Dark matter: The matter we can't see - James Gillies

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  • Опубликовано: 17 май 2024
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    View full lesson: ed.ted.com/lessons/dark-matter...
    The Greeks had a simple and elegant formula for the universe: just earth, fire, wind, and water. Turns out there's more to it than that -- a lot more. Visible matter (and that goes beyond the four Greek elements) comprises only 4% of the universe. CERN scientist James Gillies tells us what accounts for the remaining 96% (dark matter and dark energy) and how we might go about detecting it.
    Lesson by James Gillies, animation by TED-Ed.

Комментарии • 2,4 тыс.

  • @KhaiNguyen-wy1it
    @KhaiNguyen-wy1it 3 года назад +3257

    scientists: 80% of the universe is dark matter
    people: what is dark matter
    scientists: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • @mickdan19
      @mickdan19 3 года назад +52

      What a scientist..😀

    • @tanmay5855
      @tanmay5855 3 года назад +35

      This comment is so underrated!

    • @hridayagrawal7992
      @hridayagrawal7992 3 года назад +32

      `\_(●●/)_/`

    • @AkBoss78600
      @AkBoss78600 3 года назад +41

      No dark Matter is just 25 percent 70 percent dark energy and other just 5 percent is matter

    • @mohammedhamza8289
      @mohammedhamza8289 3 года назад +13

      That made me crack up

  • @JossAndJanik
    @JossAndJanik 6 лет назад +5021

    TED-Ed attempting to save me from an existential crisis at the end of the video...

    • @Enzoki_
      @Enzoki_ 5 лет назад +61

      Na, we are still nothing compared to observable universe, now imagine how tiny we are to the actual universe.

    • @joegastly6166
      @joegastly6166 5 лет назад +67

      @@Enzoki_ Everything we know today is just based on the 5% of the Universe we can actually see and yet we can't even understand a fraction on how that 5% fully works lol

    • @angietorres8969
      @angietorres8969 4 года назад +3

      Omg you guys what are you doing here?❤️

    • @stressedbyamountainofbooks
      @stressedbyamountainofbooks 3 года назад +26

      And as far as we know we are the only species
      keyword: as far as we know

    • @samueljohnson4806
      @samueljohnson4806 3 года назад +3

      Curiously, this comment gets 2.3K likes but just 4 replies. Interesting.

  • @patrickroelant5171
    @patrickroelant5171 7 лет назад +2294

    I love that the one thing we know is that we don't know it all

  • @RevJamesCostello
    @RevJamesCostello 2 года назад +182

    The fact that we are able to look at ‘all of this’ and say, ‘Wow, I know very little about this amazing universe,’ is pretty bloody impressive if you ask me.

  • @simoncarlile5190
    @simoncarlile5190 8 лет назад +2772

    If you were to give this information to someone from 500 years ago, even someone like Newton, it would basically be gibberish. Now imagine what a scientific talk from 500 years in the future will look like.

    • @mitekillem
      @mitekillem 8 лет назад +86

      +Simon Carlile If we continue upon the same path, as we are on, 500 years in the future, scientist will consult the laws of THE BIBLE, rather than user their brains to solve problems rationally.

    • @simoncarlile5190
      @simoncarlile5190 8 лет назад +189

      Daniel Gregory
      Yeah, I meant optimistic, happy futures. Not ones ruled by Christian or Muslim extremists (or both)

    • @nal8503
      @nal8503 8 лет назад +56

      +Daniel Gregory I'd rather not go back to a religious institution pulling the strings. Why would you revert to an evil larger than anything we have today?

    • @CraftKitty007
      @CraftKitty007 8 лет назад +44

      Its truely amazing how every idea, language, culture and knowledge evolves and changes over time in our civilization.
      Imagine, the most bizzar, seemingly crazy and ludecrous scientific studies and theories today, may be common sense in a few decades or so. Gravity was once like this, so was the earth being round, and the existance of microorganisms. For lack of a word profound enough to truley reflect this idea: "amazing"

    • @simoncarlile5190
      @simoncarlile5190 8 лет назад +16

      CraftKitty
      I think there's something to the current trend in quantum mechanics as viewing information as the most basic unit of existence. I suspect we're on the cusp of fleshing out a theory in the next few decades that will radically shift how we view physical laws. If I'm correct in my expectations, it will make "The Matrix" seem like dipping your toes into the pool, whereas this will be diving straight into the deep end.

