Dr. Lincoln I work at a General Mills cake and brownie mix factory right down the road from Fermilab on Kirk Rd. If you ever want a tour of my place you're welcome to. We don't have any particle detectors but we have a lab where we bake up samples. It's actually a really impressive plant. You can bring science ninja dude too I guess. 😁
@RME76048
5 жыл бұрын
That was quite thoughtful, Adam. Just like you are, people being helpful and interested in other people's advancement of everything from the every day to the What If? Isn't that the definition of, 'humanity' after all?
@adamkendall997
5 жыл бұрын
@ScienceNinjaDude you don't work at Fermilab?
@BPantherPink
5 жыл бұрын
@@RME76048 Tell me again... How is all this expense and time (of places like Fermi lab) going to create 'humanity' among the poor and the suffering??? The wars and the stupidity of man???
@frankkolton1780
5 жыл бұрын
@@BPantherPink Maybe english isn't your first language but I think what you are asking is how do places like Fermilab benefit humanity and is it worth the expense? Science, the study of the natural forces or behavior of things around us and the attempt to understand them. Simply put, science is knowledge, and throughout man's history, that collective knowledge has helped the world's farmers in keeping us fed (pop. now and rising 7.7 billion people), vaccines and modern medicine that have dramatically increased life expectancy, especially in poor countries, knowledge from science has advanced communications, education, transportation, housing, energy use, and just about everything else that we do in our daily life. As to the "wars and stupidity of man???" War has been a part of man's nature as long as there have been groups, tribes, and countries. The root causes of wars is want of other peoples land/territory, others resources, and control/power. As long as there are people willing to defend their land, resources, or freedom from those that would take it, there will be war.
@RME76048
5 жыл бұрын
@@BPantherPink Never told you anything, so how could I possibly tell you again? Jerk.
@TheSilentWhales
5 жыл бұрын
You say you can talk all day. Well, I am quite certain I am not just speaking for myself when I say I can watch and listen to you talk all day.
@mflynn2009
5 жыл бұрын
Dr. Lincoln you are a great teacher. Information given to non scientists will surely make us better citizens. I love your videos. Thanks for the great information about Fermi. It looks like the Adler has some catching up to do.
@АнарНурмуханова-в3ц
3 жыл бұрын
TC TC65 5 vhhgof to allu postaldhjg
@shakattack2
2 жыл бұрын
Yeah I did that but it wasn’t too much lol xxx I just woke him up lol xxx lol lol xxx yeah lol xxx lol lol xxx yeah yeah that’s fine fine I’ll let you know when I get you home lol xxx lol lol xxx xxx yeah yeah that’s fine xxx yeah that’s fine I’ll sort it out of it lol xxx lol lol xxx yeyeah yeah that’s fine xxx yeah yeah that’s that’s what I was was talking abotlet you know when when I I get off work at the park I’ll park in the the park I’ll park in in the park I’ll park in in the the park I’ll park in in the park I’ll park park in the the park I’ll park in the park I’ll park on the park I’ll park in the park I’ll I’ll park park in in the park I’ll park park in park park I’ll park park in park park and park park in park park and park pparkark in hat’s fine fine I’ll I’ll ut lol lol xxx yeah yeah what what you do it lol xxx ah yeah that’s that’s
@martinpickard6043
5 жыл бұрын
Great overview by a realy good presenter. Clear and concise. Thank you Dr L.
@carlmarch603
5 жыл бұрын
Great video. My college physics professor, Dr. Robert Purbrick, got his Ph.D. with Enrico Fermi during the Manhattan Project days. The grad students took turns sleeping near the nuclear reactor to monitor the D2O leak alarm. He was on duty one night and the alarm went off. He got up to get dressed and go outside in the cold winter and climb down to see what was going on. Then the alarm stopped. So, he went back to bed thinking it was a faulty alarm that could be looked at when he woke up. However, the alarm went off and on again and then again once more. After getting up and climbing down the ladder under the reactor, he found that a beetle was on its back wiggling its legs to try and turn over. Every now and then, two legs would hit both contacts of the sensor and the alarm would sound. The current would knock the beetle out, stopping the alarm. When the beetle came to, the whole process repeated itself. Sometimes, pure physics involves biology!
