Neil deGrasse Tyson Explains Why You Can’t Reach Absolute Zero

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  • Опубликовано: 27 апр 2024
  • Cool things happen at low temperatures. In this StarTalk explainer, we’re cooling things down - way down. But how cold can we actually get? Neil deGrasse Tyson and comic co-host Chuck Nice investigate the limits of temperature and a lot more.
    You’ll learn why there’s really no limit of how hot you can make something. On the flip side, we dive into why making things colder is a different story. How do you create a place where there is no heat? You’ll find out more about the Kelvin scale or absolute temperature scale.
    Neil takes us through the process of cooling things down. Discover the differences between temperature and heat energy. We explore the vibration of particles and dip our toes into Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution. Then, Neil tells us why we can never philosophically or theoretically reach absolute zero.
    To wrap things up, we investigate what happens when quantum physics take over. Discover more about superfluidity. All that, plus, you’ll hear about the Bose-Einstein condensate and how we can “shape-shift” matter.
    Support us on Patreon: / startalkradio
    Subscribe to StarTalk: ruclips.net/user/startalk...
    Follow StarTalk:
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    About the prints that flank Neil in this video:
    "Black Swan” & "White Swan" limited edition serigraph prints by Coast Salish artist Jane Kwatleematt Marston. For more information about this artist and her work, visit Inuit Gallery of Vancouver inuit.com/
    About StarTalk:
    Science meets pop culture on StarTalk! Astrophysicist & Hayden Planetarium director Neil deGrasse Tyson, his comic co-hosts, guest celebrities & scientists discuss astronomy, physics, and everything else about life in the universe. Keep Looking Up!
    #StarTalk #NeildeGrasseTyson
    0:00 - Introduction
    0:29 - Is there a limit to how hot something can be?
    1:44 - Kelvin Temperature Scale
    5:00 - How do we get to absolute zero?
    10:23 - Nothing is ever stationary
    11:57 - What is Bose-Einstein condensate?
    13:33 - What is Superfluidity?
    15:56 - What would we measure in Tysons?
    16:42 - Closing Notes
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Комментарии • 7 тыс.

  • @ethansutherland3786
    @ethansutherland3786 3 года назад +4151

    When Lord Kelvin decided to use the same intervals as the Celsius scale he became an instant friend to all physics students ever to exist

    • @martinwillemse8923
      @martinwillemse8923 3 года назад +22

      It is possible to go faster than the light, if you are dreaming that there is a big bang that we are in. We can observe galaxies very far away that have 90% of the speed of light and let's just start there to reach the speed of light, it takes a little time, but then you also go faster than light and not on the next. once so very difficult to understand system, we first go to the next galaxy, with a simple rocket, we refuel that for a while and fly to the next galaxies and if you do that you will also visit our galaxies, to get to drink us a cup of coffee and you also get a cookie, then you continue to the next galaxy until you reach a galaxy that also has 90% of the speed of light compared to us and you go at that moment 1,8 times the speed of light and we then act as an observer, who can perceive that you have completed this task and you have not been able to perceive the base from which you departed for some time, just like we are rescuing the big bang. aunts can perceive and can assume that there are also galaxies behind that that we cannot perceive, but faster than the light, how that is possible all the time, that is because you believe in it.

    • @tysonrinker5958
      @tysonrinker5958 3 года назад +11

      @@martinwillemse8923 yes it is possible. The act of measuring the quantum world turn from energy to physical happens faster than the speed of light.

    • @tysonrinker5958
      @tysonrinker5958 3 года назад +11

      @@martinwillemse8923 its basically happening beyond time . Its happening at 0 or infinite.

    • @knightnm4091
      @knightnm4091 2 года назад +2

      True

    • @sbastianbrilyanto4722
      @sbastianbrilyanto4722 2 года назад +20

      Kelvin is truly our Lord and Savior

  • @mattrogers6897
    @mattrogers6897 3 года назад +1907

    Doctor: Your kid has a fever
    Neil: Your kid is moving faster

    • @pranishkhadgi2723
      @pranishkhadgi2723 3 года назад +105

      vibrating*

    • @teweco8757
      @teweco8757 3 года назад +59

      @@pranishkhadgi2723 is he vibing?

    • @pranishkhadgi2723
      @pranishkhadgi2723 3 года назад +12

      @@teweco8757 yo *metal song playing*

    • @martinwillemse8923
      @martinwillemse8923 3 года назад +1

      It is possible to go faster than the light, if you are dreaming that there is a big bang that we are in. We can observe galaxies very far away that have 90% of the speed of light and let's just start there to reach the speed of light, it takes a little time, but then you also go faster than light and not on the next. once so very difficult to understand system, we first go to the next galaxy, with a simple rocket, we refuel that for a while and fly to the next galaxies and if you do that you will also visit our galaxies, to get to drink us a cup of coffee and you also get a cookie, then you continue to the next galaxy until you reach a galaxy that also has 90% of the speed of light compared to us and you go at that moment 1,8 times the speed of light and we then act as an observer, who can perceive that you have completed this task and you have not been able to perceive the base from which you departed for some time, just like we are rescuing the big bang. aunts can perceive and can assume that there are also galaxies behind that that we cannot perceive, but faster than the light, how that is possible all the time, that is because you believe in it.

    • @ligerfelikscayanga7361
      @ligerfelikscayanga7361 3 года назад +4

      @@martinwillemse8923 you cannot go faster than the speed of light because LIGHT CANNOT GO FASTER THAN LIGHT,remember that. Anything that has mass cannot reach the speed of light,and the universe in the future will expand at the speed of light at which point we cannot even see distant galaxies or even stars "but no object is actually moving through the Universe faster than the speed of light. The Universe is expanding, but the expansion doesn't have a speed; it has a speed-per-unit-distance, which is equivalent to a frequency, or an inverse time" nothing can break the universal speed limit.You can warp space,you can quantum tunnel,you can create wormholes BUT YOU CAN'T GO FASTER THAN LIGHT. The galaxy maybe is moving with the expansion but the speed which it goes through space is not lightspeed, maybe lets say 170 mp/s,thats really fast,infact our galaxy is hurdling through space at about 130 mp/s but it doesnt go as fast as the universe is expanding right?

  • @jakelannetti3128
    @jakelannetti3128 Год назад +61

    I know almost nothing of physics besides what I remember of my high school physics class a decade ago, but Neil has inspired me to learn. I look back and regret not paying attention to things that are so fascinating and literally explain the universe! Neil has inspired me as an adult man to go back, and purely for fun and for a desire for understanding, study physics and science in general; what a great educator

    • @origenjerome8031
      @origenjerome8031 Год назад +3

      You should also search for Brian Greene on RUclips.

