For an uninterrupted viewing experience, we recommend watching our full-length Interstellar documentary video instead: ua-cam.com/video/dl9uok6m3G8/v-deo.html PS: Due to copyright restrictions, some of the original music tracks in this video have been replaced with alternate audio after upload. Additionally, certain segments have been removed, which result in moments of silence.
I have a question regarding to what the man said that If he backs on earth they are the same age to his daughter. Is the astronaut physical appearance (body) will not affected like going older than his daughter?
Time itself cannot be manipulated only in the ways we record time. Images move at the speed of light,so therefore you can move faster than images and get far enough ahead to see yourself start the journey. Important too remember is your mass occupies the same space no matter the speed.
crazy to think that it has just been about 7.5 yrs since interstellar was released, which also means that just about an hour has passed on Miller's planet.
The fact that the movie makers came up with the black hole’s design using an mathematical equation and a visual software engine is amazing, and on top of that, some years later the first photograph of a black hole was taken, and it looks hella similar to the movie one. Just amazing!!!
@@futuretrunks3158 Not suspicious at all because the image of the black hole had been in the Works years before the movie was made. It wasn’t like they just all of a sudden decided to release the picture that they took yesterday….They were working on the picture of the black hole for a really long time. Even before the movie was released. And just so you know, the mathematical equation for the black hole came from Einstein. It’s just been revised many times to see if we could get more accurate descriptions of it over the decades. It’s just a computing power has improved tremendously over the last few decades to the point that now we can use math to reconstruct an image. Because science uses a lot of computers as well having the same advancement in computing power means that we now are able to do more in the real world not just Hollywood. There’s a lot of things that improve at the same time because of computing power increasing
Lemme explain it to you. The picture of a black hole they reconstruct, they could not do it earlier because (as that woman showed, said and collect it, and was major part of the project) of lack Of storage and computer/technology power. But finally they managed to collect, reconstruct and render image, and still it took a lot of time for computer to finish it. Technology is amazing
Except the math was wrong because each 1 sec is actually 17 hours in Earth time and thus the music should tick every 1.4 sec to represent 1day in Earth.
As someone who grew up fascinated by outer space and our universe, interstellar will always be one of my all time favorite movies. I show it to everyone and explain the science behind everything 😂
@@Relius36 yeah I agree I was super excited about this movie and it kinda of disappointed me.. I mean you are traveling to other star systems and exoplanets and that’s the best you could come up with? A water planet(which I’m not sure why they couldn’t tell there was no land from above the planet) and an ice planet both with zero life kinda of boring
Fun fact: To cause such a huge time dilation on Miller's Planet, a black hole(In this case Gargantua) , needs to have 900,000,000 solar masses. And we have already found black holes like ton 618 and Phoenix A, which have 66,000,000,000 solar masses!!
It’s not just the black hole that causes it. If we were to land on a planet that close, the planet would have to be orbiting at 99.99% the speed of light and the black hole would have to have an exceptionally fast rotation for that planet to keep a stable orbit.
The soundtrack that plays during Miller's Planet has a tick tock sound of a clock. Each tick is 1.25 seconds long. And one hour is 7 years back on earth. So the ticks actually represent one day passing on earth every 1.25 seconds. The fact they detailed this movie so much that even the soundtrack represents a narrative is incredible.
Time dilation is one of the craziest things our species has ever discovered. I remember in the original Cosmos series, Carl Sagan gave the example of twins experiencing time dilation in a thought experiment. One twin would be kid and the other would be a 50 year old man depending on the gravitational force enacted on each of them. It’s funny in certain areas of physics your mind just breaks down trying to comprehend some of these seemingly impossible realities. I suppose if you know the math intuitively, you have some sort of a framework to grasp your mind around it.
but how does time dilation even work on our bodies? i get that due to gravity the speed of different objects can look different from different perspectives. but would this directly affect the flow of the body's aging as well? as far as i know, our bodies have its own flow of aging, and its not a "relative" thing. how does gravity biologically affect our aging system..?
@@user-em7ft2ec9u We don't know. It would require us sending biological matter into a high gravity area that we assume has time dilation and then seeing what happens to it.
Interstellar was a masterpiece in my opinion and I love the attempt to be as accurate as possible in a theoretical sence for the science in the film to make it watchable but not too ridiculous, you rarely see that anymore.
Because it's all one truck load of crap. Cooked by Einstein-Dirac. No wonder we made no serious progress in theoretical physics since then. Just year on year Nobel prizes piling the crap even more.
Whenever I'm trying to get out the door as rush hour is approaching, I think of this part of the movie. "An extra 1 minute here is an extra 3 minutes of drive time!"
Hey man can you answer this? Say you were on miller planet and I was back on earth and there was a strong enough signal to where we can FaceTime, I see you and you see me still while on Miller planet How much time work if we both see each other on FaceTime?
@@TropicalAsian-1000 Doesn’t work that way. You will be on re-connecting forever. If by chance there is a possibility for you to receive a signal, then as per the video, you will maybe receive it once a day for a split second. This is how it will go in that case: Let’s assume the facetime connection already happened to simplify this. And while on call, your friend accidentally falls of a huge cliff. You will hear a scream and then again it goes to re-connecting. After about 60,000 seconds, you will hear the same scream continuing. For him, the fall might take 4-5 secs, but for you it will be couple of days. And while you’re sleeping in your bed at night, this MF on miller planet still falling lol..
@@jedgould5531 The question was asked from a third person perspective. So yes, in this case, we can assume 2 different people in 2 different parts of the universe are experiencing 2 different forms of time passage if that makes sense..
This easily became my favorite movie of all time. I love science fiction, but what I love even more, is plausible science fiction. Despite the obvious math problems, it made for an incredible movie. It's not like they were wrong as they were aware of the gravity problem, but it would've been a lot less interesting if they landed, turned to pancakes, and the movie ended haha
@@The_OneManCrowd didn't even notice the comment reply til now 🤣 a month later whoops. But oh god yea. Everything's just fish, smelly mayo, white rice, and meat that's 50% cartilidge. I miss western cuasine for sure 🤣
It's not plausible. Nearly all of the science in the movie is wrong. Maybe the visuals of the black hole (nobody knows for sure) but that's about it. The time dilation was wrong, reaction mass was wrong, everything was wrong. My favorite of course was how Coop's spacecraft only had enough fuel to visit three planets, but then had infinite fuel to fight against a black hole. The whole movie was crap.
Me and my nephew watched this movie together. After it was over we just sat in our seats soaking in the enormity of the story and the science behind it. I'll never forget it. It put a smile on our face and another on our brain. A wonderful movie that inspired and perplexed at the same time.
Hey man can you answer this? Say you were on miller planet and I was back on earth and there was a strong enough signal to where we can FaceTime, I see you and you see me still while on Miller planet How much time work if we both see each other on FaceTime
@@TropicalAsian-1000 well your question is flawed Marshall. But you're one of those people who don't punctuate or use English correctly so what can I expect
Thank you from a curious mind who will forever be a student. Hope to show this to my children when they’re old enough. Remember people are watching and appreciate your efforts & time.
*_"Interstellar is a masterpiece..... Combination of emotions and sci fi"_* Aside from the completely absurd premise, the glaring plot-holes, the never-ending sequences of impossible, fantasy 'science', the schmaltzy dialogue, the stupid decisions made by supposedly intelligent people whose role was saving humanity, and the overall message that we are biological robots with no free will, it is a masterpiece... It's a masterpiece because it shows that filmmakers can get away with anything these days if they just make the movie look and sound good. It doesn't matter if it's an absolutely terrible film in every way - other than the visuals and sound - because education levels are so bad these days that people will lap it up and call it a masterpiece anyway.
@@philsurtees It’s a master piece because you don’t need to be an astrophysicist to understand the movie yet you still feel like one watching it. Yes, you’re correct on all points but I’m sure if you asked those who watched it they’d gladly admit to not understanding the exact science behind any of it. It’s not common knowledge simple as that. But it is a well done movie when you look outside of the educational scope and realize most people won’t spot those plot holes. Looking down on people for not comprehending the entire scientific grasp of the falsities in the movie is just pure condescending. You and play Mr. Smart Guy all you want, you’re still a grade A douchebag.
