Astrophysicists Discuss the Latest in Black Hole Physics

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 909

  • @StarTalk
    @StarTalk  3 месяца назад +115

    What do you think is the most significant unanswered question about black holes and their impact on our understanding of the universe?

    • @MrBoomer-k6v
      @MrBoomer-k6v 3 месяца назад +10

      Will black holes be the last thing to die out in the universe

    • @simplicitysitruc
      @simplicitysitruc 3 месяца назад +2

      @@MrBoomer-k6v they might merge and remake the universe I'm hoping

    • @Dylan-jj8xc
      @Dylan-jj8xc 3 месяца назад +5

      Can trillions of mini blackholes explain dark matter?

    • @LightDiodeNeal
      @LightDiodeNeal 3 месяца назад +4

      That thing with the quarks, fascinated now.!
      If time "stops" at the event horizon, how can black holes merge?

    • @lornenoland8098
      @lornenoland8098 3 месяца назад +2

      Black holes are the engine of universe expansion

  • @StarTalk
    @StarTalk  3 месяца назад +272

    Our camera angles and mic setup might not be perfectly aligned, but just like gravitational lensing, we’re bending the rules to bring you the best black hole content which was captured much more spur of the moment (a fly by if you will)! 🌌 Thanks for sticking with us through these minor distortions. Enjoy these insights from Neil deGrasse Tyson, Gary O’Reilly, Steve Balbus, and Andy Mummery as we dive into the universe’s mysteries! 🔭

    • @NortheastSurvival911
      @NortheastSurvival911 3 месяца назад +8

      Keep up the good work!

    • @lornenoland8098
      @lornenoland8098 3 месяца назад +16

      Makes me feel like I’m casually sitting on the other side of the table just soaking in the conversation

    • @Vince-ml9gw
      @Vince-ml9gw 3 месяца назад +2

      Dude. Glad you said something. 🥬🔥

    • @iphoneShothand
      @iphoneShothand 3 месяца назад +2

      One of the best episodes you have done.

    • @5thwalltv
      @5thwalltv 3 месяца назад

      Love the content. One likely possibility is that the other mics needed to be dipped down when one person is speaking. Seems like your post team did some of that but not all the time. There are also methods for aligning the audio waveforms if you’re able to move audio subframes or samples in the timeline.

  • @RijuChatterjee
    @RijuChatterjee 3 месяца назад +293

    PEN AND PAPER! Most people have NO IDEA how impressive it is to do SOMETHING NEW with pen and paper. Protect this man!!!

    • @CloudWaIker112
      @CloudWaIker112 3 месяца назад +8

      Not really most people still use paper

    • @RijuChatterjee
      @RijuChatterjee 3 месяца назад +9

      @@CloudWaIker112 I know. But this is a _new analytical solution_ to one of the _most famous_ partial differential equations in the world. How many people do you know who can claim to have found something like that by hand?

    • @syk9475
      @syk9475 3 месяца назад

      I keep a few people people that did that in my circle

    • @RijuChatterjee
      @RijuChatterjee 3 месяца назад +4

      @@syk9475 Cool man. I know a few that use a lot of paper, but none that don't use computers somewhere along the math process.

    • @GerodW
      @GerodW 3 месяца назад

      at ALL costs

  • @Dippedinsilver1974
    @Dippedinsilver1974 3 месяца назад +68

    I’m old enough to remember learning about black holes in school as an unlikely phenomenon that was purely theoretical. There have been so many exiting discoveries in my lifetime, and I hope to see many more before I go.

    • @leonardobaeza8159
      @leonardobaeza8159 24 дня назад

      It blows my mind how much of astrophysics is being discovered. It has its pros and cons (con being those who don’t believe in space)

  • @freelikeyve
    @freelikeyve 3 месяца назад +735

    oh the blunt gon’ be lit for this one 😶‍🌫️

    • @r4v4g3r
      @r4v4g3r 3 месяца назад +63

      Heyy Chuck 😉

    • @mtl47
      @mtl47 3 месяца назад +10

      Cheers! 🍃

    • @northuniverse
      @northuniverse 3 месяца назад +5

      🌲🔥

    • @Vince-ml9gw
      @Vince-ml9gw 3 месяца назад +7

      🥬 🔥

    • @DJTUNE1770
      @DJTUNE1770 3 месяца назад +8

      😂😂😂😂 facts

  • @Dylan-jj8xc
    @Dylan-jj8xc 3 месяца назад +133

    I’m watching this to try falling asleep…but it is not boring enough…it’s interesting!

  • @maurizioalbera
    @maurizioalbera 3 месяца назад +97

    If you had read the book of K.T., you'd know that he DID know that the time differences were impossible, but the director needed them that way for the plot.

    • @paulmichaelfreedman8334
      @paulmichaelfreedman8334 3 месяца назад +13

      It was only possible if the black hole was spinning near light speed. So technically possible, not practically. So deep in the gravity well, everything would have already been a quark-gluon soup in the accretion disc.

