The Black Hole Information Paradox

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  • Опубликовано: 15 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,7 тыс.

  • @ThinkkTwiice
    @ThinkkTwiice 6 лет назад +56

    This is hands down the best astrophysics channel. Thank you for talking about these high level problems.

    • @JKDVIPER
      @JKDVIPER 2 года назад

      Oh ya.. good Monty over here

    • @edmondcohen2300
      @edmondcohen2300 Год назад

      THERE IS NO MORE PROBLEM,TIME I.S. DEAD

  • @mr.bodiddly7702
    @mr.bodiddly7702 6 лет назад +25

    I like the attempt to hide the smirk at the very end with the "Ran-out-of-time dilation" joke. :) Awesome series, thank you all for everything you do.

  • @efarjeonfgc
    @efarjeonfgc 6 лет назад +54

    6:46 literally looks like a character select screen from a fighting game for physicists.

  • @LastDollie
    @LastDollie 4 года назад +67

    Your intro is nostalgic for some reason. Reminds me of newgrounds more than 10 yrs ago

    • @C.U.N.Tahiti
      @C.U.N.Tahiti 3 года назад +1

      Last Dollie yes, as soon as I heard it I was reminded of something, I just don't know what. I feel like it's always in time-lapse video type stuff

    • @moahammad1mohammad
      @moahammad1mohammad 3 года назад +2

      Friday nite funkin

    • @redchief94
      @redchief94 3 года назад

      @@C.U.N.Tahiti its salad fingers. That grammophone

    • @C.U.N.Tahiti
      @C.U.N.Tahiti 3 года назад

      Andrew Ruedisueli ah, I love salad fingers!! I know David Firth creates all the music for it, and probably did use that sound, but Idk if it originated from that series. It's such a spooky, ethereal sound tho, perfect for Salad Fingers

    • @mimikeofficial86
      @mimikeofficial86 3 года назад

      kinda sounds like the very beginning of that mac miller song best day ever i think.

  • @sebastianelytron8450
    @sebastianelytron8450 6 лет назад +2011

    My mind has an information paradox. Whatever I store in there magically disappears minutes before the exam starts, yet reappears once the exam is over.

    • @harish2309
      @harish2309 6 лет назад +40

      google State-dependent memory, may help you with it.

    • @Monochromicornicopia
      @Monochromicornicopia 6 лет назад +96

      Cause you were high when learning and high after the test. Should take the test high too I guess

    • @oscarmike1131
      @oscarmike1131 6 лет назад +3

      Sebastian Elytron weed can help with that

    • @bobzombie2710
      @bobzombie2710 6 лет назад +3

      Sebastian Elytron I guess it must have also forgot all the other similar comments lol.

    • @JorgetePanete
      @JorgetePanete 6 лет назад +2

      GDI 'cause*

  • @inujosha
    @inujosha 4 года назад +175

    These videos make me wish I would have gone into theoretical physics

    • @tyblazitar
      @tyblazitar 3 года назад +38

      My cousin came out with an award-winning Ph.D. in theoretical physics a year or two ago. He's currently working for free assisting some professor at the local university, living with his mom and miserable. Never follow your dreams, get a job instead.

    • @daroay
      @daroay 3 года назад +11

      @@tyblazitar Physicists can easily switch to computer science, hopefuly he does that.

    • @gallowglass719
      @gallowglass719 3 года назад +23

      @@tyblazitar Plenty of happily employed physicists, theoretical and experimental alike, across the planet. Your cousin's mistake was immediately accepting an assistant professorship rather than going into industry and establishing himself first.

    • @RexGalilae
      @RexGalilae 2 года назад +4

      @@gallowglass719
      "Your cousin's mistake was immediately accepting an assistant professorship rather than going into industry and establishing himself first."
      It's astonishing how ignorant is this statement!
      What "industry" does a physics major have to go into to become a successful physicist? Take a look at the most prominent physicists of the past few centuries and tell me what their day job was.
      Spoilers, they mostly in academia and worked as professors!
      In today's world, becoming a professor at an institute of repute and funding is the best way to be able to research and publish what you love working on and he did the right thing. The only other option was for him to join an R&D team at some company which is both highly competitive and equally unrewarding in terms of autonomy, especially when you're starting out. In the beginning, they use you as the script kiddie to run simulations all day. There's little to no career progression to speak of thanks to how slow-paced R&D departments are so you better work your ass off for decades or join as a professor in order to have any autonomy to talk of.
      As an assistant professor, you have access to your own resources, are free to engage in any projects and make use of PhD and Post Graduate students to help with your research. Having to teach courses keeps you from getting rusty which 3 years of running scripts and sims can make you do.

    • @RexGalilae
      @RexGalilae 2 года назад +16

      If your exposure to physics is through videos like these and not through university courses and textbooks, you're deep in the honeymoon phase. You get to see only the distilled bits that are appealing without all the career sacrifice, pain and imposter syndrome of graduating in a program you feel less and less competent for every coming year.

  • @gagiotter4114
    @gagiotter4114 6 лет назад +539

    Thanks for the explanation of "ran out of time dilation". Now I can explain all the missed deadlines to my boss with pure physics and it's not my fault at all.

    • @giovannysilva7735
      @giovannysilva7735 6 лет назад +25

      Oh man, i'm jumping on that wagon too ;)

    • @hubertheiser
      @hubertheiser 6 лет назад +14

      Yep, that's good one to remeber :-)

    • @Sanquinity
      @Sanquinity 6 лет назад +14

      Definitely have to remember that one. "Ran out of time dilation."

    • @flagro770
      @flagro770 6 лет назад +25

      They need a "ran out of time dilation" shirt, it'll be half finished and only have one sleeve.

    • @LordAmerican
      @LordAmerican 6 лет назад

      Now I know why I've been stuck in a procrastination loop for the past five years. If any of my (physics) professors ever ask I can just tell them that it's physics!
      Whether or not they would accept this new concept of ran-out-of-time dilation is a different story.

