How Can MASS and ENERGY be the Same Thing? What, Where and Why is it?

2024 ж. 24 Мам.
188 760 Рет қаралды

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REFERENCES
Stron Nuclear Force explained: • Why Don't Protons Fly ...
Quantum ChromoDynamics (QCD): • QCD: Visualizing the S...
General Relativity: • General Relativity Exp...
Higgs field explained: • The Crazy Mass-Giving ...
CHAPTERS
0:00 Things not moving have energy
1:56 What and where is mass?
2:45 Higgs Field a source of mass
4:01 Strong force a source of mass
5:23 DeleteMe
6:32 Where 99% of the mass of the universe is located
7:55 How color charges work (Quantum chromodynamics)
8:23 Confinement
10:31 How does Strong Force create mass?
13:34 Strong NUCLEAR force also a source of mass
SUMMARY
How is mass and energy the same thing? What is mass really? If you weigh 80kg and are in a car moving 100km/hr, your energy is equal to about 30000 joules. But did you know that the energy you have standing still, not moving at all, is more than a hundred trillion times that, over 6*10^18 joules?
This comes from E=mc^2. But what is the nature of that energy? Is it due to movement at the quantum level? It is due to forces? How is it that mass can be the same as this energy. If it’s all energy, then is mass even a real thing?
What we call mass is made up of all the atoms in the rock. 99.99% of the mass of an atom is located in its tiny nucleus in the center, which makes up less than 0.01% of its volume. The rest is in the electrons that surround the atom.
There are two sources of mass. The known mass of fundamental particles comes from their interaction with the Higgs Field. This is like an energy grid. Different particles take different amounts of energy from it. But this makes up less than 1% of the mass of an atom. The other 99% of the mass is due to the strong force which keeps quarks bound within the nucleus of an atom.
A fundamental force of nature called the strong force that keeps these quarks bound together to form the proton nucleus. This force is mediated by gluons. But gluons are massless, so how are they responsible for so much mass? Gluons bind quarks together. And both have something called the color charge. This charge is how the strong force operates.
It’s somewhat analogous to an electrical charge where negatively charged electrons surrounding positively charged protons making the atom neutral. With quarks however, we deal with red, blue and green color charges that combine to form a neutral color. These are not optical colors, but metaphorically speaking, works similarly to the way red, blue and green optical colors can combine to form a neutral or white color.
Quarks exchange colors between themselves which is mediated by gluons. And it is this exchange which results in the strong force keeping them glued together. Why does color exchange keep them bound. This is due to confinement. What this means is that a color charged particle cannot exist on its own. Quarks and Gluons are color charged particles. Why? Because color charges exist can only exist in a combination of colors that is always neutral. This need for the combination of charges to exist as neutral, attracts red, blue and green color charged particles to each other.
This is quantum chromodynamics. It’s the science of the way the strong force works to keep the quarks inside the nuclei of atoms tightly bound together. This is the strong force. But how is this strong force creating mass? Mass is really just bound energy. The rest mass of an object is its intrinsic energy-content. It’s a type of potential energy. Any form of energy contributes to the mass of a body, potential or kinetic. The nature of this energy doesn’t matter. So for example, a compressed spring is a little bit heavier than the same spring without the potential energy stored in its compression. You don’t notice this mass difference because at our scales, these energies contribute very little to the mass.
Any kind of energy bends spacetime. it creates gravity. And so bounded energy, which is what the strong force results in creates is where most of the mass comes from. 99% of the mass of objects comes from the energy of the gluons confining quarks inside the nuclei of atoms.
#strongforce
#whatismass
#quantumchromodynamics
Another concept related to the strong force is the force that keeps Protons and neutrons glued together inside the nucleus of larger atoms. This is called strong NUCLEAR force, distinct from the Strong force which keeps quarks glued together. This is also a form of potential energy, and also contributes to the mass of an atom. This force is mediated by mesons which are formed when energy stretches quarks such that a new quark/anti-quark pair are stretched. This pair is called a meson. The exchange of mesons creates a strong attraction between protons and neutrons.

Пікірлер
  • (ERRATA) Note that there is mistake in the formula at 0:35-0:40 - it should be 1/2 MV^2 - the MV^2 should be in the numerator not the denominator. Sorry, we did not pick this up in editing.

    @ArvinAsh@ArvinAsh2 ай бұрын
    • Basically an electron is made up of really condensed pieces of its fields smoke liquid energy and these are probably little round piece's of energy.... 😂😂 that are inside the electron and they're just condensed enough to combine to make one piece of energy or one particle... So the collide and push one another and this is why... We see vibrates so they collide in the center and push away from the center of the electron and the center pieces pull the on the other little pieces that are traveling away from the collision in the center..... And gravitational pull from the pieces in the center pulls the other little pieces that are being pushed away from center of the electron... back towards the center of the electron because of the other little pieces in the center...... Good enough my name is Dylan ray Stone Okay so the field that makes up gravity is in all fields.... Accept space which is also its own field.... Or you could say time acts like a smoke and some pieces of the smoke are more condensed than others and whenever they collide in to the same condensity pieces they pull in on other and be come one condensed piece and then they pull in on their own field creating a gravitational pull... Or it's another field inside the second field... Doing the same thing as time and then basically one of those pieces becomes condensed enough it pulls on the second field. Then the particle from the first field also pulls on its little uncondensed pieces in it's field to create what we call gravitational pull😂

      @user-uu2cd4wl3i@user-uu2cd4wl3i2 ай бұрын
    • So energy and energy are the same thing and are caused by energy and is caused by mass and mass is energy ok I got it.

