge science experiments. It's not funded through a wealth killing system like socialism.

      @gamorro@gamorro2 жыл бұрын
    • @@gamorro Both China and USSR raised the living standards in their countries and lifted more people out of poverty in the past century than capitalism has in western nations, and over a much shorter time. Plus neither had 200+ years of virtually unchallenged expansion with no comparable competitors on the continent, like the US, which accounts for a large part of the success of capitalism, such as its been. I wonder how much of the gains of capitalism in the first world are directly proportional to natural wealth extracted from the third world. Did capitalism create wealth, or just redistribute it?

      @Jimi_Lee@Jimi_Lee2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Jimi_Lee completely untrue, capitalism is the system that has brought more people out of poverty. Get your facts straight. And remember the millions murdered under socialism by Stalin or the millions killed under communism by Mao. Socialism can never work bc it ignores human nature . Your dream world pretends there is no envy, greed or jealousy. Today's school's pretend to teach capitalism by teachers who lie, ignore the facts and are unqualified to teach capitalism bc they don't understand the first thing about it.

      @OhAncientOne@OhAncientOne Жыл бұрын
  • 1:09 I would imagine, if the universe began with a big bang, then at the edge is a blast wave traveling outwards at the speed of light. The blastwave would (i imagine) consist of every wavelength of light including some we haven't even imagined yet or didn't think were possible, wavelengths that occasionally precipitate into elementary particles as well as an unimaginably large amount of fermions and W and Z bosons trailing behind or with it. I dont base this on any hypothesis made from proven work, this is just what I would imagine the effects of an unquantifiable high energy explosion in a nearly infinite vacuum would be like. Yes, I believe outside the universe is a nearly infinite vacuum with an incredibly sparse scattering of black holes from the previous universe (a scattering so sparse that or universe expansion hasn't encountered one yet). I don't rule out the idea of a multi-verse, I just think they are to far away to ever matter.

    @crimsonwolf1982@crimsonwolf1982 Жыл бұрын
    • Actually no, space time was non existent, the edge would be travelling faster than speed of light, imagine light slingshot in perfect trajectory to do perfect orbit through black hole, the gravity pull would defy light speed and cause it to get pulled into it and not escape thus the pull must be bigger than the speed , so photon entering, entered or spewed from the white hole would possibly travel at faster speeds. Maybe am thinking wrong at space and light travel at the same speed and at the end is edge and light packed together ? Who knows we need to find white holes and do lot of scientific research

      @Dino_Hunter_420@Dino_Hunter_420 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Dino_Hunter_420 I know you're quoting the scientific knowledge of the day. However it is impossible for there to not have been a vacuum before the universe existed. It's very possible that time did not exist before the universe, for the exact same reasons it is possible that math did not exist before the universe. A great void however, has no such dependencies on time or math, a great void just is. I agree that the blastwave could be traveling away from the center at speeds faster then the speed of light because I'm not fully convinced that the speed of light is the speed limit that everyone says it is. I base this on the following. If a car going one way at 40 MPH collides with another car going the opposite way at 40 MPH, then the resulting collision took place at 80 MPH. Atom smashers accelerate a particle to 99% the speed of light, and accelerate another particle to 99% the speed of light in the opposite direction and then head on collide them together which means the resulting impact happened at almost two times the speed of light. Now I've already seen and heard scientist make the case that from the particles perspective, the collision took place at the speed of light and they prove this through the same math that both allows for black hole existence but also ceases to work beyond the event horizon of said black hole, ergo, we know the collision of particles is taking place at 1.98C regardless of what the math does. But regardless of weather or not the blast wave of universal expansion is traveling faster then the speed of light or not, it is undeniable that whatever pressure that caused the FTL expansion in the first place no longer exist. I say the following on faith more than science. I have faith that our universe was originally a black hole left over from the previous universe and some unknown event took place that caused it to big bang. What that event was, I can only guess. Maybe the black hole was a ringularity that evaporated so much through hawking radiation that its schwarzschild radius shrunk to below it's size, or maybe the previous universe underwent the big rip and ours was a supermassive black hole in that scenario, or maybe it was a one in a trillion chance head on collision between two black holes going the speed of light in exactly aligned opposite directions. I don't know, but I'm sure it was a black hole, I'm sure it was in a vacuum, and I'm sure there was a previous universe.

