This New Element is Lighter than Hydrogen. What?!?!

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 9 січ 2025
  • Visit brilliant.org/... to get started learning STEM for free, and the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium subscription.
    When we first learn about atoms, we learn that the simplest has one electron buzzing around one proton, aka hydrogen. But it turns out there's an atom that's even simpler than this. It's called muonium, and it's an atom that's partially made of antimatter!
    Hosted by: Hank Green (he/him)
    Muonium: The Atom That Breaks All The Rules
    ----------
    Support SciShow by becoming a patron on Patreon: / scishow
    ----------
    Huge thanks go to the following Patreon supporters for helping us keep SciShow free for everyone forever: Matt Curls, Alisa Sherbow, Dr. Melvin Sanicas, Harrison Mills, Adam Brainard, Chris Peters, charles george, Piya Shedden, Alex Hackman, Christopher R, Boucher, Jeffrey Mckishen, Ash, Silas Emrys, Eric Jensen, Kevin Bealer, Jason A Saslow, Tom Mosner, Tomás Lagos González, Jacob, Christoph Schwanke, Sam Lutfi, Bryan Cloer
    ----------
    Looking for SciShow elsewhere on the internet?
    SciShow Tangents Podcast: scishow-tangen...
    TikTok: / scishow
    Twitter: / scishow
    Instagram: / thescishowfacebook: / scishow
    #SciShow #science #education #learning #complexly
    ----------
    Sources:
    doi.org/10.102...
    www.nature.com...
    www.nature.com...
    www.eurekalert...
    www.nature.com...
    arxiv.org/pdf/...
    www.psi.ch/en/...
    www.theguardia...
    www.snowmass21...
    www.proquest.c...
    core.ac.uk/dow...
    www.scienceale...
    www.scientific...
    www.symmetryma...
    journals.aps.o...
    pubs.rsc.org/e...
    www.epj-confer...
    www.gettyimage...
    commons.wikime...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,1 тис.

  • @SciShow
    @SciShow  Рік тому +663

    Visit brilliant.org/scishow/ to get started learning STEM for free, and the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium subscription.

    • @hunterball7938
      @hunterball7938 Рік тому +9

      I'm honestly interested in how muonium would interact with other objects. It's inherently unstable, so I'd wonder what would happen before (and perhaps during) the inevitable decay. An electron (and positron from the antimuon) would fling off free to bump into any atom that's there. Muonium may actually be worth more research. It may hold some understanding into basic molecular forces/interactions

    • @garysteven1343
      @garysteven1343 Рік тому +8

      It's weird to like your own comment 😅

    • @alto7183
      @alto7183 Рік тому +1

      Muy interesante, prácticamente podría estar nuevos descubrimientos a la vuelta de la esquina con esto, intuido naves voladoras que usen anti gravedad.

    • @newlineschannel
      @newlineschannel Рік тому +1

      lol

    • @TWJfdsa
      @TWJfdsa Рік тому +1

      is MU a stable atom?

  • @seanmurphy3430
    @seanmurphy3430 Рік тому +7404

    I just want to take a second to appreciate the phrase, "fairly easy to create in particle accelerators."

    • @maxwilson7001
      @maxwilson7001 Рік тому +537

      We’re living in the future, it just doesn’t feel like it

    • @greenben3744
      @greenben3744 Рік тому +301

      Mostly because of how dystopian everything is

    • @getbendt2970
      @getbendt2970 Рік тому +347

      You don’t have one?

    • @haggis53
      @haggis53 Рік тому +51

      okay this made me cackle ngl

    • @vincentfreddoyle7555
      @vincentfreddoyle7555 Рік тому +116

      Yeah mine takes like 30 minutes to turn on, and when I try to make muonium, it almost breaks. Like I can afford to repair it 🙄💅

  • @daBuzzY90
    @daBuzzY90 Рік тому +9553

    Hey! I’m actually going to be doing my master’s thesis in a particle physics group that aims to do exactly that, measure the (anti-)gravitational constant using muonium. Funny to see this pop up here.

