This video comes with a quiz which you can take here: quizwithit.com/start_thequiz/1696810732638x719113301385612800
@unbekannternr.1353
11 ай бұрын
Quizes are a bit 'Watson', let's predict next weeks riddle like Sherlock would...
@osmosisjones4912
11 ай бұрын
Mars is shrinking to that means the planet used to be Bigger
@unbekannternr.1353
11 ай бұрын
Either this or they have just abolished capitalism...@@osmosisjones4912
@srobertweiser
11 ай бұрын
I took the test last week and scored 80%. And that was just from memory. lf there's no time limit and I can go back to check my notes, I'm gonna ace them from now on.
@srobertweiser
11 ай бұрын
I told you so, 12/12
@charlesrosenbauer3135
11 ай бұрын
Fun fact: planetary shrinkage was a popular geological explanation for Earth's mountains and other features prior to the theory of continental shift.
@sunnyjim1355
11 ай бұрын
*Continental drift "continental shift" is something else entirely, relation to work schedules.
@hervigdewilde3599
11 ай бұрын
@@sunnyjim1355 "Work schedules? That sounds interesting, tell me more..." - Penny, Big Bang Theory . Sorry, but it needed saying... 😂
@diversionbob8482
11 ай бұрын
@@hervigdewilde3599 Don't tell her, she's a spy 🤣
@joyl7842
11 ай бұрын
Fun fact: a lot of scientists do not agree on the conclusion that continental drift created Earth's mountain in the way that it supposedly did. Look into the formation of The Rocky Mountains, for example. In short: it's more complicated than just continental drift.
@helenamcginty4920
11 ай бұрын
@@joyl7842saw a video about the rockies the other week but cant recall whether i saw the end or not. Must find text on the web. I prefer reading stuff like that. I dont see why that negates continental drift though or the formation of ranges such as the Alps and Himalayas.
@willyburger
10 ай бұрын
"Don't get too excited. It just might be one damn string after another." I love how she injects her sense of humor into her videos.
@bootskanchelsis3337
11 ай бұрын
I just assumed we all knew that meatballs shrink in an oven ...
@dr.tonielffaucet5988
11 ай бұрын
Noice Woyk my fwiend💯🧙♂️👍
@kingo_friver
11 ай бұрын
Also you might observe other twin balls down below shrunk and despined as they cool
@jeebusk
11 ай бұрын
They shrink outside of an oven too...
@Thomas-gk42
11 ай бұрын
About one year now, we are happy to benefit from your science news, thanks a lot😊
@SabineHossenfelder
11 ай бұрын
Yes, you're right, we started almost exactly one year ago!
@srobertweiser
11 ай бұрын
You edited this comment and it still says ''bews''?
@Thomas-gk42
11 ай бұрын
@@srobertweiser repaired, but sadly I lost her like by that.
@srobertweiser
11 ай бұрын
@@Thomas-gk42 Sorry about that, but I'm gonna sleep much better tonight knowing it doesn't say science ''bews''.
@paulbyerlee2529
11 ай бұрын
@@SabineHossenfelderthere is an imposter pretending to be you doing a telegram scam.
@larrywalsh9939
11 ай бұрын
What often amazes me about Sabine is, as a physicist, she makes predictions based on her observations and experimental data, and it's shocking how often her predictions are right. She predicts "...and, of course, the phone will ring." And she's RIGHT. EVERY. GODDAMN. TIME. Quantum physics just blows my mind.
@paulbyerlee2529
11 ай бұрын
@sabine_hossenfelder- Scam Scam Scam
@jorriffhdhtrsegg
11 ай бұрын
But there may be a a Black Swan Event where this does not take place because ultimately she uses inductive probabilities as opposed to a deductive theory about what causes the phone to ring.
@larrywalsh9939
11 ай бұрын
@@jorriffhdhtrsegg Brain hurts now.
@pliktl
11 ай бұрын
she is really psychic
@rickharriss
11 ай бұрын
She simply doesn't show all the times it doesnt ring!
@alikifahfneich
11 ай бұрын
Thank you for the news Dr. Sabine!
