How Does Light Actually Work?

2024 ж. 18 Сәу.
3 231 446 Рет қаралды

Get Surfshark VPN at surfshark.deals/universe - Enter promo code UNIVERSE for 83% off and three extra months for free!
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If you like this video, check out writer Geraint Lewis´ excellent book, co-written with Chris Ferrie:
Where Did the Universe Come From? And Other Cosmic Questions: Our Universe, from the Quantum to the Cosmos
www.amazon.com/Where-Universe...
AND check out his KZhead channel:
/ alaslewisandbarnes
Incredible thumbnail art by Ettore Mazza, the GOAT: instagram.com/ettore.mazz...
Animations by the superb Jero Squartini www.fiverr.com/share/0v7Kjv using Manim - MIT License, (c) 2020-2023 3Blue1Brown LLC
Music from Silver Maple, Epidemic Sound and Artlist.
Stock footage from Storyblocks and Artgrid, images of galaxies from NASA and ESO/Hubble.
World line animation By Cyp - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
00:00 Introduction
05:18 What Is Light?
12:58 An Invisible World
21:11 An Impossible Particle
30:54 Both And Neither
46:52 The Life of a Photon
#quantum #relativity

Пікірлер
  • Get Surfshark VPN at surfshark.deals/universe - Enter promo code UNIVERSE for 83% off and three extra months for free.

    @HistoryoftheUniverse@HistoryoftheUniverse Жыл бұрын
    • Always love your videos, some I’ve watched multiple times…..

      @Angl0sax0nknight@Angl0sax0nknight Жыл бұрын
    • I assume you're seeking to earn a coin on your hard work, which I am very interested in supporting. Do you offer an alternative to buying products or services I am not interested in? Direct monthly donations etc.?

      @liqd@liqd Жыл бұрын
    • How did the universe look like before atoms formed?`Like was it like today just only plasma or was it really plasma everywhere so no false vacuum?

      @Donnirononon@Donnirononon Жыл бұрын
    • Newly Born western fake science tries to make a new universe with a fake Big Bang theory.

      @smlanka4u@smlanka4u Жыл бұрын
    • Good video - pity about the glaring 5 errors. It would be good if you corrected these 5 errors - it would certainly improve the presentation and limit confusing viewers. There is no need to apologise at this point in time.

      @PetraKann@PetraKann Жыл бұрын
  • i’m still so amazed i get this for free while im sitting on the toilet. thank you.

    @leahime@leahime Жыл бұрын
    • TMI, you know.

      @jhwheuer@jhwheuer Жыл бұрын
    • The creation of the pooniverse

      @mikeoxmall69420@mikeoxmall69420 Жыл бұрын
    • Reading this while sitting on the toilet xD

      @keanureeves4025@keanureeves4025 Жыл бұрын
    • I feel you xD

      @rodrigoodonsalcedocisneros9266@rodrigoodonsalcedocisneros9266 Жыл бұрын
    • Quality going in, waste going out, you're definitely doing that exchange right! All the poor people in their crazy echo chamber threads have exactly the opposite arrangement! 😥...🤔...🤣🤣🤣

      @warpdriveby@warpdriveby Жыл бұрын
  • I'll tell you what I think, I think this series is better than anything the BBC, Discovery, or anyone else on the internet is putting out right now. High quality coupled with a knack for making incredibly complex subjects easy to understand by the laymen. I also think the more we learn about Quantum Mechanics the more bonkers it gets.

    @CallmeKenneth-tb1zb@CallmeKenneth-tb1zb Жыл бұрын
    • @@ChuckleJokes it's this channel. On youtube

      @CarlosLopez-wq8oi@CarlosLopez-wq8oi Жыл бұрын
    • Especially Discovery... Everything is an action movie for them, insufferable!

      @MorganSullivan@MorganSullivan Жыл бұрын
    • This channel, SEA and Kosmos tend to have very subdued narration, no sports arena type announcer. Also a very chill soundtrack.

      @jeremyt7722@jeremyt7722 Жыл бұрын
    • and then all of a sudden it isn't bonkers but, still completely abstract.

      @chriskelly6574@chriskelly6574 Жыл бұрын
    • Facts on all accounts

      @pathic2449@pathic2449 Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks! As an 80 y/o graduate in Physics and life-time science nerd, I enjoy learning about discoveries that reveal the complexities of our wondrous universe with its two trillion galaxies. Viewing videos such as this is a mind expanding joy. Your explanation that a photon sees neither time nor distance in its journey has helped me finally accept quantum entanglement.

    @jimmoore6033@jimmoore603311 ай бұрын
    • Thanks for your support Jim!

      @HistoryoftheUniverse@HistoryoftheUniverse11 ай бұрын
    • i have been trying to wrap my head around quantum entaglment for a while now without much improvement but the moment the pieces connected bcs if this video was pure bliss

      @kounkieinc3714@kounkieinc371411 ай бұрын
    • Like many religious fanatics, I blindly accept it because it feels right. You guys helped my connect his information to understand more of the “why”. Edit: it may feel right because I have a psychic connection to my mother, son, and my father to some extent. My son has type 1 diabetes and that connection saved his life more than once.

      @kristinessTX@kristinessTX11 ай бұрын
    • @@kristinessTX We must not ask Why, instead we must ask How in order to understand.

      @wicked1172@wicked117210 ай бұрын
    • I'm with you buddy, ten years ahead in time but... Share this photon. 🎇

      @BoB-Dobbs_leaning-left@BoB-Dobbs_leaning-left10 ай бұрын
  • John Rendle below put it perfectly. This is stunningly well done. I first was taught physics at this level 51 years ago and this, is the single clearest, best written, most approachable / comprehensible documentary on quantum science & field theory that I have ever seen. How CAN this only have 0.5m views. BRILLIANT.

    @mikenccc1955@mikenccc1955 Жыл бұрын
    • High school physics in 1957 still defined the aether (sp?) as: "Light is a transverse wave motion in a hypothetical medium called the aether."

