A Brief History of the Universe! All Cosmology in 20 mins

2024 ж. 16 Мам.
126 625 Рет қаралды

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IN DEPTH VIDEOS for Details:
Cosmic Inflation: • Cosmic Inflation: The ...
Higgs Mechanism: • How 2 Fundamental Forc...
CMB: • What Do We "SEE" in th...
CHAPTERS:
0:00 What this video is about
0:54 History of major cosmological discoveries
3:31 How modern Cosmology started with Einstein
6:04 All about the singularity
7:49 Timeline of 6 stages of the formation of the Universe
8:56 Cosmic Inflation
9:30 Elementary particle formation
10:15 Nuclei formation
11:00 Recombination: Atoms formed, CMB
12:01 How stars, planets and galaxies formed
15:00 Dark Matter
16:33 Dark Energy
17:50 Learn more on Wondrium
SUMMARY:
All cosmology: A brief history of the universe, from the Big bang to today by Arvin Ash. Our view of modern Cosmology has largely been shaped by discoveries made over only about the last 100 years. 1920s - Edwin Hubble discovered galaxies outside our own Milky Way, and that the universe is expanding. 1949 - Fred Hoyle coined the term “Big Bang.” Penzias and Wilson discovered the Cosmic Microwave Background, or CMB, which is strong evidence for the Big Bang. 1970s - Vera Rubin found evidence for dark matter. 1980s - Alan Guth developed the theory of Cosmic Inflation. 1990’s - Evidence of dark matter was discovered. 2015 - Gravitational waves were detected.
But modern cosmology began with Einstein’s formulation of the theory of General Relativity. It described how mass and energy could change the underlying space and time itself. And this change is what manifests as gravity. Plugging everything into the equations gives us a model of our universe.
We know our visible universe is expanding, so if we turn back time, it should be infinitely small. This is called the singularity. This may not be real, but we know the early universe was very dense and hot. It was compressed to a very small size. How can the entire universe fit into the size of a swimming pool? The universe was all energy, no particles. And energy has no size limit. The temperature is just very high at smaller volumes.
The timeline of the universe can be divided into 6 stages. The first stage at t=0, is the birth of the universe started from perhaps a singularity 13.8 billion years ago. Stage 2 is cosmic inflation at t=10^-36 seconds, and temp of 10^32 Kelvin. Stage 3 is when elementary particles formed at t= 10^-11 seconds. The temperature cooled to 10^18K. Stage 4 is when nuclei formed at t=180 seconds, temperature was 1 billion Kelvin. Stage 5 is Recombination, when atoms formed at t=380,000 years. Temperature was 3000 K. The first light of the universe can be detected at this point, called the cosmic microwave background or CMB. Stage 6 is when stars, galaxies and larger structures formed.
Minor temperature differences can be detected on the CMB. This is what provided the seeds for large scale structures of the universe. Stars formed when gas clouds consisting of hydrogen and helium combined and gravitational pressure increased over time. Eventually, the pressure condensed the ball of gas and ignited forming stars. Elements heavier than helium formed in the cores of early stars, which exploded in supernovae explosions to form successive generations of stars.
Our sun formed when a gravitational clump formed somewhere within a cloud of gas or nebula, consisting of prior supernovae explosions. When it got heavy enough to fuse hydrogen in its core, began to shine. The leftover debris from the sun’s birth consisting of heavier elements formed a proto-planetary disk which accreted over time to form the planets. That’s how the earth was formed.
Galaxies are vast collections of stars like our sun. But these visible forms of matter do not appear to have enough mass to keep most galaxies gravitationally bound together. Calculations suggest that up to 5X more mass forms an invisible halo around galaxies and galaxy clusters that keeps them gravitationally bound. This is known as dark matter.
Galaxies spin due to conservation of angular momentum. The rotation is also why galaxies are generally flat. If you take any object and spin it, it will flatten. The exact details of why we have the different galaxy types are not fully known.
#cosmology
#bigbang
There is something that accounts for more than two thirds of all the energy we observe in the universe. It's dark energy which is like an anti-gravity force that pervades all of spacetime. It is accelerating the expansion of the universe. So in the early universe, where dark matter dominates, the attractive force of gravity reigns supreme, and things got together and formed structures.
But as the universe aged, dark energy became more dominant, and made things move further away from each other. And there seems to be nothing that will stop the universe from expanding at an ever accelerating pace.

Пікірлер
  • Love seeing the most fascinating discoveries in science made by my colleagues distilled into such delicious knowledge nuggets! What’s your favorite cosmic epoch?

    @DrBrianKeating@DrBrianKeating Жыл бұрын
    • When there's nothing left in final void of gloom, and not a quant brings any flash after the last, and nothing changes anymore, at all, and everything remains a pure chance of something that will never come.

      @generaltheory@generaltheory Жыл бұрын
    • well, not just one, the first second is my favorite. I can theorize about that non-stop without any scrupules, and the one thing that tends to disprove my theories, postulations, conjectures, thought processes, is "you forgot about conservation" or "you forgot about heisenbergs uncertainty principle" or "nuh-uu-uuuh, Pauli's exclusion dude" but never "not theoretically possible" or "that doesn't even sound like physics to me"..... or people just won't answer, that happens most of the time. Anyway, i'm not a big fan of string theory, which basically sounds like quantum field theory, only it's strings instead of fields, and everything else "oh, let's invent a couple more dimensions, it's perfectly fine!" Then again, for the past couple of months, i'm having the feeling that we are forgetting about one very important field. If GUT is correct, everything did separate from a unified force, then shouldn't that be a field too, when forces were still unified, or is that called a barn in physics? Something has to be responsible for raw energy, or how shall I call whatever the universe was before there was any matter at all, to be converted in different kinds of fields. We have no problem with gravity separating from that field, the strong force separating from that field, the weak and electromagnetic force separating from that field, but somehow, when we thought "hmmmmm, all forces are separated, so the field must have vanished".... and then we claim quark fields, electron fields, muon fields, tau fields,.... all other particles that DON'T have spin 0,1 or 2. My thought was "hmmmm, maybe that field is still there, and it just converts energy into bosons at high temperatures and fermions at low temperatures" It didn't even cross my mind, that I'm postulating something that was or is already there, and physicists are looking desperately for a TOE, both basically have the same objective. I'm saying that before the big bang the universe was zero-dimensional, cold and extremely dense, and inside that dimension is where gravity separated, turning a zero-dimension into spacetime