    • @lcflngn
      @lcflngn 9 месяцев назад +4

      So sad & sorry thinking about my HS classes. So dull and unutterably horrible. The world desperately needs more great science teachers, middle through high.

    • @ProfShibe
      @ProfShibe 8 месяцев назад +4

      @@lcflngnthe whole “education” system needs to be focused on learning and not just pumping out grades and factory workers. That’s the issue with them it’s not even the teachers at a fundamental level.

    • @williamjudge8722
      @williamjudge8722 5 месяцев назад

      Study harder.

  • @ph2738
    @ph2738 Год назад +41

    I was on the Jersey shore once in an unusually cold June, and the beaches were empty. But I saw that the parking lots were huge. I started thinking about how all those people in the cities are like molecules in the kinetic theory of gases. Raise the temperature a bit and those people start getting more active and the most energetic of those people start expanding out onto the beaches.

    • @marvac-r7916
      @marvac-r7916 5 месяцев назад +1

      ...thus making the beaches hotter.😁 Always fascinated watching how much the temperature rises as i drive only ~10m from the lush suburbs into the concrete-jungle of the city.

  • @DoctorGlitch
    @DoctorGlitch 3 года назад +3108

    Give a definition of absolute zero
    Me: Hold my bank account

    • @dustinswatsons9150
      @dustinswatsons9150 3 года назад +25

      I suppose the three of us share a common intrinsic angular momentum

    • @dustinswatsons9150
      @dustinswatsons9150 3 года назад +5

      Yeah for corn computers to work we got to put them in the f****** refrigerator

    • @dustinswatsons9150
      @dustinswatsons9150 3 года назад +2

      That's right Google I said quantum

    • @dustinswatsons9150
      @dustinswatsons9150 3 года назад

      Particleless refrigerator or rather particleless void

    • @dustinswatsons9150
      @dustinswatsons9150 3 года назад +3

      Common intrinsic momentum is the thing

  • @texastriguy
    @texastriguy 3 года назад +1703

    Chuck: "That's so cool!" *doesn't even realize the joke he just made...*

  • @oaguilera81
    @oaguilera81 10 месяцев назад +67

    It is so contagious the excitement of Neil. And Chuck is great at throwing jokes to lighten up the concepts. I love this channel ❤

  • @Aristothink
    @Aristothink 7 месяцев назад +27

    Neil deGrasse makes Physics be soooo simple. I love his explanations. Thank you Mr. Neil for bringing Physics into the ground so we can all learn more and more with the honey you put on top of it... 👍

  • @G3LOFY
    @G3LOFY 3 года назад +381

    Zero Kelvin: can you stop for a second?
    Atom: no

    • @ismirdochegal4804
      @ismirdochegal4804 3 года назад +17

      Zero Kelvin: perhaps stop for an attosecond?
      Atom: still no

    • @stanfordfeynman2796
      @stanfordfeynman2796 3 года назад +25

      *Atoms go brrrr*

    • @ShivamSharma-uu2ij
      @ShivamSharma-uu2ij 3 года назад +5

      Why did I laugh so hard to this thread?!

    • @Carlos_Jzx
      @Carlos_Jzx 3 года назад

      Well this one is not a joke.
      Imagine what's going to happen to all those atom's we keep on burning for fuel for electricity and we have no where to dispose them afterwards they don't care if they are buried,sank etc they will always keep on chucking.

    • @EddyKorgo
      @EddyKorgo 3 года назад

      Only if you stop the existence its self.

  • @sanitarymailbox-8023
    @sanitarymailbox-8023 3 года назад +1671

    Chuck looks like he's chilling around 420° right now

    • @sixstringedthing
      @sixstringedthing 3 года назад +89

      Every science nerd loves getting baked and listening to NdGT talk about anything at all.
      Chuck got baked and had a whole 20min conversation with him about the lower temperature limit for all matter in the universe.
      Fukn mindsplode. 👌🤯👍

    • @gabrielrocha9479
      @gabrielrocha9479 3 года назад +45

      Aren't we all?

    • @brumizso
      @brumizso 3 года назад +4

      @@sixstringedthing I'm having this feeling now 😑

    • @ToiletPaper2020
      @ToiletPaper2020 3 года назад +10

      I can hypothesize what below zero would be. But first, it's just easier to start with nuclear physics. What is a nuclear bomb? What is an electromagnetic thermonuclear bomb? A regular bomb is a 3d bomb and a nuclear bomb is a 4d bomb that either implodes or explodes the 4th dimension in a nuclear chain reaction. An electromagnetic nuclear bomb decreases the electrical charge of the gravitational field of space through the magnetic field. This pushes the gravitational force of Dark Matter, Dark Energy, and the gravitational force of the mass of space into the area of the mass of space where electrical charge is decreased without the "cushion" of the gravitational field of energy to slow down the impact with the force of acceleration and all things in motion stay in motion. So now to below zero. When we get the breaking point of where all things in motion are staying in motion because the gravitational field of energy is no longer pushing mass apart we have universal collapse. Take a step back and go to the geometrical shape of space. Space is expressed as parallel circles with infinite curvature forming flat parallel lines in the interior surface, accelerated expansion in the parameter functioning, and the gravitational field of a singularity observed in its gravitational field of Dark Matter and Dark Energy. A circle around a circle until infinity always accelerates and expands. Infinite and zero are non-observable in 3 dimensions and we observe them by measuring them over time to differentiate. Infinite is non-observable over time and zero is. Zero has no beginning and no end. Infinite is both the beginning and end. The beginning of infinite curvature is also the end. So the singularity forms a flat parallel line between each edge of the sphere that forms flat parallel lines. A single instance of infinite temperature at all points of space. But, when there is explosion, the mass, density, and volume of the singularity do not increase. So the universe inside the singularity at the point of universal implosion is negative infinite while the singularity remains infinite. Like a negative and positive charge.

    • @ToiletPaper2020
      @ToiletPaper2020 3 года назад +2

      @@jareddiscipio1768 Ok, so to clarify. I typed up what I summarized with absolute zero. It's too long to text. I. The end you get infinitely negative or in the sense of absolute zero, infinitely negative zero.
      drive.google.com/file/d/1wnxA-civlDMswVXRAnF7gu3nFHzEgPtL/view?usp=drivesdk
      You seem to think I care about how you make a nuclear bomb. I don't. I don't care one bit. And I also don't care how much c4 you have, you're never going to effect the gravitational field. Nuclear bombs merely have the difference of a chain reaction that effects spacetime and not just space.
      And you can explode cra* all day, it's never really going to do anything to the universe as a whole because that is how the universe was created. Expansion.
      Now..use magnetism and decrease electrical charge and the universe will implode because the gravitational field deflates.

