Do Atoms Ever Touch?

Ғылым және технология

Professor Philip Moriarty expresses his displeasure with oft-repeated belief that atoms do not physically touch each other.
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From Brady on this video...
In anticipation of questions and comments, I thought I'd write this in the description (where no-one will ever see it!!!)
Prof Moriarty and I have discussed the issue of "atoms touching" many times off camera.
We've shared different views on the best definitions and tools used by various online "explainers" over the years.
Clearly it is an issue close to Professor Moriarty's heart because it involves his main area of research.
And I am mindful he is a professional on the topic. I am not.
We jointly decided to make a Sixty Symbols video that reflected our previous discussions, so included more than my usual fill of provocative questions.
And regardless, I see it as my role to be a "devil's advocate" and ensure we challenge our scientists and get the best possible explanations.
I can assure everyone it was done in good spirit and we had a laugh afterwards.
Oh and by the way, Prof Moriarty is now on Twitter... / moriarty2112

Пікірлер: 3 300

  • @Bnio
    @Bnio8 жыл бұрын

    Watching Prof. Moriarty in this discussion was like watching a Ferrari stuck in city traffic.

  • @victorselve8349

    @victorselve8349

    7 жыл бұрын

    pure comedic gold

  • @JNeverMindMe

    @JNeverMindMe

    7 жыл бұрын

    But the analogy breaks down!

  • @bikerchrisukk

    @bikerchrisukk

    7 жыл бұрын

    Bnio The guy behind the camera probably wouldn't ask about the definition of 'traffic' :-)

  • @AuroraNora3

    @AuroraNora3

    7 жыл бұрын

    Perfect analogy

  • @casaxtreme2952

    @casaxtreme2952

    7 жыл бұрын

    I'm waiting for him to go like: "FFUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU..."

  • @Mrgiveupufail
    @Mrgiveupufail8 жыл бұрын

    'when common sense meets quantum physics'

  • @kigozimuhammad

    @kigozimuhammad

    7 жыл бұрын

    +The Stacker dude that sound more like a threat when u put it that way .lol

  • @kigozimuhammad

    @kigozimuhammad

    7 жыл бұрын

    +The Stacker I like the way u politely threatened him . Shows how nice u are .

  • @garielmartir9876

    @garielmartir9876

    7 жыл бұрын

    Jajajajaja yes

  • @saturdyl5711

    @saturdyl5711

    7 жыл бұрын

    I'm sorry guys. I'm infatuated with fundamental particles and i'm too cowardly to inform the public in fear of ridicule or opinion.

  • @Bix12

    @Bix12

    7 жыл бұрын

    "when common sense meets quantum physics" - in the quantum world, never the twain shall meet.

  • @fen4554
    @fen45548 жыл бұрын

    So passionate... I love how enthusiastic Phil always is.

  • @kamel3d

    @kamel3d

    7 жыл бұрын

    I love him

  • @MrUfojunkiedavid

    @MrUfojunkiedavid

    7 жыл бұрын

    Friendly Metroid he's a charlatan

  • @ScottBrown124

    @ScottBrown124

    7 жыл бұрын

    David That seems harsh, why do you think that?

  • @30l0l3

    @30l0l3

    7 жыл бұрын

    Some parts of the internet hate him (he used to have a blog where, among other things, he tried to debate with the anti-"feminazi" crowd)

  • @AnaICarnaval

    @AnaICarnaval

    7 жыл бұрын

    David just like priest in your church

  • @MozartJunior22
    @MozartJunior228 жыл бұрын

    I find this video...touching.

  • @aurelia8028

    @aurelia8028

    8 жыл бұрын

    wow...

  • @frysause934

    @frysause934

    8 жыл бұрын

    hahaha

  • @tuneboyz5634

    @tuneboyz5634

    4 жыл бұрын

    Theirs nothing emotional here to be touched

  • @donpcmartin

    @donpcmartin

    3 жыл бұрын

    But who’s right tho? Now to the experts here in KZread comments

  • @sc4r3d0ntf34r

    @sc4r3d0ntf34r

    3 жыл бұрын

    Nope a video can't touch you

  • @bertlowry7668
    @bertlowry766811 ай бұрын

    I think we all need to admire Brady’s ability to embody the casual physics fan’s questions and beliefs.

  • @whirled_peas
    @whirled_peas9 жыл бұрын

    His explanation and solution to the problem of the definition of "touching" is spot on. Our brains try to turn everything into objects, specifically, atoms into solid spheres, but science tells us absolutely nothing is actually that simple. The traditional definition of 'touch' doesn't make sense on this scale. I love how animated he gets trying to get through to the cameraman :D.

  • @whirled_peas

    @whirled_peas

    9 жыл бұрын

    I think another, simpler explanation is that well, no interaction in physics is binary, on or off.

  • @JohnDoe-zl6qw

    @JohnDoe-zl6qw

    9 жыл бұрын

    +samthepoor Agreed. The problem results from the limits of our perception; we want - as you say - to turn everything into objects. Or - put in a more physics-y way - we want to apply a perceptual bias in favor of matter. But the universe isn't just matter; it's matter and energy (or - if you'd rather - it's all the same stuff and matter and energy are simply two expressions of that "stuff"). Just because we have difficulty perceiving and conceptualizing the energy doesn't mean the energy is any less significant in defining the point of "contact". As Professor Moriarty challenged the interviewer, "Let's define what you mean by touching. Do you mean the nuclear cores come together?" To define it in this matter is reductionism and a failure to understand how matter and energy interact and are inseparable. In this context, you can't have a discussion of one without including the other. The Van Der Waals force causing two molecules to attract each other are every bit a part of the molecule as the electrons, protons, or neutrons. Likewise, the repulsive force of the electrons being brought into close proximity to one another is equally a part of the whole system of the respective molecules. We don't get to cherry pick and discount one or the other simply because it doesn't fit within the limits of our perceptual or cognitive framework. Once the balance point between these forces are reached, that's the definition of contact; period. Can we go beyond those forces? Sure; just look to neutron stars where you have neutrons physically/mechanically "touching" one another. If one wants to use that as their benchmark of contact, then certainly the interactions we experience in our day-to-day lives wouldn't qualify under that definition. Of course, one could claim there's no true contact between neutrons, either, since they're made of quarks which do not come into contact with the quarks in an adjacent neutron. Using the previous paragraph as their definition, one can then rightly claim that at the energies at which human life is possible, then - no - nuclear cores never touch one another; therefore there is no true "contact". As stated earlier, though, that argument completely invalidates the role of energy and the interactions between molecules. The interviewer also needs to come to an understanding that contact is a fluid definition. Standing on the surface of the Earth at normal pressure, temperature, etc., the nuclei of two atoms will never touch; their point of contact is when the Van Der Waals and electron repulsive forces balance one another. Return to the example of the neutron star and the point of contact is when neutron nuclei start bumping up against one another. He's going to have to be more precise in his assumptions, criteria, and limiters in forming a definition of contact before making a blanket proclamation that nothing ever really touches. In the interactions between molecules, energy is just as valid as matter in defining the point of contact. That's what Professor Moriarty is trying to explain to the interviewer and which the interviewer is rejecting due to a bias in favor of matter over energy. One won't get very far in understanding how our universe works if they dismiss the contribution of energy.

  • @JGunlimited

    @JGunlimited

    8 жыл бұрын

    John Doe Oh I see! Your comment helps clear up what Moriarty was saying. I was on Brady's side, but reading what you are saying about energy...I kinda get now why Morirarty says that that is the contact point.

