BREAKING: New Phase of Matter

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  • Опубликовано: 14 июн 2022
  • What are time crystals? How do scientists make one on a quantum computer.
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Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @peterwroberts
    @peterwroberts 2 года назад +2825

    You actually have to deal with quantum tunneling of electrons in the design of traditional computers because of the scale we're at these days 🤯

    • @thewealthand_health
      @thewealthand_health 2 года назад +46

      Duh

    • @unclejuju12
      @unclejuju12 2 года назад +198

      If you want look into "single atom transistors", its definitely a problem that they can hopefully solve lol. What a time to be alive

    • @allan710
      @allan710 2 года назад +49

      I mean... Aren't transistors only possible because quantum tunneling is a thing?

    • @DJNiems
      @DJNiems 2 года назад +128

      @@allan710 no, because they are semi-conductors.

    • @hugofontes5708
      @hugofontes5708 2 года назад +119

      @@allan710 yeah, quantum computers are actually quantumer computers
      Edit for clarity:
      Because regular computers feature usually undesired quantum effects, while actual quantum computers do use quantum phenomena in order to work. That's the joke.

  • @patrickfrawley768
    @patrickfrawley768 Год назад +317

    My son did his doctorate degree in physics studying crystals, studying the effects of radiation and lasers on crystals ( I think ) Unfortunately not long after he got his Doctorate degree he got Cancer and was gone within a year of being diagnosed . He was just 30 year old. All that studying , sometimes there no justice in this world.

    • @catwoman3247
      @catwoman3247 Год назад +30

      Sending my condolences to you. ❤🙏❤🙏

    • @chance_waters
      @chance_waters Год назад +72

      The learning and study wasn't a waste, it was his time spent and his purpose, what a great way to spend an unfairly short time, you must have been really proud of him

    • @shiruka2758
      @shiruka2758 Год назад +18

      sorry for your loss hope youre well

    • @jchill2095
      @jchill2095 Год назад +17

      having just lost my father I whole heartedly understand losing someone to cancer.

    • @siinxx7656
      @siinxx7656 Год назад +33

      With all due respect and my upmost sincere condolences, might I add that it seems that could've been the other way around. It is said that when someone caring, brave and passionate goes down the road of their dreams they bring light to the world. Some people are so great that within archiving their own dreams they inspire others to join the rightful way, which is then they the ones bringing justice in an unjust world.

  • @jerichocruzado
    @jerichocruzado Год назад +128

    If I had a professor like you in college that explained concepts to me like this I would have been far more engaged in physics. Sadly my university was just keeping tenured folk who had the brains and stacked resume but could not teach physics to a wider spectrum of learners

    • @starbattles1
      @starbattles1 Год назад +3

      That's not what the professors are for these days. Best thing you can get from college is the value of research. That's your avenue to learning. Not someone telling you. It's you, finding it, the journey to find it, and the ability you gain to use critical thinking. When you research something, you truly learn it. Not just memorize what someone said.

    • @swadjo1149
      @swadjo1149 Год назад +6

      @@starbattles1 so by that logic there should be no teachers ? Everything should be self taught?

    • @starbattles1
      @starbattles1 Год назад

      @@swadjo1149 All college classes require research papers to graduate. No professor stands up there and gives the answers to memorize and repeat on a test. They give a lecture, then assign a research topic. They are there to assess and grade those research papers. To guide them in their research journey.
      You twist words and topics in your mind and it keeps your IQ very low.
      Are there no teachers in college? Yet ALL classes require research papers.
      At your IQ level you took what I said to mean no teachers. Very narrow minded short sighted, uninformed comment.

    • @noelanthony1204
      @noelanthony1204 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@starbattles1 you can research on your own physics .. yes, professors are to guide students on a pathway that makes sense -- if they can't then why need a professor ? Salaries are big and they are to earn it through guiding their students with knowledge ..

    • @Pre-op8ut
      @Pre-op8ut 3 месяца назад

      ​@@swadjo1149privacy is what you lack yes hmmmm

  • @ihcterra4625
    @ihcterra4625 4 месяца назад +12

    There is a book by Anne McCaffery published in 1982 called Crystal Singer.
    The main character is recruited to be a crystal singer. They cut crystals that have space folding properties. They are used in warp drives and in subspace transmitters.

  • @urbannanni5864
    @urbannanni5864 2 года назад +374

    I'm in my late 60's and my college experience was 50 years ago. Thank you for explaining this in a manner that left me blankly staring only a time or 2. If I'd had someone like you around, I might not have needed to take chemistry three times to get my passing grade.

    • @JiggerzWithAttitude
      @JiggerzWithAttitude 2 года назад

      I don't know why but I bet you're a pretty dope granny.

    • @VEE727
      @VEE727 2 года назад +5

      You went to college when you were 15 or something?

    • @Hello-hello-hello456
      @Hello-hello-hello456 2 года назад +2

      @@VEE727 no, probably 18 or something

    • @skie6282
      @skie6282 2 года назад +8

      @@VEE727 apparently this is a bot comment, theres a few more exactly the same from different accounts.

    • @LadyCynthiana
      @LadyCynthiana 2 года назад +2

      I appreciate your tenacity to stick with chemistry even though it was difficult for you! Too often we are discouraged from doing things we're not immediately good at.

  • @patrickhodson8715
    @patrickhodson8715 2 года назад +2986

    Hey just wanted to say, the style of videos lately where it's like "explain a cool physics concept to someone who doesn't know about it" is a _really_ good idea and it works _really_ well and you should _definitely_ keep doing it! I feel like no one else in physics RUclips really does that. Veritasium explains the thing to the audience directly, and Smarter Every Day condescends (edit: I just mean he brings the content to a layperson’s level) to learn along with the audience (both also work well for them) but you've got a good thing going here with your way of doing things

    • @trevorlybbert3640
      @trevorlybbert3640 2 года назад +10

      Condecends to learn lololol. And I like that channel.

    • @chrisb8154
      @chrisb8154 2 года назад +26

      What does "condescends to learn" mean? I like Smarter Every Day for the same reason I like Physics Girl...they are endlessly curious!

    • @patrickhodson8715
      @patrickhodson8715 2 года назад +48

      @@chrisb8154 while he probably understands more than he initially lets on, he brings it down to an entry level any casual viewer can understand. From there, he learns right along with us, and shares what he’s learning. I meant “condescend” in a positive way

    • @RobertKreegier
      @RobertKreegier 2 года назад +15

      Brady Haran (of Periodic Videos, Computerphile, Numberphile, etc.) makes videos with a similar format.