  • @AdamKauk
    @AdamKauk 6 лет назад +16

    This is why I love this channel. Every other science channel has covered the information paradox in a way that leaves me wondering what details I'm missing. Finally, an explanation that basically includes all the information I need. PBS SpaceTime is the only channel with conservation of physics information.

    • @mozgojad75
      @mozgojad75 11 месяцев назад

      but has that information been reconstructed after going into a black hole?

  • @jezusbloodie
    @jezusbloodie 6 лет назад +39

    At university I often observe the run-out-of-time-dilation. Interestingly enough, in some rare cases this let's to an observer experiencing time slower and somehow finishing a report while traditional understanding wouldn't allow this. Obviously, more math is needed

  • @bloodybobbygamecatx2532
    @bloodybobbygamecatx2532 6 лет назад +21

    "Generalitivity"
    -Pbs space time
    😂
    awesome video as always , thanks

  • @spadeyspacely
    @spadeyspacely 6 лет назад +6

    PBS helped teach me as a child in front of the television, and now here its found me as an adult on the Internet, helping teach and research the subject that exhilarates me most: Space (and black holes, lol)

  • @nervoussuffermaker
    @nervoussuffermaker 6 лет назад +76

    "It may have revealed that the Universe is a hologram"
    So at the end of the day the Earth IS flat?

    • @erniespratt1660
      @erniespratt1660 6 лет назад +22

      If the Universal information is scrambled and stored on a flat spherical surface, then you can presumably convert from the polar coordinates and represent the whole thing as an infinitely long line of numbers.
      So rather than flat...
      Earth is a line segment, sheeple!

    • @onetwothree4148
      @onetwothree4148 5 лет назад +2

      No because holograms--or anything else for that matter--aren't actually 2 dimensional.

    • @aldoushuxley5953
      @aldoushuxley5953 4 года назад +1

      @@onetwothree4148 hologram, in the physical sense, is referring to a projection onto a lower dimensional space.
      In this case 3d -> 2d

    • @onetwothree4148
      @onetwothree4148 4 года назад +1

      @@aldoushuxley5953 calling anything beyond 3 dimensions "space" is problematic. Hologram is a poor metaphor. (Holograms are not in any way two dimensional, but are fully 3d)

    • @aldoushuxley5953
      @aldoushuxley5953 4 года назад +1

      @@onetwothree4148 space as in the mathematical definition, not space in the sense of stars and galaxies

  • @Hecatonicosachoron
    @Hecatonicosachoron 6 лет назад +14

    Never have I seen so many mind-bending ideas explained with so much clarity!!!
    Well done!!!!

  • @ke0kie
    @ke0kie 3 года назад +2

    I love presentations where the presenter is so good it doesn't matter if the subject matter is speculative or conjecture, you don't care you just believe it anyway!

  • @johannesh7610
    @johannesh7610 6 лет назад +3

    Thanks for your wonderful videos about physics. Finally a channel that is made for those with more understanding and interest

  • @cRAVEtrance
    @cRAVEtrance 6 лет назад +6

    I felt my brain cramping as I was absorbing information. That's how I know this was a great episode :-D

  • @Alorand
    @Alorand 6 лет назад +209

    I wish I knew that this series' finances were in good shape. It would help with my restless sleep after Infinite Series disappeared.

    • @alperenyasar6792
      @alperenyasar6792 6 лет назад +12

      Are they in trouble?

    • @christurnbull4637
      @christurnbull4637 6 лет назад +23

      Not really a complete answer to your question, but if you click the patreon link in the description you can get some idea...

    • @Alorand
      @Alorand 6 лет назад +14

      +Chris Turnbull
      But how much does the show actually cost to produce?
      What percentage of their costs are covered by Patreon and partnerships and how much are they reliant on funding from PBS?

    • @non-inertialobserver946
      @non-inertialobserver946 6 лет назад

      Alperen Yaşar They quit

    • @gJonii
      @gJonii 6 лет назад +25

      Infinite Series just ceased to exist with no warning. They were doing multi-part episode and in the middle of it they just announced that Infinite Series was done and would not be coming back.

  • @seanehle8323
    @seanehle8323 6 лет назад +5

    I "ran out of time" dilation is my new favorite excuse for everything.

  • @poseidonc1259
    @poseidonc1259 6 лет назад +148

    God damn! This channel blows my mind every time!

    • @vaagishsharma1129
      @vaagishsharma1129 6 лет назад

      Ever heard of "in a nutshell" ? ;)

    • @johnnyyuma9326
      @johnnyyuma9326 6 лет назад +1

      What mind? This is all "FICTION" moron.

    • @vaagishsharma1129
      @vaagishsharma1129 6 лет назад +2

      Mobile phones were a 'fiction' in stone age you degenerative asshole.

    • @johnnyyuma9326
      @johnnyyuma9326 6 лет назад

      It is "fiction" you stupid dumbshit. Show me a blackhole (besides the one your head is in)..........It's all a "fictional theory" dipshit.

    • @frankschneider6156
      @frankschneider6156 6 лет назад +2

      Johnny yuma
      Your are severely mistaking. One shouldn't take mistake theories for "reality", but they are far from fiction. The observation made, in comparison with those predicted from these theories, are far too good, to be just random coincidences, indicating quite strongly that they somehow describe behavior of nature quite adequately. What your mental image of this is , is pretty irrelevant. The important thing is, that the model upon with the theory is based describes nature with sufficient accuracy and allows also sufficiently accurate predictions of future behavior and effects.
      The other problem is that you seem to think that only that is real what you can "see" with your own eye. With this mindset you'll run into problems very fast. E.g. you can neither see UV nor IR. Are they real ? I mean you can feel them on your skin and other animals can actually see them, so are they real or just imaginations ? Or is only real what you can experience via all your bodily sensors ? In that case e.g. radioactivity wouldn't be real or atoms. Do you doubt the existence of radioactivity and atoms ?
      Or is only real what can be measured by in the lab ? Well we can't measure the sun in the lab. We can just measure it where it is: 8 light minutes away. So do you doubt the existence of the sun ? BTW we do the same thing that we do with the sun with black holes. They are just a little bit farther away than 8 light minutes. So if you think the sun is real, while black holes are not, isn't that kind of a pretty inconsistent view ?