@DavidODuvall
5 жыл бұрын
Excellent story!
@pzenari
5 жыл бұрын
Debugging the alarm solved the issue
@frankschneider6156
5 жыл бұрын
He should have told Grace Hopper about it.
@ikerus0072
5 жыл бұрын
Lool debugging xDD
@sp00n
5 жыл бұрын
That's actually where the word "bug" originated from. Computers were so big that actual bugs would cause all sort of errors when they were crawling around inside them. 😅
@bandongogogo
5 ай бұрын
It is indeed an amazing place! Thank you Dr. Don! SCIENCE IS EVERYTHING!
@quahntasy
5 жыл бұрын
"Fermilab is everything" And Dr. Lincoln is such a great educator. Thanks a lot!
@davidzhichen1169
5 жыл бұрын
I really appreciate Dr. Lincoln's way of talking, very smooth and gets to the principles and points of core physics!
@nicholascorso129
5 жыл бұрын
my grandmpa worked their for 40 years, sense they began building. I have visited and got very private tours from him. He also helped build that lazer thing, his position was a Senior Head Engineer. He also designed one of the buildings currently their still.
@morleyman4614
2 жыл бұрын
Did he tell you about the Reptilians working there and what they really do?
@mpaulworkman
5 жыл бұрын
I love Fermilab. CERN has and will continue to do wonderful things, but Fermilab has been at it for a while too. Thank you all for your contributions. I love these videos and your projects and research.
@RichardLightburn
5 жыл бұрын
The science Fermilab does is wonderful, but I'm very impressed by the art and architecture there. Wilson Hall is incredible.
@InvestindoDoJapao
2 жыл бұрын
I was a visitor there for one year. One of the best experience of my life. I contributed making a very high precision magnetic field measure machine.
@nachannachle2706
5 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the presentation! It's very exciting to know about all these projects running in a SINGLE place! :)
@susworld129
5 ай бұрын
Hi, Dr. Lincoln. It was very nice to meet you and get such an easy to understand explanation of Neutrinos and Fermilab. I'm totally not scientifically gifted, so, thank you very much for making this so easy to understand. For some reason, lately, I've felt like this is incredibly important research for, yeah, the future of humanity, in an urgent way. Thank you.
@helenel4126
5 жыл бұрын
Thanks for posting this and all of the other Fermilab videos; they convince this layperson who never took math beyond trigonometry and graduate statistics that she understands a bit about quantum mechanics. The bit I understand has definitely convinced me, Dr Lincoln, that "physics is everything." Sign me "A Grateful Taxpayer."
@morleyman4614
2 жыл бұрын
You have no idea what the Reptilians at Fermilab really do.
@cdubs9918
3 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid in 1979 me and my friends used to ride our bikes to Fermilab and just walk around in the building. We just randomly walked into labs and rooms. No security, no one kicking us out. It was bizarre now that I think about it. We would go to the top floor because the center of the building was open, and you can see to the bottom floor and we would throw paper airplanes into the lobby to see how far they would fly. I'm assuming security is a bit better now. In 1979 it didn't exist.
@datroofboa7988
5 ай бұрын
This guy is great
@p1nesap
5 жыл бұрын
Excellent overview video about exciting developments. @10:07 is always amazing.
@pavelbaidurov228
5 жыл бұрын
Hello from Russia! great job!
@farhadpoladin2988
Жыл бұрын
Now I can understand why your explanations made more sense than the most of related videos here on KZitem. I definitely don’t have the qualifications to be someone there. But at least hire me as a ganitor please. Would you? So that I be with you guys while earning something to live.
@KplusU
5 жыл бұрын
The OG atom smasher!! I have always loved you guys.
@gacrux225
5 жыл бұрын
Remember ," Fermilab is everything".
@sudhakarreddy1453
5 жыл бұрын
The music preceding the video is wonderful
@jechambers4
Жыл бұрын
You need to have a local event called : Bosons, Beers, & Bison. Its a locally held event where everyone drinks and shares stories on science, environmentalism, and art
@hamentaschen
5 жыл бұрын
Dr. Don is so worth being late to work over!
