Changes Everything: A Profound Glitch Discovered In The Cosmos By Scientists

Ғылым және технология

Dive into the mysteries of the cosmos as we explore a groundbreaking discovery-a "cosmic glitch" in the fine structure constant, alpha. This anomaly could mean that the laws of physics aren't uniform across the universe. Join us as we unravel what this means for Einstein's theories, our cosmic models, and the very fabric of reality. Don't miss out on reimagining the universe's fundamental principles!
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Пікірлер: 137

  • @Bobalicious
    @Bobalicious23 күн бұрын

    Quasar should not be pronounced in a way that makes me flinch.

  • @billyhomeyer7414

    @billyhomeyer7414

    23 күн бұрын

    Quiezar

  • @Bobalicious

    @Bobalicious

    23 күн бұрын

    @@billyhomeyer7414 Damn, you made me flinch again.

  • @marpsr

    @marpsr

    23 күн бұрын

    AI voice 🙄

  • @Bobalicious

    @Bobalicious

    23 күн бұрын

    @@marpsr I thought as much.

  • @erikkennedy8725

    @erikkennedy8725

    23 күн бұрын

    It bugs me so much I don't think I can watch the video.

  • @amberb.5964
    @amberb.596424 күн бұрын

    Absolutely fascinating, what a time to be alive. If you’re out there some where reading this, just keep holding on. Sometimes we get stuck on fight or flight when we need to just accept and be in the moment. ❤

  • @chuckjones9159
    @chuckjones915922 күн бұрын

    While interesting two things are to be noted. 1. We have long known that alpha, as well as other coupling constants, varies with temperature and/or energy density. Therefore inside stars or other extreme environments these and likely other constants vary. 2. If we are looking across the universe then we are seeing it vary in time as the universe evolved. The above also brings 3 other constants into question. These are: A. Electric Permittivity of free space B. Magnetic Permeability of free space C. Speed of Light It is quite likely that these are highly altered in extreme environments and may have even varied as the universe evolved.

  • @johnburnside7828
    @johnburnside782823 күн бұрын

    Well, as the old saying goes, the three most important things about determining the desirability of a property are "location, location, location".

  • @failforwardresearch3127

    @failforwardresearch3127

    20 күн бұрын

    And what factors make that location! Understanding those factors paves the road to the stars

  • @mikemore732
    @mikemore73223 күн бұрын

    He starts by saying "the astronomers discovered...". Which astronomers? All of them i guess. Not really any references for any of this material, but it sounds cool.

  • @HitsInSandbox

    @HitsInSandbox

    23 күн бұрын

    Sounds like it was stolen material posted back in 2014 from A. Vallee at adaption systems

  • @jeremy1350
    @jeremy135023 күн бұрын

    Where's the Kaboom, there's supposed to be an Earth Shattering KABOOM !!!

  • @Pax.Alotin
    @Pax.Alotin23 күн бұрын

    *I love our human Hubris* --- We have the conceit to label a result we don't understand as a 'Glitch' ---- *As if the Universe needs to answer for what we think is an error* 🤨🤔🙄

  • @srikantankckc1305

    @srikantankckc1305

    23 күн бұрын

    When instrument says wrong value its a glitch.When scientist says wrong its a new discovery..pls discover a new Einstein or Newton.🙏

  • @gothesouthway
    @gothesouthway23 күн бұрын

    It's called the Sommerfeld constant not Alpha. Alpha is just a Greek letter to represent it. And it's not well understood, and more of a ratio.

  • @johnculver6994

    @johnculver6994

    16 күн бұрын

    Actually he is referring to the fine structure constant of electromagnetic theory.

  • @gothesouthway

    @gothesouthway

    15 күн бұрын

    @@johnculver6994 Come on man! I even took the time to google it just to look all smart 'n stuff and you go 'n ruin it.

  • @shantanubasu9289

    @shantanubasu9289

    6 күн бұрын

    See Arnold Sommerfield 1916

  • @lyrapsi
    @lyrapsi18 күн бұрын

    Yes! Getting closer. I'm so excited. Can't wait till you figure out what most of the universe is made of.

