The Biggest Ideas in the Universe | 10. Interactions

Ғылым және технология

The Biggest Ideas in the Universe is a series of videos where I talk informally about some of the fundamental concepts that help us understand our natural world. Exceedingly casual, not overly polished, and meant for absolutely everybody.
This is Idea #10, "Interactions." Last time we dipped a toe into quantum field theory, seeing how quantizing fields leads to particles. Now we let the particles interact with each other, and see how the results are characterized by Feynman diagrams.
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#science #physics #ideas #universe #learning #cosmology #philosophy #quantum #fields #feynman

Пікірлер: 144

  • @vinm300
    @vinm3002 жыл бұрын

    This series will be the best thing on KZread for decades.

  • @chiphill4856
    @chiphill48564 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for hitting the technical complexity sweet spot. These are great videos!

  • @esperancaemisterio
    @esperancaemisterio4 жыл бұрын

    Stopping everything to watch the new video! =)

  • @robbiejames1466

    @robbiejames1466

    4 жыл бұрын

    Even time?

  • @ulob
    @ulob4 жыл бұрын

    Neat spherical-cyberpunk cow in the background!

  • @archaicentity38
    @archaicentity384 жыл бұрын

    I think it was John Wheeler who gave Feynman the idea that the positron is an electron moving backwards in time.

  • @johnrendle1303
    @johnrendle13032 жыл бұрын

    Such a pleasure to watch your lectures….I’m a radiologist and you’ve given me a Eureka moment re PET and the fact that you get two photos rather than one in positron-electron interactions. Thank you!

  • @beagle1008
    @beagle10084 жыл бұрын

    Great series! Are you going to do a "Lenny" and write a Theoretical Minimum based on this series? That would be great and something good would come out of lockdown.

  • @werneryc
    @werneryc3 жыл бұрын

    Great series you made here. I love how you take care of the details but still stay sufficiently on the surface

  • @ticket67
    @ticket674 жыл бұрын

    "The Biggest Ideas in the Universe" series is fantastic! They are timeless content. This format of explaining one concept is great.

  • @soulremoval
    @soulremoval4 жыл бұрын

    thank you so much, this was extremely helpful and insightful.

  • @Eigenbros
    @Eigenbros4 жыл бұрын

    I've always wanted to know more quantum field theory without taking a course on it. much appreciated Sean

  • @samintajik860
    @samintajik860 Жыл бұрын

    I loved how you started from Feynman diagrams and then got into the concept of calculating it through the least action principle. Wonderful approach to teach QFT.

  • @mattrodriguez115
    @mattrodriguez1154 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Sean for the video.

  • @Jurassic_Fart
    @Jurassic_Fart4 жыл бұрын

    These sci fi backgrounds look cool as hell

  • @thesciencehinduby
    @thesciencehinduby3 жыл бұрын

    @Sean Carroll. Thanks Prof, if you happen to see my gratitude. Wonderful series.

  • @Grasuggan22
    @Grasuggan224 жыл бұрын

    I have bought Seans book and its good. Sean is pushing the limits.

  • @user-lz9sf5to7m
    @user-lz9sf5to7m2 ай бұрын

    Very clear and concise talks. Continue

  • @calvingrondahl1011
    @calvingrondahl10113 жыл бұрын

    I am old so these videos are as relaxing as music... playful and honest. Carl Sagan in 1980 was also reassuring and fun.

  • @Saitama62181
    @Saitama621814 жыл бұрын

    Would an Eternalist look at a Feynmann diagram as not going from right to left or left to right, but just *being there*?

  • @swan2799
    @swan27992 жыл бұрын

    A piece of gold!

  • @woody7652
    @woody76524 жыл бұрын

    Thanks, Sean!

  • @_John_Sean_Walker
    @_John_Sean_Walker4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you sir, nice lecture.