    • @EvilSandwich
      @EvilSandwich Рік тому +174

      Actually in that case, I had a few questions that they kind of glazed over this video and I was wondering if you could provide me any insight with it? Now bear in mind that I am one hundred percent a layman so you're probably going to dumb it down a lot lol

    • @EvilSandwich
      @EvilSandwich Рік тому +109

      What are the big questions I had is do muons have the same issue that electrons have for their position isn't fixed in space but rather operates on probability?

    • @davidhand9721
      @davidhand9721 Рік тому +215

      May I ask _why_ an antiparticle should have a reverse effect of gravity? Nobody's arguing that they have negative mass, right?

    • @jhonbus
      @jhonbus Рік тому +130

      @@EvilSandwich Everything is like that.

    • @billfoster5257
      @billfoster5257 Рік тому +53

      I'm also taking a class. In physical therapy...

  • @amarukrosis
    @amarukrosis Рік тому +2294

    Given that muonium contains no protons and atomic numbers denote the number of protons in an atom of a given element: Muonium is officially Element Zero (as long as you consider it to be its own element).

    • @badhbhchadh
      @badhbhchadh Рік тому +88

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutronium#In_the_periodic_table

    • @mikezappulla4092
      @mikezappulla4092 Рік тому +67

      So is positronium also element zero since they are analogous? They are radioisotopes of hydrogen and it would be a stretch to call them quasi-atoms.
      Back in 1960 when it was first discovered they thought it was an atom but our understanding of particle physics has significantly increased. What this video is saying is true only if it also 1960. Also, muonium and positronium have never been observed and are theoretical. To end in -ium requires the positive particle to be bound with a negative particle and the positive particle would have -ium added to the end of the name. If this is not the cause it is ends in -on.
      If they do exist, they would not be placed in the standard model so hydrogen would remain the lightest atom.

    • @yallareblind4948
      @yallareblind4948 Рік тому +21

      Wouldn’t it be element -1? Since its, antimatter?

    • @notalexzander2
      @notalexzander2 Рік тому

      @@yallareblind4948no.

    • @chrismanuel9768
      @chrismanuel9768 Рік тому +67

      @@yallareblind4948 It doesn't contain one antiproton though

  • @idmckenzie76
    @idmckenzie76 Рік тому +2373

    Very cool video. I received my PhD in muonium chemistry and have been working in the field since 1998, so it's very cool to see a video on this subject. Mu behaves chemically like atomic hydrogen and we study it for two different reasons. One is that we are interested in seeing what effect the light mass of Mu has on reactions (isotope effect). This can tell us a lot about how a reaction proceeds. We also study Mu under conditions where it is difficult to study H, such as in supercritical water. One point to note, at 3:53 the slowing down of muons through a degrader is described. Usually we don't do that. Instead we frequently use surface muons, which are produced from the decay of pions at the surface of the muon production target. These have an energy of about 4 MeV and stop in about 1 mm of water. A thin degrader of condensed noble gases is used to produced low energy muons at the Paul Scherrer Institute in Switzerland. There they can produce a muon beam with energies of a few keV and can stop in tens to hundreds of nanometers. The muon beams are 100% spin-polarized and we use a form of magnetic resonance known as μSR to study the various chemical states involving muons as probes of materials. μSR is about 10 orders of magnitude more sensitive than conventional magnetic resonance techniques.

    • @death_parade
      @death_parade Рік тому +83

      Thank you for this treasure trove of information. I have high respect for people in high value professions explaining to us lay people the concepts they know.

    • @EEEEEEEE
      @EEEEEEEE Рік тому +15

      E‎ ‎

    • @lifeasagamerswife1961
      @lifeasagamerswife1961 Рік тому +25

      So Muonium has existed since the 60s? Why does this video call it new, then? Is it just suddenly easier to synthesize in 2023?

    • @Burbie
      @Burbie Рік тому +27

      I'm proud of myself bcz i understood everything on this comment!!

    • @dieselexhausted
      @dieselexhausted Рік тому +35

      @@Burbie I'm actually proud of you, too! I got.... some of it. I just enjoy reading things I only understand part of a) to remind myself just how smart humans can get and b) to challenge myself to understand more, a little bit at a time.

  • @estivalbloom
    @estivalbloom Рік тому +3882

    3:10 if you *do* consider muonium to be a quirky kind of hydrogen, would that mean protium, deuterium, and tritium are quarky kinds of hydrogen?

