Einstein's prediction that was proofed after his death w/ Professor Brian Cox

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  • Опубликовано: 18 дек 2024

Комментарии • 4,2 тыс.

  • @josueavila5210
    @josueavila5210 2 месяца назад +23567

    "I am limited by the technolgy of my time" taken to a whole other level. Einstein was ridiculous

    • @fpSmoker
      @fpSmoker 2 месяца назад +174

      Exactly my first thought. Iron man right or did they get it from someone else?

    • @ZayRakks
      @ZayRakks 2 месяца назад +100

      @@fpSmokeri heard that from iron man when Tony’s dad is talking to Tony through that video

    • @dreckigerdan3739
      @dreckigerdan3739 2 месяца назад +215

      bro just look up Leonardo Da Vinci, that dude was limited by the technology of his time, basically 500 fucking years

    • @josueavila5210
      @josueavila5210 2 месяца назад +48

      @@dreckigerdan3739 yeah him too never denied it but einstein predicted to many things absoute madness

    • @dude157
      @dude157 2 месяца назад +56

      i dont think Einstein directly made that prediction. Pulsars werent even discovered until 12 years after Einstein had died. What he's talking about here is that Einstein's theory of general relativity tells you the rate at which these two bodies would fall into each other. Because of the immense speeds and forces of gravity involved, Newton's theory of gravity is not precise enough to give the right answer. However general relativity accounts for that and gives the correct result. Whats special is the theory can be used to make accurate predictions about phenomena that people didn't even know existed in the time Einstein was alive, which we can now observe and measure.

  • @creativesource3514
    @creativesource3514 4 месяца назад +20878

    Most people do not understand the significance and brilliance of Einstein.

    • @EddieG-uz4ro
      @EddieG-uz4ro 4 месяца назад +352

      Most people don't know who Nikola Tesla is either. 😵‍💫💤🐑

    • @creativesource3514
      @creativesource3514 4 месяца назад +88

      @@EddieG-uz4ro there is difference. Everyone knows who Einstein is. They just know what he discovered.

    • @EddieG-uz4ro
      @EddieG-uz4ro 4 месяца назад +100

      @creativesource3514 yeah but the fact less people know who Tesla is dosent sit well. I know growing up in school you hear Einstein this, Einstein that, not once was Tesla ever mentioned. Find that odd considering his level of genius inventions, a lot of wich we use today . Don't get me wrong I'm not taking anything away Einstein was a genius, Einstein was once asked how it felt to be the smartest man alive and he responded saying " I don't know maybe you should ask N.tesla" humbled so smart that he knows there is someone above himself.

    • @creativesource3514
      @creativesource3514 4 месяца назад +40

      @@EddieG-uz4ro yes I have heard that quote but I never really know if it's true.
      Tesla invented things and was no doubt very very smart.
      But somehow special relativity and general relativity (Einstein) and quantum (Bohr, Plank, Heisenberg, Durac) were on the ultimate level.
      Now if the next generation of geniuses can unify both of these then we will move to another level of humanity.

    • @skpt516
      @skpt516 3 месяца назад +49

      @@EddieG-uz4ro It's highly doubtful Einstein said that about Tesla. Tesla adamantly rejected Relativity after it was clearly shown to be correct. For someone to completely reject the fundamental change in our understanding of the universe as Tesla did shows Tesla was not on the same intellectual level as Einstein.

  • @TheCoasterConnorisseur
    @TheCoasterConnorisseur 2 месяца назад +4568

    I love Einsteins attitude to everything. He goes like, “Ok, we don’t know for certain, and we can’t prove any of it as of now. But if we did know, this is how it would be, and this is how it works.”

    • @primary5050
      @primary5050 2 месяца назад +130

      Can't even begin to imagine what this guy would have done in a technologically advanced society like today's . If this double quark thing is making my mind blow away to nothingness, the predictions he would have made with the help today's lasers and satellites and telescopes and AI and stuff . I can't even begin to imagine .

    • @sindri1447
      @sindri1447 2 месяца назад +108

      ​@@primary5050 I think Einstein in todays world would be too busy doomscrolling tik tok or youtube shorts to make any sort og scientific breakthroughs.

    • @NekoinaBox2000
      @NekoinaBox2000 2 месяца назад +29

      @@sindri1447that implies that habits are based on when you live and not who you are. Because those things exist doesn’t mean you have to do them. Your the problem if you engage in bad behavior, the behavior isn’t

    • @sindri1447
      @sindri1447 2 месяца назад +31

      @@NekoinaBox2000 my point is that people in todays society mostly don't have the kind of obsession for their work/field of expertise that Einstein had. Before the internet, people spent way more time being deep in thought. They dwelled on their thoughts and had deep meaningful conversations with their peers. They had friendly debates for fun. The world Einstein lived in contributed heavily to making Einstein utilize the gifts that he ended up amazing the world with.

    • @GrandDefenestrator
      @GrandDefenestrator 2 месяца назад +8

      ​@@sindri1447What else can you tell us about society in this time period you weren't even alive for?

  • @nl8850
    @nl8850 Месяц назад +199

    This guy has the most soothing, educational, and calming voice ever. He can tell you a bed time story and you will be extremely happy.

    • @knititwearit
      @knititwearit 21 день назад +2

      He’s actually a pop star and a Prof. Brian Cox

    • @adilnafih
      @adilnafih 17 дней назад +2

      He Is always happy ❤

    • @stockdoc9384
      @stockdoc9384 11 дней назад

      Yawnnn. Only heard this statement 1 million times before. How original

    • @oniongravy1737
      @oniongravy1737 4 дня назад +1

      He also talks a load of shite

    • @k1ndr3dspirits
      @k1ndr3dspirits 2 дня назад +1

      @@oniongravy1737 Nah, you're talking about Neil deGrasse Tyson! 😂

  • @jcoco7687
    @jcoco7687 2 месяца назад +3084

    my favorite one of his previously unsolved theories was when he published saying "This variable is the greatest mistake in my career" referring to a unknown factor at which the universe changes, many years later we find it's expanding at the same rate he predicted before he died. His true biggest mistake was doubting his own genius. 😢

    • @AdrianPerez-hk4ym
      @AdrianPerez-hk4ym 2 месяца назад +13

      How does comment only have 4 likes. It’s the only reason I wanted to read the comments 😮😮

    • @AdrianPerez-hk4ym
      @AdrianPerez-hk4ym 2 месяца назад +15

      The dude is the dude ❤

    • @Kinobambino
      @Kinobambino 2 месяца назад +6

      That's what I thought this video would be

    • @jcoco7687
      @jcoco7687 2 месяца назад

      @@AdrianPerez-hk4ym appreciate it

    • @PedroTricking
      @PedroTricking 2 месяца назад +10

      > we find it's expanding at the same rate he predicted before he died.
      Not quite right but yolo

  • @craigfowler7098
    @craigfowler7098 3 месяца назад +2243

    Should have been given 12 Nobel Prizes if you look at all his discoveries.
    Breathtaking genius

    • @charlesincharge1245
      @charlesincharge1245 2 месяца назад +1

      Yeah but who cares that’s the problem. Just a bunch of internet bandwagon dopes ready to kiss whoever’s butt is on the screen for 15 seconds.