@AdamBowersDeveloper
11 ай бұрын
I love finishing my day at work. Heading to the gym and then walking home listening to Sabine. It's a little highlight of my week, thank you for all your hard work putting this together Sabine
@Thomas-gk42
11 ай бұрын
So right 👍
@TerriblePerfection
11 ай бұрын
And her obvious pleasure in delivering the new topic. 😊
@informationinformation647
11 ай бұрын
Fun fact: if there was a bike path at the equator of Mercury, you could easily stay all day in the sunset or sunrise temperate zone at about 20 degrees C.
@nosuchthing8
10 ай бұрын
And if you go 10 miles off that path by mistake, you burst into flames like Sarah conner did in her dream in terminator two.
@jimgraham6722
8 ай бұрын
Do we know how wide that zone is? What about at the poles? Is there anywhere you could set up camp and survive?
@ColdHawk
7 ай бұрын
Bring a pump for your tires…. The price for getting a flat is very, very high.
@t74devkw
11 ай бұрын
This channel is a gem
@dryued6874
11 ай бұрын
15:09 You forgot to mention probably the most significant application: current AI models are pretty much entirely based on matrix multiplication. So better dedicated hardware will give us faster and probably bigger models to inevitably bring forth our robot overlords.
@fwiffo
11 ай бұрын
Was going to post this comment. This is also why graphics cards are great for doing machine learning, and why photonic computing will finally let me run Crysis.
@python_l5367
11 ай бұрын
Computer graphics as well.
@davidharvey3743
11 ай бұрын
If you knew what you are talking about, you could explain it in comprehensive English
@atashgallagher5139
11 ай бұрын
@@davidharvey3743if you comprehensively understood English you'd be able to see that that was pretty thoroughly explained. It wasn't explained in very simple terms, but it was put well using the level of complexity appropriate for the topic at hand.
@BitwiseMobile
11 ай бұрын
@@davidharvey3743Matrix multiplication is a short cut way to multiply a collection of numbers in a n dimensional space. The way AI via an ANN works is that it stores a bunch of numbers, called weights, which it calculates during the training phase. In order to calculate an activation you need to sum those numbers and perform certain threshold operations on the value. The function used is dependent on the application, and there are many different types of activation functions. The output of that function is usually is usually the activation amount with the weight value in. That activation amount relates to the strength of the activation, and will help determine the final outcome. That example is for a single neuron. Modern networks have millions and even billions of artificial neurons which means you have to multiple millions or billions of numbers very quickly. That's where the massive parallelism comes with GPUs. There are other aspects of matrix multiplication that requires a course in linear algebra to understand, but that's it in a nutshell. You have to multiple a bunch of numbers quickly, and having a bunch of parallel floating point processing cores, like there is in modern GPUs, is the perfect way to do that calculation. Quantum computers will change that landscape in many ways. Those calculations essentially become instant. If we can get AI working in an quantum computer it will be scary fast.
@davewolfy2906
11 ай бұрын
A German with a sense of humour, hot as Mercury.
@yetanother4x4channel22
11 ай бұрын
9:11 "But it is another step on the way to putting 'quantum' before every other word." Best laugh I've had in a long time.
@giovannironchi5332
11 ай бұрын
In the spirit of putting 'quantum' before anything, I am waiting for 'quantum quantum' and 'quantum anything'
@generalmarkmilleyisbenedic8895
11 ай бұрын
ULTRA QUANTUM
@Anonymous-df8it
10 ай бұрын
*Quantum in quantum the quantum spirit quantum of quantum putting quantum 'quantum' quantum before quantum anything, quantum I quantum am quantum waiting quantum for 'quantum quantum quantum quantum' quantum and 'quantum quantum quantum anything'
@grindupBaker
11 ай бұрын
For the new general computing trend of specialized hardware to speed things up at 16:13 - 16:26 I wrote computer programs for IBM 360/44 1968-73, for oil & gas exploration, in Fortran IV-E & Assembler and our (rented) IBM included a "convolver" specialized hardware (size of a wardrobe) that simply did the convolving process of 2 time series (multiply aligned values, sum them all, shift 1 time series & repeat). Not sure whether my Fast Fourier Transform for frequency domain filtering let them return the "convolver" to save rental but then the Raytheon 706 and Varian V73 happened and an Array Transform Processor (ATP) little slide-in box arrived cheap enough to buy outright so it was the scrap heap for the old "convolver", much like me now. That was nostalgic.