  • @JohnDoe-zl6qw

    @JohnDoe-zl6qw

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Evi1M4chine I wouldn't say he's a moron. I'd say he's representative of the perceptual limits of the human organism. It's a very difficult concept to wrap one's head around because what physics and quantum mechanics tells us is happening at the micro scale flies in the face of everything we experience at the macro scale. The universe/physics doesn't function at the micro scale the way we perceive it at the macro scale; or - more correctly - our perceptions of the how the universe/physics works at the macro scale is not an accurate representation of what's really occurring at the micro scale. That's not a failing on our part; that's simply the hand we've been dealt by evolution and our biology. I'm sure thesis-level dissertations could be written concerning the overlap of physics and biology. I won't attempt to take on that challenge in a KZread comments section, but suffice to say it would probably fill a book. What's incredible is that we can surpass the limitations of what we experience with our senses and begin to understand how the universe really works. That's one of the real values of science. The interviewer can be forgiven for rejecting the notion that what physics and quantum mechanics says about reality flies in the face of everything he experiences with his senses. It's a huge cognitive leap and I think it will be many, many generations (if ever) before we as a species accept that what our senses tell us is not an accurate representation of what's really happening; especially when those senses have served our survival so well.

  • @lumburgapalooza

    @lumburgapalooza

    8 жыл бұрын

    You do realize the ignorance was feigned, right? He's attempting to challenge him as the average person would who has no scientific background in order to illicit a more thorough debunking of classical, sensory perceptions of reality... Devil's Advocate if you will. Even if it were real though your antagonistic attitude towards those you consider to be intellectually inferior is the sign of a troubled and insecure mind. I suggest you rid yourself of this kind of self-bias and ego to the best of your ability.

  • @pairot01
    @pairot017 жыл бұрын

    A perfect example of two people arguing about two different things.

  • @skinny55772

    @skinny55772

    7 жыл бұрын

    Cocaine or a double dose of Vyvanse.

  • @cassiopeia9701

    @cassiopeia9701

    7 жыл бұрын

    then you missed both points completly :D maybe rewatch the argumentation of prof Moriarty. It is exactly the issue of the whole discussion. If you see his point there is no need for such and therefor it is perfect counter argument for bradies (or the internet questions he represents)

  • @cidfacetious3722

    @cidfacetious3722

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@cassiopeia9701 there's a reason no one responded to you just stop it he didn't miss anything the question answer was asked by the Common Man would be answered no by Professor Moriarty if you understood what was being asked but he took it as a science question asked by somebody who has a basic understanding of quantum physics but that's not what was being asked but Professor Moriarty did answer the question and it's no it is impossible it would be immediate Fusion as he alluded to with astronomical energy levels

  • @cassiopeia9701

    @cassiopeia9701

    5 жыл бұрын

    well how did i go on my comment is a year old... but yeah you seem to have missed the point too. The whole argument is there is no "common mans" way of defining touching

  • @cidfacetious3722

    @cidfacetious3722

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@cassiopeia9701 no it is you missing my point not only did I get your point and agree with it what I was saying is the question that was asked as it was being asked by the Common Man was not understood by the physicist who heard it as a physicist the common man doesn't understand the waves and all the weirdness of quantum mechanics what to repeat myself the answer to the common man's question as it was asked is no they do not ever "touch" if a physics student asked the question then the answer in the video would be what we were looking for the whole video was literally a giant misunderstanding between the question and the answer

  • @WeeWeeJumbo
    @WeeWeeJumbo8 жыл бұрын

    "I agree, but you have to be kerrful!"

  • @kellyjackson7889

    @kellyjackson7889

    7 жыл бұрын

    eye

  • @ahadicow
    @ahadicow9 жыл бұрын

    My burning question whenever come to Prof Moriarty is do he always keep two footballs in his office specially for this purpose?

  • @nibblrrr7124

    @nibblrrr7124

    5 жыл бұрын

    It would be annoying to always have to borrow Prof. Poliakoff's dog toys.

  • @jcollins519

    @jcollins519

    4 жыл бұрын

    I'm sure he keeps all kinds of props around for demonstrations and analogies during his lectures

  • @tammyplatte328

    @tammyplatte328

    3 жыл бұрын

    I think he juggles them like knockers in his free time

  • @sixtysymbols
    @sixtysymbols9 жыл бұрын

    In anticipation of everyone getting a bit upset about the "debate" nature of this video, I wrote something in the video description, but of course no-one reads the full video description.... It says: In anticipation of questions and comments, I thought I'd write this in the description (where no-one will ever see it!!!) Prof Moriarty and I have discussed the issue of "atoms touching" many times off camera. We've shared different views on the best definitions and tools used by various online "explainers" over the years. Clearly it is an issue close to Professor Moriarty's heart because it involves his main area of research. And I am mindful he is a professional on the topic. I am not. We jointly decided to make a Sixty Symbols video that reflected our previous discussions, so included more than my usual fill of provocative questions. And regardless, I see it as my role to be a "devil's advocate" and ensure we challenge our scientists and get the best possible explanations. I can assure everyone it was done in good spirt and we had a laugh afterwards. Oh and by the way, Prof Moriarty is now on Twitter... twitter.com/Moriarty2112

  • @joerobinson7564

    @joerobinson7564

    9 жыл бұрын

    I am far from being a scientist and far from understanding the precise physics behind atoms but if you say the atoms are not touching would you not have to ignore the electrons and components of the atoms and the forces they apply on each other? I mean those forces are part of the atoms themselves and as such are an extension of the atoms so they would in fact be touching each other, just not in a way you could physically see, (kind of moot considering you can't see it anyway) I guess my point is the force would be a part of the atoms themselves which would mean they would in fact be touching would they not?

  • @Tethloach1

    @Tethloach1

    9 жыл бұрын

    Joe Robinson that is like saying that my words touched you, and whence we just made contact. the idea of touching doesn't apply to the small objects they remain the same. the question would be if they don't touch what is changing, energy is what touches everything. atoms don't touch because it would be chaos. energy is what moves threw space sand time. some things lose energy while other things gain energy. that is far more scientific than touching. the idea of atoms touching is like the idea of truth. truth is too abstract to be of any use to science or math. the language is too limited to describe the universe in its perfect form. that is like you trying to map PIE( 3.14.......) using language. it won't happen, the laws of nature don't allow you to do it. language is limited that is why scientist use math, because math is more precise than words like truth or touch.

  • @khasab6124

    @khasab6124

    9 жыл бұрын

    Sixty Symbols I see. :) I thought you sounded a bit dense although I did wonder while watching the video if you weren't doing it deliberately as it was unlike you. It's a very interesting video and clears up that question once and for all. Thanks.p.s.

  • @afrog2666

    @afrog2666

    9 жыл бұрын

    Sixty Symbols "Prof Moriarty and I have discussed the issue of "atoms touching" many times off camera." LoL! It shows..

  • @koshhe

    @koshhe

    8 жыл бұрын

    Sixty Symbols If the standard definition of contact on the atomic scale has the same meaning it does at the human scale, why is that a problem?

  • @tomasdelatoba7572
    @tomasdelatoba75728 жыл бұрын

    His reaction at 8:06 is the international sign of "WTF DUDE" lol

  • @mewepede
    @mewepede7 жыл бұрын

    One hundred percent understand what Mr. Teacher is getting at. Thank you both for playing your parts to clear this up and make the destinctions clear.

  • @ThePurza

    @ThePurza

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, if election 'shells' are more a cloud of probability than anything defined, I can't see how anyone could say - 'yep they are touching now'. You need to define an arbitrary point, I would have thought an arbitrary measure of "overlapping electron density" would be as close as us laymen could possibly get

  • @Cheesepuff
    @Cheesepuff9 жыл бұрын

    There are 4 fundamental quantities in physics: 1. Energy 2. Mass 3. Force 4. etc.

  • @Mic_Glow

    @Mic_Glow

    6 жыл бұрын

    In classical physics at least...

  • @nagarmalsharma9992

    @nagarmalsharma9992

    6 жыл бұрын

    Idiot, there are 8...time, mass, temperature, current, length, luminous intensity, mole,

  • @57thorns

    @57thorns

    5 жыл бұрын

    I was so hoping for "passion" there at #4.

  • @koroko999

    @koroko999

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@ombelle5284 Well done ;-) I was thinking the same!!