  • @BassDat33
    @BassDat33 8 лет назад +6526

    too late to explore the world
    too soon to explore the galaxy
    just in time to watch ted ed vids

    • @acrossearth4760
      @acrossearth4760 7 лет назад +124

      "I was born in the wrong generation,"

    • @novigradian1284
      @novigradian1284 7 лет назад +133

      +All Across Earth How? We are some of the generations that are literally watching the insane things such as internet or web (which will one day probably connect all the strings of humanity in this universe like it does today on Earth) being weaved in front of our eyes. We are some of the first ones to use such kind of technology. (AKA Golden Age of Technology)
      Perhaps, in future (thousands of years from today) people would be thinking just like us. Even if they were able to explore different galaxies, they might think that they were born in the WRONG GENERATION because they wouldn't be able to explore different dimensions or other galaxy clusters. We should be satisfied with what we have and where we are.

    • @BassDat33
      @BassDat33 7 лет назад +29

      Someone need to points the " " " harder.

    • @ericklopes4046
      @ericklopes4046 7 лет назад +3

      ķkkkkk best comment

    • @benmaghsoodi2067
      @benmaghsoodi2067 7 лет назад +12

      just in time for exploring web.

  • @eagleman3577
    @eagleman3577 6 лет назад +178

    "Beautiful is what we see...
    More beautiful is what we know
    Most beautiful by far is what we dont."

    • @azheegraphic
      @azheegraphic 2 года назад +3

      Wow , i will memorize this as a quote

    • @williamhan2064
      @williamhan2064 2 года назад +1

      Sounds profound but from what I can tell doesn’t mean anything lol

    • @queenanneboleyn6848
      @queenanneboleyn6848 Год назад +1

      @@williamhan2064 There is a proverb in Bangla “The inhabitants of one river’s ashore say - How beautiful the other end is. While the people of the end say- such wonderful place this ashore is. “
      Meaning no matter what beautiful things we possess, what we don't have is the most exquisite.

    • @williamhan2064
      @williamhan2064 Год назад +1

      @@queenanneboleyn6848 Sounds a lot like "the grass is greener on the other side" if I'm understanding it correctly. Which most of the times isn't true. The people at one side of the river say it's more beautiful on the other side, but is it actually?

    • @williamhan2064
      @williamhan2064 Год назад +1

      @@queenanneboleyn6848 Furthermore, what is meant by: what we know is more beautiful than what we see. When is this true, and more importantly, why is this generally true. If I were to rephrase this quote into something that made more sense, perhaps it would go something like "Beautiful is what we see and know, but the greatest wonder lies in what we don't."

  • @billyzleef3230
    @billyzleef3230 4 года назад +195

    1:21 Just a moment to appreciate this brilliant attemt at visually presenting the nature of electrons and their "movement" around the nucleus.

    • @interestedperson174
      @interestedperson174 3 года назад +4

      i was going to comment this exact statement

    • @as.31415
      @as.31415 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@interestedperson174 I noticed that too! So often when atoms are shown, they show electrons like planets orbiting a star which is not even close to accurate. This video does a nice job of showing how chaotic and hazy an atom really is.

  • @dadon9386
    @dadon9386 10 лет назад +1602

    Apparently all the answers scientists can't seem to find have been hidden away in the RUclips comments section all along ...

    • @KK-nw1so
      @KK-nw1so 6 лет назад +10

      Da Don 😂

    • @nickmarinakis2100
      @nickmarinakis2100 6 лет назад +9

      Thank you!

    • @thebinlgbtisbabadook7832
      @thebinlgbtisbabadook7832 5 лет назад +3

      Da Don XD

    • @ImehSmith
      @ImehSmith 5 лет назад +3

      😂🤣👍👍👍

    • @ballsislife6018
      @ballsislife6018 4 года назад +13

      apparently scientists are just humans just like the ones with answers in the comments section of the biggest database of knowledge in the world with the most users in the world by large. good one

  • @this_mfr
    @this_mfr 8 лет назад +1373

    Dark Matter: "Do you even matter, bro?"

  • @shevetlevi2821
    @shevetlevi2821 3 года назад +46

    The deeper you dive into physics and cosmology the freakier it gets. Says alot about the minds of scientists that much of what they derive is through indirect observation.

  • @kittyneng1
    @kittyneng1 3 года назад +69

    This quick explanation of string theory finally makes me understand what Sheldon from The Big Bang Theory keeps talking about

  • @milasyt
    @milasyt 8 лет назад +2065

    I think the ancient Greeks were probably thinking about the STATES of matter with their analogy.
    Earth - Solid
    Water - Liquid
    Air - Gas
    Fire - Light/Energy
    For their access of knowledge, that's actually pretty brilliant.

    • @rever4217
      @rever4217 8 лет назад +52

      Genius

    • @eboysix
      @eboysix 8 лет назад +91

      Yes, that's what I thought! It also says that on Wikipedia, except Fire is Plasma.

    • @trailmarker6154
      @trailmarker6154 7 лет назад +43

      So, Stan Lee stole the idea of the Fantastic Four from the Greeks? Excelsior!