    • @lordgarion514
      @lordgarion514 Рік тому +203

      No, because like all normal atoms, those other forms of hydrogen have protons.
      It's having protons that matter to our definition of an atom, not what the protons are made of.

    • @alanshteyman1071
      @alanshteyman1071 Рік тому +713

      @@lordgarion514 did you miss the pun?

    • @tf_d
      @tf_d Рік тому +253

      @@lordgarion514 It was a pun 😭😭😭

    • @lordgarion514
      @lordgarion514 Рік тому

      @@alanshteyman1071
      Nope. Didn't miss anything.
      You apparently don't spend much time talking to scientifically illiterate people.
      It's damn near a certainty that I'm gonna run into someone stupid enough to think you were serious......
      Sorry dude, but we have to do things based on the stupidest people out there.

    • @mr.boomguy
      @mr.boomguy Рік тому +125

      @@alanshteyman1071 I did. And I'm usually good with puns

  • @johnsteiner3417
    @johnsteiner3417 Рік тому +45

    Weirdest "element" I read about was a nucleus that had four neutrons and no protons. It was made by bombarding regular helium with helium-8 [I know, it was new to me also]. The outcome was beryllium atoms and this short-lived element with zero protons.
    For those of you who are huge Mass Effect fans you can think of this as Element Zero.

    • @josem.1811
      @josem.1811 10 місяців тому +3

      That would be nuclear pasta I think, it is what Neutron stars are made of

    • @thatoneguy9582
      @thatoneguy9582 9 місяців тому +1

      @@josem.1811
      is “nuclear pasta” the scientific term for that

    • @lotion5238
      @lotion5238 8 місяців тому +2

      ​@@josem.1811I thought that nuclear pasta was made from the iron created during the hypergiant stage of stars in the final time before gravity wins and crushes the star?

    • @josem.1811
      @josem.1811 8 місяців тому +1

      @@lotion5238 it is created that way, but basically it is just neutrons mashed together because the protons and electrons have been combined, creating neutrons

  • @heavenchainslayingmoon
    @heavenchainslayingmoon Рік тому +120

    2 millionths of a second is enough for muons to have a relationship with other particles, finish school, find a job, have children and family, and retire as an accomplished particle and here I am almost thirty years old with less than half that.

  • @theloganator13
    @theloganator13 Рік тому +623

    I'm pretty sure positronium is an even lighter form of "hydrogen", just an anti-electron (positron) replacing the proton instead of a muon. It does have a shorter lifetime than muonium, about 0.1 millionths of a second (100 ns) but it was produced at CERN as a part of the AEgIS experiment which, funny enough, is also trying to determine if antimatter falls up.
    Source: I worked on this this experiment briefly.

    • @MarcusAsaro
      @MarcusAsaro Рік тому +12

      Yes, you are correct!

    • @jmgraves8
      @jmgraves8 Рік тому +28

      Yeah, I thought he was going to talk about positronium when the vid started. Makes sense he went in this direction because of that decay time.

    • @robinsparrow1618
      @robinsparrow1618 Рік тому +5

      would it also be considered a lighter form of anti-hydrogen?

    • @viorp5267
      @viorp5267 Рік тому +2

      there is a minimum lifetime required to classfy something as a new atom. Myuonium doesnt meet it either though, thus its not on the periodic table

    • @theloganator13
      @theloganator13 Рік тому +55

      @@viorp5267 that minimum lifetime is 10 femtoseconds (10^-14 seconds)
      Muonion has a lifetime of 2.2 microseconds (10^-6), about 200 million times longer than the necessary lifetime.
      This is not why muonium is not on the periodic table.
      It's not on the table because the IUPAC defined chemical elements as having a nucleus with protons, and muonium has no protons.

  • @Chase_Danger
    @Chase_Danger Рік тому +121

    We got a new element before gta 6

    • @Hnagd
      @Hnagd 7 місяців тому +3

      We gotten so many new elements. They haven’t discovered all of them

    • @new-cold-war
      @new-cold-war 5 місяців тому +1

      Lololol

  • @booknamebasis
    @booknamebasis Рік тому +580

    I think one of my favorite things I have learned from physics and chemistry and biology is that the universe seems to work on a “close enough” principle rather than perfect exactness

    • @danielhanlon8438
      @danielhanlon8438 Рік тому +60

      Yeah. If it works dont break it. Partly why some animals can evolve certain attributes that dont really do much

    • @Oscaragious
      @Oscaragious Рік тому +17

      That's my least favorite thing.