  • @FrancoisTremblay

    @FrancoisTremblay

    3 жыл бұрын

    Especially the etc

  • @mcrut111
    @mcrut1119 жыл бұрын

    people need to realize that you can have a great heated discussion like this one between brady and mariarty, and still walk away and be good friends or colleagues. just because you disagree doesn't mean you get to hate that person, that is an immature reaction.

  • @twobyfour
    @twobyfour2 жыл бұрын

    Almost 8 years on and this is still one of my favourite episodes.

  • @thishandleistaken1011
    @thishandleistaken10117 жыл бұрын

    This is fucking comedy. 9:36 is one of my favorite parts, Phil's reaction to brady's "true contact" is perfect.

  • @noob94884

    @noob94884

    7 жыл бұрын

    people seem to be forgetting that the 'electron shell' represented by the skin of the football is **NOT SOLID** !! It is a spinning electron!! (VERY SIMPLE DESCRIPTION!!)

  • @jja77a

    @jja77a

    7 жыл бұрын

    actually electrons dont even "spin" around the nucleus

  • @noob94884

    @noob94884

    7 жыл бұрын

    jja77a so WHAT does an 'electron round a nucleus' DO??????

  • @jja77a

    @jja77a

    7 жыл бұрын

    it is best described as a probabilistic "wave function"

  • @gressorialNanites

    @gressorialNanites

    7 жыл бұрын

    well, EVERYTHING is ultimately best described as a probabilistic wave function...

  • @IceMetalPunk
    @IceMetalPunk9 жыл бұрын

    I have to agree with Professor Moriarty on this one. To define "contact" as "the point at which there is no space, not even a Planck length, between two objects" is an extreme exaggeration that doesn't apply to anything. You can't put a piece of paper between the two "contacting" footballs, but you CAN put a sheet of graphene (ignoring the logistics of alignment). You can't put even graphene between two close-enough atoms, but you CAN put an electron. Etc. So that definition doesn't apply to anything on any scale. And since particles aren't really volumetric points...there's the issue of "what does it mean to be 'that close' to another electron when electrons have no defined position?" In the end, the common ideas of contact don't actually apply to the real world on any scale, and so the only way to talk about contact factually is to define it in a way that does--which the Professor has done here.

  • @khasab6124

    @khasab6124

    9 жыл бұрын

    IceMetalPunk Absolutely correct. (I'm afraid some people haven't really understood the video).

  • @SmartAlx

    @SmartAlx

    9 жыл бұрын

    Yes. But I'm not one of them.

  • @synapse349

    @synapse349

    9 жыл бұрын

    IceMetalPunk Yeah, and I shudder to think about contact between the quarks that make up the protons and neutrons, etc. And what exactly happens when particles collide at high energy? Do they THEN touch? Even ever so briefly? Oh if I never find out, I'll still die happy, I suppose.

  • @mightysunmanpro

    @mightysunmanpro

    Жыл бұрын

    How you scientifically measure an "extreme exaggeration"? And to say that it doesn't apply to anything when it applies to this discussion is disinforming. It was an accurate definition of "touch" especially in terms of classic physics. However, to talk about particle interactions on the quantum level is pointless when those particles actually behave like waves. The answer to this discussion was given when the professor talked about Attractive and Repulsive forces. The whole discussion should have been around forces and waves since those are what matters most at the actual level of atomic interactions.

  • @_varden
    @_varden9 жыл бұрын

    Great video. Moriarty's analogy with footballs moving closer than the point of contact (squeezed together) repelling from each other was really good.

  • @sixtysymbols

    @sixtysymbols

    9 жыл бұрын

    ***** I agree that was useful

  • @GravisTKD
    @GravisTKD8 жыл бұрын

    "... the problem is, you can't extend what the normal person thinks about touching down to the quantum level..." BINGO. Quantum mechanics is, by its nature, not intuitive. Our minds did not evolve in such a way that we dealt with quantum phenomena in our daily lives. We are evolved for the macro. As Prof. Moriarty says, the analogies break down. That statement he made is worth listening to again and again until it's internalized. This stuff is much more readily understood when we let go of our preconceived notions of how we think things *should* behave. Brilliant video.

  • @noob94884

    @noob94884

    7 жыл бұрын

    It is also like saying ' can you read the text on the screen' :D if you move your eye up VERY CLOSE to the screen, you will only see the red green blue dots, so of course, you CANNOT read the text, that is made up of hundreds of those dots.. :D :D

  • @sarge1176

    @sarge1176

    6 жыл бұрын

    excellent analogy for this phenomenon

  • @Yutani_Crayven

    @Yutani_Crayven

    6 жыл бұрын

    Geoff Futch Then use a different descriptive term that doesn't run into this problem. Seems easy enough.

  • @philipjohnson2986

    @philipjohnson2986

    6 жыл бұрын

    Isn't this what religious people would argue tho? To quote what Geoff Futch said... for example...... That statement he made is worth listening to again and again until it's internalized. This stuff is much more readily understood when we let go of our preconceived notions of how we think things should behave. Brilliant video. Please correct me if i'm wrong. Thanks.

  • @fu886

    @fu886

    6 жыл бұрын

    analogies "break down" because that what analogy means - symbol that is not identical with the symbolized but exemplify aspect of what being symbolized. it is not because "in the quantum level" or anything like that any derivative use of language "break down" at some point but have merit in other.

  • @DANGJOS
    @DANGJOS7 жыл бұрын

    NO! There aren't any other videos on Sixty Symbols on the Pauli Exclusion Principle please do one

  • @00BillyTorontoBill

    @00BillyTorontoBill

    6 жыл бұрын

    do the search then look at the video descriptions...you're right its not stated in a title...but it does appear in descriptions.

  • @vitorfernandes2406

    @vitorfernandes2406

    4 жыл бұрын

    I didn't find those videos. Please make more of them and please include some math

  • @DANGJOS

    @DANGJOS

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@00BillyTorontoBill Wow I am so insanely late to this comment, but can you point me to which videos that is?

  • @TheRealBanana

    @TheRealBanana

    2 жыл бұрын

    I think the video he was referring to was entitled "Was Brian Cox wrong?" .

  • @DANGJOS

    @DANGJOS

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@TheRealBanana Ah that makes sense. Yes, that one is about the Exclusion principle. They should go into more detail though

  • @squidcaps4308
    @squidcaps43089 жыл бұрын

    Easily one of the alltime best videos from Sixty Symbols, i could watch these two debate for an hour (i could debate for days, i like the swoosh sound that it makes in my brain, everything lights up like fireworks, coffee and debate, what a rush and oh my god, how nerd am i really?.). The debate is true and shows exactly what people who are getting so deep in their fields of study that the semantics are not working on same worlds anymore. This is just the same concept of how matter is mostly just empty space but that is not how we experience it when you get hit by a truck. I get why he gets so worked up about it, when you have an insight how something works and you know you can explain it quickly inaccurately but enough for applications to use it or you can explain it right.. Sometimes the right explanation is worse than what is needed, ie "quick&inaccurate but it works". But for everyday life, things touch. For philosophical aspect, nothing ever touches and the real scientific fact is that the definition of touch is different and it combines the other two (and gives nice philospohical twist: we touch everything since touch is just interaction between forces anyway..)

  • @000Mazno000
    @000Mazno0004 жыл бұрын

    When i watched this when it came out, I was on Brady's side, but now I totally understand Moriarty's frustration.

  • @VV66613
    @VV666138 жыл бұрын

    Professor Moriarty has a lot patience....

  • @nosuchthing8

    @nosuchthing8

    8 жыл бұрын

    so when the moon orbits the earth, and the outward force from the velocity matches the inward force from gravity, the system is in equilibrium. But according to you the earth also touches the moon, even though it is many hundreds of thousands of miles or kilometers away?