  • @johannesh7610
    @johannesh7610 6 лет назад +4

    Yes! You covered two of my most pressing questions about black holes, namely how they could even grow when all particles freeze outside of them (from our perspective) and how can the information that there is charge in it be known from the outside when information can only traverse time with light speed. Actually, I'm still not sure how this should work, because the information "something is here and has charge" must travel from one place to another and must be affected by general relativity. Or not? And also, how can rotational Energy be known from the outside and how the heck can it be accessed from the outside? I think you already answered that with warped space-time but how can that information leave the event horizon again?
    You are my favorite source of information on black holes. Please go on being in depth and NOT on the surface of the black hole subject (although you obviously still have to scratch on the surface of the many sub subjects)
    Also, thanks for not asking for a like or a subscription. I'm always happier to like a video if that is not said to me. I honestly don't understand why most channels demand for that each video, because it would never influence my likelihood to like and especially to subscribe for the better.

  • @Kevin.Andrews
    @Kevin.Andrews 6 лет назад +14

    Awesome and informative as per usual.

  • @zachshafer1274
    @zachshafer1274 3 года назад

    This video clarified so many things that I sort of had a grasp on but not fully. Thank you

  • @cj719521
    @cj719521 6 лет назад +11

    “Ran-out-of-time dilation” is my default state. :P

  • @oftenwrite
    @oftenwrite 2 года назад

    indeed, the best quantum, astrophysics, theoretical physics information site I have ever seen and heard !

  • @markwentz8332
    @markwentz8332 6 лет назад +67

    "Destroying quantum information with Hawking radiation" sounds like a dope rap lyric!

    • @kvdrr
      @kvdrr 4 года назад

      lol nope

    • @trevorrogers95
      @trevorrogers95 4 года назад +1

      Bars.

    • @trevorrogers95
      @trevorrogers95 4 года назад +1

      kvdr you couldn’t even contribute something funny to the conversation. Mediocre.

    • @kvdrr
      @kvdrr 4 года назад

      @@trevorrogers95 lol nope

    • @markwentz8332
      @markwentz8332 4 года назад

      sounds like a rap you’d hear from immortal technique 🤷🏻‍♂️ that was the original thought

  • @RosarioLeonardi
    @RosarioLeonardi 6 лет назад

    This one is now one of my favourite video of the whole channel.

  • @aprole87
    @aprole87 6 лет назад +4

    "Ran-out-of-time dilation" Love it!

  • @BritishBeachcomber
    @BritishBeachcomber 2 года назад +1

    Every paradox results from a lack of knowledge or understanding, or a fatal flaw in a theory. Resolving a paradox leads to new science. Exciting times.

  • @Sam_on_YouTube
    @Sam_on_YouTube 6 лет назад +29

    I'm a fan of Susskind. He has great lecture series on advanced physics topics. It's an adult education class he teaches on different subjects which should be accessible for an audience about on par with this one. The lectures are all on youtube.
    He calls the class "Physics for Old Farts." It is very in depth, but skips the stuff you don't really need if you aren't a professional. All the calculations are order of magnitude, so he is constantly saying things like "2=1".
    And he looks like Johnathan Banks (Mike Ehrmantraut from Breaking Bad/Better Call Saul).

    • @erikziak1249
      @erikziak1249 6 лет назад

      +1 Being, or at least feeling like an "old fart", I should probably rewatch the lectures. Although I preffered the lectures of Robert Sapolsky if we are talking Stanford...

    • @pepe6666
      @pepe6666 6 лет назад +1

      neat. investigatingg.

    • @pepe6666
      @pepe6666 6 лет назад +9

      Hydroponic City oi. Thats not how we act around here. His recommendation is valid and useful. We cross-recommend good science channels all the time.

    • @avischiffmann6220
      @avischiffmann6220 6 лет назад +2

      I like susskind too

    • @pepe6666
      @pepe6666 6 лет назад +2

      Hydroponic City so brave

  • @ESponge2000
    @ESponge2000 3 года назад +1

    I like the postulate that the information that goes into black holes is encoded in the correlations between future and past. That theory is that information that gets swallowed in a black hole is part of a code that is already naturally recurring in the universe and so it is not a unique destruction. It could go with the wave explanation that likewise FTL parts of a wave are not transmitting anything that adds valuable information

  • @paramountx
    @paramountx 6 лет назад +77

    Lmao.
    Ran out of time dilation!

  • @g00dvibes47
    @g00dvibes47 6 лет назад

    This is undoubtedly one of the best channels on RUclips.

  • @user-vc5zt9ci12
    @user-vc5zt9ci12 6 лет назад +6

    Black holes make more sense described as 2D objects - I like the holographic principle. Does it get around the singularity issue too? I know there are suggestions that QM uncertainly stops there being a true singularity, but it still doesn't sit well.

  • @esraeloh8681
    @esraeloh8681 6 лет назад

    Those joke man, you nail them, you could do stand up physics, I'm remembering much of what I'm going through without putting any of it down on paper, it probably helps my liking your voice & accent as well, your just so chilled

  • @Kabitu1
    @Kabitu1 6 лет назад +406

    Is anyone else getting real tired of the "the whole universe might be a hologram" catchphrase? It might have factual substance to those who study physics, but the definition of a hologram to the common person is so vague it does not allow us to decipher at all what might be meant by that sentence. Most of us have as our only reference something like the Star Trek holodeck, so the sentence seem to imply nothing more than the universe perhaps being "unreal" or "fake" in some vague way. Pop science channels have been throwing this sentence around so haphazardly without ever taking the time to explain what a hologram is defined to be in this context, and it's really getting on my nerves.

    • @matthewlind3102
      @matthewlind3102 6 лет назад +24

      When I think of a hologram, I think of the ones on credit cards. In what way our universe could be such a thing, I have no idea

    • @michaelsommers2356
      @michaelsommers2356 6 лет назад +79

      Instead of complaining, why don't you expend a little effort and find out what a hologram is. It is ridiculous to criticize physicists for using ideas that are not instantly understandable by the most ignorant and least educated people on the planet.