      @florh@florh Жыл бұрын
    • @@florh Flor, you are free to theorize anything, but Heisenberg's uncertainty principle is something that must be there in the very first structures of changes of our universe

      @generaltheory@generaltheory Жыл бұрын
    • Inflation

      @ny3793@ny3793 Жыл бұрын
    • The habitable age, when the entire universe was a comfortable 70F

      @nmarbletoe8210@nmarbletoe8210 Жыл бұрын
  • Really, we can't thank you enough, Arvin. Your work makes complex--vitally important--ideas available for all. There is no better definition of a great teacher.

    @e.mcguire1538@e.mcguire1538 Жыл бұрын
    • Thank you for that. Much appreciated!

      @ArvinAsh@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks a lot sir for explaining complex issues in simple and lucid manner.

    @sushilkumarkalia8605@sushilkumarkalia8605 Жыл бұрын
  • The explanation at 7:05 regarding how the sizing of the early universe is possible is just fantastic - I haven't heard it explained that way - thank you

    @davidkeane1820@davidkeane1820 Жыл бұрын
    • Makes sense.

      @supmojo@supmojo Жыл бұрын
    • There isn't any expansion, it is only depletion of the energy of the light beams from very old spots of images of the galactic sources by the Laws: of Wien and Planck 's λ=σ/Τ, λ= ch/E. When the T and the E goes to 0 the λ goes to infinity. It is simple physics! The galaxies sources aren't still in a spot to supply with energy their old images. They are traveling over trajectories and if they exist nobody now could see their real images.

      @user-dialectic-scietist1@user-dialectic-scietist1 Жыл бұрын
    • @@user-dialectic-scietist1 Wrong, there is expansion and has being proven. The Wien law does not account for the red shift of the spectrum of distant galaxies.

      @shadowmax889@shadowmax889 Жыл бұрын
    • @@shadowmax889 And what about the Planck's Law? And why, please the law of Wien do not account? You mean that in one Galaxy, the temperatures of its stars are the same? The Wien's law is a universal law and with this law an Astronomer can tell you the temperature of a star be the color in the spectrum. That means, far away red, to cold. Because you do not like the answer, you can't through the law away. And the Wien law is going well with the law of Planck. I am translating my books in English now, and I have written there 15 points why the expansion is nonsense. Especially about space and time if they are the energy of the vacuum, they can't expand at velocities greater than c. The dogma of Einstein says, no material, no energy with speed greater than c. Furthermore, my friend, space and time couldn't create a traveling fabric, because from SR, they are opposite values. When space dilates, the time has to shrink, and Vice Versa. The expansion is impossible under any known physical law. Accept someone write new physics, but then everything we know about physics has to be thrown away. So, find an answer about Planck's law, and you said that it is proved the expansion. Please tell me where I can read about a proof, because it is light and only human eye.

      @user-dialectic-scietist1@user-dialectic-scietist1 Жыл бұрын
    • @@user-dialectic-scietist1 What about Plank's law? The same because it does not explain the red shift in SPECTRUM. Wein and Plank's law are about the black body radiation and measure the temperature of stars, the thing is those laws do not explain the red shift in the spectrum of elements that make the distant galaxies. The spectrum of any element do not depend on the temperature, but the orbitals of its electrons. So if you have a galaxy with the spectrum of the hydrogen red shifted is not because it is colder, but because is moving away from you, the same thing goes if the spectrum is blue shifted, the galaxy is moving towards you. The expansion of the universe has being proved beyond doubt and do not violate Relativity (it was the derivation of the relativity equation that hinted to an expanded universe in the first place). Objects cannot move faster than C trough space, but space itself CAN expand beyond C, that's why the expansion of the universe do not violate relativity no need to any new law. The only question scientist are looking for an answer is not that space is expanding but is expanding at accelerated rates, and that is a mystery right now

      @shadowmax889@shadowmax889 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you, Dr. Ash. Time spent with you is always the best part of my day. Another one of your superb programs.

    @robertgoss4842@robertgoss4842 Жыл бұрын
    • Gravitational waves didn't provide evidence for Cosmic Inflation. Arvin Ash lied in this video.

      @smlanka4u@smlanka4u Жыл бұрын
  • Amazing that we've come this far in our knowledge, and there's still so much more to learn

    @AB-et6nj@AB-et6nj Жыл бұрын
  • What a Fantastic video! One of the Best I've seen to quickly explore cosmology. 👍🏻

    @vr6jettar@vr6jettar Жыл бұрын
  • Congrats as always doc. Great video and clear information, thanks again and greetings from Athens, Greece.