  • @ReisskIaue
    @ReisskIaue Год назад +114

    It is such fun to watch the two of them. They harmonize so well - and Neil can explain the things so well.

    • @xenalin1
      @xenalin1 Год назад +4

      Their vibrations match and the behave as one object

    • @woozy7405
      @woozy7405 Год назад +2

      Other guy doesnt understand a damn thing be honest

    • @michaeloluwafemi7539
      @michaeloluwafemi7539 Год назад +3

      That's Chuck Nice, and he's a comedian turned science enthusiast who narrates documentaries.

    • @sangeet9100
      @sangeet9100 8 месяцев назад

      @@woozy7405 your school buddy that was smarter than you?

    • @TomCruz54321
      @TomCruz54321 8 месяцев назад

      Chuck and Neil are a perfect match. I hope they stay together for a long long time and keep doing these videos.

  • @letmefindout81
    @letmefindout81 10 месяцев назад +23

    I most say Neil makes every lesson fun. Imagine having Neil as a professor 👏👏

  • @BobSkiz1
    @BobSkiz1 3 года назад +2749

    The amount of impact you have had on humanity should be measured in tysons.
    Edit: changed to lower case t due to popular demand.

    • @Hibiki_vtuber
      @Hibiki_vtuber 3 года назад +62

      tysons

    • @sagnorm1863
      @sagnorm1863 3 года назад +29

      @@Hibiki_vtuber Mike Tysons? Chicken Tysons? Neil Tysons?

    • @chacdogful
      @chacdogful 3 года назад +5

      Sag Norm Id rather have the chickens! They’ve made way more awesome of an impact on humanity!!

    • @dginx
      @dginx 3 года назад +16

      @@sagnorm1863 Mega Tysons.

    • @shashishekhar----
      @shashishekhar---- 3 года назад +30

      @@chacdogful You seem to be sufferung from 'Butthurtosomia' .

  • @Pter496
    @Pter496 Год назад +4

    As a Mechanical Engineering student in my senior year, this surely added something to my knowledge.

  • @brandonhunter3036
    @brandonhunter3036 8 месяцев назад +41

    Chuck's absolute brilliance is so completely underrated.

    • @TheOmegaXicor
      @TheOmegaXicor 6 месяцев назад +5

      That can be the Tyson, a unit of absolute brilliance. The number of Tysons needed to be the first to understand something unknown to science.

    • @brandonhunter3036
      @brandonhunter3036 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@TheOmegaXicor 😆

  • @danielvazquez6691
    @danielvazquez6691 3 года назад +1605

    Absolute Zero is just the number of times I’ve been laid this year.

    • @wiztek1197
      @wiztek1197 3 года назад +53

      F

    • @joandar1
      @joandar1 3 года назад +12

      Same, John, Australia. They can be so Cool. lol.

    • @themurmeli88
      @themurmeli88 3 года назад +25

      So... that would mean you physically have to get laid more than 0 times, because you can not reach 0?
      I - I don't if I should call you lucky, or call the police.

    • @rsdsingh4720
      @rsdsingh4720 3 года назад +3

      We need to get back on approach broski

    • @dennissakala2601
      @dennissakala2601 3 года назад +2

      That's funny!

  • @Chestnut-xm2pv
    @Chestnut-xm2pv 3 года назад +2582

    This is like a teacher teaching a class clown that actually pays attention.

    • @alaaalsarraj763
      @alaaalsarraj763 3 года назад +93

      This literally explained it so freaking accurately 😍

    • @jeaneljaylamputi2215
      @jeaneljaylamputi2215 3 года назад +80

      You can be a class clown and pay attention, given that the teacher is chill enough with the humor. But yeah, most of the time, it isn't the case.

    • @ChacaPleto
      @ChacaPleto 3 года назад +65

      @@jeaneljaylamputi2215 Yeah is possible for a teacher to be chill enough with the humor for 17 minutes, but for a whole day, the whole week, the whole semester, while being underpaid and underappreciated by everyone? Impossible, the clown has to put some effort too.

    • @jeaneljaylamputi2215
      @jeaneljaylamputi2215 3 года назад +15

      @@ChacaPleto true, the class clown should be a class clown through their humor, but not their grades(if you mean he's failing bad for being too much of a goofball).

    • @udayyadav5017
      @udayyadav5017 3 года назад +2

      Why is this so accurate

  • @irokosalei5133
    @irokosalei5133 5 месяцев назад +2

    Let's credit Chuck for being the best host there is as he's both entertaining and relevant.

  • @zanes9898
    @zanes9898 Год назад +4

    Man this is just the best way to learn. No pressure, engaging, and fun.

  • @GulfsideMinistries
    @GulfsideMinistries 3 года назад +297

    "Cool things happen at low temperatures." Oh, Neil . . . if only that pun was intended.

    • @heavyfromtf2117
      @heavyfromtf2117 2 года назад +4

      i´d like your comment but it´s exactly 111

    • @seanpeacejohn889
      @seanpeacejohn889 2 года назад +2

      Time for you to add your like to make it 222 while at 221 😉

    • @n3me51s2
      @n3me51s2 2 года назад +1

      Can I ask you a question?

    • @GulfsideMinistries
      @GulfsideMinistries 2 года назад +1

      @@n3me51s2 Me? Sure.

    • @n3me51s2
      @n3me51s2 2 года назад +1

      @@GulfsideMinistries temperature has a lower limit but no higher limit right?
      I mean u cannot go below -273 degree Celsius

  • @VentusWind9
    @VentusWind9 3 года назад +294

    Every time Neil says "now watch what happens..." I put my mental seatbelt on and brace myself.

    • @ThirdDynamic
      @ThirdDynamic 3 года назад +4

      This is my favorite comment ever.

    • @brianvector
      @brianvector 3 года назад

      Tyson is a pretend scientist. He is a fraud.

    • @evandroa4845
      @evandroa4845 3 года назад

      @@brianvector Could you elaborate?

    • @TheB0sss
      @TheB0sss 3 года назад +2

      @@brianvector aah, great argument as always. Never any proof

    • @brianvector
      @brianvector 3 года назад

      Tyson is a 33rd degree free mason, as are all astronots. NASA is a fraud. Tyson provides no "proof" either. I have seen "man on the moon" footage and you can clearly see the reflection of movie studio crew in the glass bubble of the astroNOT's helmet.