    • @patrickhodson8715
      @patrickhodson8715 2 года назад +52

      @@Aethenthebored I meant definition 3 from www.dictionary.com/browse/condescend but maybe that meaning is falling out of usage. It must be, because the first two sites I checked didn’t have that meaning. Also it must be, because I obviously didn’t really convey what I meant to lol

  • @OCompton
    @OCompton Год назад +11

    I remember hearing about this but i still got chills when you described some of the actions of time crystals and love your casual simplified explanation of a mind blowing experiment. Thank you

  • @maryreynolds5310
    @maryreynolds5310 Год назад +48

    Get well soon Physics Girl! I’m a new subscriber, and I’m so thrilled to have found you…I love this stuff! I can’t wait to learn even more. My prayers to you I send for sure..Thank you for what you do here, so much more, SO MUCH MORE I want to learn and the way you teach and explain everything, I actually get it! XO

  • @iau
    @iau Год назад +496

    My TL;DW: They used a quantum computer to put some electrons together in a configuration such that they flip together back and forth through time.
    The surprising part is that it doesn't seem to consume any energy and it's stable, so it can be called a state of matter. The electrons somehow "know" their previous state and they all flip together.
    They're called a crystal because it's a repeating structure, but through time instead of space in this case.

    • @justaskin8523
      @justaskin8523 Год назад +24

      I read about that, but I don't think it flipped back and forth "through time". If I recall correctly, both "ends" flipped at the same time without any lag/latency. And no energy consumption either, as you said.

    • @brainretardant
      @brainretardant Год назад +10

      Look up intermediate axis theory

    • @QuantumEffectResidue
      @QuantumEffectResidue Год назад +5

      It's so obvious that the Mandela / Quantum Effect was done using this method. I don't care what anyone says that wants to "argue" with me about it. It won't work; I'm convinced and I will always believe that.

    • @kevinpaap2890
      @kevinpaap2890 Год назад +7

      So it’s more like a ping-pong cycling of arrangements of information that the particles are holding onto, rather than the arrangement of particles of an object.
      Obviously the electrons are changing their arrangements, but this isn’t like a traditional phase you can “hold” is the point i’m getting at.

    • @brainretardant
      @brainretardant Год назад

      @@kevinpaap2890 there are no electrons

  • @alicecuriosityoftenleadsto6288
    @alicecuriosityoftenleadsto6288 Год назад +400

    I really appreciate how she breaks it down without being condescending. Instead she assumes the person is intelligent while also asking the person questions to guage their level of understanding/knowledge of the principles underlying the subject shes describing.
    Well done.
    Also not over-explaining to the point where you get bored listening or lost, thats a talent

    • @liammahan4497
      @liammahan4497 Год назад +6

      Honestly explains why I feel so engaged with the video

    • @amihere383
      @amihere383 Год назад +3

      Exactly. She must have done some training, or is just incredibly talented, to break such complex ideas down so neatly. Einstein said if you can’t explain something to a six year old you don’t understand it yourself.

    • @BluRey100
      @BluRey100 Год назад +1

      SHE IS BEING CONDESCENDING, IT'S JUST THAT SHE HERSELF IS CONVINCING HERSELF SHE HAS FOUND SOMETHING NEW, SHE HAS NOT, "TIME & SPACE" OR THE 4TH & 5TH DIMMENSION HAVE EXISTED SINCE THE BIG BANG. HOW DARE SHE TAKE THIS CREDIT? DID SHE WIN A NOBEL PRIZE? GET REAL, QUARTZ WATCHES HAVE BEEN USING CRYSTALS TO USE THIS ALLEGED "NEW" MATTTER WHICH IS TIME. DUH.

  • @dennismokry258
    @dennismokry258 3 месяца назад +5

    Had a short reposted by one of Diane’s friends pop up on my feed yesterday and now today the algorithm gave me this vid which made me happy. Making this comment and adding a like in hopes it spawns an appearance on someone else’s feed to keep Physics Girl going strong while she recovers from her medical issues. Help me to keep it going in this little way.

  • @_Silly-Dad_
    @_Silly-Dad_ Год назад +54

    Id consider myself an enthusiast of all things tech and science (if not a casual one), but I have to say I owe it to creators like you and your patience and willingness to explain concepts to normies like me!
    Thank you!

    • @Xxstephenx1x
      @Xxstephenx1x 9 месяцев назад

      This 1000000% this. I feel the same way I love learning from creators like this..

  • @justa.american8303
    @justa.american8303 Год назад +334

    Physics was one of my favorite subjects in high school. And that was because my teacher took the same teaching approach as you. He could take a complex issue and break it down to an understandable concept and put all the properties together in a understandable manner.
    You remind me of one of my favorite teachers who became a good friend. Keep inspiring us to think, especially out of the box.

    • @prdprdprdprdprdel
      @prdprdprdprdprdel Год назад +2

      Same.. At first, we had a meh physics teacher and i genuinely thought i just don't like the subject. But all of my teachers after that were super enthusiastic and great at explaining in an easily digestible way and it became one of my favorite subjects all throughout high school and college.. A great teacher makes all the difference

    • @jeromeball859
      @jeromeball859 Год назад +4

      Buhl, Idaho... decades ago.... graduating class: 100... physics students: occasional. Me and one other kid. We sat in the back of chemistry class and worked through a physics curriculum, more or less. The teacher spent his personal time coming up with it, and keeping us going. The administration basically invented a class they didn't really offer and made it work. "Takes a village" kind of thing. We never appreciated it at the time. But it got me in a spin-up state that maintained through college and set the course of my life. Thanks, Charles Humphries.

  • @salamanca1954
    @salamanca1954 2 года назад +309

    Boy, do I love Physics Girl. Taking obscure and highly technical and/or mathematical concepts and rendering them understandable to a general audience is a gift, and the product of a lot of hard work. Respect.

    • @chefgiovanni
      @chefgiovanni Год назад +7

      She wants me to cook for her. I would as long as she talked over wine and appetizers.

    • @phaseshifter3d455
      @phaseshifter3d455 Год назад +1

      I don't know what an integer is.

    • @BuddyLee23
      @BuddyLee23 Год назад +1

      The interviewer seemed surprisingly clueless however. She should have a 5th grader interview her to make it more understandable.

    • @salamanca1954
      @salamanca1954 Год назад +1

      @@BuddyLee23 I think it was her producer, not himself a scientist based on the available evidence.

    • @mikenewtonninja9379
      @mikenewtonninja9379 Год назад

      bruv, I heard your mum gifts her audiences with one on one interaction, and that she works to make things hard. I heard she does this kind of work by the bins in the bin alley between the shops on the main road, at night time. I also heard she likes animals too. and she welcomes cripples and spastics too.

  • @marksmith7997
    @marksmith7997 Год назад +10

    I just want to say that I think it is really cool to see someone who is so excited about the subject as you are. I’m fascinated by physics but mostly I’m fascinated by the level of excitement you convey when talking about it.

  • @aserta
    @aserta Год назад +64

    Going back to this video, i like this format and i think it's one of the cooler out there. Expert talking with a person that's neither completely unawares but not keyed in either. Any explanation is bound to hit solid points with everyone involved with watching the video.

  • @decrepitworld3634
    @decrepitworld3634 Год назад +289

    Physics Girl is always down to earth with her examples and illustrations. This really helps less scientifically exposed audiences relate to what she's trying to explain much better. Well done

    • @ougintoga7195
      @ougintoga7195 Год назад +3

      @Rosetta Stoned I don't really understand what makes this comment pretentious can you explain?