    @dariopalomba8420@dariopalomba8420 Жыл бұрын
  • Cosmology and physics always fascinates me even if I'm not able to fully grasp all the complexities that comes with it, so I always enjoy listening to your videos that explains these concepts in a way that even an average person may be able to appreciate and share in the fascination of our vast universe in its mysterious ways. Yet the more I learn about Dark Matter and Dark Energy the more I can't help but feel like they don't exist. I can't help but feel as though they are derivative (or simply a placeholder of sorts) due to our lack of a more comprehensive understanding of how gravity affects the very fabric of our reality (ie space-time) at different scales. We only know how gravity 'acts' as an attractive force between bodies of mass through the warping of space-time, but how do we know that gravity is not 'acting' as a repulsive force over vast stretches of empty space through some negative warping/expansion of space-time? Since gravity isn't really a force but really a manipulation of the very fabric of our reality itself. We as humans living on planet earth, how would we know how space-time would pass by differently in inter-galactic space where there's hardly any matter? We can only perceive a reality in our frame of reference which is itself affected by gravity of our planets, moon and star. I have no evidence to base any of this on, but I can't help but have all these unanswered questions about the nature of our reality.

    @bethg9471@bethg9471 Жыл бұрын
  • I find all these hypothesis fascinating! It is refreshing to see honest science educators when they acknowledge the limitations and speculatory nature of their claims.

    @ziguirayou@ziguirayou Жыл бұрын
  • This is crazily good presentation! thank you

    @harrykekgmail@harrykekgmail Жыл бұрын
  • this was a beautiful exposition, thank you. The concept that all the universe could have started in a tiny space because it was not massive, it was energy, is a brilliantly obvious and simple explanation.

    @iggyzorro2406@iggyzorro2406 Жыл бұрын
  • you know, I'm so glad to have a person that teaching something to me from my cell phone. I love the developments in the age I was born.

    @diedat-oe3gj@diedat-oe3gj Жыл бұрын
  • Just brilliant as always. As I rewatched, it struck me how the description of the genesis and evolution of dark matter and dark energy is completely absent in our models of the first few seconds of the universe, since we have no clue what they are. It just shows how much we still have to learn!

    @subhanusaxena7199@subhanusaxena7199 Жыл бұрын
    • Oh I'm pretty sure that's because dark matter/energy either didn't exist then or weren't in the right conditions to behave how they do now Sorta like how electrons couldn't bind to form matter until the universe had cooled for 380,000yrs

      @drsatan7554@drsatan7554 Жыл бұрын
  • Best 20 minutes I'll have today, no doubt! Thank you Professor Ash! I've not seen the "Big Bang" Cone drawn to include the Higgs Field before!

    @alfadog67@alfadog67 Жыл бұрын
    • He lies without using the scientific method. Nothing prove what happened before the CMB radiation. Energies could collide and make the matter within existing space.

      @smlanka4u@smlanka4u Жыл бұрын
  • I like how you broke it down for us. Great content!

    @TM-88@TM-88 Жыл бұрын
  • You explain these things so extremely well. Thank you.

    @fckyoutubeshandlesystem@fckyoutubeshandlesystem Жыл бұрын
    • Glad it was helpful!

      @ArvinAsh@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
  • What a great show. I've watched this episode now about 6 or 7 times, and I learn something new everytime.

    @fikipilot@fikipilot Жыл бұрын
  • Wow....thanx for compilation of timeline 🤩

    @Natgrid02@Natgrid02 Жыл бұрын
  • Another beautiful lesson thank you very much Arvin

    @petergreen5337@petergreen5337 Жыл бұрын
  • Amazing work, thank you sir.

    @ffs55@ffs55 Жыл бұрын
  • arvin you are THE expert in explaining the unexplainable in simple terms

    @shaahinflc4732@shaahinflc4732 Жыл бұрын
  • love you sir 😍😍.......thanku for this channel...... please never stop making videos like this

    @SachiN-Vishwakarm@SachiN-Vishwakarm Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for this masterpiece, Sir Arvin

    @meet560@meet560 Жыл бұрын
  • Another great video. Thank you, Arvin.

    @jlunde35@jlunde35 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for this concise summary.

    @h3rotor783@h3rotor783 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for attaching faces with all the scientists' names. I've heard these stories so many times, but seeing some of their faces for the very first! Makes the video ten times more interesting for me, personally.

    @ShubhamKejriwal@ShubhamKejriwal Жыл бұрын
    • ...why? It's not even the focus at all of the video. You know you can just Google what any scientist looked like, right?

      @ChinnuWoW@ChinnuWoW Жыл бұрын
    • @@ChinnuWoW you can Google anything ,Why did you come here ?

      @ameenabdullah5370@ameenabdullah5370 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ameenabdullah5370 Because it's far more entertaining to watch a video of an interesting person with animations to look at rather than staring at a text.

      @ChinnuWoW@ChinnuWoW Жыл бұрын
  • I have heard his story more than several times, and I believe yours is the best rendition. And thank you for pointing out that singularities may/probably don't exist - most will avoid this note. As always: nicely done. I do have a question: When you say the very early universe was only 'energy', what does that mean? Is energy a thing in itself? I thought I understood that energy is a property of 'things'.

    @stevemallot721@stevemallot721 Жыл бұрын
  • as always great content and nice speech

    @MrLgbk@MrLgbk Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for creating this program. Always great to watch. I didn't see anything about the imbalance of matter / anti-matter in this program.

    @svenlindahl5607@svenlindahl5607 Жыл бұрын
    • That's because the matter/antimatter model for the big bang is just one of many and it doesn't even make sense Physicists prefer the energy model for the singularity The universe was too hot for matter to exist at the time of the inflation. Electrons need a specific temperature to have the properties they have now. The universe had to cool for 380,000yrs after the inflation epoch ended before electrons could bind to nuclei and form hydrogen atoms In the matter/antimatter model for the big bang no explanation is given for why the matter/antimatter was able to stay formed at those temperatures, nor does it explain where the matter that survived the bang went or which kind of matter it was The matter/antimatter model precludes our knowledge of the process of nucleosynthesis which is how matter actually first formed

      @drsatan7554@drsatan7554 Жыл бұрын
    • @@drsatan7554 thanks for the detailed reply. Appreciate your message... Very insightful for me

      @svenlindahl5607@svenlindahl5607 Жыл бұрын
  • All cosmology beautifully and effectively summarised. Everyone should see this video.