    • @gopichanddon
      @gopichanddon 7 лет назад +105

      But ancient Indians long long ago, definitely before the Greeks told that there r 5 elements..the 5th one being Space..ie., Dark matter n Dark energy all put together. ..

    • @kaecilius2656
      @kaecilius2656 7 лет назад +9

      And how did they come up with the Aether? Oh +Gopichand It's Aether, (Dark Matter = Neutrinos?)...

  • @4dityanarayan
    @4dityanarayan 8 лет назад +2308

    Can we call the study of dark matter the Dark Arts pleease xD

    • @wolfizee2363
      @wolfizee2363 8 лет назад +75

      +aditya narayan More like Darkology.

    • @ddmagee57
      @ddmagee57 8 лет назад +48

      I'm afraid not aditya. You must take social factors into account on these names. Can you imagine a physicist from Boston saying "daaak aaaats" and confusing everybody? It just won't do!

    • @OswaldoGoite
      @OswaldoGoite 8 лет назад +16

      Best proposal ever!

    • @caylinwalsh77
      @caylinwalsh77 7 лет назад +25

      +Dennis Magee I laughed so hard DAAAK AAATS

    • @NinfaRoma41
      @NinfaRoma41 7 лет назад +17

      Why not? It would be sooo epic seeing their faces on a oh serious conference that it could actually get away with it as an opening joke of sorts. It would be awesome o,0,o

  • @iambored5
    @iambored5 7 лет назад +42

    Dark Matter is just Massive Databases of Memes we are not ready for

  • @derekhacault4731
    @derekhacault4731 7 лет назад +936

    If the universe is expanding, then what is outside of it?

    • @michaelodonovan7405
      @michaelodonovan7405 7 лет назад +346

      That's the basic question scientists won't touch cause they have absolutely no ideas on the subject.

    • @infomation1526
      @infomation1526 7 лет назад +50

      Derek hacault+ outside of universe is only plane darkness

    • @melker6409
      @melker6409 7 лет назад +230

      but is there? I mean there must be something for there to be darkness, darkness is something right? We honestly have no idea what is "outside" of the expanding universe, just like we can't know what was before The Big Bang.

    • @judyreyjumamoy
      @judyreyjumamoy 7 лет назад +68

      the universe we see are inside a bubble and outside of it is another bubbles of universes

    • @buryitdeep
      @buryitdeep 7 лет назад +52

      It expands into the space it occupies. If you can think of it as a sphere of boiling matter, bubbling away in space, what bubbles up from the inside rolls around itself back down into itself. So in essence its occupying an infinite space and it just expands and bends its way through itself into the space it occupies. That's how I imagine it anyway.

  • @bigmilk13_
    @bigmilk13_ 9 лет назад +120

    "you're living at the right time to see our understanding explode" Yeah well, it would've been great if i was born a few thousand years later, when we can be out exploring all of this stuff that we can only now dream about...

    • @rever4217
      @rever4217 8 лет назад +33

      At least you weren't born a thousand years ago when people thought they were the centre of the universe.

    • @mr_dirt3434
      @mr_dirt3434 4 года назад +17

      Yay at least im not a monkey eating some berries

    • @aditisk99
      @aditisk99 3 года назад

      Yeah but you wouldn't realize this later.

    • @gabrielbatistuta6326
      @gabrielbatistuta6326 2 года назад

      intelligent life won't survive that much probably

    • @mad_huntress_8796
      @mad_huntress_8796 2 года назад

      @@mr_dirt3434 Reject humanity return to monke

  • @maryamfirdaus7776
    @maryamfirdaus7776 8 лет назад +571

    Why didn't we study all this in high school?!! X-(

    • @josephnome
      @josephnome 8 лет назад +90

      Because George Washington and basic chemistry are much more important.

    • @leratoecon4547
      @leratoecon4547 8 лет назад +3

      +Canned Snacks I can't see them be

    • @HaydenHatTrick
      @HaydenHatTrick 8 лет назад +53

      because there are a lot of things to actually learn, and this is just science porn. learn quantum mechanics first, because string theory is pretty much an attempt to explain that.

    • @Killer97
      @Killer97 8 лет назад +55

      +Hiba Mary okay so youre saying instead of teaching high schoolers about things they can actually experience and would be intuitive to them ( like basic chem in labs and newtonian physics) which they already find hard enough and is at least likely to be useful for them later in life, we should teach them theoretical hypotheses that require understanding of other theories that require understanding of some of the relatively newest and hardest to grasp laws of the universe (general relativity and quantum mechanics)?

