The Puzzling Fourth Dimension (and exotic shapes) - Numberphile

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 12 чер 2024
  • Featuring Ciprian Manolescu from Stanford University.
    More links & stuff in full description below ↓↓↓
    Ciprian Manolescu: web.stanford.edu/~cm5/
    Sphere art at the end of the video by www.adistu.ro/
    Perfect Shapes in Higher Dimensions: • Perfect Shapes in High...
    Numberphile is supported by the Simons Laufer Mathematical Sciences Institute (formerly MSRI): bit.ly/MSRINumberphile
    We are also supported by Science Sandbox, a Simons Foundation initiative dedicated to engaging everyone with the process of science. www.simonsfoundation.org/outr...
    And support from The Akamai Foundation - dedicated to encouraging the next generation of technology innovators and equitable access to STEM education - www.akamai.com/company/corpor...
    NUMBERPHILE
    Website: www.numberphile.com/
    Numberphile on Facebook: / numberphile
    Numberphile tweets: / numberphile
    Subscribe: bit.ly/Numberphile_Sub
    Videos by Brady Haran
    Animation by Pete McPartlan
    Patreon: / numberphile
    Numberphile T-Shirts and Merch: teespring.com/stores/numberphile
    Brady's videos subreddit: / bradyharan
    Brady's latest videos across all channels: www.bradyharanblog.com/
    Sign up for (occasional) emails: eepurl.com/YdjL9
    Special thanks to:
    Ben Delo
    Juan Benet
    Jeff Straathof
    Ken Baron
    Andy B
    Michael Dunworth
    James Bissonette
    Jubal John
    Jeremy Buchanan
    Steve Crutchfield
    Adam Savage
    Ben White
    Andrei M Burke
    RAD Donato
    Matthew Schuster
    Nat Tyce
    Ron Hochsprung
    Ubiquity Ventures
    John Zelinka
    Gnare
    Kannan Stanz
    OnlineBookClub.org
    Matt Tiblow
    Heather Liu
    Jordan W Oja
    Tracy Parry
    Ian George Walker
    Arnas
    Bernd Sing
    Valentin
    Alfred Wallace
    Alex Khein
    Mirik Gogri
    Doug Hoffman
    Xavier F. G.
    John Loach
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 656

  • @Djorgal
    @Djorgal Рік тому +593

    "We topologist are healthy people, we're not supposed to be eating donuts."
    Yeah, that's because of the ceramic.

    • @meesalikeu
      @meesalikeu Рік тому +4

      NO, ITS BECAUSE THE GUYS FROM ODD FUTURE WILL CLAP BACK AT YA

    • @Mike-lx9qn
      @Mike-lx9qn Рік тому +1

      Because smart people aren't as likely to be obese, because they try not to overeat.

    • @akelodaima5639
      @akelodaima5639 Рік тому +11

      @Mike Donuts and coffee mugs are the same to a topologist (they both have one hole), and that's why they are weary of eating donuts.

    • @reynoldskynaston9529
      @reynoldskynaston9529 Рік тому +4

      @@Mike-lx9qn missed the joke

    • @shadowmax889
      @shadowmax889 Рік тому +5

      @@Mike-lx9qn There are a ton of smart people that are obese, smokers, use drugs, are promiscuous, etc. Human being are still human beings after all

  • @JohnSmith-zq9mo
    @JohnSmith-zq9mo Рік тому +400

    I like how he finished the most random looking sequence ever with "and so on".

    • @adityakhanna113
      @adityakhanna113 Рік тому +17

      Hahaha, it's on you to find the pattern

    • @RubidiumOxide
      @RubidiumOxide Рік тому +65

      @@adityakhanna113 extrapolating on this pattern is left as an exercise for the reader

    • @Valvex_
      @Valvex_ Рік тому +3

      @@RubidiumOxide Your comment made me laugh, thank you haha

    • @inigo8740
      @inigo8740 Рік тому +1

      @@RubidiumOxide If you manage to extrapolate it to n=4 you get a big party

    • @Fred-tz7hs
      @Fred-tz7hs Рік тому +3

      I think he is just trolling and making up numbers

  • @andrewlecouteurbisson7217
    @andrewlecouteurbisson7217 Рік тому +748

    Only a mathematician could refer to an "ordinary 7-dimensional sphere." You know, the common household 7-dimensional sphere. :D

    • @diribigal
      @diribigal Рік тому +41

      Yeah, like the one you might have in your 8-dimensional home.