    • @DrDeuteron
      @DrDeuteron Рік тому +32

      if it were exact, all leptons and flavored baryons would be stable: no life. We need the weak integration to f-it-all-up so we can live as stable baryonic/electronic beings.

    • @AlexanderThePilgrim
      @AlexanderThePilgrim Рік тому +8

      Perhaps that ‘close enough’ attribute of the cosmos is what makes it perfect 👁️👄👁️

    • @RockEuroStinger87
      @RockEuroStinger87 Рік тому

      There is no way it can be perfect and even if it is, we'll never be sure about that.

  • @anthonyaddo
    @anthonyaddo Рік тому +602

    The writer (Tom Rivlin) and editors (Bill Mead, JD Voyek) of this episode are incredible. Their skill of being able to explain such complicated subjects in such a digestible manner is peerless and deeply appreciated. Thanks for making such deep science accessible to so many more people!

    • @Imperial_Squid
      @Imperial_Squid Рік тому +6

      Hell yeah! Much love to the army of people behind the camera helping to explain this stuff too 💜💜

    • @lux6485
      @lux6485 Рік тому +3

      wait that was deep science?!?! i guess they explained it really nicely then

    • @EEEEEEEE
      @EEEEEEEE Рік тому +1

      E‎ ‎

    • @tomrivlin7278
      @tomrivlin7278 Рік тому +19

      Going to break my usual habit of avoiding comments to say thank you so much!!! Deeply grateful to my editors for taking my ramblings and forcing me to make them coherent (and then fixing them up even more after that haha)

    • @sebastianortega1938
      @sebastianortega1938 Рік тому +1

      It's like they thought "how would you talk about quantum mechanics with a chihuahua?" and so they write their scripts, and so we're heere learning a lot 😁

  • @NeilRieck
    @NeilRieck Рік тому +245

    Leptons come in three flavors (ordered by mass): electron, mu and tau. So if an electron can be captured by an anti-muon then I suppose it is possible that an anti-tau can do the same. So, has anyone ever discovered the element Tauium ???

    • @bozhidarmihaylov
      @bozhidarmihaylov 8 місяців тому +20

      Idk, but there’s a probability to discover MuThaunium in the process or anything in between 😅

    • @SariRomero-wo6sz
      @SariRomero-wo6sz 7 місяців тому +6

      ​@@bozhidarmihaylov Leptonium of Leptium is a better name

    • @MrMats0n
      @MrMats0n 7 місяців тому +7

      I would suppose an anti-tau particle to have a way lesser positive charge compared to a proton, so keeping an electron in orbit around one might not be feasible

    • @joshualucas1821
      @joshualucas1821 7 місяців тому +9

      The problem with producing tauonium is that the tauon's half-life is one ten-millionth of the muon's already extremely short lifespan of 2 microseconds.

    • @shiedakayn3430
      @shiedakayn3430 2 місяці тому +6

      Hawk Tau 🗣️🗣️

  • @Stigvandr
    @Stigvandr Рік тому +1851

    Does it form Mu²? That would be rad. What happens if you react Muonium molecules with oxygen? Anti-water? This is like a secret second page of the periodic table.

    • @frogz
      @frogz Рік тому +496

      unsure if this is a pokemon reference or just an oxide

    • @daBuzzY90
      @daBuzzY90 Рік тому +283

      Yes, in theory it absolutely could. In practice not so much, as the problem of short lifetimes comes in to play. Also they’d be a bit different to normal water, as the muon is much less massive, plus some other mire technical things.

    • @franck3279
      @franck3279 Рік тому +97

      It would likely be just like with regular hydrogen since chemical properties mostly come from the electron outer layer, but it will vanish very fast since such a bound will have no stabilizing effect on the antimuon

    • @dillonlamb2011
      @dillonlamb2011 Рік тому +127

      I imagine it'll create light water - bit like how heavier isotopes of hydrogen create "heavy" water. It would probably be just as harmful aswell, due to the decay products

    • @georgeh6856
      @georgeh6856 Рік тому +32

      I was wondering if two muonium atoms could knock two hydrogen atoms off of a water molecule just long enough to capture the H2 gas. That could be easier than using electrolysis to separate H2O.