      @keiths.taylor5293@keiths.taylor5293Ай бұрын
    • @@keiths.taylor5293 Lol. Well, this video could have been condensed to your single sentence!

      @ArvinAsh@ArvinAshАй бұрын
    • It is false either way. As you stated the vehicle standing still is still moving with exponential velocity. Which is the same exact velocity the Earth spins around the sun as it spins around. The same exact velocity the Galaxy is spinning, the solar system is spinning, and the Earth is spinning. The same exact velocity the universe is spinning, the galaxy is spinning, as the solar system spins at that velocity while the planets spin with the solar system. Observe it for yourself. If you can see another galaxy in the sky. We are moving as fast as that galaxy is, to observe it. Mass and energy are one in the same. Quantum physics will prove it when education allows it. Apparently, we have not made it that deep yet. Electrons must have mass. Electrons fuse atoms. Dictate spectrum. Determine magnetism. Electrons are the communicating device to all elements. Electrons are the visual and invisible spectrums of photons. X-ray, incandescent, Florescent, ultraviolet. With every atom and photon, there is an electron.

      @rafaelgonzalez4175@rafaelgonzalez4175Ай бұрын
    • So basically if a man should lay with a man as man lay with women he's going to burn in hell.. and I'm not gay but I bet some of you are so good luck

      @user-uu2cd4wl3i@user-uu2cd4wl3iАй бұрын
  • The explanation differentiating the "Strong" force from the "Strong Nuclear" force was the answer to something I've wondered about for a long time. Thanks Arvin!

    @daytonanderson2804@daytonanderson2804Ай бұрын
    • Strong force and binding force

      @jasonwiley798@jasonwiley7983 күн бұрын
  • This is just the kind of topic I love when you cover, really digging down into the endless "why"s until we finally reach the "we don't know." Thanks, Arvin, you're awesome!

    @stevenjones8575@stevenjones85752 ай бұрын
    • yeah exactly

      @alwaysdisputin9930@alwaysdisputin99302 ай бұрын
    • I'm equally shocked at how much we know as I am about how much we don't know. It's not that we're making things up. It's just that we can't probe any deeper, so we just have to take what we see at face value and go with it. It's crazy how we don't really know the mechanisms that bind these particles and quarks together. Like we know enough to understand a bit of how it works, but we have no idea what's truly happening. We just know it happens and roll with it.

      @zualapips1638@zualapips1638Ай бұрын
  • This has got to be one of the most readily understandable videos I've seen about QCD ... and the only one I've seen differentiating how the strong force operates vs. the strong nuclear force

    @lyndalexfactor6282@lyndalexfactor62822 ай бұрын
    • "QCD"???

      @James-ll3jb@James-ll3jb2 ай бұрын
    • @@James-ll3jb10:15 Quantum Chromodynamics. Never heard of it either.

      @ronjon7942@ronjon79422 ай бұрын
    • Agree. I knew each of those concepts individually, but putting them into a broader framework really helped me to understand.

      @cyclonasaurusrex1525@cyclonasaurusrex15252 ай бұрын
    • Chromo = color, in reference to colorforce

      @iridium1911@iridium19112 ай бұрын
    • Yeah descriptively. But the number of times he says "We don't know why." is frightening. He might as well say: "It's because God planned it that way." WE don't know any "WHY".

      @ramrod0209@ramrod02092 ай бұрын
  • This is an astoundingly clear presentation that this half-wit greatly appreciates. Honestly, I've been watching particle physic videos for years and could explain almost none of it. But after viewing this video I think I am many steps closer. THANKS!

    @OneAmongBillions@OneAmongBillions2 ай бұрын
    • You're still a whole half ahead of me. This is a video I'll need to watch about ten more times. Or probably a hundred.

      @SRMoore1178@SRMoore11782 ай бұрын
    • I was thinking of commenting something similar, but am happy to tag along on yours. Same. I mean, it was even a eureka moment at 7:15 when he described the rationale of using color to denote quark charges!

      @ronjon7942@ronjon79422 ай бұрын
    • don't feel too bad about it, there are still, as this guy points out, lots of explanations as to how things are, but literally NOTHING on WHAT they are, we simply do not yet know...we may never know.

      @ashleyobrien4937@ashleyobrien4937Ай бұрын
  • Nice synopsis of the basics of how QED works. However, you need to point out that, unlike photons and electrodynamics, the color force carriers ALSO carry the color charge. It is BECAUSE the gluons carry charge they have so much energy that manifests as mass. Contrast to photons which carry no charge of the force they mediate.

    @zyntolaz@zyntolaz2 ай бұрын
    • Huh. K, that helps, thnx.

      @ronjon7942@ronjon79422 ай бұрын
    • Well it’s nice to see an opinion that is Based on facts you must do a lot of studying like I do yes I find quantum mechanics in general very interesting specially the Higgs bozon quantum field

      @charlesdrury9712@charlesdrury9712Ай бұрын
  • The more I learn about how the universe works on a fundamental level the more I realize how little we actually know.

    @Johnny-bm7ry@Johnny-bm7ry2 ай бұрын
    • I don’t agree! Get 400 years back and see what we have achieved! A lot of unknowns- yes! But we are still infants in physics

      @theklaus7436@theklaus7436Ай бұрын
    • No it's just that the layers keep going deeper and deeper. Never ending.