      @Swanwgm@Swanwgm5 ай бұрын
    • Thank you for being a teacher. I went to a fundamentalist Christian school. I taught myself Calculus, Physics, Anatomy and Physiology. I thought my piers Algebra, Geometry, Old Testament, and World Religion. I’m Jewish, and they never could convert me. Because of the classes I taught my peers, my sister and I went for free. I continued teaching after graduating so my sister’s tuition was covered. I graduated at 16, and received a BS with dual majors in Mathematics and Physics. I wanted to be a professor, but my husband developed MS, my father had NH Lymphoma and I spent a year re-learning how to walk after being hit head on at 60mph. I went to Med School instead. It was the right path for me. Teachers are so important yet often overlooked as the humanitarians they are. Thank you for sharing your knowledge with others❤

      @persephone342@persephone3425 ай бұрын
  • “The bizarre world of quantum mechanics never disappoints.” Neither do these videos. Thanks.

    @joshonemoore@joshonemoore Жыл бұрын
  • I've heard this sentiment commented here before, but I have an undergraduate degree in physics and yet these videos give me so much insight into these concepts I've learned. I have learned the formulas of relativity and those which govern photons and light on a classical scale and yet the way you present these concepts is incredibly illuminating and never fails to blow my mind, so thank you for producing such incredibly high quality educational content for free.

    @einfisch3891@einfisch3891 Жыл бұрын
    • Really?

      @deltalima6703@deltalima6703 Жыл бұрын
    • g=9.81m/s2

      @Phdintheory@Phdintheory Жыл бұрын
    • @@deltalima6703 really what?

      @danielhenderson7050@danielhenderson7050 Жыл бұрын
    • It’s like a university textbook

      @jonnyqwst@jonnyqwst Жыл бұрын
    • ​@Daniel Henderson Delta Lima is a person of very few words

      @jf5505@jf5505 Жыл бұрын
  • pre-teen here. i discovered this video after getting inspired after watching the movie Oppenheimer, the process of the Manhattan Project. i’ve watched this a little over three times, wrote four papers about light and gave two to my science teacher which she is planning on hanging up in her class, and i am currently creating an entire journal to organize the information listed in this video, so whenever im bored with no internet, i can easily just pull out the journal and start reading. in addition, i’ve screen recorded this video so again, when i have no internet i can watch this video if i dont feel like reading. thank you for giving me and many others the opportunity to find something they are passionate about! update : my teacher suggested i come up with something to show the class so im currently working on google slides to present voluntarily:)

    @Iveri.REP.@Iveri.REP.Ай бұрын
    • Keep seeking this kind of knowledge, kid! School isn’t going to teach it, and this is really what life and reality is about! You’re off to a great start ❤️

      @mxRian4@mxRian4Ай бұрын
    • @@mxRian4 i told my teacher about this and she said that she wants me to make a presentation and talk about light to my class!! 😁😁

      @Iveri.REP.@Iveri.REP.24 күн бұрын
    • You're twelve and wrote 4 papers!?

      @eustab.anas-mann9510@eustab.anas-mann951014 күн бұрын
    • @@eustab.anas-mann9510 11 actually lol

      @Iveri.REP.@Iveri.REP.14 күн бұрын
    • Take this initiative and run with it. I had the same drive as a kid, ended up not doing anything with it until I was 21, I’m in the Navy now training to be a nuclear reactor operator, but I still wish I hadn’t wasted my time not pursuing sciences younger. You’re getting a great start right now, keep going!

      @jamyemoreno3877@jamyemoreno38772 күн бұрын
  • Alright so I do like this series very much since the beginning, but this one litteraly blew my mind. I'm amazed at the extraordinary quality of both the script and the illustrations - you manage to give a grasp of the madness of quantum physics in an amazingly clear way. I feel smarter with each episode (then I realize I have even more questions, hehe). This is an absolute jewel of a production on KZhead, by far the best astrophysics material for laymen out there since Feynman's lectures ;) Outstanding work, can't wait for more.

    @nik-btd@nik-btd Жыл бұрын
  • opening story of a single photon being detected by a telescope was beautiful

    @zactar@zactar Жыл бұрын
    • As always. Poetry with moving pictures.

      @lxathu@lxathu Жыл бұрын
    • I could tell it was going there from the start, but the faster than light expansion of the universe part never makes sense.

      @Charok1@Charok1 Жыл бұрын
    • But unfortunately they got it _very_ wrong; at about 2:43 the narrator says that the photons “travelled for nearly 14 billion light years” but this is absolutely incorrect, if they’re referring to us, which obviously they are since they mention the Milky Way, etc. the photons actually travelled about 42 billion light years, that’s not a typo, FOURTY TWO billion! They forgot about this unimportant thing, umm, dark energy, which has been causing the universe’s expansion to accelerate. Actually, they forgot about the universe expanding at all in that statement.😱

      @aaronperelmuter8433@aaronperelmuter8433 Жыл бұрын
    • @@aaronperelmuter8433 Something had to be made up to fit their math and what has been observed. There still isn't a good answer.

      @Charok1@Charok1 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Charok1 Dunno why anyone needs to make anything up. The observable universe is about 92 billion ly in diameter, so I simply halved in and, oops, should have written 46b ly, not 42 - had 92b on my mind when I wrote the comment. Anyway, what do you mean something needs to be made up? What, and for what reason? Not sure I understand…?🤔

      @aaronperelmuter8433@aaronperelmuter8433 Жыл бұрын
  • Hands down, the best science channel on KZhead. I grew up with Carl Sagan's/PBS' Cosmos series on both broadcast and then VHS. This channel and its series are the modern equivalent of that prior gem, and here they are in full modern resolution and quality and essentially made free for all. Amazing. Whoever the creative geniuses are behind this channel, thank you! 👏🙏

    @ryanbaker7404@ryanbaker7404 Жыл бұрын
    • except that he is talking with such a paauseeeeeeeeeee that it comes across as full of crap

      @xyzzyx7812@xyzzyx7812 Жыл бұрын
    • @@xyzzyx7812 play ur video at 2x

      @swordigo5101@swordigo5101 Жыл бұрын
    • @@xyzzyx7812 Yeah, one or two of them could've been edited better, but in the context of the whole beautifully written episode, they fade into nothing at all. Why would that be your immediate reaction to what you just watched, to the mind-expanding subject matter??? Did you even watch it? Maybe you're a failing wannabe competitor to this You tube channel? Otherwise I think you might be missing a large chunk of your personality package. You should ask for a refund - yours sucks.