    • @lucasjokiel
      @lucasjokiel 3 месяца назад

      Well the book actually says IT gonna work if you spin it :)

    • @Ausknutz
      @Ausknutz 3 месяца назад

      True. I actually watched a presentation from Kip Throne earlier this year and he said exactly this. He proposed a "correct" scenario, but it was not up to Hollywood emotion levels, so he "allowed" the production team to go crazy with it.

    • @paulmichaelfreedman8334
      @paulmichaelfreedman8334 3 месяца назад

      @@Ausknutz The time dilation for a planet just outside R-isco would be so small it would be useless for the plot.

    • @THCza
      @THCza 2 месяца назад

      I came here to comment that

  • @johnh8013
    @johnh8013 2 месяца назад +13

    Hello, old guy here who barely graduated high school. I love the fact that Neil's show brings together people (scientists) who, each in their own field, are trying to find answers that make up a piece of a puzzle that, while we may have a small idea of the basic premise of, no one is quite sure what the end result of the puzzle will look like. In the words of one of my favorite sci-fi characters..."Fascinating!"

    • @mattorr2256
      @mattorr2256 2 месяца назад

      We have discovered a lot (or better yet, scientists have discovered a lot) about how the universe works. However there seems to me that there will always be an endless amount of discoveries basically forever. I cannot see us knowing everything about everything and also travel to all parts of the universe at will if we want to. I hope we do discover everything I just cannot fathom that ever coming to fruition. So I think we have to come to peace with the fact that while we have begun to understand a lot about how the world and universe around us works, there is just simply an endless amount of things we don’t know or understand. It’s just reality and there’s nothing we can do about it right now besides just be at peace with it. It is what it is, in other words.

    • @mattorr2256
      @mattorr2256 2 месяца назад

      I and amongst many others I’ve spoken to about this topic is that it gives me a certain amount of acceptance and comfort in knowing that there is so much that has yet to be discovered. I don’t know why, it just does.

  • @RickySTT
    @RickySTT 3 месяца назад +41

    Newton absolutely stood on the shoulders of giants. His equations explained Kepler’s laws, and Kepler in turn stood on the shoulders of Galileo, who stood on the shoulders of Copernicus, who stood on the shoulders of Aristarchus.

    • @petergriffin383
      @petergriffin383 3 месяца назад +4

      Who stood on the shoulders of aliens, who taught how to build the pyramids

    • @RickySTT
      @RickySTT 2 месяца назад +1

      @@petergriffin383 😉

    • @yannyyansen9743
      @yannyyansen9743 2 месяца назад

      They definitely gettin into the r rated movie.

    • @hugegamer5988
      @hugegamer5988 Месяц назад

      @@petergriffin383 don’t be ridiculous, those aliens don’t have shoulders.

    • @alexcollins3086
      @alexcollins3086 Месяц назад

      ​@@petergriffin383 our lord and savior peter griffin taught them.

  • @avnut7
    @avnut7 3 месяца назад +35

    This was so awesome! I loved hearing from an Oxford Post Doctoral student on gravitational eddies in black holes. I love how you brought Interstellar into it as it is a touchpoint from which we can talk to each other, layman to Physicist.

  • @THCza
    @THCza 2 месяца назад +12

    Kip Thorne wrote a book called 'The science behind Interstellar '. The book really gets to the SPECIFICS of everything in the movie. I recommend it

  • @danielschenker1969
    @danielschenker1969 3 месяца назад +16

    I love the finger snapping transition! @StarTalk Was it planned, or improvised? This was an amazing episode, one of my favourites - and I've been watching since 2009!

  • @mikedavis4214
    @mikedavis4214 3 месяца назад +50

    Gargantua is the name of the super massive black hole in Interstellar. The name of the closest planet o the event horizon of Gargantua is Miller's Planet

    • @dubwah1848
      @dubwah1848 3 месяца назад +2

      Thank you! I was looking for this comment

    • @itsd0nk
      @itsd0nk 2 месяца назад +2

      I thought it was just a smaller, quieter, calmer black hole, and not a super massive black hole. It was essentially playing the role of the sun in that system as far as I understood it.

  • @leecarlson9713
    @leecarlson9713 3 месяца назад +66

    My husband, for a period of a whole three weeks, was the world expert on black holes, until another doctoral candidate published his thesis. This was back in the last 60s and early 70s.

  • @alpsirus
    @alpsirus Месяц назад +2

    31:05 Neil’s face when he broke through and understood something new. Love it.

  • @blurandomnumber
    @blurandomnumber 3 месяца назад +4

    I friggin love listening to how fundamental things we now take for granted got discovered/invented from 1st hand! Thank you for this episode indeed!

  • @johnwu222000
    @johnwu222000 3 месяца назад +87

    I just wish Neil didn't interrupt the guests so often to explain to Gary. It would have been better to let guests finish their explanations before Neil interjects with his own remarks.