    @owaisahmad7841@owaisahmad7841 Жыл бұрын
  • Amazing video. Thanks!

    @adnelortiz@adnelortiz Жыл бұрын
  • OMG! Not to pander but this is great work and an awesome overview of the most important stages of the universe. It’s also well organized into history, theory, math, and imagery. I understand why it wouldn’t necessarily fit to include the separation of the strong-electroweak force and the antimatter problem, but hopefully you’ll allow me to ask some questions about it, as my spacetime cells idea postulates that it was here that matter was slightly favored over antimatter and that what we call dark matter was “formed”, but I think it’s residual virtual energy stuck in the W boson field. The question is: Does the W boson of the weak force only control flavor changing of quarks and why does it only occur in free neutrons and unstable nuclei?

    @randalljsilva@randalljsilva Жыл бұрын
  • I like it, sharp work simplifying decades.

    @goranmancevski5550@goranmancevski5550 Жыл бұрын
  • I have no doubt that Arvin knows the entire history of the universe! I believe in this man.

    @MrGriff305@MrGriff305 Жыл бұрын
  • Another great summation!!

    @LQhristian@LQhristian Жыл бұрын
  • Great presentation that answered some questions. I appreciated the Einstein field equation section describing energy (includes mass) creating curvature. I'd like to know more about how (and if) the gravitational field translates to spacetime. Thank you!

    @photon434@photon434 Жыл бұрын
    • The gravitational quantum field IS spacetime. At least I'm fairly certain

      @drsatan7554@drsatan7554 Жыл бұрын
  • Arvin, the explainer and presenter par excellence.

    @primajump@primajump Жыл бұрын
  • your videos are the best

    @superdanish489@superdanish489 Жыл бұрын
  • Absolutly wonderful video!!! 🤩🤩🤩

    @vittorio13ful@vittorio13ful Жыл бұрын
  • Dear Mr Ash. You are the gift from the universe. If only you were my science teacher back in the days.. i can’t even say how much you taught me and I’m 36 🤓🥰🥰😘😘😘

    @Antoinette540@Antoinette540 Жыл бұрын
  • Dear Mr. Ash, first of all, thank you so much for the great content you provide on this amazing channel! Second, a question. I seem to remember a video about the beginning of the universe. The hypothesis in this video describes the universe not condensed in one single point -as far as I can remember- but was a zero average distribution of sub-elementary particles, there was a constant balance between creation and annihilation. I feel like remember this video is one of yours, but I am wrong or I am unable to find it. Can you please help me? Many thanks in advance! With best regards.

    @lucasardelli7164@lucasardelli7164 Жыл бұрын
    • Na dawg. You jus high

      @TellURide447@TellURide447 Жыл бұрын
  • Wonderful and clear presentacion! I would like to know how life and consciousness fit into this, because without them the model is incomplete ...

    @EcoTHEgrey@EcoTHEgrey Жыл бұрын
  • Hey Arvan, Great Video! At high enough energy levels when the strong force was not working, and i also know that the electroweak video you did where you explain that the forces merge together into 1 force, what does that mean for the quantum fields? Are they merged together as well? Are the bosons that mediate the fields identical and when the energy drops they become different? Can you explain some more info on what a merged theory means for the behaviour of the particles? Do both forces still work the same with different strengths or both forces disappear etc? Thanks so much again!

    @joelydadolley@joelydadolley Жыл бұрын
    • Hello. Means that perhaps the universe was compacted into a little too dense, not really moving much chunk of anything that we could name something like that. Then, something happened and it expanded. Quickly. When that happened, possibly the forces manifested for the first time in this universe at least.

      @misterlau5246@misterlau5246 Жыл бұрын
  • Amazing graphics!

    @JohannY2@JohannY2 Жыл бұрын
  • I’m also a Chem Eng and love cosmology & astrophysics!

    @cleander97@cleander97 Жыл бұрын
  • Another awesome video thank you so much! I have a question, it’s always slightly confused me how the initial universe expanded and didn’t turn into a black hole. At the earliest moment of the universe, you said all the energy in the universe would be condensed to a swimming pool. But wouldn’t that high of an energy density form an inescapable force of gravity? Thanks!

    @alexmonko1754@alexmonko1754 Жыл бұрын
    • At the risk of embarrassing myself, my understanding is that black holes form within the universe as the result of gravitational aberrations. At the point described, the dense, hot structure WAS the universe, not a structure within the universe. In addition the necessary forces such as electromagnetism and gravity had not established yet. Thus the universe could not form a black hole because it had nowhere to form it in, and the contents of the universe could not form a black hole because it lacked the structure that the forces impart and impose on the universe. However your speculation does yield fruit - it is believed that the early universe did create black holes that were not a result of star collapse - primordial black holes. In addition, a hypothesis called "cosmological coupling" proposes that the the expansion of the universe causes an increase in the mass of objects, and since black holes are already so massive, this coupling provides a shortcut for smaller black holes to become larger, even supermassive black holes without necessarily increasing their mass by consuming mass.

      @Regel123@Regel123 Жыл бұрын
  • THANK YOU... DR. ARVIN ASH...!!!