      @chamajid@chamajidАй бұрын
    • Does He-2 exist? This would be useful to study, as it would show the strength or the nuclear binding force relative to the em repulsive force. Perhaps this is known already.

      @jasonwiley798@jasonwiley798Ай бұрын
    • Yea man Iv always been a believer but when you ponder the universe it’s about as close as you can get to proving a god to me, it’s incredible

      @ARdave311@ARdave311Ай бұрын
    • @@ARdave311 in other words, you believe in magical beings. I believe in facts.

      @jasonwiley798@jasonwiley79828 күн бұрын
  • Arvin, you're someone I could probably spend time talking with to no end, but with continuous insights and revelations, i.e. useful and productive talk. You ask all the question I myself would ask, so we think alike. It is very hard to find such minds where I live, unfortunately. Best wishes from Bosnia.

    @edinfific2576@edinfific25762 ай бұрын
    • Thank you. And Welcome.

      @ArvinAsh@ArvinAsh2 ай бұрын
    • Hi ​@@ArvinAsh! Great Channel, my friend!!! :) Gravity = The Spaceless and Timeless Vacuum Energy State of Matter!!! :)

      @robhappier@robhappier2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@ArvinAsh- So in a nuclear explosion when bombarding the nucleus with neutrons, is that creating Mesons and consequently the large amounts of energy released as the nuclei is being torn apart?

      @billant2@billant22 ай бұрын
    • Hi Edin, same here. We could talk if you want to. And we could gather more people to talk. And we could visually bring to life the ideas that emerge. Let's start.

      @localverse@localverse2 ай бұрын
    • @@localverse woah woah i wanna join this party.

      @isaacdebrah3963@isaacdebrah3963Ай бұрын
  • I am COMPLETELY amazed at the amount of understanding that has been developed. Amazing.

    @halfisher3598@halfisher35985 күн бұрын
  • The brilliance of this guy in explaining these theories, is on a par with the brilliance of Einstein, Dirac, Feynman, etc in developing these theories...

    @RandomNooby@RandomNoobyАй бұрын
  • After studying physics in school for years, I appreciate the simple things we don't know more than how all those simple things interact.

    @DB-ho8cc@DB-ho8cc2 ай бұрын
  • The photon box thought experiment is the clearest explanation I've heard for why bound energy acts like mass. That is, oscillating force carriers can transfer momentum even though they're massless, and they resist an aggregate change in momentum because it creates a gradient for momentum transfer at the boundary, kind of like how a spring attached across the inside of a box makes it harder to move the box parallel to the spring's action.

    @matt_w@matt_w2 ай бұрын
  • Arvin - as always, you do an amazing job of explaining the profoundly complex into something very intuitive and easy to comprehend - many thanks! It will be great if every high school physics student (or for that matter, any student) gets to see your videos as part of their curriculum. Makes learning so much more fun when explained the way you do!!

    @sridharsrinivasan400@sridharsrinivasan400Ай бұрын
    • Great to hear! thank you.

      @ArvinAsh@ArvinAshАй бұрын
  • Arvin, just another GREAT Video by you and your team!!! Thank you for this comprehendable explanation of the strong force(s)! Keep the great content up! 👍👍👍

    @Kaffeesuchti1985@Kaffeesuchti19852 ай бұрын
  • This was one of your best so far! The part where mentioning mass being a fraction heavier when they have more energy was very informative and something I had wondered about. Also explains the difference between the strong force and the strong nuclear force. Great work!

    @Turbulence1976@Turbulence19762 ай бұрын
  • This was a very good video. I’m going to watch it a few more times. This is the best I’ve heard QCD explained. Thanks so much!

    @chrisdickens4862@chrisdickens48622 ай бұрын
  • Another wonderful video. Arvin, you're indispensable to anyone with a thirst and curiosity for the fundamental. Always loved this channel dearly.

    @roycefruciano5418@roycefruciano54182 ай бұрын
  • I find it amazing that E=MC squared... not some fraction but exactly the speed of light squared x whatever the mass is.

    @moopius@moopius2 ай бұрын
    • nature really seems to hate fractions, it only seems to like integers.

      @icaleinns6233@icaleinns62332 ай бұрын
    • I think that's another facet of both E=mc^2 and the classical definition of energy being special cases of the same equation. Cool in any case, especially in that it's true of any system of units that defines Energy in a similar way.

      @FireStormOOO_@FireStormOOO_2 ай бұрын
    • Joules are kilograms time (meters per second) squared ..so two Ftw.

      @DrDeuteron@DrDeuteron2 ай бұрын
    • Me too. Take a look at: E = Mc² E/c = M*c E*T/L = M*L/T and think about the last one. Energy for a Time per Length is equal to Mass for a Length per Time.

      @DEMOKRATEN-DEUTSCHLANDS@DEMOKRATEN-DEUTSCHLANDSАй бұрын
  • 12:00 as a layman, this seems to imply that, on the surface, unifying Gravity and Quantum Mechanics shouldn't be anywhere near as difficult as it really is proving to be. Very nice to see yet another clear explanation to such a mind-bending topic as you've outlined here, thankyou.