  • @TheYuriiaraujo
    @TheYuriiaraujo Рік тому +278

    I watch science videos on UA-cam as kind of a hobby and I swear this is the first time I've heard about muonium. Mind-blowing. Thanks!

    • @DudeNoEdge
      @DudeNoEdge Рік тому +4

      Exatamente o mesmo pra mim kkkkkkk

    • @abaraigamer8814
      @abaraigamer8814 Рік тому

      @@DudeNoEdge Quanto BR

    • @GrinninPig
      @GrinninPig Рік тому +1

      Thanks for saying you just watch videos like everyone else, instead of claiming to be a physicist that turns down the Nobel prize every year like some kind of sciencey Bob Dillon

  • @meeponinthbit3466
    @meeponinthbit3466 Рік тому +1113

    Well... This means in some non-zero degree of a plausibility, we could have a whole host of sci-fi unobtainium type materials out there yet undiscovered.

    • @alien9279
      @alien9279 Рік тому +97

      You should check out the video from PBS spacetime where they talk about the extended periodic table :D

    • @sirsanti8408
      @sirsanti8408 Рік тому +60

      Well if there were conditions for muons to be stable for decent amounts of time, basically only in neutron stars maybe

    • @caffiend81
      @caffiend81 Рік тому +32

      Depends if the strong force could glue muons together. I am not sure it can, but maybe? Muons are fundamental, i.e. not made of quarks, so I don't think the strong force would be present to overpower the electromagnetic force pushing muons apart.

    • @Zekbo
      @Zekbo Рік тому +23

      @@caffiend81 strong force only interacts with hadrons (muons are just heavier more unstable electrons and are also leptons) there may be some form of electron degeneration pressure stopping it from collapsing instead

    • @slkjvlkfsvnlsdfhgdght5447
      @slkjvlkfsvnlsdfhgdght5447 Рік тому +11

      yes, but they will most likely not be different from regular chemicals in any way that matters; well, except for being lighter perhaps

  • @tonymurphy2624
    @tonymurphy2624 Рік тому +150

    Speaking as a veteran sci-commer largely on bleeding edge physics, I have to say this is one of the best sci-comm presentations I've ever seen. I even learned some new things - rare in this particular arena - while all I came for was fishing for good new analogies.
    Sterling work.

  • @someone4650
    @someone4650 Рік тому +156

    This is insane, I wonder if there are other possible types of weird antimatter elements, like a positron and an electron orbiting each other

    • @Kamikater0815
      @Kamikater0815 Рік тому +81

      Yes, it’s called positronium. I’m surprised it wasn’t mentioned, as it’s even lighter than Mu.

    • @someone4650
      @someone4650 Рік тому +56

      @@Kamikater0815 IT’S REAL??? Call me a theoretical physicist the way I predict particles and then search for evidence of their existence

    • @gorkskoal9315
      @gorkskoal9315 Рік тому +8

      Yes! theoretically, anyway. Their's potentially some trippy af phenomenons: 4 or even 5demensional structures or regions of space that formed at the moment the universe formed, White Holes where particles do things that'd make even Einstein babble in coherently. In theory anyway objects and attoms that a white hole create wouldn't (technically) exist in our--uh time line- because they would be doing the opossit effects of a black hole that chomps down on anything that gets to close, this object(if found) would back hand them across space making for some surreal physics in the process.

    • @mk_rexx
      @mk_rexx Рік тому +3

      ​@@Kamikater0815I guess because it hardly looks like an atom. Less of a planet with moon/s, more like a binary system.

    • @Noobprokermit
      @Noobprokermit Рік тому +5

      @@someone4650Even better, for a short amount of time it can bond with hydrogen to form positronium hydride

  • @hunterball7938
    @hunterball7938 Рік тому +120

    I'm honestly intrigued what muonium may do in large doses. I'd assume it'd be a gas but that's roughly it. The thing about quasi-atoms is that well they're quasi-atoms.