    • @Bugdenl
      @Bugdenl 2 месяца назад

      Sorry what? Go on. list them. Fuck it, list one.
      Meanwhile Nicola Tesla got zero and his inventions are REAL and dwarf the fraud.

    • @vance9460
      @vance9460 2 месяца назад +35

      At the very least.. four

    • @jamessilver6429
      @jamessilver6429 2 месяца назад +6

      I know that I'm basically only standing on his shoulders , but ..... E =MC2 + 3/8 .

    • @Ant_Dawgg
      @Ant_Dawgg 2 месяца назад +1

      @@charlesincharge1245”yeah but who cares that’s the problem” said every immature teen.

  • @jamesadame-j3s
    @jamesadame-j3s 4 месяца назад +8608

    When is Hollywood gona make a movie about this brilliant man???

    • @scottchristner4242
      @scottchristner4242 4 месяца назад +338

      Have to find a comic genius to make it real. It’ll happen, but it has to be believable. Nobody thought the way he did. I think he needed another 50-60 years and we might be looking at wormholes or know they won’t work.

    • @megabonnar
      @megabonnar 4 месяца назад +75

      They have, look it up

    • @ilirianbardhi7901
      @ilirianbardhi7901 4 месяца назад

      We dont need the woke hollywood yo make movies about European, Jewish, African or Asian fogures. U fugged up everything, dont fug more things up. We dont need your woke culture in the rest of of world

    • @cephus2008
      @cephus2008 4 месяца назад +137

      They'd screw it up

    • @rizzo50417
      @rizzo50417 4 месяца назад +144

      Seriously! Give us a Conan O’Brien biopic please!

  • @deadlichaos
    @deadlichaos 2 месяца назад +81

    Finally a host that actually cares and doesn't interrupt every five seconds to make stupid jokes. Refreshing

    • @PaulJacobs1970
      @PaulJacobs1970 Месяц назад

      You mean like that turd Letterman

    • @aalimackey9115
      @aalimackey9115 15 дней назад +2

      You’re talking about Fallon and Kimmel 😂😂😂

    • @deadlichaos
      @deadlichaos 15 дней назад +1

      @@aalimackey9115 indeed

  • @LaughingOrange
    @LaughingOrange 2 месяца назад +1670

    To be precise, Einstein didn't know the rate of spin or orbital decay of that particular system, he wrote down the formulas which described it. Other physicists still had to put in the numbers for each symbol to get the results.
    His formula gave the correct result, proving they accurately describes the phenomenon.

    • @silvaquick193
      @silvaquick193 2 месяца назад +88

      This makes it even better

    • @-IGRIS-
      @-IGRIS- 2 месяца назад +25

      that's the same thing lol

    • @ithinkthonkthunk5333
      @ithinkthonkthunk5333 2 месяца назад +17

      @@LaughingOrange
      descriptions = math language
      explanations = scientific method
      “The theory of relativity is a mass of error and deceptive ideas violently opposed to the teachings of great men of science of the past and even to common sense … The theory, wraps all these errors and fallacies and clothes them in magnificent mathematical garb which fascinates, dazzles and makes people blind to the underlying errors. The theory is like a beggar clothed in purple whom ignorant people take for a king. Its exponents are very brilliant men, but they are metaphysicists rather than scientists. Not a single one of the relativity propositions has been proved.”
      - Nikola Tesla

    • @javidm.f8533
      @javidm.f8533 Месяц назад +2

      Of course! he simultaneously proves both perspectives through one equation. The parameters themselves are deduced once you have the variables..

    • @BadAmigo
      @BadAmigo Месяц назад

      @@ithinkthonkthunk5333 exakt !!!! 100% richtig! Einstein hat mit deiner Arbeit dafür gesorgt das die Wissenschaft begrenzt wurde! Einstein hat es zu spät gemerkt …

  • @camielkotte
    @camielkotte 5 месяцев назад +2134

    It's not that single calculation... It's the mass of theories he produced that were all right. If it were a movie it would be categorized as science fiction or fantasy.

    • @davitjanashia9344
      @davitjanashia9344 4 месяца назад +13

      don't yap please

    • @camielkotte
      @camielkotte 4 месяца назад +61

      @@davitjanashia9344 what does that mean? I understand relativity explained by Brian Cox. But I do not understand your comment.

    • @joeyparms26
      @joeyparms26 4 месяца назад

      It is science fiction….it’s just made up numbers and calculations that only a handful of people on earth pretend to understand and with that authority, they make their students also pretend to understand in order to get a degree and earn $. You can’t measure millimeter distance of something that is trillions upon trillions of miles away. Sorry

    • @YagrumBagarnTheLastofTheDwemer
      @YagrumBagarnTheLastofTheDwemer 4 месяца назад +25

      ​@@camielkotteThat makes you seem way less smart than you're trying to be.

    • @camielkotte
      @camielkotte 4 месяца назад +21

      @@YagrumBagarnTheLastofTheDwemer i dont "try" to be anything. In western society that is a typical male thing. To try be something superficial.
      English isn't my first language. I generaly don't care what kids use for expressions to order their lives. I shouldn't have asked. My fault .

  • @chrisblack9851
    @chrisblack9851 4 месяца назад +2227

    There's not 1 video where Brian isn't smiling, I think he even smiles when he's asleep

    • @tomben6180
      @tomben6180 3 месяца назад +79

      Happens to everyone that manages to get out of Oldham

    • @boywonderrr71
      @boywonderrr71 3 месяца назад +13

      Wish I was that happy

    • @myflippinggoodness8821
      @myflippinggoodness8821 3 месяца назад +9

      ​@@boywonderrr71do science! Srsly, study astrophysics. While you're at it, figure out warp for us if ya can 🤞🤞

    • @connienoguchi1815
      @connienoguchi1815 3 месяца назад +7

      He’s so cute it makes me smile 😊

    • @eagleeyes6642
      @eagleeyes6642 3 месяца назад +11

      Imagine when he realises that God is Real.
      He will smile even more😃🤭

  • @annettedavies8958
    @annettedavies8958 Месяц назад +13

    Brian Cox is brilliant, I could watch him all day. ❤❤❤

  • @nitishgautam5728
    @nitishgautam5728 2 месяца назад +597

    Einstein was not just an ordinary scientist he had deep philosophical understanding of the world and human nature

    • @ozzypawsborneprinceofbarkness
      @ozzypawsborneprinceofbarkness 2 месяца назад +3

      And he believed in God

    • @KnowPain666
      @KnowPain666 2 месяца назад +11

      What does god have to do with any of what he just said🤔

    • @PedroTricking
      @PedroTricking 2 месяца назад +37

      @@ozzypawsborneprinceofbarkness "The word God is for me nothing more than the expression and product of human weaknesses, the Bible a collection of honorable, but still primitive legends which are nevertheless pretty childish." ,
      "I do not believe in a personal God and I have never denied this but have expressed it clearly. If something is in me which can be called religious then it is the unbounded admiration for the structure of the world so far as our science can reveal it." ,
      "I am a deeply religious nonbeliever. This is a somewhat new kind of religion."
      Sure, he was "religious".