@@msavage960 I partially agree with you but I think you're putting too much weight in just the intellectual side of the movie. The screen time actually exploring new worlds is pretty good, but a lot of world building is forced through rushed dialogue rather than being shown or made understood through proper storytelling. It plays like a movie that has about 30 minutes or an hour of scenes cut from the beginning and end, to appease an audience with a short attention span. I think Phil's criticism's are each entirely fair, and actually a pretty astute summation of the hype surrounding this movie. That said, it's entertainment, it doesn't have to be educational, and it doesn't have to be meaningful. What it does have to do is capture people's imaginations, which it does, and as a beneficial side effect, it seems to inspire at least some viewers to learn and understand some of the complex physics theories that gave birth to this fictional tale. Masterpiece is a strong word though, if objectively looking at some of the screen writing, storytelling, and special effects (particularly while in the ship going through the black hole. All goes pitch black at first, this seems logical, but then slow water droplets and sparks descend on a prop ship that's pretty obviously stationary on a sounstage.. and that's meant to represent the most mindboggling experience of human history?), it's kind of underwhelming really. I really enjoyed the movie, but there were also moments that made no sense and completely took me out of the experience, and back in to a critical mindset. The whole thing should've at the very least been postponed when the girl who discovers the interdimensional gravitational message decodes it before the mission even takes place. That earth shattering revelation in not even given one second of consideration in the plot.. and that's not the only instance of rushing over what should be massively important plot building scenarios. I wouldn't go so far as to call somebody a douchebag, for simply trying to convey these factual criticisms in a straight forward sense.
Hey man can you answer this? Say you were on miller planet and I was back on earth and there was a strong enough signal to where we can FaceTime, I see you and you see me still while on Miller planet How much time work if we both see each other on FaceTime
interstellar is such a great movie and so close to actual science that it can be used to understand topics like this itself. The black hole was so accurate that scientist used it for experiments and theories...i love this movie
The concept of time is truly mind-boggling 🤯 But honestly speaking, Interstellar somehow managed to make it rather interesting for me to learn and explore. It’s also a captivating movie with an even more captivating soundtrack espc the ticking soundtrack when they landed on Miller’s planet related to the difference in time between the planet & earth. Cool explanation video! 👍
Whilst the planet itself is at 130% of earth's gravity, the effect of the extreme time dilation is from the black hole, not the planet. They don't experience the crushing gravity effect of the black hole whilst visiting the planet as Millers planet is in a stable orbit in continuous freefall around Gargantuan, so I think the movie is accurate during that scene.
@@akathemiraclestory it is tho. It's orbiting around the gargantuan. The moon is affected by earths gravity but it's orbiting around it. Same thing for the planet and the gargantuan. Same thing for the ISS and earth.
@@dompling The massive effects of time dialation should be relative to the gravitational force that effectuated it. So even if it was in a stable orbit, (Which is feasibly unrealistic), the planet and people in it would be under colossal gravitational pull to explain such huge effects of time dialation. My explanation, Is that people from the future, That put that wormhole, And are capable of putting copper into a tesseract, facilitated the existence of the planets, and them being there, but that's only my own interpretation.
@@dompling Earth's high tide and low tide is caused by moons minimal gravity, then if a blackhole like gargantuan is nearby, it will definitely have drastic effects on Miller's planet. Won't it? Edit: Even if they are not crushed, theh won't be able to walk around the planet, and on top of that after space travel their body must be weaker which will make them more susceptible to that.
You blew my mind with the ticking clock sound in the soundtrack. I actually never got that from watching the movie and listening to the soundtrack over and over. That’s amazing 🙏
im an electronics engineer and have no clue about this spacetime stuff. for some reason i watched many videos about those topics in the last weeks and can say for real that noone brings points so clear as you do. thank you!
The time dilation on Miller's planet isn't from the gravity of the planet. The planet is orbiting the black hole, at which it would gain such an extreme velocity that would make that kind of time dilation possible.
@@jacksonraidal9917 Yeah, was looking for this comment actually. Channel is new so he'll prob get it worked out. From a technical standpoint, the reason the time dilation is so extreme on Miller's planet is that Gargantua is not only a black hole, but it is _also_ spinning. The spinning of the black hole causes it to drag spacetime as it rotates which further increases the dilation. That fucker Phil Plait got that part wrong and was...gently corrected by Kip Thorne.
No.. this planet is in gravitational field of black hole. You would experience dilatation not only on this planet but in gravitational field depending on how close you are to singularity. So still makes no sense to me.
@@kmshyamsundar mathematically the gravitational pull of any body of mass extends infinitely. The guy in orbit is also experiencing time dilation just to a smaller extent. What exactly are you unsure about?
So cool! This is the best explanation of time dilation that I have heard. I'm not a math whiz whatsoever, wish I was. :-) Black holes are just sooooo interesting to learn about. Very good video, thank you!
Your efforts will pay off. Incredible video from someone with only 2k subs. This video quality could be made by a large youtuber with millions of subs and i wouldn't have known the difference
Calm, sane, using as little "jargon" as possible to explain big concepts. This might be my new Go to channel for science. Loved the video and love Interstellar. Movie hits hard when they get back to the ship and that guy has aged and been alone for 21 years. My mind was blown!
Hey man can you answer this? Say you were on miller planet and I was back on earth and there was a strong enough signal to where we can FaceTime, I see you and you see me still while on Miller planet How much time work if we both see each other on FaceTime
@@TropicalAsian-1000 as they said in the gravitational redshift section, your signal which is just another kind of electromagnetic waves, got stretched out. If he's calling at 60fps, he'll send you like 1 frame every 1000 seconds so you'll feel very very laggy.
@@BeeyondIdeas but like speaking audio i mean, there were three times when the guy’s words just stopped mid sentence and it was just the music playing and his mouth moving and i felt like i was missing key info
@@jonathanfoster4202 you cannot remove sound in isolation. So if he was speaking over restricted background music, that entire clip has to be muted/substituted or trimmed out
To me, this is by far one of the most interesting and mind-bending ideas that is out there. If you think about it, everything in the universe is moving and space itself is apparently (from what we understand) expanding faster than the speed of light. I feel like the implications of this idea are HUGE. We're only scratching the surface of our understanding of concepts like this and it's almost scary to think about how this has an effect on what we know about reality itself.
This subject is eternally fascinating to me. The more I study general relativity and time dilation, the closer, and yet father away I get from understanding it. Like the beam of light that can almost, but not quite escape the event horizon of a black hole.
Love finding fellow Exjws ❤ I agree with you! Since waking up i replaced Jesus with Newton, Jehovah with Einstein. No topic fascinates me more than physics and specifically Relativity. Have a great day my former brother 🤙
@@naytchh7 Thank u 😊 The Witness ideology basically demands that members shun higher education. So their member live entire lives ignorant of these vast universes of knowledge. I'm so glad to be out! Take care 🙂
@@exjwsonnytrue9191 I would recommend listening to some talks of Roger Penrose, and the PBS spacetime channel. As well even the articles on Wikipedia of certain topics of astrophysics, cosmology, and quantum mechanics. I literally read this stuff all day. Though I'm pretty fortunate that I enjoy it and will be starting school soon for astrophysics. Keep that interest. Even if you don't use it in your daily routine. It does make you more susceptible to learning.
Hey man can you answer this? Say you were on miller planet and I was back on earth and there was a strong enough signal to where we can FaceTime, I see you and you see me still while on Miller planet How much time work if we both see each other on FaceTime
@@TropicalAsian-1000 you would need enough radio signals from millers planet to get to earth and vice versa. It's similar to how on Mars it takes 20 minutes for the rover to send signals back to earth. It has to travel through space. You would see it as it's happening but for the person on millers planet it would have been years.
Something about the concept of time dilation is incredibly creepy..That part of the movie shook me to the core thinking of what it would take for me to decide to spend even 5 minutes on a planet like this.
The soundtrack that plays during Miller's Planet has a tick tock sound of a clock. Each tick is 1.25 seconds long. And one hour is 7 years back on earth. So the ticks actually represent one day passing on earth every 1.25 seconds. The fact they detailed this movie so much that even the soundtrack represents a narrative is incredible.
Ikr. I always thought of time as a constant. Completely shook my view of the universe after i learned things like gravity and speed altered the passage of time
@@EL-ISS damn, i never actually thought about that But yea i did feel at the moment when watching film that the ticking is quite a lil bit late and thinking of it as just a normal score but i got the real meaning of it today.. wow !
bur something also makes perfect sense.... to simplify it, if you have a bread, how fast it toast depends on how much heat you give to it (which make depend on how close it is to the source of heat).... time is basically what gravity does to atoms... in this sense, it makes sense that how much gravity there is, determines
What makes you sure that the movie makers would want the average watcher to get this? I think the "average watcher" should be able to to accept the idea of 7 years to pass on the earth per hour on millers planet, without any explanation. But exactly the explanation and the ticking sounds is imo one of the reasons that makes this movie a masterpiece when you go in depth afterwards.