  • @roxydzey

    @roxydzey

    7 жыл бұрын

    *of patience. lietuvį visur sutiksi :D

  • @abdalhadifitouri131

    @abdalhadifitouri131

    6 жыл бұрын

    Some people enjoy debate. I do very much

  • @MKWiiLuke4TW

    @MKWiiLuke4TW

    6 жыл бұрын

    this is two years late I realize but like that's not right, there is no outward force exerted on the moon, that force is fictitious and only created by the function of the moons perpendicular velocity to it's orbit and it's free fall acceleration being in equilibrium, you have no true repulsion force between the two, if the moon wasn't in motion it would come towards the earth, and push through it until the gravitational force equalled the force exerted outward by the earth, you can only define contact when comparing "real" forces

  • @NuncNuncNuncNunc

    @NuncNuncNuncNunc

    6 жыл бұрын

    Patient, smart, and dangerous.

  • @hewhoisknownastaco
    @hewhoisknownastaco7 жыл бұрын

    I think his explanation of the footballs touching was perfect. He asked if they where in contact and then he pushed down and got them, or at least their centroids, even closer to each other.

  • @AlphasysNl
    @AlphasysNl9 жыл бұрын

    This video, with your "layman" questions and ideas vs. the "expert" definitions, was riveting to watch, Brady. I would even go so far as calling it the best Sixty Symbols video to date! Even though it never mentioned a symbol...

  • @RazzorG
    @RazzorG9 жыл бұрын

    I love when Prof. Moriarty gets really passionate about the arguments.

  • @StreuB1
    @StreuB18 жыл бұрын

    This has got to be one of my favorite Sixty Symbols video ever. Professor Moriartys fire and passion and such a high level discussion really gets you turned up and into it as well. Such a great discussion! REALLY makes you think!! My real question is.......if the repulsive and attractive forces are pushed beyond equilibrium, does the repulsive force approach infinity the closer two elementary particles come? I would assume not because if the repulsive force was infinitely great, fusion could never happen and we could never have collisions. Though.....would the point where we add enough energy to the system to get (in theory) two elementary particles so close that their distance from center to center equals the sum of their radii?? Or is that one of the problems....elementary particles can't be thought of as round balls? Thank you Brady and Professor Moriarty!!

  • @BobSmith-dt6xs

    @BobSmith-dt6xs

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Brian Streufert In fusion they don't have to physically touch each other because even protons aren't point-like; they don't have a precise position. You just have to get them close enough so that they bind.

  • @FlyingJetpack1

    @FlyingJetpack1

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Brian Streufert It infact DO go to infinity, you will need infinite energy to get the "center" of a partical to the other's "center" [cough cough with quotation marks]. Getting two particals in the same position is fundamentally impossible, and the closer you are to achiving it, the more energy you will need to put in. As for infusion, as long as they can get close enough + some other criterias, a bond can happen, created by the strong force. I'm no expert on that subject so you'd be better off looking it up yourself.

  • @alyasgrey9370

    @alyasgrey9370

    8 жыл бұрын

    +FlyingJetpack1 No... just no.

  • @AdasiekkkTrzeci

    @AdasiekkkTrzeci

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Brian Streufert There isn't just one "attractive force" and one "repulsive force". If you were to plot a graph of force vs distance, you'd find that there is more than one local minimum (ie. more than one point at which the forces balance). This is possible because the different forces will be effective at various distances, some are short-range while others are long-range. In fusion, there comes a point in which the strong nuclear force starts playing a significant role and in effect you create a new minimum point. But there is a barrier that needs to be overcome to get there in the first place.

  • @jacobscrackers98

    @jacobscrackers98

    4 жыл бұрын

    I personally found it intimidating and unneccesarily aggressive. You don't need fiery words to make a point, you just need truth and logic on your side.

  • @argentvixen
    @argentvixen2 жыл бұрын

    I absolutely love how passionate he is about this. And I agree, it is a wonderful opportunity to help people redefine their understanding of "touch". I feel that is what the masses are trying to work out with all the chatter but I also agree that it is necessary for smart and passionate people who study this stuff for a living, to patiently but consistently help keep the flow of understanding on the right track.

  • @Aphetorusbull
    @Aphetorusbull9 жыл бұрын

    I'm perfectly happy in saying that an atom is touching another one when the two forces are equal. What's wrong with that. If you understand that we have no macro equivalence to an atom why are we trying to draw analogies? Using analogous thinking is not of any real value when you have nothing that is analogous! great video by the way.

  • @Aphetorusbull

    @Aphetorusbull

    9 жыл бұрын

    As a follow up, how do you define the edge of something that doesn't really have an edge?

  • @Aphetorusbull

    @Aphetorusbull

    9 жыл бұрын

    Hi Mark as best I can tell "touching" is a macro concept and not really applicable at the atomic level. So Eye contact and balloons and balls are all analogies that are not really useful. If you insist on trying to draw analogies lets use some fictional star-trek language. Each atom has its own integral glowing blue force-field. Atoms attract each other but when the atoms get close enough to touch force-fields the attraction ends. If you try to compress them closer the force-field turns red and starts to crackle and hiss and begin to push away from the contact. Now in that mental image are the force fields touching?

  • @AmxCsifier

    @AmxCsifier

    9 жыл бұрын

    I agree, our macro perceptions are holding us back I also think that the Professor using balls as analogy to atoms is a significant compromise

  • @WorthlessWinner

    @WorthlessWinner

    9 жыл бұрын

    Intuitive language and metaphor just lead to confusion a lot of the time.

  • @iamhaute69

    @iamhaute69

    9 жыл бұрын

    Aphetorusbull exactly! looking at an edge on microscopic or even deeper level would move things to fractal geometry!! A circle is never round on fractal level!! its all polygons!!

  • @L00NGB00W
    @L00NGB00W9 жыл бұрын

    Brady. Don't piss off Professor Moriarty.

  • @occamschainsaw3450
    @occamschainsaw34507 жыл бұрын

    But what did this people expect, for nuclear fusion to happen every time we clap our hands or something?

  • @niko_hand589

    @niko_hand589

    7 жыл бұрын

    That explains why my house is blown up

  • @hewhoisknownastaco

    @hewhoisknownastaco

    7 жыл бұрын

    Ha, that's a great name, Occams Chainsaw.

  • @Carcaroff87

    @Carcaroff87

    6 жыл бұрын

    i dieded.

  • @xenoblad

    @xenoblad

    6 жыл бұрын

    Just say they don't touch, so we use a different definition for touch since touch as a word is useful.

  • @aussiebloke609

    @aussiebloke609

    6 жыл бұрын

    +xenoblad That's probably the most accurate and enlightened idea so far. Simply explain that the scientific definition of touch is different to the common, everyday definition we generally use. People will still often get it wrong, though...rather like the difference between hypothesis, theory and law (which even some scientists still get wrong.)

  • @GabrielKnightz
    @GabrielKnightz6 жыл бұрын

    The best ones are when these two argue, it's hilarious on top of being informative.

  • @vedranjosipovic7673
    @vedranjosipovic76739 жыл бұрын

    Brady is just an amazing interviewer, I love him!

  • @BrokenSofa
    @BrokenSofa9 жыл бұрын

    What Brady needs to understand is that nothing is solid. There is no touching between anything, it's just a question of attracting and repelling. Imagine this, if you smack your hand on the table, would you say that the hand and table are touching? If your answer is yes, zoom in the molecule level. Would you say that the molecules are touching? As touching is being defined by their edges being indistinguishable as two seperate objects. Now zoom in to the atomic level, would you say that the electrons are touching? Considering that the electrons are just floating in a magnetic field around the core of the atom. If you don't define contact as the electrons touching, then what about the nucleus? Do the nucleus of each atom have to touch before you call it 'contact'? Because if the nucleus' are touching on each atom, you've put the atoms in a state of fusion, not contact. I don't think that Brady understands a tad bit of what he is talking about, Moriarty on the other hand is a professor in this subject, if I didn't understand any of this I'd probably put my money on him either way.

  • @sixtysymbols

    @sixtysymbols

    9 жыл бұрын

    Broken soffa just so I am clear, this comment is in support of Phil's view, right? You wrote "There is no touching between anything" - that seems to be the WHOLE position Phil is arguing against!?