    • @HaydenHatTrick
      @HaydenHatTrick 8 лет назад +9

      its probably worth saying that physicists speculate that the reason quantum mechanics is not introduced into the high school curriculum is because the difficulty of making a visual model for it. There are a few, however it does not really express the subject without a fair amount of subjectivity.
      In the past we do introduce stuff like this into the school curriculum, like electro magnetism. Still, once this is in the school curriculum you would probably find THAT boring because it isn't as mystical.

  • @texaspoontappa2088
    @texaspoontappa2088 7 лет назад +432

    Existential crisis time

    • @NULL-ug7ve
      @NULL-ug7ve 4 года назад

      @vanilla berry where

  • @Cakebombize
    @Cakebombize 7 лет назад +75

    These endings always give me chills.

  • @AdvosArt
    @AdvosArt 9 лет назад +475

    Does it matter? (pun intended)

  • @satya6823
    @satya6823 4 года назад +75

    I would love to mention few things. According to Hindu ancient scriptures, there are 5 elements: the fifth one is SPACE. Way back in ancient India, a scholar, Kanaad, had given the idea of tiny particle or atoms as the basic unit of any material. However, besides the matter content, there is Zero, which was later added in number system by Aryabhatta, another ancient scholar.
    Intriguingly, today also in India, we worship Shiva, which (and not who) is indescribable and is present throughout, and Shakti (energy), which help shiva in creation.
    Somehow, Indians could not pursue the research work started by ancient scholars. Having said that, it is good that the knowledge is unfolding now.

    • @Shrimzys_Buttplug
      @Shrimzys_Buttplug Год назад

      living in your dreams man. wake up. the reality is different than that

    • @ameesinghamazing3825
      @ameesinghamazing3825 Год назад +1

      you are so right. in fact indian scholars like aryabhatta figured out the distance between earth, moon and the sun way back in time. And scientists today have used certain instruments to figure out that the numbers they gave were actually right. And its so sad to see our people abandoning our culture and values in pursuit of fame.

    • @Shrimzys_Buttplug
      @Shrimzys_Buttplug Год назад +5

      @@ameesinghamazing3825 doing a little google search doesnt hurt your finger brother. while i value patriotism, but being blind about it is totally not ok. the man who first measured the distance between earth and mon was Aristarchus and he was born around 310 BCE, while Aryabhata was born in 476 CE. this is the fact everybody agrees on.

    • @LoveCoffee123
      @LoveCoffee123 11 месяцев назад +1

      sorry, I stopped reading when I saw Hindu ancie...

    • @Shrimzys_Buttplug
      @Shrimzys_Buttplug 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@LoveCoffee123 omg dude, this is hilarious. i mean like people can have different faith, but being delusional that's another story.

  • @fredrechid2245
    @fredrechid2245 6 лет назад +19

    When studying dark matter/energy I always get super excited, but get a little depressed at the same time.

  • @thatguymork
    @thatguymork 4 года назад +21

    What a great comment section. Really, I mean it. It's so very thoughtful...

  • @aidanrogers4438
    @aidanrogers4438 4 года назад +82

    0:21 Then everything changed when the Fire element attacked.

  • @joh514
    @joh514 7 лет назад +12

    Some of Ted Ed's closing remarks give me goose bumps. Superb

  • @olympickle_7037
    @olympickle_7037 4 года назад +19

    2013: Nope
    2014: Nuhuh
    2015: Still no
    2016: Not yet
    2017: Noooo
    2018: Guess what, nope
    2019: PUT THIS IN THIS MANS RECOMMENDATIONS

  • @artirani3806
    @artirani3806 3 года назад +13

    Till school day I used to think there's only biggest thing in this universe "The universe" But then I got to know TED-Ed and then I came to know there something much more bigger than the universe.......awesome....thanks TED-Ed for telling us such great things🥰💖💖💖💖

  • @martijnvanweele6204
    @martijnvanweele6204 10 лет назад +33

    When I try to think of how I live in the right time, and in the right place to witness and cotribute to all this beautiful train of thought, at some point, by brain starts to hurt. The idea that, of all the possible times and places I could have lived, destiny chose this time and place for me, is just too hard for me to grasp. That's where the whys start invading my mind, and refuse to let any becauses enter.

    • @misbahuddinathar4982
      @misbahuddinathar4982 5 лет назад +5

      Your thought itself could be wrong that you live in the right time and right place. Why should there be a right time and right place. Why should you matter so much to yourself when you are just a drop in this ocean of limitless time that will exist long after you are gone

  • @vp21ct
    @vp21ct 9 лет назад +57

    To note: The classical greek elements weren't 'wrong'.
    They just weren't describing proper ELEMENTS.
    They were describing the four states of matter:
    Solid. Liquid. Gas. Plasma.

    • @melissacabrera6076
      @melissacabrera6076 8 лет назад +7

      shepard1707 I agree. The 4 elements were also metaphors for thought (fire), feeling (water), intuition (air) and sensing (earth). Many old beliefs had multiple meanings.