@pablobragato7164
5 жыл бұрын
would love to know Dr. Don Lincoln someday, great guy, great physicist
@Lvlaple4Ever
2 жыл бұрын
Proud to have an uncle that works for Fermilab.
@morleyman4614
2 жыл бұрын
Does he tell you about the Reptilians he works with there?
@brandonmorad737
5 жыл бұрын
Absolutely necessary to keep the lead in research and innovations. Thank you for explaining. Hope our government, especially now, understand it's importance.
@markzummallen9047
2 жыл бұрын
As a young student about 50 years ago - in fact it was the summer between high school and university - I got the itch to visit Fermilab and drove the two hours and some minutes to it. I parked in the lot and instead of registering as a visitor I just began strolling around sticking my nose into every nook and cranny especially into those nooks and crannies with signs like "DO NOT ENTER" or "ENTRY FORBIDDEN TO THE PUBLIC". I walked through workshops crammed with detectors in various degrees of assembly or disassembly and even saw one of the worlds largest bubble chambers. I new enough physics and mechanics to avoid areas of potential radiation or beams (not likely in a workshop area) and didn't stick my head into anything that looked remotely dangerous (overhead crane loads, etc). For someone who would study and later achieve a degree in mechanical engineering this was like Christmas and the best birthday imaginable. I wandered into the main building and through a few closed doors and ended up in the main collider control room. I walked in and peered over the shoulders of some scientists and grad students looking at a computer screen and discussing I know not what. After a few minutes of looking at the displays and controls, someone noticed me and asked me who the hell I was. I explained my presence and what I had been up to. My inquisitor just smiled and said not to touch anything. I imagine today I would have been arrested and questioned by Homeland Security, if I even would have the chance nowadays to get so far. Thanks Fermilab for making the visit of a young student into one of the most memorable days of his life. Kind regards, Mark ZumMallen PS: To Dr. Lincoln and all others responsible for video and informational content...keep up the good work.
@Nosikas
2 жыл бұрын
This is an incredible video on an incredible topic
@bruinflight
5 жыл бұрын
The ONE thing I need to know about Fermilab is Dr Lincoln works there :-) You are AWESOME buddy! Keep doing what you do! Also: I miss the old into music with the shredding guitar-like opening!
@morleyman4614
2 жыл бұрын
Reptilians work at Fermilab,that's what you need to know.
@brendarua01
5 жыл бұрын
Good information and nicely presented. We need more outreach to the public to give them a better understanding of the work scientists are doing, and the importance of it. It seems clear that this is ultimately important for continuing funding.
@frankschneider6156
5 жыл бұрын
Actually that's exactly why this channel exists. If you are cynical you might call it self-marketing "your tax payers money is well spend, we do great science here". Spreading that message is the prime goal of this channel. It is the very unfortunate, that we live in a world where most people are so natural scientifically uneducated, so that such kind of science marketing is necessary.
@jayphone1
2 жыл бұрын
It says the video was posted 2 years ago but it just reached me now and the content is still beyond my horizon of understanding.
@paulryan7289
4 жыл бұрын
This is about to become my go to for the answers to the greatest questions I didn't know you were here guys glad to have found you .... I genuinely mean that this is a great opportunity for our students to behold I really wish I'd have been from a different era there's so many questions I have for you all brilliant first episode for me
@blivion7203
5 жыл бұрын
My dream job......
@dhimanroyturzo6620
5 жыл бұрын
I'll obviously visit this heaven. 😍
@windnwater7706
5 жыл бұрын
I found this channel not too long ago and... Wow. Inspiring stuff. I liked the channel so much that after the DUNE and Twin Paradox videos and wanted to sub twice :) (although that's not a good idea XD). It goes deep into beautiful mathematical concepts (more so than average popular science) and leaves me understanding it all... Just the right difficulty for the average layperson to feel like a physicist :). I came in awe the most from the beauty, weirdness and counterintuitiveness of the quantum world, and was treated to extra enthralled by fact that you can think of mathematics and relate it physics, and vice versa, manifested in amazing projects where 100 years from now humans might talk about the great subatomic (and cosmic) science experiments by the world's leading physicists that allowed us the understanding (or even the exploration!) of the cosmos; perhaps as we do today for those of the past. Really appreciate your reaching out to us like this- may the forces be with you, and keep up the great work! PS. Sorry for the the long post XD
@alleneverhart4141
5 жыл бұрын
Simply amazing, I'm coming!