    @markzambelli@markzambelli2 ай бұрын
    • From what I understand, the problem with quantum gravity is that it’s only really relevant at very small length scales, or at extremely high energies. Unless you’re at the center of a black hole or at the beginning of time, gravity seems to behave quite classically, and General Relativity + some quantum mechanics here and there depending on the situation (i.e. Hawking Radiation) seems to be adequate. If only we had a particle accelerator with the radius of Neptune’s orbit…. Which, who knows, might happen in a few thousand years. I truly hope we figure it out before then though. That would be cool.

      @i_booba@i_booba2 ай бұрын
    • We could probably build such an accelerator much sooner than that, considering we wouldn't need the vacuum equipment and maybe not even the cryo-coolers in space. You only need a handful of space stations to bend the beam, and in micro-gravity, they can be rather spindly, lightly built, unmanned affairs.@@i_booba

      @FireStormOOO_@FireStormOOO_2 ай бұрын
    • QFT and GR are mathematically incompatible with or without experimental data.

      @DrDeuteron@DrDeuteron2 ай бұрын
  • Amazing video, can't believe I didn't find this channel earlier. I love that you go to the "we don't know yet why" part, it's really important for understanding, it's something that schools don't do

    @tonipejic2645@tonipejic264528 күн бұрын
  • Thanks Arvin! You've the clearest and frankly best quality science videos Ive seen on the web!

    @joshualee3059@joshualee30592 ай бұрын
  • Arvin always makes me say “eureka!”

    @Horribilus@Horribilus2 ай бұрын
  • Wow 🤯 Arvin that was so well explained and simple. Best explanation I've seen... ever, love your work.

    @seanmostert4213@seanmostert42132 ай бұрын
  • Arvin, thank you very much for such in depth and fascinating content! And thx even more for finally explaining what EVERY single one of my teachers failed to answer: my question to them was, if e=mc2, what does m=e/c2 mean; and you did so masterfully I might add! It may seem trivial as it seems to answer itself when simply reading it aloud, but I was always met with silence and the lesson moving on; not one of them mentioned this was Einsteins actual postulate… honestly love this video and admittedly have much more to say but I believe it may be too in depth for a comment to a video; thanks again!

    @BetzalelMC@BetzalelMC2 ай бұрын
  • Holy crap legit 10 mins ago I was thinking about this and just got a notification for this topic wow that's insane

    @tnt5320@tnt53202 ай бұрын
    • Please reinstall your Neuralink firmware and reset. KZhead values your privacy, and will only share your brainwaves with select third-party advertising partners to enhance your online experience.

      @Deletirium@Deletirium2 ай бұрын
    • Is that what's called spooky action at a distance?

      @johnhamilton7762@johnhamilton77622 ай бұрын
    • Actually, it's called Synchronicity....but who knows, maybe it's rooted in entanglement 🤷‍♂️

      @ilya4759@ilya47592 ай бұрын
    • Or maybe your presence in "this" moment of having experienced the topic had an influence on you and your timeline from 10 minutes ago.

      @yinyang2385@yinyang23852 ай бұрын
  • Youre one of the best on YT. Thanks for the video keep it up

    @andycopeland7051@andycopeland70512 ай бұрын
  • Arvin...❤❤❤❤❤thank you for this wonderful video

    @sarass1234@sarass12342 ай бұрын
  • Wow. Just wow. Ty so much for this video. I'm falling in love with your channel.

    @criz6825@criz682512 күн бұрын
  • Arvin, you're one of the best physics educators on KZhead, and I appreciate how politely you've responded to my comments amidst the sea of inquiries. I liken the mass of an atomic nucleus to the dynamics of a fidget spinner. The mass seems to arise from the interactions and rotational inertia of the three spinning parts, similar to the weights in a fidget spinner. Does this analogy correctly apply to the concept of atomic weight in physics?

    @ISK_VAGR@ISK_VAGR2 ай бұрын
    • There is a kinetic energy component due to the movement of quarks that contributes to the mass, but it is minor. The majority comes from the force keeping quarks glued to each other - you can think of this like a strong compressed spring.

      @ArvinAsh@ArvinAsh2 ай бұрын
  • The strong "nuclear" force and the strong force are different. I've been reading, but not understanding, that they are not the same thing since I was in elementary school. I can't speak "math." I've tried many times to learn it. Thanks for explaining it without overcomplicating it.

    @Nedski42YT@Nedski42YT2 ай бұрын
    • They are very different, and this I wonder if they should be considered two different forces.

      @jasonwiley798@jasonwiley79810 сағат бұрын
    • @@jasonwiley798 Maybe even give them more distinct names?

      @Nedski42YT@Nedski42YT10 сағат бұрын
  • We don't need to understand everything you say to remain fascinated!! Great video!!

    @wesleywashington1251@wesleywashington1251Ай бұрын
  • This video is the best about QCD I've ever seen so far. Thanks a lot!

    @andreyassa7638@andreyassa7638Ай бұрын
  • The way you explain these concepts makes them click even more! Thank you!

    @jonathancunningham4159@jonathancunningham41592 ай бұрын
  • I got the part where they guy is driving a car, but need to catch up on the rest.

    @Pangolier@Pangolier2 ай бұрын
    • All you gotta know is that it is classic Elon musk driving the car

      @kevinbenitez42@kevinbenitez422 ай бұрын
    • Chuckle

      @ronjon7942@ronjon79422 ай бұрын
    • Glad I'm not the only one😂

      @peterflynn9123@peterflynn91232 ай бұрын
  • You have an extraordinary gift for teaching advanced ideas in a very accessible way, Arvin. Thank-you for all your great work and devotion to education.