      @HowlinWilf13@HowlinWilf13 Жыл бұрын
    • You can use the pauses to rethink and understand the meaningful words

      @Bass0hr@Bass0hr Жыл бұрын
    • No offense @@xyzzyx7812 but there are many, many intelligent comments on this channel. And then there's yours.

      @JB-db4gf@JB-db4gf Жыл бұрын
  • I can't express my awe in this series. My mind is continuously blown even though I have never taken physics! I applaud your presentation and how you can allow me, a simple man, to peak into our amazing universe. Thank you for this gift. I will tear up every time I look to the sky because of you. The revelations at 46 & 54 minutes are just...... amazing...! Thank you.

    @sweethaven-nc@sweethaven-nc8 ай бұрын
  • Can't thank you enough for all the incredible content you put out. Your storytelling and visuals makes complicated topics actually understandable. My absolute favorite channel of all time! ❤️

    @RootsMj@RootsMj10 ай бұрын
    • Give charity instead to poors

      @darkphantom_01@darkphantom_017 ай бұрын
    • ​@@darkphantom_01why do you care what other people do with their money?

      @DimensionalDisorientation@DimensionalDisorientation6 ай бұрын
    • ​@@DimensionalDisorientationwe should

      @darkphantom_01@darkphantom_016 ай бұрын
    • ​@RoEnlightenEd That's what we pay taxes for. That little bit of money wouldn't do shit to help any of us poor folk anyways...we need socio-economic reform and a reasonable maximum wage for the rich and for them to pay their fkng taxes, not random little handouts. And every charity on earth is a joke. Most are just money laundering schemes and/or tax write-off generators, and donate around 10% of incoming donations to people in need.

      @wesleygibson5546@wesleygibson55465 ай бұрын
    • @@wesleygibson5546 true, like American taxes going for genocide in Gaza. 270b+ 😨 donation to only Israel 😆

      @darkphantom_01@darkphantom_015 ай бұрын
  • as a Physics major in college, i understood many (if not all) of the concepts you talked about in the video/documentary(?), yet i still learned so much in this past hour. in education, we learn all of these formulas and briefly cover the idea where they come from, but you covering the history, the historical figures, and the slow accumulation of collective knowledge taught me so much. the beauty of science and math is what attracted me to pursue physics as a career, and this hour long experience reminded my burnt-out brain of my absolute love for these wonderous concepts!

    @undeathbysnipe2986@undeathbysnipe2986 Жыл бұрын
    • "in education, we learn all of these formulas and briefly cover the idea where they come from, but you covering the history, the historical figures, and the slow accumulation of collective knowledge taught me so much." This is a prime example showing that schooling and education are two completely different things. Education is the process of seeking knowledge, whereas schooling is the process of memorizing what is dictated to you. The only person that can educate you is yourself. You gained more knowledge on your own in less than an hour FOR FREE than in 4 years at a school costing tens of thousands of dollars. Our "education" system is the biggest scam in the history of the universe.

      @bostonteapartycrasher@bostonteapartycrasher Жыл бұрын
    • @@bostonteapartycrasher Underrated comment. Yes you can remember all these things about physics, but to actually understand them and apply them is a total different thing. But I'm a dumdum, I don't believe in the big bang theory, neither do I believe in god. Only thing I believe in, is that we are never going to find the truth. It's designed that way. Science changes all the time. I've paid attention enough to know this. And there are genius people out there who created the world we live in today, many of them are gone. But when it comes down to the big question, how the world started and what we live in, personally I always had the belief it's designed for us to never truly know. You can find smart people in the science world who don't buy into the big bang theory, you can find people who work with stuff like this who believe in a god. I accepted along time ago we will never get the answer. I just think it's troubling when people think the big bang is a fact and not a theory, wish it is. It's great science behind the theory, but were did the fire come from? it's always a question we can't ever answer. Were did space itself come from. How can it be anything. It's an impossible task for us to comprehend. Big bang theory is based upon a "let's say" and what I mean by this, they started the theory on "It was fire" but where did the fire come from? It's no way to explain these things. Space itself, even when it's just emptyness, shouldn't exist. Nothing should exist. It makes no sense.

      @Cornell90@Cornell90 Жыл бұрын
    • @@bostonteapartycrasher not true. If you can’t solve the homework problems you don’t understand the material

      @DrDeuteron@DrDeuteron Жыл бұрын
    • If what you didn’t understand was the so-called time ordered virtual particles, then don’t worry. That was misleading at best.

      @DrDeuteron@DrDeuteron Жыл бұрын
  • This doesn't even begin to show the worth of this video as a scientific piece, and falls even further away from appreciating it's value as an entertainment piece. Well done on the masterful ability to put those two things together, and bring some semblance of beauty AND knowledge to millions that otherwise would not have experienced it. Well done and thank you, from all of us, somewhere in time.

    @LairdPrydae@LairdPrydae Жыл бұрын
    • Thank you, very kind words.

      @HistoryoftheUniverse@HistoryoftheUniverse Жыл бұрын
    • I would like to add an appreciation for the timelining and historical account of how and when things were discovered and so seamlessly into the science and storytelling

      @groovergabe@groovergabe Жыл бұрын
    • Lol 10 bucks for attention so sas

      @DontHateMeCausImSexy@DontHateMeCausImSexy Жыл бұрын
    • So... it's really about clickbait?

      @tomasinacovell4293@tomasinacovell4293 Жыл бұрын
    • Give to poors instead

      @darkphantom_01@darkphantom_017 ай бұрын
  • Incredible! It's difficult for me to express, in words, how phenomenal these videos are. I'm familiar with many of the topics having an interest in this area and having watched countless other programs on BBC, YT, etc.. BUT, the way your videos are written, presented, and narrated makes everything else pale in comparison. I'm often breathless after watching. I can't get enough. WOW!

    @jaxwylde2139@jaxwylde213911 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for actually educating us, instead of clickbaiting us like 99% of other space documentary channels.

    @parallelparkdaudette2863@parallelparkdaudette28638 ай бұрын
  • This must be one of the most beautifully presented episodes in an almost poetic series. Incredibly produced and written with superb delivery. Wow!

    @johnrendle1303@johnrendle1303 Жыл бұрын
  • I love how this series is not only a history of the universe, but also a history of physics itself.