  • @larsalfredhenrikstahlin8012
    @larsalfredhenrikstahlin80124 жыл бұрын

    You're getting better at this youtube business Sean! Totally lured me in with that tasty blue rather irrelevant CGI thumbnail! ...Glad you did. I love this series and I loved you latest book. And the one before that taught me a lot too. Like philosophy and the universe for dummies. I feel like I'm getting more and more inspired to learn calculus, differential equations and all that the more stuff you put up. Greetings from Sweden

  • @Toocrash
    @Toocrash4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you. I hope to understand more.

  • @paulc96
    @paulc963 жыл бұрын

    Reminder : at 41:00 This video, (no. 10 - Interactions) is where the "Lagrangian" & "Lagrange Density" is discussed & explained. Fully.

  • @ssshurley
    @ssshurley4 жыл бұрын

    Rad, every video gets better!

  • @chavdardanchev9584
    @chavdardanchev95844 жыл бұрын

    Question: How do we ensure that the sum of the probabilities for all variations of interactions converges to 1? If it exceeds 1 do we have to think of other version of alpha?

  • @alfiangunawan5946
    @alfiangunawan59464 жыл бұрын

    this is a completely new concept for me

  • @qr6QRbMBG6hjGpZhnWqG
    @qr6QRbMBG6hjGpZhnWqG2 жыл бұрын

    Such an amazing physicist and communicator. Such a terrible arrow head drawer. 23:15 :D

  • @NGC-7635
    @NGC-76352 жыл бұрын

    Sean: There is only one diagram we can draw for this Sean 5 minutes later: There is an infinite amount of diagrams we can draw for this

  • @michaeljmorrison5757
    @michaeljmorrison57574 жыл бұрын

    Enjoying your lectures....we are so lucky that corona seems to have you with us -a very real silver lining! So.... my question....Is gravity emergent and if so can it be manipulated by affecting entropy in a particular volume of space or even specifically here on Earth?

  • @TetonGemWorks
    @TetonGemWorks3 жыл бұрын

    These are great videos, but I'm failing this class.... Won't stop watching and rewatching. Just love listening to the Professor explain thing, go on tangents, the whole thing.

  • @naimulhaq9626
    @naimulhaq96264 жыл бұрын

    Hawking demonstrated the most interesting interaction of QF, using a blend of GR and QM, when explaining radiation and calculating entropy of BH. A pair production of virtual particle and anti-particle from the QF, makes the anti-particle fall into the BH while a real particle is ejected into space. Implying the QF can simulate conscious intelligent 'observer', collapsing the field to produce particles (Adam Becker' question, can QF simulate/define cosmic consciousness).

  • @jeffbass1165
    @jeffbass11654 жыл бұрын

    Another question...I believe you mentioned in an earlier video that vacuum entanglement is different from particle entanglement (since you have the idea that spacetime emerges from vacuum entanglement). How can these two things be separate if particles are just excitations in fields?

  • @jaybertulus
    @jaybertulus9 ай бұрын

    since photons are the force carriers of the EM field, do photos travel alongside the fieldlines when i charge my phone? referring to veritassiums video about energy flow perpendicular to the wire. thx

  • @Shalkka
    @Shalkka4 жыл бұрын

    I was more excited to go from particle diagram to understand how the wavelike nature of interactions works. Could one try to tell the story using the mode decompositions of the incmoing particles. Like electron momentum right encounters anti-electron momentum left plus other configurations like electron momentum north encounters anti-electron momentum going left. But maybe it's the case that the mathematics is not particularly elegant or that summed back up version is not very packety? It also feels that the feyman diagramms are in effects the "modes" of the interaction with added vertex being analogous to considering an increase of an energy quanta. If one tried to solve a hamilton with an interaction term in it would it have quantised solutions? With QED it should be enough to have most essential things handled with a electron-antielectron system. I was looking to understand the conditions where they keep circling each other vs annhilation vs flying far apart from each other. Because both partcile have uncertainty in position and momentum it seemed to be possibe to set up a situation where that wave-indeterminacy decides which of the three types of outcomes happens. And I had an incling that "time to decay" via a quantum uncertain path would be something I don't understand and could gain more insight on. I also feel that the construction of understanding fields via particles was a red herring in that it's applicability is already hit. When we start rolling our spherical cows we are going to get in trouble with cow-tipping. Part of the job of a particle physcicis was to come up with new hamiltoninan. However the interaction term seemd to be just combine all fields via multiplication and a scalar. There doesn't seem to be much room to make it any other way. Or is it rather a more general function f(e-,e+,y) that could in principle do more fancy stuff? Or is the complication hidden in the definition of what the fields are (complexity of combining the fields vs how rich the field ontology is)