    @andoletube@andoletube2 ай бұрын
  • Brilliant, love it, hooray Arvin!

    @emergentform1188@emergentform11882 ай бұрын
  • He’ve sad “The energy is in my mass” so quickly that I decided to listen to it again, just to be sure.

    @Sherlock_The_Corgi@Sherlock_The_Corgi2 ай бұрын
    • I am too lazy to listen it again because all my energy is in my mass.

      @XtreeM_FaiL@XtreeM_FaiL2 ай бұрын
    • All my energy is in my ass, it is known

      @ILLUMINATED-1@ILLUMINATED-12 ай бұрын
  • The last part of the video omg thank you! Finally someone explains this. I was always confused about what keeps protons/neutrons together vs vs what keeps quarks together. Great video!

    @Qrexx1@Qrexx12 ай бұрын
  • Fantastic video, as always 😊.

    @SmogandBlack@SmogandBlack2 ай бұрын
  • Awesome awesome video. Great explainer. Thank you!

    @Simmo87@Simmo872 ай бұрын
  • Best explanation I have heard yet. Thanks!

    @avinut@avinut2 ай бұрын
  • The intresting thing that Einstein found e = mc^2 without knowing about binding energy and stuff like that.

    @luudest@luudest2 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, it's the "light in a box of mirrors" model, which wasn't mentioned at all in this video. It's literally how you derive m=E/c² from momentum. (Also, Poincaré did it too.)

      @juliavixen176@juliavixen1762 ай бұрын
    • @@juliavixen176 yes indeed! After Einstein the relationship between energy and mass was found many times more in other circumstances.

      @luudest@luudest2 ай бұрын
  • ALVIN, what a gift you have! You present VERY DEEP CONCEPTS in an understandable way!👏👏👏👏

    @bettekavalec1454@bettekavalec1454Ай бұрын
  • Great Video Arvin! 👍 If you're saying that a compressed spring has greater mass then it sounds to me like particle bonds warp spacetime more when under stress.

    @danberm1755@danberm17552 ай бұрын
  • For anyone who still doesn't get it, it's very simple. I will explain it this way. So, if you have a massless photon moving through space with extra energy E, you won't see any mass. But once the photon is absorbed by a black hole, the mass of that black hole increases by the energy of the photon over c^2. Or if the photon is bouncing around the box of perfect mirrors, the energy of the photon is also added to the box of mirrors because the photon bouncing around the mirror adds pressure to the side of the box, therefore increasing its inertia. It also contributes to the curvature of spacetime, thereby increasing the box's gravity. So what it means is that while energy is a fundamental property of an object, mass is not. Mass is an emergent property; it only arises when energy is trapped. The same is the case for the interaction with the Higgs Field. Particles have masses because the process of the interaction confines them, without the Higgs Field, they are massless particles.

    @Mysoi123@Mysoi1232 ай бұрын
    • WOW!!!!! Minhdand 1775 !!!!!! You and so far ONLY YOU have managed to get a 58 year old Heroin Addict, grade 9 high school dropout to finally understand the mass - energy concept, When you described the energy being added to the box because the mass ONLY becomes relevant because the energy making it be able to hit the mirrors in the first place allows the mass to show itself when energy DOES SOMETHING like hitting the mirrors or a measurement of sorts, I can't explain as well as I understand though, I do I swear I never did before But I do Now!!!! Thanks again 💓👍🧠👍💓 p.s. sorry Arvin but minhdang1775 did what you couldn't!!!!😓

      @KORGULL-ISOLATES@KORGULL-ISOLATES2 ай бұрын
    • @@KORGULL-ISOLATES Thanks! I’m glad my comment was helpful.

      @Mysoi123@Mysoi1232 ай бұрын
    • You have it backwards: Mass is fundamental, energy is not. The mass is the fundamental invariant object, the norm of the 4-momentum, while the energy is the observer dependent time-coordinate of the object's spacetime momentum.

      @kylelochlann5053@kylelochlann5053Ай бұрын
    • @@kylelochlann5053 ||P||² = E²/c² - (P¹)² - (P²)² - (P³)² Yes, the norm of 4-momentum is related to the mass of the object, but for this to happen, the norm also depends on the rest frame. But which object is at rest in that frame? Probably the collection of atoms, so the collection is at rest. However, if you pick an individual atom, you've just selected a different frame. Thus, momentum in the time direction or energy is actually related to the spatial momentum in the collection. In the frame you've picked, you have that mass invariant, but if you pick another particle, you lose some of the mass, seeing them only as kinetic or potential energies, which then turns into spatial momentum due to gamma.

      @Mysoi123@Mysoi123Ай бұрын
    • ​@@kylelochlann5053 Yes, but since the norm of the 4-momentum vector is invariant and directly related to mass, you must have a rest frame where the mass exists. However, which object is at rest in that frame? Probably a collection of atoms. So, if you pick a random atom that is moving in that collection, you have just selected a different frame, and some of the mass that contributes to that collection is actually kinetic and potential energies, which take the form of gamma. Thus, thanks to the Lorentz factor of that particle, the total energy and the norm of the momentum stay constant, but you lose some mass when you select a different frame. Unless you are dealing with a single point particle, then yes, its mass is invariant in all frames. But what I mean here is when you change to another frame, some of the mass that contributes to the total energy of something could turn into the value of gamma, so the total energy stays constant.