    • @fifthycharaktersforaqualit7468
      @fifthycharaktersforaqualit7468 2 месяца назад +1

      I wouldn't call him religious but truly fascinated by the universe this would still fall under atheism in my book but of course if there was evidence for God like him getting a visit by God or an Angel and so on that would definitely made him believe in God because he wasn't ignorant to evidence but by then you aren't believing or having faith instead you know of the existence of God.

    • @sofi1200
      @sofi1200 2 месяца назад +4

      @@PedroTricking so Spinoza

  • @AClaiderman
    @AClaiderman 4 месяца назад +271

    I’m so glad that every now and then people like Newton and Einstein come along and help us get a better understanding of what’s out there. There’s so much we don’t know. But people like them are our only hope to ever get anywhere near the truth.

    • @Bugdenl
      @Bugdenl 2 месяца назад +5

      Unfortunately this is not the case, particularly with Einstein. A lot of nonsense which 70 years on is more easily disproved than it ever was, yet the propaganda just increases to suit. That people think Einstein is the zenith and then go listen to a failed keyboard player who is trying to sound like an expert, is just such a sorry sad state for humanity..

    • @Ant_Dawgg
      @Ant_Dawgg 2 месяца назад +15

      @@Bugdenlwtf are you yapping about kid?

    • @DavidCobb-uc4qr
      @DavidCobb-uc4qr 2 месяца назад +2

      We have Elon Musk and most of today’s youth think he is a villain. Musk will be heralded one day 60 years after his death. If we haven’t deceased ourselves through hatred and greed first.

    • @AClaiderman
      @AClaiderman 2 месяца назад +1

      @@Ant_Dawgg Bro. I literally just read this. Like wtf is he saying? Calling out Einstein? I’m about to call the cops on my guy.

    • @AClaiderman
      @AClaiderman 2 месяца назад +1

      @@DavidCobb-uc4qr Yes. I love Elon. Idk what people think, but this dude is about to take us to mars. Give him his flowers.

  • @josephmango4628
    @josephmango4628 2 месяца назад +79

    Einstein was a huge fan of Newton. Newton, one of the most brilliant people in history, once said, "If I have achieved greatness, it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants." The modesty of genius.

    • @rafindeed
      @rafindeed 2 месяца назад +1

      Although i agree with you its a modesty but its the truth. Everyone that wants to push knowledge further knows that they are standing on the shoulders of giants. We can only have Einsten due to the fact that every new discovery is a starting point to next scientist. Imagine if we had to develop all over again

    • @davethompson1687
      @davethompson1687 Месяц назад +1

      Genius demands modesty.

  • @youngfresh9780
    @youngfresh9780 4 месяца назад +513

    Einstein was a rockstar he was so intelligent and could read mathematics and science and understand the universe like we’ve never seen before

    • @rolandcastillo9716
      @rolandcastillo9716 4 месяца назад +6

      They said he saw the world in numbers I wonder if that's true

    • @gregoryrollins59
      @gregoryrollins59 3 месяца назад +4

      Have you heard of the Hiesenburg uncertainty principle? Well, Einstein was not happy with it. He and Neils Bohr argued about it. Einstein even came up with the slit experiment to disprove it.
      Borh had a colleague named Wolfgang Pauli who said of Einstein that he was a detached observer. I think of myself as a detached observer. I don't know about Einstein, but I can live with that. 😊
      Peace through Ahev

    • @youngfresh9780
      @youngfresh9780 3 месяца назад +2

      @@rolandcastillo9716 he definitely seen the world in a way different way then we do that’s for sure

    • @youngfresh9780
      @youngfresh9780 3 месяца назад +1

      @@gregoryrollins59 I’m not completely certain about that but I will definitely look into it thank you 🙏 and yes I do remember the slit experiment and that blows my mind

    • @TheeShastyMcNasty
      @TheeShastyMcNasty 3 месяца назад

      He was a thief ... a poser.... tesla was the real one

  • @ese_JONNYX3
    @ese_JONNYX3 2 месяца назад +549

    One my favorite quotes of his was, "Coincidence is God's way of remaining anonymous." Brilliant, and humble fellow.

    • @SirJohnEd
      @SirJohnEd 2 месяца назад +19

      Yeah, that's not an Einstein quote

    • @CEx-we
      @CEx-we 2 месяца назад +10

      @@SirJohnEd”um actually” ahh

    • @SirJohnEd
      @SirJohnEd 2 месяца назад

      @@CEx-we sorry if using ones brain offends you

    • @skpt516
      @skpt516 2 месяца назад +5

      @@CEx-we Please cite a source of that quote during Einstein's life time.

    • @nannybananers
      @nannybananers 2 месяца назад +5

      My parents gave me a bookmark with an Einstein quote
      " imagination is more important than knowledge "
      That's where it all starts, follow your imagination and the knowledge will be revealed.

  • @mikem9584
    @mikem9584 4 месяца назад +82

    Mathematics is not just 2+2....its mindbogglingly amazing

    • @georgegunnee313
      @georgegunnee313 4 месяца назад +3

      @@mikem9584 actually it is that easy, everything starts somewhere 2+2 always equals 4 that's the beauty of mathematics

    • @peterham6197
      @peterham6197 2 месяца назад +5

      Einstein was actually quite bad at mathematics. His high school maths teacher in Germany told him he would amount to nothing. In Princeton, he would hold out a bunch of loose change on a bus and ask the driver to count out the fare. Einstein was a great (understatement...) theoretical physicist.

    • @olivernielsen2206
      @olivernielsen2206 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@georgegunnee313actually its not that easy, if everything starts somewhere or from something, where did the big bang come from? 2+2 only equals 4 , because of theoretic structures. If you multiply 1 by 1 it is still 1, nothing to concerne about, thats the beauty of physics!

    • @jochenehmen6108
      @jochenehmen6108 2 месяца назад +2

      That's not Math - that is accuracy of measurement - and that should tell you immediately that this is BS.
      Cox is a effing clown.
      7 mm a year from 1916 till today is 108 years, each with 365 days, that times 7 mm - that is just short of 276 m or about 900 feet.
      No one is measuring the distance of stars that accurately.

    • @paull2166
      @paull2166 2 месяца назад

      Einstein and others were tied into un-worldly thoughts. Leonardo DaVinci created many detailed drawings of airplanes and helicopters (among other things), he died in 1519, 500 years ago. 😮

  • @joesimon2018
    @joesimon2018 2 месяца назад +176

    The hard part was getting a guy out there with a ruler.