    • @vinayakmukherjee
      @vinayakmukherjee 3 месяца назад +9

      Agreed 100%

    • @greghughes4838
      @greghughes4838 3 месяца назад +12

      I agree, it is quite frustrating trying to listen to the guest speaking and Neil just jumps in and I'm just thinking shut up and let him speak

    • @jinjin1156
      @jinjin1156 3 месяца назад +1

      You want him to just sit down there and speak if the show is ending? 🤣🤣🤣

    • @nofacefranciex7417
      @nofacefranciex7417 3 месяца назад +10

      Never comment on videos but Neil would NOT stop interrupting. I almost turned it off entirely

    • @Stegibbon
      @Stegibbon 3 месяца назад +13

      It makes it more accessible to people. That's the whole point of having Gary or Chuck on the show.

  • @Hammeredprawn
    @Hammeredprawn 3 месяца назад +33

    0:53 😂😂😂😂😂 interpreter ! You may not be Chuck but you certainly are cool af and we love seeing you on the channel. Alex - Brighton. 🎉

    • @rhys1564
      @rhys1564 3 месяца назад +1

      …and he still wants to know you….🤣💀

    • @Hammeredprawn
      @Hammeredprawn 3 месяца назад +1

      @@rhys1564 I don’t get it 😂🙈

  • @Thomas_H_Sears
    @Thomas_H_Sears 10 дней назад +1

    The question is always more interesting than the answer. It is the quest that is important. On the quest you swim the whirlpool, battle giant, sleep chaste with virgins, slay dragon, rescue princess, discover the hidden mountain, enter the invisible cave, consult the 3,000 year old man, climb the ice mountain to the castle of the grail, negotiate the labyrinth and find the grail. You pick it up - and you are merely holding a cup.

  • @AndyRevans
    @AndyRevans 3 месяца назад +7

    Loved this, incredible that Andy did some leading edge research with pen and paper! Maybe that says something.....!!!!

  • @skeller61
    @skeller61 3 месяца назад +4

    It’s great to see Gary in the same room as Neil! Having Chuck in the separate picture and his jokes that would ensue would have been classic, but it was fun to see Gary in England.

  • @AlexPortRacing
    @AlexPortRacing 3 месяца назад +19

    Actually read the Kip Thorn book and still have it on my bookshelf.

    • @carmstrong7000
      @carmstrong7000 3 месяца назад +1

      Wow !!! Did you get pumped by him to?

    • @lucasjokiel
      @lucasjokiel 3 месяца назад

      Do you do know that he explained it? Quite well I must say.

  • @isatousarr7044
    @isatousarr7044 3 месяца назад +5

    The latest advancements in black hole physics are truly fascinating, particularly the growing understanding of how black holes interact with their surroundings. Recent studies on black hole mergers, quantum information paradoxes, and event horizon imaging have deepened our insights into these enigmatic objects. These findings are pushing the boundaries of our knowledge in astrophysics, challenging existing theories and opening up new possibilities for understanding the fundamental nature of the universe. With the recent breakthroughs in black hole imaging and quantum information theory, how do you think these discoveries will influence our understanding of spacetime and the fabric of the universe? Are we on the brink of a new paradigm in astrophysics that could potentially reconcile general relativity with quantum mechanics?

    • @JS55505
      @JS55505 2 месяца назад +2

      Am I crazy or is this comment doped with an injection of chat gpt

    • @mattorr2256
      @mattorr2256 2 месяца назад

      Astrophysicists, Cosmologists and Astronomers are working on this and have been for a while now. They are working on connecting the world of the macro (general relativity) and the world of the micro (quantum mechanics) into one theory of everything.

    • @mattorr2256
      @mattorr2256 2 месяца назад

      ⁠​⁠@@JS55505yes I agree with you. The comment does seem like it has some chat gpt in it.

    • @mattorr2256
      @mattorr2256 2 месяца назад

      Connecting these two must be the most difficult and time consuming task I can imagine. They just don’t want to fit together. So are they close? How could we know? I believe we are quite far from a theory of everything by combining general relativity and quantum mechanics.

  • @ranyawad5971
    @ranyawad5971 3 месяца назад +1

    One of the best episodes so far! It's refreshing to see enthusiastic young scientists from our generation doing such work.

  • @BlueOceanBelow
    @BlueOceanBelow 3 месяца назад +37

    Chuck must've ran into Turbulent Eddy.

  • @gothoverheaven6239
    @gothoverheaven6239 3 месяца назад +2

    ever since i was a kid i as fascinated with space and astronomy and like many other people, black holes. im so lucky to be alive during modern science that discovers these things somewhat rapidly, i mean not that like ago we proved gravitational waves existed as well. how long before hawking radiation? or being able to visualize black holes in much of the way we visualize galaxies? theres something so exciting about this video and hearing the invention of a new term to explain this unstable orbit, it feels like we get closer and closer to unlocking all of the secrets of black holes every day.

    • @mattorr2256
      @mattorr2256 2 месяца назад

      Seek an education in Astronomy or Astrophysics. Help contribute to humanities understanding of the universe. To me there is no greater human endeavor.

    • @gothoverheaven6239
      @gothoverheaven6239 2 месяца назад

      @@mattorr2256 haha unfortunately i dont have that kind of money or resources, maybe one day. im 25 currently and struggling to get my bachelors in psychology and will soon have to take care of my mother. i also really, REALLY hate math lol and that can throw a wrench into things since astrophysics is some of the most complicated math in existence. i appreciate the beauty and wonder and sheer indifference of the universe in a literary sense, but beyond that, i fear i havent got what it takes to make any sort of drastic career choices lol at least not right now.