    • @decrepitworld3634
      @decrepitworld3634 Год назад +1

      @Rosetta Stoned - Yup! Love it!

    • @repentandbelieveinjesuschr9495
      @repentandbelieveinjesuschr9495 Год назад

      Repent to Jesus Christ
      “For I am the Lord your God who takes hold of your right hand and says to you, Do not fear; I will help you.”
      ‭‭Isaiah‬ ‭41:13‬ ‭NIV‬‬

    • @FireTurkey
      @FireTurkey Год назад +2

      @@repentandbelieveinjesuschr9495 I just don't get how these bots pick videos.. I mean ignoring that this is a scientific video I honestly don't get why it'd pick this video.

  • @rogerionascimento9080
    @rogerionascimento9080 2 года назад +312

    I'm not versed at all in any of the subjects but I am fascinated by science and having it explained in this manner put a huge smile on my face as I begin to understand how far we've come and where this can go.

    • @winstonsmith11
      @winstonsmith11 2 года назад +6

      I love this comment. Apart from the word "manor". In this instance, you would use "manner" :)

    • @Exaspatial
      @Exaspatial 2 года назад +4

      @@winstonsmith11 🤓

    • @dmz140
      @dmz140 2 года назад

      I love this comment. I agree 100%. And I don’t care which manor she was in when she explained it.. @Winsten Smith.

    • @supermeteorite
      @supermeteorite 2 года назад +1

      Well it’s a fake video with no sources so..

    • @nicnic1190
      @nicnic1190 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/29Tlzf8f1FQ/видео.html

  • @parksnewbornportraiture4989
    @parksnewbornportraiture4989 Год назад +65

    So, I have been a huge fan of yours for a long time. Not only do I love the energy you bring when talking about physics and the approach you use to explain in ways even most laypeople can understand to a degree, but I really respect the way you will acknowledge your own errors and credit those who catch them. You aren’t vain, trying to paint yourself as a know it all. You’re a brilliant and passionate scientist who makes mistakes and embraces them.
    Yours is my favorite YT channel.

  • @ljg6979
    @ljg6979 Год назад +17

    I have discovered a process to make THYME crystals. Currently I am working on Rosemary crystals, and if successful, will move on to Parsley and Sage as well. I anticipate winning the Noble Prize for this complex work that will surely have great benefits for all human kind.

  • @JoshuaGoudreau
    @JoshuaGoudreau 2 года назад +129

    I love how in each of these explains videos Levi is getting a little more literate in science each time, it makes me feel like myself and how anyone can learn this stuff

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 2 года назад

      Conservatives are on a giant Anti-Trans-Campaign right-now.Professor Dave, Planarwalk and other Science-RUclipsrs and Atheist-Channel try to oppose them, but oh wow, Fox-News, Shapiro, everyone is in-it.

  • @tristanneal9552
    @tristanneal9552 Год назад +374

    As a biologist, this makes me think of how peptides spontaneously fold into their tertiary protein structures without energy input, simply because the order of amino acid domains must do so according to their physical properties. I don't know if that's comparable to how the qbits managed to find their way back to the starting position, but it seems to me that time crystals somehow create a sort of schema within their closed system that includes time as one of its physical properties. It also makes me wonder if it would ever be possible to create a time crystal on the scale of a protein, because that would be amazing

    • @amihere383
      @amihere383 Год назад +15

      That is incredible, and so fascinating! I need to know more 😭

    • @StfuFFS
      @StfuFFS Год назад +21

      That's less of spin flipping and more of the weird phenomenon of nature occasionally (and irrationally) tending toward order rather than entropy when entropy is the path of least resistance.

    • @StfuFFS
      @StfuFFS Год назад +6

      But spin up or down are the same magnitude vector but with an opposite direction.

    • @troy510
      @troy510 Год назад +14

      That is an amazing thought. I always wondered what decided or designed what life decides to be or what tells it to be that thing. Would that mean you could possibly create life with a quantum computer? I mean proteins are matter too, That's mind blowing to think about.

    • @troywahl9731
      @troywahl9731 Год назад +34

      I'm a chemist. The spontaneous peptide folding is a result of intramolecular forces that lower the overall energy of the system and as the folding proceeds the peptide loses energy.

  • @ronaldbaits9924
    @ronaldbaits9924 Год назад +163

    Love this channel so much , I’m just a chef that spends his daily train commute thinking about string theory and the Big Bang / multiverse, you really help make physics understandable with the way you deliver the subject! Bravo

    • @Displ4c
      @Displ4c Год назад +6

      Interesting man

    • @bidyo1365
      @bidyo1365 Год назад +1

      wow nice, interesting!🧐

    • @jaysoncowan5763
      @jaysoncowan5763 Год назад

      Big Bang? Didn't we prove that didn't happen yet? I wrote a paper in University that proved the Big Bang likely didn't happen and the big crunch will not happen for sure. I was later proven right and asked the professor to revise my grade since I got a C for being a crack pot and he told me to get stuffed. Just an analysis of superstructures of galaxies it is impossible for the Big Bang to be responsible for them.

    • @claireredfield6676
      @claireredfield6676 Год назад +1

      We think alike.

    • @notsilentfalcon4773
      @notsilentfalcon4773 Год назад +2

      What’s up chef It’s nice to see a fellow servant of the flame

  • @FitnessYogawithSarah
    @FitnessYogawithSarah Год назад +11

    I am not a scientific nor into physics....but I love to collect crystals and learning new things. I really appreciate this video as I was able to understand and follow along. Thank you 😊

  • @riley._.5332
    @riley._.5332 Год назад +357

    I have ADHD, and learning has always been much more engaging and easy for me in a space where conversation is the primary vehicle of information. These videos are absolutely stunning to me, it's such a simple concept, but it works so well to convey that real life psuedo-kinesthetic learning style

    • @Chris-cf2kp
      @Chris-cf2kp Год назад +7

      I agree. I also think that modality is an invaluable, even integral lens to use for observation, learning, and imagination - one that any field of study can benefit from especially because it can lead to questions, connections, and ideas that have not ever surfaced before. Sincerely, from one ADHD brain to another : )

    • @slow-mo_moonbuggy
      @slow-mo_moonbuggy Год назад

      @@Chris-cf2kp Show me one verified scientific hypothesis constructed in the entire history of cosmology, astronomy or astrophysics.

    • @sueelliott4793
      @sueelliott4793 Год назад

      same 😊

    • @SilhSe
      @SilhSe Год назад

      Crystals that brings you ro the 4th dimension.

    • @slow-mo_moonbuggy
      @slow-mo_moonbuggy Год назад +2

      @@SilhSe Can it bring us to Narnia also?

  • @robin111v
    @robin111v 2 года назад +189

    cool video! I have also used the swing analogy a couple times to explain it. I actually do research which builds on time crystals, and we (theoretically) found this phase which is called a time glass! Similar to the time crystal, this phase periodically shows glassy behaviour. We also talked about it with Frank Wilczek, which was super awesome!