  • @Relbl

    @Relbl

    9 жыл бұрын

    Sixty Symbols The title of the video is 'Do Atoms Ever Touch', and the electron orbit/shell/potential is part of the atom, and these orbits/shells/potentials absolutely interact and 'touch' - the whole of Chemistry is based on this being fact! You come off as fairly petulant when you essentially say 'yea, well, the nucleii never touch so na na na na na na'... come on, that's just silly. Maybe you mean to ask 'do nucleii ever touch?', 'or do quarks ever touch?', etc, instead of 'do atoms ever touch'...

  • @BrokenSofa

    @BrokenSofa

    9 жыл бұрын

    Relbl That's exactly my point, no one knows what touching really means. and that's the point that the irish guy is trying to get across.

  • @Relbl

    @Relbl

    9 жыл бұрын

    Broken soffa but the question is stated one way and answered that way by the PhD, whereas the director tries to change the question after asking it

  • @BrokenSofa

    @BrokenSofa

    9 жыл бұрын

    Sixty Symbols Contact is still undefined but seems to mean that contact means that something is touching on the cellular level and you can't get any object between these 2 or more objects that are in contact, right? In that case, if you zoom in to the level of molecules, none of theese objects are touching because you can not tell where one object starts and another begins. There is no clear line of what touching really means. A language has to have the same meanings for the same words, otherwise there is no point in debating when we don't understand each other. That's why we have to figure out the meaning of the word 'contact' and the word 'touching' before we start arguing about something in two different languages.

  • @sirmetaladon
    @sirmetaladon7 жыл бұрын

    This is the best kind of arguing. I love it.

  • @bpjbusiness
    @bpjbusiness8 жыл бұрын

    Sixty Symbols, I have recently decided to get more involved in Physics and Astronomy, since I've always liked it but never did anything about it. It's not in my plans to pursue it as a career but I still want to learn as much as possible. You guys make it simple and fun, yet you do it by covering very complex topics. Thank you so much for the videos and keep up the excellent work. It's quickly become my favourite channel on KZread.

  • @thesnowedone
    @thesnowedone9 жыл бұрын

    I actually liked Brady's definition of a "layperson" concept of touch being zero plank length distance between two particles. This is what I would have thought would be the case. That said Professor Philip Moriarty does argue (and rightly so) that this sort of point of contact would not one you would naturally occurring (exceptions being nuclear fusion). I would actually like to see is a list of all possible definitions of contact, both from a physics and chemistry point of view. Perhaps by examining all the definitions of touch that can be derived from via scientific method we can perhaps tease out an acceptable set of criteria that would satisfy everyone.

  • @chap666ish
    @chap666ish9 жыл бұрын

    "Jeez, if we could have nuclear fusion by just doing that... it would be wonderful" Er... no. That would be reallly, really bad :-)

  • @Lavabug

    @Lavabug

    9 жыл бұрын

    ***** High five! Uh oh...

  • @pepe6666
    @pepe66668 жыл бұрын

    thats an interesting video. i think the shortest way to explain what the professor is saying is that on the quantum scale, electrons arent discrete particles. they dont have a specific location, so atoms dont have a specific border. so when you bring atoms close together, you only have a probability of them touching. given that, you cant specifically say 'the distance between the atoms is zero' - because that would be precise knowledge of the atoms position. er i think. the idea of discrete location breaks down at the quantum level

  • @piccalillipit9211
    @piccalillipit92113 жыл бұрын

    *THE GUY ASKING THE QUESTIONS* is actually brilliant at asking the obvious question most people would be embarrassed to.

  • @RinoaL
    @RinoaL9 жыл бұрын

    i love how there is a bit of debating in this video :D a lot of the issues people have with this is due to people thinking of atoms as a hard sphere when really its a collection of objects that might as well be 0-dimensional points in space. but those points are like little force field generators that create a spherical field around it that will influence other objects. so the atom's outer edges are very fuzzy.

  • @FranklinNewhart

    @FranklinNewhart

    9 жыл бұрын

    This who damn discussion is very Fuzzy.

  • @daffidavit

    @daffidavit

    6 жыл бұрын

    Don't tell that to Brian Greene. He'll get all tangled up in his strings.

  • @gara911ultra
    @gara911ultra9 жыл бұрын

    I fully agree with Moriarty's definition of contact. If we were to compare an atom to a soccer ball, where the nuclei of the atoms are comparable to the center of the soccer balls. As soon as the atomic forces are balanced between two atoms, it is similar to a soccer ball resting on another. At this point, this is contact. If you push the soccer balls closer together, and do the same with the atoms, this is also contact but there is just more force in the system. The center of the soccer balls are closer together, and the nuclei of the atoms are closer together, all of this is still be considered touching. There is also a limit of how close you can push the atoms and the soccer balls together. At some point the soccer balls will rupture, and the atoms will fuse. Once the soccer balls blow out there will be no clear center to them, the same will happen once the atoms fuse. After this point there is no longer contact between the atoms, but a fusion of two atoms. P.S. This is just my view on this discussion. I am by no means a physicist, but i still believe that this is a good definition of contact.

  • @Paul_9320
    @Paul_93205 жыл бұрын

    This is brilliant. My favourite vid on KZread. Watching the passion that both are genially arguing with and the wider discussions this brings about science communication was mindblowing. More like this please. Passionate, educated people arguing in a fact based way.

  • @s0c1al1z3dm3d1c1ne
    @s0c1al1z3dm3d1c1ne8 жыл бұрын

    Phil is by far the most punk rock physicist of all time. I love this guy.

  • @Slithy
    @Slithy9 жыл бұрын

    Seriously, "contact" and "touch" are totally different things. When you have eye contact with a person, for example, it doesn't mean that your eyeballs are touching. So you can have contact without touching, or you can have both, or you can even have touching without contact, it all just boils down to the definition. And if a group of scientists come up with a perfectly reasonable and usable definition of contact, i don't feel like i'm in a position to argue about it. But what prof. Moriarty described is a contact without touching. If, on a quantum level, you want to make 2 things touch - you should call CERN.

  • @z-beeblebrox

    @z-beeblebrox

    9 жыл бұрын

    Well, you have to be careful, because it's not like the footballs touching, where you have two discrete particles. It's more like if you have little objects under a blanket and all you can measure is the ripples they make (except not this at all because the objects under the blanket literally wouldn't exist) - you can't really say the ripples touch any more than you can say they don't touch. Either they make a sort of contact/interaction, or they sort of merge. What Moriarty eventually ends up trying to say is that the whole concept of "touch" as we know it is basically irrelevant in the quantum world, because there aren't any solid objects capable of doing it (or not doing it)

  • @joeymacguffin

    @joeymacguffin

    9 жыл бұрын

    It's more that "touch" simply doesn't make sense at the atomic level, where there's no such thing as physical objects with defined shape and size. The definition of "touch" relies on clear boundaries between object and environment that aren't applicable on a molecular scale.

  • @LivingChords

    @LivingChords

    9 жыл бұрын

    You have to distinguish between physical contact and something like eye contact.

  • @SenneChristiaens

    @SenneChristiaens

    9 жыл бұрын

    "When you have eye contact with a person, for example, it doesn't mean that your eyeballs are touching" That image is hilarious, thanks for that statement.

  • @SangoProductions213

    @SangoProductions213

    9 жыл бұрын

    such a touching speech. No? Nothing? I'll sit in my corner now.

  • @Saki630
    @Saki6309 жыл бұрын

    This guy is tough Brady, I was intimidated from all the way over here in my bunker.

  • @sixtysymbols

    @sixtysymbols

    9 жыл бұрын

    Saki630 he's a sweetie really

  • @Saki630

    @Saki630

    9 жыл бұрын

    Sixty Symbols You are correct because I just watched some more videos and saw how he talks about other things that he loves to do. I am envious of you and your colleagues. To me it seems you have the best job/hobby because you get to talk with some of the greatest minds of science and successfully bring condensed simple explanations to people all over the world. Some of which may have never had a chance to go to school in the first place, and are learning using your videos.