    • @Volodimir_Druzhkin
      @Volodimir_Druzhkin 6 лет назад +3

      Not the hologram on a credit card

    • @AaronFresh09
      @AaronFresh09 6 лет назад +2

      Kabitu1 it is a hologram

    • @TheBlueB0mber
      @TheBlueB0mber 6 лет назад +15

      Nicholas Coffin excellent breakdown of a common misunderstanding. Very well said.

  • @TS-oh1gl
    @TS-oh1gl 6 лет назад +1

    I would love for Spacetime to do an episode (or a couple) on the holographic universe theory. It's crazy how quickly people devolve this theory into arguments on consciousness and whatnot. I would love to hear a fully factual interpretation of the consequences of such a universe!

  • @ronaldderooij1774
    @ronaldderooij1774 6 лет назад +6

    Susskind says simply that spacetime itself is an entangled structure. Mass breaks open the entanglement. This IS gravity according to him. I missed that point in this episode.

    • @enterprisesoftwarearchitect
      @enterprisesoftwarearchitect 6 лет назад +6

      I think what Susskind/Maldacena say is that space next to another patch of space is entangled, and this entanglement might be what gives rise to what we call "space" in the first place - it is a speculation of his and Juan's, it seems. Never seen Susskind say that mass "breaks" entanglement. Mass is just bound energy watch this SpaceTime episode: ruclips.net/video/Xo232kyTsO0/видео.html … the energy in mass curves SpaceTime, and gives the illusion of a gravitational force, watch this spacetime episode: ruclips.net/video/NblR01hHK6U/видео.html

  • @Upstreamprovider
    @Upstreamprovider 6 лет назад

    This channel should permanently replace all TV channels. For our own good!

  • @markross699
    @markross699 6 лет назад +7

    This was terrific and very accessible. Thank you!

  • @stanleydelano9169
    @stanleydelano9169 3 года назад

    You deserve a raise, well done to make sense of things!

  • @danyo8512
    @danyo8512 6 лет назад +4

    Ahhhh the ol' "Ran out of time dilation" i run into that problem quite frequently >:C

  • @Dahxelb
    @Dahxelb 6 лет назад

    I always love the silly questions & answers addressed in the very end of the video. Keep up the tradition.

  • @moisessalazar4432
    @moisessalazar4432 6 лет назад +5

    Humankind has become wiser, at the end of the 19 century all physics though that physic was complete. Today with all of our technology we are certain that it is not.

  • @greenman360
    @greenman360 6 лет назад

    This is my favorite channel on RUclips, by far.

  • @exoplanets
    @exoplanets 6 лет назад +42

    Great video! Recently, a study concluded that up to 1 million habitable exoplanets can orbit a black hole :O

    • @gek4028
      @gek4028 6 лет назад +5

      so there could be life on a planet orbiting a black hole ?
      image living there and knowing there is a black hole somewhere, scary :P
      and maybe even sometimes seeing that something falls in?

    • @Ba11leFieldAce
      @Ba11leFieldAce 6 лет назад +9

      Life would be miserable LOL. Can you imagine living your entire existence in a massive time dilated Paradox?

    • @KevinP32270
      @KevinP32270 6 лет назад +1

      The Exoplanets Channel amazing

    • @pepe6666
      @pepe6666 6 лет назад +1

      Oh man remember that episode of star trek voyager with the time dialated planet? That was amazing

    • @exoplanets
      @exoplanets 6 лет назад +2

      pepe6666 yeah, and also Miller's planet, in the movie 'Interestellar'

  • @willbrink
    @willbrink 4 месяца назад

    I may have understood about half of what he said, but I did learn useful information.

  • @gokuldinesh8851
    @gokuldinesh8851 6 лет назад +3

    Can I join the race? Mmm I cant cause I am just a highschooler studying basic classical electromagnetism. This channel is only a good challenge to my brain, I cant wait for the next week. I wish I had some knowledge to join the race. Thank you #PBSSpacetime for sharing this awsome info!

  • @Dolei
    @Dolei 3 года назад

    Please do a vid about black hole complementarity & firewalls! That concept of duplication and projection of information really piqued my interest but nobody on YT explains things as clearly and.. digestibly? As you!!

  • @grizscrumptious2868
    @grizscrumptious2868 4 года назад +9

    It's interesting to think that if we learned to control black holes, he could create a duplicator, bringing things back from the black hole. Also still keeping the original copy.

    • @Janken_Pro
      @Janken_Pro 2 года назад

      We already have that, it's called a copier

  • @DruMusica
    @DruMusica 6 лет назад

    Very well written video. Your logical flow is crystal clear, nice and inspiring conclusion too.

  • @SirKurogane
    @SirKurogane 6 лет назад +5

    I support the blackhole in whitehole out into the new universe idea because I'm currently writing a sci-fi fantasy book heavily founded in real day astrophysics. 🖖😎👌

  • @nareshsahu565
    @nareshsahu565 6 лет назад

    i just love whatever you guys post. its everything i need in my life, thank you.

  • @luboisfat
    @luboisfat 6 лет назад +4

    Would this paradox still exist if we assume the De Broglie-Bohm interpretation of quantum mechanics to be correct?

    • @jagnestormskull3178
      @jagnestormskull3178 3 года назад

      A different information paradox shows up if you assume Bohmian mechanics: the hidden variable paradox.

  • @RCaIabraro
    @RCaIabraro 6 лет назад +1

    Great episode. I love thinking about the nature of the event horizon. I deeply dig the holographic universe.

  • @mechakitsune
    @mechakitsune 6 лет назад +63

    Will the information in this comment survive beyond the event horizon that is RUclips's comment section? The only way to find out is to go inside.

    • @ktopaz
      @ktopaz 6 лет назад +1

      OMG That's genius, also: so high right now!

    • @mechakitsune
      @mechakitsune 6 лет назад +4

      8-Bit Wizard It depends on what your frame of reference is. To an outside observer, I might look like I'm permanently hunched over my keyboard, my eyes locked on the screen.
      From my perspective, I would be unaware of the outside world, and would perceive myself as falling into an impossibly deep abyss.
      Perhaps after some time, an outside observer would see the effects of my fall as residual notifications on my phone, but they would not be able to discern much about my pre-event horizon self from that information.