  • @StubbornBullet
    @StubbornBullet 2 месяца назад +5

    As much as i love NDT, sometimes i wish he would stop interrupting people and just let them speak

  • @mxbranesic3933
    @mxbranesic3933 3 месяца назад +1

    Hey, I just wanted to say thank you for having Andy on the episode. I've been bugging out over what the distance your orbit has to be to not decay into a black hole. We talk about the event horizon a lot, but that's the point for light where it can't escape. But we never talked about the important part for navigation/studying the black hole. It was interesting to know that it's around 3 event horizon radii away. I certainly didn't want to do the math on this one, so I'm glad Andy did the work XD
    Does he have a last name? The description doesn't give his last name so I was curious if it was said. I may go back and rewatch to get it if so.

  • @Kalthos85
    @Kalthos85 3 месяца назад +6

    I can hear Chuck's sigh at the fact that he had to clean his microwave for this Factor_ product placement.

  • @eddyhardz5404
    @eddyhardz5404 3 месяца назад +39

    Neil's interruptions were on another level in this episode. I'm impressed the guests were as respectful as they were. Gary looked genuinely annoyed after a while.

    • @jessarae6076
      @jessarae6076 3 месяца назад +1

      He usually looks annoyed 😂

    • @philius6759
      @philius6759 3 месяца назад +1

      I was thinking the same about Gary. He looked physically annoyed, and why does Neil keep touching their forearms when he's talking to them? It seems a bit weird.

    • @ChartPrince
      @ChartPrince 3 месяца назад +5

      I am a fan of startalk but Neil should reduce interrupting people. I just start looking at their faces to see if they felt irritated once he does that 😂.

    • @tankydhg
      @tankydhg 3 месяца назад +3

      It really irritated me, Neil would as a question, and as soon as the last guest started to answer it, he's interrupted him, and he couldn't get a word in edgewise

    • @AbhishekKumar-db5om
      @AbhishekKumar-db5om 2 месяца назад

      Absolutely

  • @zeddfish
    @zeddfish 3 месяца назад +5

    hahaha. Neil's gag about "muster the fortitude" at 24:33 was hilarious!

  • @Vince-ml9gw
    @Vince-ml9gw 3 месяца назад

    Neil, your Cosmic Perspective at the end was spot on. Thank you for a great interview session. Bravo. 👏

  • @airtonsilva8006
    @airtonsilva8006 3 месяца назад +3

    44:45 I am only a Biologist, but I hear this phrase from my supervisor very often "I want you to be more ambitious!" 😄. What a marvelous video, it showed me that, although our fields are very different, we may encounter the same questions during a post doc.

    • @mattorr2256
      @mattorr2256 2 месяца назад

      All of the sciences have some similarities that connect them all. Some more than others but still, if it’s a science, there will be aspects or themes that correlate each of them together

    • @mattorr2256
      @mattorr2256 2 месяца назад +1

      Oh and Biology and being a Biologist is nothing to feel inferior about. Biology is a very important field of science. I only am stating this because you started out by stating “I am only a Biologist”.

  • @priscillawrites6685
    @priscillawrites6685 20 дней назад

    When my daughter took AP Physics C, her favorite homework was a problem that took her 3 days to solve. Her mind craved computation.

  • @legendary7708
    @legendary7708 3 месяца назад +3

    I do love Chuck but I really do love it when Gary O'REILLY shows up!

  • @johndoyle2347
    @johndoyle2347 2 месяца назад

    Willans' Formula for primes:
    2 to the n part = vertical asymptote and p-adic numbers. 1/n part = vertical tangent. Factorial part = vertical line. These tensors from differential calculus determine singularities in stable matter as represented as primes.
    Willan's Formula can be looked for budding primordial black holes and for black holes forming from low metallicity collapsing stars. Willan's Formula also applies to dark matter unflaking during a Big Bang event and to dark matter being broken up into galaxies or solar systems. The floor function part corresponds to the Delanges sectrix and trisectrix. Sectrix for the unflaking and trisectrix for when the dark matter is broken up by a supernova.

  • @stevenmach286
    @stevenmach286 3 месяца назад +5

    I just found out Neils mom is puerto rican 🇵🇷. Puerto ricans contribute significantly to the US Government in various areas of expertise, even more than States and that information doesn’t get shared. Puerto ricans are in charge of many programs at NASA from the ISS to Space travel, etc.

    • @tye829
      @tye829 2 месяца назад

      Of course, they are Americans after all!

  • @antoniopaulodamiance
    @antoniopaulodamiance 3 месяца назад

    I love how we can hear from the best. The “student” was awesome as well

  • @doubletribble-yt
    @doubletribble-yt 3 месяца назад +5

    28:10 - Is it the relativistic increase in mass of the matter orbiting he black hole as it increases in speed - is that what causes the instability?