    @tresajessygeorge210@tresajessygeorge210 Жыл бұрын
  • All the way from 🇯🇵. My 5 year old and I love your videos. He doesn’t know exactly what you’re talking about, and neither do I. But I think we both feel smarter because of you. So thank you.

    @BilboSwaggins999@BilboSwaggins999 Жыл бұрын
    • I think you have a 5 year old genius on your hands! You might be surprised

      @ArvinAsh@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
  • Great work

    @TipSheikh@TipSheikh Жыл бұрын
  • It is a matter of sorrow,😭🥺😭 that these great channels does not get vast subscribers like the other channels,,, like gaming channels, TV serial channels, entertaining channels, songs channel and so on. The most subscribed channels we see in KZhead,, most of them are of no use. They are just entertaining and time killing, but do not give us any knowledge especially about science. Channels like these, which can be the light of education in our life, children's can be curious and motivated to be scientist in the future which can lead our humanity to the next level.... are not treated well... I love your channel and hope that you and other channels like yours might be the biggest channels of subscribers, viewers, and likes...... Wish you to be successful on your path to create new contents...... Love you🥰❣️❤️🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩

    @FunJoyTV@FunJoyTV Жыл бұрын
  • l love this channel, many thanks

    @husseinhassanhh@husseinhassanhh7 ай бұрын
  • Cool! Awesome! Beautiful! *_Nothing_* beats the greatest brainchild of the human brain-the scientific method, whose solid yet pliable backbone is the fusing of constructive criticism, rigorous skepticism, a vivid imagination, and above all the consuming curiosity of a child. 💕☮🌎🌌

    @totalfreedom45@totalfreedom45 Жыл бұрын
  • Two minutes, can’t wait!

    @tuberu2@tuberu2 Жыл бұрын
  • could the big bang be a singularity decay? past neutron decay, if photons decay, it would have to be a bifurcation into matter and antimatter, which if not energized by an outside source, gravity would push them back together which would make a heck of a bang... this is the second of ur vids that i have watched and liked : ), looking forward to the next

    @welcometothemotherverse6213@welcometothemotherverse6213 Жыл бұрын
  • Good content

    @Gsjsji_jwjsbs@Gsjsji_jwjsbs Жыл бұрын
  • Looking forward to sharing this with my kids. Visualization helps for the kids.

    @rgundapaneni@rgundapaneni Жыл бұрын
  • I think it all comes down to 3 questions everyone interested in science would so much like to find or hear the answer to : what are the dark energy and matter, what was the universe like at its "singularity", what is the quantum description of gravity if there can be any. But I think one step closer to all this is understanding what was the grand unification era like, when all forces except gravity were unified (I gotta say the electroweak force makes already no sense for me, how could light/electricity/magnetism and nuclear disintegration be the "same exact thing" at some point lol)

    @Droopy95mkDS@Droopy95mkDS Жыл бұрын
  • great job from a layperson like me love it

    @Hazeefam@Hazeefam Жыл бұрын
  • I Love your Channel ❤

    @ericgraham3344@ericgraham3344 Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks!

    @ervinperetz5973@ervinperetz5973 Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks so much.

      @ArvinAsh@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
  • I dont know but i believe that sound, a logical medium (waves), particles (that travel along waves...ie...light) and vibration (dependant on reverberation) explains that there must have been more than just One Big Bang and that there will be more big bangs to come. In fact, if you do the maths, we are currently still experiencing 3 concurrent big bangs (81st-84th total so far). It explains the macro (organism, destiny) behaviour of a cyclic time signature (yugas) that has already been recorded by our ancients...every pattern or complex light formation (irregular) seen in our universe can explain results of this theory.....either way, the intention or reason for all this is order.

    @anthonymorena6259@anthonymorena6259 Жыл бұрын
  • The "rebound curve" on certain mass/space/energy quotients is going to be fun to discover. There's dips, but there is wobbles to even it a bit out over larger areas. With a huge amount of area/density curves doing it.

    @sambojinbojin-sam6550@sambojinbojin-sam6550 Жыл бұрын
  • Superb video. A bit disconcerted as i note the word quantum mechanics (QM) not associated with the cosmological description. By the looks of it the initial epochs all seem QMey rather than classical physical. Did the weirdness of QM play a role in these epochs? Was the entire big bang possibly due to QM?THANKS

    @tkrisnadas@tkrisnadas Жыл бұрын
  • Not too long ago we didn't know atoms existed. The more I learn about the universe the more I see how simple it is. From it's birth, to today. There's definitely gradual steps from simple to more complex. The universe is basically an ocean of empty space for stars and it's planets with dark energy as a one way current. Life is probably the natural chain reaction on planets with the right conditions. Starting out simple to consume energy and survive into more and more complex things to do basically the same thing.

    @lazybeachbum9394@lazybeachbum9394 Жыл бұрын
  • I have a question to Mr Arvin.. If the earliest universe was only pure energy, how could it be hot and say the temperature was very high when there was nothing except energy to manifest "temperature". Temperature is defined as the kinetic energy of "particles" meaning "mass". I even fail to understand how the earliest universe ( just after a Plank's time , and plank's volume(4D) can be "hot". I would say it had a large potential enegery to produce heat by transformation if there was something created to jiggle and raise in tempersture and thus become "Hot". I also noticed that Einstein's GR does not have "temperature" in its equation, meaning gravity and engery are temperature agnostic. Correct me if I am wrong.

    @hirands@hirands Жыл бұрын
  • At 1:20 you show the GR equation with Lambda on the right side. I like it moved over there so there is geometry on the left and stuff on the right. However, on the right side it takes a negative sign, not positive.

