To see subtitles in other languages: Click on the gear symbol under the video, then click on "subtitles." Then select the language (You may need to scroll up and down to see all the languages available). --To change subtitle appearance: Scroll to the top of the language selection window and click "options." In the options window you can, for example, choose a different font color and background color, and set the "background opacity" to 100% to help make the subtitles more readable. --To turn the subtitles "on" or "off" altogether: Click the "CC" button under the video. --If you believe that the translation in the subtitles can be improved, please send me an email.
I'm crying. I finally understand this after hours of roaming on RUclips videos. We're studying online, and our professor didn't give us any textbook. He just gave the topic and left us on our own with an assignment. I'm really thankful for these people who share knowledge through the internet. I cannot learn during this season if it wasn't because of teachers in RUclips like you. Thank you very much.
@@debrachambers1304 hello. Yes i do that. But for people like me who understand better if it's being explained verbally, textbooks can be challenging to study as well, especially when we have deadlines coming up and I can't spend hours on a single topic. I'm not trying to find excuses, I hope you don't think about it that way :< I'm just saying, I'm thankful to those who explain the topics when our own professors don't.
@@0anniegrace I understand. I was just responding to the part where you said you weren't given any textbook and letting you know you can still get one easily for free.
Yes. I want to rant because of your comment and yell to the world all the things I've been learning recently. But I'll stick with your comment. The universe is truly magnificent.
@@hambonefakenamington69 My biggest rant has to be why does the Pauli Exclusion principle exist? What is the true reason behind it, the mechanism we understand (or at least we think we do), I want to know why. Also, planck length and time are scary to me for some reasons, but thats another rant.
Have watched this 3D animation several times. It is really beneficial to understand circular polarisation and Stern-Gerlach Experiment. Thank you, Eugene, for your sincere effort.
I am just now learning about this in my E and M class, and it is nearly identical to the class lectures that we are taking notes on. I must say, Eugene, I am very impressed by the quality of your videos. You deserve a lot more attention than you are currently receiving.
Wish I had seen this video when I was taking grade 12 physics last year... the stuff would have made so much more sense! Your videos are actually so great they make me love physics
Wow. This video deserves more recognition. It gave me a full understanding on polarization of electromagnetic waves in 20 min which I have been trying to do for 6 months with textbooks but failed.
I paused the video to comment on how easy the animation makes it for one to grasp and visualize how the different types of polarization come about. Thank you for putting in the effort, really appreciate it.
Magnificent,I can not visualise the concept of polarisation and how electric field vector contributes in polarization.Thank you so much for your 3D explanation video.
This is really the first video I've seen that explains polarization in a way that I can really understand. Thank you very much. Congratulations. Hope see you in others Physic items
The visual explanation of circular polarization was very good. Now it makes perfect sense how it works, and why it is the same phenomenon as linear polarization.
The maker of these videos have great in depth conceptual knowledge and techniques that make students understand everything once and never to forget again. Thank You So Much Eugene
Thank you so much for creating these amazing videos. Your work is making people's lives better through holistic understanding, not just superficial information.
Always amazed by the superb 3D animations, simply unthinkable how to make them, not mentioning the nearly 20 different languages of CC which is unseen ever !!! 👍👍👍
This is by far the best ever explanation of polarization. It lets you understand the topic more intuitively. Thank you Ma'am. Love and respect from INDIA.
u deserve much more views and likes.i am a RUclips science video watcher. There was a science channel named Kurzsegat they changed their channel name to 'in a nutshell' and is running quite successfully. This name Is nice but may be you should try something catchy like the science show or something more catchy just a advice
I always enjoy the videos in which you explain exactly why notions of classical thinking and logic do not work when dealing with Quantum Mechanics. It would be nice if you did something like this for the polarization aspects of light.....beyond just the Quantum Eraser Experiment. I would also enjoy a video on how a computer stores things even if you turn off the power.