@georgebih1854
5 жыл бұрын
BEST KZitem CHANNEL EVER....
@marc-andrebrunet5386
5 жыл бұрын
Bravo, one day I will Visit for sure!!
@nayanendumisra6764
13 күн бұрын
Thank you very much ❤️. You really impressed me with your erudite lecture. I salute you. ❤🎉😂
@36gih
4 жыл бұрын
I’m here after the PBS SpaceTime collab video! Grateful for that
@indotipstrik9031
5 жыл бұрын
hello, my name is jusuf & im indonesian. I really like the videos from this channel, I really like it. although my toefl score is below 400, but somehow i think I can understand every explanation in the video in this channel 😂😂. I admit that in my place there are still many who don't understand English and I want people (in Indonesia) to also understand the latest developments in science. for that in the future I plan to provide Indonesian subtitles to these videos. once again thank you fermilab for all knowledge information. this channel is truly extraordinary. By the way, I wrote this comment with the help of Google Translate 😂😂
@ericklein3960
5 жыл бұрын
someday i will visit both cern and fermilab
@edwardlee2794
3 жыл бұрын
Yes, you should. It's enlightening and fascinating.
@affinix3840
3 жыл бұрын
These guys discovered a new force in nature. Fucking legends
@Broken_robot1986
5 жыл бұрын
I've been in Chicago for almost a decade and still haven't visited. I will try to make it out there early next month! Hope to you there!
@amphibiousone7972
5 жыл бұрын
Great Plug! Yes it is a great place. Thanks for the invite 😊
@prasadbhojak
4 жыл бұрын
Was lucky to visit Fermilab.
@richardhoover4471
3 жыл бұрын
Fascinating explanation of all the really cool stuff done at Fermilab! Many thanks!👏🏻
@edwardlee2794
3 жыл бұрын
As always, Dr Lincoln s lecture is fascinating and inspiring even for a retired old fart. After visiting the CERN, I'm inspired this time to have a tour of the Fermilab too,bas soon as the pandemic quiet down. And I will spend enough time to fully savor ultimate feast of science... on-site lecture, years old questions and better still a tour of the 4 miles accelerator. Thanks for the effort and reaching out to the public.
@theultimatereductionist7592
4 жыл бұрын
1:31 Apparently Fermilab also has the youngest particle physicist in the world working for them in the lower right of this photograph.
@morleyman4614
2 жыл бұрын
Reptilians work at Fermilab.
@a.i.newton847
5 жыл бұрын
Please make a presentation on the physics of plasma and photon emission and absorption. What are low gravity and high gravity effects. From candle flame to solar masses.
@ParthPatel-zg7bf
4 жыл бұрын
I thought such laboratory is in movies or TV shows (The Flash) only, but it really exist wow !!!
@vinayakpendse7233
5 жыл бұрын
This channel is just great ,why is it having so less subscribers.
@GiacomodellaSvezia
5 жыл бұрын
@ScienceNinjaDude Guess I'm kind of weird in my circle of family and acquaintances, being interested in this stuff despite my lack of understanding math, for I don't know anyone I can share my enthousiasm with, and I've tried. Some are still stuck in magical thinking (at their mature age!) and I can't talk them out of it, even though real science can give so much to wonder about.
@frankschneider6156
5 жыл бұрын
@GiacomodellaSvezia For the majority of all humans the age of enlightenment never took place and they are still driven by superstitious/religious/magical thinking, exactly the same as in the middle ages, just leprechauns, dragons and angels have been substituted by aliens, Sasquatch and the moth man. Superstition is thus not only true for your nuts family, but for the vast majority of all humans on this planet, that's why absurd stuff like palm or crystal ball reading, tarot cards, astrology, homeopathy or climate-change-skepticism or believe in abductions by aliens exists. It seems to be a profound way of thinking of human beings that can only be overcome be proper education, which again means that it will actually never go away. Sad but true. Eg it's absolutely impossible to talk religious people out of their weird superstitious believes. Despite oblivious of any facts they just cling to it, just like anti-vaxxers or homeopathy fans. So trying to talk them out of their irrational behavior simply won't work, primarily because humans are inherently not rational, unless they have been trained to behave in such a way, but also because this would require them to completely change their world view. People hate changes more than death, so they do everything to avoid that.