@preacherF-15
11 ай бұрын
Im retired and its easy to get way behind these days. I love your channel Sabine! And being a Texan of German descent who has spent a lot of time in Germany, your accent makes me feel at home. Wunderbar!
@srobertweiser
11 ай бұрын
Was your grandpa a German prisoner of war captured in North Africa?
@bjdefilippo447
11 ай бұрын
So true about retirement. The first few years, I still read the journals, advised grad students, etc., but it's tough to keep up when you're not going to the lab or department.😢 Don't suppose you're near either Fredericksburg or New Braunfels?
@howtoappearincompletely9739
11 ай бұрын
@@srobertweiser More probably a Deutschtexaner. See the Wikipedia article "German Texan".
@preacherF-15
11 ай бұрын
@@bjdefilippo447 very near new braunfels, hour and a half from Fredericksburg. Why?
@preacherF-15
11 ай бұрын
@@srobertweiser no, the German one was in his 70s during WWII and living in east Texas lol . These are not the Deutschlanders you're looking for...
@scudrunner2005
11 ай бұрын
Love it cuz there is no limit to the entertaining and instructive value of sarcasm ... enlightening and questioning.
@AICoffeeBreak
10 ай бұрын
13:39 great headline "AI helps find aliens" for a statistical method.
@TheKbdering
11 ай бұрын
The same happened to Pluto. It used to be a planet a few years ago...
@jedahn
11 ай бұрын
Jupiter used to be a God
@SebSN-y3f
11 ай бұрын
@@jedahnand Venus, Mars and Neptun too.
@jedahn
11 ай бұрын
@@SebSN-y3f They should never have been demoted.
@rhnirsilva652
11 ай бұрын
"if I wanted to care about things that doesnt exist I can just think about my pension savings" I spilled my water lmao
@Chris.Davies
11 ай бұрын
Betteridge's Law of Headlines says, "No!" and prevents us wasting nearly 19 minutes of our lives. Thank you, Sabine.
@avae5343
11 ай бұрын
What, you mean there aren’t an infinite amount of universes and in one of them there is an sentient elephant?
@radar4763
11 ай бұрын
"One-Dimensional-Object larger then a galaxy" *mind boggled*.
@MCsCreations
11 ай бұрын
Thanks a bunch for the news, Sabine! 😊 Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
@srobertweiser
11 ай бұрын
If coolness caused shrinking, you'd be microscopic by now Sabine.
@dr.tonielffaucet5988
11 ай бұрын
Noice Woyk my fwiend 🤣
@srobertweiser
11 ай бұрын
@@dr.tonielffaucet5988 Tank you, Doc
@colbynotes2741
7 ай бұрын
4:38 -- Gimme a second, would you? Yah sure, in about 300 billion years if you don't mind waiting. Look fella, we've already been 14 billion years, so we're almost most of the way there already. 4:58 -- No, no, now she says it's 300 million years. Whatever, million, billion, what the hell, same difference. What's 3 orders of magnitude between you and Kevin Bacon? Now get back in line, I have other customers waiting. We only give out seconds after we're done with the firsts. 6:15 -- Nah, haven't you heard? It's the Germans, man. They got into that Scandium nuclei instead of the Cesium, that's why you only got 3 orders to go. Shoulda ordered the Scandium. Yeah, well we're outta the Scandium, you want soup or not? It's a bit of a wait. 6:40 -- Well, I could go for 3 femtoseconds. You got maybe 3 femtoseconds back there? We're not all that precise, buddy, if you get my drift, but I'll go look, be back in a sec. 7:01 -- Hey buddy, you're in luck. You want femtoseconds, we got this new Thorium fresh in from Europe. It's a little pricey, cost you an X-ray or two, but that's the high energy for ya. Buddy? What the? Where'd he off to ... I was only gone a minute. And a small minute at that. What a buncha eons. Millie, hey Millie! You seen that second guy? If he show up again, you keep an ion him, okay? 7:36 -- Yah sure, MikeRon, whatever ya quant. The fermion took off, so just chill out.