03:20 - It was a bit unclear to see 3 different magnetic fields without a proper textual explanation, e.g. "electric field 1", "electric field 2" and "resulting electric field"
Yes! I had to watch this video 3 times to make sure I was understanding that part correctly. Still a great video but some more descriptive labels for the waves would have less some of my confusion.
What this video fails to mention is that if you have an electric wave and a magnetic wave whose amplitudes differ and which are not in phase, then the polarization is elliptical. In order to have circular polarization, the amplitudes of the magnetic wave and the electric wave must be equal.
How can the amplitudes differ? I thought all photons have the same amplitude. What does it mean for a photon to have a smaller or larger amplitude? What is an example of a 'real world' example of that?
Well for a single electromagnetic wave the electric field and magnetic field will always be in phase, so idk if that's totally right. But if you meant two different electromagnetic waves of different amplitudes out of phase, then I think you are right. Also it seems the waves need to be 90 degrees out of phase in order to be 'perfectly' circularly polarized. Cheers.
You mention amplitude here, but what about wavelength? 2 photons with differing wavelength would have some sort of irregular polarisation, since the revolving motion will move 360 degrees on 2 different lengths?
@@MrS85755 interesting! I think they would have some irregular polarization pattern. It certainly wouldn't be 'circular' (i.e. Constant rate of change for electric/magnetic field direction), but the rate of change for direction would vary. Kinda similar to adding sine waves of different frequencies, except in 3d. I could only imagine applying Fourier's theorem to light waves.. Imagine creating a "square" polorization by applying Fourier's theorem.. I'd be very interested to see an animation of that! Or in real life if it's even possible lol
All the music in this video is from the free RUclips audio library, and the names of the songs are the following. Waltz_of_the_Flowers_by_Tchaikovsky Fur_Elise_by_Beethoven Eine_Kleine_Nachtmusik_by_Mozart
great video! i got 2 questions: 1)when electro-magnetic field is passing through polizer what is happening to the part of it that doesnt pass through? is it absorbed by the material? or maybe reflected? 2) @ 19:00 u say this phenomena plays a very important role in technology. could u give few egzamples of how is it used??
+TheSara90, thanks for the compliment on the video. In reply to your questions, the electromagnetic wave that does not make it through can be either absorbed or reflected, or a combination of the two, depending on the type of material. Examples of technology where this phenomena is used are liquid crystal displays and 3D glasses. Liquid crystal displays can operate similarly to the example of the three linear polarizers that either allowed light to pass through or block light depending on what the polarizer in the center was doing. Many 3D glasses operate by having the material for each eye pass through or block light depending on its polarization, thereby allowing each eye to see a different image.
Not the electromagnetic field, but the electromagnetic field excitation. The electromagnetic field itself is everywhere all the time. When it is excited, a ripple, a wave is created, which travels through spacetime. That ripple is the lightwave, if it bumps into something, it is the photon. I thought, you asked, what happens to the distorted field, like a field around the magnet, if it is interacting with a polariser lens.
@cairo can you explain the “if it bumps into something, it is the photon"? I thought that lightwave and photon were two different names of the same thing
Your videos help me in understanding difficult concepts of physics like no one else can! Thank you so much for making my concepts so concrete! I would have never had such clarity in science if not for your videos! Amazing
I have to say that while the video itself is very clear, most of your last videos are getting boring due to constant repetitions of pretty much the same things. For example, you could have simply said that the wave would rotate the other way if the shift was done for the first wave without going through all that "add like vectors" process. And I think you should consider decreasing time intervals between phrases.
I recently created a Patreon account for people who want to help support my channel. The link is on my RUclips home page. Also, in case, you have not already seen them, I uploaded several other videos recently. As always, for each video that you like, you can help more people find it in their RUclips search engine by clicking the like button, and writing a comment. Lots more videos are coming very soon. Thanks.
why do you make the light passing through perpendicular to the plane of polarizer, it looks as if lights were all blocked but they were going through. my brain is resisting in this visual effect.