    • @VincentPride1986
      @VincentPride1986 8 лет назад +5

      shepard1707 There is also the 5th important element which is Sex.

    • @GhostGlitch.
      @GhostGlitch. 11 месяцев назад +1

      Similarly, he says they were "wrong" about atoms being indivisible because modern atoms arent They weren't talking about modern atoms and had no understanding of them. What we call atoms were only given the name long after the Greeks, that naming being wrong proves nothing about the idea of a base particle that can't be cut.

  • @bcmarcin9447
    @bcmarcin9447 4 года назад +3

    Dark matter is very difficult to describe concisely, and the fact Vera Rubin was able to discover it is miraculous

  • @mateusvitorxaviergoveia4798
    @mateusvitorxaviergoveia4798 5 лет назад +3

    Um dos melhores vídeos que já vi no RUclips...
    Desejo eu que um dia tenha mais vídeos desse nível no RUclips..

  • @JacksonReynolds
    @JacksonReynolds 9 лет назад +10

    Love it. Elegant and easy-to-grasp explanation.

  • @oo7metallica
    @oo7metallica 9 лет назад +3

    I liked the ending... we live in the time when our understanding is about to explode. Gives me such a fulfilling feeling.

  • @DisciplesOnCampus
    @DisciplesOnCampus 9 месяцев назад

    fascinating as always... Ted-Ed's videos never lose their wonder

  • @santiagog.3866
    @santiagog.3866 4 года назад +7

    I love how the animation shows atoms as a nuclei with a shifting electron cloud. That's the way !

    • @TucsonDude
      @TucsonDude 2 года назад

      Only the cloud is grossly undersized compared to the nucleus.

  • @CZEError
    @CZEError 8 лет назад +6

    That is excelent! Visualization and animation done perfectly :)

  • @AndrewGunner
    @AndrewGunner 8 лет назад +151

    Light is an agent that lets you see some of the matter that exists. There must be other agents that let you see some other matter that exists. Perhaps that other agent is the key to another parallel universe.

    • @AndrewGunner
      @AndrewGunner 8 лет назад +2

      TopTribute Bands yeah

    • @davidthompson1129
      @davidthompson1129 8 лет назад +4

      +Andrew Gunner I mean, we can technically see dark matter with gravity

    • @AndrewGunner
      @AndrewGunner 8 лет назад +2

      we can't see it, we can only assume it exists.

    • @Hank254
      @Hank254 8 лет назад +8

      +Andrew Gunner
      I can't see gravity either but I am pretty sure it exists.

    • @AndrewGunner
      @AndrewGunner 8 лет назад +4

      Henry School gravity is not matter.

  • @TerrelleCheers1
    @TerrelleCheers1 7 лет назад +1

    The universe is full of mystery and enigma, and the fact that scientist can openly admit when something is there but can't seem to explain it yet they know for sure it exist is a testament to all humanity and it's entirety.

  • @StarBoundFables
    @StarBoundFables Год назад

    Woah, this is beautifully well put together, thank you 🙏🏽😄

  • @JoeLackey
    @JoeLackey 9 лет назад +13

    "A fairly ordinary planet.."
    Are you sure about that?

  • @69509766
    @69509766 8 лет назад +3

    Muito elucidativo, educativo e remete à reflexões sobre as limitações que transitam entre o "ver" , "sentir" e o "enxergar". Parabéns pela animação. Jurema.

  • @randomvicky939
    @randomvicky939 4 года назад +1

    Best channel for those looking for deep answers from deep questions.

  • @borschtwithnocream583
    @borschtwithnocream583 5 лет назад +13

    “Does all this make you feel small?”
    *Well yes, it quite f***ing does.*

  • @saifalino
    @saifalino 10 лет назад +5

    Brilliant work ted-ed...
    2 informative...
    Thank u.

  • @SuicideBunny6
    @SuicideBunny6 6 лет назад +14

    And why do we know dark matter isn't another sort of invisible force like gravity?

  • @niteshvishwakarma6709
    @niteshvishwakarma6709 Год назад

    I felt stress free at the end of the video. Thank you soo much!

  • @xochiltestrada1724
    @xochiltestrada1724 7 лет назад

    These space videos always blow my mind.

  • @polaroidstyles9348
    @polaroidstyles9348 8 лет назад +15

    Maybe dark matter is a part of the electromagnetic spectrum that's invisible to us? Further away from gamma rays, real far away. Idk, it's mind boggling

  • @snailofkale
    @snailofkale 4 года назад +3

    *The Dark Universe, made of Dark Matter and Dark Energy*
    The Dark Quarantine is driving me to watching every Dark Ted-ED video. My Dark Sleep Schedule is really messed up. I'm running low on Dark Snacks, but at least I can get on to Dark Zoom and do some Dark Learning.