    @MrEvers@MrEvers Жыл бұрын
    • How did the first heat or whatever begin?? 🤔🧐

      @sootuckchoong7077@sootuckchoong7077 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@sootuckchoong7077 well that's one of the, if not the biggest, mysteries of physics. What caused a sudden expansion of energy and space that led to existence? We'll likely never know, but it's amazing to ponder.

      @system0fadowner251@system0fadowner25111 ай бұрын
    • @@system0fadowner251 I think my biggest personal questions are: -What brought the initial singularity before the big bang into existence? -What was beyond that, and what is outside the boundaries of our current universe (observable and unobservable) if there is one? I think I'm just baffled by the actual idea of nothingness, I confuse myself even thinking about what I'm trying to wonder about and that's why I LOVE this stuff.

      @RT-qd8yl@RT-qd8yl3 ай бұрын
  • There is a perfect amount of awe and wonderment in the narrator's tone. The writing and production are also top tier. Gold star 🌟

    @LandonBell11@LandonBell1111 ай бұрын
  • I'm just a bohunk from south Georgia, USA, but I must say that this video is the finest presentation of some very complex ideas that I have seen. Superbly written, expertly presented. This is some very tough stuff, but I relished every frame.

    @robertgoss4842@robertgoss48428 ай бұрын
  • I’ve been studying light and gravity for a while, and this is the most complete and succinct explanation of its mysteries I’ve come across

    @melissachristensen614@melissachristensen614 Жыл бұрын
    • You need to study The Electric Universe by the Thunderbolts project . This rubbish is the very definition of Psuedo science. Something , a proton , can not be both a particle and a wave , nor can you manipulate a construct or perdibation , bending of spacetime . Modern theoretical physics is a non science , it is a religion .

      @heracles5766@heracles5766 Жыл бұрын
    • Maybe you could help. I don't understand. How are we measuring this in years? What is a year?

      @timwalsh6283@timwalsh6283 Жыл бұрын
    • @Tim Walsh we measure galactic scaled distance in light years , which represents the distance light in a vacuum travels in one year , which is roughly 58000000000000 miles . We do this mainly because Einstein wrongly assumed light travels, and it travels at a constant speed, therefore making it , not the aether the constant frame for reference in the universe . As most PHD level theoretical physicists know , Einstein was wrong about light and relativity.

      @heracles5766@heracles5766 Жыл бұрын
    • @@heracles5766 so what is a year?

      @timwalsh6283@timwalsh6283 Жыл бұрын
    • @Tim Walsh A year represents the amount of time it takes for the stars to make a complete turn over our heads and return to the exact same place in the sky to an observer , approx 365 1/4 Earth days .

      @heracles5766@heracles5766 Жыл бұрын
  • One of the best documentaries on light that helped me finally understand wave to particle.

    @brianmangan2459@brianmangan2459 Жыл бұрын
    • If you think you understand, you haven't understood. Light and all matter is made up of quantum particles. All quantum particles have wave-like properties. All quantum particles have particle-like properties. No quantum particle is either. Clear now? The terms "wave" and "particle" can be used as analogies to describe certain properties of quantum particles but they are just that... analogies. These are not realities. Electrons have spin states too, yet they do not spin. It's called spin because it is angular momentum. Like a spinning ball, they have angular momentum yet they do not spin. Unlike a spinning ball, this angular momentum is both up or down and left or right. So, here we have yet another anology which is not reality. Nobody understands quantum particles nor what a quantum particle is. Most likely, none of us have that ability. It is unlike anything we can directly observe in just about every way it could be. Not a single anology actually fits any properties of a quantum particle. And the "fields" that these "waves" and "particles" exist in.... most particle physicists don't believe they actually exist. These are just another analogy, a useful construct that enables them to do calculations that make predictions. So, the next time you think you understand, think again.

      @antonystringfellow5152@antonystringfellow515211 ай бұрын
    • @@antonystringfellow5152 I bet you're fun at parties. Joking. I get it. I like to take a more optimistic look at it. We've only just begun. Instant access to information will have a profound effect on our evolution and understanding. I, for one, am pretty happy with what's capable with our current "understanding" of quantum physics. Whatever analogies we needed to get a super computer in our pockets that's letting me talk to you from a mountain top in the desert, half way around the world, is OK by me. It's fascinating we can even ponder it, let alone build kilometers long, underground colliders to find them.

      @easley421@easley42111 ай бұрын
    • Give to poors instead

      @darkphantom_01@darkphantom_017 ай бұрын
  • "A photon is a quantized version of light." Thank you so much for this one line. This whole series is just absolutely exquisite, and this is exactly the description of a photon that I needed. Thank you to every single person involved in making this wonderful series.

    @LisaPalumbo-sq5qc@LisaPalumbo-sq5qc3 ай бұрын
  • Not only the best science channel currently on youtube, but also the best narrator of all time including BBC. You tell the story like you've been there and take us into your journey. Keep up the best work man!

    @farzadgarmiani3653@farzadgarmiani365317 күн бұрын
  • To the team who produced this one : You have outdone yourselves this time. In theory content, visuals and as usual . . the most compeling storytelling way of how to explain it . General audience that lives and dies on the arena . . We salute you .

    @-AndAllThatJazz..@-AndAllThatJazz.. Жыл бұрын
  • This channel and your History of the Earth are putting out some of the best content on KZhead! I'm always blown away by your releases! Thank you for sharing your work and I'm looking forward to the next video!

    @828Brian@828Brian Жыл бұрын
    • Watch History Time and Voices of the Past… it’s his brother and him… just as great!

      @stefanieberg1569@stefanieberg1569 Жыл бұрын
  • Have watched this numerous times and enjoyed it every single time 🙂

    @DL-iq5zo@DL-iq5zo6 ай бұрын
  • Honestly, best documentary series on the universe I've ever seen. I absolutely love these channels. You should make some pins for merch

    @Vanguardw@Vanguardw Жыл бұрын
  • This is one of the most digestible bits of physics i've ever seen. Well done.

    @natjonestower3035@natjonestower3035 Жыл бұрын
    • Digestible? It's full of inaccuracies and falsehoods. It's based on out of date information and lacks understanding of human history while claiming to understand the complexities of the universe. It's well produced and easy on the ears... But it's mostly nonsense.