    • @kevinloomer1858
      @kevinloomer1858 2 месяца назад +38

      The universe is infinitely too vast to be measured with a simple ruler. They used a meter stick.

    • @floofyfurlogdog999
      @floofyfurlogdog999 2 месяца назад +11

      Respectfully the banana is the only way to measure the universe with any precision.

    • @kevinloomer1858
      @kevinloomer1858 2 месяца назад +8

      @@floofyfurlogdog999Ooooh, that’s what people use bananas for??
      I’m not gonna get into it, but I’ve been doing something very different with them, and I’m feeling a little embarrassed right now.

    • @LucidAnomalies_
      @LucidAnomalies_ 2 месяца назад +2

      😂😂😂😂

    • @RichardRodriguez-dc1hk
      @RichardRodriguez-dc1hk 2 месяца назад

      ​@kevinloomer1858 ahh, i see 🫣. You also used it as body wash. How could we be so nieve?! 🤦‍♂️

  • @S-I-T
    @S-I-T 2 месяца назад +149

    Best line from Close Encounters of the Third Kind was. "Einstein was right". "Einstein was probably one of them". Brilliant line.

  • @kybercrow
    @kybercrow 3 месяца назад +243

    Einstein is actually *underrated* by the general public, which sounds absurd to even say.
    He's most well-known for general relativity because that was what fundamentally changed the course of cosmology, but he achieved so much more than that. Fucking brilliant mind.

    • @echalvorson
      @echalvorson 2 месяца назад +2

      If RUclips comments are an accurate measurement of general public, he is rated exactly where he should be
      If you could *read* you’d be very upset right now

    • @AdrianPerez-hk4ym
      @AdrianPerez-hk4ym 2 месяца назад +4

      I was thinking the same thing. He helped us understand our existence. What’s even crazier is how many more people we have now a days that are just as brilliant. It makes me think it’s the reason we have come from apes to mere human beings to what we have achieved. It’s mind blowing to wonder where we will be in 50 years even a hundred ❤

    • @Demention94
      @Demention94 2 месяца назад

      He's known as a genius, and that is what he was. So maybe the word genius is overrated, but I don't think Einstein is underrated. Just my opinion.

    • @kybercrow
      @kybercrow 2 месяца назад

      @@Demention94 Meh, the word genius is overused, and thus, has lost its potency in my view. There's apparently lots of them.
      When people think of Einstein, they most often just think of E=MC²; point being, he accomplished far more than that, much of which the average person isn't even aware.

    • @kybercrow
      @kybercrow 2 месяца назад +1

      @@echalvorson Good thing then that RUclips comments are not an accurate measurement of the general public... It's also amusing that you think I'd be upset by the very reality I obviously wish were the case, hence specifically using the word "underrated."
      If *you* could read-or think for that matter-you might've discerned that before being unnecessarily rude 😀

  • @hanro50
    @hanro50 Месяц назад +4

    What people forgot is that there were natural phenomena in Einstein's time that couldn't be explained. He used his theories to mathematically predict the outcome of some of those phenomena. His theories held, and so it was developed further.
    Einstein and others then used those theories to make predictions. Those predictions turned out to still hold many years after his death when we had the equipment to actually test said predictions.

  • @justdeaf-ry6bn
    @justdeaf-ry6bn 5 месяцев назад +137

    Mind boggling

    • @corysamoila
      @corysamoila 4 месяца назад

      That's the idea.
      Too complicated for you.
      When, it's designed that way

    • @arifsaleem5467
      @arifsaleem5467 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@@corysamoila
      Who designed these two pulsars and for what purpose?
      We know that every designed thing is produced to serve specific needs and purposes.
      Like, shoes and clothes etc are designed to fit the body.
      A tree doesn't exist to serve anyone or any specific purpose, naturally occurring things do not exist to serve any other thing or to fulfill anyone's needs, that's why it's foolish to call them designed.

    • @Super-nz2xq
      @Super-nz2xq 2 месяца назад

      Everything in the universe is designed in a measured and specific way ​@@arifsaleem5467

  • @joevale1562
    @joevale1562 2 месяца назад +18

    Way ahead of his time! He was a gift to humanity

  • @woodyboyd2961
    @woodyboyd2961 2 месяца назад +186

    Love Brian Cox's boy-like enthusiasm and passion for astrophysics. He tackles the wonder and amazement of the things we don't or can't see, while we were enraptured with dinosaurs.

    • @greglesnett7980
      @greglesnett7980 2 месяца назад +4

      I love the enthusiasm he shows about the astonishing truths that are proven by science and and his ability to convey those in a man̈er that we can understand I always feel the joy he feels with that smile. He's my favorite educator I understand exactly what he feels in his epiphany and you feel those smiles. I hope he continues forever.😮❤

    • @derricksteyn860
      @derricksteyn860 2 месяца назад +1

      Lol😂😂😂, okay

  • @Andrew1782
    @Andrew1782 Месяц назад

    Brian Cox is a legend. The man is so well read and presents in such a digestbale manner. Also, if you haven't heard his music, you should.

    • @caro52120
      @caro52120 Месяц назад

      Dumbing down lies for the gullible.

  • @amarverma6770
    @amarverma6770 4 месяца назад +48

    It’s Albert Einstein. Let’s give some respect guys. What do you expect?? One of the best ever.

    • @gerardbonner6464
      @gerardbonner6464 3 месяца назад +2

      No. Einstein is the best ever. The goat

  • @byronsoul1
    @byronsoul1 2 месяца назад +41

    Love how Brian never lost his excitement for his work

    • @にこ-c7l
      @にこ-c7l 2 месяца назад +1

      Science has no formal epistemology or ontology. Newtonian physics does not reflect reality and neither does general relativity good luck trying to reconcile quantum physics and general relativity.

  • @anthonyvickers5941
    @anthonyvickers5941 2 месяца назад +6

    Dr Brian Cox, He's from Chadderton, Oldham,,Manchester . Also a lovely bloke and a legend.

    • @stewzs9269
      @stewzs9269 Месяц назад

      and hes a city fan which makes him even more legendary

  • @travo6805
    @travo6805 22 дня назад +1

    A conversation between two legends

  • @fancydeeldo
    @fancydeeldo 2 месяца назад +1

    you can tell that conan is a smart guy too, he's following along and re-interpreting it correctly to prove he understands.

  • @VivekKumar-rw1ri
    @VivekKumar-rw1ri 3 месяца назад +19

    Nobody can match Einstein
    He was something else .

    • @jochenehmen6108
      @jochenehmen6108 2 месяца назад

      But Cox is a effing clown.
      7 mm a day from 1916 till today is 108 years, each with 365 days, that times 7 mm - that is just short of 276 m or about 900 feet.
      No one is measuring the distance of stars that accurately.