    • @hunterball7938
      @hunterball7938 Рік тому +13

      And considering the facts muons are sorta "magic particles" in that they can pull a disappearing act, Muonium could actually be a really important gas, noting the central particle is inherently destined to decay quicker than humanly perceptible. Imagine muonium, it would seem interesting to work with personally

    • @daBuzzY90
      @daBuzzY90 Рік тому +14

      Whether it would be a gas or not depends on ol’ thermodynamics. But yes, it would be a gas. We’d never be able to make muonium in a density high enough to do much with the matter itself, though.

    • @franck3279
      @franck3279 Рік тому +16

      It would be a very strange gas that instantly turns into pure electricity and radiation

    • @sdfkjgh
      @sdfkjgh Рік тому +10

      @@franck3279: Sounds liek you could get _really_ freakin' high from huffing it!

    • @yodo9000
      @yodo9000 Рік тому +5

      Muonium forms compounds in basically the same way as hydrogen, but the rate at which it does so is different due to its different mass. Muonium would be a gas, but as soon as it starts decaying it might become a bit like a plasma.

  • @Kitsudote
    @Kitsudote Рік тому +17

    That is actually really exciting, being able to test how antimatter is affected by gravity can fundamentally change our understanding of the universe!

  • @liquidesper1533
    @liquidesper1533 Рік тому +195

    This is an amazing opportunity to say you guys do amazing work

  • @r0kus
    @r0kus Рік тому +368

    So if someone could combine two muonium atoms with an oxygen atom, would that make a muter molecule?

    • @stellarx20
      @stellarx20 Рік тому +159

      We've got heavy water and regular water, now light water?
      I guess this was inevitable, with all those kinds of ice.

    • @nachoijp
      @nachoijp Рік тому +88

      @@AndrewTBP Like, diet water?

    • @shreyjain3197
      @shreyjain3197 Рік тому +35

      no because water doesnt obtain its word root from hydrogen and oxygen
      the molecule would be called either dimuonium oxide or muonium monoxide

    • @caejones2792
      @caejones2792 Рік тому +73

      Mu2O? I think we'd need a masterball to study it properly.

    • @rosyidharyadi7871
      @rosyidharyadi7871 Рік тому +2

      🤣🤣🤣

  • @SovietPupper
    @SovietPupper Рік тому +810

    I get the oddest feeling that TECHNICALLY there is a whole seperate periodic table of elements with Muonium instead of the standard. We need to expand the table NOW

    • @duhboy9782
      @duhboy9782 Рік тому +185

      nah i think we need to leave our table alone but make a QET Quantum Elemental Table i feel we are just at the doorstep of finding tons more adding to our current table would cause confusion i think.

    • @strangeman5698
      @strangeman5698 Рік тому +50

      But would the lifespan get lower and lower? So after a point we won't be able to observe it

    • @Ixions
      @Ixions Рік тому +51

      Makes me wonder about the fine tuning argument... If certain parameters were tweaked carbon wouldn't be able to support life. This video seems to suggest that carbon maybe wouldn't but something else would take its place in a similar stable range where interesting chemistry can happen.

    • @duhboy9782
      @duhboy9782 Рік тому +22

      @@strangeman5698 i assume we could observe them in relatively strong gravity fields that slow the movement of time seemingly increasing the particles lifespan

    • @strangeman5698
      @strangeman5698 Рік тому +29

      @@duhboy9782 but to slow them significant you'd need to have something as massive and dense as a black hole and if you get that close to a black hole simply for an experiment you would need a very large amount of energy to escape. Also that's not how time dilation works. Because time would also slow down for you so you would see no difference

  • @eddiemarohl5789
    @eddiemarohl5789 Рік тому +59

    I love it when we say we'll understand the deepest parts of the universe but then moreoften then not we simply discover how much more we don't know about

    • @HaydenX
      @HaydenX Рік тому +4

      Discovering what you don't know is the first step to learning. If you aren't asking the right questions, you are getting the wrong answers.