      @crimsonwolf1982@crimsonwolf1982 Жыл бұрын
    • @@crimsonwolf1982 I’m the beginning of our everything it was more likely white hole or black hole coming to an end, we haven’t seen any but math is there to support white holes, because we haven’t observed any yet there’s possibility only one would exist for relatively short amount of time, I always since childhood believed that was the cause of Big Bang, now I see black holes as interspace hoovers and white holes as matter introducer

      @Dino_Hunter_420@Dino_Hunter_420 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Dino_Hunter_420 We are in agreement because, to me, a white hole and the big bang are the same thing (by description I mean). I have never done the math of a white hole but by their descriptions alone, I have never noted any kind of difference between a white hole and the big bang. I picture that the previous universe was far far far into it's black hole era when the event happened. This could be wishful thinking on my part. The idea of our universe going into the black hole era for endless eternity with no light, no chemistry, no nothing, doesn't exactly let me sleep well. The idea that one of our black holes could give birth to another universe helps. Of course that future universe will begin with significantly less mass then ours has unless whatever event causes it to big bang also causes its mass to jump significantly, but, even if it doesn't, the possibility that there could be future activity is what I'm holding onto hope for.

      @crimsonwolf1982@crimsonwolf1982 Жыл бұрын
    • @@crimsonwolf1982 am hoping for human kind to wake up and perhaps die in space but not on a tiny planet due to conflict between each and other 😂

      @Dino_Hunter_420@Dino_Hunter_420 Жыл бұрын
  • One primary reason of objecting a super collider is not the fear of knowledge. It is the triage of limited resource to scientific inquiry. We have limited resources. And the unified quantum-gravity theory may not be the most important question. Dedicating resource to the super collider implies sacrificing funding for other scientific inquiry and discovery.

    @hgs6200@hgs6200 Жыл бұрын
  • Amazing talk! I’m moved by his inspiring passion ! Thank you for these beautiful insights!

    @annamariacarusone6619@annamariacarusone6619 Жыл бұрын
    • All wild guesses, doesn't have a clue.

      @TommyTCGT@TommyTCGT Жыл бұрын
  • That's fact he's doesn't understand his job or politics doesn't make me feel better about our place in ever discovering anything useful in explaining existence.

    @robertmurphy2960@robertmurphy2960 Жыл бұрын
    • He knows his job. Thanks for being triggered! Fascists and right wingers actively prevent the progression of mankind and its gathering of information and furtherance of science.

      @pogtuber5146@pogtuber5146 Жыл бұрын
  • The fact the cmb shows its flat by our best measurements is crazy

    @josephsmith6777@josephsmith67779 ай бұрын
  • Startling and scary but within the realm of possibility.

    @winstonsmith9533@winstonsmith9533 Жыл бұрын
  • This was one of the best speaches I've ever heard. The part about the Universe is questioning itself through us humans was a mind blowing. I hope they will manage to make that plasma accelerator. Very good, A+

    @ivan-Croatian@ivan-Croatian4 жыл бұрын
    • Yes indeed +1

      @rdwz@rdwz3 жыл бұрын
    • If he had any sense, he would recognize, that a Creator/Designer existed. Where there is information, intelligence can always be traced to it. He knows this.

      @baberoot1998@baberoot19983 жыл бұрын
    • @@baberoot1998 "traced to it", but it can't be traced itself...useless

      @ck58npj72@ck58npj723 жыл бұрын
    • @@baberoot1998 Are there invisible gnomes chiseling out snowflakes too?

      @NoName-fc3xe@NoName-fc3xe2 жыл бұрын
    • kzhead.info/sun/e8dsiLJwoputmmw/bejne.html Your true identity

      @eyeam9305@eyeam9305 Жыл бұрын
  • He studies more and more about less and les, until he knows everything about nothing

    @neilgabriel1436@neilgabriel14362 жыл бұрын
    • Then he is indeed a genius if he's makin' bank by giving lectures about nothing.

      @NOMAD-qp3dd@NOMAD-qp3dd2 жыл бұрын
    • 1 way to put it..... Sounds like my old homies from da' hood , " Everything is everything". LoL

      @marcsalzman8082@marcsalzman80822 жыл бұрын
    • That is the universe in a nutshell. The universe should have existed.