    @skyking9835@skyking9835 Жыл бұрын
  • Love it

    @AbulkalamAzad-qz1vv@AbulkalamAzad-qz1vv Жыл бұрын
  • The universe was cooling and still is! So, where the heat was/is going? Was(is) it getting converted into particles or other forms of energy? Was the temperature low, in the quantum states where the particle formation probability was high? Did not read all the comments, if any body has raised/answered this. Finally, am I making any sense here? It had been great experience watching these videos on this channel. Dr Arvin Ash always triggers a different thought or two, with each video. Thanks to you ...

    @sreeramvipparthy5811@sreeramvipparthy5811 Жыл бұрын
    • The universe is cooling because a volume (the entire universe in this case) is more energetic the smaller it is. More pressure = higher temps. All the energy from the big bang is still around, it's the volume (space) that is expanding. Coincidentally enough, that expansion will theoretically lead the entire universe to reach 0 Kelvin in an event called the big freeze. There are other theories like the big crunch where the universe ends in a very hot contraction, but that is more theoretical, and mostly based on the idea that our universe clearly began as a hot dense singularity. It's "more symmetrical" as it allow an explanation for the big bang, but with no certainty just yet

      @RedNomster@RedNomster Жыл бұрын
  • Amazing video! But i still don't get the time measures on the different stages of the Univers. Is it measured from within the system or converted to our perspective as external observers from our actual time?

    @omar2886@omar2886 Жыл бұрын
    • Yea same, I did not get that part at all. Something happens within fraction of a second, then something after few minutes and the next stage is already hundreds of thousands of years. If space and time are so connected then do we really have a clear understanding at what pace time is progressing forward when the universe is only the size of a swimming pool?

      @LeeroyLeone@LeeroyLeone Жыл бұрын
  • Dr. Ash This may be a naive question, but here it is. Since space and time was expanding in the first (incredibly) small fractions of a second at the beginning of our universe, how does it make sense to describe the expansion in terms of fractions of a second i.e. a zepto second or as you say, for example, or "ten to the minus 32 seconds" Since space-time itself is expanding, what is "ten to the minus 32 seconds?" How do physicist make that determination?

    @springerkey6947@springerkey6947 Жыл бұрын
    • I might be too high for this but I'll try to explain You know how time moves faster in space for the international space station and how time moves slower near black holes? That's cause mass bends spacetime. We use our measurements of the time difference on earth/In orbit + physicists calculations of the number of particles in the universe (most of which have mass) to approximate how quickly time would flow if you got all the particles back in close proximity like they were during the inflation Because all the mass was super close together and gravity didn't exist (the four fundamental forces 'decayed' from the inflation quantum field) they had to try figure out how time would work without gravity by using our knowledge of how mass effects space It's all SUPER speculative and as such should be taken with a single atom of sodium and a single atom of chloride

      @drsatan7554@drsatan7554 Жыл бұрын
  • thank you for the interesting video. well explained and shown. I still don't know how to visualize the shape of the universe. if we see the CBR everywhere we look, would that means that we are inside a balloon that keeps getting inflated? But do we also say that the universe is flat?

    @francomercatelli2063@francomercatelli2063 Жыл бұрын
    • There is no edge to the universe. In the balloon analogy, the universe would be the surface of the balloon. The balloon gets larger, but there is no edge.

      @ArvinAsh@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
    • @@ArvinAsh ok. thank you, but still..but from where we are how can we look at any direction and still see up, down left and right (figuratively)

      @francomercatelli2063@francomercatelli2063 Жыл бұрын
  • wonderful

    @NyznTvfk@NyznTvfk Жыл бұрын
  • Love the vid thank you. But…. Where did the singularity come from? and where did the void come from? Is anything real?

    @markedis5902@markedis5902 Жыл бұрын
    • This is not understood, and is a gap in our understanding.

      @ArvinAsh@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
  • I wonder if it is correct to talk of temperature at the big bang - if it is massless energy, so how would we define temperature/motion of particles? Maybe we should just talk of energy density, or is this equivalent?

    @chaukeedaar@chaukeedaar Жыл бұрын
  • Love the universe

    @elisax5373@elisax5373 Жыл бұрын
  • Neutron decay cosmology Dark matter is decayed free neutrons. Although it will evolve into atomic hydrogen initially it doesn't have a stable orbital electron so can't emit or absorb photons. The volume increase from this decay, near point particle to one cubic meter of gas, is a volume increase of 10^45. This is the expansion of dark energy. The negative pressure created by the electrons created from free neutron decay. The neutrons came from an event horizon somewhere. Matter/neutrons contact an event horizon become the vacuum flux for a single Planck second then reemerge from lowest energy density points of space where quantum basement is easiest to penetrate. Neutron decay cosmology

    @KaliFissure@KaliFissure Жыл бұрын
  • @Arvin Ash could the Higgs field quantum tunneling to the present energy state have caused the big bang?

    @Lydian7lc@Lydian7lc Жыл бұрын
  • The interesting thing about the cosmological constant (CC), Einstein introduced it because his field equation was showing an expanding universe. So he introduced the CC to keep the universe in a static state. When it was discovered the universe was expanding, in the 1920s, he called it "his biggest blunder". Even when Einstein is wrong, he's right. Lol...