@@generous6200 Just call it a hunch on my part that the makers of the movie would want their audience to, you know, follow their plot. Idk where I got that crazy idea
It does not have anything to do with the plot tho. It is just something that is considered a fact in this movie, namely 1 hour on this planet equals 7 years on earth. That's all you need to know for the plot, there is no need to know WHY this is the case. The fact that it is based on actual physic theories makes it stand out for those who show further interest in the topic and end up on UA-cam videos like this :)
I see very few comments stating this. The time dilation is not because of the planet's gravity, but because of its proximity to the black hole. I am assuming the planet's sun is in orbit around the black hole at an extremely high speed so as not to fall into it. The high gravity of the black hole along with the high speed creates the time dilation.
If it did the centrifugal force whould cause it to spin apart, this is a paradox for Quazars that spin and massive speeds I was reading. Time is a concept its not physical once you get that you realise its all made up
Totally correct, time dilation is coming from the black hole, not the planet itself. Also in the movie, the "star" is dark in the center. It's actually the black hole. It's halo is so bright that it acts like a star in the movie
Yeah a shame the video missed this. An easy way to imagine it, is that the astronauts on the ISS experience weightlessness, however they experience the same gravitational time dilation regardless. This is because they are in orbit and the same gravitational force is acting on them. The planet in interstellar is like the ISS in this case. The astronauts and the planet both experience the massive gravitational force of the black hole. However, since both are accelerating in the same orbit, the astronaut only 'feel' the gravity of the planet. That being said, that orbit would be insane, so for the spacecraft to follow the orbit to land would be a intense process in itself. It kinda sucks that the video missed the ultimate conclusion of the discussion of why they experience that dilation.
@@ashu176 one or two man doesn't represent the whole Indian audience. We got shitty movies because of mass audience like them and that doesn't mean every single Indian loves them. And now even that is changing because ott platforms are making good contant.
Thank you for the wonderful explanation of the scenes of reality between stars and projecting it on Einstein's ratio theory. I would like you to continue explaining the last scene because I did not understand it in the movie
To be honest, I was unable to recognize and absorb all the story much less science details watching this movie the first time. I then read the book and watched it a second time learning something new each time. Now these new revelations. What an awesome flick.
I've been looking all over for a video on how the mass of an object effects time and couldn't find one until now. Thank you for taking the time to make this video and explaining time dilation. I look forward to more videos from your channel.😎
Interstellar is a tour de force of the intersection of the theoretical extremes of astrophysics, and a simple story of the undying love between a parent and child, that you guessed it, transcends space, time and gravity. The movie is technically brilliant and heartbreaking at the same time. I absolutely loved the film!
Couldn't have said it better myself. It is both parts mind blowing and gut wrenching. And we could never truly know what would really happen in real life. I think Nolan wanted the perfect balance of science and humanity. Aren't they always so at odds....
Usually when I discover a new channel I watch several videos over a week or so before deciding to subscribe or not, today this was not the case! What an interesting and well made video. The quality and professionalism are great, subscribed after one video! Can't wait to see what's going to be next.
A simple definition of time dialation: the faster you are moving through space, in other words, the closer you are to the speed of light, the more time slows down for you. If you are moving exactly at the speed of light, time will completely stop. And if you are moving faster than the speed of light, time starts to go backwards. Let me give a simple example: imagine you are racing a guy named "Time" who is always driving at the constant speed of 100KM/H, neither faster nor slower. You are behind him at the speed of 60KM/H. If you lower your speed it will seem like "Time" is going faster even he's at the constant speed of 100KM/H. Now if you increase your speed it will seem like "Time" is slowing down and when you also reach 100KM/H, you and "Time" will be in the exact level, both of you being still on each others perspective. Now if you increase your speed even further to 120KM/H, "Time" will go behind you.
@@craigman7262 exactly, a black holes gravity is so powerful that even light photons will start to orbit around it. This is one of the reasons we are able to see black holes because of the light orbiting it.
It's a cool theory but still not real and it wouldn't happen to humans. Your cells replicate and cause you to age. You have no evidence at all the traveling faster slows your cellular metabolism. Hence you'd still age just as fast as anyone else. If you went into lightspeed for 10 years. Youd still come out ten years older and everyone else on earth would also be ten years older. It's a cool theory but it's not real sorry
@@swickens930 there are actually plenty of instances of tike dilation that we can see. For instance, there is a specific particle that comes from space. It is very volatile so it dies extremely quickly when it reaches our atmosphere but it also moves at speeds close to the speed of light. The distance this particle goes, compared with the time that it can stay together does not add up. But when you factor in einsteins equation of special relativity, we can make an exact prediction of how far it will go. This is just one of many such examples.
He keeps saying we "experience" time going faster or slower, but the theory* is that you don't actually feel anything different. It would be fascinating to do experiments where sensitive measuring equipment is subjected to extreme time dilation and see if any kind of glitchiness results. * or "story" or "interpretation". Thanks to user "best MC wit no chain" for pointing out the ambiguity. 🙂
Loved this video! God bless Einstein and his works. So far ahead of his time. We can only wonder what kind of accomplishments he would achieve if he were alive today
For each person in the proximity to strong gravity or high velocities, they would experience time as normal. It is only relative to other frames of reference that a difference can be detected. To the person near a black hole, time would tick along as normal (from their perspective). Only when they return (or communicate) back to Earth would they notice any difference.
@USERZ123 sure, practically speaking, it’s not feasible to actually experience this feature of the universe. The movie contrives a situation where apes would adventure through the vastness of space to a place experiencing extreme gravity and then later return to their point of origin (the Solar System in this case, I’m aware Matt Mac isn’t show returning to earth itself). The point is that: if we could do this thing - survive it - and that planet had the requisite level of gravity to produce the stated time shift, this is precisely what would happen. Relativity isn’t just pure mathematics like some of the comments here suggest. It has been proven experimentally every single day for a century now. When that guy talks about redshift - that’s real time dilation we can see with telescopes. We don’t need to actually experience it to see it happening - astronomers and astrophysicists see it happening every day in the form of red shift. Relativity is among the most bullet proof areas of our scientific knowledge. If relativity suddenly stopped working no one’s life on this planet would be remote similar to what it is today. It was only with relativity that we were able to flesh out our knowledge of elementary particles, develop the standard model and quantum electrodynamics. It’s not just the GPS example that gets posted in the discussion - it’s all integrated circuits. Every single IC in the world is experimental proof of relativity and quantum physics.
I don't know why I got this video in my feed but I love it! It's just amazing how the universe works that I got chills. Truly magnificent. For as long as I was a kid I wanted when I pass away for my body to be sent into space in a capsule( I know it's a bit weird) so I can travel through space for eternity.
Interstellar isn’ttt how the universe works, sorry bud. It’s actually total bs side from the fact they got the aging part half right. It’s okay though, really, the reality of our universe will ALWAYS beat science fiction. Any. Day. Stay safe!
Thanks Jake, you're figuratively and literally the GOAT! People say having the first 1000 followers makes all the difference. Starting this channel is no accident. It takes us intentional work, but we're glad now we don't have to go through it alone, as we get more support from you guys. Cheers!
Great video! With regard to the crew experiencing time dilation on the planet, my understanding is that it was not just the planet's gravity causing it but the proximity to Gargantua. They were already in warped space before landing, but to ground the audience the dialogue switches quickly from 'close to Gargantua' (the black hole) to 'on the planet.' So I think the questions about gravity and time time dilation needs more discussion. I am no physicist, so I don't have answers. Just noticed a discrepancy in how the movie is discussed here. 🙂
Totally agree. I honestly think this video got some things wrong. It's mentioning the concept of "acceleration" being a factor of time dilation, though I'm pretty sure it's just relative speed - not acceleration - otherwise we wouldn't have the time dilation issue with our satellites and the ISS ( they don't constantly accelerate). So not only does this video gets it wrong, it also just forgets about that concept which can easily explain why a planet so close to a black hole may experience high orbital speed relative to other bodies in space. Disclaimer: This is just the couch knowledge I've picked up from other yt videos, so take it with a grain of salt. EDIT: The greatest video I've ever seen explaining this phenomenon: ua-cam.com/video/-O8lBIcHre0/v-deo.html
@@mathiasmunkulrich7370 just one correction on your comment. Things like the ISS are constantly accelerating. Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity, and velocity is a combination of speed and direction. The direction is constantly changing, and thus even if the speed is the same, acceleration is occurring. Otherwise, agree with your points.
@@greenchillifyahh yes, constantly falling towards the earth is an acceleration from that perspective, but I'm not sure whether that's the "reason" for time dilation. Ref the video i shared.
@@mathiasmunkulrich7370 My god, my head hurts listening to people who have such a grasp of physics that they are wrong on even the most basic level. As always, unless you DO THE MATH, you CANNOT understand this.
This is one of my favorite scenes in a movie, just the clicks you can hear representing years going by is just such a cool idea to show theory of relativity
Another example of time dilation is when it comes to toilet. Inside the toilet person feels like only few minutes but from outside who's waiting feels like decade has passed.