@hondahirny
11 ай бұрын
There’s enough Botox in Southern California to correct Mercury’s wrinkles, I’m sure if it! 😂
@itryen7632
11 ай бұрын
Now poor pluto won't feel so alone
@JacoboGallegos
11 ай бұрын
I’m glad you chose an ‘old apple’ for the imagery of Mercury’s wrinkly shrinkage. 😅3:04
@AlexTrusk91
11 ай бұрын
Listening to you explaining Grabens in this sense while your brains basically screams for the basic German definition was some fun :D Actually Horsts confuse me somewhat more...
@jojo-pk
11 ай бұрын
A Horst is a high spot or lookout point (and eg eagle's nests are called Adlerhorst because they're typically high up)
@ngsq12
11 ай бұрын
Finally. A use for Scandium.
@ellieshine
11 ай бұрын
This episode brought to you by the numbers 300 million, and 300 billion.
@colbynotes2741
7 ай бұрын
They've been stringing us along, for what seems like eternity.
@whycantiremainanonymous8091
11 ай бұрын
How can cesium clocks have an error in measuring the second, if the second is literally defined in terms of what the cesium clock measures?
@tim57243
11 ай бұрын
The schematic image at 1:38 has the object that is seen twice not reflected, but the actual photo at 2:00 has it reflected. What is the correct expectation? When I visualize the situation I expect it to look like the schematic, but if the photo were wrong the experts should have noticed by now. Edit: In the conclusion, the paper hypothesizes that "the string is strongly inclined to the line of sight and, possibly, bent in the image plane". They talk about having to do general relativity computations to get it to match.
@Warp9pnt9
11 ай бұрын
Sabine is my favorite commedian. She has so many great quantum bits about technology.
@manfredkrifka8400
11 ай бұрын
Thanks
@SabineHossenfelder
11 ай бұрын
Thank you from the entire team!
@coffeetablesex
11 ай бұрын
I just want to say thank you to whoever named their organization "PNAS"
@srobertweiser
11 ай бұрын
Please tell them that Steve said 'thanks' too
@duncanny5848
11 ай бұрын
One damned String after another!! I laughed out loud! 🤣
@byrnedhead
11 ай бұрын
I'm here for the rotating skull animations
@Mike80528
7 ай бұрын
Astrophysicists: "Mercury is shrinking" Mercury: "Space is cold! Space is cold!"
@MomentsInTrading
11 ай бұрын
We should send NASA to explore the sun. We can do it safely if we go at night.
@adirmugrabi
11 ай бұрын
we must use it for my Dyson sphere before it evaporates away!!!
@hamoudiayoub9341
11 ай бұрын
When faced with real-life challenges, I construct a fictional realm where everything is fine. String theory is that beautiful dream for physicist to escape
@sapelesteve
11 ай бұрын
Yet another excellent & informative video Sabine! It's been almost a year since you have been posting but I'll bet anything that it feels like an eternity! 😉😉👍👍
@srobertweiser
11 ай бұрын
I'd bet my incisors that it feels almost exactly like 365 days.
@COSMOS_AND_SUPER_ULTRA_MIND.
11 ай бұрын
Many thanks for your much needed work! 👍🏼
@juliankohler5086
11 ай бұрын
I've been sick for two weeks, and now that I'm a little better, of all the channels I watch, this is the one I'm happier catching up with. I even have channels dedicate to hobbies of mine that I will leave for later.
@phlogistanjones2722
11 ай бұрын
Thanks for the vidja!
@fmdj
11 ай бұрын
6:00 there are not THAT many elements in the periodic table, but every time I hear about one I didn't know I'm like "but, is this table infinite?" - here with Scandium 12:20 can't even tell anymore if the Musk segments are true or satire ahahah
@TlalocTemporal
11 ай бұрын
Scandium isn't even that big, just number 21.