    • @stoneysdead689
      @stoneysdead689 3 месяца назад +2

      Idk but that's a really good idea man- good thinking. I had never considered that. The only thing that makes me sort of doubt it is because he said gravity times orbit and called it a "new term"- which makes me think he's talking about a whole new phenomenon that only happens next to a black hole. Relativistic mass gain happens anywhere, anytime, all you need is an object with mass that's moving.

    • @DrDeuteron
      @DrDeuteron 3 месяца назад

      Relativistic mass is passé

    • @zdlax
      @zdlax 3 месяца назад

      I imagine the biggest difference between Newtonian gravity and GR is that in GR the stress of warped spacetime embodies a tremendous amount of energy which further warps spacetime, creating a positive feedback loop that doesn't exist in Newton's model.

  • @YetiCoolBrother
    @YetiCoolBrother 2 месяца назад +1

    Neil you gotta be one of my favorite Humans, never stop doing what you do

  • @AlexPortRacing
    @AlexPortRacing 3 месяца назад +4

    34:04 get the man some Hagorogo

  • @PK_Dud
    @PK_Dud 3 месяца назад

    Took a lot of notes from this. Keep this up I love it

  • @gizmo101ish
    @gizmo101ish 2 месяца назад +19

    Please let your guest try to finish before interupting them constantly Neil! Really ruins the otherwise great show

  • @johndoyle2347
    @johndoyle2347 2 месяца назад

    From the polar equations of the trisectrices as applied with the exponential part of Doyle's constant to give an "invisible touch", just a slight bump in order to view hyperbolic math from the lens of elliptical math.
    The conchoid of Nicomedes: gravitational fields affect the corner/cusp singularities, the cosine of theta represents how this laterally drives the central bulge to form a tornado of fluidic motion that occasionally forms gaps and can spin off budded primordial black holes.
    The Maclaurin trisectrix: the sine of 3 times theta represents the effects of the paired corner/cusp singularities forcing a rotation in the central bulge. The doubling signifies the top and bottom halves of the bulge.
    The Tschirnhausen cubic: the ripples of energy from the paired corner/cusp singularities combine at the inflected areas to fatten the particle.
    The trisectrix limaçon: the cosine of theta represents the line between the leading and trailing points of the rotating ring/cylinder/horn singularity being united with the rest of the body, such as a photon or electron, and the 1 squared divisor represents how gravity elongates the singularity, through the "magic" of split-complex numbers and how the leading and trailing rotating points maintain an elliptical orbit around each other.
    The equilateral trefoil: a supernova event. A high metallicity collapsing star briefly forms dark matter. The dark matter drives the explosion and gets quickly broken up. The cosine of 3 times theta represents how the dark matter breaks up at the inflected areas.
    The regular trifolium: the cosine of 3 times theta represents how a feeding or forming black hole singularity wobbles.
    The Ceva trisectrix: the 1 + 2 times the cosine of 2 times theta represents the top and bottom halves of the budding bulge of Big Bang era dark matter. The sine of 3 times theta over the sine of theta represents how ripples of energy from alternating corner/cusp singularities unite at the inflected areas to form a bulged disk shape from the inflection points onward toward the center.
    The Delanges trisectrix: the cosine of theta halved. Reminiscent of the natural logarithm of the imaginary number, forces are being released perpendicularly, but causing rotation instead of hindering it.
    The Dürer folium: whether in a proton or neutron, the two ring/cylinder/horn elliptical singularities cannot stably form obtuse associations.
    The hyperbola of eccentricity 2: gravity is produced, creating an accretion disk and causing impacts and a consumption of the less massive particle or body.

  • @locke6531
    @locke6531 3 месяца назад +6

    I know I shouldn't, but I can't help myself. I can't stop laughing now that I noticed that all three belly's look the same size and are lined up in a row to show them off 🤣

  • @malkulaas6380
    @malkulaas6380 3 месяца назад

    The end was really heart warming ❤ I love to dedicate my life to science. I'll hope we figure out a lot more of nature's meaning in my lifetime

  • @Ie420juggalo
    @Ie420juggalo 3 месяца назад +6

    I want to know more about the dark oxygen they are talking about discovering in the ocean

    • @crawkn
      @crawkn 3 месяца назад +5

      It's really pretty simple, the nodules on the sea floor are composed of crystals of different minerals with different electrochemical potentials, which in contact with the electrolyte of seawater cause a current to flow, causing electrolysis that separates water into oxygen and hydrogen. It's essentially innumerable tiny batteries. I assume the hydrogen reacts with other chemicals.

    • @jeremyhollon3993
      @jeremyhollon3993 3 месяца назад +1

      Kyle Hill made a fantastic video on dark oxygen

    • @mattorr2256
      @mattorr2256 2 месяца назад +1

      @@crawknwow. Thank you for the breakdown

  • @lazaruslong92
    @lazaruslong92 3 месяца назад

    Andy is a common guest on Dr. Becky's show. Love them both for their individual contributions to popularizing physics.