I've been fascinated by black holes since i was about 10, and seeing this movie was probably the closest I'll ever get to seeing one irl. i honestly can't even tell you if it was objectively a good movie or not. i loved it so unconditionally for the black hole scenes that i literally cannot quantify it. that said they could've made the whole movie a two-hour animation of gargantua and i would've been happy to sit through it.
Was this Einstein or Woody Allen: “Relativity is why an hour with your beloved feels like a minute, while a minute with Aunt Gladys and Uncle Elmer feels like a week.”
9:26 The movie isn’t saying the gravity of the planet is causing the time dilation, but the proximity to the black hole is. The planet is just more massive than Earth, which is why the gravity is stronger and they are heavier. The time passing slowly is because it looks like the water planet is pretty much near the accretion disc.
Yes, exactly. But I wonder why the crew, or the original mission designers, would consider a planet that close to a gargantuan freaking BLACK HOLE a potentially reasonable settlement spot for (what's left of) the entire human race! Now that's nutty.
Thank you. Your explanation is great, interesting and simple to understand even to a person like me that doesn’t relate to or understand science much. Will subscribe to you and look forward to watching more of your videos. :)
0:40. They forgot to consider the time dialation occured during there journey to the planet. Time dialation is due the massive object present near the planet which is BlackHole. So while getting closer to the planet there time dialation has already started.
Exactly. This video seems to start out on the right track...and then switches to thinking that landing on the planet is when the extreme time dilation effect started occurring. The planet had very very little to due with the time difference. It was the proximity to the black hole. How close to the event horizon the planet was orbiting the black hole.
Yes thank you! Mercury experiences significant dilation from its proximity to the sun. If you scale that up to a black hole you would experience extreme dilation. This guy needs to junk this video.
but if you calculate real values you'll find out that there are no materials in the universe which could withstand the title force of the gravity needed to achieve 64 000 times of time dilation and that is in a combination with the speed at which the planet should move to compensate for "stable" orbit. Film is incorrect by orders of magnitude
@@antares-the-one That's incorrect. Look up Schrwartzschild radius for a 3 solar mass black hole, the gravitational field would only be 13.5km R=2GM/c2
@@preoccupied4800 "that's incorrect" - i would be happy if you could specify what exactly is incorrect? And do you mean event horizon would be 13.5 km radius for 3 Mo black hole? Sounds reasonable but i cannot wrap my head around the reasons why would you drop that in here? Calculate the distance to the event horizon at which gravitational time dilation would be the 64 000 slower than the earth time flow.
Interesting watching and reading all the explanations of something that is theoretical. So much effort thinking of how things might work based on calculations based on how someone believed space and time work together.
Well Einstein’s theories of general and special relativity is accepted in physics as the truth as it has been proven many times to be able to predict unexpected outcomes.
For an uninterrupted viewing experience, we recommend watching our full-length Interstellar documentary video instead: ua-cam.com/video/dl9uok6m3G8/v-deo.html
PS: Due to copyright restrictions, some of the original music tracks in this video have been replaced with alternate audio after upload. Additionally, certain segments have been removed, which result in moments of silence.
juan.
@@juan.6008 juan.
So unfair
I have a question regarding to what the man said that If he backs on earth they are the same age to his daughter. Is the astronaut physical appearance (body) will not affected like going older than his daughter?
Time itself cannot be manipulated only in the ways we record time. Images move at the speed of light,so therefore you can move faster than images and get far enough ahead to see yourself start the journey. Important too remember is your mass occupies the same space no matter the speed.
crazy to think that it has just been about 7.5 yrs since interstellar was released, which also means that just about an hour has passed on Miller's planet.
Damn bro
Was the movie any good? Maybe ill watch it
@@411Adidas It is
@@411Adidas lol its so good, cant stress it enough
@@411Adidas I would say it is one of the best ever
A husband waiting for his wife shopping feels a very long time, while she feel only few minutes. A real time dilation.
Lmao
That is so true it should be taught in science classes.
And you're holding her purse.
I think I’m understanding this science thing.
And waiting on her to do her damn Make up and hair
The fact that the movie makers came up with the black hole’s design using an mathematical equation and a visual software engine is amazing, and on top of that, some years later the first photograph of a black hole was taken, and it looks hella similar to the movie one. Just amazing!!!
Just suspicious if you ask me
@@futuretrunks3158 Not suspicious at all because the image of the black hole had been in the Works years before the movie was made. It wasn’t like they just all of a sudden decided to release the picture that they took yesterday….They were working on the picture of the black hole for a really long time. Even before the movie was released. And just so you know, the mathematical equation for the black hole came from Einstein. It’s just been revised many times to see if we could get more accurate descriptions of it over the decades. It’s just a computing power has improved tremendously over the last few decades to the point that now we can use math to reconstruct an image. Because science uses a lot of computers as well having the same advancement in computing power means that we now are able to do more in the real world not just Hollywood. There’s a lot of things that improve at the same time because of computing power increasing
they actually published a couple scientific papers based on the revelations from their visualization of the equation
I'm hoping that the term "hella," and those who use it, get sucked into a black hole soon.
Lemme explain it to you. The picture of a black hole they reconstruct, they could not do it earlier because (as that woman showed, said and collect it, and was major part of the project) of lack Of storage and computer/technology power. But finally they managed to collect, reconstruct and render image, and still it took a lot of time for computer to finish it. Technology is amazing
Man the fact they used the audio of the clock ticking on the planet to to represent the differential of earth time. This movie is a masterpiece
I loved that!! Shit had me so anxious in the movies and even now when watching from home
The earth is flat guys, truth will be revealed soon
What a detail that no one had noticed before! Nolan's films are so cerebral and ahead of their time. Take Tenet for instance.
Except the math was wrong because each 1 sec is actually 17 hours in Earth time and thus the music should tick every 1.4 sec to represent 1day in Earth.
If you listen closely, you can hear a subtle dripping sound along with the ticking sound. So genius
When doing a plank, for each second on earth one hour passes in the plank position
Same goes for school
*Planche
Even longer when you’re really out of shape
@@DanZhukovin ?????
@@DanZhukovin hes talking about the exercise
For every second at the DMV, 7 years passes on Earth.
Underrated comment
Every hour
"hour"
@@SightedFlyer5 Indian ?
DMV?
As someone who grew up fascinated by outer space and our universe, interstellar will always be one of my all time favorite movies. I show it to everyone and explain the science behind everything 😂
tesseract lost me. worst part of the movie
Mediocre movie at best
Another fun series to see time dilation used in a save the world plot element would be Gunbuster by Gainax.
@@Relius36 yeah I agree I was super excited about this movie and it kinda of disappointed me.. I mean you are traveling to other star systems and exoplanets and that’s the best you could come up with? A water planet(which I’m not sure why they couldn’t tell there was no land from above the planet) and an ice planet both with zero life kinda of boring
Have you read the book
Fun fact: To cause such a huge time dilation on Miller's Planet, a black hole(In this case Gargantua) , needs to have 900,000,000 solar masses. And we have already found black holes like ton 618 and Phoenix A, which have 66,000,000,000 solar masses!!
I did and it's more larger than ehan you mentioned
It's not only black hole. Time just flows differently in different parts of space.
It’s not just the black hole that causes it. If we were to land on a planet that close, the planet would have to be orbiting at 99.99% the speed of light and the black hole would have to have an exceptionally fast rotation for that planet to keep a stable orbit.
Great I guess I’ll go there and come back for the release of star citizen lol
Fact 😂 fucking hell
The soundtrack that plays during Miller's Planet has a tick tock sound of a clock.
Each tick is 1.25 seconds long. And one hour is 7 years back on earth. So the ticks actually represent one day passing on earth every 1.25 seconds.
The fact they detailed this movie so much that even the soundtrack represents a narrative is incredible.
You expect nothing less from the legendary Hans zimmer
Apparently the black hole gargantua scenes were so scientifically correct, it took them months to render those multiple minutes.
Umm it's not that big of a detail.
Thanks Captain Obvious.
Hans Zimmer worked for two years on this soundtrack!
Time dilation is one of the craziest things our species has ever discovered. I remember in the original Cosmos series, Carl Sagan gave the example of twins experiencing time dilation in a thought experiment. One twin would be kid and the other would be a 50 year old man depending on the gravitational force enacted on each of them.
It’s funny in certain areas of physics your mind just breaks down trying to comprehend some of these seemingly impossible realities.
I suppose if you know the math intuitively, you have some sort of a framework to grasp your mind around it.
The math is even more difficult
We have yet to prove that Extreme Time Dilation exists.