  • @fknGandalf
    @fknGandalf Год назад +21

    16:28 mad respect Neil 🤙🏻

  • @matheusrossetto7733
    @matheusrossetto7733 Год назад +3

    I love this ability Neil has that is taking extremely long and complicated questions and making them simple and understandable for the broad audience. Plus his sense of humor is 🤌🏻🤌🏻

  • @coldsoul333
    @coldsoul333 3 года назад +278

    I just love his passion through the hand gestures he gave lol...

    • @martinwillemse8923
      @martinwillemse8923 3 года назад +1

      It is possible to go faster than the light, if you are dreaming that there is a big bang that we are in. We can observe galaxies very far away that have 90% of the speed of light and let's just start there to reach the speed of light, it takes a little time, but then you also go faster than light and not on the next. once so very difficult to understand system, we first go to the next galaxy, with a simple rocket, we refuel that for a while and fly to the next galaxies and if you do that you will also visit our galaxies, to get to drink us a cup of coffee and you also get a cookie, then you continue to the next galaxy until you reach a galaxy that also has 90% of the speed of light compared to us and you go at that moment 1,8 times the speed of light and we then act as an observer, who can perceive that you have completed this task and you have not been able to perceive the base from which you departed for some time, just like we are rescuing the big bang. aunts can perceive and can assume that there are also galaxies behind that that we cannot perceive, but faster than the light, how that is possible all the time, that is because you believe in it.

    • @mrswolls
      @mrswolls 3 года назад +4

      The hands are moving faster therefore he's creating more heat... 😂

    • @martinhorvath4117
      @martinhorvath4117 2 года назад

      ​@@martinwillemse8923 I don't know if I understand, but you probably mean that galaxies go faster then the speed of light (?) because they are 2,3 billion lightyears further then their light was send to our retinas, but this is actually Dark Energy,

  • @NicksSkillz
    @NicksSkillz 3 года назад +172

    Love it when Chuck gets hit with knowledge so deep he can't even joke about it

    • @UdayNatt
      @UdayNatt 3 года назад +25

      He got hit with Cold Temperature knowledge so deep, he said "wow thats cool" and didn't even realize the pun himself.
      If you're an astrophysicist and can make a comedian forget his comedy, that's a whole another level of badass.

    • @spragism
      @spragism 3 года назад +3

      However he did say "that is so cool" without realizing the joke😅

    • @iqbalhussaing7859
      @iqbalhussaing7859 2 года назад

      P
      Bale jibrail

    • @chrisB_OG
      @chrisB_OG 2 года назад

      @@UdayNatt haha yes! Well said

  • @mayurgunderia8368
    @mayurgunderia8368 7 месяцев назад +1

    Enjoying every moment of my time with you both guys. I was always into questioning of why and what for, why not, that I am finally getting my curiosity satisfied though partially. Pl kp it up prof Tyson.

  • @Chris.starfleet
    @Chris.starfleet Год назад +10

    But this is how exactly how I teach. There are certain common speeds at which kids and students hear something, grasp it and then internalise it. A good teacher will find that rhythm and will never go too fast or too slow. If you go too slow, your intelligent kids' minds will wander and they will end up missing bits of information or fail to form a cohesive picture. If you go too quickly less intelligent kids will just fall behind because they never have time to process and internalise information.

  • @johnnyjimj
    @johnnyjimj 3 года назад +274

    "I don't want to be remembered for anything. To me, Education is empowering You to Understand Everything Without Any Reference back to Me at All" - Neil deGrasse Tyson @ 16:16
    Wow... What a pearl of wisdom ❤️

    • @josuearredondo8798
      @josuearredondo8798 3 года назад +7

      Lol great quote, but the irony in this comment 😂

    • @johnnyjimj
      @johnnyjimj 3 года назад +3

      @@josuearredondo8798
      It's another way to say buy a man a fish, he will eat for a day, show him how to fish, he will eat for a lifetime.

    • @TheBiggreenpig
      @TheBiggreenpig 3 года назад +8

      @@johnnyjimj Build a man a campfire, he will be warm for a day, set him on fire, he will be warm for his entire lifetime.

    • @johnnyjimj
      @johnnyjimj 3 года назад

      @@TheBiggreenpig 😆 😆 😆 😆

    • @obaidsyed1
      @obaidsyed1 3 года назад

      very humbling of him

  • @robtk3
    @robtk3 3 года назад +92

    "I don't want to be remembered for anything..."
    Too late for that Professor. You passed that milestone many, many years ago.

  • @kyle666vegan
    @kyle666vegan 8 месяцев назад +1

    Tysons are the unofficial unit to measure the degree of interesting educational physics conversations. It has an absolute zero and no upper limit denoted as a "#Ty".

  • @praveenkumarmorabad1358
    @praveenkumarmorabad1358 Год назад +4

    Now i don't need any more explanation about absolute zero
    Thank you sir 🙏

  • @zaldoh7568
    @zaldoh7568 3 года назад +280

    "So -273 celcius is the absolute zero"
    "Absolutely"
    "Thats so *cool*"

    • @kebekbutcher
      @kebekbutcher 3 года назад +14

      It is actually -273.15 Celsius... they should have mentioned the real absolute zero... 🙄
      There is still energy at -273 Celsius...

    • @Mr_Bartt
      @Mr_Bartt 3 года назад +6

      @@kebekbutcher You mean that there is still "hit energy" to be more precise.

    • @carbon273
      @carbon273 3 года назад +3

      @@kebekbutcher Not accurate enough sir. I need the EXACT number.

    • @kebekbutcher
      @kebekbutcher 3 года назад +2

      @@carbon273 It is actually the exact number, let me know if you find another one with the source. 🤔

    • @turtle8558
      @turtle8558 3 года назад

      ....2/laugh

  • @mosqueraaa
    @mosqueraaa 3 года назад +217

    "i don´t want to be rememmbered for anithing , for me , education is empowering you to understand what it is you´re talking about with any reference back to me at all , but thereby you take ownership of your own enlightenment "
    I just got chills

    • @martinwillemse8923
      @martinwillemse8923 3 года назад

      It is possible to go faster than the light, if you are dreaming that there is a big bang that we are in. We can observe galaxies very far away that have 90% of the speed of light and let's just start there to reach the speed of light, it takes a little time, but then you also go faster than light and not on the next. once so very difficult to understand system, we first go to the next galaxy, with a simple rocket, we refuel that for a while and fly to the next galaxies and if you do that you will also visit our galaxies, to get to drink us a cup of coffee and you also get a cookie, then you continue to the next galaxy until you reach a galaxy that also has 90% of the speed of light compared to us and you go at that moment 1,8 times the speed of light and we then act as an observer, who can perceive that you have completed this task and you have not been able to perceive the base from which you departed for some time, just like we are rescuing the big bang. aunts can perceive and can assume that there are also galaxies behind that that we cannot perceive, but faster than the light, how that is possible all the time, that is because you believe in it.