  • @garethwilliams2173
    @garethwilliams21734 жыл бұрын

    The two lowest order electron>γ

  • @nathanisbored
    @nathanisbored4 жыл бұрын

    QUESTION 1: - 27:26 "These diagrams have a typical size of alpha, but can have different signs"

  • @kindlin

    @kindlin

    4 жыл бұрын

    Just because Sean hasn't answered, I'll take a stab (I have no formal experience, just watched a lot of videos and built up some intuition over some years): Q1: I think renormalization is the answer to this. I'll know more, i believe, after watching the next video in this series. I know renormalization takes absurd quantities (infinites) and makes them interpretable as physical quantities. The thing we renormalize is some experimental value to some theoretical predication (typically, as i understand it, an infinity). Q2: I believe this is just a simplified notation of the 3d gadient, aka, dx/da+dy/da+dz/da (where *a* could be time, a dimension of space, or any other quantity). I believe this was just a simplification of notation.

  • @LelandBeaumont
    @LelandBeaumont3 жыл бұрын

    Is there anything analogous to Feynman diagrams that can be used to diagram philosophical arguments or texts?

  • @jph000
    @jph0004 жыл бұрын

    I enjoyed the wrap-up to your chat #10 Interactions. (transcript quote) so we are left with both this wonderfully accurate calculational device of Feynman diagrams and this somewhat unnatural formalism of quantum field theory. we don't know what to do about that. we didn't ... I'm not gonna reveal what to do about that. We still don't know what to do about the energy density of empty space. But we're thinking, and it might be that we do in one way or the other have to replace quantum field theory. But in the mean time it is absolutely the best way we have of understanding nature currently available. (end quote) The "what to do about the energy density of empty space" is what intrigues me. As well as ways to do 3D visualizations of localized field interactions, like a electron vibration and "reverse" vibration (positron) annihilating.

  • @element4element4
    @element4element44 жыл бұрын

    I feel that one of the deepest ideas in physics is the Wilsonian renormalization group theory. Not only does it give a way to think about the connection between high energy microscopic and low energy macroscopic theory, it gives a deep understanding of phase transitions, the space of quantum field theories, universality (the robustness and fundamentalness of low energy effective theories) etc etc. In particular, it gives a possible answer of the infinities quantum field theory implying that they should most likely be considered as effective theories rather than be seen as fundamental. I think there generally lacks a good exposition of these important ideas in theoretical physics for the general public. I can imagine that a version of Kadanoff block spin would give some intuition.

  • @judychurley6623
    @judychurley66234 жыл бұрын

    If some particle 'decays into...' does that imply that it was made up of those decay constituents? Or that it has changed the interacting fields in some way that those 'decay constituents' come into being in he relevant fields?

  • @rafaellazanchet5452
    @rafaellazanchet54523 жыл бұрын

    so if the reason for every electon having the same mass and charge is because they are vibrations in the same field,does it mean that every particle have its own specific field? Does the field defines the particles or the opposite ? Or is it both simultaneously and they are different ways of expressing the same thing ?

  • @karabomothupi9759
    @karabomothupi97593 жыл бұрын

    Beautiful

  • @samuelj5890
    @samuelj58904 жыл бұрын

    YES! Just in time for my particle physics exam tomorrow!!!