  • @unclehectorandtheboys8043
    @unclehectorandtheboys8043 7 лет назад

    such a great closing remark

  • @hdjjdjdjsnkkshshjsk719
    @hdjjdjdjsnkkshshjsk719 4 года назад +1

    The adjectives and adverbs TED Ed uses to describe such complex things and phenomena is just overwhelming. The idea of atom being elegant.The motion of galaxies being graceful.

  • @MsSBVideos
    @MsSBVideos 8 лет назад +80

    SoooooooOOooOoooO.... we are the universe's way of experiencing itself. Wow, that is a great quote for myself.

    • @mohaamd_7505
      @mohaamd_7505 8 лет назад +14

      actually it's a Kurzgesagt in a nutshell quote.

    • @EasaYahiya
      @EasaYahiya 8 лет назад +12

      +Mohaamd Almojil it's a Carl Sagan quote

    • @ushira_dharmaratne
      @ushira_dharmaratne 8 лет назад +4

      +Easa Yahiya pretty sure it's an obama bin laden quote

    • @conormcglorious1847
      @conormcglorious1847 7 лет назад +11

      Nope, it's from Melania Trump

  • @arrowstheorem1881
    @arrowstheorem1881 8 лет назад +61

    What we cannot see , can exist. Science is based on OBSERVATION. Does this mean science is LIMITED by its own definition such that it excludes the part of nature that is not VISIBLE or OBSERVABLE? For this instance, what is not visible is observable.

    • @QuantumPhyZ
      @QuantumPhyZ 8 лет назад +5

      We try to make it visible, for example, radio waves, we cannot see them, but we can see how it acts, the better question is, why science rellays on light?

    • @arrowstheorem1881
      @arrowstheorem1881 8 лет назад +5

      Quantum PhyZ
      Of course scientists try to make things visible that are invisible. Other invisible stuff according to theory is Dark Matter and Energy. For these, they say what is invisible is still science.
      But when it comes to religion, why do they not try to make it visible?

    • @QuantumPhyZ
      @QuantumPhyZ 8 лет назад +4

      Cosmo John Because of evidence. You need evidence, before doing anything else. They have evidence of dark matter and dark energy, due the expansion of the universe, becoming faster and faster. The anti-matter particles for example. Had been found, and some people say it can be included as part of dark matter. In the case of the religion, there isn't enough evidence to support it in terms of science, but this doesn't mean, there is scientists using science to prove religion. Actually one of the great scientists of the XX century, tried to use science to prove religion. And many scientists such as Einstein believed on God. Einstein was even claimed by many as "fanboy" for the religion he supported ( aka, jews, don't know nothing about religion names, or things like that ).

    • @arrowstheorem1881
      @arrowstheorem1881 8 лет назад +4

      +Quantum PhyZ You are right, Religion lacks evidence. But what if i say God exists in the 6th dimension and science is essentially on the 4th dinension and thats why scientists cannot 'see' the evidence for God? string theory touches on the multidimensions upto 10th. so, how can we conclude god does not exist even though in our human dimension , there is no evidence of him?

    • @QuantumPhyZ
      @QuantumPhyZ 8 лет назад +2

      Cosmo John The string theory, the quantum fold, etc. Multidimensional theory, consists in using multiple dimensions, to make the maths easier to deal with, and to remove the anomalies that it has. Those 10 dimensions that we created to explain what happens at that level, is to explain the actions and movements on the string case. It is no longer a spacial thing to use. We need to convert it to 10 dimensions, to see its movement and actions, with this said, if we saw god movement in one of those dimensions, it would had been seen. Maybe we will find evidence of God, but not until we define theories and laws, at quantum level, that quite precises and demonstrates how it works. So the search for God is still to far away to us.

  • @TheLooking4sunset
    @TheLooking4sunset 7 лет назад

    This is gorgeous! Thank you

  • @AliceThomas-zx5zh
    @AliceThomas-zx5zh Год назад

    Thank you for this enjoyable video.

  • @shintyty
    @shintyty 3 года назад +5

    I feel like I’m living in a time when scientists thought the earth was flat for where we are in space science

  • @CreatureOfGoddess
    @CreatureOfGoddess 4 года назад +5

    We're the Yang in the Yin.
    We are the needle injection of life from the light which has taken 5% of the darkness
    And ever on we Flow
    Be blessed y'all 🙏

  • @adrianberti8342
    @adrianberti8342 2 года назад +1

    It actually gave me goosebumps

  • @venkystellar1877
    @venkystellar1877 5 лет назад

    Excellent narration

  • @flaviuratiu6927
    @flaviuratiu6927 4 года назад +4

    "all the particles we know today are just different harmanics on the string"...
    Does anyone else think about "the Music of the Ainur" when they hear that?