  • @DetailOneLakeland
    @DetailOneLakeland 3 месяца назад +10

    Anyone else noticed how Rosey his face was at the beginning of the interview, and then the further it got, it turned beet red LOL

    • @josephdesole
      @josephdesole 3 месяца назад +9

      Probably because Neil is so damn difficult to talk to

    • @philius6759
      @philius6759 3 месяца назад +1

      I noticed it too. I was like damn did they slap him around off camera lol

    • @Pengman19
      @Pengman19 3 месяца назад +4

      Nervousness probably, but maybe multiplied by rosacea. He sounded fine though so maybe not nervous but just adrenaline.

    • @BenjaminOienMB
      @BenjaminOienMB 3 месяца назад

      Ya, went to the comments to see if anyone else was talking about it.

    • @mattorr2256
      @mattorr2256 2 месяца назад +1

      Nervousness or nervousness by adrenaline rush. That’s all it is. This shouldn’t be a mystery here…

  • @BiswajitBhattacharjee-up8vv
    @BiswajitBhattacharjee-up8vv 3 месяца назад

    I am very delighted and happy to see and witnessing with new communication technology for new science development.
    We not only get information about the publication and the research. But also hear from them in conservative response to scientific thoughts.
    My heartiest congratulations to all four of who have not only interested but have worked with blackhole physics for long (3+1).
    My support to new star as you have located.
    It is my surprise that you have Newton's mechanics when it is by convention that inside the space alone or no space quantum is the way as it is established by decades.
    I am also involved in understanding physics in my TOE approach, since long as SURT recently me too with very classical derivations ( not GR)
    I could established what is the reason behind the stability inside a blackhole and what is so special in event horizon. But also with very simple equation, my standard unit techniques I could established the unit black hole mass for my system. Value is exact by experimental observation. All old and new data of stellar observations.
    New physics fact that I could derived that deep inside the black hole ( as a inverse square root of radius of event horizon scale, at half way from point mass two opposite pole due to moment of inertia of inside disc rotation around the axis could act as two opposite mass ejection spot depending on a nice equilibrium due to falling mass and unit horizon and unit mass relation inside BH.
    It is in progress that a new time is emergent showings the sign of three generation.
    For very small atomic scale, yet to explore and details. But I am now more on geometry and gravity.
    With a great hope that you will reach the truth very soon.
    As you have discussed the temperature, I have found a 4D kelvin scale from 4D volume. I will get there on due course.
    Thank you & your channel to cover this history and salute to be a part of a history being written.
    Namaste 🙏 from my part to contribute few words in your big platform.
    Videos that I often shared.

  • @imcnagpc2
    @imcnagpc2 3 месяца назад +9

    Please make that “physics is my god” tee shirt! 😊

  • @nicolasclaudot6724
    @nicolasclaudot6724 3 месяца назад +1

    Very deep episode ! New words coined ! Thanks

  • @BoilerBall3094
    @BoilerBall3094 3 месяца назад +4

    Astrophysical Gas

  • @kenya9540
    @kenya9540 23 дня назад

    I really enjoyed this interview.

  • @mysaga
    @mysaga 3 месяца назад +5

    So what’s the possibility that Super Massive Black Holes (SMBH) are like seeds for new Universes? Assume that a SMBH consumes a complete Galaxy that has formed around it condenses the materials that were sucked into it and when it can’t hold anymore pops like a balloon which is a Big Bang? If our own Universe was created in such a way? It seems like an answer that can’t ever be confirmed and will forever remain unknown

    • @dreamer1292
      @dreamer1292 3 месяца назад

      What in the infinity big bang storm is this?
      Super tengen toppa gurren lagann predicted theoretical blackhole physics in 2027!?

    • @fang_xianfu
      @fang_xianfu 3 месяца назад

      Roger Penrose is working on a version of this. Black holes emit their contents gradually as Hawking radiation until they evaporate. Eventually all the matter in the universe will be in black holes, and then it will be Hawking radiation. At that point, time and distance stop making sense because photons don't experience time and space like we do. From there, another big bang could occur.

    • @Llyd_ApDicta
      @Llyd_ApDicta 3 месяца назад +1

      "and when it can’t hold anymore pops like a balloon" - I think there is some confusion here. The more the BH "sucks" in the easier it can "hold stuff in" since the gravitational force get stronger.

    • @Llyd_ApDicta
      @Llyd_ApDicta 3 месяца назад

      @@fang_xianfu The time frames you are considering here are so extreme, that the proposed half life of protons would play a role as well as the universal exapnsion of the Univsere to a point where the distance between atomic building blocks, i.e. Quarks, would get so far that the particle istself would get ripped apart.

    • @ZboeC5
      @ZboeC5 3 месяца назад +1

      We "see" the edge of the universe the same way that that we "see" the edge of a black hole... There is a non zero chance that a black hole is a universe.

  • @ihaveanunorigionalname
    @ihaveanunorigionalname 3 месяца назад +1

    1 min in and were chuck free i think this may be my second favorite episode (my first is anything with Charles liu in it)

  • @MrBoomer-k6v
    @MrBoomer-k6v 3 месяца назад +3

    Great content

  • @TheVeryHungrySingularity
    @TheVeryHungrySingularity 2 месяца назад

    science nerds getting together to talk about crazy stuff is the absolute best

  • @kibervatniki7552
    @kibervatniki7552 3 месяца назад +6

    A black hole is synonymous with the Pentagon budget 😁

    • @SiqueScarface
      @SiqueScarface 3 месяца назад

      You mean, everyone is spinning around it in a heated debate, and when you don't feed any new money, it will disappear from view?