    • @lo1bo2
      @lo1bo2 Рік тому +23

      Mine is in my kitchen junk drawer somewhere.

    • @HarryNicNicholas
      @HarryNicNicholas Рік тому +9

      @@lo1bo2 i had 8 but it got bent in the drier, now i only have seven again.

    • @akizeta
      @akizeta Рік тому +11

      @@lo1bo2 Mine keeps rolling into the corners of the room, where the Hounds of Tindalos get ahold of it, and when they've finished I have to repair it. Do you have any idea how difficult 7-dimensional sewing is?

    • @joshyoung1440
      @joshyoung1440 Рік тому +3

      Well yeah, you have like... vigintillions of them in your home right now. Maybe. I don't know how superstrings (allegedly) work.

  • @MichaelSalston
    @MichaelSalston Рік тому +114

    I love how at 11:54, he says putting a lasso around a donut and the animation shows the coffee cup. After all, they are the same!

    • @Ak-qq2le
      @Ak-qq2le Рік тому +4

      animator is also a topologist. :D

  • @emaldonadokpcr
    @emaldonadokpcr Рік тому +484

    Numberphile is VERY necessary. Thank you professor!

  • @Hunnter2k3
    @Hunnter2k3 Рік тому +521

    I always knew dimension 4 was strange, but I didn't realize just how strange it was in regards to the rest of them. That's fascinating

    • @peterwhitey4992
      @peterwhitey4992 Рік тому +13

      There's nothing different about "dimension 4". It's indistinguishable from the other dimensions. But working in 4 dimensions is different from working in 3 dimension. Which 3 or 4 you use, makes no difference.

    • @sihingvonfelix4251
      @sihingvonfelix4251 Рік тому +51

      @@peterwhitey4992 did you watch the video? The Professor says "dimension 4" multiple times so the author of the comment did use a term that everybody in the comments section should be familiar with.
      If you arent familiar with it just ask: "What exactly do you mean with dimension 4?"

    • @nickpatella1525
      @nickpatella1525 Рік тому +34

      @@sihingvonfelix4251 Peter is clarifying a misconception one might have about what is called “dimension 4” or “the 4th dimension”. Attaching a special significance to one of the dimensions isn’t something you do when studying pure Euclidean spaces.
      In the video, he briefly mentioned “it could be time”, which would probably cause misconceptions.
      If you study 4D spacetime (3 space dimensions + 1 time dimension), that’s different from what topology is usually concerned with, and distance is defined differently.
      In pure Euclidean space, a 4D distance can be found with the Euclidean formula: sqrt(dx^2 + dy^2 + dz^2 + dw^2).
      In 4D space time, distance is defined as sqrt((c-dt)^2 - (dx^2 + dy^2 + dz^2)).

    • @theMosen
      @theMosen Рік тому +37

      I didn't even think dimension 4 was strange, I thought the only reason it tends to get more attention than other higher dimensional spaces is because it happens to be the first dimensional space that we didn't evolve to comprehend intuitively. The fact that it stands out topologically from all others blows my mind.

    • @theMosen
      @theMosen Рік тому +14

      @@nickpatella1525 But we are clearly talking about 4D spaces as a whole here, not some arbitrarily assigned "4th dimension" of any given space with N dimensions. It does seem that Peter hadn't watched the video.

  • @Joel-tm7xq
    @Joel-tm7xq Рік тому +127

    The delivery on "for example, here is a donut and here is a coffee mug." is immaculate

    • @lua-nya
      @lua-nya Рік тому

      Indeed. Some things are easier to think about when you internalise that a donut is a squashed coffee mug.

    • @hareecionelson5875
      @hareecionelson5875 Рік тому +4

      When someone commits to the joke, that is art. It was Lee Mack-esque

  • @farouku5334
    @farouku5334 Рік тому +64

    This guy is the only person to have scored perfectly on the IMO 3 separate times !

  • @11pupona
    @11pupona Рік тому +57

    Ciprian is a genius!!! he is the only person ever to score 3 perfect papers at the IMO!, he was also top 5 in putnam (putnam fellow) 3 years!

    • @anticorncob6
      @anticorncob6 8 місяців тому

      I didn't know he was American.

    • @ABCDEF-it4ml
      @ABCDEF-it4ml 5 місяців тому +3

      @@anticorncob6he’s romanian

  • @weetabixharry
    @weetabixharry Рік тому +50

    Engineers use manifolds (in N-dimensional complex space) to analyze multiple-antenna communications systems, such as MIMO WiFi. The shape of the manifold is determined principally by the arrangement of the antennas in 3D real space. Each point on the manifold corresponds to a direction (bearing) in 3D real space. The local properties of the manifold about that point tell us how well the communications system can detect, resolve and estimate the parameters of a remote signal source emitting from that direction.