    • @Hymie-j3p
      @Hymie-j3p 2 месяца назад +1

      You don’t know TESLA do you

    • @life-live-
      @life-live- 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@jochenehmen6108 exactly, just blatant scientism, he and many others have become cult like in what they believe is true

    • @MrFeucca
      @MrFeucca 2 месяца назад

      @@life-live-you are just too dumb to comprehend. It is literally just math, and the cool thing is that if you were a little smarter you too could look it up and do the math yourself!!

  • @ernietech-101
    @ernietech-101 5 месяцев назад +49

    Yes, but please Dr. Cox, let everyone know it was radio astrophysicists Dr. Joe Taylor and Dr. Russell Hulse when they were at Arecibo in the early 90's. They both won a Nobel prize for this work.

    • @marksmyth6886
      @marksmyth6886 2 месяца назад +1

      This should have more likes!

  • @yk-id
    @yk-id 2 месяца назад +17

    Predicting sonething thousands or billions light years away with millimeter accuracy is insane even by today standard

    • @TheJon315
      @TheJon315 2 месяца назад +3

      Unbelievable one could say

  • @nickzrenthlei
    @nickzrenthlei Месяц назад

    Brian and his excitement and enthusiasm, with such a soft yet intriguing expressions. So nice to listen to his explanations

  • @everettplummer9725
    @everettplummer9725 2 месяца назад +5

    He begged his fellow Jewish colleague not to create the Mustard Gas for the German military. But he not only created the sulfur based gas, he supervised its dispensing. He thought kissing up would help his fellow Jews. Yet millions were gassed to death. My grandfather was in a trench. He used his trench knife to loosen the soil, and he soaked his hankerchief and buried his face. It was too late to save half of his lungs.

    • @JustinPogue
      @JustinPogue 2 месяца назад

      That inventor, Fritz Habor, kept the world from starving by figuring out how to draw nitrogen into ammonia to create fertilizer. Then, in wartime, the poisonous gases. An extremely proud German Nationalist...and a Jew. Died a very lonely man, uncertain as to why the world turned on him.

    • @jamesdean1283
      @jamesdean1283 27 дней назад +1

      @everettplummer9725
      Moron, did you take your meds today ?
      Your home attendant is not doing a good job.

  • @merfanian
    @merfanian 3 месяца назад +9

    Not sure if we’ll ever see another Einstein, man! The guy was so ahead of his own time, he was the future.

    • @12bladedfpv10
      @12bladedfpv10 2 месяца назад

      unless somebody will clone him 🙈

  • @tomarmstrong3297
    @tomarmstrong3297 4 месяца назад +7

    Why Einstein didn’t win the Nobel Prize for his theory of relativity - prob the most significant theory of modern physics - because it couldn’t be proven till much later. He did win for the photoelectric effect

    • @andersongomez636
      @andersongomez636 2 месяца назад

      The real question isn’t E=MC2 or relativity ! The general relativity is an absolute monster deep insight into nature !

  • @spencerhansen5804
    @spencerhansen5804 2 месяца назад +1

    Had respect for the guy, but now I'm bowing to him. What an incredible accomplishment

  • @ronfender8101
    @ronfender8101 3 месяца назад +7

    That guys brain was absolutely insane off the charts.

    • @jochenehmen6108
      @jochenehmen6108 2 месяца назад +1

      Maybe. Cox is still a effing clown.
      7 mm a day from 1916 till today is 108 years, each with 365 days, that times 7 mm - that is just short of 276 m or about 900 feet.
      No one is measuring the distance of stars that accurately.

    • @nade5557
      @nade5557 2 месяца назад

      ​@jochenehmen6108 apparently, people with 16 years worth of data from 7 radio telescopes around the world are

    • @jochenehmen6108
      @jochenehmen6108 2 месяца назад

      @@nade5557 Apparently, some people will believe anything.

    • @nade5557
      @nade5557 2 месяца назад

      @@jochenehmen6108 apparently, people love talking about stuff they have no clue about

    • @jochenehmen6108
      @jochenehmen6108 2 месяца назад

      @@nade5557 Cox is certainly one of those.
      Perhaps you are too - not sure how to interpret what you said so far - you where careful not to be clear. ;)
      No one "measures" a few hundred feet of **difference** in distance over time between two stars a couple of hundreds or thousands of light years away.

  • @swingingmonk
    @swingingmonk Месяц назад +3

    I heard once that Einstein was asked how does it feel to be the cleverest person on the planet and he replied: I don't know ask Nicola Tesla.

  • @greatape1011
    @greatape1011 2 месяца назад +3

    Einstein was bound by the tech of his day, While Hawking faced limits in a different way. Both brilliant minds, in their own special fight, Pushing the boundaries, reaching for light.

    • @bobbwc7011
      @bobbwc7011 28 дней назад

      @@greatape1011 Hawking was not in Einstein's league, not remotely.

  • @nyc1960
    @nyc1960 3 месяца назад +6

    He's a prophet. Inarguably the one and only science genius above all of others

    • @caro52120
      @caro52120 Месяц назад

      😂 a master mason bullshiter more like. Ever noticed his tranny wife?

  • @blakehill6122
    @blakehill6122 Месяц назад +1

    This is true of almost every early stage prediction of Einstein. We used to think about 75% of the theory of relativity was exactly correct making it the best framework for the scale it described, but not perfect.
    Then we proved some of his other theories pushing it to 80%, then 85% then 90%.
    it’s generally accepted now that even though we can only prove/observe 90% of his theories, 100% of his predictions are correct, we just can’t understand what he meant yet. 🤯
    He achieved this through mastering the art of mathematics THEN using what he called “thought experiments” to self-determine how the universe should act under absurd preconditions. Using things like “if I was traveling the speed of light” or “if I was inside a black hole” then applying his unfathomable knowledge of mathmatics he was able to make more correct predictions about how the universe worked than any other human in history.
    THAT is why you know the name Einstein.

  • @TungstenCarbideTempe
    @TungstenCarbideTempe 4 месяца назад +10

    Something soo huge, so far away, yet they’re able to calculate 7mm movement???

    • @PrabhakaranJeyamohan-h8w
      @PrabhakaranJeyamohan-h8w 2 месяца назад

      7mm per day accumulated over 60 years

    • @umelnyck
      @umelnyck 2 месяца назад +1

      Yes. How?? Obviously bullshit

    • @VPuffy
      @VPuffy 2 месяца назад

      ​@@umelnyckno we have really advanced optical and radiotelescopes. That can detect calculate the interference in the waves they emit to put it simply. There's a lot of complex math that goes into it which will take too long to explain. It's not bs ita science

    • @YouOverYourself
      @YouOverYourself 2 месяца назад

      Do you think the device you used to write your comment is magical? If not then dive little deeper into physics you'll get it someday ​@umelnyck

    • @thelukos
      @thelukos Месяц назад

      @@umelnyck😂

  • @luck9837
    @luck9837 2 месяца назад +17

    I cant wrap my head around how someone can be so smart, like where does it come from

    • @greg6509
      @greg6509 2 месяца назад +5

      The Divine, the Creator dowloading info through a person's higher soul/self. Translates to Intuition and Inspiration. Then, the brilliant scientist crunches the numbers to prove what was given from direct perception.