  • @kwengkynator
    @kwengkynator 11 лет назад +6

    That was phenomenal! The ending gave me incredible goosebumps!

    • @User14854
      @User14854 2 года назад +1

      Actually... i was also feeling so small..thn they motivated me😤😤😤

  • @jaani101
    @jaani101 5 лет назад

    This video is truly made gracefully

  • @123oparya
    @123oparya 4 года назад

    Thanks this channel gave me so much valuable information

  • @BattyBest
    @BattyBest 4 года назад +7

    Schools: meh lets still say mitochandria is the powerhouse of the cell

  • @smaklilu90
    @smaklilu90 10 лет назад +6

    i liked the ending

  • @mansoorahmedmemon
    @mansoorahmedmemon 3 года назад

    Those smooth transitions!

  • @TheThe1thelast
    @TheThe1thelast 4 года назад

    Love this channel.. no crazy loud music at the beginning of the video, fast talking douches, etc. Just plain good ole informative video.

  • @thebigeader3809
    @thebigeader3809 Год назад +2

    4:20
    Captions: “SUSY” amongus

  • @jonathanmorales3359
    @jonathanmorales3359 4 года назад +3

    The day we understand dark energy and how it affects light time travel will be a walk in the park

  • @raka7743
    @raka7743 3 года назад

    woah this is so beautiful. I was just mesmerized.

  • @a-rue-nima
    @a-rue-nima 3 года назад

    The last part gave me goosebumps or better yet, a homey feeling

  • @paulalisauskaite7719
    @paulalisauskaite7719 8 лет назад +4

    Interesting but the ending caught me off gaurd. I'm positive we ,humans are not the only ones who have thoufht of this theory. The univerese is expanding greatly so you said so odds are there are "species" or "Aliens" etc with similar knowledge if not more advanced.

  • @moistwater8289
    @moistwater8289 5 лет назад +6

    0:25 but that all changed when the fire nation attacked

  • @AliceMarieLewis
    @AliceMarieLewis 2 года назад

    What a beautiful note to end on

  • @sukanya3411
    @sukanya3411 2 года назад

    I'm really enjoying the illustration in this video ☺

  • @GastonBR_TV
    @GastonBR_TV 5 лет назад +6

    Dark matter: *exists but is invisible*
    Also Dark matter:
    *am I a joke to you?*

  • @JeanneFeisont
    @JeanneFeisont 8 лет назад +3

    "Living at the right time--"
    Yeah, but anyone alive right now will probably be dead by the time scientists truly uncover the Universe's secrets...

  • @allainefria4589
    @allainefria4589 5 лет назад

    the message at the end 💕

  • @billieeyelash3920
    @billieeyelash3920 4 года назад

    I have been looking for this everywhere

  • @alcapone531
    @alcapone531 3 года назад +3

    "I know that I know nothing" -Socrates

  • @grimmitachi
    @grimmitachi 10 лет назад +7

    Law of Attraction overload!!

  • @pattheegreat
    @pattheegreat 4 года назад

    It's amazing they make these kind of videos

  • @Hosigie
    @Hosigie 3 года назад +1

    One of my main points of interests and hopefully I get to work on this soon ^^

  • @eyeskrim407
    @eyeskrim407 3 года назад +3

    3:24 i can see fried chickens, so many of them.

  • @nathanschreffler1415
    @nathanschreffler1415 8 лет назад +46

    We're on an ordinary planet? How about the only planet that supports life a far as we know. Send pretty special to me.

    • @EmIsGodOfRap
      @EmIsGodOfRap 8 лет назад +2

      +Nathan Schreffler you are wrong my friend go and check out the facts/read The Grad Design by Stephen my Bae Hawking. Hundreds have been found (and i think this was like 20 years ago) and billions in our galaxy alone are estimated to exist, nothing special in our universe, altough considering the 10^500 different universes M-Theory predicts and how extremely narrow the conditions for life is we could say we live ina pretty special universe haha :)....I personally belive the reason that we havn't yet found intelligent life like ours yet is a logical and simple one. All the evidence points towards an earth that is about 4,5 billion years, and all the evidence points towards an universe that's about 13,7 billion years. Considering we are carbon-based lifeforms and that carbon can only be created in the centre of stars when they die in a process called resonans, carbon can only have "entered" our solarsystem when a supernova exploded billions of years ago, and that supernova had to have existed/been born shortly after the big bang considering the amount of time it had to have lived b4 it died,i'd say its logical to assume we are one of the very first forms of very intelligent lifeforms in the universe considering the more or less 4 billion years it took from single celled bacteria>us. So I think your statement would be proven utterly wrong in another few billion years when (i hope) we got a PEACEFULL starwars like galaxy.