    • @vladyslavkorenyak872
      @vladyslavkorenyak872 2 года назад +7

      But glass is amorphous. Would that mean that the change is not between two states but between random states? Have you discovered quantumrand(); ?

    • @robin111v
      @robin111v 2 года назад +25

      @@vladyslavkorenyak872 there is indeed no crystal structure, but what makes it a time material is that it periodically switches from a liquid to a glass phase and back

    • @hugofontes5708
      @hugofontes5708 2 года назад +2

      @@robin111v hang on, is the glass phase consistent with previous states? either way, that is awesome!

    • @jockbw
      @jockbw 2 года назад +8

      @@robin111v why despite appreciating how truly bonkers and cool this is, all i’m thinking is “who’s going to tell them its a memory leak, from a intern a few years ago that ran the “game of life” on one of the quantum adjacent systems and forgot to shut it down hen he left. And now its making time crystals over and above the gliders and other known forms in the game.
      The mind on this side never seems to grow 🤦

    • @robin111v
      @robin111v 2 года назад +11

      @@jockbw well it is not just one experiment, there are many things happening in parallel all over the world ;)

  • @iKarmaPOONS
    @iKarmaPOONS Год назад +3

    Hello! I'm just writing to say thanks for the video but also to emphasize the format of the video works really well for people like me. The conversation works REALLY well. Have a great one! Best wishes!

  • @chris7777
    @chris7777 Год назад +20

    I truly enjoyed your explanation of time crystals. One thing I am curious about, that wasn't touched on, was compensating for quantum drift. It really is rhetorical. Thank you for sharing this!

  • @LookingGlassUniverse
    @LookingGlassUniverse 2 года назад +2000

    This was so interesting and well explained! I love these videos where you just sit down and explain something to someone

    • @nedisawegoyogya
      @nedisawegoyogya 2 года назад +3

      what about the entropy of the system? wouldn't the time crystal increase the photons' entropy from the laser?

    • @djtomleeuwen
      @djtomleeuwen 2 года назад +6

      Love your explanations as well!

    • @revantair8497
      @revantair8497 2 года назад +6

      Probably the best way to explain is, well, interaction. Puns probably intended.

    • @P-G-77
      @P-G-77 2 года назад +4

      Difficult to say "well explain..." considering ALL. ... and difficult to say "New phase of matter...." very difficult at least.

    • @Danuxsy
      @Danuxsy 2 года назад

      me after reading something on wikipedia be like:

  • @MrWorth66
    @MrWorth66 2 года назад +69

    the best part of your videos is how excited you are to talk about each subject, even if im not that interested myself, or know about it already, listening to your enthusiasm is fun and entertaining. I hope you never lose your enthusiasm for learning and educating

  • @werebitch1313
    @werebitch1313 10 месяцев назад +1

    Cool to hear about Frank Wilczek again! 😄 I read "Longing for the Harmonies" when I was a little kid. It made a big impact then. I still go back & re-read it every so many years.

  • @karkussthesupreme7343
    @karkussthesupreme7343 Год назад +13

    Imagine a glass falling off the table and breaking. Now imagine the glass repairing itself.

    • @thealize808
      @thealize808 Год назад +1

      No

    • @Jeff-zs2pq
      @Jeff-zs2pq 3 месяца назад

      The time crystal moving a few seconds back in time would look like a violation of the second law of thermodynamics because the glass would be "repaired" . But then it would oscillate forward in time a few seconds later and it would be broken.

  • @wybewestra7050
    @wybewestra7050 2 года назад +58

    4:13 Interestingly, while neutrons don't have a net charge, they _do_ turn out to have a magnetic moment, and are affected by magnetic fields (but only a really small bit). As far as I understand it, this is because it's quarks (one up and two down) individually have charges. And because the quarks aren't all exactly in the same "location", the charge isn't exactly 0 everywhere.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutron_magnetic_moment

  • @danielkunigan102
    @danielkunigan102 Год назад +265

    Your editor deserves an award for making me laugh repeatedly in an educational video, and for making you explain every concept a reasonable person would need explained.

    • @brianhenson6141
      @brianhenson6141 Год назад +1

      Ahh yes!, Now if I could somehow figure out how to use those time crystal's go back in time just to teach my younger self what mistakes not to make and teach myself everything I've learnt about real estate and investing into Apple before the iphone came out and to teach myself to buy up All the cheap bitcoin I could get my hands on!, I would be one very rich man by now!..... Would've could've should've, LOL!

    • @nathanallen9068
      @nathanallen9068 Год назад +5

      Bold of you to assume we are reasonable people for wanting to learn about time crystals

  • @dorkavenger42
    @dorkavenger42 Год назад +3

    I appreciate that she keeps the corrections in as opposed to completely editing them out. These concepts are difficult and to show that is really important. 12:08

  • @max410bery
    @max410bery Год назад +2

    I have just got to say that this video that I have watched 6 months ago has started my journey into going back to school for physics. Also to go back to school for astronomy and hopefully, eventually, astrophysics. I have ended up with the drive of learning more just because I have watched this singular video. 🔭🖤

  • @StarTalk
    @StarTalk 2 года назад +687

    Loved this video. Great job!

  • @mstreich
    @mstreich 2 года назад +94

    Thank you, Editor, for being many of us in this conversation…

    • @notyrpapa
      @notyrpapa 2 года назад +4

      100% I wonder what their job description looks like.

    • @suzannestrickland1586
      @suzannestrickland1586 2 года назад

      Yes! Levi does so well representing us

    • @genghisgalahad8465
      @genghisgalahad8465 2 года назад +2

      Thank you too for reflecting and sharing our thoughts about the excellent relatable editor! I was just gonna say!

  • @fiainphoenix
    @fiainphoenix Год назад

    Well, I have just discovered your channel and I am obsessed and feel like I am learning about gravity or looking through a telescope for the first time as a kid again. Every video has so much easily digestible information. Truly enlightening, massively interesting, and often mind-blowing!

  • @christopherbillups7562
    @christopherbillups7562 4 месяца назад +8

    I hope she recovers. There are so many new discoveries for her to discover.

  • @LemonArsonist
    @LemonArsonist 2 года назад +55

    I now need to read up on this a lot more. The main thing that's getting to me is that they break time-translational symmetry. We know thanks to Noether's theorem that conservation of energy isn't a fundamental law, but an emergent property of time translational symmetry. So when it's broken, energy conservation should also be broken. I have to assume this breaking of energy conservation is highly situational and minor though, like how conservation of momentum is broken within regular crystals but only in the form of phenomena like Umklapp scattering, as crystals break spatial-transitional symmetry, but that doesn't mean we can break the conservation of momentum whenever we like. But still, I am so interested to know to what extent conservation of energy can be broken in time crystals, even if it's small.

    • @pannegoleyn9734
      @pannegoleyn9734 2 года назад +8

      Thank you! I was just coming into the comments to ask what the implications of the symmetry-breaking were, from Noether's Theorem.