  • @johnwaters97

    @johnwaters97

    9 жыл бұрын

    Sixty Symbols Can you do an other video where you discuss what happens when two particles (that you both agree have the necessary qualities for the analogy, unlike electrons) have zero plank lengths between them?

  • @TNTEQUALSFUN

    @TNTEQUALSFUN

    8 жыл бұрын

    Saki630 just a prof getting really passionate about his work :D

  • @randy109

    @randy109

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Kazza FDM Exactly! Without a very small fraction of people Passionate about obscure topics Mankind would still be in the dark ages. Thanks!

  • @MWash-ix6fu
    @MWash-ix6fu3 жыл бұрын

    I love the Professor's Passion in this video. I come back to it every so often. It has re-watchability!

  • @HartlandOrchard
    @HartlandOrchard7 жыл бұрын

    I absolutely love these videos and this one in particular. what an amazing service you all are providing all of us!

  • @SardiPax
    @SardiPax9 жыл бұрын

    I loved seeing a scientist/professor getting so excited about his topic. Wonderful. Well done Brady, now see if you can get Professor Poliakov as animated :)

  • @conelrad1447
    @conelrad14477 жыл бұрын

    This reminds me so much of me arguing with my dad

  • @sankha6920

    @sankha6920

    3 жыл бұрын

    I can literally understand what you mean 😂

  • @facilis
    @facilis7 ай бұрын

    I return to this video a few times a year. Absolute classic example of passion

  • @harveysummers3175
    @harveysummers31757 жыл бұрын

    I love how passionate Professor Moriarty is about this!

  • @NemosChannel
    @NemosChannel9 жыл бұрын

    Look, it's very simple. If there's no contact on the atomic level, then there's no contact at all. For the word contact to even mean anything, there has to be contact at the atomic level. The only question is what that contact is, and that's what he says they measured: the point where the repulsive force cancels out the attractive force.

  • @NemosChannel

    @NemosChannel

    9 жыл бұрын

    This was a great discussion btw.

  • @brandynkelly9319

    @brandynkelly9319

    9 жыл бұрын

    This comment is the best summary of the video without a doubt!

  • @WorthlessWinner

    @WorthlessWinner

    9 жыл бұрын

    Sadly it looks like things are adjacent in space on the macro scale (to the resolution our eyes detect) when the repulsive force outweighs the attractive force, so people think things have to be adjacent to touch. Even though that's not what really happens at any level.

  • @bikerchrisukk
    @bikerchrisukk7 жыл бұрын

    I trust the guy who has a microwave oven next to his desk - that's dedication :-)

  • @sandropollastrini2707
    @sandropollastrini27073 жыл бұрын

    I liked the discussion: in my opinion it highlighted the difficulty of the scientist to find a common metaphorical ground to speak to the layman, and for the layman the difficulty to digest the radical change of point of view needed to understand the quantum world. Furthermore the topic is simply fun.

  • @MrBanzoid
    @MrBanzoid8 жыл бұрын

    Ohhhh, I love a heated discussion! To he honest, as an astronomer I never really gave this subject a lot of thought. Thanks to Prof Moriarty for explaining it so well.

  • @wtfpwnz0red
    @wtfpwnz0red4 жыл бұрын

    All I can think about this is the implications this has for that annoying "I'm not touching you" game

  • @hanumanvaya
    @hanumanvaya4 жыл бұрын

    "Long before you get to the repulsive side, you have an attractive force..." Pretty much sums up my marriage.

  • @seijirou302
    @seijirou3023 жыл бұрын

    What a gift it would be to have a conversation with Moriarty.

  • @Vulporium
    @Vulporium6 жыл бұрын

    I really enjoyed this, usually i'm uncomfortable with such a high energy conversation. But the subject matter was expressed passionately and with knowledge and understanding. Great questions were asked, and great reasoning was given.

  • @MrAwesomesize
    @MrAwesomesize9 жыл бұрын

    This was a very stressful video.. Didnt enjoy it at all..

  • @schwarzerTeufel88

    @schwarzerTeufel88

    9 жыл бұрын

    MrAwesomesize As an INTP personality type Watching this video gave me one of the greatest moments of joy i will have in front of the computer probably all week

  • @AdamHicks20

    @AdamHicks20

    9 жыл бұрын

    Although it gets better at the end... still anxiety.

  • @Technolgy2

    @Technolgy2

    7 жыл бұрын

    ye but usually when people say "heated debate" in a scientific context they mean an interesting discussion between two informed people who each have legitimate points...

  • @KatherineClairmont

    @KatherineClairmont

    7 жыл бұрын

    people announcing to their world their gastric distress gives me anxiety. we appear to be at an impasse.

  • @cryora

    @cryora

    7 жыл бұрын

    It sounded like things could have been easily explained if he was willing to get into the Pauli Exclusion principle, but decided not to because there are many videos by the channel already on it and because he believes the only audience of these videos are people with no science backgrounds and would be lost in these concepts.

  • @jakedowman-french3205
    @jakedowman-french32059 жыл бұрын

    Contact may not necessarily construe touch, but interaction.

  • @jakedowman-french3205

    @jakedowman-french3205

    9 жыл бұрын

    Also, I loved the debate aspect of this video. Nice to see people so passionate about their fields.

  • @d3line

    @d3line

    9 жыл бұрын

    Everything is interacting. Electro-magnetic and gravitational forces inversely proportional to the square of distance between bodes, so that forces never actually zero. Right now electrons on your skin are busy interacting with electrons of alpha-centauri. Just weakly, but they do.

  • @TheReligiousAtheists
    @TheReligiousAtheists4 жыл бұрын

    I'd say that the fault in Brady's arguement is that he says that he says that 'contact' is when you can't bring those footballs any closer, and he also says that if you keep one on top of the other, condition is satisfied. But anyone can tell you that you CAN move them closer if you squeeze them, which means that they don't satisfy the condition of you just keep them on top of each other. So you might think "Then let's define 'contact' to mean the point where to bring the 2 objects closer, you'd have to apply forces on them and 'squeeze' them to bring them closer". Well, that's exactly what Professor Moriarty defined contact to be! The reason I like this expression is that you can explain it to a layman without saying "It's quantum mechanics, it's just like this", which, needless to mention, is a very dissatisfactory answer.

  • @DanG249
    @DanG2494 жыл бұрын

    still one of my favorite videos -- I've come back to this so many times

  • @ellis0896
    @ellis08969 жыл бұрын

    Fight fight fight fight! I completely agree with Philip though.

  • @sixtysymbols

    @sixtysymbols

    9 жыл бұрын

    ellis0896 I also think Phil would win a fight - so let's give him the win!

  • @WonderBoy55555

    @WonderBoy55555

    9 жыл бұрын

    Hah for real. I was expecting Phil to show Bradey how his fist makes contact with his face

  • @elfutbolphenom
    @elfutbolphenom9 жыл бұрын

    I liked how Professor Moriarty kept saying "the analogy breaks down" and Brady kept refusing to accept that, because that is what my students do as well. I think one of the primary issues causing the disconnect between the two sides of these arguments is the misconception of atoms and molecules as objects which are essentially solid in the same way that macroscopic objects are solid is so deep-seated that most "normal people" (oh Brady) have real trouble navigating a more quantum, probabilistic reality. But... the analogy really does break down!

  • @sixtysymbols

    @sixtysymbols

    9 жыл бұрын

    elfutbolphenom time for a better analogy then! :)

  • @PelegTsadok

    @PelegTsadok

    9 жыл бұрын

    This concept, that reality isn't as solid as we think or hope it is, is extremely hard to understand. I understand that it is, I just don't get how it can be so abstract(if that's the right word). For an example, I understand objects with mass curve space-time, I just don't get what this "space-time" is and how we can observe it.