@Ian-lx1iz
11 ай бұрын
That's a shame: 'Scientists' have _missed a trick_ by choosing _Scandium_ for their atomic clock (5:55). If they'd have chosen _Uranium 235_ instead, then not only would their atomic clock have been more accurate (possibly) but it would also work as an ALARM CLOCK. lol
@davidrennie8197
11 ай бұрын
That "quantum engine" needing very low temperatures -- might be feasible in space
@davidrennie8197
11 ай бұрын
@@retiredbore378 I imagine it would radiate away
@empireempire3545
11 ай бұрын
Fast matrix multiplication hardware would be a HUGE change
@thomassicard3733
11 ай бұрын
It's great to be hopefully learning more about Mercury!!! Of course, it would be even GREATER to learn more about Uranus.
@rodkeh
11 ай бұрын
The queen of tabloid Physics. Thank you Sabine...
@KentoLeoDragon
11 ай бұрын
Planetary shrinkage. I feel for you brother. It's okay.
@nosuchthing8
11 ай бұрын
Shrinkage, Jerry, shrinkage!
@janerussell3472
11 ай бұрын
2 fermions make a boson? That shows it's all to do with spin, then. And the W and Z particles aren't bosons. They are baryons with super-added spins. The Z, for example, spinwise, is a level 20 proton meeting a level 19 proton and a level 15 proton. That's why it adds to 91.16 GeV. There's a mechanical reason why its that number, not pulled out the air like Weinberg.
@Darisiabgal7573
11 ай бұрын
W and Z have integer spin values. "In particle physics, the W and Z bosons are vector bosons that are together known as the weak bosons or more generally as the intermediate vector bosons." wikipedia.
@charliebaby7065
7 ай бұрын
I so so sooooo wish we could have a segment over that phone of yours together one day, just at least once in our lives, i can already imagine all the theories that would pop up in our conversation. and all the peer reviews we'd start failing, but i wouldnt care... it would just give them, something to talk about and we could just keep trying each other's theories , together (with all due respect)
@adamnagy4544
11 ай бұрын
Photonic matrix operation can help a lot on using large AI models as well (it is very expensive and most of the calculation is matrix multiplication)
@robbirose7032
11 ай бұрын
Isn't that what you fire at the Borg?
@DavidOfWhitehills
11 ай бұрын
Mercury is a brilliant candidate for space horror movies: you have to stay ahead of the sunrise but keep on mining those rare earths and heavy elements.
@dryued6874
11 ай бұрын
Literally Riddick
@gcewing
11 ай бұрын
And now, you have to do it before the planet shrinks away to nothing!
@edding8400
11 ай бұрын
That happens to the best of us, especially when the weather is getting colder
@itsjavaman
7 ай бұрын
If I remember correctly, the Kerr equation removed the singularity from the center of a black hole. It's something I've been trying to understand for a while, and for me, it started by questioning the size of the hole. As the hole absorbs mass, it gets larger, but how is this possible if the mass is a singularity?
@MrAtrophy
11 ай бұрын
I assume the Planck satellite is really really small.
@WillCrawford0
11 ай бұрын
Or really big, obvs
@kounaboy7011
11 ай бұрын
String crunch event to ligo woble, is gravitational to string gauge. Stability periodicity. Now, the exemplified experiment is a true cake 🎉.
@XHoYenAuthor
9 ай бұрын
Thank you for your humor, Dr. Sabine. You make me laugh as you educate me!
@GaxosAlter
11 ай бұрын
You are cheerier than usual Sabine, im beginning to think you were lying about being German 😂
@weho_brian
11 ай бұрын
its AI Sabine
@TerriblePerfection
11 ай бұрын
OK that's funny. 😂 Greetings from Bavaria!
@KarlSmith1
11 ай бұрын
Yes, I really did LOL.
@pakde8002
11 ай бұрын
And it's not even asparagus season.
@juliaspoonie3627
11 ай бұрын
@@pakde8002better, it’s almost Brussels sprouts season 😂
@KravMagoo
11 ай бұрын
Not surprised Mercury is shrinking...it was very violet in the picture you presented.
@grumblycurmudgeon
11 ай бұрын
That's gonna make it time sensitive, if we're planning to disassemble Mercury for our Dyson swarm.
@santiagovidal4497
11 ай бұрын
Kerr black holes allow you to time travel if this anime I watched was right…
@NemisCassander
11 ай бұрын
A sample size of 130 doesn't sound like a lot to train a machine learning algorithm. I'd be worried that their result isn't generalizable.