@frankschneider6156
5 жыл бұрын
ScienceNinjaDude In theory yes, but Sagan was far more optimistic than I am. I'm pretty sure that reading that book won't change anything for a person already caught in their superstitious believes and that the fight against superstition can't be won, just like you can't train a shark to become a vegan. If you see that even some biology school teachers are happily willing to teach "Intelligent Design" as equal alternative to evolution or that adult pedestrians on the street are incapable of solving the simplest mathematical questions involving numbers below 100, you know that all hope is lost.
@GiacomodellaSvezia
5 жыл бұрын
@@frankschneider6156 Fortunately, they're not that nuts. They are sort of atheist but inclined (like so many) to believe there is some deeper meaning: Some are convinced that the full moon has an influence on the quality of harvested vegetables, of the effectiveness of acupuncture and other alternative medical treatments. Most of them are just undisciplined in their thinking and tend to believe what they want and filter out information they don't like. I suspect I still do the same but unaware when I do it.
@maverickdisco4036
5 жыл бұрын
Great video, made a visit to Fermi Lab a few years ago for a workshop. Been in science for over thirty years and now thinking that more effort should be put into things that concern our planet now. Is all that knowledge and experience being used effectively? I noted a recent report about CERN which stated that less than 1% of data collected will be analysed. A definite case of Experiments for Experiments sake.
@julian3bk
5 жыл бұрын
There is also a test beam program for prototyping detectors for other labs
@eliasgallegos3058
5 жыл бұрын
Great video! I had no idea!!!
@CrisJahnke
4 жыл бұрын
Best channel ever!
@JamesMading
Жыл бұрын
Dr. Lincoln: I watched the video about the speed of gravity. That was enlightening, but I have more questions. Your video demonstrated that gravity has a speed! I've always wondered about that. I asked myself: Is gravity a property of mass, or is it a property the universe (space). It was a logical thought that it might be a property of the universe and exists everywhere, therefore has no need of a velocity. All masses are 'floating' around in a gravitational field, but if it has a velocity, this upsets the all enveloping concept. Does this mean there is an escape velocity from the universe? If (a big if) a mass happened to achieve a speed greater than light, does this mean that it could escape from the universe because it would be traveling too fast for gravity to catch it and act on it? I presume that would be a dangerous speed. I believe that I have proof that light is mass-less. If it had any amount of mass, even a very small particle traveling around 186281 miles per second would ruin a mirror trying to reflect it. If it did not shatter, its surface would be pitted. It follows there would not be any solid surface showing on earth. It would be covered with fine dust particles. The steady stream of light from the sun would have ruined every surface on earth. Life could not exist unless it were subterranean. The next question: Is there a delay when light reflects off a surface, or is it instantaneous? Older methods of measuring light speed used rotating mirrors with the assumption that light reflection was instantaneous (and that is an unproven assumption). When scientists bounced a laser beam off a corner reflector box left on the moon and got a return, it was again was assumed that the reflection time was zero. How would one design an experiment to measure this? But this may be an impossible measurement because how does one measure zero. There's nothing to measure.
@philochristos
5 жыл бұрын
Now I want to go work at Fermilab.
@johnmcnaught7453
5 жыл бұрын
Nice overview Doc. Now if only I had paid more attention in Mr. Moseley 's physics class in 1965........
@NeonsStyleHD
5 жыл бұрын
Thank you Dr Lincoln. That was really interesting video.
@ultra5612
5 жыл бұрын
2" is the answer to all the questions in the universe
@MichaelSkinner-e9j
Ай бұрын
I wish I had the money to visit!
@constpegasus
5 жыл бұрын
Particle physics is the best. Wouldn't mind riding my motorcycle on vacation for a visit.
@SajayanKS
3 жыл бұрын
I think particle accelerators create more questions than answers and new particles.
@jaredkerber5877
2 жыл бұрын
Fermilab ROCKS!