  • @marianagyorgyfalvi3659
    @marianagyorgyfalvi3659 3 месяца назад

    He just said that it moves quickly and in all directions, it practically stays in place as if it were returning to its original form!

  • @Libertybeautysalon
    @Libertybeautysalon 3 месяца назад +3

    First comment ?😂

  • @clvyboipvrti8523
    @clvyboipvrti8523 2 месяца назад

    “We take pictures of them and put them on our iphones.” Was a crazy statement. It truly shows how fast we are advancing as a race.

  • @ravearcher1
    @ravearcher1 2 месяца назад

    Neil, amazing you were in Oxford! Wish I met you!

  • @stevekirkby6570
    @stevekirkby6570 3 месяца назад +2

    @ about 05:10 "Eddies in the space time continum ...oh, really, who is Eddy?" Douglas Adams :) He had it way before you guys! LOL

  • @idiocracyBonanza
    @idiocracyBonanza 2 месяца назад

    The laws of the universe are equal everywhere.
    To understand or visually simplify the black hole for normal people we have to swap the space for a water. The way black holes work are not much diferent from draining lot of water through a small hole causing corilosis effect. Just replace the water with a lot of space matter and you have the same effect. Believe or not black holes are genuinely gates through space time. If you fill a huge 50.000 gallons tank of water and open the valve on the bottom you start the momentum and gravity will pull everything out then let little piece of wood (your space ship) float on the top it will slowly suck it in and once behind the horizon within few seconds it moves right from the top to the bottom of the tank and exit trough the valve. The laws of physics work exactly the same here on earth with tank full of water and little hole on the botom or wast space. The only difference is in the pull of gravity behind each example. There is exit behind each black hole.You will be able to send a probe in the future and prove this.

  • @JaymanWuddup
    @JaymanWuddup 3 месяца назад

    Such a great episode so informative as usual. Really showed how much levity chuck adds though 😂
    Love this show

  • @Mervy79
    @Mervy79 3 месяца назад

    Welcome to England, hope you enjoy your visit.

  • @nunomaroco583
    @nunomaroco583 3 месяца назад

    Extraordinary achievement congratulations, amazing talk.

  • @wlocas
    @wlocas 3 месяца назад

    @39:50 Neil, it's stated, in the conversation, that Gamma Radiation is emitted at very high temperatures.
    But, doesn't Uranium emit gamma rays at room temperature?
    Can you help us understand this?

  • @thestonewall30
    @thestonewall30 3 месяца назад

    Think this one is the best one yet. Just it’s been over 100 and no one thought of it till now.

  • @patordie
    @patordie 3 месяца назад

    Gary’s power is unmatched

  • @zeroax0
    @zeroax0 3 месяца назад +2

    excited!

  • @nefarioustoned
    @nefarioustoned 2 месяца назад

    Since I saw the universe back in the 80's, I've always wondered why the center of our galaxy looks like liquid and why did the spiral stars(wasn't stars as told but galaxies) have different colors. When observed without a telescope.

  •  13 дней назад

    Andy Mummery thank you answers

  • @billionsandbillionsofstars
    @billionsandbillionsofstars 3 месяца назад +1

    Isn’t everything in the cosmos rotating? If so, then why and how can some black holes be non-rotating?

  • @DanH-u3f
    @DanH-u3f 3 месяца назад +1

    So any object that falls below a 3 to 1 orbit will plunge into the black hole without any chance of escape? Amazing.

  • @GAK1atatt
    @GAK1atatt 3 месяца назад

    I want to see you and Dr. Becky in an episode as long as you’re in England and talking black holes.

  • @cyborgzulu2011
    @cyborgzulu2011 2 месяца назад

    Had to watch this three times now

  • @victoriamichellefrances1345
    @victoriamichellefrances1345 3 месяца назад +1

    Traffic-circle yourself silly :D I love that.

  • @johndoyle2347
    @johndoyle2347 3 месяца назад

    You ask if I'm a fan? Well, yes. I do not agree with you on all the physics, but I think you're a great teacher.

  • @jefft1769
    @jefft1769 3 месяца назад +1

    Did u guys know that u need the right leg of calígula to truly Open a blackhole....and by the way como se dice rio grande coming to this side??....sweetly azucarin....mr natural museum lord 👌

  • @lady_draguliana784
    @lady_draguliana784 3 месяца назад

    purely imaginative theories:
    1) it'd be interesting if a black hole, ultimately, is pure matter _that has excluded space from it's volume_
    most matter we know is 99.9999 etc. Empty Space. so, what happens when the density of matter is so high that the space is so distorted that it, from a certain POV, the matter is 100% and the space is absolutely minimized
    ------------
    Imagination 2 (the more likely imo).
    I imagine the classic cloth representation of space being bent by a ball in the middle. more mass, more distortion in that geometry.
    so, taken to it's conclusion, the cloth wraps around the ball and is pinched shut over top of it.
    the pinch point is the event horizon, and passed it would be the mass compressed to max density, perhaps both pulling the fabric of space around itself, but also being crushed by the fabric in a sort of feedback loop of 'pressure'.