    • @jeanherrmann7693
      @jeanherrmann7693 2 месяца назад +4

      @@greg6509 Glory to God well said

    • @rafindeed
      @rafindeed 2 месяца назад +4

      Iq+obsession+environment+education+social circle= what you become. It’s like all the right factors at the right time having obsession for the knowledge that is meaningful at that moment

    • @ttghhgg1918
      @ttghhgg1918 2 месяца назад

      ⁠@@rafindeednah there is a thing called gods gift n u can’t deny that n yes all those factors matters but sometimes u can’t define brilliance. There is this Indian singer called Arijit Singh he is the most listened musician on the planet n the highest in Spotify even bigger than drake n when u listen to his music he barely plays any fancy guitar neither does he has the highest vocal range but when he sings it’s just plain lyrics but somehow he makes the song ethereal. He becomes the song and it’s vessel which is impossible to do unless you are favoured by god same as Einstein

    • @John...44...
      @John...44... 2 месяца назад +4

      ​@@greg6509pure drivel. Dont belittle a great scientist by saying god was behind his genius

  • @ValSmith-od6zq
    @ValSmith-od6zq 4 месяца назад +41

    We were not on his frequency, that's why people like him and Tesla could could sit down and rap. ❤❤

    • @gianmartial
      @gianmartial 2 месяца назад +2

      What 😂😂😂

    • @kuloisgay
      @kuloisgay 2 месяца назад +1

      he once said , I am not smarter than the others, I just see things differently.

    • @megajesus_web
      @megajesus_web 2 месяца назад

      ​@@gianmartialSame here😂
      But good that they could could
      And rap

    • @gianmartial
      @gianmartial 2 месяца назад

      @@megajesus_web this guy is nuts 😂
      Talking about freaking frequencies as if there is a tuning fork 😂

    • @german18072
      @german18072 2 месяца назад +2

      Tesla is nowhere near einstein when it come to science. Is like comparing messi with USA team goalkeeper

  • @monke4044
    @monke4044 2 месяца назад +2

    Bro was WAY BEYOND ahead of his time. Bro's a genius born at the wrong age. Had he been born in the 1990's we probably would've actually had sci-fi techs by now

  • @Stonemonkie1
    @Stonemonkie1 2 месяца назад +15

    How do you measure 7mm per day between 2 objects from thousands of light years away?

    • @primary5050
      @primary5050 2 месяца назад

      Maths .

    • @Stonemonkie1
      @Stonemonkie1 2 месяца назад

      @@primary5050
      Brian Cox "...and we do this measurement, and we find out it's true."

    • @tigerstallion
      @tigerstallion 2 месяца назад +1

      to not even mention a margin of error is proof this dude is a storyteller, not a scientist

    • @kino2467
      @kino2467 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@Stonemonkie1 You don't think they possibly did all the measurements with rulers and measuring tapes, do you?

    • @Stonemonkie1
      @Stonemonkie1 2 месяца назад +1

      @@kino2467 why do you think I'm asking? Einstein's maths predicts it happens, Cox says they measured it and the measurement agrees with Einstein, how did they measure it?

  • @ultrableu1
    @ultrableu1 5 месяцев назад +77

    This rock singer knows a fair bit about physics!

    • @iangillis2230
      @iangillis2230 5 месяцев назад +1

      Ian Dury (of the Blockheads)
      "There en't arf been some clever bastards."

    • @relativetruth8889
      @relativetruth8889 4 месяца назад

      ​@@iangillis2230straighten up buddy...

    • @bongofury333
      @bongofury333 4 месяца назад

      Too funny

    • @lonpfrb
      @lonpfrb 2 месяца назад

      ​@iangillis2230 Just Ian as their name was Ian Drury and the Blockheads meaning that they were separate.
      However, your brilliant quote stands.

  • @mdwoods100
    @mdwoods100 4 месяца назад +6

    I'm in awe of people like Einstein. Where do they even begin to start when they're coming up with these ideas?

    • @timmyspov
      @timmyspov 4 месяца назад +1

      The math brings them to a certain point and from there they give a hypothesis based on the numbers its not pure brain power!

    • @skpt516
      @skpt516 3 месяца назад +1

      @@timmyspov Einstein did not start with math to come up with Special Relativity. He was asking fundamental questions about the concept of an absolute frame of reference and that the speed of light was a constant for all reference frames. It wasn't math first.

    • @BlueYoshTV
      @BlueYoshTV 2 месяца назад

      @@skpt516I believe by saying ‘’math” he meant the equations that help support the law of general relativity not just mathematics in general but also how time/space is linked to it

    • @skpt516
      @skpt516 2 месяца назад +1

      @@BlueYoshTV The impression I had is he was saying that Einstein started with the equations when figuring out Relativity. That was not how Einstein did it. If my understanding of what @timmyspov said is wrong then I made a mistake.

  • @pagansgames
    @pagansgames Месяц назад +1

    He also said we would never be able to split the atom, everyone is flawed

  • @daydreamer4078
    @daydreamer4078 3 месяца назад +9

    Brian Cox can be perfect for both science and movies

  • @DrZaheerAbbas08
    @DrZaheerAbbas08 5 месяцев назад +21

    Just to put it more perspectively , whole Interstellar movie is made on Einstein's Special and General theory of Relativity which is already proved but still very hard for general viewers to gulp the meaning of it let alone essence of Entire movie .

  • @bendayho4192
    @bendayho4192 2 месяца назад +10

    Einstein was a genius but his brother Frank was a monster!!!...😅😂🤣

    • @primary5050
      @primary5050 2 месяца назад +2

      You successfully made me go through a Google ride with this . I legit thought that he was some psycho or a serial killer or something as it is with the family of geniuses .

    • @bendayho4192
      @bendayho4192 2 месяца назад +2

      😄 🤣 😂 it is a joke on Frankenstein

    • @NohWon101
      @NohWon101 9 дней назад +1

      Funny😂

  • @bhavik2u1
    @bhavik2u1 2 месяца назад +1

    No, Einstein did not specifically predict a 7 mm per day shrinkage for binary pulsars. Instead, his theory of general relativity predicted that binary systems like pulsars would lose energy through the emission of gravitational waves, causing their orbits to decay over time.
    The 7 mm per day shrinkage was an observational result specific to the Hulse-Taylor binary pulsar (PSR B1913+16), discovered in 1974. Once the system was observed, astronomers used Einstein’s equations to calculate how fast the orbit should shrink due to gravitational wave radiation. The observed orbital decay, which amounted to approximately 7 millimeters per day, matched the predictions made using Einstein’s general relativity.
    In summary, while Einstein predicted the general phenomenon of orbital decay in such systems, the specific 7 mm per day figure was an observational result derived from applying his theory to the binary pulsar system.