    @JJs_playground@JJs_playground Жыл бұрын
  • 🧲🌡️📡🔆☢️🔌🔊🔋♻️🌐☯️⚛️ Electromagnetism- (energy, wavelength, frequency) Play such a crucial aspect of the cosmos. It's really facinating how so many properties with-in Nature use: ~{"Differences"}~ That "factor" seems to be a key factor in keeping dynamic systems functioning. *High pressure/low pressure, hot/cold temp, different densities, static electric charges/discharges, electromagnetism north/south poles, different velocity/angular momentum, different amounts of energy/mass/frequency/vibrations. Different layers between different regions such as: (Land/water/air/edge of the atmosphere/space/ the different regions in space with different particle density/background radiation, creating bubbles/membrane layers/cloud regions, nebula's/Galaxy's/Galaxy clusters/ Cosmic filaments/less dense regions of space compared to dense regions of space.) All of these things are basic differences but create a way for the dynamic engine with-in Nature to continue flowing and operating to create and convert energy. Just Like How a battery 🔋 transfers + charges through a membrane layer to a - charged side. Like how regions of high/low pressure and temperature 🌡️differences create winds. In water- add some factors and It creates ocean currents and flow. Then internally in our planet it creates plate tectonics, planetary convection, geothermal activity, a magnetic field around our planet, to hold a atmosphere. 🧲🌡️📡🔆☢️🔌🔊🔋♻️🌐☯️⚛️ The natural world around us is just utterly facinating to me. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~{Hypothetical idea}~ What if our universe is 1 half of a sorta ying yang ☯️ universe where there's a membrane layer in-between 2 layers. Quantum fields could be entangled with that membrane layer. Which allows for quantum particles to pop in and out of existence and decay from that membrane with the other half. The 2nd half could be our universe but maybe be an anti-universe. Where anti-particles go? Where the anti-matter can create this balancing act with-in the system. (It doesn't mean there is multiple versions of ourselves and all that stuff when people talk about a multiverse. No, not that.) It just seems like a natural way to balance things out, yet also describe the fluctuations we see in quantum mechanics. I just had a random daydream thought and obviously I hope more professional people's minds end up diving into this sorta possible theoretical physics. I think Neil Turok had a similar theory. ⚖️ 🌐🧲🌡️🔆☢️⚛️♻️🌐☯️

    @benmcreynolds8581@benmcreynolds8581 Жыл бұрын
  • My dude, you do a service to society🙏

    @AG-pm3tc@AG-pm3tc Жыл бұрын
  • If the Higgs is in a non-zero ground state and it's the coupling with it that makes particles drop to the zero ground state, does the Higgs still have potential to drop to the zero ground state? I mean is vacuum decay still a theoretical thing?

    @vaasnaad@vaasnaad Жыл бұрын
  • 20 Minutes well spent

    @firstnamelastname307@firstnamelastname307 Жыл бұрын
  • I look at the night sky and think that I’m just seeing a tiny fraction of the universal wavefunction and that by some reason, probably due to the choices I and others made in my timeline things looks like this, but it’s just a small part, my version of this universe since all others combinations also exist, and my choices continue to determine especially at my human level what version of the quantum multiverse I’ll continue to collapse, it may correspond with yours occasionally.

    @jge123@jge123 Жыл бұрын
    • You're fantasizing about a fantasy story made up by mathematicians to get more funding.

      @jonz23m@jonz23m Жыл бұрын
  • You are saying that the strong force began at a certain point, like it didn’t exist prior to that point. Do you mean that it did not exist at all before that time, or do you mean that it technically always did exist, but because of the immense amount of energy, it was basically negligible, because it would create continuously unstable bonds, but later when the energy density got lower, it was able to settle in stable bonds for prolonged amounts of time?

    @roygalaasen@roygalaasen Жыл бұрын
    • Yes, pretty much. It is thought at extremely high temperatures just after the big bang (tiny fractions of a second) all the forces of nature had the same strength (eg. the electromagnetic and weak forces combined above a thousand trillion degrees and before a trillionth of a second , electroweak fields increase in strength with temperature until they become as strong as the strong force, and all forces combined at a temperature of 10^28 degrees) due to the huge energy densities and the particle fields behaved differently than they do today, so quarks and electrons may have been undistinguishable.

      @tonywells6990@tonywells6990 Жыл бұрын
  • Great video! Amazing! Just a little question. What about the size of our universe? It looks like our universe has a finite volyme when I look att the video but sometimes physicists claim the it is infinite. What do you think about it? I´m not talking about the visible universe but the whole of it.

    @SCANTIC@SCANTIC Жыл бұрын
    • I don't think anyone knows

      @debrachambers1304@debrachambers1304 Жыл бұрын
    • @@debrachambers1304 correct, there is a minimum size (which is much larger than we can see) but no way to tell if it is just really big or infinite. So far.

      @nmarbletoe8210@nmarbletoe8210 Жыл бұрын
  • all these years watchin your videos cannot help but notice your mannerisms remind me of my teachers in school! Are you a teacher? (great vids btw, keep 'em coming! ) edit: NOTHING wrong against teachers, i respect them)

    @sadderwhiskeymann@sadderwhiskeymann Жыл бұрын
    • haha, yeah it's weird you gotta say your "edit..." I completely understand. at least when I read it, I definitely read it as you giving him a complement on his competence.

      @TheMixxon2@TheMixxon2 Жыл бұрын
  • When you describe the expansion of the early universe, I wonder: do those seconds, minute and years have the same "value" as today? Being everything so dense and energetic, did time have a different "rate" than we know now?

    @Rbksmn@Rbksmn Жыл бұрын
  • What fascinates me the most is time's utter and complete meaninglessless outside of our lifetimes. I may be at awe by the unbelieveably extensive lengths of time that came before my birth, even more by the mind-boggling lengths of time coming after my death, yet to my consciousness, these two periods will be and feel no longer than the blink of an eye of a plank-sized ant. For all I know the whole universe might reboot (some-unexplicably-how get completely destroyed and then spontaneously rebuilt with the same configuration after said reboot) daily, hourly, at every second, and I might not even notice it at all. It's like a brain f*ck on endless loop. But I kinda like to think about it.