    • @superhipposock
      @superhipposock 2 года назад +10

      Local symmetry breaking vs global symmetry breaking. - fields during local symmetry breaking are conserved by the appearance of goldstone modes/bosons, i.e. in the spatial translational setting that's phonons. Are we actually getting some kind of goldstone mode/boson from time-crystals? Are the associated long-wavelength excitations measurable? *I haven't delved into time-crystals yet, but these are the big questions that for sure would be in the back of my mind.

    • @thedagit
      @thedagit 2 года назад +2

      There is a video by youtuber science asylum where he says that the expansion of the universe breaks conversation of energy. His reasoning is that the red shift we see in the CMB is caused by the expansion of the universe. That energy loss that caused the light to red shift is just gone now. But I don't know if this counts as breaking time-translation symmetry because in principle that light could travel through contracting space and blue shift.

    • @theresalwaysanotherway3996
      @theresalwaysanotherway3996 2 года назад +11

      @@thedagit it's not the loss of energy, but the loss of energy density. We have the same amount, just in a larger system.

    • @superhipposock
      @superhipposock 2 года назад +1

      @@theresalwaysanotherway3996 this is correct. An equivalent discussion is around non-Hermitian sub-system imbedded inside a Hermitian system. Everything is relative as it turns out, but I think most physicists believe/agree that the universe must be manifestly Hermitian.

  • @joryshelton
    @joryshelton 2 года назад +40

    This reminds me very much of the novel '2001: A Space Odyssey'; the monolith was described as having sides with a ratio of 1x4x9, the squares of 1, 2, and 3, and that humans were naive to believe that that ratio ended with just the first three dimensions.

    • @JohnJ469
      @JohnJ469 Год назад +5

      I always think of Heinlein. If there are three spatial dimensions, why would we conclude there's only one time dimension?

    • @MarioMonte13
      @MarioMonte13 Год назад +1

      @@JohnJ469 interesting thought that I have no idea how to comprehend.

    • @JohnJ469
      @JohnJ469 Год назад

      @@MarioMonte13 Me either. He used the idea in "The Number of the Beast". If there were 3 time dimensions and you could move to different universes by swapping them around, then the number of possible Universes becomes 6 to the 6th to the 6th.
      But also, when you think about it, why should there only be one time dimension?

  • @corey396
    @corey396 Год назад +5

    Can you do a video on how certain minerals such as galena are influenced by electromagnetic fields?
    I have a theory that EM fields applied in specific settings to reactive minerals may be able to shift the polarity of the bonds into a metaphysical ‘in-between’ state in which the bonds rearrange to an alternate balance state(same molecules with secondary structure). If the EM settings are applied in a vibrational manner you could “sift” the atoms causing constant rearrangement and rotation, and in that state a stable physical object should be able to pass through the affected metal. In short, allowing one to pass through a seemingly impassible metal wall when the proper EM field is applied.

  • @elvenatheart982
    @elvenatheart982 Год назад +8

    Did not understand much but I stayed till the end because she is so passionate about it. Keep up tge good work

    • @lexwill718
      @lexwill718 Год назад

      hHAHAHAHA

    • @ItsOnF1re
      @ItsOnF1re Год назад

      You don't need to understand it to know about it

  • @ronbuckner8179
    @ronbuckner8179 Год назад +114

    The Time crystal sensed the energy and then flipped when the pulse from the laser cycled. Not using the energy but observing the change via the time between the pulse. Put that into a mechanical devise and it could replace relay switching, or diode switching and change the energy requirements for just about every mechanical devise we build. This is HUGE! I had to listen to this 4 times to wrap my head around this. Time is part of matter. I'll bet sound is too. Harmonics is just energy frequency and the time between the waves. I love this stuff.

    • @JakeRoy96
      @JakeRoy96 Год назад +19

      We need more people that can understand this on an engineering level

    • @jackodd8284
      @jackodd8284 Год назад +4

      It's like the old saying" How many angels can dance on the head of a pin?" As it turns out. This many. We have the maximum level of angels right here. That is to say, the math is so perfect we can now slide on the moment. The Tick to the universes tock. Maximum lever and fulcrum.

    • @astonesthrow
      @astonesthrow Год назад +2

      Ask Tesla. Or the Bible. Genesis 1. 'God said' has more packed into it than you realize.

    • @Jayson_Tatum
      @Jayson_Tatum Год назад +9

      We already know that sound is a state of matter. Or rather, the displacement and reordering of matter, and the inherent effects of it. I.e. acoustics, wavelengths, etc.

    • @slow-mo_moonbuggy
      @slow-mo_moonbuggy Год назад

      It's Kabbalahistic psudoscience. This girl is pure nonsense.

  • @boomermatic6035
    @boomermatic6035 2 года назад +41

    Having taken a class in quantum computing, I really enjoyed the enthusiasm that Dianna showed for a really complex subject, I wish my professor had some of that, I think I would have enjoyed the class more.

  • @lukeaskew9242
    @lukeaskew9242 3 месяца назад +2

    Hey physics girl. I hope your doing better from COVID.. I love your videos and then to stop but not at the risk of your health. Lots of ❤ from Luke in Australia.

  • @tinagallant6315
    @tinagallant6315 4 месяца назад

    Get well soon Diana❣️❣️❣️
    Thank you so much for your upbeat personality while schooling us w a smile! I hope to see it again real soon 🥰

  • @CartoonKidOLLY
    @CartoonKidOLLY 2 года назад +24

    I love how enthusiastic you are when you talk, it really engages the viewer. This blew my mind! I've always loved your videos!

  • @VCNickels
    @VCNickels 2 года назад +202

    In High School in the 80s I had a thing for Perpetual Motion. I knew all the claims were bunk but I always thought it was a neat idea. I ended up taking a Physics class with a guy that also taught Physics at the local University.
    Randomly, he brought up Perpetual Motion and all the hooey in one of the lectures and my brain just clicked on Time. So I raised my hand and said well, what about time?
    The next 20 minutes was me being dressed down so badly I dropped the glass, and subsequently left High School.
    So, this is some vindication, I guess. Eat my Shorts snarky High School Professor.

    • @rhmayer1
      @rhmayer1 Год назад +77

      What a shame the teacher didn't use your natural curiosity as a spring-board, and leverage that into further inspiration for you and your classmates. Even if there were things "worthy" of slamming down, a good teacher will not "dress down" a student and show off his/her expertise, but recognize it as an opportunity to inspire with a good explanation.

    • @jamesstuartbrice420
      @jamesstuartbrice420 Год назад +9

      Probably the motion of objects in space, which is almost a vacuum and has no resistance to slow the motion of a spinning object. That could be perpetual motion. Just guessing. In the atmosphere, there is air pressure to slow down movement. Or the movement of electrons around a mucleus seems to be perpetual motion with no end.

    • @shrimpkins
      @shrimpkins Год назад +7

      Or maybe the self-organizing universe? Because, as she mentions in the video, entropy should not allow a self starting explosion like the big bang, or the increasingly orderly assembly of structured matter that followed. As physicists say, "Allow us one miracle and we'll explain the rest." That one miracle kind of overshadows all the other supposed limitations of physical laws as we understand them; so perhaps your old professor was mistaken.