Unified Field is real and the NEW discovery of monopoles made this possible PICTURES of light fields and unified theory works perfectly. ruclips.net/video/aw_u7bjqmGU/видео.html
This is the first ever video that helped me to understand the concept. Anyone can see the hardwork put in it. Keep it up. I am sure your Channel is going to be one of the best physics channel on RUclips.
You can help translate this video by adding subtitles in other languages. To add a translation, click on the following link: ruclips.net/user/timedtext_video?v=8YkfEft4p-w&ref=share You will then be able to add translations for all the subtitles. You will also be able to provide a translation for the title of the video. Please remember to hit the submit button for both the title and for the subtitles, as they are submitted separately. Details about adding translations is available at support.google.com/youtube/answer/6054623?hl=en Thanks.
Nobody has yet explained to me WHY light "chooses" (for lack of a better word) only these 2 planes to be polarized in OUT OF THE UNCOUNTABLY INFINITELY MANY POSSIBLE PLANES THAT EXIST. When I first learned of light waves, I always assumed that the wave pictured was NOT meant to be taken literally but merely as a geometric metaphor/representation of the amplitude of the pulse of light. In other words, I always assumed that the amplitude of a point source of light is radially symmetric and that the magnitude is a sine or cosine function of time & r, not a function of some arbitrary x,y,z coordinates.
I want to make videos like this to explain people really..but I have no knowledge of 3D animation. I can see the hardwork behind this video. Awesome work. You people are guide for future generations..
I never ever understood circularly polarized light... Thanks for explaining through visualization. And additional thanks for some great piano pieces playing in the background
SUPERB... animations and the combination of perfect commentary and background music. I wish ALL RUclips videos could be like this !!! Thank you so much for your efforts.
extraordinary!!! im surprised as to why this video has 901 likes only.100 % TRUE its the only video that explains polarization as said by Khandnalie. its just WOW!!
Beautiful. I am neither an animator nor programmer, so I cannot create many visualizations that I would like to do. This is one of those. After this video, I think there can be no one who can not understand polarization.
i know that by considering phase shift and by different assumptions we will get them....after watching this i visualized the different phase shifts and vector additions more clearly...awesome video...thank you
thank you for this video ,this is best the video i 've ever seen explaining polarisation of light . this makes me understand how wonderful the physics is !!!!
wow i am a bit speechless on the knowledge and the representation of it. top of the charts. i will try to rattle the understanding in technological terms and inventions. light is the path of perceptional choice of understanding the universe for me. thank you for helping understand it better. peace
@@EugeneKhutoryansky youre understanding is amazing, i was wondering what is youre take on coiling.i am trying to figure out cognitively about a photon perception of working with //capacitance and scalar waves. i am a amateur but can also create a perceptual reality that everyone can understand for direct application terms. you are so advanced and at the leading edge of what knowledge must be reconceptualized in direct understanding. field cancelation,phase shift and what is really going on.i will do my best to understand it,but really we should talk my amateur side leads me to much beginner's luck and helps us understand,you just raised the bar bro,making sense of this is star trek level of technology application.
To see subtitles in other languages: Click on the gear symbol under the video, then click on "subtitles." Then select the language (You may need to scroll up and down to see all the languages available).
--To change subtitle appearance: Scroll to the top of the language selection window and click "options." In the options window you can, for example, choose a different font color and background color, and set the "background opacity" to 100% to help make the subtitles more readable.
--To turn the subtitles "on" or "off" altogether: Click the "CC" button under the video.
--If you believe that the translation in the subtitles can be improved, please send me an email.
Love how ita all positiones on a checkered board
Beautiful 🏵️ music 🎶 how can I download it?
You are the best ever🤩😍🌲
I nothing understend...