    • @absolutelydeplorable4339
      @absolutelydeplorable4339 8 лет назад +3

      +Danny Brown Pretty sure he was referring to the fact that our planet is the only planet where we know life exists. Even though there are plenty of other planets that could harbor life, we don't know if they actually do.

    • @TZZZminzka
      @TZZZminzka 8 лет назад

      we are the only planet on which we met the existing life. we are NOT the only planet we know with the conditions to support life & we are 10000000% sure that we are NOT the only planet with life on it. we are no special snowflake!

    • @nathanschreffler1415
      @nathanschreffler1415 8 лет назад +2

      +Apokakryptische Landmine I don't think you know how percentages work. Forget that you have to many zeros, I'll assume you mean 100%. my first question is, how can you be that sure that life exists on other planets when we don't even know how life began on this planet? I assume you know that at one point this planet had no life. how can life come from no life? This is not, possible naturally, only supernaturally. That's why Jesus's resurrection is the ultimate proof that he was God's son. life coming from no life shows that God's must have had his hand in the resurrection. you say there is lots of life in the universe. Then my second question for you is, how did that life come about naturally, since at one point there was no life at all in the universe?

    • @TZZZminzka
      @TZZZminzka 8 лет назад

      ***** I don't have much time right now so I'll read the rest of your comment later and take time to formulate an answer. About the too many zeros: is this the first time ever you're confronted with an exaggeration or are you pretending to be an idiot?

  • @kumarashish2051
    @kumarashish2051 3 года назад

    1:24 there, there... That's how you really represent an atom. Great work. Most of videos show it as a planetary model.

  • @akashpalande4705
    @akashpalande4705 4 года назад

    Really....a great video.
    Worth it

  • @Uzerzz
    @Uzerzz 5 лет назад +3

    0:38 Dry like my jokes...
    Hahaha get it?

  • @oliverbuch2202
    @oliverbuch2202 9 лет назад +131

    This must be the more intelligent part of RUclips

  • @raginirawat1915
    @raginirawat1915 4 года назад +2

    the ending line was so intense :3

  • @jayganeshcj
    @jayganeshcj 4 года назад

    Wonderful endline❤️

  • @christiansaldana4200
    @christiansaldana4200 8 лет назад +9

    What if the universe is still expanding because it isnt done accelerating yet? After an explosion there is a moment of acceleration. What if that moment isnt finished for the big bang. Im not a physicist so idk, but what if? lol

    • @MrAlexAKAprokiller
      @MrAlexAKAprokiller 8 лет назад +1

      the big bang is a huge amount of energy being converted into pairs of matter and anti-matter, and since no more anti-matter is observed, there is no more energy feeding into the expansion of the universe

    • @caseyf3790
      @caseyf3790 8 лет назад

      It could be logical, though not probable. If everything was still accelerating it would probably be spreading out. Dark matter keeps everything together and in place.

    • @ballsislife6018
      @ballsislife6018 4 года назад +1

      @@MrAlexAKAprokiller thanks for your good answer, i appreciate it!

  • @heryong4211
    @heryong4211 7 лет назад +9

    i fear if scientist know how to control dark matter, then they will control dark force. soon our scientist will become dart vader and turn to dark side

    • @MushuWishes
      @MushuWishes 7 лет назад

      DUN DUN DUN, DUN-DE-LE-DUN, DUN-DUN-DUN! (star wars darth vader tune)

    • @pingpong7617
      @pingpong7617 3 года назад

      Ahahaha funny😂

  • @aakrutigupta8168
    @aakrutigupta8168 3 года назад

    this gave me goosebumps

  • @patriciamariemanalaysay326
    @patriciamariemanalaysay326 2 месяца назад

    Thank you Mr. James Gillies ❤❤❤

  • @jigglemcswiggle7186
    @jigglemcswiggle7186 4 года назад +7

    Could it be that Dark Matter is 4D hence why we can't see it?

    • @harshlahoti8368
      @harshlahoti8368 4 года назад +3

      4D stuff is seen as slices of 3D stuff in the 3D world

  • @gaeltigree418
    @gaeltigree418 4 года назад +3

    I'm really tired of hearing about string theory everywhere! Especially when my bro quantum loop theory is overlooked all the time :(

  • @einsteinboricua
    @einsteinboricua 3 года назад +1

    “As far as we know, you’re a member of the only species in the universe able even to begin to grasp its wonders.”
    Pretty bold assessment to assume humans are the only species capable of doing that, when the probability is almost 100% that there is an exact copy of you somewhere else in the universe.

  • @ironnecklee9230
    @ironnecklee9230 6 лет назад

    Great channel and fantastic video