    • @nindoninshu
      @nindoninshu Год назад +5

      @@jamesstuartbrice420 it still won't be perpetual because just like how our planets spin they're actually slowing down, ever so little by little, due to other things pulling on it and it's even more of a problem to cause something to spin without gravity interfering with the spinning

    • @nindoninshu
      @nindoninshu Год назад +2

      @@jamesstuartbrice420 keep thinking though

  • @swirlcrop
    @swirlcrop Год назад

    Thanks for a video that makes me wonder about things again. Great job.

  • @oceangrownkae
    @oceangrownkae Год назад

    Super excited for your future Physics Girl. I’m ‘hear’ for it!!!

  • @psiphisapiens
    @psiphisapiens Год назад +110

    The title of the video made me sceptical, having taken interest in this subject in 2015. But then I saw you posted it, and I love your content and collaborations. I was right to trust you, this is absolutely amazing. What a brilliant format. This is superb, from the explanation till the post-production corrections…. Just brilliantly done, thank you.

    • @iam1894
      @iam1894 Год назад +1

      Nothing like a little bit of bias-confirmation lol

  • @jimmyyu2184
    @jimmyyu2184 2 года назад +114

    I honestly rate R. Feynman as one of the top genius of our time, the book "Genius" was an absolute joy to read. Loved this episode, I am not fortunately enough to learn math beyond the basic calculus level. Abstract Algebra and Partial Diff Equ just went (waaaaaaaaay) over my head.
    Otherwise I would have taken a coupla more physics classes besides the required 101. Keep up the good work, I'm learning so much from you and the channel.

    • @aserta
      @aserta Год назад

      You don't really need perfect math to understand complex things tho.
      I mean, think about it: A French guy and an Japanese guy walk in to a bar. Do you think they can't communicate just because the two languages differ?
      If math is a language, and this higher math is saying something you don't understand... then what you need to do to understand it is to change your frame of reference. Don't focus on the "words" focus on the odd movements of the Japanese guy's hands. You'll eventually get that he's just trying to share a drink.

  • @richh.1010
    @richh.1010 8 месяцев назад +4

    Get well. I'll continue to watch and re-watch your older videos and hope you'll be making new ones soon. Blessings to you.

  • @saiganeshmanda4904
    @saiganeshmanda4904 2 года назад +70

    Imagine like, going on to explain something and, en route, encountering many other things that need to be be explained first. So, we branch out to those prerequisite things as they pile up more and more and we find ourselves branching out more...
    Anyway, really cool to see a first experimental observation coming out just after around ten years of theoretical understanding.
    Also, some links to the articles or any research papers is much appreciated. Thank you!

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 Год назад

      I LOVE SCIENCE, so i wanna ask if you want Recommendations, but asking that repeatedly (to reach more people) is of course automatically risking that i seem like a robot, which makes people decline. A Risk, a Risk.

  • @qqq1701
    @qqq1701 2 года назад +39

    This is the kind of stuff I wanted to be involved in when I was a kid. I love hearing about the subatomic. Forget when you know from living at our size, you throw out the rule book when you shrink down. The more things we figure out the more it sounds to me like this is a simulation and we are finding the software/hardware we are running on.

    • @autohmae
      @autohmae 2 года назад +8

      regardless if it's a simulation or not, which a debate I'm gonna skip for now, we are discovering more of how our universe works which is really exciting.

    • @e.s.r5809
      @e.s.r5809 2 года назад +5

      It's not too late! The maths of quantum mechanics is less daunting than it looks, and you can get there starting with classical models.
      I collected a lot of resources for my electronics degree, would you be interested in them? What sort of level are you at? (I was a high school dropout who didn't take any maths, physics or chemistry, then started uni in my 30s... so I had to catch up on the fly with stuff the kids learned at 16. 😵 Still-- I've got loads of links!)

    • @numerum_bestia
      @numerum_bestia 2 года назад +1

      I think the simulation theory is interesting. I’ve definitely see some stuff while I’ve been tripping that would back it up if I believed in it.
      I think the universe is just chaos and chaos finds order eventually through trial and error. It begins at the subatomic level and spirals outwards. Maybe that’s just the programming learning as it goes. I don’t think anybody will really ever know.

    • @alienassasin1234
      @alienassasin1234 2 года назад +1

      There's exciting physics experiments in the works with the intention of adding credence to the idea of our universe being a "simulation". I think the word simulation give people the wrong idea at times (i.e., people think we're being simulated by aliens or advanced human or something which I don't believe to be the case), but quantum physics and experiments like the double slit have lent validity to simulation theory for so long. Slowly the physics community will have no option but to start embracing the idea as all signs point to it being true.

    • @qqq1701
      @qqq1701 2 года назад +1

      @@alienassasin1234 The double slit experiment is great. WTF is going on?

  • @jeffreyogden2647
    @jeffreyogden2647 Год назад +3

    Thanks! You were able to simplify it enough that I could understand and show my friends and family thank you so much. I know it's not a big donation but I really appreciate I wish I could afford more thank you

  • @kristianhiorth9236
    @kristianhiorth9236 2 года назад +13

    I love how your wrongs and explaining why its wrong got me to understand it way better then just listening to the explanation. Great work!

  • @sodsofbeachesmetaldetectin7208
    @sodsofbeachesmetaldetectin7208 Год назад +13

    Hi, I have seen a couple of your vids in the past year and have really enjoyed them. This vid on time crystals had me so fixated my mind was blown. You now have a new subscriber. Very fun to watch including your crew. Keep up the excellent work. 👏

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 Год назад

      I LOVE SCIENCE, so i wanna ask if you want Recommendations, but asking that repeatedly (to reach more people) is of course automatically risking that i seem like a robot, which makes people decline.

  • @josuemartinez2660
    @josuemartinez2660 Год назад

    love how she explains and her enthusiasm.

  • @garygray420
    @garygray420 Год назад +2

    Whoa !!! this one just broke my brain. I think i may have lost a few thousand neurons just trying to keep up with the concepts.I had to view the vid twice. But i got the purpose cause you did a wonderful job. I'm gonna pass this one around to several friends just to melt their minds. Creating another state of matter?!! S0O0ooo co0l . Thank You, Dianna. 🙃

  • @randymarsh8936
    @randymarsh8936 Год назад +26

    I really like how you explain things to your editor in your videos, it makes it feel more real and unscripted. Despite the "unscripted" feel you are very good at making complete sense even when what you explain sometimes doesn't.
    You're the best (:

  • @fb150185
    @fb150185 2 года назад +10

    I'll never tired of saying it: I LOVE your videos. I find all so interesting but complicated and you manage to explain in a way that I can follow and be engaged. This just sounds so incredible.

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 2 года назад

      Conservatives are on a giant Anti-Trans-Campaign right-now.Professor Dave, Planarwalk and other Science-RUclipsrs and Atheist-Channel try to oppose them, but oh wow, Fox-News, Shapiro, everyone is in-it.