@john.ellmaker
11 ай бұрын
Came for the cosmic string but was more interested in that disease simulator from northwestern, pretty intriguing
@jurjenbos228
11 ай бұрын
I find it a bit strange that reinventing analog computers from the 1950's is in the news all of a sudden. They seem to have forgotten the most important reason we don't do this anymore: accuracy. And indeed, AI is not exactly known for its accuracy.
@Jimmeh_B
11 ай бұрын
True. And also true. AI is probably the most unsuitable and inappropriate naming of all time. Half true. It is artificial, but in no context is it intelligent.
@asd-wd5bj
11 ай бұрын
@@Jimmeh_B That's because it is objectively wrong, what we call AI nowdays isn't true AI, it's just a marketing trick, they are just neural networks
@Justintime2grow
11 ай бұрын
Are we really shocked about Mercury though? When you bake things in the oven until they're totally dry they shrink and wrinkle.
@DanFrederiksen
11 ай бұрын
That spin and gravity isn't lost in a black hole should speak volumes about how they work, I would think. And yes I strongly suspect that spin modified gravity is a thing. Both from observations of ET ships and the galactic spin anomaly and cosmic jets. Spin seems to be the common trigger. ET ships sometimes have a spinning section, aircraft in close proximity observe their compass spinning like a motor and a vortex force has been observed under ET ships. One could argue that just a spinning integral part of an ET ship is conclusive in itself. If mass spin wasn't necessary then it's a very clumsy design compromise and they would avoid it. Seeing as just spinning mass doesn't create exotic effects it might require a resonant EM component or more. If we could learn more of the conditions for cosmic jets it might become obvious.
@mtheory85
11 ай бұрын
That lattice device sounds like absolute vaporware.
@SebSN-y3f
11 ай бұрын
Great as always! Thank you very much.
@rmladenic
11 ай бұрын
Do the black holes emit something? Chatbot: "Yes...". The next problem is the conversion of lower frequency electromagnetic waves into higher frequency. electromagnetic waves.
@AdrianBoyko
11 ай бұрын
Maybe Mercury’s fermions are being converted to bosons
@Bravetrain13
11 ай бұрын
Would cooling cause fermions to convert to bosons?
@dlrss2171
11 ай бұрын
16:26 quantum html, LOL
@leemiller8258
6 ай бұрын
I would like you to make a video about some of the successes of string theory. Granted, it hasn't moved physics forward much, but hasn't it led to creative mathematical tools that other fields can use? Even if the theory has so far failed, hasn't it created new mathematical methods that have proven useful?
@restorator7
7 ай бұрын
The shrinkage of Mercury is really interesting because one would expect that the core of any planet becomes significantly cooler since its time of formation as a molten ball. And, everyone knows that cooling bodies of matter shrink. A few kilometers of diameter over a billion years? I guess there would have been a previous 3 billion years for the interior heat distribution to settle into the thresholds of the last billion. And, the crust would have cooled solid enough to begin to show contractional features at the 1 bya mark? What makes me curious is that our own planet has that plate tectonics characteristic that swallows evidence of planet contraction like a grocery store conveyor belt can swallow your coupon. And a century ago, early paleontologists floated an idea called paleogravity to explain why dinosaurs were so massive. If they seemed too heavy to walk on land, another way to express that thought would be to say that they appeared to have evolved under lower surface gravity due to an expanded planetary diameter for Earth's mass. So, how exactly did paleogravity come to be dismissed? I'm not saying paleogravity needs to be resurrected. I simply want to know what information it was that eliminated it a century ago. If there was a 'paleogravity" page on Wikipedia, I swear I would have read that instead of troubling this comment section.
@monoptique621
11 ай бұрын
Good morning. Mercury must have an inner core offset from its geological center. Which influences its rotation and its structure. Greeting from France.
@Cablur
11 ай бұрын
Great video, I especially love its 80s/90s style, and your sense of humor 😄😄
@bishwajitbhattacharjee-xm6xp
11 ай бұрын
Good technology of fermion and bososns we need a Carnot cycle and assessed the efficiency. It brings a hope for me the predictions of GUT . At low temperature particles collapses to Identity less state . At very high temperature could be force field. Do we need a new photon's definition. News Sabina is brilliant. Looks nice.