      @Anon-xd3cf@Anon-xd3cf Жыл бұрын
  • I watch a lot of videos about these concepts through a plethora of channels, but your work here captivates me by far the most and it's not even close. I love to discuss these ideas with my friends and family. The complexity tends to ruin discussion because it can all be nigh impossible to visualize these concepts. Your analogies clear up the confusion. I thank you for that. Wonderful video, wonderful channel. Keep up the good work, please.

    @Warpded@Warpded Жыл бұрын
    • @@simonebest6013no. this is not helpfull.

      @thomasmartin7524@thomasmartin75249 ай бұрын
  • This is how I view “time” and a photon’s journey is instantaneous 😊 The Surf Shake ad slipped into the narration like a buttered ferret, bravo 👏

    @wearemany73@wearemany736 ай бұрын
  • These are hands down the most educational, well put together, and enjoyable to listen to physics/astronomy videos on KZhead. Please keep producing content!!! You are raising the intelligence of every person that finds this channel!!

    @davidczajkowski5956@davidczajkowski59569 ай бұрын
  • I absolutely loved the photon journey to the telescope analogy. Just represents the quality of these documentaries. Can’t believe it’s actually free

    @Michikatsu_tsugikuni28@Michikatsu_tsugikuni28 Жыл бұрын
  • For the (idea of) electrons agreeing to swap the photon, over the vastness of space-time, they had to know it would get there (the photon would cooperate and so would everything else [including the stuff we're still not certain of]).

    @joer.6458@joer.645811 ай бұрын
  • Absolutely mind blowing conclusions which puts our perceived reality in question. My mind is racing and am hungry for answers. Great great video - I hope this inspires a new Newton to take us on the next step of our journey to understanding our impossible existence.

    @gary8022@gary80227 ай бұрын
  • I remember when I was younger I had an epiphany. Time stops at the speed of light. A photon travels at the speed of light. So to a photon it never really exists or it in its own eyes is eternal. The moment of a photons emission up to its absorption, to a photon this happens faster than instantly, no time has passed for it. To a 14 year old it blew my mind, and still does today at 43.

    @ryanhampson673@ryanhampson673 Жыл бұрын
    • lol making up things doesnt make you sound cool bud.

      @josephhall5681@josephhall5681 Жыл бұрын
    • @@josephhall5681 he’s not.

      @phunkyjunkee@phunkyjunkee Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@josephhall5681 of course your name is Joseph

      @BB-pb3hv@BB-pb3hv Жыл бұрын
    • Yes! This is already known!

      @coreyc47@coreyc47 Жыл бұрын
    • Probably not related but when I was 6 years old 60 years old I remember asking my 1st grade teacher a question about magnetism. The question; "is the earth magnetic because of all the magnets on the earth in the material have poles or does the earth cause the poles in the material?" She said I don't know and said she would look into it. A few days latter I asked "so what did you find out?" and she just said that doesn't have anything to do do with magnetism". I have remembered this and after hearing about Feynman wanting to travel to Tuva, thought how it would have been great to learn more from someone like him when I was younger.

      @halsmith7642@halsmith7642 Жыл бұрын
  • I'm an accountant by trade, yet I could swim in cosmic and subatomic knowledge thanks to this program's way friendly presentation. As always it was immersing and impressive. I cant wait to watch the next episode!

    @yohannesgaim6459@yohannesgaim6459 Жыл бұрын
  • When will this channel get the support it deserves! Soooo underrated and genuinely brought back my passion for STEM. Genuinely.

    @nikhilashri6615@nikhilashri6615 Жыл бұрын
  • I love this chanbel, its contents and the narrator is great too! Amazing science in a tangible way.

    @pecfree@pecfree8 ай бұрын
  • Beautiful episode. Love how you and your writers manage to make science so poetic

    @DeftPol@DeftPol Жыл бұрын
    • Perfect description, poetic

      @JHaven-lg7lj@JHaven-lg7lj Жыл бұрын
  • This is the most amazingly approachable and well written channel on KZhead. Thank you for making my days complete with your kickass work. I watch/listen to your videos a ton and it makes me wish I had taken physics courses when I was young. Epic work sir!

    @TheScienceOfAdventure@TheScienceOfAdventure Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you so much. An extraordinary tour de force. It should be compulsory for all students of physics even at secondary school. I am a fan of Richard Feyman but have some doubts regarding his mathematics regarding the problem of escaping infinities. I think we are only at the threshold of understanding the universe and doubt as finite bei gs we will ever really understand. One thing that I find fascinating is that creation has created a being that looks back at itself. Jacqueline Rafferty

    @jacquelinerafferty6071@jacquelinerafferty6071 Жыл бұрын
  • Good job explaining a complex subject so that it's more comprehensible. Thank you.

    @tlahe2@tlahe29 ай бұрын
  • I’m always happy to see that this channel has delivered another video. Thank you for your hard work. They are always masterpieces and although I haven’t seen this yet I’m sure I won’t be disappointed.

    @DW-ng9ke@DW-ng9ke Жыл бұрын
    • 2 out of 2 D.W.'s agree!

      @BunkyFitches@BunkyFitches Жыл бұрын
  • You hold a vast and so well researched wealth of knowledge. Your videos are marvelously narrated and make the education that you provide incredibly interesting, holding the listener's attention to the last word! Thankyou very much for all of your hard research and for sharing it freely with everyone!

    @andyfox6023@andyfox6023 Жыл бұрын
  • That was a real rollercoaster ride. Photon is a wave, no its a particle, no its a wave acting like a particle. Its neither but both! Yes but its quantum entanglement. I’m beginning to understand, i think. This is science education at its finest. Bravo 👏

    @roysam-sin5389@roysam-sin53895 ай бұрын
  • Literally the best documentary format ever❤ “Handshake” of electrons is completely mind blowing 🤯🤯

    @karnovalex@karnovalex Жыл бұрын
  • This channel should be illegal... I'm literally 🙊 speechless... What a remarkable way of depicting the path of a single tinny "Photon" whit such an elegance and simplicity, while casually but rigorously narrating how the brightest minds on our short human history have come to acknowledge what actually 'Light' is, and what are the principales that ultimately make it work that way. I just wanted to thank you for making this topic so accesible and interesting for all KZhead viewers out there. Please keep improving, and making us wonder. This channel, Veritasium, and Kurtzsgesat are definitely among my all time favorites 😁👌

    @3dgar7eandro@3dgar7eandro Жыл бұрын
    • You sound like my kind of science lover! Have you seen "Cool Worlds?" The Columbia University astrophysics star--David Kipping--is astoundingly charismatic and blistering smart.