    • @alvinoid12
      @alvinoid12 6 лет назад +1

      ScorchedWind My man, these analogies were truly intriguing. It was a great read!

  • @jellymop
    @jellymop 6 лет назад

    You mentioned Lenny! One of my favorite theoretical physicists!

  • @alexkorocencev7689
    @alexkorocencev7689 6 лет назад +16

    If we can encode 3D information on a 2D surface, can we also do it on a 1D string?

    • @SrmthfgRockLee
      @SrmthfgRockLee 6 лет назад

      hmmmmmmm

    • @BxBL85
      @BxBL85 6 лет назад +3

      Everything on a computer is encoded to a 1D string of 0 and 1, the processor can only process one single value at a time... It just executes really really fast, giving the illusion of multi-processing and multi-tasking.

    • @kavinsp
      @kavinsp 6 лет назад +1

      @@BxBL85 yes for single core processor , multi-core processing is a real thing for a while now

    • @NLB90805
      @NLB90805 5 лет назад

      Or perhaps onto a 0D point? (0D looks too much like Hexidecimal).

    • @sarahg4409
      @sarahg4409 4 года назад

      You can encode 2D on 1D, and 3D on 2D and so on!

  • @IgorDz
    @IgorDz 6 лет назад +1

    Watching this I am like "Ok, I can jump into a black hole and survive"... "or maybe not"... "I can totally jump into it, but one copy dies and other will be fine, good enuff"

  • @oisnowy5368
    @oisnowy5368 6 лет назад +4

    "With perfect knowledge of the current universe, it should be possible to perfectly trace the universe backwards and forwards in time..." Ok. But how does that work with the cosmic event horizon? Sure, in the future most parts of the universe will expand from us so fast, none of their light can ever reach us... we can predict that future. However, if we were to reverse the flow of time all sorts of things should start to appear from the cosmic horizon. Granted, I'm being mean since anything beyond the cosmic event horizon is basically still part of the universe. I just find the idea of having perfect knowledge of the current universe at odds with our space-time at large scales and Heisenberg at the extreme small scales.

    • @ANGRYpooCHUCKER
      @ANGRYpooCHUCKER 6 лет назад +2

      Well, even objects that are beyond the cosmic horizon were influencing things within the horizon through gravity and EM at one point. So, no matter how small the leftover influence is now, IF we had PERFECT knowledge then we could extrapolate what the universe was like at any time, even if it involved things that are now beyond the cosmic horizon.

  • @DeliciousFood69420
    @DeliciousFood69420 5 лет назад +1

    I think what's really inside a black hole is a billion spacetime videos

  • @Cypekjam94
    @Cypekjam94 6 лет назад +7

    if i would Fall into a black hole would i See the speeded up timelapse of all the events that would occour in the universe to a moment when i Just reached the event horizont and die ??

    • @orionsarrow2119
      @orionsarrow2119 6 лет назад +2

      Cypekjam from my (very, very limited) understanding, the answer is essentially yes.
      If you could fall in without being ripped apart, and you looked out to the rest of the universe you would see the time of the universe speeding up faster and faster - essentially to infinity which is the point at which you would fully cross the event horizon.
      The last thing to happen on your worldline is also the very last thing to happen on the worldline of the outside universe.

    • @MikeSnitkovski
      @MikeSnitkovski 6 лет назад

      as far as I understand, reaching event horizon would expand it, even if just a tiny bit, and next stuff falling into it won't reach you

    • @vampyricon7026
      @vampyricon7026 6 лет назад +5

      Nope. Remember, light has to reach you for you to see stuff. In the Penrose diagram below, light travels at 45 degree angles, so at the singularity, the light that reaches you isn't from the far future.
      jila.colorado.edu/~ajsh/insidebh/penrose_schw.gif

    • @orionsarrow2119
      @orionsarrow2119 6 лет назад +1

      Vampiricon knows what they're talking about.
      But I think the original question was about before they hit the event horizon

    • @vampyricon7026
      @vampyricon7026 6 лет назад +1

      Orion Della Silva You won't die when you reach the event horizon. At least if the black hole is big enough that the tidal forces are small.

  • @jessicamorgan3073
    @jessicamorgan3073 4 года назад +1

    Hi Matt,
    I love your videos, they're rabbit holes, I never know what to watch next!
    In my understanding of hawking radiation, the particle pairs that form by the event horizon get separated (for want of a better description), with one 'appearing' to be eminate from the the hole, and the other passing over the horizon.
    Why doesn't the energy/mass of the particle passing through through into the hole add to the total mass of the hole, negating the mass lost to the escaping particle?
    Thanks

  • @CharlesOffdensen
    @CharlesOffdensen 6 лет назад +11

    Doesn't the supposed singularity in the black hole also contradict the conservation of information?

    • @Ricocossa1
      @Ricocossa1 6 лет назад +4

      Not if the information is stored on the horizon for an external observer. This completely solves the problem as far as we stay out of the black-hole, because in that reference frame, nothing ever goes through the horizon.
      Inside the blackhole, singularities often disappear in quantum theories of gravity. ECT (Einstein-Cartan theory) also makes singularities disappear as mentioned in this video, and it's a classical extension of GR. It basically relaxes some geometric assumptions made in GR and makes it more suitable to handle matter with spin (intrinsic angular momentum). When one looks at what happens to fermionic matter in a black hole in ECT, it turns out there's no singularity and instead the black-hole turns into an Einstein-Rosen bridge, possibly leading to another universe. And that's where the information might go.