    • @vibaj16
      @vibaj16 2 года назад +9

      @@martinwillemse8923 idk what most of this nonsense means, but the parts I did understand were completely wrong. You do not understand how the expansion of the universe works.

    • @arianaharvey961
      @arianaharvey961 2 года назад +3

      @@martinwillemse8923 Lol, somebody doesn't know what special relativity is.

    • @aliarsal4082
      @aliarsal4082 2 года назад

      He is a great man

    • @babayega_
      @babayega_ 2 года назад

      @@martinwillemse8923 bro bro, let's keep it simple. How are you going from over Galaxy to the next, if the next is traveling away from you at .9 the speed of light while you stop to refuel and have coffee and cookies? You would then have to travel faster than that Galaxy just to reach it wouldn't you? And you plan on doing this with a "simple rocket"? 🤣 I want whatever coffee you had this morning.

  • @dongding3017
    @dongding3017 Год назад +1

    I wish you added some images to demonstrate them better… I’m slowly getting it though.. Thank you so much.

  • @MichaelPenick
    @MichaelPenick Год назад +34

    Thank you, Neil! These are the kinds of videos that make my day.

    • @mightym
      @mightym Год назад

      Unfortunately he explains it in a way which is not entirely correct.
      Absolute zero is well defined in quantum mechanics with an example being in complete darkness, the optical system is in a Quantum Ground State and the thermal reservoir of optical photons is zero kelvin.
      The more important concept as above is the Quantum Ground State, the lowest energy state of a system. No temperature is defined for a pure quantum ground state because the state is known, and temperature is dependent on the system (in many systems the QGS energy is just above absolute zero).

  • @taylorrobeug2044
    @taylorrobeug2044 3 года назад +140

    Chuck is like me in physics class.
    Lecture:Okay yea that makes sense okay
    Exam: 40%

  • @gpang788
    @gpang788 3 года назад +237

    I love hearing Neil talk. He's a very engaging speaker no matter what he talks about.

    • @ShiftingDrifter
      @ShiftingDrifter 3 года назад +15

      He could make watching paint dry sound interesting.

    • @modestdaddy2000
      @modestdaddy2000 3 года назад +3

      In person, I zone out even more, just to sorta “wake up” when the lights come up and he walks off stage. Like a great movie, it’s over in what seems like only a few mins after it started. He pull you in and you don’t blink for 2 hours. It’s so worth the money and travel if needed.

    • @jordank6961
      @jordank6961 3 года назад +1

      I want to hear him explain how to change a tire or recharge a car battery.
      Audible call him!

  • @Kinzarr4ever
    @Kinzarr4ever Год назад +9

    Excellent explanation, loving it, and they're a highly entertaining duo :)
    Also, every time Neil calls something "very cool" I giggle.
    It reminds me of one of my favorite puns of all time:
    "Do you know what's very cool?"
    "It's English for really cold."
    This entire video is literally about very cool things.
    Literally literally, not internet literally.

    • @Krikenemp18
      @Krikenemp18 6 месяцев назад

      Language is weird. But also weird is language.

  • @cityofjoy8830
    @cityofjoy8830 Год назад +1

    Such a beautiful way of explaining things. Thank god for Neil Degrase Tyson.

  • @smackedinthejaw
    @smackedinthejaw 2 года назад +526

    Neil is very good at making science interesting and understandable.

  • @panworks
    @panworks 3 года назад +102

    1 Tyson = a measurement of a mind blowing concept

    • @putridhalo7927
      @putridhalo7927 2 года назад +4

      It's because he's named after a bag of chicken strips.

    • @WasabiSniffer
      @WasabiSniffer 2 года назад +3

      i think i've sustained about 3-4 tysons watching this

    • @JPAutoService
      @JPAutoService 2 года назад

      Tyson is a total fraud.

    • @putridhalo7927
      @putridhalo7927 2 года назад

      @@JPAutoService are you a world famous theorist. Last time I remember you don't learn absolute zero in 7th grade. Why are you commenting on your own personal opinion. Nobody cares surprise surprise.

    • @Reuged666
      @Reuged666 2 года назад

      that's was over 9000

  • @alily375
    @alily375 10 месяцев назад

    the way that he explains all of this is amazing. i wisheveryome could learn it like this.

  • @007Yasir
    @007Yasir Год назад

    This is a great conversation👌, the Heat and Cold explanation sums it all, if people will comprehend it, it might change the course of their life with this understanding, especially with the global warming effect and how we should go about fixing it. Thanks,
    I will follow in you on the YT Shorts.🙏

  • @ArJayDM
    @ArJayDM 2 года назад +512

    The fact that Chuck actually understands the concepts Neil is throwing at him but throws in jokes as well. Perfect synergy duo.

    • @blitzgoat6509
      @blitzgoat6509 2 года назад +2

      Had to unlike to keep at 69

    • @ArJayDM
      @ArJayDM 2 года назад +2

      @@blitzgoat6509 nice

    • @samsmythe937
      @samsmythe937 2 года назад +1

      100% agree. That's a totally spot on and relevant comment! And I notice the likes are way over 69 now lol. Cheers from Aus

    • @pearl8246
      @pearl8246 2 года назад +4

      you're delusional if you think this isn't rehearsed

    • @epremeaux
      @epremeaux 2 года назад +1

      yeah. actually I was impressed he made the mental leap of being able to travel faster through a super fluid due to no friction.

  • @dimitardonev4507
    @dimitardonev4507 3 года назад +477

    Neil deGrasse Tyson is one of the reasons I still believe in humanity.

    • @corporalpiss7727
      @corporalpiss7727 3 года назад +12

      Dimitar Donev you‘re an idiot...

    • @v3124
      @v3124 3 года назад +16

      Yeah he comes off as smug and egotistical to me.

    • @LordTelperion
      @LordTelperion 3 года назад +7

      Hear hear, Mr. Tyson is a national treasure.

    • @ethannguyen2754
      @ethannguyen2754 3 года назад +8

      Same here...
      Until I see people like flat Earthers

    • @Bonobo_JoJo
      @Bonobo_JoJo 3 года назад +8

      He is certainly bright...but he brings me no hope for humanity. The ever expanding universe and what is in it makes no difference if we can’t live amongst ourselves as humans on earth.
      He is smug and arrogant with that “I’m better than you because I’ve received more education” demeanor, and it shows whenever he speaks to someone without the extensive background in physics as him. An elitist world full of Neil’s is not one I want to live in.