@alainpainchaud
5 жыл бұрын
Dear Dr. Lincoln. Thank you for this interesting presentation about Fermi Lab. We never met together, as your background is much more specialized and impressive than mine. I am involved in physic too. Our little Academy is not recognized and it is finance by private interests. And, it is much smaller, but still very very interesting. We follow scientific research and experimental development rules. We are very serious, even if small! For example, I know for a fact that it is not possible for "matter" to go at the speed of light in our world. However, we found how to travel at speed equal or higher than the speed of light. The first part of the sentence seems in contradiction with the second part? But, it is not! To be honnest, we found this by luck and because I have the chance to be a little bit clever. So, both things combined gave huge results. Due to our little contribution, in my opinion, Classic and Quantum Physic will form only one in the mid term. There is just a little fix to do in both disciplines to make one discipline! Einstein did a good job to try to make sure that laws of Physics apply everywhere the same way but he failed to link with little things. Also, the "space-time" is problematic, as time does not really exist (clearly, Einstein did not understand that when he did the relativity It is obvious when we look at his 1905 declaration about the 2 clocks - once clock traveling and the other fix). Einstein has been lucky, time correlates with gravity! That is why the relativity passed all the tests up to now. I think we took over his good job and added a little bit to it.
@ellevanburen4973
5 жыл бұрын
I agree with one of the comments below that I could watch you talk all day haha! Thank you Dr Lincoln!
@theophilus749
5 жыл бұрын
It would be interesting to know how the brains at Fermilab would even be able to propose a scientific research program to enlighten us on the question: Why is there something rather than nothing? Physics is about how one stage of 'something' becomes a further stage of 'something', even of how 'something' turns into 'something else'. These are properly scientific questions. Even if they cannot fully be answered now, perhaps they will be answered some day. But something rather than nothing! That is so obviously a non-scientific question. Why? Because only _something_ can have a physics, even if that something was at one time mistakenly thought of as a 'nothing'.
@trynottodie3317
2 жыл бұрын
can't wait for the SMP program starting tomorrow!
@zaksrdanovich9649
3 жыл бұрын
I pass by fermi lab every day to school. I go to marmion academy. I’ve always wanted to visit it
@tonyguerich9854
5 жыл бұрын
Thanks, Dr Lincoln. Hope to visit someday now that I am retired. BTW, loved your Great Courses offering on Audible
@nmagko
5 жыл бұрын
very nice place to work
@mjkpjjkl2418
5 жыл бұрын
I have questions about the stages of the emergence of the four powers after the Big Bang Perhaps the four powers were united in the time of the Big Bang that created the universe These four forces are ( gravitational force , strong nuclear force, weak nuclear force, electromagnetic force) My question when did the Big Bang begin? 1 - began after the separation of gravity from the rest of the forces? 2 - Or began after the separation of the nuclear force from those forces? 3. Is the weak nuclear force separated before electromagnetic? We wish you to send my three questions to physicists
@JigilJigil
3 жыл бұрын
Great video, very informative & educational.
@davejones542
2 жыл бұрын
When you get time please can you do a video explaining why the speed of light in a vacuum is 299,792,458 m / s and not some other number, (e.g why not 400,000 or 200,000 etc) or is that an unsolved mystery ? Thank you for an awesome channel.
@aliawann7948
2 жыл бұрын
VERY NICE AND AWESOME THANKS FOR SHARING
@SquirrelASMR
5 жыл бұрын
Dr Lincoln is cool is what I know
@seanmortazyt
5 жыл бұрын
another great video! looking fwd to more...
@philharmer198
2 жыл бұрын
It Would be very interesting to work there .
@erickelly8704
3 жыл бұрын
Gotta ask since the large collider is decommissioned is it still there & are there tours of it love to see that!
@ayanbanerjee4177
4 жыл бұрын
When I will grow up i will definitely want to work there.
@venkatbabu1722
3 жыл бұрын
He has everything.