  • @vidarmartinsen1305
    @vidarmartinsen1305 3 месяца назад

    Since nothing can escape a black hole. How can it be that gravity escapes, since you can feel gravity on the outside of a black hole. And since gravity escapes, can a magnetic field also escape and can you measure magnetic fields from the black hole on the outside of a black hole? Or is this an indication that gravity is not a force but the result of a time-speed difference.

    • @abc33155
      @abc33155 3 месяца назад

      Just type your questions in Google, you can learn a lot that way.

  • @syk9475
    @syk9475 3 месяца назад +1

    Them: talking about unsolved problems
    Me fresh off the smoke: man yall need to get on that

  • @dosesandmimoses
    @dosesandmimoses 3 месяца назад

    Cheers! I got the chill bumps!

  • @ROBLOXTHANOS
    @ROBLOXTHANOS 3 месяца назад +1

    A black hole is a dangerous sphere of condensed matter that is NOT a gateway or portal.

  • @pollyb.4648
    @pollyb.4648 3 месяца назад

    I wanted to know what the actual time difference would be if they were as close as possible. To see if the movie could have been more accurate but maybe much less dramatic.

  • @albertcamus6611
    @albertcamus6611 3 месяца назад

    entendres! great discussion gents!

  • @bobjackson6669
    @bobjackson6669 3 месяца назад

    I love the humor in your videos. I'm interested in black holes and dark matter.

  • @davidhyde9992
    @davidhyde9992 3 месяца назад

    Is it possible to observe and detect whether or not particles such as x ray decay over space as opposed to time?

  • @MariaRodriguezSequeria
    @MariaRodriguezSequeria 2 месяца назад

    Gama rays and Hulk were mentioned. Is there a video explaining the physics behind Hulk? Or about Fantastic Four's Human Torch?

    • @dreamburn1
      @dreamburn1 2 месяца назад

      There are no physics behind those imaginary comic book characters. 😂

  • @ICratosIESO
    @ICratosIESO 3 месяца назад

    Just finished rewatching interstellar as I periodically do.. followed always by immediately heading to RUclips for more interstellar things. And wouldn't you know a 1 day old video made just for me lol

  • @wannaknowitall
    @wannaknowitall 3 месяца назад

    wait what so which generalizations and simplifications could he make in that giant equation that made him able to calculate it by pen and paper and simplify it? how did he discover that? I didn't quite understand what the point of this interview was because Neil kept interupting him and I feel like Andy got to say everything about his work? Is there more information I can find about how Andy calculated that point of unstable radius 3?

  • @FlorentSaifati
    @FlorentSaifati 3 месяца назад

    estranged synchnode is es², or eclon synchronized hydropots, and 5 node synch points are clarified. One had to be under the chin.

  • @Familylawgroup
    @Familylawgroup 2 месяца назад

    can you have your special effects team write up the equations that the second guest started using? yes, your guests try to to do the math, but we need the formulas to do the work. The formulas help us understand the ration of relevant variables.

  • @patsagreen
    @patsagreen 3 месяца назад +1

    There is an interesting story in Hindu mythology about time dilation, a King lives on earth visits a god in the heaven along with his daughter and asks God to advise a matching groom for his daughter because of her unusual stature in height. King waits for a while in heaven for an ongoing concert to end before he speaks to God. Later after the concert ends, God replies to king that while King was waiting until the concert to end there were many years passed on earth and a man suitable to his daughter has been born and grown up, he is the best match to King’s daughter. King returns to earth happily and finds that groom for his daughter. This story is known to many Indians for last few hundreds of years yet could not figure out what's encoded in this story. The mythical couple is called Balaram & Revathi.

    • @BiswajitBhattacharjee-up8vv
      @BiswajitBhattacharjee-up8vv 3 месяца назад

      Yes, you are right and we know it all.
      The situation is spell bound .
      Added fact the hight mismatch between these couple Devine but earthly.
      Thank you . Now it is black hole planetary system, Krishna's brother!!!

    • @phoenix007ism
      @phoenix007ism 3 месяца назад

      It is amazing that about 5 to 10 centuries ago, ancient habitants of the Indian subcontinent could even think of time running at different speeds and include that in one of the Puranic tales. Truly remarkable! I am not saying thay they were aware of the conept of time dilation but it is wonderful that someone could think this differently.

  • @mattofalltradez
    @mattofalltradez 25 дней назад

    I am curious to know if we could build a craft that could counteract the instability of the new term and somehow balance out the equation

  • @shantanubopardikar7719
    @shantanubopardikar7719 3 месяца назад

    @Neil, I have one question, in a space time fabric (sorry I don't know the exact term) why do we only have time dilation across our universe and not space dilation? How do we exactly know that for eg 1 km on earth will be the same in a far away galaxy?

  • @Idellphany
    @Idellphany 3 месяца назад

    Thank you!

  • @silvergold-lq5vd
    @silvergold-lq5vd 3 месяца назад

    Thank you