  • @MichalCanecky
    @MichalCanecky4 жыл бұрын

    I'm the spherical cow everyone is talking about.

  • @joshuapasa4229
    @joshuapasa42294 жыл бұрын

    I thought QM was about unifying fields and particles? So does QFT give a multi-variable function depending on x and phi? (Probability that x will have a certain field value phi). Is that what he is saying? I'm just confused because its probabilities of probabilities.

  • @rikimitchell916
    @rikimitchell9164 жыл бұрын

    re 10:00 outgoing dispersive wavefront combined (additive/subtractive) harmonic spectra

  • @papsaebus8606
    @papsaebus86064 жыл бұрын

    What about Gauge Invariance?

  • @rodrigoserafim8834
    @rodrigoserafim88344 жыл бұрын

    49:20 "an electron, a positron and a photon..." walk into a bar. electron turns to the positron and says 'i'm feeling negative', positron asks responds 'are you positive?', photon interjects 'can you guys see where this is going?'

  • @davidschneide5422

    @davidschneide5422

    4 жыл бұрын

    What's the matter with that massless joke?

  • @ToriKo_
    @ToriKo_ Жыл бұрын

    00:00:50 “We talk about fields interacting through Feynman diagrams, and we use them to calculate the interactions between certain quantum fields, fields that are thought of as collections of particles” 3:00 hammering home what modes are - really key So it seems like when we sin wave-ify a field, which we can imagine as plane waves, we need to define its wavelength, (not sure if we have to define frequency, as that can mean different things if we’re picturing a static frame or a wave through time. I’m also unsure of amplitude (h).) AND it’s direction. And that might be why we write phi sub k(vector, you know, since it’s directional!) (h). Going back to my confusion of frequency and amplitude, I’m not really sure what h is referring to - density? Density graphed against space? Density graphed against time? I think this is a case we’re Sean explicitly say what the axiis were, which is causing some of my confusion 5:00 “A QF is an organisation tool for talking about a superpositon(s?) of many collections of particles with different numbers of particles.” “There are cases were the Field-iness of the Fields really does matter, and talking about Fields is not just a cheap substitute for talking about particles.” “Unlike non-Field Theory QM, the number of particles doesn’t have to be conserved, the wavefunction of the QF is a superposition of different numbers of particles, AND the Schrödinger equation that tells you how that wavefunction evolves can change the number of particles through different kinds of interactions.” Damn it’s starting to pay off Omg it really is!!! 9:00 He says what I was assuming - that through the Fourier transform let’s us have a localized function by summing over sin waves that are non-localized!!!!! 18:30 particles direction vs ‘electron-ness’ direction in the notation of Feynman diagrams, left to right vs arrows 33:20 This is Perturbation Theory; “you start with something you understand perfectly (like Free Fields or a ball falling without air resistance) and add in tiny effects - add them in as perturbations” 45:00 criticisms of Wheeler’s 1 electron 50:00 Feynman diagrams are just a story, what is actually going on? Momentum conserved etc. The real parts and the virtual parts (where the fields are interacting locally and are doing complicated non-particle stuff). The mass of a virtual photon does not have to be zero, it is a way of talking about interacting Fields, not actual ‘particles’ We still don’t know what to do about the energy density of empty space.

  • @JohnDlugosz
    @JohnDlugosz4 жыл бұрын

    Do you mean *lepton number* rather than *fermion number* for conserving electron-ness?

  • @jeffbass1165
    @jeffbass11654 жыл бұрын

    I'm sure it's hidden in all the Lagrangian stuff, but where in the fields do these interactions take place...like, do the interactions always happen where both the electron field and positron field have relatively large values?

  • @lilitvehuni1458
    @lilitvehuni14584 жыл бұрын

    The electron splits into another electron and photon. The new electron must be at a lower energy level, since it lost a photon worth of energy. Is this correct?