  • @Melody_Boi_Piyush
    @Melody_Boi_Piyush Рік тому +12

    5:50 Antielectron is also called as positron

  • @gabrielbarrera5509
    @gabrielbarrera5509 9 місяців тому +24

    Spoiler : research demonstrated that anti matter is affected exactly the same by gravity.. Just so you guys know

    • @thekirbycrafter7229
      @thekirbycrafter7229 6 місяців тому

      I mean, still groundbreaking even if its the null hypothesis

    • @lefishe5845
      @lefishe5845 20 днів тому

      Gravity is the great equalizer.

  • @pb6481
    @pb6481 Рік тому +47

    while seeing this video I thought: why don’t we have muonium fusion reactors then? but it turns out it costs more energy to make a muon than you get if you fuze them, according to the wikipedia page I found, and that makes sense.. maybe I wasn’t that far off though since apparently Muon-catalyzed fusion is a thing

    • @garethdean6382
      @garethdean6382 Рік тому +17

      As with all fusion the trick is making it efficient enough. Muons tend to be
      sticky' and not jump around enough hydrogen atoms to make it worthwhile.

    • @paulmahoney7619
      @paulmahoney7619 Рік тому +1

      @@garethdean6382 you know, one of the observations that confirms special relativity that we know of is high-energy muons being detectable around the surface of the earth. If we could find some mechanism to use a fraction of the energy from fusion to extend the lifetime of muons through time dilation, perhaps we could increase the numbers of particles fused before the muon decays to above breakeven energy.

    • @sirthursday6159
      @sirthursday6159 Рік тому +1

      Makes no sense, why would you try to do nuclear fusion with extremely unstable atoms.
      A muon being a catalyst is also something completely different from fusing muonium atoms

  • @danielm.1441
    @danielm.1441 Рік тому +173

    Feeling the need to point out the existence of postronium (a bound state of an electron & a positron) which is surely 'simpler' than muonium... albeit much more prone to... disappearing into gamma rays.

    • @pedrosso0
      @pedrosso0 Рік тому +42

      simpler, yes. However it doesn't have the same structure as an atom in the way of a nucleus and other particles orbiting it

    • @user-pr6ed3ri2k
      @user-pr6ed3ri2k Рік тому +1

      yeee

    • @danielm.1441
      @danielm.1441 Рік тому +27

      @@pedrosso0 Which isn't _really_ how atoms behave... Each particle is confined by the Coloumb potential of the other, & their wavefunctions localise to a region about their common centre of mass.
      Positronium has energy levels much in the same way as muonium or hydrogen, they're less bound to one another, but they are there.

    • @voidwyrm6149
      @voidwyrm6149 Рік тому +7

      there's also "true muonium" which is a muon and an antimuon bound together

    • @pedrosso0
      @pedrosso0 Рік тому +4

      @@danielm.1441 I haven't learned much of the wave functions yet and I'll assume your right. My point is just that the lack of symmetry between the masses

  • @godkid8059
    @godkid8059 Рік тому +57

    Hey, scientists actually found out the answer to the question at 5:10 . The answer is, yes, gravity does pull on antimatter the same as regular matter.

    • @justsomenightowl7220
      @justsomenightowl7220 Рік тому +11

      Source?

    • @gm_construct_13_betaexplor38
      @gm_construct_13_betaexplor38 Рік тому

      @@justsomenightowl7220look it up ☠️

    • @TheDiamondBladeHD
      @TheDiamondBladeHD Рік тому

      ​@@justsomenightowl72201.6 only for me

    • @Jpx0999
      @Jpx0999 Рік тому

      Blackholes​@@justsomenightowl7220

    • @SoulcatcherLucario
      @SoulcatcherLucario Рік тому

      ​​@@justsomenightowl7220here's the wikipedia page about it: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravitational_interaction_of_antimatter
      obviously not a scientific paper, but i think this'll lead you in the right direction

  • @duxtorm
    @duxtorm Рік тому +10

    Your enthusiasm along for this stuff adds so much quality, I love this channel and the stuff you post!

  • @StormBlackwell
    @StormBlackwell Рік тому +5

    This was the craziest video I've seen from this channel in a long time. The whole concept is kind of blowing my mind. Atoms made from both antimatter and "normal" matter? That is pretty gosh darn cool.