    @byamboy@byamboy Жыл бұрын
  • No, the model breaks down when the number of quantum fluctuations is less than 5. Without spatial dimensionality energy density becomes infinite. However problematic, this is a far smaller problem that the implausibility that spacetime as we know it probably cannot exist under the conditions prior to expansion, which means our concepts of space and time also fall apart. The physics of the inflaton is not physics, its something else indescribable. "It was all energy", yeah what kind?

    @Darisiabgal7573@Darisiabgal7573 Жыл бұрын
  • if energy can neither be created nor destroyed and it can only be converted from one form to another. where do our energy as a soul or as a consciousness go once we die? or from where is this energy recycling? how exactly do some amalgamation of cells develop consciousness? (idk if this became a scientific or philosophical question but i need to know)

    @zaynsaftab@zaynsaftab Жыл бұрын
    • It is arbitrary. We perceive it ourselves.

      @c2h5oh77@c2h5oh77 Жыл бұрын
  • #AskArvin Hi Arvin, thank you for yet another great presentation. You are the intellectual Mozart to my ears! My question is what is the possibility that the unseen mass, dark matter, would be coming from the fourth or higher spatial dimension? Is that too wild a thought? Do other dimensions not exist or do they? How are we sure of either? The best explanation on extra dimensions that I have seen has come from late Dr. Sagan in his iconic TV series Cosmos. He explained how an Apple slicing through a 2 dimensional world would appear like a train of slices changing shapes to the 2D citizens. A 4D (5D if you count time) world could exist right around us or may be at astronomical scale and would be casting gravity on our galaxies.

    @shethtejas104@shethtejas104 Жыл бұрын
    • There is really no need to invoke an unseen dimension when it comes to dark matter. Just because we haven't detected what it is, does not mean that it is a product of anything other than our universe. There is no evidence of any spatial dimensions beyond the 3 we can see.

      @ArvinAsh@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
    • @@ArvinAsh Many Thanks Arvin. Kiitos (Finnish for thanks pronounced kee-tos)

      @shethtejas104@shethtejas104 Жыл бұрын
  • If the universe expands and has been expanding since the big bang, which is a better building block of spacetime? A. superstrings. B. quantum loops. C. Huygen Principle (ripples). D. Nothingness. Answer: C.

    @wulphstein@wulphstein Жыл бұрын
  • This is a wonderful recapitulation of all the cosmology we have heard or read in bits for many years. There three points to make: 1. On the basis of JWST photos of very earliest galaxies going back to estimated 13 billion years, serious doubts have been raised by many KZheadrs about the veracity of Big Bang theory. Request you to please make a video addressing this issue. 2. I have read somewhere that Iron atom is very stable. Thereafter, formation of heavier elements of the periodic table is by a different process and not merely from the debris of a dead star. Is this right? 3. From your explanation, it seems that dark matter and dark energy are mathematical derivatives, not really proven even indirectly. Isn’t it better to take this with a pinch of salt? Why is more mass required in the universe to prove accelerated expansion? I would expect that with greater mass in the universe, and stronger gravity, the expansion has to slow down and eventually leading to Gradual contraction Big Crunch? I recall that Brian Green, in his book The Perfect Symmetry, briefly explains this at plank’s measurements level. Therefore, isn’t it better to look for different explanation for the accelerating expansion of the universe?

    @GururajBN@GururajBN Жыл бұрын
  • I'm confused. You began by showing that gravity is not a force but is manifested by the curvature of space-time. But later when talking about the formation of galaxies you describe how the force of gravity pulls matter together. It would be clearer if you describe how space-time began to curve which cause matter/energy to clump creating more curvature...

    @davidjohnson109@davidjohnson109 Жыл бұрын
  • Hi Arvin, I understand that galactic expansion explains the famous red shift but one thing confuses me. A blue photon leaving a remote galaxy arrives at the earth as a red photon.. - A blue photon has more energy than a red photon - where has this energy gone ?

    @alansharples9520@alansharples9520 Жыл бұрын
    • Good question. The photon doesn't gain or lose energy. The difference in energy arises because the observer’s reference frame is not the same as the reference frame that emitted the photon. It is due to cosmic expansion which creates a Doppler effect. Energy is not conserved from the perspective of different reference frames. For example if you were flying in a supersonic jet next to a fired bulled. You could simply grab that bullet with your hand. It would have no kinetic energy from your reference frame.

      @ArvinAsh@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
  • Are wave functions and light cones the same thing?

    @codywhite1427@codywhite1427 Жыл бұрын
    • Or perhaps I should say is there a correspondence?

      @codywhite1427@codywhite1427 Жыл бұрын
    • No. Two different animals. I have several videos on what wave functions are. Check them out.

      @ArvinAsh@ArvinAsh Жыл бұрын
  • If the supermassive black hole at the centre of galaxies projected all of it's gravity outward on a plane, rather than a sphere, then the stars orbit the galactic bulk as observed without dark matter. It's the result of a spinning singularity. Ultra diffuse galaxies without a SMBH don't.

    @NeonVisual@NeonVisual Жыл бұрын
  • It's funny to imagine a civilization that arises 150b years from now when only our local galaxy can be seen. They'll just have no idea how expansive the universe is. (Was?) Will they even be able to detect the CMB at that time? It seems like eventually it will be red-shifted so much that no device of sufficient size to detect it could be constructed.

    @alhypo@alhypo Жыл бұрын
  • But... It's history story of how they are up to this date modeling the universe 🤓. It's a nice video to have as a reference. Well.. I don't know about your time scaling, but the part that's going to get ignored is from when the construction time ends onwards 😀🤓

    @misterlau5246@misterlau5246 Жыл бұрын
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