  • @Luper1billion
    @Luper1billion Рік тому +106

    I knew topology was interesting, but this blew my mind. Feels like there's so much to learn about higher dimensions

  • @strangeWaters
    @strangeWaters Рік тому +33

    FYI, the disks starting around 12:00 should be filled, not empty. "Disk" means the inside of an n-sphere and "sphere" means the outside. That's why it's okay to contract them, no holes.

  • @joshuakahky6891
    @joshuakahky6891 Рік тому +179

    *But can you turn a 3-dimensional sphere inside out?*

    • @TheAruruu
      @TheAruruu Рік тому +38

      i know this reference, and i was thinking of it the entire time he was discussing how to turn a figure 8 into a circle.

    • @swirlingabyss
      @swirlingabyss Рік тому +16

      That was the first thing I thought of when this started!

    • @NavajoNinja
      @NavajoNinja Рік тому +4

      Yes

    • @diribigal
      @diribigal Рік тому +12

      No, only the 2d sphere inside of 3d space (as in that famous video), the 6d sphere inside of 7d space, and (if you want to count it) the 0d sphere (just two points) in 1d space

    • @diribigal
      @diribigal Рік тому +13

      @ChannelZero Yes, there's a proof. You can see mathematicians agreeing about this in MathOverflow question 115110 "Eversion of the 6-sphere in 7-space". (This parallels other topology facts about spheres and dimensions related to the quaternions and octonions.)
      For the 0-sphere, it is all solutions of x^2=1, so the two points -1 and 1 on the number line. It's not a smooth object, but passing the points through eachother doesn't pinch it in any way, so it can topologically be turned inside out.

  • @NoNTr1v1aL
    @NoNTr1v1aL Рік тому +78

    This is the guy that proved that there exist manifolds that cannot be triangulated!

    • @jackozeehakkjuz
      @jackozeehakkjuz Рік тому +9

      HE WHAT
      nooo mannnn my simplicial homology :(

    • @bencressman6110
      @bencressman6110 Рік тому +12

      I don’t know what it means to triangulate a manifold :|

    • @xario2007
      @xario2007 Рік тому +2

      @@bencressman6110 That you can't rebuild the manifold with a triangle mesh?

    • @xario2007
      @xario2007 Рік тому +2

      What's the lowest dimension such a non-triangulatable manifold exists?

    • @user-hs3zl2rh2i
      @user-hs3zl2rh2i Рік тому +4

      Oh no!
      Does it mean I can't use my GPS in a N-Dimentional forest?

  • @TheThunder005
    @TheThunder005 Рік тому +41

    Very humble and knowledgeable professor, nice work trying to help us normal sphere people get a glimpse at those exotics... like a fancy car video for numberphiles

  • @adsilcott
    @adsilcott Рік тому +315

    Topologists aren't so weird. They dunk their coffee cup into their doughnut just like everyone else.

    • @hareecionelson5875
      @hareecionelson5875 Рік тому +7

      well, according to Einstein, if you let go of a doughnut it is the coffee cup which accelerates towards the doughnut, so the coffee cup does indeed dunk into the doughnut

    • @matthewabln6989
      @matthewabln6989 Рік тому

      Nice.

    • @Mike-lx9qn
      @Mike-lx9qn Рік тому

      @@hareecionelson5875
      Explain.

    • @hareecionelson5875
      @hareecionelson5875 Рік тому +5

      @@Mike-lx9qn In Newtonian physics, gravity is a force, and the surface of Earth is not accelerating
      in general relativity, gravity is curved space-time, and it is more accurate to think of the grounds as accelerating up into you, pushing you off your inertial path (free fall)

    • @zes7215
      @zes7215 5 місяців тому

      wrg

  • @fmanda
    @fmanda Рік тому +4

    Shoutout to whomever cleaned those blackboards. Exquisite work!

  • @jagoandlitefoot
    @jagoandlitefoot Рік тому +40

    yooooo this guy was my professor for a discrete math class at UCLA in 2018, cool to see him on the channel :D

    • @deltalima6703
      @deltalima6703 Рік тому +2

      I am not sure whether to feel jealousy or pity. Guy knows his stuff, you would learn a lot and still feel like you are missing something.