  • @samuelkamau3418
    @samuelkamau3418 Год назад

    I must state that I'm addicted to StarTalk. It's always enlightening

  • @dani5645
    @dani5645 4 месяца назад +1

    This is a brilliant video. You are great at explaining things and your partner asks great questions. Thank you guys for this.

  • @baddmanaz
    @baddmanaz 3 года назад +154

    We have absolutely zero chance of reaching absolute zero?
    Absolutely.

    • @magnetarstar9329
      @magnetarstar9329 3 года назад +4

      This comment is so underrated

    • @user-cu5sl5zj5m
      @user-cu5sl5zj5m 3 года назад

      Unless we define absolute zero as some temperature which we can reach.

    • @rwood1995
      @rwood1995 3 года назад

      Always the one person who tries to say something clever to contradict original comment but sounds like a fool!!! LOL

    • @XtreeM_FaiL
      @XtreeM_FaiL 3 года назад

      0K.

  • @UseActionsNotWords
    @UseActionsNotWords 3 года назад +159

    I love how much Neil truly enjoys this man's sense of humor.

  • @tactrix1h
    @tactrix1h Год назад +2

    Very informative, thank you Neil as usual you are a beacon of information.

  • @twowingsstudio
    @twowingsstudio 3 месяца назад +1

    Mr. Tyson, you are such a good teacher! Thank you!

  • @krisbrixon
    @krisbrixon 3 года назад +112

    Mr Nice is picking up more and more science with every video. It's like that if you expose someone to science, they might get smarter over time. Early on, his mind was always blown, but these days he is following along more and more. We can all wish we are like Chuck Nice.

    • @ermiasd2695
      @ermiasd2695 3 года назад +3

      Couldn’t agree more, krisbrixon. Love this show

    • @jackshit6088
      @jackshit6088 3 года назад +7

      I wished, Neil deGrasse Tyson would have given Chuck Nices' idea about combining the fridge with an oven a bit more of a thought. Geothermal heat pumps work in a similar way as Chuck suggested it. If you have already some heat, you won't need to add so much energy to reach the desired temperature.
      Thought from the perspective of an engineer.

    • @5353Jumper
      @5353Jumper 3 года назад +5

      Yeah in the last few months many of his comebacks have been with some high level understanding of multiple disciplines. Way to go funny man, y'all are getting pretty smart.

  • @LarryManiccia
    @LarryManiccia 2 года назад +62

    This guy is awesome. If only all teachers and professors taught like he does. He has such a way of explaining things that makes it easy to understand even if you don't have an engineering or physics degree. Super interesting to listen to as well.

  • @davidevans3227
    @davidevans3227 Год назад +1

    so enjoyable and fascinating thankyou 🙂 x

  • @trjblq
    @trjblq 7 дней назад

    That is absolutely mind blowing, particularly when it seeps through the container.

  • @QuestingNeurons
    @QuestingNeurons Год назад +264

    Woah...I never, in my wildest dreams, have ever thought of someone who could explain entire Bose- Einstein condensate thing in just one line and that to with such clarity. Tyson is a brilliant educator.

    • @richrick6168
      @richrick6168 8 месяцев назад +26

      People don't give him enough credit for how great of an educator he is.

    • @KevinP32270
      @KevinP32270 8 месяцев назад +3

      agreed!!

    • @WildernessGirl21
      @WildernessGirl21 8 месяцев назад +4

      He is absolutely phenomenal!❤

    • @heinrichetsebeth157
      @heinrichetsebeth157 8 месяцев назад +9

      Tyson = The rate at which scientific enlightenment is reached

    • @KevinP32270
      @KevinP32270 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@heinrichetsebeth157 AGREED!

  • @kraahk1928
    @kraahk1928 2 года назад +311

    "Cool things happen at low temperatures." This awesome quote will make it into history for sure. Thanks for brightening my day. You guys are awesome. :)

    • @FrankNStein-pf9rr
      @FrankNStein-pf9rr 2 года назад +1

      Kraahk
      Hot things happen when you're HOT! When You're HOT You're HOT and when You're NOT You're NOT!!

    • @kraahk1928
      @kraahk1928 2 года назад

      @@FrankNStein-pf9rr Uh, does that mean when you're cold, you're old? ~lookingconfused~ Because, i mean, i would prefer being hot, but then again ...

    • @FrankNStein-pf9rr
      @FrankNStein-pf9rr 2 года назад

      @@kraahk1928
      Don't know if being old means being cold. I do know that a dead body gets cold, young or old.

    • @Joshua-ev9uw
      @Joshua-ev9uw 2 года назад

      You probably still think Bill Nye (the science guy) is cool and "hip." You have to trust whatever HE says because he was always the tape your substitute teacher would play when she rolled the TV into the room. Lol.

    • @FrankNStein-pf9rr
      @FrankNStein-pf9rr 2 года назад

      @@Joshua-ev9uw
      Who is your cool and "hip" message meant for?

  • @soniamccoon2185
    @soniamccoon2185 5 месяцев назад +1

    I really enjoyed this one today. I learned something new and had a good laugh doing it. Thank you guys for the lesson 😂

  • @asmetanka
    @asmetanka Год назад +2

    Love you guys, thanks for what are you doing, I can't say how amazing it is! Thank you so very much!

  • @vdabest2118
    @vdabest2118 3 года назад +401

    “You can’t reach absolute zero”
    Me: laughs in my maths test score

  • @juistian
    @juistian 3 года назад +71

    I can't help but love the excitement of Dr Tyson when he's explaining science stuff.

    • @katiakatia2380
      @katiakatia2380 3 года назад +1

      Without that science we wouldnt be able to communicate 😁

  • @beautifullybrilliant7542
    @beautifullybrilliant7542 9 месяцев назад

    3:58 that’s amazing. You mention that because I always learned 100 Fahrenheit and when my grandmom and I were learning to Celsius so I can go do well in school. She used to call it centigrade. Keep in mind she’s from Scotland. Yes but yeah I always knew it as centigrade love that thank you so much Neil #Nostalgic

  • @mudassarm30
    @mudassarm30 7 месяцев назад

    You are making me StarTalk addicted 😂

  • @leecaste
    @leecaste 3 года назад +607

    "Cool things happen at low temperatures"
    - Neil deGrasse Tyson

  • @brotherhoodofgame
    @brotherhoodofgame 3 года назад +142

    I enjoy how Chuck will make Neil laugh, and interject some humor inbetween all these fascinating but long information dumps. (I mean dump in the nicest way possible).