Or what happens if humans are subjected to them.
but how does time dilation even work on our bodies? i get that due to gravity the speed of different objects can look different from different perspectives. but would this directly affect the flow of the body's aging as well? as far as i know, our bodies have its own flow of aging, and its not a "relative" thing. how does gravity biologically affect our aging system..?
@@user-em7ft2ec9u
We don't know.
It would require us sending biological matter into a high gravity area that we assume has time dilation and then seeing what happens to it.
If you think space is real and that Einstein was anything more than a bad actor.... The matrix has you.
Interstellar was a masterpiece in my opinion and I love the attempt to be as accurate as possible in a theoretical sence for the science in the film to make it watchable but not too ridiculous, you rarely see that anymore.
Marvelous film. Another one in this decade is Arrival. My favourite sci-fi movies possibly in the last 10-15 years
@@Dr.SyedSaifAbbasNaqvi same here man, we need more movies like that
The first movie I watched with time dilation as a major plot element was Gunbuster by studio Gainax. In 1998, imagine. Yep, those were fun times.
@@Dr.SyedSaifAbbasNaqvi , don't forget Jodie Foster in Contact. The harder the sci fi the better.
Agreed 💯
No matter how many videos, or someone explains it to me, this will always boggle my mind. Yet i'm always fascinated.
Bruh... Every damn time. Light speed, relativity, time dilation. My head goes 🙃...🤷🏾♂️
Don't worry about it. It's all sci-fi nonsense.
Because it's all one truck load of crap. Cooked by Einstein-Dirac. No wonder we made no serious progress in theoretical physics since then. Just year on year Nobel prizes piling the crap even more.
@@sarabrown7689 well age dilation is nonsense but time dilation is real
@@sarabrown7689it is real though
Whenever I'm trying to get out the door as rush hour is approaching, I think of this part of the movie. "An extra 1 minute here is an extra 3 minutes of drive time!"
Hey man can you answer this?
Say you were on miller planet and I was back on earth and there was a strong enough signal to where we can FaceTime, I see you and you see me still while on Miller planet
How much time work if we both see each other on FaceTime?
@@TropicalAsian-1000 Doesn’t work that way. You will be on re-connecting forever. If by chance there is a possibility for you to receive a signal, then as per the video, you will maybe receive it once a day for a split second. This is how it will go in that case: Let’s assume the facetime connection already happened to simplify this. And while on call, your friend accidentally falls of a huge cliff. You will hear a scream and then again it goes to re-connecting. After about 60,000 seconds, you will hear the same scream continuing. For him, the fall might take 4-5 secs, but for you it will be couple of days. And while you’re sleeping in your bed at night, this MF on miller planet still falling lol..
please be quiet and just go watch a disney movie. thank you.
Who’s a good boy 🐶! Wanna scooby snax?
@@jedgould5531 The question was asked from a third person perspective. So yes, in this case, we can assume 2 different people in 2 different parts of the universe are experiencing 2 different forms of time passage if that makes sense..
This easily became my favorite movie of all time. I love science fiction, but what I love even more, is plausible science fiction. Despite the obvious math problems, it made for an incredible movie. It's not like they were wrong as they were aware of the gravity problem, but it would've been a lot less interesting if they landed, turned to pancakes, and the movie ended haha
Hey man, how's Japan treating you? I'll bet your missing tacos and spaghetti with real marinara sauce!
Yeah true. Sometimes you have to turn the brain off and just enjoy it. 😉
@@The_OneManCrowd didn't even notice the comment reply til now 🤣 a month later whoops. But oh god yea. Everything's just fish, smelly mayo, white rice, and meat that's 50% cartilidge. I miss western cuasine for sure 🤣
@@frankieinjapan I'll freaking bet man. I love Japanese food but I love fried chicken and tacos even more LOL!
It's not plausible. Nearly all of the science in the movie is wrong. Maybe the visuals of the black hole (nobody knows for sure) but that's about it.
The time dilation was wrong, reaction mass was wrong, everything was wrong.
My favorite of course was how Coop's spacecraft only had enough fuel to visit three planets, but then had infinite fuel to fight against a black hole.
The whole movie was crap.
Me and my nephew watched this movie together. After it was over we just sat in our seats soaking in the enormity of the story and the science behind it. I'll never forget it. It put a smile on our face and another on our brain. A wonderful movie that inspired and perplexed at the same time.
Don't be too perplexed this movies scientific accuracy is very wrong.
Hey man can you answer this?
Say you were on miller planet and I was back on earth and there was a strong enough signal to where we can FaceTime, I see you and you see me still while on Miller planet
How much time work if we both see each other on FaceTime
@@TropicalAsian-1000 don't be a twat marshal
@@daggermouth4695
So time would be the same
@@TropicalAsian-1000 well your question is flawed Marshall.
But you're one of those people who don't punctuate or use English correctly so what can I expect
Thank you from a curious mind who will forever be a student. Hope to show this to my children when they’re old enough.
Remember people are watching and appreciate your efforts & time.
For Einstein to find this out while still living on earth is god level.
guess what ancient hindus knew about it all along.
and not just this there's so much more.
@@milknbutter1167 oh look , another hindu claiming they were responsible for every invention, ever.
@@AliHamza-sv4ni chill dude
@@AliHamza-sv4ni did i mention everything??? I'm a Muslim too though.
Grow up Lmao !!!😂😂🤞🏽
@@AliHamza-sv4ni look who is after hindus again
Interstellar is a masterpiece..... Combination of emotions and sci fi
*_"Interstellar is a masterpiece..... Combination of emotions and sci fi"_*
Aside from the completely absurd premise, the glaring plot-holes, the never-ending sequences of impossible, fantasy 'science', the schmaltzy dialogue, the stupid decisions made by supposedly intelligent people whose role was saving humanity, and the overall message that we are biological robots with no free will, it is a masterpiece...
It's a masterpiece because it shows that filmmakers can get away with anything these days if they just make the movie look and sound good. It doesn't matter if it's an absolutely terrible film in every way - other than the visuals and sound - because education levels are so bad these days that people will lap it up and call it a masterpiece anyway.
@@philsurtees who have hurt you?
@@philsurtees It’s a master piece because you don’t need to be an astrophysicist to understand the movie yet you still feel like one watching it. Yes, you’re correct on all points but I’m sure if you asked those who watched it they’d gladly admit to not understanding the exact science behind any of it. It’s not common knowledge simple as that. But it is a well done movie when you look outside of the educational scope and realize most people won’t spot those plot holes.
Looking down on people for not comprehending the entire scientific grasp of the falsities in the movie is just pure condescending. You and play Mr. Smart Guy all you want, you’re still a grade A douchebag.
@@philsurtees Ah, a movie critic.
@@msavage960 I partially agree with you but I think you're putting too much weight in just the intellectual side of the movie. The screen time actually exploring new worlds is pretty good, but a lot of world building is forced through rushed dialogue rather than being shown or made understood through proper storytelling. It plays like a movie that has about 30 minutes or an hour of scenes cut from the beginning and end, to appease an audience with a short attention span.
I think Phil's criticism's are each entirely fair, and actually a pretty astute summation of the hype surrounding this movie. That said, it's entertainment, it doesn't have to be educational, and it doesn't have to be meaningful. What it does have to do is capture people's imaginations, which it does, and as a beneficial side effect, it seems to inspire at least some viewers to learn and understand some of the complex physics theories that gave birth to this fictional tale.
Masterpiece is a strong word though, if objectively looking at some of the screen writing, storytelling, and special effects (particularly while in the ship going through the black hole. All goes pitch black at first, this seems logical, but then slow water droplets and sparks descend on a prop ship that's pretty obviously stationary on a sounstage.. and that's meant to represent the most mindboggling experience of human history?), it's kind of underwhelming really.
I really enjoyed the movie, but there were also moments that made no sense and completely took me out of the experience, and back in to a critical mindset. The whole thing should've at the very least been postponed when the girl who discovers the interdimensional gravitational message decodes it before the mission even takes place. That earth shattering revelation in not even given one second of consideration in the plot.. and that's not the only instance of rushing over what should be massively important plot building scenarios.
I wouldn't go so far as to call somebody a douchebag, for simply trying to convey these factual criticisms in a straight forward sense.
Your channel's expansion better be faster than light regardless of distance between bodies in relation to it. You deserve it.
Joe ma
@@grandmacat406 0000
Ser
Hey man can you answer this?