    • @meesalikeu
      @meesalikeu Рік тому +2

      IS THAT A MATH CLASS YOU TAKE SECRETLY, SO THEY DONT KNOW YA BOY IS WICKED SMAHT?

  • @jorgejorge8878
    @jorgejorge8878 Рік тому +118

    Numberphile never disappoints

    • @peterwhitey4992
      @peterwhitey4992 Рік тому +4

      False.

    • @Xormac2
      @Xormac2 Рік тому +3

      True.

    • @waynedarronwalls6468
      @waynedarronwalls6468 Рік тому +3

      @@peterwhitey4992 your assertion is false

    • @alw6824
      @alw6824 Рік тому

      Brady's interruptions are becoming more and more annoying. Even Ciprian seemed annoyed a couple of times during the presentation.

    • @deltalima6703
      @deltalima6703 Рік тому +2

      @AL W No. Bradys comments are always appropriate and welcome.

  • @Marguerite-Rouge
    @Marguerite-Rouge Рік тому +25

    One of the best numberphile videos I have ever seen! Please invite pr. Manolescu very often!

  • @NavajoNinja
    @NavajoNinja Рік тому +18

    Thanks for visiting us from dimension 7 and droppin some knowledge doc. 👍

  • @Gabriel01298
    @Gabriel01298 Рік тому +60

    I feel like my brain is a smooth object watching this video.

    • @SkippiiKai
      @SkippiiKai Рік тому +3

      Best comment I've seen all week.

    • @evanglickstein8001
      @evanglickstein8001 Рік тому +1

      Hahaha, I completely agree! I've even built a 3D shadow of a shadow of a 5D hypercube, but I haven't begun to understand why there are more than 1 type of sphere in any number of dimensions. I did however like the explanation of why 4D topology is more complicated than topology in lower and higher dimensions.

    • @Gabriel01298
      @Gabriel01298 Рік тому

      @@evanglickstein8001 Damn, that's awesome. I have a friend doing a maths degree and he is interested in researching how to arrange spheres in the most optimal way possible in higher dimensions. This kind of thing just boggles my mind.

  • @jonathanbyrdmusic
    @jonathanbyrdmusic Рік тому +13

    What a great voice. Would be a treat to hear him lecture.

  • @angelowentzler9961
    @angelowentzler9961 Рік тому +3

    Mr Manolescu has an excellent explaining style and a good voice as well. Joy to hear him speak.

  • @ebhd33
    @ebhd33 Рік тому +5

    I dont remember how many times i rewinded 10 seconds back to re hear that new piece of information. This is episode is dense.

  • @mrbigberd
    @mrbigberd Рік тому +30

    I'd love to see a video on division by invariant multiplication. It's incredibly important in modern computing, but almost unknown to most programmers let alone non-programmers.

  • @nerdyjoe314
    @nerdyjoe314 Рік тому +19

    Prof Manolescu is awesome! He disproved the triangulation conjecture in high dimension. You should ask him if he could do a video in that direction. This video turned out great.

    • @jamesknapp64
      @jamesknapp64 Рік тому

      What was the triangulation conjecture

  • @veggiet2009
    @veggiet2009 Рік тому +42

    I want to learn about the different spheres in different dimensions. I'm all about the specialness that is 4D space, but I'm curious about what exactly are the 992 spheres in the 11th dimension

    • @MushookieMan
      @MushookieMan Рік тому +13

      Why don't you just try to make them and then you'll see

    • @veggiet2009
      @veggiet2009 Рік тому +5

      @@MushookieMan you got me there!

  • @neiro314
    @neiro314 Рік тому +75

    This is one of the most fascinating numberphiles videos ive ever seen! so cool!

  • @christianorlandosilvaforer3451

    best part of the video: "number phile videos are important too" absolutely agree we need to propagate maths to the whole world.. more people working on maths more probability to solve problems

  • @ZachGatesHere
    @ZachGatesHere Рік тому +22

    Haha I like this guy, hope to see more of him

    • @jessehammer123
      @jessehammer123 Рік тому +5

      When the video said “Featuring Ciprian Manolescu”, I was delighted. Manolescu is pretty famous in math competition circles because he’s the only person ever to write three perfect papers at the IMO (International Math Olympiad).

  • @denalozecon9074
    @denalozecon9074 Рік тому +7

    I love this!
    I am so confused and do not understand.
    But it's wonderful the host understands more than me.