  • @petermcateer1354
    @petermcateer135423 күн бұрын

    Lots of conjecture.

  • @donaldlococo954
    @donaldlococo95423 күн бұрын

    Rupert Sheldrake was prophetic. There are no laws of the universe, just habits. His theory shows congruence with these observations. Now, if only cosmology would stop ignoring Halton Arp's extensive observations that indicate red shift is not 100% correlated with distance. How, ladies and gentlemen, do some quasars directly linked to parent galaxies have red shifts many times larger than the ones connected to? In a universe this large, this observable fact cannot be ignored. How many Arp-type galaxies are there? Millions? Billions? And how about the electronmagnetic filaments linking all the galactic clusters? Cosmologists have to quit selective cherry-picking and start incorporating all the data if they truly want to solve the mysteries of the cosmos.

  • @TanAksoy

    @TanAksoy

    22 күн бұрын

    We should start asking about the red shift of kwisars first then go into habits I think. Let's get the word out there. If we post on enough credible scientists... Dr Keating can help I'm sure. If we place a comment in the correct place at the correct time. it's possible.

  • @Nightscape_
    @Nightscape_23 күн бұрын

    This is what happens when you don't have a mathematical theory for Alpha and have to hand write it in based purely on measurements.

  • @dubbwire3198
    @dubbwire319823 күн бұрын

    @820- it suggests we got it wrong, like real bad wrong 😂

  • @anthonygreenblatt3484
    @anthonygreenblatt348423 күн бұрын

    This changes EVERYTHING !!

  • @dkevans
    @dkevans17 күн бұрын

    The fine structure constant (approx 1/137) has been known for a long time to not be constant. It varies dependant on the energies of the environment observed.

  • @Hovercraftltd
    @Hovercraftltd18 күн бұрын

    Electric Universe theory fits these new observations better and better with each new 'unexpected' observation.... paradigm shift gets closer.

  • @peterwood6875
    @peterwood687522 күн бұрын

    This may be a challenge to the idea that the universe is isotropic, but I'm not at all convinced that this is a challenge to the equivalence principle. It just means that some "constants" are not constant.

  • @failforwardresearch3127
    @failforwardresearch312720 күн бұрын

    Unzicker physics channel talks about variable speed of light VSL models which goes back to Einstein himself in 1911. VSL is important to understand what gravity actually is and how to modify it opening the theoretical floodgates to a star trek future.