@@sarahkaveh7739 j😎🙂h,?h:-':::::-::-:-:::,:::'::&::::-::::'::::-::::::-:::':::'-::::::'::-----,3,?,?33,-3,-,-,-,-,,,-,-,,,,,,,,,,,?,,,,,,nnwhmw
I'm crying. I finally understand this after hours of roaming on RUclips videos. We're studying online, and our professor didn't give us any textbook. He just gave the topic and left us on our own with an assignment. I'm really thankful for these people who share knowledge through the internet. I cannot learn during this season if it wasn't because of teachers in RUclips like you. Thank you very much.
Thanks. I am glad my video was helpful.
Pirate textbooks
@@debrachambers1304 hello. Yes i do that. But for people like me who understand better if it's being explained verbally, textbooks can be challenging to study as well, especially when we have deadlines coming up and I can't spend hours on a single topic. I'm not trying to find excuses, I hope you don't think about it that way :< I'm just saying, I'm thankful to those who explain the topics when our own professors don't.
@@0anniegrace I understand. I was just responding to the part where you said you weren't given any textbook and letting you know you can still get one easily for free.
@@debrachambers1304 yes I understand as well. Sorry if I looked rude for a min. Thank you and have a great day
This is actually the first video I've seen that explains polarization in a way that I can really understand.
Glad I was able to help.
Physics Videos by Eugene Khutoryansky The explanation was really clear and beautiful. Thanks!!!
Well nature is still holding mysteries 😍😍😀😀
Clear my concept thanks
Exactly
For some reason, this makes me so happy.
The universe is truly magnificent.
:)
Yes. I want to rant because of your comment and yell to the world all the things I've been learning recently.
But I'll stick with your comment. The universe is truly magnificent.
@@IAmNotARobotPinkySwear ah i wish you'd rant tho
@@hambonefakenamington69
My biggest rant has to be why does the Pauli Exclusion principle exist? What is the true reason behind it, the mechanism we understand (or at least we think we do), I want to know why.
Also, planck length and time are scary to me for some reasons, but thats another rant.
👍
I want to unpolarize this channel so that it spreads in all directions far and wide!
You make Physics loveable!Thank you so much!
Ya ,right
Amazing, amazing, simply amazing. The music fits the content so well. You are such a great video composer, Eugene!
Thanks for the compliment.
music name please?
Tchaikovsky's "The Nutcracker"
@@AyushVyas1999 darude sandstorm
@@EugeneKhutoryansky which software are you using to do this visualization?
Have watched this 3D animation several times. It is really beneficial to understand circular polarisation and Stern-Gerlach Experiment. Thank you, Eugene, for your sincere effort.
Thanks. I am glad you liked my video.
I am just now learning about this in my E and M class, and it is nearly identical to the class lectures that we are taking notes on. I must say, Eugene, I am very impressed by the quality of your videos. You deserve a lot more attention than you are currently receiving.
+TheBlundert4ker, thanks.
This should be in every optics class...
I love you for that.
Wish I had seen this video when I was taking grade 12 physics last year... the stuff would have made so much more sense! Your videos are actually so great they make me love physics
+Yollanda Zhang, thanks. I am glad to hear that I am making people love physics.
This is the best explanation of polarisation I have ever seen in my life. Thank you so much😊
Thanks for the compliment about my explanation.
Wow. This video deserves more recognition. It gave me a full understanding on polarization of electromagnetic waves in 20 min which I have been trying to do for 6 months with textbooks but failed.
Thanks for the compliment on my video, and I am glad to hear that it was useful.
I paused the video to comment on how easy the animation makes it for one to grasp and visualize how the different types of polarization come about. Thank you for putting in the effort, really appreciate it.
Thanks.
It would be really cool if you illustrated how these filters can used to make the 3D glasses in theaters. (the circular polarized ones)
+Frame of Essence, perhaps that will be a topic for another video.
and how polarized sunglasses work based on these theories.
@@zack_120 you responded to a comment that was 5.5 years old
Magnificent,I can not visualise the concept of polarisation and how electric field vector contributes in polarization.Thank you so much for your 3D explanation video.
Thanks. I am glad you liked my explanation.