  • @tyleringram7883
    @tyleringram7883 Рік тому +39

    Its really weird how many spheres in the numbers have big number gaps but i actually see a pattern in sphere dimensions 7,11 and 15. They all have a relation to mersenne primes. (2^3-1)x2^2=28 (2^5-1)x2^5=992 and (2^7-1)x2^7=16256. 28 doesnt hold for this pattern, but im guessing that the next one might be in the 27th dimension might be: (2^13-1)x2^13 = 67100672. Just an observation though

    • @Alex_Deam
      @Alex_Deam Рік тому +15

      Nice, this is OEIS sequence A001676 and 27 is indeed 67100672, so looks like your theory is correct!

    • @d5uncr
      @d5uncr Рік тому +34

      ​@@Alex_Deam I'm not saying that it's incorrect but lots of Numberphile videos have taught us that you can't assume a theory is correct just because the first n numbers match.

    • @Alex_Deam
      @Alex_Deam Рік тому +9

      @@d5uncr I meant the idea that 27 would be 67100672 is correct, not that this proved Mersenne primes are definitely involved

    • @TakeTheRide
      @TakeTheRide Рік тому

      Sounds like you're talking about medicare.

    • @asatzhh
      @asatzhh Рік тому +2

      It is false in dimension 35(=2*17+1) in which case it is 2^17-1 2^19 43867

  • @richardrhodes9664
    @richardrhodes9664 Рік тому +6

    Yes Numberphile videos are important too. You may be inspiring the person who discovers the 4h dimensional exotic sphere

  • @user-go5ri2yg5f
    @user-go5ri2yg5f Рік тому +18

    I would definitely like to see a video about those infinite exotic planes!

    • @HarryNicNicholas
      @HarryNicNicholas Рік тому +2

      would there be time, i mean, really, would there be time? or would you have to fold the video?

  • @benYaakov
    @benYaakov Рік тому +29

    I had some intrinsic feeling that 4th is a mystery.

    • @hyperbaroque
      @hyperbaroque Рік тому +7

      It isn't really much of a mystery. You can map the 4th dimension, for example. You just need more than 4 dimensions to act as an overarching structure within which to map the lower dimension. Without 4 dimensions we could not map the lower 3. And so on. (Edit, the missing exotic sphere is the exception. Yes, it is considered a quandary and I think of it as a blind spot. To me it is more of an ontological mystery than a topological one.)

  • @Niinkai
    @Niinkai Рік тому +19

    4-dimension being special and infinite makes me think of time-slicing the universe into 3d spaces. Pretty wild if the reason we live in 3+1 dimensions is that 4 dimensions holds more potential (is infinitely more likely to occur) than the others. Assuming, of course, that spatial 4d is comparable to 3+1d

    • @RTzarius
      @RTzarius Рік тому +2

      Related question: does the "wavefunction collapse" pick one result (copenhagen), or does it pick every result (many worlds)?

    • @idontwantahandlethough
      @idontwantahandlethough Рік тому +2

      @@RTzarius you clearly do not believe in the heart of the cards, tsk tsk

  • @nathancortes3722
    @nathancortes3722 Рік тому +8

    It's also curious that dimension 4 happens to be the one we live in.

    • @nosuchthing8
      @nosuchthing8 Рік тому

      Kind of. We only have 3 spatial dimensions. Time isn't acceptable as another dimensio to us. Unless you move close to the speed of light, etc.

  • @juliocardenas4485
    @juliocardenas4485 Рік тому +5

    Absolutely wonderful!!!

  • @stephensheppard
    @stephensheppard Рік тому +5

    Really interesting! Would love to learn more about this topic.

  • @DanatronOne
    @DanatronOne Рік тому +13

    Careful, you're pinching it infinitely tight!

  • @jakl
    @jakl Рік тому +1

    Incredible video. I'm in love with topology now.

  • @ReinhardB100
    @ReinhardB100 Рік тому +13

    How do you become a mathematician and not become insane? This seems to me like looking straight into the abyss.

    • @Sock-Monster-Simian
      @Sock-Monster-Simian Рік тому +2

      Seriously, I can't even fathom most of this stuff. All those people arguing about 4 dimensional space when I got lost all the way back at "smoothly different."

    • @wcsxwcsx
      @wcsxwcsx Рік тому +3

      Maybe a mathematician's job is to take an abyss and reveal its structure.