  • @HitsInSandbox
    @HitsInSandbox23 күн бұрын

    This story is almost identical to what was proposed back in 2014 By A. Vallee at adaption systems, except he goes much further in placing our solar system within a column right down the centre of a black hole which we and others may be shielded from for we won the lottery. A reprint from around 2016. ****** Cosmology and science, in their quest to understand the universe, may have inadvertently replicated cognitive patterns similar to those that gave rise to religions or cults. This parallel is seen in the fundamental belief that the laws of physics are universally constant. This assumption has guided the creation of measurement tools and the formulation of what are considered universal laws, derived from empirical evidence. Yet, there’s a chance that over 95% of this data could be tainted by human overconfidence and the brain’s inclination towards familiar patterns, leading to potentially flawed conclusions. The notion that physical laws are uniform throughout the universe should be totally questioned, indicating that science and cosmology might have succumbed to the same cognitive pitfalls that have historically trapped billions of people around the world in religious or idolatrous beliefs. The widely accepted limit of the speed of light at 186,000 miles per second, and the scientific principles underpinning redshift and its calculations, may carry inherent errors that have eluded the scientific community’s notice. Unfortunately, this oversight also will affect the James Webb Telescope (JWT), what will be seen as a remarkable feat of engineering when completed and built upon these possibly erroneous theories. It operates under the presumption of universal physical laws, based on observations tested ONLY from the vantage point within our solar system, without accounting for extraterrestrial perspectives. It is possible that we receive corrupted data and never knowing it, leading us to mistakenly believe that a planet contains water or specific gases, when in reality, the data may have been altered within the Galactic and Interstellar space by distortions from fields and numerous gravity clusters between the deep space target view source and the edge of our solar system before ever entering our system. Example: Data streams of say 0101001 may represent our findings in our solar system of CO2 when the source out in intergalactic space may be omitting 0101011 and on the journey of those waves it may get distorted as 0101001 by the time it reaches our solar system and received by JWT leaving us to think we detected CO2 when it may be some thing else. Without the capability to checksum data from the source to us, we will never be certain of its accuracy compared to the standards we use within our own system. Even light moving through interstellar space may have the ability to cross contaminate each other, messing up their true colour compared from the original at the source. It could be receiving tainted data making us believe a planet has water or certain gases when it may not due to the distorted data that may be changed within Galactic and Interstellar space while travelling before it even hits our solar system. The universe’s exact age remains a mystery, and it’s quite possible that we may never pinpoint it precisely. However, it is clear that the universe extends far beyond the few thousand years some religious groups claim. Adaption Systems, a firm, is looking to transition to a completely new form of high-output space propulsion system devised by Vallee. It’s an innovation they believe has been overlooked by mainstream science since the beginning of human history, and they are surprised that science missed it all this time. The significant investments in space telescopes like Hubble and JWT, as well as other future space probes, might be undermined by repeated human design errors, potentially rendering their data as distorted reflections of reality. Nonetheless, it is suggested methods to test and verify these assertions. For instance, a proposal from around 2014 by A. Vallee at AdaptionSystems recommends deploying three space probes: one within the edge of our solar system and two others far beyond it by many millions of miles. By exchanging lasers light transmissions between them, radio waves, and data streams, including inward-looking images, between these probes, we could conduct continuous calculations and apply mathematical error correction to ensure data consistency across all locations. This ongoing data exchange could demonstrate that the speed of light and radio waves may not be bound by the same limitations in interstellar space as within our solar system. It’s plausible that light slows down or speeds up upon entering our solar system. Additionally, redshift might be influenced by interstellar conditions, with light wavelengths fluctuating as they pass through gravitational anomalies and other disturbances. Light could elongate while navigating gravity wells, then compress when directly encountering head on such forces. As light moves through gravity clusters, it undergoes shifts that could change its properties before it reaches our solar system, where it then adheres to the physical laws we consider universal but are based only on are inner solar data points. “Thus, the redshifts and radio waves we detect from within our solar system could be tainted and not truly representative of interstellar occurrences and their actual properties, as they were just outside our system. Therefore, our arrogance and flawed science, due to the human mind’s redundancy errors, may mean that our aging of the universe and distances outside could be totally incorrect. We may never really get to know the true age and distances of far-off places.” ******* Oddly enough, the above would explain the NASA issues with the Voyagers over the past couple years along with the latest 5 months with nothing, then back again. If this is crazy, you should see the write-up they have on how SETI is looking with the wrong tools and primitive for searching for intelligent life.

  • @manjulatapatra899
    @manjulatapatra89923 күн бұрын

    What is the color of star?

  • @IntentionsOfAbsence

    @IntentionsOfAbsence

    23 күн бұрын

    All and none at the same different time🙂

  • @manjulatapatra899

    @manjulatapatra899

    23 күн бұрын

    @@IntentionsOfAbsence ok

  • @UKUSA

    @UKUSA

    22 күн бұрын

    Usually green kinda

  • @PR-fk5yb

    @PR-fk5yb

    19 күн бұрын

    Blue?

  • @chuckiechuck909
    @chuckiechuck90922 күн бұрын

    Didn't a recent study also find that the sun's axis runs perpendicular to the dipole axis?

  • @terrycox1639
    @terrycox163910 күн бұрын

    I believe it's possible that the energy values all quantum fields vary over great distances.

  • @pastaplatoon6184
    @pastaplatoon618422 күн бұрын

    Sources? Links? References? Please and thank you.

  • @willkerslake8820
    @willkerslake882016 күн бұрын

    Wow, that suggests that the cosmos is not isotropic on a grand scale, only on a local scale, and the implications could be huge. The laws of the physical universe maybe different in another location, imagine going to another country, when you disembark the aeroplane, you realise that you're floating several feet above the ground! If this is the case, it seems as though a different rule book will be necessary dependant on where you are.

  • @AlienRelics
    @AlienRelics23 күн бұрын

    "Quizar"?