Just want you to know that your video's are amazing and very much appreciated!
+RubberJunk1, thanks for the compliment about my videos. I am glad that you like them.
+Eugene Khutoryansky Eugene yes , they are wonderful ty so much
Oh my god, Beauty . circularly polarised just blasted my head. You brilliantly explained it using just vector addition.
Thanks for the compliment.
You never stop blowing my mind while teaching me so much physics
I have tried 3 times to understand polarization... now, thanks to you and your brilliant representation finally I understood... thanks a lot
I am glad my video was helpful. Thanks.
This is really the first video I've seen that explains polarization in a way that I can really understand. Thank you very much. Congratulations. Hope see you in others Physic items
The visual explanation of circular polarization was very good. Now it makes perfect sense how it works, and why it is the same phenomenon as linear polarization.
Amazing video! Thank you Mr. Eugene for contributing to the science.
+StarFury2, thanks. I am glad you liked my video.
The greatest explanation I've ever seen, save a student's mind who took physics course. Thanks a lot.
Thanks for the compliment about my explanation.
Thanks, Your videos are really clear and well synthesized.
You made an amazing great job. Bravo !
The maker of these videos have great in depth conceptual knowledge and techniques that make students understand everything once and never to forget again.
Thank You So Much Eugene
Thanks for the compliments.
This is so satisfying to look at
Thank you so much for creating these amazing videos. Your work is making people's lives better through holistic understanding, not just superficial information.
Thanks for the compliments.
The music is so beautiful!
Tchaikovsky
Did they use the same music in ( 2001 A Space Odyssey ) ? Movie
This music is from 12 DANCING BARBIE MOVIE... I am telling the truth
Always amazed by the superb 3D animations, simply unthinkable how to make them, not mentioning the nearly 20 different languages of CC which is unseen ever !!! 👍👍👍
Thanks.
Moonlight sonata and fur Elise were outstanding ...😂😂
Here, take this ü
The first one was nutcracker from Tchaikovsky, not moonlight sonata.
@@monster2slayer the second time derivative of u? :))
This is by far the best ever explanation of polarization. It lets you understand the topic more intuitively. Thank you Ma'am. Love and respect from INDIA.
I am glad you liked my video. Thanks for the compliment.
Excellent explanation and animation!
Thanks for the compliment.
Can't believe how well suited the music was for the video. Excellent explanation, keep up the good work!
Thanks.
u deserve much more views and likes.i am a RUclips science video watcher. There was a science channel named Kurzsegat they changed their channel name to 'in a nutshell' and is running quite successfully. This name Is nice but may be you should try something catchy like the science show or something more catchy just a advice
Fool
Lol RUclips watcher 💁😁
U started making me love physics. Thanks
This was terrific, extremely helpful! Thanks!!!
Glad you liked my video. Thanks.
The amount of work put into this video is mind blowing.
Thanks.
I always enjoy the videos in which you explain exactly why notions of classical thinking and logic do not work when dealing with Quantum Mechanics. It would be nice if you did something like this for the polarization aspects of light.....beyond just the Quantum Eraser Experiment.
I would also enjoy a video on how a computer stores things even if you turn off the power.
+Mark G, those will be topics for future videos. Thanks.
Physics Videos by Eugene Khutoryansky
Such great visuals! Understood the concept so clearly, that only polarised light is entering my eyes! Thank you!
Thanks!
03:20 - It was a bit unclear to see 3 different magnetic fields without a proper textual explanation, e.g. "electric field 1", "electric field 2" and "resulting electric field"
Yes! I had to watch this video 3 times to make sure I was understanding that part correctly. Still a great video but some more descriptive labels for the waves would have less some of my confusion.
@@knucklescapricorn31 i got stuck too, but im glad anyway about the visual explanation which i can pair up with my textbook
This is the best explanation I found on RUclips. Thank very much.
Glad you liked my explanation. Thanks.