@jeffborders1146
8 ай бұрын
I think there should be a difference between quantum string and cosmic string. When I see the headline cosmic string I think astro scale, not quantum scale. While yes quantum objects can be in astro scale, like black holes, in some depictions, generally speaking string theory tends to the smallest of the small. When I hear cosmic string I think if those linear bands to tightly connected protons stretching between stars with mass like multiple Earths per kilometer of stretch. Funny that those headlines of discovery of such objects seem to have completely disappeared from the internet.
@ChloeV-c3d
11 ай бұрын
6:56 “pew pew pew pew” look ma I’m a space blaster!!
@snakehandler1487
11 ай бұрын
Can't even begin to imagine what could be done if things like these where mastered
@captbrick1589
11 ай бұрын
I'm so confused about the fermion/boson engine. So fermions don't like to share space but if you squish them they convert to bosons and are happy to share space. If this were always the case, why would we say that fermions don't like to share space? I feel like there has to be more to it.
@efg-smca
11 ай бұрын
If fermions convert to bosons, isn't it the traits of bosons that we then need to worry about at that point? The "forced together" part is telling I think. Fermions don't like to share space. If forced to do so, they become bosons (that seems to reinforce the idea that they don't like to share space since when forced to do so, they transform into something else).
@Edruezzi
11 ай бұрын
It's the ancient aliens that done it.
@howtoappearincompletely9739
11 ай бұрын
Plural "Grabens" and "Horsts" must've hurt like a greengrocer's apostrophe. I'd support you saying „Gräben“ and „Horste“ in this English context. 🙂
@scene2much
11 ай бұрын
"One Damn String After Another!" impressive for a non-native English speaker
@johnthewlis3920
9 ай бұрын
Appreciate the uses of the Lattice simulating human disease but would it not be better using a queue-cumber?
@herculesrockefeller8969
11 ай бұрын
I've said it before. Discovering life on other planets will not make a bit of difference to those of us here.
@zivmeir6256
11 ай бұрын
I think you got the nuclear clock performance wrong by ~14 orders of magnitude. They measured the 12.4 keV transition with 0.1 eV precision - so it’s a df/f~1e-5. much worst than your wrist watch not to mention atomic clocks. Love your videos by the way.
@artistphilb
11 ай бұрын
Almost identical doesn't sound like a mirror image, those spectra had some obvious differences, more fluff than string
@LoneWolf-wp9dn
11 ай бұрын
"I was in the pool" Mercury, probably
@ofskittlez
11 ай бұрын
Now I'm quite the stickler for precise time. But I feel like an accuracy of one second every 300 million years is enough.
@kylebowles9820
11 ай бұрын
Nobel prize winning physics happens at the attosecond scale now
@thomassicard3733
11 ай бұрын
I'm traveling from Texas to Australia, soon. I'll be flying Quantum-Qantas Airlines. I want to get there in a most fascinatingly scientific way!!!!
@axel_r_
11 ай бұрын
Impressive that this is like watching some science show during hte 70es. Not sure if I like it or not
@numbersix8919
11 ай бұрын
These jokes against taxes & government are so excellent & welcome! One can't get enough of them! Brava!
@undefined40
11 ай бұрын
Mercury, be careful! If you shrink too much, you might share Pluto's fate and get demoted by body shaming astronomers for being "too small to be a real planet".
@stephenjohnhopkinson8096
11 ай бұрын
This woman is amazingly intelligent she puts most of physics to shame and I don't think she knows it.
@ptrinch
11 ай бұрын
Agreed. And she does it without even separating her teeth!!!
@tedmoss
11 ай бұрын
Sabine is smart enough to have a team. She communicates.
@stephenjohnhopkinson8096
11 ай бұрын
That is both irrelevant and obvious
@daytradersanonymous9955
11 ай бұрын
*physicists
@freefall9832
11 ай бұрын
@@stephenjohnhopkinson8096the expert
@charlescaine6022
11 ай бұрын
You have to expect shrinking when you get in the galaticpool.
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