  • @johnl.5117
    @johnl.511717 күн бұрын

    "A lucky feature"....that's staying in the shade.

  • @jhe9521
    @jhe95217 сағат бұрын

    i don't think we need to double the age of our universe ~ galaxy JADES-GS-z7-01-QU, for example, may have 'died' without producing many stars because it formed after first inrush of stuff* / because its "surroundings at the time did not sufficiently replenish the gas reservoir" (livescience ~ james webb telescope detects oldest dead galaxy...) * if our universe sprang from a singularity fed by black hole/s of an older universe, and was triggered by dark energy which entropied that older universe, then that eruption might only have provided stuff already captured by the singularity ~ the ensuing deflation of that older universe may have then provided a second influx, not only of stuff enabling the formation of 'typical' galaxies, but also of dark energy (= second expansion) "Nothing is created, nothing is destroyed, and everything is transformed" ~ A. Lavoisier ~~~~~~~~~~~

  • @alokranjan2814
    @alokranjan281423 күн бұрын

    We can't avoid space.JWST is far better than Hubble in terms of infrared division+far sightseeing, colonization of space is very important specially in younger constiliation, the invention of rocket fuel like Gama rays,Anti matter , atomic energy,, loop tube space craft etc.

  • @jedaaa

    @jedaaa

    21 күн бұрын

    Are you high ?

  • @user-xg8ut5kh9j
    @user-xg8ut5kh9j23 күн бұрын

    There will be so much groundbreaking discoveries it's sure to make scientists head spin.

  • @IntentionsOfAbsence
    @IntentionsOfAbsence23 күн бұрын

    With everything affecting everything else from the smallest gravitational waves, densities, black holes, dark matter? making an evenly stretched/pushed/pulled universe doesn't sound logical at all.

  • @stevoplex
    @stevoplex17 күн бұрын

    Interesting video, but I'd love to know "What is the Fine Structure Constant?" Not necessarily its numerical value, but it's definition. Does it have something to do with atoms? Or subatomic particles? Or magnetic fields? It should have been defined in the beginning and I would have enjoyed the video more.

  • @terrycox1639

    @terrycox1639

    10 күн бұрын

    The strength of the electromagnetic force. He mentioned it as being the strength of electromagnetic interactions. Which is 1/137 the strength of the strong nuclear force.

  • @thekingofmojacar5333
    @thekingofmojacar533323 күн бұрын

    These anisotropic movements (uneven expansions) from different parts in the universe certainly have a logical explanation... At the very beginning there was not just one universe but many smaller so-called pocket universes. These grew or rather merged together to form the gigantic universe as we know and observe it today. So not only stars (to form star clusters) or galaxies (to form galaxy clusters) merge, but also entire universes. This phase of mergers must be based on a basic property of the universe, let's just call it the "great merger epoch".

  • @dubbwire3198
    @dubbwire319823 күн бұрын

    What is a KWI-ZAR? 😂😂😂

  • @TanAksoy

    @TanAksoy

    22 күн бұрын

    Using James Webb Telescope. The link is in description. These are signs it's an AI reading prewritten text.

  • @d2kmitc
    @d2kmitc23 күн бұрын

    Can we see on a Model where jwst is located and where it's heading

  • @tastyfrzz1
    @tastyfrzz118 күн бұрын

    So, element 115 may actually be stable and common somewhere else?!

  • @petercombs4119
    @petercombs411923 күн бұрын

    Surprise, the universe is a torus. And the big bang is a permanent feature.

  • @danmurray1143

    @danmurray1143

    23 күн бұрын

    I don't think the big bang ever happened. I say time & distance are illusions. I bet we are still stuck in the singularity!!

  • @petercombs4119

    @petercombs4119

    23 күн бұрын

    @@danmurray1143 as though the big bang is a shimmering illusion created by the refraction of light through a space-time continuum. After all, we can say precipitation 'emerges' out of vapor as it cools. So too do space, time, matter and gravity emerge from electromagnetic fields as they expand and cool. After the photons get 'juiced' from the space-time pulp, it collapses on itself in the hole of the torus. The big bang is the flip side of the Great Attractor

  • @zenokarlsbach4292

    @zenokarlsbach4292

    11 күн бұрын

    @@danmurray1143 And everything else is mud?