What this video fails to mention is that if you have an electric wave and a magnetic wave whose amplitudes differ and which are not in phase, then the polarization is elliptical. In order to have circular polarization, the amplitudes of the magnetic wave and the electric wave must be equal.
How can the amplitudes differ? I thought all photons have the same amplitude. What does it mean for a photon to have a smaller or larger amplitude? What is an example of a 'real world' example of that?
Well for a single electromagnetic wave the electric field and magnetic field will always be in phase, so idk if that's totally right. But if you meant two different electromagnetic waves of different amplitudes out of phase, then I think you are right. Also it seems the waves need to be 90 degrees out of phase in order to be 'perfectly' circularly polarized. Cheers.
You mention amplitude here, but what about wavelength? 2 photons with differing wavelength would have some sort of irregular polarisation, since the revolving motion will move 360 degrees on 2 different lengths?
I also think adow 2015 means 2 different particles. Or atleast, I hope so.
@@MrS85755 interesting! I think they would have some irregular polarization pattern. It certainly wouldn't be 'circular' (i.e. Constant rate of change for electric/magnetic field direction), but the rate of change for direction would vary. Kinda similar to adding sine waves of different frequencies, except in 3d. I could only imagine applying Fourier's theorem to light waves.. Imagine creating a "square" polorization by applying Fourier's theorem.. I'd be very interested to see an animation of that! Or in real life if it's even possible lol
This made me understand what was behind all those equations. Thank you for such a crystal clear explanation.
Thanks. Glad you liked my explanation.
magnetic field... electric field.... UH! electromagnetic wave
debile
These visuals cleared my concepts. Thank you so much!
Thanks. I am glad my video was helpful.
what is the background music used for the first 3 minutes? (NICE)
All the music in this video is from the free RUclips audio library, and the names of the songs are the following.
Waltz_of_the_Flowers_by_Tchaikovsky
Fur_Elise_by_Beethoven
Eine_Kleine_Nachtmusik_by_Mozart
Excellent use of 3D animation and explanation together. Never seen this idea of circular polarisation explained properly until now.
Thanks.
university course is becoming obsolete
The exception is you won't get the degree
Light is far more complex than I thought it to be !!!!
Thanks for such an awesome video.
Glad you liked my video. Thanks.
what program do you use for this ? dang this shit is awesome!
+2013danrazor, I make my 3D animations with "Poser." Thanks.
You are the most underrated youtuber ever..!!! Thank you so much for explaining it so simply.👍🙏❤️
Thanks.
great video! i got 2 questions:
1)when electro-magnetic field is passing through polizer what is happening to the part of it that doesnt pass through? is it absorbed by the material? or maybe reflected?
2) @ 19:00 u say this phenomena plays a very important role in technology. could u give few egzamples of how is it used??
+TheSara90, thanks for the compliment on the video. In reply to your questions, the electromagnetic wave that does not make it through can be either absorbed or reflected, or a combination of the two, depending on the type of material. Examples of technology where this phenomena is used are liquid crystal displays and 3D glasses. Liquid crystal displays can operate similarly to the example of the three linear polarizers that either allowed light to pass through or block light depending on what the polarizer in the center was doing. Many 3D glasses operate by having the material for each eye pass through or block light depending on its polarization, thereby allowing each eye to see a different image.
+TheSara90 btw, "Liquid crystal displays" means "most computer monitors", an "LCD monitor".
It's not some obscure technology ^^
Not the electromagnetic field, but the electromagnetic field excitation. The electromagnetic field itself is everywhere all the time. When it is excited, a ripple, a wave is created, which travels through spacetime. That ripple is the lightwave, if it bumps into something, it is the photon. I thought, you asked, what happens to the distorted field, like a field around the magnet, if it is interacting with a polariser lens.
@cairo can you explain the “if it bumps into something, it is the photon"? I thought that lightwave and photon were two different names of the same thing
It is absorbed
A great service indeed by producing such an amazing video on the subjects 👏 👌. Bundles of thanks from Pakistan 🇵🇰.