    • @martinwillemse8923
      @martinwillemse8923 3 года назад

      It is possible to go faster than the light, if you are dreaming that there is a big bang that we are in. We can observe galaxies very far away that have 90% of the speed of light and let's just start there to reach the speed of light, it takes a little time, but then you also go faster than light and not on the next. once so very difficult to understand system, we first go to the next galaxy, with a simple rocket, we refuel that for a while and fly to the next galaxies and if you do that you will also visit our galaxies, to get to drink us a cup of coffee and you also get a cookie, then you continue to the next galaxy until you reach a galaxy that also has 90% of the speed of light compared to us and you go at that moment 1,8 times the speed of light and we then act as an observer, who can perceive that you have completed this task and you have not been able to perceive the base from which you departed for some time, just like we are rescuing the big bang. aunts can perceive and can assume that there are also galaxies behind that that we cannot perceive, but faster than the light, how that is possible all the time, that is because you believe in it.

    • @tuneboyz5634
      @tuneboyz5634 2 года назад

      :)

    • @nosvenom2239
      @nosvenom2239 2 года назад

      @@tuneboyz5634 my

    • @benjackson9299
      @benjackson9299 2 года назад +1

      Search:
      Neil deGrasse Tyson meets Post Malone
      It’s hilarious!

    • @ananousous
      @ananousous 2 года назад

      The nicest dumps are often the nastiest

  • @strings41
    @strings41 Год назад

    You guys always put a chuckle in my day.

  • @jacobmcdorman5552
    @jacobmcdorman5552 8 месяцев назад +3

    This is not "more than I cared to know".
    Keep putting out these videos please.
    Science has always been wonderful. At a certain point it becomes it begins to mirror philosophy and changes your entire outlook on life, the universe... and well everything :)

  • @agz.51
    @agz.51 3 года назад +88

    For everyone reading this have a amazing day and I wish you the best of luck

    • @ei-on1956
      @ei-on1956 3 года назад +4

      Thank you very much! To you as well!

    • @scarletletter4900
      @scarletletter4900 3 года назад +2

      Thanks, you too =D

    • @fibyq
      @fibyq 3 года назад

      Because of the video I’m not sure if this is a bot

    • @agz.51
      @agz.51 3 года назад

      @@scarletletter4900

    • @agz.51
      @agz.51 3 года назад

      @@ei-on1956

  • @adventurehobbies1272
    @adventurehobbies1272 3 года назад +369

    Neil is looking more like Einstein with every episode that passes.

    • @foifoifoi610
      @foifoifoi610 3 года назад +2

      😂😂😂

    • @TheLickHitter
      @TheLickHitter 3 года назад +5

      2 comments that lead absolutely nowhere

    • @tannerhartl5175
      @tannerhartl5175 3 года назад +17

      @The Truth of the Matter He's more smart than you could even fathom. I wouldnt be talking if I were you

    • @sagnorm1863
      @sagnorm1863 3 года назад +1

      @The Truth of the Matter Trust me, I'm like a smart person.

    • @alainisabelledemontreal2484
      @alainisabelledemontreal2484 3 года назад

      No he does'nt look like he's been stiking is fingeur in an electrical soket.

  • @craigquann
    @craigquann Год назад

    I've missed listening to Dr. N.G.T. I loved 'cosmos'. Glad I found this.

  • @petervendetti2796
    @petervendetti2796 Год назад +1

    Thank you Professor it’s always a pleasure to learn from you

  • @Fiction_Beast
    @Fiction_Beast 3 года назад +109

    let's use tyson to measure coolness. The coolest scientist out there and everyone measured accordingly.

    • @Hibiki_vtuber
      @Hibiki_vtuber 3 года назад +8

      Neil is 0 tyson, or absolute tyson, Mike is probably about 267 tyson, the chicken, maybe 344?

    • @DampeS8N
      @DampeS8N 3 года назад

      So everyone is measured in percents Tyson?

    • @MegaKUBZI
      @MegaKUBZI 3 года назад

      Coolest scientist? So he is Super scientist

    • @Anti-HyperLink
      @Anti-HyperLink 3 года назад

      @@Hibiki_vtuber The chicken?

    • @Anti-HyperLink
      @Anti-HyperLink 3 года назад

      Who's the lamest scientist?

  • @poctordepper4269
    @poctordepper4269 3 года назад +32

    These are always the highlight of my week.

  • @manoharshenoy4800
    @manoharshenoy4800 9 месяцев назад

    We need teachers like Neil Tyson who makes science easy to understand and interesting and avoid sleeping in the classrooms.

  • @ValladaresJ0
    @ValladaresJ0 Год назад

    One of my fav videos. Thanks :)

  • @makatelli
    @makatelli 3 года назад +84

    I have learned more from Neil than any teacher i ever had.

    • @markerbiro
      @markerbiro 3 года назад

      honestly

    • @blanchy
      @blanchy 3 года назад +1

      I wish he'd Mrs Robinson me

    • @swr1240
      @swr1240 3 года назад +5

      Even if you are currently only in 1st grade, that's probably not true.
      It's easy to take for granted how much we learn in school without realizing how much we're learning.

    • @chaos.n.cosmos
      @chaos.n.cosmos 3 года назад

      Same.

    • @JohnyG29
      @JohnyG29 3 года назад +3

      You should have paid more attention in school.

  • @Fervillasmil
    @Fervillasmil 2 года назад +96

    Love Neil and Chuck.
    Neil, for being the best continuator of Carl’s legacy in science promotion and education.
    Chuck, for being the best version of what we all are when we are curious and are not afraid to ask.
    I could have commented this in any StarTalk episode but I did it on this one. Maybe a nice bottle or Malbec helped a lot.
    Keep them coming, you guys. I know I’m gonna watch all StarTalk stuff several times and, at least, make my kids aware of its existence.
    A googolplex of gratitude!!

    • @ChibDibs
      @ChibDibs 2 года назад +2

      I believe this was the perfect episode to leave this comment on because I was certainly thinking the exact same thing.

    • @cdeschrevel5341
      @cdeschrevel5341 2 года назад

      Malbec is mostly good, just as this episode!

    • @johnsteiner3417
      @johnsteiner3417 2 года назад +1

      That and Chuck's deduct6ions are sharp even if he doesn't know the terms.

    • @damariommitchell
      @damariommitchell Год назад

      Who is Carl? I'm not familiar with any of this.