      @MonarchsOfBrotherhood@MonarchsOfBrotherhood2 жыл бұрын
    • holy shit this comment and the replies are so incredibly hilarious. i think know you could convey so little with so many fucking words 😂💀💀

      @yeastnecklace@yeastnecklace2 жыл бұрын
    • @@yeastnecklace you are part of it now, welcome to the club.

      @MonarchsOfBrotherhood@MonarchsOfBrotherhood2 жыл бұрын
  • What an eloquent talk ❤❤

    @spaarkingo102593@spaarkingo10259310 ай бұрын
  • Watch, The Primer Fields part 1. It will answer all the biggest open questions of physics and the universe.

    @vincentdavis3453@vincentdavis3453 Жыл бұрын
  • Politics aside I really really enjoyed watching this on repeat for most of a night and morning (had some crazy dreams I cant even begin to tell you). I dont think I have conciously seen the whole thing but I am about to play it for other people because this guy has a gift for talking and its super interesting. This might be the greatest 45+ minute video I have EVER found on KZhead and if you are thinking about watching it - do it - its just I cant put it into words how interesting and engaging this is.

    @Red_Dead_Director@Red_Dead_Director2 жыл бұрын
    • I really wish he'd keep the political remarks out of it and stick to the science

      @monke8478@monke8478 Жыл бұрын
    • @@monke8478 " Two white males won a Nobel Prize ". In a condescending voice. Sound more like an activist than a scientist.

      @DM-ki1bs@DM-ki1bs Жыл бұрын
    • going into politics on a science talk is one of the worst things you can do. It's a shame because it was a good talk otherwise

      @the_Acaman@the_Acaman7 ай бұрын
  • short answer - we don't know

    @alpacino4857@alpacino48573 жыл бұрын
    • Longer short answer - we will NEVER know

      @kroon275@kroon2753 жыл бұрын
    • Thx, I owe you an hour.

      @LettersAndNumbers300@LettersAndNumbers300 Жыл бұрын
    • Considering String and Quantum theory, we can’t know. We just cant comprehend it.

      @vietnam2013@vietnam2013 Жыл бұрын
    • Considering String and Quantum theory, we can’t know. We just cant comprehend it.

      @vietnam2013@vietnam2013 Жыл бұрын
    • Considering String and Quantum theory, we can’t know. We just cant comprehend it.

      @vietnam2013@vietnam2013 Жыл бұрын
  • This lecture was amazing

    @djcstb_@djcstb_27 күн бұрын
  • So we have two possible solutions: Either Futurama was right, and at the end of the universe there's a partition of white where an alternate universe also sits, or we're waiting for the red shift/blue shift phase of the universe to reverse course and begin shrinking into itself to repeat the concentration of mass. Add: I was going to withhold the next Aha moment, but I was reminded some months ago watching another "physics" video postulating that time doesn't exist. In a long winded way drastically shortened, time seems like a more convenient way of defining an observation versus a concrete idea. One 'for instance', looking out into the cosmos, all of that light that's taken xx many years to reach us likely, if the math is to be true, no longer exists in its point of origin, whether that be the precise state or location. We're quite possibly looking backwards in time in the present, which physics tells us as we understand it to be impossible, yet there it is. We as a species have a lot of understanding yet to discover, but our verbiage if you will needs better definition. All of our combined knowledge, for the most part, has been observed here on Earth. While the principles remain similar, everything is subject to question when it occurs outside of Earth, so things that people often think will violate the 'laws' of physics (or more correctly, the laws of humans written by and for human understanding) may in fact need better definition through observation. Long version short, go out to the edge of the universe with an open mind. 😉

    @C-M-E@C-M-E Жыл бұрын
  • Love the first two thirds of this presentation… that’s all I’m going to say

    @timblack6422@timblack6422 Жыл бұрын
    • +1 Beacham should fear the Globalists. How's Melanie faring, now?

      @megamond@megamond Жыл бұрын
    • proving that knowledge and wisdom are compartmentalized, and ignorance is possible in even the smartest of us. unfettered capitalism is why we have this fantastic world that we live in, yet his limited intellect, assisted by bad values, sees it as a negative. And he falls into mystical leftist-collectivist narratives.