Thanks for the compliments. I am glad you liked my video.
who enjoyed polarisation with fur elise
Your videos help me in understanding difficult concepts of physics like no one else can! Thank you so much for making my concepts so concrete! I would have never had such clarity in science if not for your videos! Amazing
Thanks for the compliments. I am glad my videos are helpful.
I have to say that while the video itself is very clear, most of your last videos are getting boring due to constant repetitions of pretty much the same things. For example, you could have simply said that the wave would rotate the other way if the shift was done for the first wave without going through all that "add like vectors" process. And I think you should consider decreasing time intervals between phrases.
so true, I agree!
+mrzlotnleo That's intentional, like his style. He explained in another video why he does that.
+Joee Green I know, but I have just suggested he changes the style
+Joee Green what is the title of the vid?
Sorry it's not a video, it was a comment on one of the videos.
THE best explanation ever for polarization! Amazing!
Thanks for the compliment about my explanation.
1 676 890 arrows in this video. Prove me wrong!
gitnote ... u r absolutely wrong.... this is actually prticle's motion which u r saying arrows .....nd fr ur information this is nt fixed ......
Saima Siddiqui particles motion or E/M force at a given time and space. The arrows are arbitrary and I certainly wouldn't want to prove him wrong.
Saima Siddiqui
Why...... Do....... you....... type......like......this
I do too... gives you something to think about the immediately preceding words !!
"Anything asserted without evidence can be rejected without evidence."
I've been struggling with this topic for last two nights. I think I've got it now. Thanks a lot.
Glad my video was helpful. Thanks.
The quality and effort that goes into these is mind-blowing, this chanel is amazing
Thanks for the compliments.
I recently created a Patreon account for people who want to help support my channel. The link is on my RUclips home page. Also, in case, you have not already seen them, I uploaded several other videos recently. As always, for each video that you like, you can help more people find it in their RUclips search engine by clicking the like button, and writing a comment. Lots more videos are coming very soon. Thanks.
why do you make the light passing through perpendicular to the plane of polarizer, it looks as if lights were all blocked but they were going through. my brain is resisting in this visual effect.
Agree.
Great work. This should be among those Most satisfying videos to watch :)
Unified Field is real and the NEW discovery of monopoles made this possible PICTURES of light fields and unified theory works perfectly. ruclips.net/video/aw_u7bjqmGU/видео.html
This is the first ever video that helped me to understand the concept. Anyone can see the hardwork put in it. Keep it up. I am sure your Channel is going to be one of the best physics channel on RUclips.
Watched a Richard Feynman probabilities lecture shortly after seeing your video on electromagnetic waves. Brilliant! Thanks so much.
Thanks.
You can help translate this video by adding subtitles in other languages. To add a translation, click on the following link:
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You will then be able to add translations for all the subtitles. You will also be able to provide a translation for the title of the video. Please remember to hit the submit button for both the title and for the subtitles, as they are submitted separately.
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Thanks.
Thank u best video
Nobody has yet explained to me WHY light "chooses" (for lack of a better word) only these 2 planes to be polarized in OUT OF THE UNCOUNTABLY INFINITELY MANY POSSIBLE PLANES THAT EXIST.
When I first learned of light waves, I always assumed that the wave pictured was NOT meant to be taken literally but merely as a geometric metaphor/representation of the amplitude of the pulse of light. In other words, I always assumed that the amplitude of a point source of light is radially symmetric and that the magnitude is a sine or cosine function of time & r, not a function of some arbitrary x,y,z coordinates.
I want to make videos like this to explain people really..but I have no knowledge of 3D animation. I can see the hardwork behind this video. Awesome work. You people are guide for future generations..
gracias
You explained with 3D animation so it becomes so clear to understand. Thank you for your time and world class Teaching
Thanks for the compliments.
I never ever understood circularly polarized light... Thanks for explaining through visualization. And additional thanks for some great piano pieces playing in the background
Thanks.