    • @adraedin
      @adraedin Рік тому

      There's an interesting show called "Dangerous Knowledge" about how some mathematicians/physicists/etc have lost their minds to math. Wrapping your head around infinity isn't as quick & easy as learning to tie your shoes. Pretty interesting watch, although it's a bit dated at this point.
      I'd like to think that being a mathematician helps to process the deep thoughts they have... it must be nice to have an outlet, a way to express the thoughts, a language (math) to convert ideas to, so that others can interpret/peer review/etc. Knowing how complex the world/universe is, is almost like a blessing and a curse. That said, I'd rather ask the big questions and drive myself a bit mad trying to figure it out, than to never ask them at all and just bumble around taking everything for granted for my short time here.

    • @danielbickford3458
      @danielbickford3458 11 місяців тому

      I've actually ran across a book series where people can use math to do magic, but they also have an increasingly High chance of going insane from doing so. There are ways to reduce the chances, like don't actually do the math all in your head, but the chances never zero.

  • @vick229
    @vick229 Рік тому +10

    Back then I knew numberphile through Vsauce ...Never disappoint 😊

    • @oldcowbb
      @oldcowbb Рік тому +2

      Vsauce was the entry drug for educational youtube

  • @Oldfaithful61
    @Oldfaithful61 Рік тому +26

    From now on, when people ask me why I didn't specialize in topology, I'll tell them it's because I like doughnuts.

  • @afonsohenriquessilvaleite8356
    @afonsohenriquessilvaleite8356 Рік тому +5

    So amazing! I got an interesting point: on corners, derivatives are not defined, so u can't say anymore where to grow or shrink to deform the objects!

  • @idjles
    @idjles Рік тому

    Those blackboards look amazingly clean!

  • @LuigiRosa
    @LuigiRosa Рік тому

    That's truly fascinating, thank you!

  • @ultrozy
    @ultrozy Рік тому +13

    Absolutely fascinating. I didn't like functional analysis in university (which kinda relates to topology) and I always thought, that there is nothing special about higher dimensions because you can't properly visualize their objects (I tried hard especially in 4D), but now.. I completely changed my mind

    • @zapazap
      @zapazap Рік тому +3

      Topology is sometimes called 'soft analysis'. I find it much easier and much more fun.

    • @anticorncob6
      @anticorncob6 8 місяців тому +1

      Strange as functional analysis deals with infinite dimensional spaces, thiugh you typically don't think of them as "space".

  • @fierydino9402
    @fierydino9402 Рік тому

    You cannot imagine how much I love your channel. It's like 🎉🎉🎉🎉😆😆

  • @KaiCyreus
    @KaiCyreus Рік тому +4

    love the animations here ☆

  • @dr.mohamedaitnouh4501
    @dr.mohamedaitnouh4501 Рік тому +1

    We will understand dimension 4 once we understand time t (the 4th dimension). Great explanation for the exotic structure with corners. thank you!

  • @joshuaunderwood7
    @joshuaunderwood7 Рік тому

    This is one of those “unknown unknown” videos where I was like: I knew that I didn’t really understand topology… what I didn’t know was that I don’t really understand topology.
    Side note, I totally use hyper-spheres and bisectional searches to resolve a convex optimization problem “when have I collected enough data about subject X?”, so it’s not that I wouldn’t love to have a better method by exploiting the manifold or by loosening the requirements of the shape of that manifold… but, I’ve yet to find the way to ask the question in a way that brings me closer to a better implementation.
    So, great video. Love that numberphile will dive into subjects like this.

  • @machineman8920
    @machineman8920 Рік тому +1

    Fantastic animation !!!!!

  • @Galakyllz
    @Galakyllz Рік тому

    These animations are great!

  • @jareknowak8712
    @jareknowak8712 Рік тому +2

    Topology - my favorite piece of Math!
    👍

  • @Pfhorrest
    @Pfhorrest Рік тому +3

    Dimension 4 being uniquely special like this feels like it could potentially have implications on why, if the higher dimensional models of e.g. string theories are correct, only three dimensions are extended spatially, the fourth is uniquely temporal, and higher dimensions are curled up and only manifest as phenomena within space over time.

    • @Pfhorrest
      @Pfhorrest Рік тому

      @Mike Foster That ant-on-a-hose analogy is exactly what it meant by the higher dimensions being "curled up"; they're like the dimension around the hose, while the three we're used to are line the dimension along the length of the hose. We're so big compared to the curled-up dimensions that they basically don't exist to us, in the same way that we're so big relative to a hose that it seems almost like a one-dimensional object. But for tiny subatomic particles, the curled-up dimensions are big enough to give them room to do interesting things, which is a proposed explanation for various phenomena that we observe of those particles; what looks like a property of "charge" to us, of an apparently static particle in 3D space, is actually its velocity along a curled-up higher dimension, but since it's just looping around that dimension that's too small for us to see, we don't perceive it as "motion" but as some static property of a motionless particle.