  • @jamesjacobberger6471
    @jamesjacobberger64714 жыл бұрын

    Sorry if this was asked already. So, is a hydrogen atom the superposition of an electron wave and proton wave function (which is the superposition of quark and gluon wave functions) that travel through space-time together? Somehow, I think the answer is no.

  • @yewenyi
    @yewenyi2 жыл бұрын

    If electrons move forward in time and positrons move backwards in time, does that mean that at the no bang two universes were created. On with our matter moving forwards in time and one with antimatter moving backwards in time?

  • @hot-sawse
    @hot-sawse4 жыл бұрын

    i think one future problem may be that there is no small metric for the density or energy level , if i had to guess id say those measurements are based on the individual doing the measurement,. once again thank you. great informational video*

  • @nartanapremachandra3052
    @nartanapremachandra30524 жыл бұрын

    Hello Sean, I have a question: how can a particle or field be completely free or not entangled? I can’t envision that as everything interacts with everything else all the time. Thank you so much for these lectures; I have all your books and the lectures help to elucidate them.

  • @alvarorodriguez1592

    @alvarorodriguez1592

    4 жыл бұрын

    If there would be such a field, my guess is that we would not know of it, as it doesn’t act on anything else in the universe. But you can still start your mathematical thought experiment with that kind of made up particle, as it’s the easiest to model.

  • @jeffbass1165

    @jeffbass1165

    4 жыл бұрын

    I'm wondering the exact same thing. How would it be possible for anything to ever be not entangled?

  • @Czeckie
    @Czeckie4 жыл бұрын

    If I grow up to be a particle physicist, what fields will I be inventing? Standard model is bunch of interacting fields and they are all described, right? So is my job to imagine some new interactions and new particles and see what happens even though I have no indications from experiments there are any other fields? Clearly, I am confused about why should anyone invent new fields when it seems we've got them all.

  • @motmot2694
    @motmot26944 жыл бұрын

    25:20 was a bit of hand-waving?

  • @jcowan2341
    @jcowan23414 жыл бұрын

    Is there a Field Theory (classical or quantum) that uses Special Relativity? Field configurations defined in spacetime coordinates rather than R3 real coordinates? How about higher dimensional space (rolled-up dimensions?)

  • @simplelife1021

    @simplelife1021

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yep! The field theory of spacetime coordinates is General Relativity.

  • @alvarorodriguez1592
    @alvarorodriguez15924 жыл бұрын

    Now fields interact with each other?? I feel that if I don’t understand how, I’m going to grow a giant moustache and pretend I live in the XIXth century, just to keep what’s left of my sanity. PS: the level of math you introduce is very satisfying. If it depends on me, the more the better.

  • @replica1052

    @replica1052

    4 жыл бұрын

    interact and generate new fieilds in other dimensions

  • @4pharaoh
    @4pharaoh4 жыл бұрын

    Much More on Alpha Please! I'm sure α is a Big Idea.

  • @sinebar
    @sinebar3 жыл бұрын

    I'm imagining a particle that is like a tiny sphere with a surface that is wavey. Don't know if that's right.

  • @faisalsheikh7846
    @faisalsheikh78464 жыл бұрын

    Love you from India sir

  • @jessemontano6399
    @jessemontano63994 жыл бұрын

    Interactions?? Nice!!!!!

  • @papsaebus8606
    @papsaebus86064 жыл бұрын

    Does an electron lose energy in the interaction 22:46? Or does the energy conservation simply not apply in this scenario?🤔

  • @papsaebus8606

    @papsaebus8606

    4 жыл бұрын

    Asking this because Lawrence Krauss has mentioned for number of times that electron emitting a photon is an example of “something from nothing”. Not sure how accurate that is.