    • @Ricocossa1
      @Ricocossa1 6 лет назад +2

      Some background independent theories of quantum gravity predict a Planck star in place of a singularity. I know very little about those, and I know even less about M-theory so I don't even know what it exactly predicts. The thing to keep in mind is that those theories are all still very speculative:
      M/string theories have yet to make physical predictions that aren't made by classical GR, and that have a chance of being observed within this century. The extreme abundance of adjustable parameters is also a problem for those models.
      Loop Quantum gravity theories make some predictions, but those are likely to be highly flawed because the theory is not exactly complete yet, and can't even account for matter in the universe. It is not known either if the theory actually reproduces gravity at large scales. This is hard to prove/disprove because space-time itself does not really exist in the theory, it is supposed to arise from the structure of the "spin foam" (the quantum states of the theory and their evolution) at scales larger than the Planck scale. This is what is meant by "background independent".
      Einstein-Cartan is very hard to observe as well because its effects are limited to the inside of matter distributions, and are more significant at very high density. Try to measure gravity inside a ball of highly dense matter...

    • @michaelsommers2356
      @michaelsommers2356 6 лет назад +5

      Nobody thinks that the singularity is real. If a singularity shows up in your theory, it is a sure sign that your theory is broken,

    • @xCorvus7x
      @xCorvus7x 6 лет назад

      Except that GR works incredibly well wherever else we have checked.

    • @kindlin
      @kindlin 6 лет назад

      Michael, I've tried to explain this to people in the past and they absolutely refute me. I say:
      "No real physicists believes there is an actual physical, infinitely dense singularity at the heart of a black hole; some phenomenon of unknown variety will act upon the mass and cease it's decent. The only question that remains is: what is that phenomenon?"
      I think it's some kind of Planck degeneracy pressure. Like how neutron stars are degenerate neutrons, quark stars are degenerate quark matter, so what's left? Whatever's at the heart of a quark. If string theory is to be believed, it's Planck-scale, 1-D vibrating strings, that presumably would begin to be crushed together at the heart of a black hole.
      My favorite idea for the "source" of the material for the Big Bang is, what if there was a 3D volume of _space_ that is the same substance of the strings in our Universe, and an instability in the 3D volume, like, say, the higgs boson falling into a false vacuum state (ned.ipac.caltech.edu/level5/Guth/Guth3.html), causes that bit of _space_ to inflate, causing our Big Bang, and all of the _space_ is bessiected to Planck-oblivion. This would mean that the total energy of the universe is proportional to the size of the region of _space_ that became unstable, maybe with some constant based on c^2/h (light speed square over Planck constant).

  • @digimon41lifeify
    @digimon41lifeify 5 лет назад

    Good thing we still have the laws of entropy and E=Mc^2 to help guide us.

  • @sarysa
    @sarysa 6 лет назад +3

    "They found us out, boss! What should I do?"
    "Shut 'er down, quick! Can't be havin' any gat-dang holograms runnin' willy nilly on MY watch!"
    "I'm trying, but they've overridden the shutdown procedure!"
    "So it's finally begun...all hands, abandon the planet. This world belongs to the 'grams, now..."

  • @whitenight941
    @whitenight941 6 лет назад

    This one is by far the hardest one Yet !I can't get my head around it !

  • @UpcycleElectronics
    @UpcycleElectronics 6 лет назад +11

    Tangent... Why doesn't the theoretical time dilation of the mass of a black hole crammed into the smallest physical dimension account for the information paradox, or even hawking radiation for that matter? Searching for (2min) the answer usually leaves me feeling trolled by some Lorentz dude and a bunch of fiziqueks foreign language namenclature. That kind of crazy unfamiliar language totally blocks me from an intuitive understanding of any meaningful concepts... That gibber jabber is usually followed by someone explaining things in Greek...as of that's going to help.
    ....back to figuring out simple FPGA's....never thought I'd say that...
    -Jake

    • @Ricocossa1
      @Ricocossa1 6 лет назад +2

      Those words often have a much simpler meaning than how they sound. Although I have no idea of what you mean by "the time dilation of the mass being crammed into a dimension".

    • @pillowbugg
      @pillowbugg 6 лет назад +2

      The singularity of mass enters criticality and 'pierces' the fundamental wave causing it to rapidly expand into a new universe...

    • @enterprisesoftwarearchitect
      @enterprisesoftwarearchitect 6 лет назад +6

      Has everyone forgotten that the previous host Gabe taught us that black holes don't have mass per se, they are just four-dimensional extents where all the events (space and time points to which coordinates can be assigned) have been ripped from our universe? He said he thought that the singularity was more like a point that was "punched out" of our universe … a hole … not a nugget where all the mass is stored. There probably ISN'T any mass inside the black hole to evaporate. The singularity is an "end" to time - no time comes "after" it, according to Gabe … wonder how that sits with Matt.

    • @karlkuhn1997
      @karlkuhn1997 6 лет назад +1

      Eugene Bird
      That's a good point.

    • @UpcycleElectronics
      @UpcycleElectronics 6 лет назад

      I wonder if the singularity is essentially like an anchor in time. Anything that "falls in" is no longer really "falling into" anything on any kind of time scale we could observe. Instead ito is trapped in a near infinite time dilation between the dilated time at the center of the singularity and the universe outside of the gravity well. Something like Hawking radiation would allow the singularity to still move through time just extremely slowly. Technically nothing entering has to be lost. Everything is just stretching farther and farther between the anchor and the gravitational average time of the rest of the universe. It's kinda like a gravity to time constant, if the scale tips in favor of time over gravity we have the universe as we observe it, but if that ratio reaches a tipping point the dilation is so large and time is so slow that everything fits into the dilation space between the anchor and whatever relative time matter is part of when it encounters the singularity's gravity well. The singularity would still be traveling on it's own extremely dilated time, and that could slowly loose mass through hawking radiation and decay. Nothing is lost, nothing is magic, or like some mythological multiverse. It's just catching up extremely slowly on enormous time scales.

  • @frankschneider6156
    @frankschneider6156 6 лет назад

    Outstanding episode. Please keep this level.

  • @azafreak
    @azafreak 6 лет назад +6

    YAY

  • @biswaranjandas9190
    @biswaranjandas9190 6 лет назад +1

    How does information persist when the singularity in that black hole devours everything

    • @MrTripcore
      @MrTripcore 6 лет назад

      Black holes are mechanisms which reverse entropy of 3 dimensional space-time to 2 dimensional space with constant time/momentum

  • @thiboroelandt4784
    @thiboroelandt4784 6 лет назад +23

    IS THE UNIVERSE A BLACK HOLE?