      @prototropo@prototropo Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@prototropoyes indeed I have, and yes it is also a wonderful channel 😁👌

      @3dgar7eandro@3dgar7eandro10 ай бұрын
  • The quality of the content on/of (I'm struggling with English prepositions sometimes) this channel is out of this world.

    @jakobfredriksson2272@jakobfredriksson2272 Жыл бұрын
    • Correct on the first one. _On_

      @kadourimdou43@kadourimdou43 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@kadourimdou43 The quality of content on this channel. The quality of content of this channel. The first does sound better, but I'm 80% sure both are correct.

      @redridingcape@redridingcape Жыл бұрын
    • @@redridingcape 🤷‍♂️ Maybe. Just thought _on_ sounded less clunky.

      @kadourimdou43@kadourimdou43 Жыл бұрын
    • @@kadourimdou43 I agree, just didn't want OP to think wither was grammatically incorrect.

      @redridingcape@redridingcape Жыл бұрын
    • Well since you are open to learn, the sentence in the brackets should have been - "I sometimes struggle with English prepositions" or " I struggle with English prepositions sometimes" or maybe remove the sometimes from your sentence if you want to use the word "I'm struggling" but it wouldn't capture the whole picture that you are trying to tell. English is my second language too so if anybody finds this wrong, kindly correct me.

      @agnosticmuslim6341@agnosticmuslim6341 Жыл бұрын
  • this video has helped me greatly at filling in the gaps in my mental map of physics. Although it has brought on more questions than answers but that is typical in phyics. Truly reawakend my passion and interest for phycics.

    @kounkieinc3714@kounkieinc371411 ай бұрын
  • Amazing grafics, poetic telling and research! Masterpiece of a video!!

    @Ethosan@Ethosan9 ай бұрын
  • Stunningly beautiful. I'm a physicist, and many of the visuals in this video are very close to what I see when I close my eyes and think about these things. It's cool to see in on a screen, because my mind has to generate it from the math.

    @TimTeatro@TimTeatro Жыл бұрын
  • I always wait for the new video. When it finally arrives, I sit comfortably, grab a cup of tea, turn off the lights, and simply enjoy the journey through space and time.

    @soosik9494@soosik9494 Жыл бұрын
  • This is a beautiful exposition of the subject, guiding you gently through to a mind-blowing culmination

    @greenelk@greenelk Жыл бұрын
  • Your clear precise relaxed and understandable way of narration ,and no excessive music, make these videoos a great joy to watch!! Thank you.😊

    @mack8488@mack8488 Жыл бұрын
  • This is the most well laid out explanation of our understanding of light throughout time I have ever witnessed. Even at about an hour run time, I was thoroughly intrigued and entertained the whole time. Very well done.

    @peaceandloveusa6656@peaceandloveusa6656 Жыл бұрын
  • I love it when the great Paul Dirac gets a mention, voted by a poll of scientists to be the second-greatest UK physicist ever behind only Isaac Newton. He should be as well-known a name with the public as Einstien! His biography "The strangest man" is a fantastic read that I would recommend to one and all!

    @stevebrindle1724@stevebrindle1724 Жыл бұрын
    • Dirac is one of the most brilliant people ever. My favorite scientist. He never gets enough credit. I wish I could have known him personally. Yeah.

      @ngonzalesiii@ngonzalesiii9 ай бұрын
    • @@ngonzalesiii Sometimes I imagine who I would choose from History to attend a dinner party with, Dirac is always on my list although I believe he was very pedantic, but so am I, so no problem, if I had to choose 3 others they would be Karl Marx, Richard Feynman, and Aldous Huxley. Who would you choose?

      @stevebrindle1724@stevebrindle17248 ай бұрын
  • I am no scientist or physicist, but i follow science, and this documentary is definitely one of the I have EVER come across.

    @tjmachaka9023@tjmachaka9023 Жыл бұрын
    • It's definitely one of the documentaries, ever

      @Masoch1st@Masoch1st11 ай бұрын
  • this is some absolutely GOAT youtube science content, thank you for your efforts. I am excited to watch the rest of your work.

    @BrandonFifer@BrandonFifer10 ай бұрын
  • I keep watching this over and over again trying to make sense of what is said. I can’t! I will keep watching it because its so much fun to think about and yet painful to come to any conclusion. To all the great minds that have worked and continue to work on this, I salute you for sharing with this lay person.

    @GM-cf6jv@GM-cf6jv Жыл бұрын
    • Satan is the author of confusion.

      @ezekielnow425@ezekielnow425 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ezekielnow425LOL. This guy 👆👆👆

      @j.edmondson4927@j.edmondson4927Ай бұрын
  • 17:00 - Whoa there. When he first set out to study electromagnetic fields moving through the vacuum of space, he *did not know* that light was an electromagnetic field. He realized this when he calculated the speed of his EM waves and lo and behold the already known speed of light fell out of the arithmetic. This was a huge shock to him, and I can only *imagine* the utter joy he must have felt at the discovery. What a moment that must have been for him!

    @KipIngram@KipIngram Жыл бұрын
  • This is a masterpiece! The content, the way presented, and everything.

    @flattenthestupiditycurve4811@flattenthestupiditycurve4811 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you! I am glad to see you avoided getting hung up on the double slit experiment - which I love, but glad you made the assumption that viewers have seen those videos already. Also, great intro to Feynman diagrams.

    @ericericson9282@ericericson9282 Жыл бұрын
  • I love your content. Like a black hole devouring its stellar neighbours, I’ve devoured your content. It’s well researched, well told, well animated, and well spoken. I’m not gonna lie I have fell asleep a few times late at night watching these mind bending, but relaxing videos. I always go back and watch anything I miss. Thank you so much for doing this.