  • @jeremybristol4374
    @jeremybristol437423 күн бұрын

    Link to the paper?

  • @jay31415

    @jay31415

    22 күн бұрын

    2:05 you're welcome

  • @darthjarwood7943
    @darthjarwood794323 күн бұрын

    we seem to have alot of "lucky features" that allowed life to be here on earth

  • @jedaaa

    @jedaaa

    21 күн бұрын

    Not really,most are inevitable

  • @darthjarwood7943

    @darthjarwood7943

    21 күн бұрын

    @@jedaaa ok

  • @darthjarwood7943

    @darthjarwood7943

    21 күн бұрын

    @@jedaaa inevitable yet there isnt anything like earth in the universe....hmmmm

  • @jedaaa

    @jedaaa

    21 күн бұрын

    @darthjarwood7943 how can you say that ? Our detection methods are still limited but even now we know that the vast majority of star systems have small rocky worlds orbiting them , and likely even more than our solar system does, and we know that life on Earth shares most of its chemical composition with what earth is made from, and that earth shares its chemical composition largely with that of the sun, and we stars all over that also share those same chemicals in varying degrees , so I wouldn't consider that luck, I'd consider it (the galaxy/ universe) ripe for life.

  • @darthjarwood7943

    @darthjarwood7943

    21 күн бұрын

    @@jedaaa my dude...every astronomer from Harvard to the guy with 20 subscribers on youtube says there is ZERO evidence of life outside of Earth...star wars, star trek, fantasy land, Hollywood programming talk will get us no where

  • @nicodesmidt4034
    @nicodesmidt403418 күн бұрын

    3:00 paper from 2011 🤔

  • @Hecarim420
    @Hecarim42023 күн бұрын

    Obviously 👀ツ ==> If Alfa would changing it rather changing randomly" ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

  • @tpbtpb2602
    @tpbtpb260223 күн бұрын

    If we see 1ppm difference, and a 4% difference is needed to prevent production of carbon, I'm not to concerned.

  • @jcdisci
    @jcdisci23 күн бұрын

    Gonna have to stop calling them 'constants'. And what if we find the 'constants' vary on Mars? Or Jupiter? Or anywhere within our own solar system?

  • @JerryMlinarevic
    @JerryMlinarevic24 күн бұрын

    Great reasoning. Alpha is indeed calculated as varying with location in the universe due to local gravitational conditions, however it is still a constant varying with universal time (entropy) which is not available to us without sound understanding of universe evolution. Nothing special about our location because it is not the only one.

  • @srikantankckc1305

    @srikantankckc1305

    23 күн бұрын

    We need more inputs from dark energy fields to correct alpha distribution.noot just gravitation or Higgs field..right sir?

  • @Leo-pd4fc
    @Leo-pd4fc23 күн бұрын

    If there are Glitches in Universe we really are Glitch in the Matrix! 😮

  • @user-hz8uc9iu8c
    @user-hz8uc9iu8c23 күн бұрын

    are you guys sure the difference isn't just merely the reassignment of (0,0)... and yeah, "alpha" is just the name of a letter in greek, not a physical law-

  • @alex79suited
    @alex79suited23 күн бұрын

    Closed environments

  • @will2see
    @will2see14 күн бұрын

    3:40 - I think you misunderstood the Copernican principle

  • @Debbie-henri
    @Debbie-henri23 күн бұрын

    Interesting discovery. Wonder if there are any other regions like ours where Alpha is the same value. No reason why not. Could these differing regions be evidence of another Big Bang within or next to (what we consider) our local Big Bang? So when telescopes look into space, maybe they are already seeing a Multiverse, bubbles erupting within bubbles at an earlier time. I suppose we need that bigger telescope... Although, the bigger and better they get, the more we discover that we know less than we thought we did before. I wonder what would happen if humanity could reach these regions of space with differing values in physics, whether 2 types of matter could be compatible in the same place, or whether there would be implications for technology and biology.