    • @Videohead-eq5cy
      @Videohead-eq5cy 6 лет назад +1

      Thibo Roelandt no

    • @nicholasperkins4655
      @nicholasperkins4655 6 лет назад +3

      El Shaddai means God Almighty in Hebrew
      It comes from the Hebrew word shad which means mountain
      The Arabic word for mountain is sana
      Sana means thread of summer in Japanese
      Sana means eternity in Sanskrit
      The Ancient Jews believed that the earth(cosmos in Greek) was flat
      Albert Einstein modeled the cosmos with an infinite flat sheet of space/time
      A black hole is an infinite pit in space/time
      An infinite mountain in space/time would be an infinite white hole.
      Dark Energy and Dark Matter can be explained by finite quantum spinning white holes(tachyons) that exist for a few planck instances.
      Some scientists believe that the big bang was a white hole
      If God is an infinite white hole than the Father would be the infinite singularity of the white hole, the Son would be the infinite tachyon, and the Holy Spirit would be the infinite tachyonic wave(space)
      Space does not expand: The cosmos is shrinking while space is constant. This means that the speed of light is shrinking each planck instant in a way that makes it appear constant
      If the cosmos is shrinking then the density of energy is increasing.
      This means that all energy will become a black hole because of Schwarzschild radius
      The beginning of the big bang had 0 entropy which means 100% of the universe was light
      The universe now has less than 5% light
      Conclusion the 3 dimensional cosmos is inbetween an infinite infinitly dimensional white hole and an infinite 0 dimensional black hole. (Taeguk)
      Good does not need evil to exist
      Black Holes are not eternal because of Hawking radiation
      If you don't abide in Jesus Christ you will be deleted
      You have the choice to be loved everlastingly or to suffer infinite entropy as your last memory that seems forever because 0 time is eternal to a tachyon
      Please choose the Perfect Agape of God.

    • @Videohead-eq5cy
      @Videohead-eq5cy 6 лет назад +9

      Nicholas Perkins wow

    • @scp3999
      @scp3999 6 лет назад +3

      the theory is that it's on the event horizon of a black hole, not the black hole itself

    • @Videohead-eq5cy
      @Videohead-eq5cy 6 лет назад

      Izaya Furryhara a copy of the universe*

  • @huntervanhook
    @huntervanhook 6 лет назад

    Is it just me, or did this video break my brain more than any other space time video?

  • @julius2943
    @julius2943 5 лет назад +3

    It looks like this guy is always about to sneeze

  • @rhitamdutta1996
    @rhitamdutta1996 4 года назад +2

    0:05 A lose “thread” that leads to the theory of everything. I see what you did there.

  • @ViralKiller
    @ViralKiller 5 лет назад +4

    it doesn't escape...it is destroyed in our universe effectively, and expelled to the baby/parallel universe

    • @YathishShamaraj
      @YathishShamaraj 4 года назад

      2:05 yeah, the event horizon shields the baby Universe from the parent one..
      And inside the singularity, space and time can expand to infinity starting a new big bang..👍

  • @saturnsmurf
    @saturnsmurf 6 лет назад

    The whole burned encyclopedia is a good metaphor. A black hole sucks in matter but it slowly turns it back into pure energy. Information is organized bits of energy. A black hole somehow descrambles all of this and releases it back into the universe.

    • @cloudpoint0
      @cloudpoint0 6 лет назад

      The term "pure energy" doesn't exist in physics. You probably mean "pure black body thermal energy", which retains no information about its origins (essentially, it is completely disorganized energy, in the information sense).

  • @vanshgarg9560
    @vanshgarg9560 6 лет назад +3

    If I have a pair of entangled electrons, one with spin up and other with spin down but don't know which particle has spin up or down and throws one of them in a black hole ,and then measure the spin of the particle that I have ,I will know what the spin of the other particle was which is now in the black hole .No information is lost here

  • @supersymm3try
    @supersymm3try 6 лет назад

    I love this chanel almost as much as I love Isaac Arthurs channel, maybe they would be equal in my heart though if spacetime started to make longer videos. Please spacetime, consider making 25-30+ minute plus videos... i'd watch them all again and again like i do isaac's videos/

  • @jholts6912
    @jholts6912 4 года назад

    So just a suggestion. From an Aristotelian perspective on the most fundamental level of matter we have what is pure potentiality. What we would call Prime Matter (PM). PM is actualized by information being combined with it. This is done in several ways. The first would be by adding form. Form is the essence or nature of a thing. For example, some PM can be combined with the form of a triangle and thus take on a triangular shape. But given the potentiality of PM and only a degree of information being added to it we get an imperfect triangle. However, the second way in which PM is defined in through causal relations of both a hierarchical and locality level of ontology. That is atoms have causal relations with other atoms that helps define each other. This is done via the forces each atom has and enacts upon another (electromagnetism, gravity, etc..) Thus, this explains some of the potential atoms have by defining say their spatial location. Secondly, these atoms, will actualize the potentials above them namely particles. They do this by being conjoined in such a way that the causal relations between them define greater detail making up the totality of the particles. It is at this point that the particles are now actual and the atoms merely virtual. As we go up in levels of ontology we reach the macroscopic scale where matter has much more definition than the bottom. There is a lot of information since the micro levels have defined the macro. On the quantum level we have a situation where things are close to being PM. Given that they have so much potentiality it is easy to see why we’d expect electrons to exist in two locations at the same time and in the same way because they simply are not defined well enough. So what does this have to do with black hole information loss? Well, say you take that which is actual (well defined), say a molecule for example, and then through the gravitational pull of a black whole literally stretch the molecule so much that it rips apart. At this point you’ve broken the information that defined the molecule in the state that it started for the micro levels of matter that were working together to define the macro level molecule have been separated. The information loss will occur when you rip the bonds of causality to such a degree that there is simply nothing left but fundamental particles with so little definition they loose their prior information because they are now on a level of fundamentality that they become indistinguishable from other only slightly actualized potential. Remember that pure potentiality is simply not distinct in anyway for it is just potentiality. Therefore, it makes sense to say that such slightly defined potential is not distinguishable from other slightly defined potential and that the information is not plausibly conserved.