    @crayons9120@crayons9120 Жыл бұрын
    • Io0 no ng

      @charlievalentine4123@charlievalentine4123 Жыл бұрын
  • Brilliant documentary on the toughest of subjects. Probably the best I have ever seen cover such a range in one hour, information, illustration and commentary first class. Thank you. PS. One tiny comment: at 51:13 think you should stop left clock to show time difference and not let it catch up with right, which has already stopped.

    @andrewreeve5537@andrewreeve5537 Жыл бұрын
  • Wow! I didn't even fall asleep to this (seriously!), it was so informative and amusing and entertaining--just, wow! loved it!

    @catmorganabq@catmorganabq6 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for excellent easy to understand physics. just 3 thoughts on this presentation. 1. As it is through Special Relativity (which does not address gravity) you explain why a photon does not experience time, how does General Relativity which includes gravity play out in a photon’s instantaneous life? 2. How does an exchange take place when a photon is absorbed or trapped by a black hole? 3. Similar to point 1, as a photon 'travels' a to b if it is affected by gravity, as in gravitational lensing, surely this changes it's time experience?

    @mikeegan@mikeegan Жыл бұрын
  • You guys are a gift.. I’m so so glad to have had you to watch or listen to for years now.. you’re amazing.. better than tv could hope to be.. and the effort is seen & appreciated..thank you, for these 2 channels and the History ones..I watch and rewatch again.. Absolutely one of the best anywhere.. 🥰

    @ruththinkingoutside.707@ruththinkingoutside.707 Жыл бұрын
  • This documentary is amazingly well done - the content, the visuals but to me even more so the beautiful comprehensible narration. It is the first time that I feel I got a little grasp on quantum mechanics and effects. This is on par with expensive BBC productions, thank you for putting high quality content like this on KZhead for free.

    @thomass.586@thomass.586 Жыл бұрын
  • I have watched the series in several occasions and every time I find them more and more fascinating. Thank you for creating such wonderful way of learning

    @araceliav8818@araceliav88182 ай бұрын
  • I love the way the sponsor was presented in this video. Usually I skip the sponsor part, but here I listened, fascinated and smiling 🙂

    @danielgogeleien2771@danielgogeleien2771 Жыл бұрын
  • This has been the best explanation of this complex subject that I’ve seen so far. Wonderful…… even though I will have to watch it a few times over !!

    @Chicagoexpat2004@Chicagoexpat2004 Жыл бұрын
  • Wow, this was incredible! The story-telling mixed with a documentary is the ultimate combination. The production value on this is something else. Well done!!!

    @chrzan9608@chrzan9608 Жыл бұрын
  • What a gorgeous video. Great writing, too: this subject is tough for me to understand and I actually got some of it. 😂

    @mortalclown3812@mortalclown3812 Жыл бұрын
  • One of the best vids I've seen on YT. I have one pedantic point though, a planet's orbit is not classed as an oscillation. An oscilation means to swing like a pendulum, it is also a vibration. Light doesn't oscillate or vibrate, but it can oscillate between a particle and a wave.

    @seanuk7757@seanuk7757 Жыл бұрын
  • these videos have been so good for my understanding. It’s really difficult to look at something like physics and approach it, with all its broad complexity, when you don’t have a background already. It’s so useful to be able to see the history of the debates and the evolution of the theories, it feels like these ideas are really clicking now.

    @hypermobilesinger@hypermobilesinger Жыл бұрын
  • From a channel that consistently produces brilliant content, this video stands out. Telling the story of mankind's understanding of the nature of light, paired with the story of a photon from the early days of the universe, this is one of the very best science documentaries I have ever seen. Entertaining, informative, and authoritative. Bravo.

    @johnpurdy6284@johnpurdy6284 Жыл бұрын
  • This has to be your best yet. I am going to have to watch it more than once to take it all in. 😊

    @peterbreis5407@peterbreis5407 Жыл бұрын
  • So well put together and so beautifully narrated.

    @geoffreyM2TW@geoffreyM2TW Жыл бұрын
  • This is, together with History of the Earth the best KZhead has to offer. Every single episode is a masterclass of writing and narration. And every episode is a joy to watch. Thanks a lot and please keep on the good work.

    @Rafaga777@Rafaga777 Жыл бұрын
  • I've watched this episode 3 times now and each viewing increases my understanding. I have a maths/physics degree from King's College, London but that was way back in 1973. I subscribe to a lot of similar sites but I've found this series to top the lot. The commentary is excellent as is the content.........and this episode was the best so far, IMHO. Kudos to you all.

    @papaspice1248@papaspice1248 Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for that, I’m no scientist and no mathematician but I find this lecture fascinating. Thanks.

    @davidrichard2761@davidrichard2761 Жыл бұрын
  • i cant for fucks sake get myself to like studying anymore. im so fed up with everything (every single cell inside me hates it while i do it, sadly i have to). but i stumbled about this channel while grinding POE (a game) and watched it on second screen while killing things. i just happened to stop every now and then, intrigued by the video. at some point i was auto-pilot inside the game and full-brain into the video. 1. its just nice to listen to (good voice, nice pacing, nice music) 2. its super well structured. starts small, gets the whole picture, has a nice finish. i hate history but it gets inbetted into everything so nicely i dont even mind. 3. its full of knowledge. many channels always go abit over the top with speculations are just wana bait you with extrapolated ideas etc. but this channel seems really educational and tries to stay with the facts. i love that. 4. IMO people should be forced to watch this. scrap any physics class in school and show children this instead. its beautiful, attantion grabbing in a good way, educational, perfected and thought through. not like some semi-improvised, hectic, overly specific, chaotic lesson in school from a teacher who hates his life and thinks everyone is stupid anyway. (surely, some exceptions excluded)

    @kliersheed@kliersheed11 ай бұрын
  • This is such an inspiring video, HOTU. My dream is to become a science teacher and my goal would be to make my students feel the same way your videos make me feel. Awe, intrigue, and overall captivating in the face of the massive cosmos that is our existence.

    @Joeyplanets@Joeyplanets Жыл бұрын
    • I feel exactly as you feel, trying to look deeper into reality. If it means something;)

      @MayaWu44@MayaWu44 Жыл бұрын
    • Joey, I commend you for wanting to teach young people about science, but have you seen kids in schools these days? There is no such thing as respecting elders (teachers) anymore and with cellphones that every kid has, they are paying no attention to anyone but the latest stupid little dances.