      @Mysoi123@Mysoi123Ай бұрын
  • Very interesting distinction between strong nuclear force and strong force. Can’t wait for someone to figure how to make a Quark bomb that will put to shame all our feeble thermonuclear weapons!

    @Richardincancale@Richardincancale2 ай бұрын
    • No quark bombs.

      @DrDeuteron@DrDeuteron2 ай бұрын
    • I can wait for that

      @jasonwiley798@jasonwiley7983 күн бұрын
  • Fascinating as always!

    @Rationalific@Rationalific2 ай бұрын
  • Really great video. Thank you!

    @user-uk9sb4qi6h@user-uk9sb4qi6h2 ай бұрын
  • If you use *m = E/c²* blindly, you could end up with the *relativistic mass* instead of the *rest mass.* In the 20th century-when I studied relativity-professors nonchalantly taught that mass increases as velocity increases. However, nowadays, this concept of relativistic mass is *deprecated.* We don't mention relativistic mass anymore. We admit to only one type of mass, rest mass m (which we earlier used to write as m₀). And we use the more complete equation for the total energy of an object: *E² = m²c⁴ + p²c²* This reduces to the more familiar *E = mc²* _only if its momentum (or equivalently, its velocity) is zero._ The thermal energy of an object-as you rightly mentioned-does contribute to its mass, even though, according to statistical mechanics, thermal energy is nothing but the sum of the kinetic energies of the individual particles that make up the object. As do its internal potential energy, chemical bond energy, quark binding energy, nucleon binding energy etc.

    @nHans@nHans2 ай бұрын
    • Thank you.

      @ronjon7942@ronjon79422 ай бұрын
    • "We don't mention relativistic mass anymore" So are you saying thermal energy from kinetic energy of particles increase mass but kinetic energy of the moving object doesn't? If relativistic mass is an obsolete concept, how do we properly explain the warping of space-time, the theory still holds I assume? Without relativistic mass how do we understand particle accelerators? Or photons? Is it not correct to simply say sentences like: 'Higgs bosons contain a relative mass in the form of energy' ?

      @bardsamok9221@bardsamok92212 ай бұрын
    • ​@@bardsamok9221 That's correct: The thermal energy of an object-which is the kinetic energy of the particles (atoms, molecules etc.) that make up the object-increases the mass of the object, but not of the particles themselves. However, if the object as a whole is moving-meaning, its center of mass is moving-it gains kinetic energy but no additional mass. Again, whenever I say "mass" without qualifying it, I mean "rest mass." Look, in the 20th century, everybody and their grandmother was talking about "relativistic mass" as if it was a real thing. Including my physics professors. The concept is really simple: If some object has total energy E, which includes its rest mass and kinetic energy, then due to SR's mass-energy equivalence, we get a quantity E/c² having units of mass, which they called relativistic mass. That simplicity is what made it ubiquitous in the textbooks of those days. I myself did lots of calculations involving relativistic mass. Such as calculating the relativistic mass of photons as Mrel = E/c² = hf/c². Another "advantage" of using relativistic mass was that it allowed you to keep using Newton's formulas like F=ma and p=mv to calculate the acceleration and momentum of objects traveling at relativistic velocities. Which is why many people from my generation and earlier generations still use relativistic mass whenever possible. However, other issues arise with relativistic mass that can only be solved by using rest mass and Einstein's equations. Which is why physicists and professors started moving away from relativistic mass. Nowadays they apply Einstein's equations directly to objects moving at relativistic velocities; they don't try to artificially perpetuate Newton's equations by using relativistic mass. Special and General Relativity concepts such as warping of space-time are all explained by Einstein's equations without resorting to relativistic mass. I hope that answers your doubts. BTW, the Higgs Boson does have rest mass, but a photon doesn't. The Higgs Boson's total energy comes from its rest mass plus-if it's moving-its kinetic energy. The photon's energy hf comes entirely from its kinetic energy.

      @nHans@nHans2 ай бұрын
    • Thank you @nHans! So great to read something here, from a person that actually KNOWS what he is talking about. For some reason, Arvins videos tends to draw a big part of the nutcase-crowd that just love to talk about their homecooked "theories", and how "mainstream science" are conspiring to hold down any brave, freethinking (e.i. crazy) person, that challenge them.

      @Mr-wv1tu@Mr-wv1tuАй бұрын
    • If the binding force (aka strong nuclear force) of nucleons is stronger than the coulomb repulsive force, there would be no "need" for neutro and. Adding in neutrons contributes additional binding force but no additional coulomb force. So why doesn't h-50 exist? 1 proton and 49 neutrons bound together very tightly

      @jasonwiley798@jasonwiley7983 күн бұрын
  • my biceps produce more than mc^2

    @MrGriff305@MrGriff305Ай бұрын
  • Another one of AA's brilliant videos that gives a far better and clearer explanation than an hour spent in the classroom.

    @talleyhoe846@talleyhoe8462 ай бұрын
  • This is a very *strong* video about mass and energy.

    @esra_erimez@esra_erimez2 ай бұрын
  • Arvin you always go deep and pushes the boundaries and envelope. But sometimes you not only pushes the envelope but shred it. YOU DINT PUSH THE ENVELOPE SHREDDED IT.