  • @keznebula333
    @keznebula333 Год назад

    I'm so glad you're feeling better! Thanks for this great video.

  • @artm6723
    @artm6723 4 месяца назад +3

    I absolutely love her enthusiasm! The day she comes back will be awesome. But if she can’t then hopefully she is able to at least get healthy. Wishing you the best!

    • @rlewis1946
      @rlewis1946 3 месяца назад +2

      Precisely my thoughts!
      Thank you.
      Thinking of you daily, Diana!
      RL

  • @Knapweed
    @Knapweed Год назад +37

    I've never heard a more articulate delivery of a complex scientific phenomenon than this video. Her explanation of the property known as 'Spin' was brilliant and it's the first time I think I've actually grasped it. I've subscribed in the hope I can find clear explanations for some of the other concepts I've been struggling with. Good job!

    • @Chaaabrah90
      @Chaaabrah90 Год назад

      Read Stephen Hawking. A brief history of time.
      “Spin” is a property of quarks which give rise the forces between matter.

    • @homosexualitymydearwatson4109
      @homosexualitymydearwatson4109 Год назад +3

      It’s kind of like orbitals around an atom. We really don’t have words to truly visualize what’s happening in physics.

    • @Durzo1259
      @Durzo1259 Год назад

      Any chance you could find it in our heart to explain here what spin is? I wish I understood it after watching this but all I got was "so it's not actually spinning, but it's this inherent property."

    • @slow-mo_moonbuggy
      @slow-mo_moonbuggy Год назад

      Show me one verified scientific hypothesis constructed in the entire history of cosmology, astronomy or astrophysics. There isn't one. That's because it's not science.

    • @Knapweed
      @Knapweed Год назад

      @@slow-mo_moonbuggy Clocks run slower at the bottom of a mountain than they do at the top. The allowance GPS satellites have to make for the time difference between their orbit and the ground. Gravity attracting photons that have no mass.

  • @lyletaylor3728
    @lyletaylor3728 2 года назад +92

    I love your enthusiasm as you discuss physics. It makes it much more fun to listen to. I also like that your editor can poke fun at you as he edits the videos. Makes it even more fun to watch. :)

    • @serversurfer6169
      @serversurfer6169 2 года назад +4

      Dianna: "Wait, he does what?"

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 2 года назад +3

      @@serversurfer6169 Levi gets to poke fun at Dianna, and Dianna gets to force him to pay attention to a cool new physics concept. That's their deal.

    • @JROD082384
      @JROD082384 2 года назад

      It certainly doesn’t come from HER sense of humor…

    • @fluentpiffle
      @fluentpiffle 2 года назад +2

      We are aspects OF existence, therefore we can learn something valuable about ourselves..
      spaceandmotion

    • @Skynet_the_AI
      @Skynet_the_AI 2 года назад

      Yeah . . . . I k n o w .

  • @Mix-up8yw
    @Mix-up8yw Год назад

    I definitely subbed I love how you explain things

  • @jensen5668
    @jensen5668 Год назад +1

    Clearly I'm at the very least intrigued enough to learn some new vocabulary and then try this video again! You did your best with the laymen terms and phrases, I surely wouldn't have made it without em thx!

  • @prdprdprdprdprdel
    @prdprdprdprdprdel Год назад +53

    Usually, i feel like i learned something after watching one of these videos.. This time, the concepts were so far out of my pool of knowledge i had no idea what was happening most of the time.. But it was still a super fun video. Great job!

  • @cyzure3385
    @cyzure3385 2 года назад +3

    I love this vid not only because it’s super interesting but also because I’m a physics undergrad who wants to go into quantum computing after grad school and whenever I try to explain what a qubit/quantum computer is to someone who doesn’t know much physics, I give the same explanation as physics girl did almost word for word- I got a both a great vid to watch and validation that I’m explaining my fave topic well :)

  • @deepthinking8100
    @deepthinking8100 Год назад +1

    I could listen to you talk all day! 😁

  • @gracea2809
    @gracea2809 4 месяца назад

    I pray and hope you fully recover soon. ❤Your videos are so intriguing, such a gift, and so worth it to just learn and understand. Thank you for always sharing your enthusiasm and knowledge with us about physics

  • @gmailaaaa
    @gmailaaaa 2 года назад +10

    That's why subscribed to your channel; so that I never miss updates like these.
    You have given me something to indulge myself in. Thanks!!

  • @spiritrunner8351
    @spiritrunner8351 Год назад +136

    To me, if I am even - remotely - interpreting this right, this sounds like the first steps to a quantum-state memory storage that could be used to match quantum computing. Locking a piece of information (a set of quantum states) in time for later release/access.
    ...but then I am much more philosopher than I am physicist/mathematician. And as we all know, if Scientists dazzle people with their brilliance, Philosophers baffle those same people with Bulls**t.

    • @InuranusBrokoff
      @InuranusBrokoff Год назад +3

      🏆

    • @kepler-444f3
      @kepler-444f3 Год назад +1

      the annoying part would be as mentions trying to return the system to a null-state, it would require a constant reading system to check that it "flipped" back to a null-state.

    • @melinaathena
      @melinaathena Год назад +4

      Not just locking in on a piece of history but we will be able to interact with our parallel counterparts that made different decisions then us.

    • @kepler-444f3
      @kepler-444f3 Год назад +3

      @@melinaathena how did you dervive that?

    • @melinaathena
      @melinaathena Год назад +18

      @@kepler-444f3 I keep replying to this and my comments keep getting deleted because I posted a few scientific articles and my comments get removed. So basically to answer your question, an atom has a twin and one twin remains in place or a set time while it’s counterpart can go in the past or future and at sometime they meet up and from there they can exchange information. This is according to what Einstein had said. However, this is not entirely true that an atom has a twin but it is not the best way to describe it. It is known as the atom paradox. In reality, the atom depending on how you look at it wavelength which is one color or spectrum at a time you can identify where it is at a certain location. However if you look at at at a different part of the same wavelength it can be somewhere else at the same time you looked at it with the other frequency. Basically at Stanford, they did this and identified the same atom in two different locations at the same time. They determined that an atom can have many superpositions at the same time and be everywhere at the same time. This is called quantum superposition. So if one atom can be in two places at once it maybe possible one day to identify all of the frequencies and determine the past, present, and future of an atom and this can be used to see parallel universes as well as we will be able to see all of the possibilities of what the atom can do based on looking at its wave frequency and a quantum computer maybe able to determine and map the possibilities for this. So in that regard we may be able to interact with our parallel self’s one day.

  • @Aussie_Aaron
    @Aussie_Aaron Год назад

    Its Always Amazing Seeing You Get So Excited About Physics 😁Keep Doing What You Do .