      @sandsmarc@sandsmarc Жыл бұрын
    • totally with you there. shit is ruining everything man

      @stonedwookie9916@stonedwookie9916 Жыл бұрын
    • Couldn't just leave it out for Chri$t sakes, had me all of the way to that point

      @6916lightfighter@6916lightfighter Жыл бұрын
    • @@6916lightfighter i watched another lecture by this guy... skipped to near the end... yep political bullshit. Its a shame i actually loved the lecture until he started seething about fake nazis. Iv had enuf of people pushing their political cock down my throat. I came here for physics.

      @stonedwookie9916@stonedwookie9916 Жыл бұрын
  • Dr. James Beacham is so good to watch. Some very clever people are not very interesting, but I could watch this guy all day. I'm surprised he's not already the American Brian Cox doing tours.

    @msgretrogamer@msgretrogamer Жыл бұрын
  • How does space travel faster than light? It makes perfect sense because space provides the support for light and all matter, so space would necessarily have to be moving faster than everything else but how does that space move faster and then, what does space expand into? More space? How exactly does one measure the movement of space itself? Everything could appear, in an illusory sense, to be expanding infinitely if the movement is happening in the shape of a torus, constantly evoluting and involuting. But then, what does that torus rest upon? More space? If infinity loops back upon itself then that which ends is endlessly ending and is simultaneously and constantly starting. One could say this is the description of consciousness. Such consiousness could be the immediate effect of a constantly looping infinity or infinity could be the effect of consiousness. Both answer the question of what is beyond space: the beyond itself is contained in the constant loop of infinity and or consiousness. Perhaps then, the tiniest particles of energy are fully conscious. Such particles would of necessity be infinitely curious, asking one single, loving and non-judgmental question: "What's going to happen next?" Imagine these particles, momentarily you, asking:"What's (insert your name here) going to do next?" No judgement there, just loving curiousity. You yourself are the Universe. A living, endlessly evolving poem; a work of art in progress. The Universe: You-in-Verse. So, sing your world into being.

    @peterwarren1824@peterwarren1824 Жыл бұрын
  • Nothing is outside the universe. The universe goes on FOREVER!!!

    @johntedder8457@johntedder8457 Жыл бұрын
  • I don't think the comment about "Two white males" was necessary. That was just weird.

    @Wolferal@Wolferal Жыл бұрын
  • This was a great presentation and the way he connected all the science at the end to human society was the cherry on top. Bravo.

    @ElearningDigest@ElearningDigest2 жыл бұрын
    • That’s where it collapsed.

      @ohroonoko@ohroonoko2 жыл бұрын
    • All that chaos entering a black hole...... I wonder why he did not compare it to the riots during the summer of 2020........ you know, to compare it to human society.....

      @heatheradams4221@heatheradams4221 Жыл бұрын
    • A SJW Physicist is as clueless as any other clueless do-gooder. Clueless to the point that he was completely unaware that the premise fell apart in the last 5 minutes of his presentation. Being "woke" in not equivalent to being Awake.

      @davidsanford9701@davidsanford9701 Жыл бұрын
  • Where is this space that the univerese is in ? How is there space ,where does it came from and in what space is this space? Where did the exsistence of anything or even space come from? And how is there that Where place?

    @remodeledcatidea5324@remodeledcatidea5324 Жыл бұрын
  • makes sense that all particles are actually just the comprisal of various fields, consider for a moment what that means in terms of the double slit experiment. The reason why observation collapses waveforms is inherently tied to the nature of multiple fields acting as factors having to be evaluated before a physical particle was found. Once the particles in the form of the double slit experiment were "found" or "spawned into existance due to observation" they produce a straight line, When unobserved until the point of contact on the sheet, it acts as a bellcurve with interferance lines. Why does observation collapse the fields and why do collapsed fields continue to act in a way similar to the particles we know? Because observation inherently is the evaluation of the fields through a physical lense (not like we know what that means on the quantum level), and the particles we know must be states inwhich the fields get locked into post evaluation; what we know as observable particles. There must also be some sort of field interaction with electrons, photons and the nucleus of atoms which would likely explain why we have this issue with tracking electrons around an atomic mass. It's likely that instead when the electron or photons hits the atom in question it is a change in the interlocked fields that make up the atom in question and the result is the decaying electrons or photons. Which would be a good reason why when photons hit atoms the energy states of electrons increase and why some substances can release light when affected by electricity.

    @Kyvarus@Kyvarus10 ай бұрын
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