    @shadowoffire4307@shadowoffire43072 ай бұрын
  • Some flerf somewhere is shaking its head at this, smirking, and thinking "oh SURE, I bet you think quarks are spinning balls too... only the awakened understand quarks don't actually exist, because I can't see them. "

    @Deletirium@Deletirium2 ай бұрын
    • Well of course, consciousness itself creates reality. If consciousness isn't happening then reality doesn't exist, heh, heh. I can't tell you how many times I've seen that argued.

      @wthomas5697@wthomas56972 ай бұрын
    • Well, it's a valid philosophical point actually. If quarks cannot be observed in isolation even in principle, then do they really exist as fundamental entities, or are they just a mental construct to help us with bookkeeping about the various charges and symmetries of hadrons?

      @siquod@siquod2 ай бұрын
    • I think the philosophical point is that we label what patterns we think we recognize, and it's a gray area where exactly do we draw the line between a pattern='an entity' and a pattern='bookkeeping'

      @charlievane@charlievane2 ай бұрын
    • @@siquodNo, it's not.

      @wthomas5697@wthomas56972 ай бұрын
    • @@wthomas5697 Why? Simply saying "It's not" doesn't make it so and brings no insight. @charlievane understood that this is a subtle issue, but you seem not to. The question what exactly it means to be "one thing" is not easy to answer, and neither is the question of what it means to be "fundamental". For example, between the various variants of string theory there are dualities between two different types of string, and depending on some parameter value either of them can be considered "fundamental". I will readily admit that the quark model does much more than just keep track of charges and symmetries. It can be used to predict particle scattering and lifetimes. But let's not confuse a model with reality, no matter how good it fits; the ontological question of what the "real" objects are remains: Maybe they are unknowable, maybe the concept doesn't really make sense if we think too hard about it (as a lot of concepts seem to do, but if you declare concepts incoherent because of that you become a fool), maybe there's a clear answer we haven't found yet, or maybe "pragmatism makes right" like you seem to think and the best model is reality. Only history shows that models have been superseded by better ones that work in radically different ways from which the old model merely emerges as a special case approximation.

      @siquod@siquod2 ай бұрын
  • What a quality you have... Knowledge and tenacity to make it simple for us...🎉🎉... Just waiting for ur next videos.... My god im more excited to listen to u than my boyfriend 😮

    @sarass1234@sarass12342 ай бұрын
  • As usual GREAT video, your ability to summarize complex physics topics is second to none these days!

    @musicman9023@musicman90232 ай бұрын
  • ✨ im convinced that 99% of mass is from another dimension we can’t observe-perhaps one that is tightly rolled up so tiny and outside our view we will never observe it physically, just mathematically

    @Rugopoly@Rugopoly2 ай бұрын
    • I also smoke weed

      @vvillem9@vvillem92 ай бұрын
    • @@vvillem9💀💀

      @JarBarBare@JarBarBare2 ай бұрын
    • You must be rather easy to convince about a thing.

      @Amethyst_Friend@Amethyst_Friend2 ай бұрын
    • Occam's razor. We have mathematical models that allow us to predict the amount of energy. Why switch to a theory with zero evidence?

      @ilya4759@ilya47592 ай бұрын
    • It doesn’t have to be tiny, but thinking about higher dimensions isn’t what the standard model is about…

      @alancham4@alancham42 ай бұрын
  • Extra clear, as always. @0:35 there's a mistake: mv^2 should be on numerator instead of denominator.

    @nicolascalandruccio6069@nicolascalandruccio60692 ай бұрын
    • yep. my editor messed up and I missed it. Thanks.

      @ArvinAsh@ArvinAsh2 ай бұрын
  • Another great video, my friend

    @AndrewBackhouse1@AndrewBackhouse12 ай бұрын
    • Thank you! Cheers!

      @ArvinAsh@ArvinAsh2 ай бұрын
  • Very good explanation, thank you.

    @385lima@385lima2 ай бұрын
  • Thanks Arvin, you are the best at explaining quantum physics without overly dumbing it down.

    @louisdetulleo1347@louisdetulleo1347Ай бұрын
  • As usual amazing stuff!!!!

    @MrIamshahid36@MrIamshahid36Ай бұрын
  • I've actually been wondering about gluons and what the actual mass comes from in the e=mc2 equation and you've explained it perfectly. Another great video, thanks

    @michael195b@michael195b2 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for the clarity in differentiating between the strong force and the strong nuclear force. BZ.

    @jamescarnevale3312@jamescarnevale33122 ай бұрын
  • Glad to have this info. Helps me think more about how my hard magic system works. Its exotic particles with energy bound in them. This energy allows the magic to do work. When all the energy in the magic particle is used up, the particle falls apart, and you need to get more energized magic particles.

    @marxtheenigma873@marxtheenigma8732 ай бұрын
  • Excellent as always

    @spobleteo@spobleteo2 ай бұрын
  • Another fascinating and informative video, many thanks

    @david.thomas.108@david.thomas.108Ай бұрын
  • I love your content arvin ❤

    @e20052@e200522 ай бұрын
  • Very precise. Very clear.

    @5ty717@5ty7172 ай бұрын
  • I love the feeling when you finally understand some small part of phenomenon, allowing you to grasp a slightly larger piece of the puzzle. Which then completely contradicts what you just thought you understood, making your grasp how little you actually understand.

    @VikingTeddy@VikingTeddy2 ай бұрын
  • You are brilliant as you explain. Greetings from Argentina

    @pabloa4672@pabloa46722 ай бұрын
  • I love all videos from Arvin Ash.