  • @JohnDlugosz

    @JohnDlugosz

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@papsaebus8606 Photons can be created and destroyed readily because they have no mass and no charge. There are still things that you must balance though: energy (in different forms), momentum, and spin. But, the conservation doesn't apply to lines that are entirely within the diagram -- only the lines entering/leaving must balance everything. The "virtual photons" are not bound by the familiar rules. If that vertex was a diagram in itself, then yes, the electron loses energy and momentum and flips its spin. This is exactly what happens when it crosses a magnetic field, for example. But he's showing these primitive vertexes as the alphabet, that can be stuck together to form complex diagrams. In context, it could represent a virtual photon, and it could be coming or going.

  • @mosgnz
    @mosgnz4 жыл бұрын

    How is the electron field different from electric field? Or How are they related?

  • @JohnDlugosz

    @JohnDlugosz

    4 жыл бұрын

    The electric field refers to the charge: what force would a probe particle feel in every position on the map. The electron field refers to the presence of electrons and virtual electrons (and positrons). They are descriptions on different "levels" of reality. If you level it, you find that the electric field is a cross section or shadow (so to speak) of the *photon* field, where the photon field is in the same level as the electron field (QFT).

  • @rotarolla1
    @rotarolla13 жыл бұрын

    So droplets of energy called particle are suspended in a cloud called electron and agitated by a wind called photon?

  • @yodajimmy2574
    @yodajimmy25744 жыл бұрын

    Why I keep watching all his videos even when I skip most of the part?

  • @stevenmellemans7215
    @stevenmellemans72154 жыл бұрын

    Center of mass of a two photon system ? :-)

  • @peterebel
    @peterebel4 жыл бұрын

    Sean, I know this is kinda the wrong place to ask, but it's been bothering me since I saw the Big Idea video on Space. In your two dimensional example of space, you drew a cylinder, which I cannot help but notice is a three dimensional object. It seems to me, the (small) circular dimension is in fact two dimensions. That makes no sense to me. Is this something that can be explained to the lay person?

  • @alvarorodriguez1592

    @alvarorodriguez1592

    4 жыл бұрын

    That cilinder is only its surface, like a rolled piece of paper. And the “available space” would be only the outer side of that sheet. So, in order to describe the position of a point on that surface you would need two numbers, so two dimensions, one of which would be cyclical. I get that your confusion comes from the need of a third dimension in order to roll the paper, but if the space everything you investigated happened in was the paper, space for you would be bidimensional. Spaces can be weird. Imagine the “space” your mathematical theory is concerned with are the numbers on a clock. 6 -5= 1. 8-7 = 1 , but 1 - 12 = 1, if minus sign means “ calculate the distance”. That clock is one dimensional, as you only need one number to say at which point in that line you are. Even if that line is a circle.

  • @gwills9337

    @gwills9337

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@alvarorodriguez1592 well said

  • @peterebel

    @peterebel

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@alvarorodriguez1592 Good reply. That does make sense. It escaped me that the space was limited to the surface of the object.

  • @higgscoulson3346

    @higgscoulson3346

    4 жыл бұрын

    Continuing on from Alvaro, in these types of explanations people often talk about an ant crawling on the surface. The ant only sees and traverses the two dimensional surface. You can define any place it can crawl with just two dimensions. Even though our visualization of it requires three dimensions it exists only in two. Hope that helps.

  • @ameremortal
    @ameremortal4 жыл бұрын

    What is actually real? Is it just the connections between things?

  • @longcastle4863
    @longcastle4863 Жыл бұрын

    Definitely a _Tempest_ theme going on here ; _)_

  • @_yak
    @_yak4 жыл бұрын

    "The positron can be thought of as an electron moving backwards in time..." The way this was stated makes me think that people don't think positrons are _actually_ electrons moving backward in time. Is that correct?

  • @JohnDlugosz

    @JohnDlugosz

    4 жыл бұрын

    No. The formulas of motion don't have a notion of a direction of time. The combination of Time, Parity, and Charge has perfect symmetry. That is, if you reverse all three values, you'll get exactly the same formula and result. Thus, reversing P and C (only) is exactly the same as reversing T (only). The formulas already don't care about the direction of time, so doing that lets you just reuse what you already know.