      @joesands8860@joesands8860 Жыл бұрын
    • @@joesands8860 I shall say, it's because Elders try so hard to be that way. Do not expect respect when you give none, do not except understanding when you do not say how nor why, do not expect thinking, if you instead teaching them only how to remember. Working in school do not make you a teacher. Throw away your old books, take this phone you hate to your hand. Show them, how to use it proficiently, show them how fun it can be to use phone to do curious things. That's the way you should teach. If you walk into class and require respect 'on credit' than kids already know you are a fool and will give you none. Kids are smart, remember that.

      @MayaWu44@MayaWu44 Жыл бұрын
    • I wish you the best of luck on your journey. A single, passionate and knowledgeable teacher can really change someone's whole life.

      @einfisch3891@einfisch3891 Жыл бұрын
    • @@user-jo1gy3kx3j you are a robot but you don't know, cut off your own fingers to verify. It's ok, they aren't real.

      @einfisch3891@einfisch3891 Жыл бұрын
  • Given that from the photon's frame of reference there is no time or distance separating its emission from its absorption, the notion of the emitting and absorbing electrons needing to agree across time to exchange the photon becomes superfluous. The photon *just is* the event of those two electrons interacting at the same place and time, effectively touching each other for an instant. And since fundamentally all particles are lightlike to begin with, massless and moving at c, only slowing down and acquiring mass in the process of interacting with each other, it is that perspective of all time and distance being zero that is most fundamental and true, and the apparent separation of different things across vast reaches of space and time being emergent from the structure of the pattern of interaction between the various fields, which interactions just are the particles of the universe. (Because even zero-extension objects can still have an order between them, so there's still a sequence where first these fields interacted this way, then those fields interacted that way, etc, in order, even if each interaction and so the sum of all the interactions adds up to zero time elapsed).

    @Pfhorrest@Pfhorrest Жыл бұрын
    • I WENT OUSTSIDE AND SHOOTED MY LASER AT MY NEIBOURGS WINDOWS ,NOTHING HAPENNED BECAUSE LUCKYLI NO ELECTRONS IN IS HOUSE AGGRED ,OTHERWISE HE WOULD HAVE CALLED THE POLICE LOL, 😂👽

      @robertpotvin8872@robertpotvin8872 Жыл бұрын
  • It’s just insane that this level of quality documentary is available on KZhead. It’s ridiculous. And a human voice, probably the best narrator voice in the history of the world, not some idiotic AI voice that’s like nails on a chalkboard. Please, please continue to be successful and continue to generate content like this. If you run out of funds just setup a Patreon account. I would gladly pay for this content.

    @smoorej@smoorej3 ай бұрын
    • Voice is me - thanks for the support!

      @HistoryoftheUniverse@HistoryoftheUniverse3 ай бұрын
    • @@HistoryoftheUniverse This person is right, your voice is PERFECT for it. It brings me back to the old school NG and PBS documentaries I grew up with. They set the standard back in the day, and you've taken over admirably. Just as good if not better than what I grew up with. Thank you so much.

      @RT-qd8yl@RT-qd8yl3 ай бұрын
  • This video gives me goosebumps. The fact that reality is so wild just blows my mind. What an excellent video.

    @y5mgisi@y5mgisi4 ай бұрын
  • Great narration & beautifully rendered graphics makes this channel one of the best for scientific breakdown of processes. The BIG questions are asked and answered. I love it. Thank you for all you do to help us understand this strange universe we live in. ✌🌎💖

    @sherifitzgerald6886@sherifitzgerald6886 Жыл бұрын
  • Such a wonderful combination of narrative quality, wonder, and scientific rigour. Unparalleled content, thanks.

    @saltydodger9597@saltydodger9597 Жыл бұрын
  • One question that’s been bouncing in my head: we know the edge of the universe is now expanding away from us faster than light. Say a photon is shot towards this expansion. Since this boundary is receding faster than it can travel, it will never interact with an electron and be absorbed. Since it’s journey is now infinite, but it’s passage of time is zero, what does the photon actually experience in this situation?

    @TheBigLeChowski@TheBigLeChowski Жыл бұрын
    • You may have just discovered the true god particle.

      @guydreamr@guydreamr5 ай бұрын
  • What a beautiful timeline to have been a part of as we discovered the limits of the dimensional realities. There have been dualistic polarities of joy and sorrows. Very grateful to progress beyond limitations. Great videos as usual.

    @user-ml8oq5dh9n@user-ml8oq5dh9n3 ай бұрын
    • Also, this channel makes me seriously consider purchasing KZhead premium just to avoid the terrible ads interrupting at the worst times as I fall asleep to these videos….

      @user-ml8oq5dh9n@user-ml8oq5dh9n3 ай бұрын
  • Yay, another video to watch 10 times over, I love watching them.

    @jay252589@jay252589 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for sharing how amazing reality is. The videos on this channel are incredibly enlightening ❤ 😉

    @ReadingRambo152@ReadingRambo152 Жыл бұрын
  • I've discovered that the soothing sound of your voice, turned down low enough to just gently caress my eardrums, cures my insomnia. I listen to this every night before bed.

    @dungareekogi2442@dungareekogi2442 Жыл бұрын
  • This video reminds me of "Journey to the Sea" or "The Little Train that Could". "Eternally Youthful". From the light's point of view. Excellent, Professional pod cast/documentary. Thanks, Mario Villarreal.

    @mariovillarreal8647@mariovillarreal8647 Жыл бұрын
  • These videos are incredibly well done. Thank you for doing your part in advancing knowledge.

    @JB-db4gf@JB-db4gf Жыл бұрын
  • Really loved this video. It explains a lot of complex physics without getting bogged down in the complexities of mathematics. Again, THANK YOU !!! 🤯🤯🤯

    @larrygraham3377@larrygraham3377 Жыл бұрын
  • That was powerful, informative well produced and delivered,veritably seamless as our protagonists photons journey. Thank you for a job well done.

    @tonyjohnson9889@tonyjohnson98899 ай бұрын
  • I thought you were going to show 3d-waves of photons or something. Most of that has already been explained by King Crocoduck and a few documentaries by Jim Al-Khalili. But it's a nice video. Clear and concise.

    @burieddreamer@burieddreamer4 ай бұрын
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