Say you were on miller planet and I was back on earth and there was a strong enough signal to where we can FaceTime, I see you and you see me still while on Miller planet
How much time work if we both see each other on FaceTime
@@TropicalAsian-1000 impossible for so many reasons...
interstellar is such a great movie and so close to actual science that it can be used to understand topics like this itself. The black hole was so accurate that scientist used it for experiments and theories...i love this movie
The concept of time is truly mind-boggling 🤯 But honestly speaking, Interstellar somehow managed to make it rather interesting for me to learn and explore. It’s also a captivating movie with an even more captivating soundtrack espc the ticking soundtrack when they landed on Miller’s planet related to the difference in time between the planet & earth. Cool explanation video! 👍
Whilst the planet itself is at 130% of earth's gravity, the effect of the extreme time dilation is from the black hole, not the planet. They don't experience the crushing gravity effect of the black hole whilst visiting the planet as Millers planet is in a stable orbit in continuous freefall around Gargantuan, so I think the movie is accurate during that scene.
That's true. But I think such a planet would be a ball of lava considering the enormous tidal forces.
But if the gargantuan gravity is not affecting the planet, then how do you explain the time dilation?
@@akathemiraclestory it is tho. It's orbiting around the gargantuan. The moon is affected by earths gravity but it's orbiting around it. Same thing for the planet and the gargantuan. Same thing for the ISS and earth.
@@dompling The massive effects of time dialation should be relative to the gravitational force that effectuated it. So even if it was in a stable orbit, (Which is feasibly unrealistic), the planet and people in it would be under colossal gravitational pull to explain such huge effects of time dialation. My explanation, Is that people from the future, That put that wormhole, And are capable of putting copper into a tesseract, facilitated the existence of the planets, and them being there, but that's only my own interpretation.
@@dompling Earth's high tide and low tide is caused by moons minimal gravity, then if a blackhole like gargantuan is nearby, it will definitely have drastic effects on Miller's planet. Won't it?
Edit: Even if they are not crushed, theh won't be able to walk around the planet, and on top of that after space travel their body must be weaker which will make them more susceptible to that.
You blew my mind with the ticking clock sound in the soundtrack. I actually never got that from watching the movie and listening to the soundtrack over and over. That’s amazing 🙏
im an electronics engineer and have no clue about this spacetime stuff. for some reason i watched many videos about those topics in the last weeks and can say for real that noone brings points so clear as you do. thank you!
Whoop whoop spent the best 10 minutes on UA-cam today! Packed with info and great analogy 🙌
Wonderful! Come back for more awesomeness on this channel 😎
The time dilation on Miller's planet isn't from the gravity of the planet. The planet is orbiting the black hole, at which it would gain such an extreme velocity that would make that kind of time dilation possible.
@@jacksonraidal9917 Yeah, was looking for this comment actually. Channel is new so he'll prob get it worked out.
From a technical standpoint, the reason the time dilation is so extreme on Miller's planet is that Gargantua is not only a black hole, but it is _also_ spinning. The spinning of the black hole causes it to drag spacetime as it rotates which further increases the dilation.
That fucker Phil Plait got that part wrong and was...gently corrected by Kip Thorne.
No.. this planet is in gravitational field of black hole. You would experience dilatation not only on this planet but in gravitational field depending on how close you are to singularity. So still makes no sense to me.
@@JJ-eg6xd I guess the planet is right at the tip of where the gravitational pull of singularity begins?.. still a leap of logic..
@@kmshyamsundar mathematically the gravitational pull of any body of mass extends infinitely. The guy in orbit is also experiencing time dilation just to a smaller extent. What exactly are you unsure about?
@@JJ-eg6xd not sure what you're confused about
Wow. Using gravitational redshift to explain special relativity is awesome! Most intuitive explanation I've seen.
Autotheism, fantastic album (:
So cool! This is the best explanation of time dilation that I have heard. I'm not a math whiz whatsoever, wish I was. :-) Black holes are just sooooo interesting to learn about. Very good video, thank you!
Brilliantly produced - and very understandable for non-scientists, like me… Thank you! 👍
3:00 That astronaut isn't resisting, so she must like being licked by his laser. This is consensual.
Your efforts will pay off. Incredible video from someone with only 2k subs. This video quality could be made by a large youtuber with millions of subs and i wouldn't have known the difference
U mean 4.71k subs?
@@Kaizakiarata1 you mean 5.63k?
@@BrUc3Lee1121 you mean 5.97 k
@@sur5885 you mean 9.08k subs?
Did you mean 9.95k?
Calm, sane, using as little "jargon" as possible to explain big concepts. This might be my new Go to channel for science. Loved the video and love Interstellar. Movie hits hard when they get back to the ship and that guy has aged and been alone for 21 years. My mind was blown!
Hey man can you answer this?
Say you were on miller planet and I was back on earth and there was a strong enough signal to where we can FaceTime, I see you and you see me still while on Miller planet
How much time work if we both see each other on FaceTime
@@TropicalAsian-1000 bro are you dumb wtf you know about “signals”?? The signals wouldn’t reach that far
@@DSGx98
Or say there is a way we could communicate
@@DSGx98 dude stfu he was just asking a creative hypothetical question 🤦♂️ don’t gotta stick on the details
@@TropicalAsian-1000 as they said in the gravitational redshift section, your signal which is just another kind of electromagnetic waves, got stretched out. If he's calling at 60fps, he'll send you like 1 frame every 1000 seconds so you'll feel very very laggy.
Am i the only one who felt like half the audio from this video was removed? What is going on
Due to copyright restrictions, several music tracks used in this video had to be substituted with tracks from the UA-cam audio library.
@@BeeyondIdeas but like speaking audio i mean, there were three times when the guy’s words just stopped mid sentence and it was just the music playing and his mouth moving and i felt like i was missing key info
@@jonathanfoster4202 you cannot remove sound in isolation. So if he was speaking over restricted background music, that entire clip has to be muted/substituted or trimmed out
To me, this is by far one of the most interesting and mind-bending ideas that is out there. If you think about it, everything in the universe is moving and space itself is apparently (from what we understand) expanding faster than the speed of light. I feel like the implications of this idea are HUGE. We're only scratching the surface of our understanding of concepts like this and it's almost scary to think about how this has an effect on what we know about reality itself.
This subject is eternally fascinating to me. The more I study general relativity and time dilation, the closer, and yet father away I get from understanding it. Like the beam of light that can almost, but not quite escape the event horizon of a black hole.
Love finding fellow Exjws ❤
I agree with you! Since waking up i replaced Jesus with Newton, Jehovah with Einstein. No topic fascinates me more than physics and specifically Relativity. Have a great day my former brother 🤙
@@naytchh7 Thank u 😊 The Witness ideology basically demands that members shun higher education. So their member live entire lives ignorant of these vast universes of knowledge. I'm so glad to be out! Take care 🙂
@@exjwsonnytrue9191 I would recommend listening to some talks of Roger Penrose, and the PBS spacetime channel. As well even the articles on Wikipedia of certain topics of astrophysics, cosmology, and quantum mechanics. I literally read this stuff all day. Though I'm pretty fortunate that I enjoy it and will be starting school soon for astrophysics. Keep that interest. Even if you don't use it in your daily routine. It does make you more susceptible to learning.
Hey man can you answer this?
Say you were on miller planet and I was back on earth and there was a strong enough signal to where we can FaceTime, I see you and you see me still while on Miller planet
How much time work if we both see each other on FaceTime
@@TropicalAsian-1000 you would need enough radio signals from millers planet to get to earth and vice versa. It's similar to how on Mars it takes 20 minutes for the rover to send signals back to earth. It has to travel through space. You would see it as it's happening but for the person on millers planet it would have been years.
How this channel only has 20k subs is a mystery to me. So glad I got recommended this video, time to binge watch the channel.
I learned more from you just now then from a whole year of science class
Something about the concept of time dilation is incredibly creepy..That part of the movie shook me to the core thinking of what it would take for me to decide to spend even 5 minutes on a planet like this.
The soundtrack that plays during Miller's Planet has a tick tock sound of a clock.
Each tick is 1.25 seconds long. And one hour is 7 years back on earth. So the ticks actually represent one day passing on earth every 1.25 seconds.
The fact they detailed this movie so much that even the soundtrack represents a narrative is incredible.
Ikr. I always thought of time as a constant. Completely shook my view of the universe after i learned things like gravity and speed altered the passage of time
@@EL-ISS damn, i never actually thought about that But yea i did feel at the moment when watching film that the ticking is quite a lil bit late and thinking of it as just a normal score but i got the real meaning of it today.. wow !
Well 5 mins won't effect you. Miller's planet was based on 1 hour which equals 7 years
bur something also makes perfect sense.... to simplify it, if you have a bread, how fast it toast depends on how much heat you give to it (which make depend on how close it is to the source of heat).... time is basically what gravity does to atoms... in this sense, it makes sense that how much gravity there is, determines
I’m so glad someone actually went into this. The movie makers expect the average watcher to get this but it’s very in depth. Thanks for this video
What makes you sure that the movie makers would want the average watcher to get this?