  • @josephno1347
    @josephno1347 10 месяцев назад

    do specific gravity Niel, you are a great communicator, love to you

  • @featheredfan
    @featheredfan 8 месяцев назад

    You didn't mention neutrinos, but you cannot filter them out since they permeate all of space. They normally don't interact much with most matter particles, but they might have an effect on the micro-temperatures. 👍

  • @peregrinef3203
    @peregrinef3203 3 года назад +6

    As a high school teacher, I explained why measuring angles in degrees was rather arbitrary. Then their task was to come up with their own unit of measurement, tell me how many of that unit would make a circle, and give me a method to convert from degrees into that unit. I used this to then jump into radians. It got their brains thinking in a way so they could more easily accept a different form of measurement for angles.

  • @Night_Rose_94
    @Night_Rose_94 3 года назад +331

    You can't reach absolute zero? I guess they haven't heard the story of the guy who cooled to absolute zero. He's 0K now.

  • @douglask1828
    @douglask1828 Год назад

    I like your videos. Very informative and funny at the same time.

  • @flyingsodwai1382
    @flyingsodwai1382 3 месяца назад

    I learned on Titanium Physicist that Lazers are being used to knock the vibration of molecules down closer to 0-k. pretty fascinating stuff

  • @kevindondrea144
    @kevindondrea144 3 года назад +52

    Neil is up there with Carl for the most well known and loved Astrophysicists in the World. Live Long and Prosper.

    • @mr.hubris961
      @mr.hubris961 3 года назад +2

      Carl who? I just learned of Neil a few days ago.

    • @idc170293
      @idc170293 3 года назад +3

      @@mr.hubris961
      If you like this kind of video and you don't know Carl Sagan...BOY, YOU ARE IN FOR A TREAT!
      Let's just say that Mr. Tyson, as much as I like what he does and how well he does it, still falls short of scratching that "itch for more" that Mr. Sagan left when he died.

    • @jewfroDZak
      @jewfroDZak 2 года назад +1

      The poetry of Sagan's thoughts, along with his childlike wonderment and love of solving mystery, make me cry cathartic tears of appreciation of the beauty of our universe. Regularly, every few minutes in the middle of something he's narrating, I vicariously feel the emotion behind the words he uses to describe his personal search for truth and the waterworks start for me.
      I can see the comparison between him and Neil. It's in the honest expressions of enthusiasm about science and fact-finding that they routinely display, I think.

    • @nwmonk3105
      @nwmonk3105 2 года назад

      Neil is a fraud and nowhere near to Dr. Sagan.

    • @StarAcademy66
      @StarAcademy66 2 года назад

      @@idc170293 Can you recommend the video you think the most interesting of him?

  • @kree0101
    @kree0101 3 года назад +131

    Dr Tyson: "you wanna get some of that super fluid!"
    Me: "pause"

    • @d.g.1986
      @d.g.1986 2 года назад +5

      New pick-up line??

    • @anthonyt4154
      @anthonyt4154 2 года назад +3

      @@d.g.1986 maybe something Homelander would say

  • @faizivejdani2608
    @faizivejdani2608 Год назад

    A ‘tyson’ is a unit measure of humility. The lower the number, the more humble, never reaching absolute zero.

  • @JackieO_LAX
    @JackieO_LAX Месяц назад

    I love you two! Your shows are always very informative, easy to follow, fun, and funny! Thank you for empowering all of us with wisdom! 😎

  • @VishnuVaratharajan
    @VishnuVaratharajan 3 года назад +55

    13:32 " cool things happen at low temp"
    I see what you did there.

  • @KmillionaryShopifyExperts
    @KmillionaryShopifyExperts 3 года назад +23

    I could listen to Neil forever! The way he teaches is so enjoyable, cause you feel he really enjoys teaching about physics.

  • @DannyJoh
    @DannyJoh 8 месяцев назад

    The Nice-scale should be a unit of how much intelligent humor that is fitted into one section of science talk. This video is rated 2 nice.
    1 tyson is a certain amount of educational impact on society, measuring the positive change on intellectual awareness and scientific thinking.

  • @krisweinschenker598
    @krisweinschenker598 Год назад

    Great talk!
    I think I finally understand what the Boss-Einstein condensate is.

  • @09GunNut
    @09GunNut 3 года назад +160

    When you reference something you learned from Mr Tyson without referencing Mr Tyson himself should be called, "The Tyson Reference"

    • @hazardeur
      @hazardeur 2 года назад

      that would still defeat Neal's wishes

    • @agsmith420
      @agsmith420 2 года назад

      Dr*

    • @newbiegaming6090
      @newbiegaming6090 2 года назад +1

      @@hazardeur *ahem* I sense a Tyson paradox happening...

  • @magnusjonsson7303
    @magnusjonsson7303 3 года назад +17

    10:05 Neil: "You can never know precisely..." Chuck: "Anything about anything." 😂❤️

  • @CookiePsycho
    @CookiePsycho Год назад

    5min with Neil is more than 45min of any physic leason i ever had

  • @Wolf3591701
    @Wolf3591701 Год назад

    Lord Kelvin would be most pleased on your gentlemanly way of discourse. Well done, good Sirs! Well done!

  • @ShawwwHa
    @ShawwwHa 3 года назад +33

    This is like ice cream for the brain, delicious. 🤤

    • @ShawwwHa
      @ShawwwHa 3 года назад

      @Kelvin Klopper 😁 chill out dude, Neil is a cool guy who is fun to learn from. politicians on the other hand give me brain freeze when I listen to them talk, and some cause me brain frostbite.
      😁🍻😁

  • @mayoite160
    @mayoite160 3 года назад +36

    I felt Chuck when he yelled out "you can't know anything about anything in quantum physics!!'

  • @terencehealy5110
    @terencehealy5110 10 месяцев назад

    Peep firstly Neil is my number 1 teacher I'm so glad I stumbled on this channel I'm even thinking about doing a open university course in science secondly is it that at absolute zero a particle would stop moving

  • @senseisapphire7763
    @senseisapphire7763 Год назад

    There was such a disconnect between physics in school and this, i find that this makes sense one point to the next where as in school ur just to remember the laws with no vision

  • @rashaadsabur
    @rashaadsabur 3 года назад +46

    I will be spoon feeding my children every episode of this I can find. I love that they can receive such elevated knowledge and motivation from men who look like me. Thanks for everything...

    • @blitzgoat6509
      @blitzgoat6509 2 года назад

      You're beautiful too? Noice

    • @yaboyvickk5635
      @yaboyvickk5635 2 года назад +1

      You look like Neil tyson?

    • @mikebar42
      @mikebar42 2 года назад +1

      They don't look the same 🤷‍♂️

    • @blitzgoat6509
      @blitzgoat6509 2 года назад

      Lol, tyson looks like an average individual is what's up, but he does great things with that approachable appearance and so the look is redefined by his personality/persona.

    • @blitzgoat6509
      @blitzgoat6509 2 года назад

      So yes, they look alike