Cosmic Inflation and the Origin of the Universe

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  • Опубликовано: 25 авг 2024

Комментарии • 34

  • @JasonKendallAstronomer
    @JasonKendallAstronomer  4 месяца назад

    Please see my updated version of this video here: ruclips.net/p/PLyu4Fovbph6dSGHJOP3o171TON6rLyN6w

  • @nachocam4514
    @nachocam4514 4 года назад +9

    Okay Jason, we will write you a comment :-) I am obsessed with videos about the universe and seek to understand it deeply. I've been greatly appreciative of your work and have almost watched every one of your videos. I listen to them nightly as I fall asleep, such as right now, and let my mind drift into the possibilities of astrophysics and all that pertains to it. Thanks again and hope you are having a wonderful life

    • @nachocam4514
      @nachocam4514 4 года назад +1

      Oh, and one more thing, I like you exponentially better than Neil deGrasse Tyson. his voice makes me want to puke after a couple hours of listening to him, and so far I'm about 20 hours deep on your videos and love every syllable. Keep being yourself

    • @JasonKendallAstronomer
      @JasonKendallAstronomer  4 года назад +1

      Awesome, thank you!

    • @drtoothpick
      @drtoothpick 7 месяцев назад

      Your lectures are amazing!

  • @tomaszantosiewicz5132
    @tomaszantosiewicz5132 2 года назад

    What are people watching?? How is it possible you don't have 20 times more views and subscribeers? Such a quality and pleasure to listen.

  • @elijaguy
    @elijaguy 2 года назад +2

    15:23 my grandfather Methusalem from East Jerusalem has been balancing a pencil on the tip of his finger since the day of creation 13.5 billion years ago, and is still going strong. I once asked him if he knew what a pencil can be good for, but unfortunately his hearing has deteriorated in recent million years, and all he said: Get me please a glass of water. Which I did.

  • @paolobarberis6827
    @paolobarberis6827 4 года назад +2

    Hello Jason, thank you immensely for the course which is at the right level of deepness for me, I could finally understand some cosmic history and dynamics, relating it with the necessary mathematic.

  • @ipsissimus7378
    @ipsissimus7378 4 года назад +2

    As one of those early neutrinos, moving through this inflating space/time feels the same as that time I got stuck in a black hole for a while; it doesn't matter which direction I go, I always get further away from where I want to be.

  • @johndef5075
    @johndef5075 2 года назад +1

    This will always be beyond my comprehension. The infinitesimal to universe size in the smallest fraction of time just doesnt compute🤯😅

    • @MrEnjoivolcom1
      @MrEnjoivolcom1 2 года назад

      Ha, I too find myself at quiet times during my day attempting to think 🤔 about the endlessness of it all and wrap my mind around it. Sort of like a mathematical equation where you're adding the product of rock 🪨 & tree 🌳 to the theory of the multiverse. Lol, it just doesn't make absolute sense.

  • @hariompathak1435
    @hariompathak1435 5 лет назад +3

    keep up the good work

    • @JasonKendallAstronomer
      @JasonKendallAstronomer  5 лет назад

      Thanks!
      Jason Kendall
      • 1 second ago
      you can see the entire stack of videos here: www.jasonkendall.com/WPU/AstronomyLectures/fullcourse.shtml.
      This will take you in the correct order.

  • @TwiztidIndica
    @TwiztidIndica 4 года назад +2

    i love the long though explanations with pictures.

  • @aleempashashaik3318
    @aleempashashaik3318 3 года назад +1

    Wish i had found this during Lock Down :(

  • @dr.lairdwhitehillsfunwitha67
    @dr.lairdwhitehillsfunwitha67 5 лет назад +1

    A great explanation, Jason. Laird.

  • @ashpool3686
    @ashpool3686 5 лет назад +1

    Another great video. Sincerely your biggest fan

    • @JasonKendallAstronomer
      @JasonKendallAstronomer  5 лет назад

      Anything that needs to be covered in greater depth?

    • @ashpool3686
      @ashpool3686 5 лет назад

      @@JasonKendallAstronomer For astronomy and cosmology, my personal preference is the stuff that is the most extreme in nature - neutron star varieties, black holes, quasars. I feel like you've done a great job covering facts that I hadn't heard before which is why I like this series (one thing that comes to mind is nuclear pasta, similar factoids). Your videos of the actual neutron star close-ups were gripping, I hadn't seen that before and it was amazing to see the videos evolve.

    • @ashpool3686
      @ashpool3686 5 лет назад

      ​@@JasonKendallAstronomer One I might add to the suggestion box is a collection of astronomy and cosmology supercomputer simulation videos. You could go into detail on the physics behind some of the simulations, and the video doesn't have to be confined to a single "type" of simulation - more like a curated selection of ones that you find compelling as an astronomer. Spacerip has a video called "Hyper Earth" that had some amazing simulations. Also there are some black hole jet simulations floating around on youtube that were pretty hardcore looking. Lastly, one amazing animation (but not a simulation) that blew me away was from Brian Cox "Wonders of the Universe" series, and the video title was either "falling" or "gravity". Midway through, they have a neutron star animation that is 100x better than any I have ever seen.

    • @ashpool3686
      @ashpool3686 5 лет назад

      LASTLY, I'd be quite interested in yearly or biyearly summaries of important discoveries for that time period. David Butler does a good job of this, but I'd also like to see what you could produce. You could even go back in time to fill in the great discoveries of the past 10 years. Its hard to find a good summary source from an astronomer's perspective that deals directly with what science has uncovered, outside of the pop culture stuff.

    • @ashpool3686
      @ashpool3686 5 лет назад

      bit.tube/play?hash=QmbqXeYZGWd8v1ivLSSDxdxSDGUH3woFnrwcu5BC7fsMuT&channel=9328 - here we are, at the 32:50 mark

  • @kristiankember8973
    @kristiankember8973 4 года назад

    could you answe me how big the universe would be after 90 years?
    I'm struggling with the meaning of certain variable and I'me really just curious of the answer

  • @johngiraldi1150
    @johngiraldi1150 4 года назад +1

    It sounds like there is an assumption that the "thing" before the Big Bang acted quantum mechanically?! Couldn't QM be emergent and not "required".

    • @JasonKendallAstronomer
      @JasonKendallAstronomer  4 года назад

      That’s a very big question. But your question begs “emergent from what?” A classical, non-QM underlying Big Numbers, Hidden Variable wibbly-wobbly, timey wimey Stuff? Hard to say. I would poke around on the history of QM studies and hidden variables. That might help resolve the idea. Remember that your question has likely been asked and addressed in a journal article level read.

  • @glennholmes7247
    @glennholmes7247 4 года назад +1

    Everyone accepts the expanding universe, extrapolated from the red shift, as the only explanation.

  • @Atrahasis7
    @Atrahasis7 4 года назад +2

    My favourite fetish.