  • @spracketskooch

    @spracketskooch

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@JohnDlugosz This is kind of off subject, but weren't there some expiriments done that showed a violation of one or more parities? Although I can't remember which one/s.

  • @jeffbass1165

    @jeffbass1165

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@spracketskooch All of them have been violated, but CPT has not been violated (if you reverse charge, parity, AND time then the laws of physics will be the same).

  • @jeremy3046

    @jeremy3046

    4 жыл бұрын

    I'm pretty sure it's like "glass half-empty vs. glass half-full". There is no one thing it "really" is, it's a matter of perspective. Both are valid and equivalent.

  • @splicexjms8117
    @splicexjms81174 жыл бұрын

    Shoutout to Greg Gutfeld who I believe has been watching your videos.

  • @charlescarter9773
    @charlescarter97734 жыл бұрын

    What if all the missing antimatter is in the future?

  • @mattiassollerman
    @mattiassollerman4 жыл бұрын

    *aggresively nodding along*

  • @alvarorodriguez1592
    @alvarorodriguez15924 жыл бұрын

    It would be very cool to see the field depiction of an electron and a positron, as to understand what you mean by “electronness “. In a more detailed way, in prior depictions particles were lobes in a wave, no matter if they were pointing up or down. So... I guess it all boils down to what defines charge in the electron field. Note: by depiction I mean literally a drawing.

  • @JohnDlugosz

    @JohnDlugosz

    4 жыл бұрын

    The famous MIT Physics FAQ has a section on that.

  • @alvarorodriguez1592

    @alvarorodriguez1592

    4 жыл бұрын

    Don’t know it. Have a link?

  • @bjarkenielsen9281
    @bjarkenielsen92813 жыл бұрын

    The field is up and down. 18 squared. 324 group 18 periodic system is All gassens together is 324. From 1 to 18.. So the field is up +up- and down+down-..

  • @colinmaclaurin407
    @colinmaclaurin4073 жыл бұрын

    at 23:00, I think the Feynman diagram with one electron in, and an electron and photon out, is unphysical. Energy is not conserved, which is most easily seen from the centre-of-mass frame of the "in" electron. Instead, as Carroll says later, the two diagrams should be mirror images of one another. Edit: But I guess it's fine as a single vertex of a larger diagram

  • @HenrikScheel_
    @HenrikScheel_3 жыл бұрын

    Can you explain how a Quantum computer works?

  • @keybutnolock

    @keybutnolock

    3 жыл бұрын

    No I can't

  • @Rattus-Norvegicus
    @Rattus-Norvegicus4 жыл бұрын

    I feel like Ogre watching this... "What if C A T really spells dog?"

  • @calinwerlein1378
    @calinwerlein13784 жыл бұрын

    I always wonder how you can top it...what's next...Sean Caroll is the best sherpa you can get (free!!) on the way to the summit of Everest of Physics...but you still have to climb high on your own feet...

  • @nathanisbored
    @nathanisbored4 жыл бұрын

    i think the reason you keep 'slipping' and calling these lectures is because you secretly want historians to refer to these videos as the Carroll Lectures

  • @PavlosPapageorgiou
    @PavlosPapageorgiou4 жыл бұрын

    I'm a little lost on how many degrees of freedom we're talking about. You explain that we can decompose any field as a collection of waves, waves have modes, modes have energy levels, and the Nth energy level corresponds to N particles. That's for a classical field and on top we have the wave function. That sounds like "for each" is expanded too many times. Is there a way to count the infinities? For example there's an R^3 infinity of k plane waves, then a Z infinity of coefficients of each mode? then you take the set of all of the above to make Ψ? I don't know. Roughly how large is everything? EDIT: And I'm guessing part of the answer is that this "how big" doesn't change with many worlds because the the wave function is already there. It's implied by what you say here that you, an object, is not defined locally anyway. We're all defined holographically as components of the vibration modes of the whole universe. All versions of us. In a way that should make Many Worlds more plausible, or at least no less plausible than expressing everyday things that way.