  • @tw1356
    @tw135623 күн бұрын

    DETAILS, as finite as "Alpha" I whould of measured the star of this presentation with being educated on THE SOMMERFELD CONSTANT being aka Alpha.

  • @srikantankckc1305
    @srikantankckc130523 күн бұрын

    Kaboom happens when old alpha is hit by new alpha⁉️

  • @chrislammi
    @chrislammi21 күн бұрын

    Q-WHY-SAR

  • @alex79suited
    @alex79suited23 күн бұрын

    Hate to say I told you, but I told you. Peace ✌️ 😎

  • @jontherevelator9663
    @jontherevelator966317 күн бұрын

    I'm the one that originally theorized the age the new age of the universe. It sux I did that with my own brain and they need billions of dollars to basically say the same thing AFTER I submitted it.

  • @smickandily
    @smickandily23 күн бұрын

    I thought this was a real person until he said “qui-zars”. I wish there were fewer ai generated videos. 😢

  • @philrabe910
    @philrabe91017 күн бұрын

    Then it's true. There really IS a universe where Spock and Kirk have beards and are evil.

  • @kyststudio-epicartadventure
    @kyststudio-epicartadventure17 күн бұрын

    It’s “kway-zarz ”. Not “kwy-zarz.”

  • @davesilkstone6912
    @davesilkstone691223 күн бұрын

    Since more like observational bias.

  • @albundy7493
    @albundy749320 күн бұрын

    Kwaisars? Bro i'm done.

  • @archlittle6067
    @archlittle606723 күн бұрын

    Okay, your channel is in no way connected to NASA, by your own admission. The “space news” you present is your own.

  • @pierreproudhon9008
    @pierreproudhon900822 күн бұрын

    Literally unplayable. God please fix.

  • @patrickwhittle9526
    @patrickwhittle952620 күн бұрын

    Pretty sure they just found out god exist not just one either

  • @patrickwhittle9526

    @patrickwhittle9526

    20 күн бұрын

    Not just one either

  • @rogerphelps9939
    @rogerphelps993917 күн бұрын

    This has been debunked years ago.

  • @ronaldkemp3952
    @ronaldkemp395224 күн бұрын

    Wow, if carbon hadn't formed in this region of the bubble then carbon based lifeforms like us wouldn't exist. Does that indicate some sort of intelligence behind the constants in our neighborhood, making it suitable for life, something only a God can do?

  • @Zoltan1412

    @Zoltan1412

    23 күн бұрын

    No and no

  • @jeremy1350

    @jeremy1350

    23 күн бұрын

    If God exists, then I think He is trying to tell us something about our human arrogance, YES? ? "Something only God can DO." Oh, you think you know best, well let me show you this ...

  • @LarryTheCableGuy-tv1js

    @LarryTheCableGuy-tv1js

    23 күн бұрын

    Follow your heart.

  • @leewatkins8685

    @leewatkins8685

    23 күн бұрын

    God of Gaps.

  • @LarryTheCableGuy-tv1js

    @LarryTheCableGuy-tv1js

    23 күн бұрын

    @@leewatkins8685 The gaps in between legs?

  • @DoreenBellDotan
    @DoreenBellDotan23 күн бұрын

    It staggers me that anyone had the unfathomable arrogant stupidity to think that the entire universe obeys any laws that their minds could grasp.

  • @TanAksoy

    @TanAksoy

    22 күн бұрын

    People were hung for going against the church that we weren't the center of the universe and this perplexes you? Humans are irrational, insane, but some are decent. Come on

  • @mastrotentaculopapichulo
    @mastrotentaculopapichulo18 күн бұрын

    That's the Demiurge brother

  • @MM-1820
    @MM-182021 күн бұрын

    I understand not even 1% of what is bieng said here. If alpha constant varies, does that means the law of constant changes is the real nature of reality?

  • @broslyons8045
    @broslyons804523 күн бұрын

    Surprising - but then again - I already thought that the human race and Earth has hit the galactic jackpot - this makes this planet and system seem even more fortunate at a cosmic scale - no creative design - no myth or stories - no supernatural - just absolute cosmic luck and an absolutely fascinating story over time - then humans show up and mess it up -

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