  • @S3verance
    @S3verance 2 месяца назад +7

    Einstein thought about things we never even considered thinking about

    • @iamchillydogg
      @iamchillydogg 2 месяца назад +1

      Eh there was previous work he built on.

  • @GuitaristPAX
    @GuitaristPAX Месяц назад +4

    A young college student once stopped Einstein and she asked him a question .. Her question was, "How does it feel to be the smartest man in the whole world?" .. Albert replied, " I don't know you'll have to ask Nikola Tesla." 🙏

    • @bobbwc7011
      @bobbwc7011 28 дней назад

      @@GuitaristPAX Nonsense.

    • @martafiord
      @martafiord 13 дней назад

      She could have said “human” instead of man. Internalized misogyny.

  • @j.a.weishaupt1748
    @j.a.weishaupt1748 4 месяца назад +29

    I have the feeling this Einstein guy was pretty smart

    • @geenethmethmin2487
      @geenethmethmin2487 2 месяца назад +2

      Yeah bro had potential to find what gravity might be. Unfortunate that he died

    • @xardas149
      @xardas149 2 месяца назад

      Some will come around

  • @lanceread7717
    @lanceread7717 Месяц назад

    Einsteins logic and theories were unbelievable for his time. He shaped our future with his mind and showed us there was more to this world and universe than we could have ever fathomed

  • @TravisLP27
    @TravisLP27 4 месяца назад +59

    If you really think about it, the math proved it, Einstein just found the right math.

    • @rickrick5041
      @rickrick5041 3 месяца назад +14

      Oh, that’s all?

    • @skpt516
      @skpt516 3 месяца назад +4

      Einstein completely altered our understanding of gravity, space, time, motion, light. And many of his discoveries were done as thought experiments about the nature of those characteristics. It was more than just finding the right math.

    • @kamlesh8305
      @kamlesh8305 3 месяца назад +1

      So what you’re trying to prove here? Supposedly no one has done any work then? Just ignore any work by saying it’s just science IG or he calculated it, Just math meh.

    • @TravisLP27
      @TravisLP27 3 месяца назад +2

      ​@@kamlesh8305 You must have a very negative mindset to pull that from what I said. Hope you can solve that eventually. All I"m saying is the answers are in the math for anyone to find. You could be the next Einstein. He didn't have a magical brain that no one else has, he just did the work as you say and Found the right math that was already there waiting to be found. Math is the universal language and it holds basically all the secrets of the universe inside it. It's wild. That's what I'm saying.

    • @kamlesh8305
      @kamlesh8305 3 месяца назад

      @@TravisLP27 You are stating the obvious, Everyone knows it’s all lying there. Who ever said it is not? In this particular short the professor was admiring his work, Which was nothing short of impressive. My question to you was what you’re trying to prove by stating the obvious? You’re a math post gard. btw?

  • @vunnnamvarshini7520
    @vunnnamvarshini7520 2 месяца назад +5

    Proof that Theoretical physics is amazing

    • @life-live-
      @life-live- 2 месяца назад

      Guessing scientism, weird cult like lunatics that don't even believe in their own scientific method anymore before deeming something to be unquestionably true

  • @thethinkdifferentman
    @thethinkdifferentman 3 месяца назад +6

    How did they measure 7mm of a star light years away. 😂

    • @skepticli
      @skepticli 2 месяца назад +5

      Very long ruler.

    • @drcowbeef
      @drcowbeef 2 месяца назад

      NASA stole the script from Einstein.

    • @biskitz86913
      @biskitz86913 2 месяца назад +4

      They didn't. Most folks don't get that our entire model of deep space is mathematical theory that unfortunately can never be proven, or at least not in our lifetime. Its still cool in the sense that we have a working model but almost every figure of mass, distance etc for anything outside our solar system could be off by a huge margin and we would/could never know

    • @thethinkdifferentman
      @thethinkdifferentman 2 месяца назад

      @@skepticli 😂

    • @retrotechgames-diyrepair4691
      @retrotechgames-diyrepair4691 Месяц назад

      ​@@biskitz86913Decent troll, but the thumbnail gives you away. Answer: math.

  • @blackbenetavo7715
    @blackbenetavo7715 Месяц назад

    One of my favorite stories about Einstein was how he regarded his cosmological constant as the greatest blunder of his career, but it was later discovered to be an extremely accurate description of dark energy... which simply didn't exist as a scientific concept back then. Dude was so good that his biggest mistake actually just needed science to catch up to reveal it was never a mistake at all.

  • @juliadean2473
    @juliadean2473 4 месяца назад +6

    That's just incredible

  • @majordanger2380
    @majordanger2380 3 месяца назад +4

    Einstein made predictions about the cosmos and time,
    Yet it’s the warmth and tingles of your touch that truly rhyme.

  • @tomkeating5178
    @tomkeating5178 5 месяцев назад +42

    He was an alien

    • @SilvanaBionda-c1o
      @SilvanaBionda-c1o 4 месяца назад

      ❤❤❤❤❤❤😊

    • @saseatanasovski4923
      @saseatanasovski4923 4 месяца назад +1

      "Vampire"

    • @Opa_Winfried
      @Opa_Winfried 4 месяца назад +3

      I think he was German 🤔

    • @Sovrakha
      @Sovrakha 4 месяца назад

      Nah, just someone who cares to think deeply about the universe, and had the patience to play with the math.
      I admire it, my ADHD could never allow me to sit down and think in such brilliant ways 😂

    • @perrxfrescx9231
      @perrxfrescx9231 3 месяца назад

      Some ppl think aliens put data in our dna that can reveal us the mysteries of the universe, bc we can store data in our dna now

  • @Exaggerating_Cat09
    @Exaggerating_Cat09 7 дней назад +1

    To really show how amazing Einstein’s theories are - Newtonian gravity was THE prevailing theory for gravity of the time. But it had flaws. Then Einstein’s theory came and significantly improved upon it to the point where it fixed Mercury’s weird orbit lol. The Standard Model, which came out in like the 60s or so, was supposed to do the same with Einstein’s theory and refine it to be even better and more accurate. But nope. The Standard Model has failed to show anything in regards gravity and how it works. I don’t mean it’s wrong. To be wrong means to be something at least. But the Standard Model has nothing to show as it relates to gravity. But Einstein’s theory still stands. Not only is Einstein still being proven right to this day, but even after his death, his theory stands triumphantly against one of the most successful models of the universe.

  • @wiseman2732
    @wiseman2732 5 месяцев назад +15

    Aliens were whispering Einstein in his sleep!

    • @Astroponicist
      @Astroponicist 5 месяцев назад

      Wrong answer, guess your not Einstein.

    • @mattnewhouse1781
      @mattnewhouse1781 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@AstroponicistNo! Youre wrong!

    • @skpt516
      @skpt516 3 месяца назад

      @@mattnewhouse1781 Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof. What is the proof.

  • @listenering
    @listenering 4 месяца назад +9

    Honestly though, which of us hasn’t made predictions about celestial orbits that were only verified decades later?