  • @ScourgeNagash

    @ScourgeNagash

    9 жыл бұрын

    Sixty Symbols How about use a planet and a ball as the objects. If the ball is falling toward the earth there will come a point where the forces attracting the earth and the ball(gravity in this case) are balanced against the force of the earth and the ball pushing away from each other. The ball is resting on the ground and you can say both are in contact. With more force you can push the ball into the ground, but that does not mean a ball resting on the ground is not in contact with the ground.

  • @edgeofunderstanding
    @edgeofunderstanding6 жыл бұрын

    I have to agree with Phil. His explanation is excellent. It makes tons of sense to me. The description as the point of contact being “where repulsive forces equal attractive forces” makes me think of my finger being pushed back when it makes contact with a wall. The force I use to push on the wall equals the force being pushed back on my finger by the wall. It’s so beautiful in its simplicity, my mind was blown!

  • @d.w.5144
    @d.w.51448 жыл бұрын

    Hello Prof Moriaty. I am some of this normal people who are whatching these wonderfull Sixty Symbols videos . I am from Germany and my english isn´t so good to understand everything. Hopefully I am waiting for such a blog in German, but I am in "touch" with your explanation of touch. Your try to explain it with 100% of your heart and soul. Its a pleasure to watch these stuff. Our world is wonderfull and full of secrets. Your guys bring light in it. I whish I was young again and try to study physics. Thanks a lot

  • @justagenosfan
    @justagenosfan3 жыл бұрын

    professor: explains camera man: yes but i think ur answer is wrong

  • @AgglomeratiProduzioni
    @AgglomeratiProduzioni8 жыл бұрын

    What was wrong with the cup of tea at 0:50?

  • @Daniel-wq2qw

    @Daniel-wq2qw

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Ruben The fact that Moriarty is an energetic person and would throw tea everywhere if he kept holding it :P

  • @AgglomeratiProduzioni

    @AgglomeratiProduzioni

    8 жыл бұрын

    Ahahah

  • @qCJLbggG4IWAY9nTH6o

    @qCJLbggG4IWAY9nTH6o

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Ruben It's not TOUCHING.

  • @lolerskates876

    @lolerskates876

    5 жыл бұрын

    Maybe it's not Metal enough

  • @Haitchpeasauce
    @Haitchpeasauce7 жыл бұрын

    Fantastic discussion. Heated, but respectful and edifying. It's great to see conceptions and assumptions being tested, and how the physical realities always challenge the way we use language to express them. So the take away points I got were: electrons cannot collide as a fundamental of quantum mechanics, that nuclei touching is basically fusion, that the energy required for nuclei to fuse is (thankfully) many orders of magnitude greater than what can be produced by mechanical means, so contact is understood as a natural equilibrium state of attractive/repulsive forces at the atomic scale. Even in chemical bonds the nuclei don't come into contact with each other, so it's hard to make a case that contact is by definition two nuclei touching.

  • @2serveand2protect
    @2serveand2protect6 жыл бұрын

    WOOWW! This channel is AWESOME! for the first time on YT I see something TRULY WORTH WATCHING!! BIG THANKS, FELLAS!

  • @dabzdavid2378
    @dabzdavid23786 жыл бұрын

    6:24 He said "exactly" without hearing Brady. LOL

  • @akshatsaxena1431

    @akshatsaxena1431

    4 жыл бұрын

    Omg that's really funny

  • @whopperlover1772
    @whopperlover17728 жыл бұрын

    In the end, I don't know if my hands are touching and now I have a headache...

  • @LeviCarlton

    @LeviCarlton

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Fester Blats They do touch

  • @DamienZshadow

    @DamienZshadow

    8 жыл бұрын

    +ByteMe Don't listen to them, the real answer is another question. "What IS touching?"

  • @oneshotki11

    @oneshotki11

    8 жыл бұрын

    They both touch and dont touch. Schrodinger hands.

  • @kenwalter3892

    @kenwalter3892

    6 жыл бұрын

    ByteMe Touching yes, in contact no.

  • @jukechuu

    @jukechuu

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@DamienZshadow "hey vsauce michael here"

  • @joops110
    @joops1108 жыл бұрын

    Read the description before commenting on this one. Great video btw!

  • @garydagget7738
    @garydagget77388 жыл бұрын

    This was a thoroughly enjoyable watch, made even more fun by Brady's notes in the description. This is proper, heated debate between two people who share mutual respect, but who are passionate about their own viewpoints. There is a difference between how most people argue and how people who respect each other argue. The world needs more respect, because it looks like you guys LOVE to argue about this particular topic. You listen to each other while you debate, and give ground where it's due, while most people won't concede the floor once they've started making a noise, whether their point is made or not. Note: More often than not, I fall into the "most people" category when things start to get heated...I AM just some random guy off the internet, after all :-)

  • @zephyrandboreas
    @zephyrandboreas4 жыл бұрын

    Just came across this video. Really loved it. Not just by the energy of the discussion but because, as a scientist I do understand the limitations of the analogies that we create to explain scientific concepts. It is always the case that analogies breakdown at some point because we use common language to help visualize in a simplified manner phenomena that require a very specific set of rigid criteria to be accurately described. This would be an excellent topic for a video on its own. Analogies are powerful to help visualize a concept without all the intricacies and level of detail that would likely make the average viewer's eyes glaze over. But at the same time there is very much the danger of a person to make extrapolations based on the perceived reality of the analogies when this is not correct because of their inherent limitation. I always believe that it is important to be very clear on this. It is the same as when as scientists draw conclusions from their experiments without taking into proper consideration the limitations of the methods used, and which precisely establish the limits of the claims made.

  • @chalked9815

    @chalked9815

    Жыл бұрын

    Amazing breakdown of the video. Hope you're doing well!

  • @ObserverZero
    @ObserverZero9 жыл бұрын

    "The analogies can't be extended to the definition" is exactly what people mean when they say "they aren't in contact". Our idea of contact doesn't exist.

  • @ObserverZero

    @ObserverZero

    9 жыл бұрын

    Sure, there is a difference in colloquial "touch" and scientific "contact".

  • @RFC3514

    @RFC3514

    9 жыл бұрын

    Maybe _your_ idea of contact doesn't exist. Mine certainly does. Contact is when things bump into each other (instead of going through each other). For all I know, microscopic particles called "contactons" might be generated for a fraction of a second, or _some_ atoms might be going through each other like ghosts and then disintegrating into small black holes that feed the great god Contacthulhu (praised be his mighty footballs). Either way, the practical result is the same: one thing bumped into another. Professor Moriarty is just explaining that what we perceive as an object bumping into another is not the moment where the nuclei of their atoms "touch" and fuse together (which would have rather more spectacular results), it's the point where two specific forces are in equilibrium. Or are you still stuck in the 19th mentality of atoms as little balls of indivisible and incompressible matter, with a perfectly-defined "surface" ? The closest thing to a "surface" is precisely that point of contact (i.e., equilibrium), but even that is flexible, and depends on the energy you apply.

  • @ObserverZero

    @ObserverZero

    9 жыл бұрын

    Right. Most people with skin, and a sense of touch have a 19th mentality and think things have a perfectly defined surface, but recognise that it is wrong, because as you say, contact is not what I (most people) think it is. I think we all agree.