I think the "average watcher" should be able to to accept the idea of 7 years to pass on the earth per hour on millers planet, without any explanation.
But exactly the explanation and the ticking sounds is imo one of the reasons that makes this movie a masterpiece when you go in depth afterwards.
@@generous6200 Just call it a hunch on my part that the makers of the movie would want their audience to, you know, follow their plot. Idk where I got that crazy idea
It does not have anything to do with the plot tho. It is just something that is considered a fact in this movie, namely 1 hour on this planet equals 7 years on earth. That's all you need to know for the plot, there is no need to know WHY this is the case. The fact that it is based on actual physic theories makes it stand out for those who show further interest in the topic and end up on UA-cam videos like this :)
@@chocrikir655 exactly, and later on when you find out the "WHY" it's just even more amazing. I like these small details.
I dont think they expected anyone to "get it" especially the average watcher lol.
The clock ticking on the water planet really adds something special to the scene.
Hey man, wow, great youtube video. I was engaged watching all the way until the end
In search of stuff related to interstellar i am finding new and extraordinary channels found you Today! 💜
Beautifully explained
0:43 thanks for clearing that up
I see very few comments stating this. The time dilation is not because of the planet's gravity, but because of its proximity to the black hole. I am assuming the planet's sun is in orbit around the black hole at an extremely high speed so as not to fall into it. The high gravity of the black hole along with the high speed creates the time dilation.
If it did the centrifugal force whould cause it to spin apart, this is a paradox for Quazars that spin and massive speeds I was reading. Time is a concept its not physical once you get that you realise its all made up
Totally correct, time dilation is coming from the black hole, not the planet itself.
Also in the movie, the "star" is dark in the center. It's actually the black hole. It's halo is so bright that it acts like a star in the movie
@@carlako3238 I think you're right. Planet is orbiting black hole. I forgot Black Holes emit light. That light acts as a sun to the planet.
Yeah a shame the video missed this. An easy way to imagine it, is that the astronauts on the ISS experience weightlessness, however they experience the same gravitational time dilation regardless. This is because they are in orbit and the same gravitational force is acting on them. The planet in interstellar is like the ISS in this case. The astronauts and the planet both experience the massive gravitational force of the black hole. However, since both are accelerating in the same orbit, the astronaut only 'feel' the gravity of the planet. That being said, that orbit would be insane, so for the spacecraft to follow the orbit to land would be a intense process in itself. It kinda sucks that the video missed the ultimate conclusion of the discussion of why they experience that dilation.
In the video it seems quite clear he's saying the black hole is the cause of the time dilation. What did I miss? Can you give me a time stamp?
I really appreciate this video and THANK YOU VERY MUCH for the subtitle.
Love the channel and the science that is explained to the people watching in a feel good manner! Keep up the good work 🐝 !
What a brilliant brilliant channel. Love how you apply science practically. I just subscribed.
The fact that so many scientific theory were so accurate in Interstellar tells us how well the movie was made and what a legend Cristopher Nolan is.
*scientific theory
Indians pretend that they understood the movie. If we were so intellectuals, we would not have tolerated the shit coming from bollywood
@@ashu176 little bit of info for you. I fucking hate Bollywood ok? That entire thing is a very pathetic joke in the name of movie industry.
@@ashu176 one or two man doesn't represent the whole Indian audience. We got shitty movies because of mass audience like them and that doesn't mean every single Indian loves them. And now even that is changing because ott platforms are making good contant.
Thank you for the wonderful explanation of the scenes of reality between stars and projecting it on Einstein's ratio theory. I would like you to continue explaining the last scene because I did not understand it in the movie
yaman
To be honest, I was unable to recognize and absorb all the story much less science details watching this movie the first time. I then read the book and watched it a second time learning something new each time. Now these new revelations. What an awesome flick.
I've been looking all over for a video on how the mass of an object effects time and couldn't find one until now. Thank you for taking the time to make this video and explaining time dilation. I look forward to more videos from your channel.😎
Interstellar is a tour de force of the intersection of the theoretical extremes of astrophysics, and a simple story of the undying love between a parent and child, that you guessed it, transcends space, time and gravity. The movie is technically brilliant and heartbreaking at the same time. I absolutely loved the film!
Couldn't have said it better myself. It is both parts mind blowing and gut wrenching. And we could never truly know what would really happen in real life. I think Nolan wanted the perfect balance of science and humanity. Aren't they always so at odds....
Your video is absolutely to the point and I really liked your approach! Thank you very much for making this video and sharing it with us! 🤝
Usually when I discover a new channel I watch several videos over a week or so before deciding to subscribe or not, today this was not the case! What an interesting and well made video. The quality and professionalism are great, subscribed after one video! Can't wait to see what's going to be next.
this channel is going to the right path, just don't give up you will become one of the greatest, thanks for your time and the information
This videos is so insightful and feels so premium. Great job!
This is a really, REALLY excellent video explaining this
A simple definition of time dialation: the faster you are moving through space, in other words, the closer you are to the speed of light, the more time slows down for you.
If you are moving exactly at the speed of light, time will completely stop. And if you are moving faster than the speed of light, time starts to go backwards.
Let me give a simple example: imagine you are racing a guy named "Time" who is always driving at the constant speed of 100KM/H, neither faster nor slower. You are behind him at the speed of 60KM/H. If you lower your speed it will seem like "Time" is going faster even he's at the constant speed of 100KM/H. Now if you increase your speed it will seem like "Time" is slowing down and when you also reach 100KM/H, you and "Time" will be in the exact level, both of you being still on each others perspective. Now if you increase your speed even further to 120KM/H, "Time" will go behind you.
this is what I was looking for. So in essence those closer to black hole are deadlocked due to the large amount of gravity.
@@craigman7262 exactly, a black holes gravity is so powerful that even light photons will start to orbit around it. This is one of the reasons we are able to see black holes because of the light orbiting it.
It's a cool theory but still not real and it wouldn't happen to humans. Your cells replicate and cause you to age. You have no evidence at all the traveling faster slows your cellular metabolism. Hence you'd still age just as fast as anyone else. If you went into lightspeed for 10 years. Youd still come out ten years older and everyone else on earth would also be ten years older. It's a cool theory but it's not real sorry
@@swickens930 so, you are saying that the theory of relativity is not real?
@@swickens930 there are actually plenty of instances of tike dilation that we can see. For instance, there is a specific particle that comes from space. It is very volatile so it dies extremely quickly when it reaches our atmosphere but it also moves at speeds close to the speed of light. The distance this particle goes, compared with the time that it can stay together does not add up. But when you factor in einsteins equation of special relativity, we can make an exact prediction of how far it will go. This is just one of many such examples.
One of the best explanations of relativity I have found on you tube. Many thanks !
Even thought I’m not necessarily interested in this topic, this video is amazing. One of the best quality videos I’ve seen.
I see you with the kemba profile pic
I’m not sure what I just walked into but this is crazy. My mind is going. Thanks for that :)
I cannot thank you enough for this explanation. Seriously, this is one of the best elucidated videos I've ever come across on this topic.
So professional and very captivating ! Can’t wait for more !
Brilliant video. I love how you are calm, and the seconds of this video are passing by very smoothly. You have a bright future! Subbed!
That side by side at 7.45 is the most brilliant thing I’ve seen in such a long time
Extraordinary experience!! Thank you for an informative lesson on time dilation!!
He keeps saying we "experience" time going faster or slower, but the theory* is that you don't actually feel anything different. It would be fascinating to do experiments where sensitive measuring equipment is subjected to extreme time dilation and see if any kind of glitchiness results.
* or "story" or "interpretation". Thanks to user "best MC wit no chain" for pointing out the ambiguity. 🙂
Do it then you lazy fuck
Satellites.
There is no Glitchiness gonna happen
@@crateer Thank you Dr. Einstein.
@@Raging.Geekazoid not sure if you are trolling or just a dipshit, either way, your comment makes no sense.
Our perception of time grows faster as we age. Scientists have shown this, but they still don't know why. We don't know enough about the brain yet.
Watching this in the theater with my father was one of the best experiences I've ever had!
Good for yoy🙂
This movie is hands down one of the best ones I have ever seen. It's incredible
Loved this video! God bless Einstein and his works. So far ahead of his time. We can only wonder what kind of accomplishments he would achieve if he were alive today
Lol
He would be too busy on tiktok and Instagram
the CIA would kill him today !
For each person in the proximity to strong gravity or high velocities, they would experience time as normal. It is only relative to other frames of reference that a difference can be detected. To the person near a black hole, time would tick along as normal (from their perspective). Only when they return (or communicate) back to Earth would they notice any difference.
So the people on millers planet would perceive nothing as strange? Everything would look and feel the same, even their watches?