  • @michaellorden8150
    @michaellorden81504 жыл бұрын

    Sir it’s turtles all the way down!!

  • @greyback4718
    @greyback47184 жыл бұрын

    Hi if you don't know tomorrow there will be a debate review on "capturing Christianity" KZread channel of your debate with William L.C maybe you would be interested in it

  • @tonydarcy1606

    @tonydarcy1606

    4 жыл бұрын

    W L C made the mistake of trying to argue physics with Sean Carroll about ? 5 years ago. He was hopelessly out of his depth. I suspect that Capturing Christianity's review will be highly edited and highly misleading. But I could be wrong.

  • @maurocruz1824
    @maurocruz18242 жыл бұрын

    33:22

  • @isabelab6851
    @isabelab68514 жыл бұрын

    I truly wish I remembered enough mathematics to do justice to this wonderful knowledge. Thank you

  • @FirstRisingSouI
    @FirstRisingSouI4 жыл бұрын

    If Feynman diagrams are just visualizations of series expansions, not real things happening in physical reality, why teach them to a general audience?

  • @EvgeniiNeumerzhitckii
    @EvgeniiNeumerzhitckii4 жыл бұрын

    18:00 Hola, wait a minute! Particles traveling backwards in time? Say what?

  • @voges1001

    @voges1001

    3 жыл бұрын

    Lol right. Came out of nowhere

  • @thorcook
    @thorcook3 жыл бұрын

    55:00 The reasons given for why Wheeler's 'one electron universe' is wrong don't actually logically falsify the theory.. Just because the [same underlying] 'field description' _works_ as an explanation for why all the electrons are the same mass and charge, doesn't mean it's the right one and Wheeler's is wrong. That's like saying the 'round globe theory' is wrong because the flat earth 'theory' has a working alternative explanation for the motion of the 'heavenly bodies' (or the geocentric/ptolemaic model explanation for planetary motion, etc.) And the fact that electrons can turn into other particles doesn't falsify it either because whatever the electron turns into can still be the 'one electron/particle' just undergoing 'transformation'. I'm not saying the 'one electron universe' theory is correct, but are there other more compelling reasons why it's wrong?

  • @thorcook

    @thorcook

    3 жыл бұрын

    ​@@michaelsommers2356 Theoretically, the electron 'produced' by the muon decay with the neutrinos could just be a time-displaced version displaced [by relativity] of the 'other' spacetime manifestations of the 'one electron'. The muon _is_ the electron in a different 'state'. Particles _essentially_ are just different forms or fluctuations of the same universal wavefunction(s) [and not fundamentally disparate/unique entities in terms of their 'essence'].

  • @karabomothupi9759
    @karabomothupi97593 жыл бұрын

    My mind is in a superposition of understanding and not understanding

  • @joshua3171
    @joshua31714 жыл бұрын

    hmmm, the energy of "empty" space.............I have an idea, should I email?comon you must get a laugh out of some of them :)

  • @gamed1676
    @gamed16762 жыл бұрын

    hej

  • @keybutnolock
    @keybutnolock3 жыл бұрын

    I wonder what his neighbours think when he calls "Taliban !" : )

  • @keybutnolock

    @keybutnolock

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@michaelsommers2356 Yes, thanks I noticed his post introducing his cats.Others have also commented in error, so maybe he felt the need to clarify.

  • @pizzacrusher4632
    @pizzacrusher46324 жыл бұрын

    Why name your cat Taliban?

  • @Valdagast
    @Valdagast4 жыл бұрын

    TIL: Physicists desperately need to adopt new alphabets to steal letters from. I suggest Chinese ideograms (not strictly letters, but never mind).

  • @MathAdam
    @MathAdam4 жыл бұрын

    Does this comment count as an interaction?

  • @frrrmphpoo1700

    @frrrmphpoo1700

    4 жыл бұрын

    I think it does. For the algorithm

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