    • @TheNaNaChMan
      @TheNaNaChMan Год назад

      Yes i agree. I hope she get well sone 🖖

  • @breaux2806
    @breaux2806 4 месяца назад

    This popped up on my timeline and I was so excited because I thought it was a new video, for a moment I thought she was feeling better.
    I never thought I would be so invested in the wellbeing of a person on youtube. We're all rooting for you Dianna, hope your days are getting easier

  • @PrometheusZandski
    @PrometheusZandski 2 года назад +8

    You have now created the perfect formula for a physics video. I've seen your other video outside where you explain expansion to your producer, but this one is much better. You describe every difficult to understand concept in easy to understand words. You then build up to the ultimate concept that you want to convey. Along the way, questions are asked and comments are made. It was just pure genius. Thank you.

  • @joelramos9984
    @joelramos9984 2 года назад +34

    I love to see your videos and learn from you.
    Thank you physics girl 🙏

  • @davemoore801
    @davemoore801 Год назад +2

    That was freakin' informative! Thank you!

  • @neekos3084
    @neekos3084 Год назад

    Loved the back and forth. Great episode

  • @InspectahPatio
    @InspectahPatio 2 года назад +9

    "Quantum computer: Are you feeling sick
    Regular Computer: No, I'm just a bit off."
    Lol!

  • @choda42
    @choda42 Год назад +13

    Very cool. I love how you keep the mistakes and corrections in the video and give a shout out to the the people that caught it. SCIENCE!!

    • @belladog2752
      @belladog2752 Год назад +1

      That is what true science is!!!! I hope every child could watch these videos! Please parents share with your children and push schools to show these!!!

  • @gelderlandproduction
    @gelderlandproduction Год назад

    so inspiring to me, my daughter and her 3 children. Thank you for all that you do.

  • @adliberate
    @adliberate Год назад

    You did a great edit on this. So many chop cuts to make things succinct, I think you are brilliant. Top quote, about Quantum computers
    'That's enough. They're not user friendly'
    Laugh my socks off.

    • @TheNaNaChMan
      @TheNaNaChMan Год назад

      Same 🤣🤣🙏🖖. Wish her well

  • @llamafromspace
    @llamafromspace Год назад +47

    That's so cool. Gosh I really need channels like this to break it down for me though. Well done. It must be very hard to turn such complex things into things abstract enough for laymen to follow but accurate enough that we don't all go around confidently saying Griaffes are horses. A really balancing challenge.

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 Год назад

      I LOVE SCIENCE, so i wanna ask if you want Recommendations, but asking that repeatedly (to reach more people) is of course automatically risking that i seem like a robot, which makes people decline.

  • @douglasboyle6544
    @douglasboyle6544 2 года назад +8

    OK, that was a fantastic explanation of something I was having a very difficult time getting my head around previously. Thank you!
    (also your PJs are the bomb!)

  • @pixcod
    @pixcod Год назад

    I was watching this as I found the topic interesting. My 8 year old daughter was down here and said she recognized the voice, came over and said she's watched your videos before, something about infrared light or something, that's cool!

  • @punboleh7081
    @punboleh7081 Год назад

    I had read about time crystals a few times, but never understood what they're about. Now it seems obvious. Great explanation :)

  • @oiausdlkasuldhflaksjdhoiausydo
    @oiausdlkasuldhflaksjdhoiausydo 2 года назад +9

    This is a great explanation!! Do more of these easy going videos of you talking to the camera. They’re great!

  • @guruofeverything6379
    @guruofeverything6379 2 года назад +115

    This is why I love physics, new theories are found everyday and there is so much to explore!

    • @op4000exe
      @op4000exe 2 года назад +4

      The more we know, the more we know that we don't know. I love that statement, and it's very apt.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L 2 года назад

      @@tomkudleq it’s an illuminati conspiracy

  • @colosousaurs
    @colosousaurs Год назад

    You made a complex theory easy to understand thank you

  • @johnkruk6929
    @johnkruk6929 5 месяцев назад

    This is crazy stuff brilliant presentation on “Time Crystals” loved your narrative .

  • @Omnifarious0
    @Omnifarious0 2 года назад +145

    These conversation style videos are a really interesting approach that kind of reminds me of Numberphile. I haven't really seen it taken in most places. I kind of like it.
    The biggest defining feature of a quantum computer isn't the way the states of the individual qubits work. It's the fact that the different quibits can be entangled so the state of the computer as a whole can be sort of 'confined' to a solution by manipulating the qubits very carefully so as to entangle them in just the right way, and not disturb the entangled state once you've created it.

    • @aliens109
      @aliens109 2 года назад +2

      Look up Fact Fiend, great channel, solely based off of one friend telling another friend about such and such trivia

    • @alesolasz6956
      @alesolasz6956 2 года назад +1

      Another defining feature of a quantum computer is that as Diana mentioned "ones" and "zeros", these are the "Yes" or "No" states of the information on the regular computer, but on quantum computer one state can be both "one" and "zero"...

    • @Omnifarious0
      @Omnifarious0 2 года назад +2

      @@alesolasz6956 - As I understand it, that's not a great way of thinking about it. It's more accurate to think of the state as being a point on a sphere. It's just that when you read it, you only get a one (north pole of the sphere) or a zero (south pole of the sphere) out.

    • @kerryblackburn7850
      @kerryblackburn7850 2 года назад

      Agreed, this style conversation was superb. I will retain this info better due to its delivery

    • @shoujahatsumetsu
      @shoujahatsumetsu 2 года назад +2

      @@alesolasz6956 Sabine Hossenfelder has a video called "Can one particle be in two places at once?", I would advise you to have a look at that to help elaborate the point that Omnifarious was making.

  • @ohgeez9971
    @ohgeez9971 2 года назад +5

    Great PJs 😁
    Oh, and my brain loves these videos where you're explaining things to your producer. Great format.

  • @Basshead40
    @Basshead40 11 месяцев назад +1

    Also best wishes to you and your health problems!! I have Addison's disease, E asthma, Churg Strauss, and bronchial stasis and they all constantly domino each other. Everything I breathe I'm allergic to and then it sets off and inflames my bronchials, then my body can't make cortisol and it throws me into a loop I call the roller coaster. It's tough... health problems and constantly trying to decomp and analyze myself and what I'm feeling going on. I heard you in your update short vid say it's consuming your brain and my eyes watered up. That's my life... consumed by my own body's problems. Science distracts me. That's why I submerge myself into science sooo much.

  • @reubenbuckley3647
    @reubenbuckley3647 5 месяцев назад +24

    Bruh, the timing, she got sponsored by a mattress company, not knowing that she would need a good mattress because she’d be spending nearly a whole year in it with long COVID. Praying for full recovery Diana! (P.S, your team are amazing, especially Kyle!!)

    • @PhillipMcack
      @PhillipMcack 4 месяца назад

      Nah bud, this ain’t it

  • @DungeonMetal
    @DungeonMetal 2 года назад +9

    I remember hearing about this then seeing only responses referring to the 2014 paper I believe. This was a fascinating video and am so glad y’all can break it down in a way for many of us to understand (I’ll admit I rewound a couple moments)

    • @MrSquash62
      @MrSquash62 2 года назад

      dustin is a pretty og name to have as a username on youtube impressive