    @dave70a@dave70a2 ай бұрын
  • I love this channel very much, I learn a lot about physics. Thank you Arvin Ash 🙏

    @kagannasuhbeyoglu@kagannasuhbeyoglu2 ай бұрын
  • VERY INTERESTING !!!

    @FATHERbBernard777@FATHERbBernard7772 ай бұрын
  • You are a legend. Love this content.

    @rampy4963@rampy49632 ай бұрын
  • Very interesting and informative. Simple enough for me to explain it to sombody to make me "look" smart.

    @daffidavit@daffidavit2 ай бұрын
  • Great explanation!

    @lisac.9393@lisac.93932 ай бұрын
  • Excellent explanation.

    @ericjome7284@ericjome72842 ай бұрын
  • Wonderful!

    @hareeshpentela5948@hareeshpentela59482 ай бұрын
  • I’m glad this channel happens to exist in this universe

    @b0b3rt2@b0b3rt22 ай бұрын
  • i adore watching your videos. they are so informative and at the same time leaves me asking other questions =)

    @user-fz1nh3mt1c@user-fz1nh3mt1c2 ай бұрын
    • There is no theoretical basis for such a postulate.

      @ArvinAsh@ArvinAsh2 ай бұрын
  • I feel like I've seen you output a bunch of videos on quarks and the strong force, but this might be the most inclusive and all encompassing one yet, easy to digest as well! Have a coffee on me ☕

    @stevoofd@stevoofd2 ай бұрын
  • Very interesting and good video, thank you. The point I did not really get about this is, why these 3 quarks are a form of potential energy to begin with.

    @dnswhh7382@dnswhh7382Ай бұрын
  • Beautiful... Pure poetry!

    @juanantonioalbacetecalero6538@juanantonioalbacetecalero6538Ай бұрын
  • What little I understood was fascinating.

    @ValerieFulmer@ValerieFulmer2 ай бұрын
  • Something I found interesting, (Though it does complicate things a bit so is often not covered.) from when a Professor Strassler covered this, is how there is a mess of other quarks in the proton. A big jumble of quarks, anti-quarks, and gluons popping in and out as they zip around, with the valence three being the imbalance that makes a proton a proton. Apparently its only relatively recently (Last twenty years or so I think.) that calculations are taking on the full impact of all this mess.

    @xtieburn@xtieburn2 ай бұрын
  • You're awesome at explaining things clearly. 😊

    @SheSweetLikSugarNSavage@SheSweetLikSugarNSavageАй бұрын
  • Nicely done video. Regarding charge, have you looked into hyperbolic space?

    @HealthcareBlockchain@HealthcareBlockchain2 ай бұрын
  • You have a fantastic content, bro

    @patrickmeneses3421@patrickmeneses342126 күн бұрын
  • Thank you you explain everything as best as

    @nyamsurenganbileg1777@nyamsurenganbileg1777Ай бұрын
  • Very interesting. I'm not going to pretend I understand all of it. I understand parts of it. Good video.

    @danielhanawalt4998@danielhanawalt49982 ай бұрын
  • Nice video! It seems possible that the Higgs Field and Particle interaction could largely be determined by the particles wave frequency (perhaps being a harmonic of the Higgs fields frequency itself)!? I.e.: If the photons frequency were not a harmonic of the Higgs Field frequency, then there's no interaction!

    @LQhristian@LQhristian2 ай бұрын
  • The rationale for using color notation 7:45 to denote quark charges is pretty cool. I always thought it was goofy nerd humor, but now I see there was thought behind it. Mr. Ash, do you have an explanatory video concerning the Higgs Field? Seems like familiarity with that would help some understanding presented in this video. And thank you for your work.

    @ronjon7942@ronjon79422 ай бұрын
    • Higgs explanation: kzhead.info/sun/hZudo6V7kIaKi30/bejne.html

      @ArvinAsh@ArvinAsh2 ай бұрын
  • Arvin, you don't get enough credit on KZhead. Absolutely excellent as always

    @cubeflinger@cubeflinger2 ай бұрын
    • thanks for that

      @ArvinAsh@ArvinAsh2 ай бұрын
  • Hi Arvin, I just love science/astronomy, QM and have been learning on my own for years now. And I have this hypothesis of why quantum phenomena occur like superposition, wave-particle duality and it is related to spacetime curvature. All of your videos about QM/QFT further strengthen my hypothesis. It is consistent with QM/QFT but just slightly modified GR. I tried this hypothesis by just thought experiments in neutron star, red giant star, nebulae, atoms, particles and even in high energy in particle collider/accelerator and in my own perspective it works or it just i didn't saw the whole picture. I'd appreciate your feedback to help me identify any gaps in my understanding. Sorry for my english grammar.

    @mangalover9000@mangalover90002 ай бұрын
  • Superb intro!

    @Amethyst_Friend@Amethyst_Friend2 ай бұрын
  • Very interesting video, In fact sometimes I can feel the surge of energy due to gluons inside my body during intensive exercise when my body weight drops and releases atoms in form of quarks and gluons

    @BharatWantsPok@BharatWantsPok2 ай бұрын
  • Love the 3D Arvin!

    @eveeseki9677@eveeseki96772 ай бұрын
  • So fascinating!!!

    @darianagnew6524@darianagnew652411 күн бұрын
  • Very complex, atomic research is astounding !

    @vitusyu9583@vitusyu9583Ай бұрын
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