You explain polarization beautifully! Couldn't understand polarization from hundreds of images. but this video made my day!
Thanks!!!!
Thanks for the compliment and I am glad that my video was helpful.
SUPERB... animations and the combination of perfect commentary and background music. I wish ALL RUclips videos could be like this !!!
Thank you so much for your efforts.
Thanks. I am glad you liked my video.
After two years I am watching this animation again. It is just mind-blowing.
Thank you, I needed to understand in more general way how and electromagnetic wave is propagated.
extraordinary!!! im surprised as to why this video has 901 likes only.100 % TRUE its the only video that explains polarization as said by Khandnalie. its just WOW!!
Brilliant with clarity ! As usual.Thank you Professor Kuthoryansky
Simulation thus proved to the most useful thing in physics.....💕💕💕
Great work you.
Thanks.
This video is very amazing because it helps me to understand how unpolarised light ray works
I am glad my video was helpful.
i could cry the animation is so beautiful thank you soo much i finally get it.
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Beautiful. I am neither an animator nor programmer, so I cannot create many visualizations that I would like to do. This is one of those. After this video, I think there can be no one who can not understand polarization.
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Thanks for explaining polarization in such a wonderful way!!! Finally i can understand circular polarization.
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I have never seen such a good visualisation for this....everything is clear now....feynman will be proud....(and the music 🔥)
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i know that by considering phase shift and by different assumptions we will get them....after watching this i visualized the different phase shifts and vector additions more clearly...awesome video...thank you
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These is the best physics simulation channel!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Excellent video. Also note that light cannot experience spin since it travels at the speed of light! Which means it cannot undergo a change in state.
This video makes me understand polarisation....thank u
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How beautiful ! Waltzing vectors...eye/ear candy. Congratulations
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such an explanation is really unbelievable and beyond any explanation......thank you mam....
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Light is just awesome. It's mind blowing to think that the brain can make sense of all those em waves orientated in different directions.
These videos are amazing, is really easy to understand with them.
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thank you for this video ,this is best the video i 've ever seen explaining polarisation of light . this makes me understand how wonderful the physics is !!!!
Best polarisation video never before, ever after....
No way an explanation could be so perfect 👌 OOOOOhooooo my goodness, it is one of the turning point of my interests!
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That's an amazing video. The smart use of different colours in the graphics of all your videos is very helpful.
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amazing explanation:all my doubts cleared....thanks Eugene Khutoryansky
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The best explanation ever about polarization! Thank you!
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Dear Eugene! Thanks for your videos! They are a
masterpiece, they represent a perfect work, congratulations! And I also really like the songs.
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@@EugeneKhutoryansky Yes! I like them a lot. Your work is excepcionnal. Thanks!
Wow! One of the best educational video on the tube! Thanks!
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Thanks, my professor could never have explained it better.
Thanks.
Thank you so much for creating this video! Very helpful in understanding!
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finallyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy
I have understood what actually polarization is...
Thank youuuuuu
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wow i am a bit speechless on the knowledge and the representation of it. top of the charts. i will try to rattle the understanding in technological terms and inventions. light is the path of perceptional choice of understanding the universe for me. thank you for helping understand it better. peace
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@@EugeneKhutoryansky youre understanding is amazing, i was wondering what is youre take on coiling.i am trying to figure out cognitively about a photon perception of working with //capacitance and scalar waves. i am a amateur but can also create a perceptual reality that everyone can understand for direct application terms. you are so advanced and at the leading edge of what knowledge must be reconceptualized in direct understanding. field cancelation,phase shift and what is really going on.i will do my best to understand it,but really we should talk my amateur side leads me to much beginner's luck and helps us understand,you just raised the bar bro,making sense of this is star trek level of technology application.
Thanks for taking the time to make this. This has made things crystal clear. Thanks a lot.
I am in 12 standard and your videos exactly matches with my syllabus.pls don't stop make really interesting videos
Excellent animation, explanation, and MUSIC!
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