@igknighttheworld1452
5 жыл бұрын
Hey Doc could you explain What is gravity? Is it a electric/magnetic force? A velocity induced force. I’d like an easy to understand explanation of how this force effects solids gasses etc. Thanks
@pmiecz
5 жыл бұрын
Great video, thanks
@RME76048
5 жыл бұрын
OK, for all you viewers that say, "What is Fermilab doing for me?" There's your answer. No, it isn't finding cheaper ways to fix your pickup truck. It is going wayyyy past such trivial things and is opening up new science and understanding... This, my friend, is the Frontier of science, technology and understanding that drives humanity forward. Be patient... soon enough, that old misfiring truck will become obsolete.
@morleyman4614
2 жыл бұрын
The Reptilians at Fermilab will never do anything good for you.
@RPG-GT
2 жыл бұрын
I didn't know you guys made these videos, I really do enjoy them! Question now that the James Webb telescope is finding new things in space do you still hold the same theory on the big bang?
@mhyzon1
5 жыл бұрын
I worked on CDMS as an undergrad! Good to see the collaboration is still ongoing.
@SpaceCakeism
5 жыл бұрын
I actually wasn't aware that uncharged particles, could have anti-matter counterparts... Guess the reason for which, is because they're rarely talked about; then again, I can't remember anyone ever saying it's exclusive to charged particles
@merlepatterson
5 жыл бұрын
What if matter at the moment of the big bang naturally took up a centralized region an acted as a type of pip (as in nuclear warhead construction) and the anti matter which should have been created in equal quantities was forced to shell regions by some early stage mechanism? This would leave the possibility that all of the antimatter created at the big bang could now possibly exist external to the CMB?
@sujurramalingam8377
5 жыл бұрын
Amazing , I love to visit . I am from INDIA please advise the procedure
@benYaakov
3 жыл бұрын
Is higgs feild real or just imagined for concept building ? I wanna explore fermilab once and meet you Doctor don .
@Times_Ticking
4 жыл бұрын
Amazing
@johnfarris6152
5 жыл бұрын
What would happen if a black hole ate matter and anti-matter?
@makeupyourmindinator
3 жыл бұрын
I really wish that I had taken a tour of fermi lab when I lived in Illinois. Especially when they use scientifically accurate terminology such as chubby electron.
@АндрейДынин-л8т
5 жыл бұрын
a key to dark matter or no time for energy exchage short version Energy exchange limit or limit for two point to interact. it is a bit hard to write down this thought for me. if two points have relative speed more then speed of light, they not able to interact. but they can interact through the third point. (exactly like dark matter) long version For a long time trying to communicate with physics to clarify my theory. with all and all main point here. -dark matter in our galaxy, (most likely particles emitted by central black hole) is particles that moving faster than light. (most likely you do not "belive" in this) if i assume it is correct, then big amount of hydrogen on edge of galaxy, is where this "dark matter particles" decay after losing speed. (decay like new particles from hadron collider) -parts of dark matter alredy found, but we do not about it. (perseption(particles from hadron collider)) -particles found with hadron collider behave like a dark matter after loosing speed. -most likely there is a energy exchange speed limit in betwen two points (not sound speed), most likely it is a speed of light. (that about why we do not see dark matter, but see it interction with other(slower for it/faster for us) particles) -particles from hadron collider will be stable if placed in faster then light speed. whant to tell more, I hope this is enough to contact me. the key is a energy exchange speed limit (i want my Nobel for showing you dark matter) Best regards, Dynin A.I.
@morleyman4614
2 жыл бұрын
Reptilians work at Fermilab. They open portals all the time at night in the woods where more of their kind come through.
@selenaszy8036
2 жыл бұрын
I wonder how many Wednesdays and 1st Sundays it would take to satiate me....? I guess I’ll have to run my own experiment and analyze the data into some equation worth the trips 🤷🏻♀️❤️🙏
@TheyCallMeNewb
5 жыл бұрын
Here are some colours of radioactive elemental decay that I found among Erwin's stuff: Radium [archetypal radioactive element] green; Actinium [it aids me to think A=B] blue; and Plutonium [the fatman bombs core] orange-red. Where is the rest of the Physics Slam I ask?
@philschiavone101
Жыл бұрын
I think that the universe came about from a region of space that was so dilute, that only quantum fluctuations existed. When too many quantum particles pop into the same space, it triggers a great inflammation of space.
Пікірлер: 344