  • @tomholroyd7519
    @tomholroyd7519 Рік тому +1

    OMG finally an ending that makes me sit through the credits!!!! On UA-cam!!! (not the ad though)

  • @olivier2553
    @olivier2553 Рік тому +2

    Numberphile video, and all the sister channels, are very important.

  • @bloomp7999
    @bloomp7999 Рік тому +8

    That's like a whole mysterious world at our doors yet to discover !

    • @RunstarHomer
      @RunstarHomer Рік тому +5

      That's what mathematics is, my guy.

  • @prdoyle
    @prdoyle Рік тому +5

    11:54 - Let's take a moment to appreciate this illustration of a donut. 😆

  • @douro20
    @douro20 Рік тому +1

    The sequence shown in this video is A001676. 1 is specified for dimension 4 but it's just a conjecture.

  • @nino805
    @nino805 Рік тому +6

    Prof Manolescu's face as he desperately tries to keep things simple and not go completely off the rails.

  • @asnierkishcowboy
    @asnierkishcowboy Рік тому +4

    The 28 spheres of dimension 7 are also known to form a cyclic group. I assume that the non exotic one is the identity element.

  • @Spectrolite1
    @Spectrolite1 Рік тому

    Really interesting, thanks!

  • @timebird78
    @timebird78 Рік тому

    the small mindbomb after work...thank you 🙂

  • @808bigisland
    @808bigisland 5 місяців тому

    Excellent!

  • @Veptis
    @Veptis 11 місяців тому

    In a seminar on word embeddings, we heard about a hyberpolic distance function that improved a specific type of classification problem. And I asked the question if the concept of sphere even makes sense in these extremely high dimensional spaces.

  • @rif6876
    @rif6876 Рік тому

    I love the Hyperspace button in Asteroids. it must be a topologists favorite 80s videogame.

  • @inrlyehheisdreaming
    @inrlyehheisdreaming Рік тому

    This is cool! Bring him back!

  • @FloydMaxwell
    @FloydMaxwell Рік тому

    This will come in handy when I go shopping later today

  • @PeeperSnail
    @PeeperSnail Рік тому +2

    Congratulations on reaching the 15TH DIMENSION! Enjoy your reward of SIXTEEN THOUSAND TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY-SIX SPHERES!

  • @scowell
    @scowell 9 місяців тому

    The shrinking the loop on the coffee cup handle reminded me of Ricci Flow for some reason... too much Numberphile!

  • @meinbherpieg4723
    @meinbherpieg4723 2 місяці тому

    Great video!

  • @yoyoyogames9527
    @yoyoyogames9527 Рік тому +1

    really interesting, three spacial and one time dimensions make up a 4 dimensional space, interesting that 4 is the one we have the most trouble saying things about

  •  Рік тому +1

    Really interesting! I'm always fascinated about higher dimensions.

  • @warping_gravity_singularity_0

    how beautiful !!!!!!! 😍😍😍😍😍

  • @Fosgen
    @Fosgen Рік тому +2

    I wonder for years why only three physical dimensions were opened in this Universe. This question must be on the list about 4th dimension.

  • @mst.ambiakhatun1651
    @mst.ambiakhatun1651 Рік тому

    Thank you sir

  • @andriypredmyrskyy7791
    @andriypredmyrskyy7791 Рік тому +14

    Your video on Ricci flow always confused me, because it never seemed to have an application. Now that I've heard a little about topology here, I can start to see why Ricci flow might be useful.

    • @d4slaimless
      @d4slaimless Рік тому +5

      Ricci flow is a part of Perelman's proof of Poincare's conjecture.

  • @ranupatel5461
    @ranupatel5461 Рік тому

    Excellent ⭐

  • @Donbros
    @Donbros 7 місяців тому

    Thus it make sense we live in 3rd dimension plus time - it lets us move very intriguing in timespace

  • @fernbedek6302
    @fernbedek6302 Рік тому +122

    Dimension 4 being so weird while we’re right beside it feels like it has some sort of meaning…

    • @peterwhitey4992
      @peterwhitey4992 Рік тому +7

      "Dimension 4" is no different from "dimension 3", or any other dimension. 4 dimensional space or objects are different from 3 dimensional space or objects though.

    • @sihingvonfelix4251
      @sihingvonfelix4251 Рік тому +29

      @@peterwhitey4992 did you watch the video? The Professor says "dimension 4" multiple times so the author of the comment did use a term that everybody in the comments section should be familiar with.
      If you arent familiar with it just ask: "What exactly do you mean with dimension 4?"