@@johannstander229yes, everything will be normal to them.
@USERZ123 sure, practically speaking, it’s not feasible to actually experience this feature of the universe. The movie contrives a situation where apes would adventure through the vastness of space to a place experiencing extreme gravity and then later return to their point of origin (the Solar System in this case, I’m aware Matt Mac isn’t show returning to earth itself).
The point is that: if we could do this thing - survive it - and that planet had the requisite level of gravity to produce the stated time shift, this is precisely what would happen. Relativity isn’t just pure mathematics like some of the comments here suggest. It has been proven experimentally every single day for a century now. When that guy talks about redshift - that’s real time dilation we can see with telescopes. We don’t need to actually experience it to see it happening - astronomers and astrophysicists see it happening every day in the form of red shift.
Relativity is among the most bullet proof areas of our scientific knowledge. If relativity suddenly stopped working no one’s life on this planet would be remote similar to what it is today. It was only with relativity that we were able to flesh out our knowledge of elementary particles, develop the standard model and quantum electrodynamics. It’s not just the GPS example that gets posted in the discussion - it’s all integrated circuits. Every single IC in the world is experimental proof of relativity and quantum physics.
@USERZ123 we're talking hypothetical here, pure physics, not human biology.
@@johannstander229 well our watches are made in reference to earth so they wouldn't work over there. so you'd need new watches.
Amazing video, great narration and explanations!
My favorite thing about Interstellar is all these cool talking points that can be formed around it
Best video I’ve seen on time dilation!
I don't know why I got this video in my feed but I love it! It's just amazing how the universe works that I got chills. Truly magnificent. For as long as I was a kid I wanted when I pass away for my body to be sent into space in a capsule( I know it's a bit weird) so I can travel through space for eternity.
Interstellar isn’ttt how the universe works, sorry bud. It’s actually total bs side from the fact they got the aging part half right. It’s okay though, really, the reality of our universe will ALWAYS beat science fiction. Any. Day. Stay safe!
Great video for such a small channel, you deserve more subs!
having the actors walk in knee deep water was actually brilliant, it's easier to appear labored to account for the "extra" gravity.
The idea behind the video is great
I’d just like to point out that I’m your 1000th subscriber. Don’t forget me
Thanks Jake, you're figuratively and literally the GOAT!
People say having the first 1000 followers makes all the difference. Starting this channel is no accident. It takes us intentional work, but we're glad now we don't have to go through it alone, as we get more support from you guys. Cheers!
@@BeeyondIdeas well tbf, in the 4 weeks, you've gone up an extra 550 or so subscribers...
@@BeeyondIdeas you deserve more subscribers 💯 and I would know, I have over a thousand subscriptions. I’m #2,330+
Think you can take me?
As a huge Astrobiology and science fan, I thought this was brilliant. Great video!
Great video!
With regard to the crew experiencing time dilation on the planet, my understanding is that it was not just the planet's gravity causing it but the proximity to Gargantua. They were already in warped space before landing, but to ground the audience the dialogue switches quickly from 'close to Gargantua' (the black hole) to 'on the planet.'
So I think the questions about gravity and time time dilation needs more discussion. I am no physicist, so I don't have answers. Just noticed a discrepancy in how the movie is discussed here. 🙂
Totally agree. I honestly think this video got some things wrong.
It's mentioning the concept of "acceleration" being a factor of time dilation, though I'm pretty sure it's just relative speed - not acceleration - otherwise we wouldn't have the time dilation issue with our satellites and the ISS ( they don't constantly accelerate).
So not only does this video gets it wrong, it also just forgets about that concept which can easily explain why a planet so close to a black hole may experience high orbital speed relative to other bodies in space.
Disclaimer: This is just the couch knowledge I've picked up from other yt videos, so take it with a grain of salt.
EDIT: The greatest video I've ever seen explaining this phenomenon:
ua-cam.com/video/-O8lBIcHre0/v-deo.html
@@mathiasmunkulrich7370 just one correction on your comment. Things like the ISS are constantly accelerating. Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity, and velocity is a combination of speed and direction. The direction is constantly changing, and thus even if the speed is the same, acceleration is occurring. Otherwise, agree with your points.
@@greenchillifyahh yes, constantly falling towards the earth is an acceleration from that perspective, but I'm not sure whether that's the "reason" for time dilation. Ref the video i shared.
@@mathiasmunkulrich7370 My god, my head hurts listening to people who have such a grasp of physics that they are wrong on even the most basic level. As always, unless you DO THE MATH, you CANNOT understand this.
This is one of my favorite scenes in a movie, just the clicks you can hear representing years going by is just such a cool idea to show theory of relativity
Definitely deserve a like and sub, great video man, love the narration
Another example of time dilation is when it comes to toilet. Inside the toilet person feels like only few minutes but from outside who's waiting feels like decade has passed.
Very interesting. The universe is such a mystery.
Best explanation of time dilation 👏🏼
I've been fascinated by black holes since i was about 10, and seeing this movie was probably the closest I'll ever get to seeing one irl. i honestly can't even tell you if it was objectively a good movie or not. i loved it so unconditionally for the black hole scenes that i literally cannot quantify it. that said they could've made the whole movie a two-hour animation of gargantua and i would've been happy to sit through it.
Every minute that is spent shopping with my mom, 7 years passes on Earth
Damn your channel is seriously underrated. Cant wait for it to grow faster then the universe expands!
Was this Einstein or Woody Allen: “Relativity is why an hour with your beloved feels like a minute, while a minute with Aunt Gladys and Uncle Elmer feels like a week.”
Thank you so much for providing this type of information 🔥🔥
As a kid it was so boring to learn about this but now as an adult I love learning about this stuff great video keep up the great work 💯💯💯💯🙏
9:26 The movie isn’t saying the gravity of the planet is causing the time dilation, but the proximity to the black hole is. The planet is just more massive than Earth, which is why the gravity is stronger and they are heavier.
The time passing slowly is because it looks like the water planet is pretty much near the accretion disc.
Yes, exactly. But I wonder why the crew, or the original mission designers, would consider a planet that close to a gargantuan freaking BLACK HOLE a potentially reasonable settlement spot for (what's left of) the entire human race! Now that's nutty.
Exactly, I'm Surprised he missed that.
yeah, the extreme gravity on the planet acted as an obstacle while they tried to outrun the wave. Not as the time dilation itself.
Bingo
@@johnd6973 they went down there to get samples of the planet and most importantly to get miller, they never planned on staying there
Thank you. Your explanation is great, interesting and simple to understand even to a person like me that doesn’t relate to or understand science much. Will subscribe to you and look forward to watching more of your videos. :)
This is my favorite theory of All time!!
20 feet out! Ten feet out! C’mon Tars!
0:40. They forgot to consider the time dialation occured during there journey to the planet.
Time dialation is due the massive object present near the planet which is BlackHole.
So while getting closer to the planet there time dialation has already started.
The more the mass an object has the more it will bend
I was looking for this comment
Exactly. This video seems to start out on the right track...and then switches to thinking that landing on the planet is when the extreme time dilation effect started occurring. The planet had very very little to due with the time difference. It was the proximity to the black hole. How close to the event horizon the planet was orbiting the black hole.
Favorite movie of all-time. Definitely wish I wasn’t so close minded when this came out, and seen it imax.
Thank you for this explanation! Love learning about this topic.
Not just the gravity, but also the speed at which Miller's planet revolves around the black hole dilates time
Yes thank you! Mercury experiences significant dilation from its proximity to the sun. If you scale that up to a black hole you would experience extreme dilation. This guy needs to junk this video.
but if you calculate real values you'll find out that there are no materials in the universe which could withstand the title force of the gravity needed to achieve 64 000 times of time dilation and that is in a combination with the speed at which the planet should move to compensate for "stable" orbit. Film is incorrect by orders of magnitude
@@krikeydial3430 you need to junk your brain
@@antares-the-one That's incorrect. Look up Schrwartzschild radius for a 3 solar mass black hole, the gravitational field would only be 13.5km
R=2GM/c2
@@preoccupied4800 "that's incorrect" - i would be happy if you could specify what exactly is incorrect? And do you mean event horizon would be 13.5 km radius for 3 Mo black hole? Sounds reasonable but i cannot wrap my head around the reasons why would you drop that in here? Calculate the distance to the event horizon at which gravitational time dilation would be the 64 000 slower than the earth time flow.
Interesting watching and reading all the explanations of something that is theoretical. So much effort thinking of how things might work based on calculations based on how someone believed space and time work together.
Well Einstein’s theories of general and special relativity is accepted in physics as the truth as it has been proven many times to be able to predict unexpected outcomes.
Though I do still believe there are missing pieces or misconceptions yet to be discovered
The more stuff in one area of the universe, the more lag you experience