    • @bongofury333
      @bongofury333 4 месяца назад +1

      Laughed out loud. Thanks

    • @myplan8166
      @myplan8166 4 месяца назад +1

      Don't know. Still not verified

    • @listenering
      @listenering 4 месяца назад +4

      @@myplan8166 The farther you are ahead of your time, the longer it takes for the world to catch up. I know because the world still thinks I’m wrong about nearly everything.

    • @myplan8166
      @myplan8166 4 месяца назад +1

      @@listenering sounds legit, it feels

    • @sarahcollin8442
      @sarahcollin8442 3 месяца назад +1

      What 😢who?

  • @bjornleifeld4442
    @bjornleifeld4442 5 месяцев назад +5

    How do you know IT is 7mm,'s

    • @chadgrov
      @chadgrov 4 месяца назад +4

      Turns out Astro physicists actually do their job and can calculate such things.

    • @drcowbeef
      @drcowbeef 2 месяца назад

      That’s what the script at nasa studios says it is.

    • @chadgrov
      @chadgrov 2 месяца назад

      @@drcowbeef man it must suck to be you. Embarrassing 🤦🏻

    • @retrotechgames-diyrepair4691
      @retrotechgames-diyrepair4691 Месяц назад

      ​@@drcowbeefah yes NASA... the only space agency according to flat earthers....

  • @merdufer
    @merdufer Месяц назад +1

    Einstein already proved his theory in his time. It works almost all the time. The few times it doesn't work, we do things like invent the idea of the existence of dark matter so everything still holds up.

  • @jgivehimtheoscarheissobril3480
    @jgivehimtheoscarheissobril3480 3 месяца назад +5

    This guy has a permanent smile always on its terrible at funerals

  • @daniellambert7889
    @daniellambert7889 2 месяца назад

    I don’t believe for a second that I’d be able to comprehend his predictions, but would love to see how he made them so long ago without the advances and knowledge we have now

  • @yungizzo1
    @yungizzo1 Месяц назад

    Keanu is amazing in anything he does. All types of brilliance

  • @ST0IC
    @ST0IC Месяц назад +2

    Lol, he could've claimed he was some prophet, and people would've fallen for it 🤣

  • @TRENTINATERx2000
    @TRENTINATERx2000 2 месяца назад

    The beauty of physics is knowing that if you open a door you can explore something no one has seen or understood.

  • @yane499
    @yane499 Месяц назад

    I don't know about other cultures but literally in my culture when we wanna refer to someone as genius we say "einstein" in morocco, that's how brilliant he's seen, he's the proper exemple of what intelligent is considered to be.

  • @princemousey
    @princemousey Месяц назад +2

    I, too, often make predictions that can’t be proven in my lifetime.

    • @chwestonjr
      @chwestonjr Месяц назад

      Haven't we all been there!

  • @fursatke
    @fursatke 2 месяца назад

    Interestingly in Ancient Indian vedic text Puranas, written about 10,000 years ago - these two stars called Arundhati - Vashishtha were given the special place. Even today any newly married couple in southe India, is supposed to go out on their first night, pray and seek blessings for their relationship to be as dedicated and eternal as these two stars!

  • @johansno5019
    @johansno5019 2 месяца назад +1

    Imagine what Einstein could do today with the progress of quantum physics. I believe 3 generations of Einstein would be able to propel humanity into a space civ

  • @MegaGuitarpicker
    @MegaGuitarpicker 28 дней назад +1

    Exactly, how was this measured? 6 mm is quite small to something light years away. Just curious.

  • @expresidentobama
    @expresidentobama 2 месяца назад +1

    He used to get angry when anyone questioned him about controlling time.

  • @Dr.A.J582
    @Dr.A.J582 27 дней назад +1

    I hate math for i dont remember any of it....but i love physics cuz i understand it in theory..😊
    Einstein definitely dint start from scratch....Newtons n other great ones of those times worked alot more making it a way for our great Einstein...i envy their genius....I wish i had their brain...my love for space grew since m a kid but dint realised it enough to get into that field...if at all..i will reborn again....i wish i can be Einstein or Newton or Tesla or Crompton or any astrophysicist!!!

  • @perkushin
    @perkushin Месяц назад

    I could listen to Brian Cox talk about this stuff all day.

  • @adamatch9624
    @adamatch9624 Месяц назад

    I don’t care what anyone says Mr Cox is one if the best scientists, nit only is he incredible lo smart but he’s incredibly good at explains complex science to average people.

    • @vlada
      @vlada 20 дней назад

      Best scientist? 😂 You have no Way of knowing or proving. You mean "the most popular scientist I know".

  • @johanneskepler873
    @johanneskepler873 2 месяца назад

    what amazes me even more are the parts of his predictions he expressly doesn’t like, and yet they are the cornerstones upon which we have built modern technology. being lightyears ahead in some ways leaves you blind to what lies just before your eyes.

  • @Xpressd
    @Xpressd 2 месяца назад

    Keanu's british scientist impression is on point 👏

  • @flame_half
    @flame_half Месяц назад

    My favorite thing about Einstein is how he was sometimes wrong about his own formulas. Inevitably someone would follow his math and realize that his guess was wrong, but his work was correct.

  • @ceerstar851
    @ceerstar851 Месяц назад +1

    7 milimeters a day is giving "when those 2 ppl FINALLY stop being stubborn and become exclusive".

  • @marlinvr8441
    @marlinvr8441 2 месяца назад

    Einstein was truly someone who is born once every 1000 years

  • @LW1Tok
    @LW1Tok 2 месяца назад

    Imagine what Einstein, Tesla, Newton etc...all these amazing minds could do today with all the new knowledge and technology available today.

  • @uclynnels2572
    @uclynnels2572 Месяц назад

    He literally understood creation...that is nuts

  • @Stranger_In_The_Alps
    @Stranger_In_The_Alps 2 месяца назад +1

    Bro focused so much on living longer that he forgot how to live

  • @MohamedMohamed-y2q4k
    @MohamedMohamed-y2q4k Месяц назад

    Ok so those who wondering how much they got closer since 1916 (108 years)
    Till now it's 275.940 mm witch mean 255m => 0.15 miles 😊

  • @DrJameson
    @DrJameson Месяц назад +1

    I have a PhD in neuropharmacology and nothing makes me feel more like a dummy than physics.

  • @jinxysaberk
    @jinxysaberk Месяц назад

    Could you imagine where we’d be with someone like him in his prime. i feel like breakthroughs will happen at the most random times

  • @justinace9518
    @justinace9518 Месяц назад

    What’s even crazier is he probably didn’t even know about those 2 stars but his theory works regardless of what your applying it too

  • @InfectedProject2011
    @InfectedProject2011 2 месяца назад

    Something the size of the sun squeezed down to the size of LA and also spinning around 40 times a second is mind-blowing.

  • @miamitten1123
    @miamitten1123 2 месяца назад +1

    Why do people like him always exist in a bygone era