    • @nickpatella1525
      @nickpatella1525 Рік тому

      @@sihingvonfelix4251 See my response under Kris’s comment

    • @LookToWindward
      @LookToWindward Рік тому +18

      Probably not a coincidence that spacetime is a 4-dimensional manifold...

    • @dragonslayerslayerdragon5077
      @dragonslayerslayerdragon5077 Рік тому +7

      We aren't "right beside it" it terms of being 3D. That's how we've evolved to experience the world; that's our perception. We exist in all available dimensions.

  • @applechocolate4U
    @applechocolate4U Рік тому +6

    We definitely need more topology videos

  • @HarryNicNicholas
    @HarryNicNicholas Рік тому

    i first dusted a computer in 1971, a univac 9300, i was a tape librarian, which meant i mowed the lawn and filled the coffee machine as well as dropping punch cards all over the floor. i got into computer graphics at uni though, in 1981 i guess (kingston poly) , and then i got poached by digital pictures and worked for them doing pop videos, and then i moved to cfx associates and i learned computer graphics and animation there, going on to freelance later for all the major visual effects houses in soho, working on tv titles and commercials and even doing some feature films and finally decided to retire after a stint at electronic arts.
    so i love shapes. and time.
    i have lots of computer graphics of all sorts on my channel.

  • @Wittokun
    @Wittokun Рік тому +1

    Will there be a vdo about turning a sphere inside out in the future? I realized about it when he said about the corner when forming a shape.

  • @PowerChannel88
    @PowerChannel88 Рік тому +3

    I always thought that higher dimensions where funky, but "2+2

  • @peter.g6
    @peter.g6 11 місяців тому +1

    I love math, but I am happy this dimension 4 is someone else's problem.

  • @phatrickmoore
    @phatrickmoore Рік тому

    Well, this is just perfectly excellent about dimension 4 throwing all rules out the window, especially being that we live in 4 dimension! (Probably)

  • @JOHNSONWIELKI
    @JOHNSONWIELKI Рік тому +1

    very interesting video💜 thanks and yes, numberphile videos are important haha

  • @Sam_on_YouTube
    @Sam_on_YouTube Рік тому +4

    They routinely measure the curvature of the universe. So far, nobody has been able to measure any. It is at least flatter than we can currently measure. If it is totally flat, it is likely infinite in size. If there is a curvature, that would tell us the actual size. Based on the fact that we have not been able to measure any curvature, the actual size is at the very least enormous, WAY bigger than the 93 billion lightyears of the visible universe.

  • @julianha5473
    @julianha5473 Рік тому +1

    Do you believe we would have solved the Smooth Poincaré Conjecture in dimension 4 already if we lived in a world with 4 spatial dimensions? Or if we lived in 8 spatial dimensions?

  • @devrimturker
    @devrimturker Рік тому +2

    I know, Selman Akbulut and Simon Donaldson, working on dimension 4

  • @the4thdimensionisweird184
    @the4thdimensionisweird184 Рік тому

    Right on!!!

  • @srwapo
    @srwapo Рік тому +2

    So a doughnut is a mug but not a doughnut hole?

  • @Firefoxav26
    @Firefoxav26 Рік тому +4

    Can you point us to the software that you used to visualize some of these exotic shapes?

    • @diribigal
      @diribigal Рік тому

      I don't think it exists. There is software that churns through calculations but they just spit out numbers, not visualizations

  • @alanwilson175
    @alanwilson175 7 місяців тому

    Interesting topic. I have run into this problem with 4 dimensions in the study of error correcting codes. Coding theory is related to exotic topology, since the number of dimensions affects how code symbols can be decoded. We know a lot about binary codes or trinary codes with symbols that have 2 states (0, 1) or 3 states (-1, 0, +1). We know the best possible error correcting codes for binary codes with length out to 256 bits, and in many useful cases much farther. Something similar is known for trinary codes. But not for quaternary codes. Finding codes for quaternary symbols is much less obvious. In most cases we simply reduce this to a pair of binary symbols, but that ignores the reality of many useful communications systems.

  • @shanematthews1985
    @shanematthews1985 Рік тому +4

    I think my 3 dimensional brain just turned in to 1 dimensional slush

  • @4984christian
    @4984christian Рік тому

    Wow!

  • @juliangoulette7600
    @juliangoulette7600 Рік тому

    “Watch out, that was a sharp bend!”