  • @RFC3514

    @RFC3514

    9 жыл бұрын

    Harald Veland Having skin and a sense of touch doesn't make you aware of the existence of atoms, let alone their structure, so that's really a non sequitur. All you know from having skin (and macroscopic observations in general) is that things generally don't go though other things, and that you can feel a force pushing back when you push against something. In fact, skin (and flesh) gives you a good indication that things can be compressed, and that "contact" is a fluid thing (it can be so light you don't feel anything, or so strong that it crushes). What this really has to do with is the nature of _atoms_. The ancient Greeks picked the word "atom" (meaning "indivisible") because they thought it was, but anyone alive today should have learned otherwise in school. If an atom is made up of several particles (even if we ignore the fuzzy wavelike nature of those particles), then the concept of a single hard "surface" immediately stops making sense. There are plenty of macroscopic parallels to this, too. For example (*), assuming your head is covered in hair, if you lean back against a wall you'll say that you are "in contact" with the wall when the force pushing you against the wall is more or less in equilibrium with the springiness of your hair (which is keeping your scalp at some distance from the wall - maybe 0.5 mm, maybe 2 cm, depending on how thick your hair is). You won't say that you are "in contact" as soon as one hair interacts with the wall (you probably won't even feel it), nor will you need to wait for all your hair to be crushed into a sub-atomic membrane, letting the atoms that make up your scalp interact directly with the ones that make up the wall. Contact is a fuzzy, practical thing, even at a macroscopic level. This notion of equilibrium (where something pushes back strongly enough to counter the thing trying to get closer) is perfectly compatible with our (or, at least, with _my_) idea of contact. (*) This example probably falls into the "Feynman's hairy balls" category.

  • @ObserverZero

    @ObserverZero

    9 жыл бұрын

    Man, I saw the video, but hanks for the transcript. Why are you still arguing? "If an atom is made up of several particles (even if we ignore the fuzzy wavelike nature of those particles), then the concept of a single hard "surface" immediately stops making sense." -That's what I'm saying. And Brady. We assume that things "touch" at the atomic and subatomic level purely by intuition. That doesn't actually happen. We agree. :)

  • @5om3kid77
    @5om3kid778 жыл бұрын

    The best bit is when the Professor is about to drink his tea without realising it.

  • @billd01rfc
    @billd01rfc3 жыл бұрын

    This might be the best ever KZread video I've ever seen . . . the passion is unbelievable . . . but totally controlled . . . and footballs!

  • @m2langberg
    @m2langberg9 жыл бұрын

    This is your best video EVER! I love the intense discussion! More like this!!

  • @sixtysymbols

    @sixtysymbols

    9 жыл бұрын

    Mike Langberg cheers

  • @dmosier
    @dmosier9 жыл бұрын

    This explains so much, and leaves even more question. I will be pondering this all weekend now......

  • @deltango12345
    @deltango123453 жыл бұрын

    Superb video, great discussion. Thanks to a man that did not stop asking, and to a man that did not stop answering, keeping the focus on the subject. This video should be a part of high school education.

  • @StasConstantine
    @StasConstantine5 жыл бұрын

    i just love how heated and passionate this guy gets :)

  • @dylanlong8744
    @dylanlong87448 жыл бұрын

    "im not touching you. im not touching you."

  • @D3w10n
    @D3w10n9 жыл бұрын

    @ 9:15 "normal person..." XD Best moment in whole video

  • @keenCS2
    @keenCS27 жыл бұрын

    I know this video is very old, but i LOVED the way they debated and made everything clear instead of accepting it. Would have left the video with more gaps in my understanding of the subject if they didn't debate/argue. Thank you.

  • @what_resists_persists6060
    @what_resists_persists60606 жыл бұрын

    I just love the guy behind the camera. He is the voice of all of us

  • @hectordng
    @hectordng7 жыл бұрын

    great video, one of my favorites. love his passion and the way he trolls him

  • @TCBYEAHCUZ
    @TCBYEAHCUZ8 жыл бұрын

    brady's wrong, the best analogue to moriaty's explanation is to have the two bouncy balls touch, Say that the ball has reached a point where it's at equilibrium of the two forces, you can squeeze the two balls together but they will revert back to this equilibrium. That is contact, Then say the balls are spherical clouds with no hard surface.

  • @salottin

    @salottin

    5 жыл бұрын

    The part where he pressed them together explained that beautifully. This video ANGERS me

  • @CitrusTsunami

    @CitrusTsunami

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yeah i just kept thinking the words influence and equilibrium could have helped dissolve the incompatibilities of their arguments. There's physical contact, with the nuclear cores touching physically, but that's not the definition of contact as used in his papers and as he says, there would be no real point to defining it that way, no way to apply the definition to a real atomic situation. There is the positive attraction that is the result of the partial charges, then the zero point equilibrium which he's saying is the definition of contact, where the repulsive force (if you bring them further together) will be in equilibrium with that attractive force! Sad to watch it go on that long with so much argument because of a misunderstanding on the cameraman's part lol

  • @hanskloss7726

    @hanskloss7726

    4 жыл бұрын

    How is he , personally wrong? How do you even know? Do you know the guy personally? I think whatever he knows or does not know he played the role of advocatus diaboli perfectly. He managed to stir quite some tension by the Professor and by the public here. I'd say perfect success for the devil :)

  • @gileee

    @gileee

    4 жыл бұрын

    So things are in contact if they're so close that you cannot make them get closer without applying a force, because that means you're making them deform or overlap or whatever (depends on what the things are) and that's beyond simple contact. If I'm about right that might have been better explained by trying to push the same pole of two magnets together and feeling the point at which the magnetic fields touch and start repelling each other.

  • @obiwansaysbuybuybuy7041

    @obiwansaysbuybuybuy7041

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Chaim Goldbaum you got it right. Atoms are not footballs, they are not solid particles, and do not have a surface to be in contact with another atom in the same way as things in the macro scale.

  • @DrDirtyHarry
    @DrDirtyHarry5 жыл бұрын

    I absolutely loved this video. The interplay was brilliant.

  • @SeishiZero
    @SeishiZero5 жыл бұрын

    4 years later - I still love this video!

  • @NZAnimeManga
    @NZAnimeManga9 жыл бұрын

    This was brilliant; reminds me of my interview with Prof. Moriarti last year. Mainly about the Pauli exclusion principle in terms in white dwarf's eletron degeneracy pressure.

  • @Teth47
    @Teth479 жыл бұрын

    I think what Prof. Moriarty is trying to say is that the boundary at which we can say, from a macroscopic perspective, that two objects are in contact, is too fuzzy to define it that way. There is no edge to a proton, for instance, and even less so for an atom or molecule. The boundary at which the attractive and repulsive forces balance *is* the point at which two objects interact in a way analogous to what one might think of as "contact". If you push then closer together, all that happens is that it deforms to maintain that space, just like the two footballs when he pushed them together, or they overlap in the same way you would expect if you pressed two curled up slinkies together, the individual pieces diffract into what would be considered the interior of the object, because there is no barrier there physically preventing the electrons from moving past one another. In both cases, they are in a state that could reasonably be defined as touching. No more space can be removed from between the two objects, because probabilistically, there is no more space there.

  • @Horrigmo
    @Horrigmo8 жыл бұрын

    This has been one of the most enjoyable episodes yet

  • @KibiHofmann
    @KibiHofmann5 жыл бұрын

    Love this sooo much - Prof Moriarty is so passionate, and Brady's just like I would be: "but but but...":

  • @TheFounderUtopia
    @TheFounderUtopia9 жыл бұрын

    In summary, I think Brian nicely demonstrated that when people say "atoms never touch" they actually ARE making an accurate statement, because as Phil said, you can't extend that macroscopic concept of touch down to the atomic level. But it seems what he takes issue with is more the way people go about justifying this using science they don't fully understand, creating a misleading impression of how these things work.

  • @MadScientist356
    @MadScientist3569 жыл бұрын

    Brady, this "conversational" format is quite effective in explaining certain concepts that aren't exceedingly intuitive. The pretense of the "normal" person also drives the conversation and generates a better explanation. You probably edit the part where you ask the question, but that part (whenever I hear it some videos) provides an extra level of clarity. And it is more exciting to watch these types of videos where you are questioning and the professionals you interview.

  • @sixtysymbols

    @sixtysymbols

    9 жыл бұрын

    ***** thanks - glad you liked it. Please share! :)

  • @BarnardClangdeggin
    @BarnardClangdeggin8 жыл бұрын

    An excellent discussion, Professor Moriarty. Thank you.

  • @rhyanbennett2629
    @rhyanbennett26295 жыл бұрын

    This has to be one of my favourite sixtysymbols videos of all time.

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