  • @zeitecsmith2875
    @zeitecsmith2875 4 года назад

    The Black Hole War is a great book by Leonard Susskind on this topic. It's pretty basic (maybe even a bit more basic than this channel) but it dives deeper into his ideas on black hole complementarity. I think it covers the topic admirably and it has a lot of anecdotes with some great physicists like hawking, wheeler, and feynman.

  • @thezebraherd8275
    @thezebraherd8275 6 лет назад +1

    Maybe the place the information goes is creating a new universe thus keeping the amount of infomation stable throughout all the universes

  • @StevenRud
    @StevenRud 6 лет назад

    One of the BEST channels...!!!👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @sakuyarules
    @sakuyarules 6 лет назад

    lmao, that ending was so perfect; he described my favorite time dilation.

  • @docholiday8029
    @docholiday8029 5 лет назад +1

    The easy/simple solution is usually the right one: Occam's razor.
    Black/white holes are Einstein-Rosen Bridges. They suck stuff in, shred it, accelerate it and spit it out.
    No information paradox.
    (Mic drop.)

    • @TheLoneMitten
      @TheLoneMitten 5 лет назад +1

      It really makes sense. I'm a 3d torus universe theory and I wouldn't be surprised if more discoveries supported that and would be disappointed but even more curious and fascinated if they didn't

  • @nachannachle2706
    @nachannachle2706 6 лет назад

    Wow, I had NO IDEA what was hiding behind the Hawking radiation-Information Paradox. It's amazing how much influence this postulate has had on contemporary research in Physics.
    Once you fall into the PBS Spacetime rabbit Blackhole, it is truly impossible to escape... :)

  • @Gdrums1981
    @Gdrums1981 3 года назад

    Our entire visible universe is actually the matter around 1 galactic size massive black hole and our observations of the universe are the distortions as observed at our point in time. Big bang was just the formation of the black hole. Prove me wrong? Anythings possible at this point lol love it, great work.

  • @Hartschteiler
    @Hartschteiler 6 лет назад

    With perfect knowledge of the amount of photons emited by a black hole and perfect knowledge of everything in the universe there is no loss of informations.
    We just know to less about everything, but that does not mean any information is lost in the first place.

  • @probablechoices
    @probablechoices 6 лет назад

    We "live" in a virtual reality. Consciousness is fundamental.

  • @mariakhan6090
    @mariakhan6090 5 лет назад +1

    I just love this channel !

  • @lomiification
    @lomiification 3 года назад

    Black hole complements still sound like a second universe where the information lives.

  • @sussexstreet5471
    @sussexstreet5471 6 лет назад

    Hi space time. It’s nice that you mention Hawking, Susskind and T’hooft in this story, though I would be interested to cover a bit about the late Joe Polchinski and his contribution to this story.

  • @ExtraTurtle
    @ExtraTurtle 2 года назад +1

    7:50 why is this a "paradox"? the black hole starts to disappear VERY slowly, which means the information that entered also starts to disappear.
    for an inside perspective, a person in a black hole would be exactly the same, untill he would start evaporating VERY slowly (information doesn't have to EITHER go in the black hole OR go outside, it enters the black hole when it gets bigger, and leaves when it gets smaller.)

  • @ARDERUUD
    @ARDERUUD 5 месяцев назад

    Whatever the heck is going on with black holes is literally the only knowledge I would love to have before I go

  • @ddorman365
    @ddorman365 6 лет назад

    Thank you Family that is beautiful, peace and love, Doug:)

  • @alwaysdisputin9930
    @alwaysdisputin9930 3 года назад

    Interesting: 12:51 _"Epsilon Jay ɛJ asks what would happen if you fired a continuous beam of electrons at a BH & how would the charge affect the Penrose diagram? Great question. If you keep injecting charge into a BH, then it does maintain an electric charge. That charge only decays if the BH is left to its own devices. & it turns out that a charged BH has a pretty weird Penrose diagram. The exterior looks pretty similar to a regular BH, but the inside is very different. The electric charge within the BH produces a negative pressure that actually halts the cascade of space within the BH & propels it back outwards. In the mathematics, it looks as though anything falling into a charged BH is ejected into a separate universe."_

  • @dr.christopherdiaz4473
    @dr.christopherdiaz4473 6 лет назад

    We are in a simulation.
    The black hole is the "hard drive" where the data that creates our reality is stored, updated and retrieved.
    Looking inside of a hard drive as a computer program, would be like a sim character looking at your 7200rpm SCSI.

  • @while_coyote
    @while_coyote 6 лет назад

    Somebody should make university courses with content and visualizations as high quality as these videos throughout. It could revolutionize how quickly people learn and how much they retain.

  • @ZoiusGM
    @ZoiusGM 2 года назад +1

    It is all nice and good, but what do we mean by information in this case? The mass, speed and spin of every particle that fell into the black hole? And if you collect all the particles you could figure out what they formed before they fell into the hole; a chair for example?

    • @arthursulit
      @arthursulit 2 года назад

      also, a Soul is completely immaterial, yet can conceive of infinite amounts of information. So for the same reason why Star Trek's atheist transporter cannot beam Kirk + his soul as if they're both reducible to material subatomic quanta, this entire information paradox as if there is only 1-3 bits of "info" per planck area is complete hogwash. They commit the error of scientism & reductionism, as if mere spin, location momentum etc. is sufficient to describe every reality, including a soul's sentience. See Godel's Incompleteness Theorem, which disproved Hilberts vain efforts to reduce everything to mere math.

  • @kaikeekat
    @kaikeekat 6 лет назад

    Who on earth is(/are) your Motion Designer(s)!? And as always, outstanding work this episode. I love this show!!!

  • @TenebraePatruus
    @TenebraePatruus 6 лет назад

    I think may of us would like an episode, or at least a segment, describing the holographic principle in more detain