  • @circlebird9013
    @circlebird9013 Рік тому +43

    This is super cool! Will be keeping an eye on this research for sure

  • @toasterbox160
    @toasterbox160 Рік тому +23

    Hank, you seem to have become more genuine sounding. I thought you were 4 years ago. Continuously, you keep improving your ability to relay information in a professional and passionate way. Thank you for being you.
    Cheers to the whole team for your amazing contribution to the community. 🙏😁

  • @luckylmj
    @luckylmj Рік тому +50

    I've actually been wondering recently "given that antimatter is pretty much the opposite of regular matter, maybe it has negative gravity". Glad to hear that I wasn't the only person to think of that.

    • @thomasnaas2813
      @thomasnaas2813 Рік тому +10

      You might need reverse time to reverse gravity.

    • @barefootalien
      @barefootalien Рік тому +41

      Well... the truth is, antimatter _isn't_ pretty much the opposite of regular matter. It's exactly the _same_ as regular matter, except with the opposite electrical charge.
      Very few scientists actually believe there's any meaningful chance that antimatter will genuinely "fall up". Some experiments are done in hopes of discovering something wild or of confirming a theory. Others are done in the name of thoroughness. The antimatter gravity experiment is one of the latter.
      Technically it's _possible_ to contrive a version of reality in which antimatter for some reason behaves differently with respect to gravity from matter. Since it's possible, we should test it to be sure, which we are, but it's more of a "let's just make sure the universe makes sense" sort of experiment.
      You're definitely not the only one to think of it, though! And if it does genuinely happen that way, it would be mind-blowing and incredible and basically open up all kinds of Star Trek like possibilities! Buuuut, probably not, sadly.

    • @infiniteplanes5775
      @infiniteplanes5775 Рік тому +4

      Don’t we have no idea how gravity works on the subatomic scale?

    • @thejackal5099
      @thejackal5099 Рік тому +1

      @@barefootalien You mean Mass Effect like possibilities?

    • @barefootalien
      @barefootalien Рік тому

      @@thejackal5099 ;)

  • @dallor09
    @dallor09 Рік тому +11

    If you drink mutonium water, then that is lighter water, meaning that after all these years… we have finally discovered diet water

  • @jamesskinner4752
    @jamesskinner4752 Рік тому +2

    I’m very excited. I started writing a scifi for myself 10 years ago about a villain manipulating muons and gravitons to rewind time and restart to his favor. Can’t wait to learn more about this.

  • @derrickmancini4118
    @derrickmancini4118 Рік тому +8

    I can't believe you just UA-camd about one of my areas of research: how to test for antigravity using muonium!

  • @bugsbunny8691
    @bugsbunny8691 Рік тому +6

    Wow, a particle physics video that I understood and that actually excited me.

  • @aimfulRenegade
    @aimfulRenegade 3 місяці тому +2

    What great things will humanity achieve with this new element?
    "$1 hydrogen vs. $1,000,000 hydrogen"

  • @badbiker666
    @badbiker666 Рік тому +24

    I love SciShow videos. Normally I learn a lot from them. But I have to admit, this one went right over my head.

    • @Supremax67
      @Supremax67 Рік тому +1

      I am going to go to every school and add Mu on their periodic table. 😂

    • @AGDinCA
      @AGDinCA Рік тому

      Me too, my friend. Me too...

    • @purgruv
      @purgruv Рік тому

      Is that because of the antigravity?

  • @fuge74
    @fuge74 Рік тому +43

    I know that most people like to abide by the regular periodic table, but I think the "periodic table of sub-atomic particles" should be taught as a foot note. They are important in fringe physics.

    • @mindulle21
      @mindulle21 Рік тому +5

      I missreaded that as fridge physics

    • @fuge74
      @fuge74 Рік тому +3

      @@mindulle21 ah yes the periodic table of thermodynamics.

    • @gorkskoal9315
      @gorkskoal9315 Рік тому

      lol soo stuff like californium?

    • @mildlymarvelous
      @mildlymarvelous Рік тому +5

      @@gorkskoal9315 ????? Californium is literally just a regular element

  • @JonJenkins1982
    @JonJenkins1982 Рік тому +8

    I’m pretty sure we’ve experimentally verified that gravitation exerts force on antimatter the same way it does on matter

  • @realemperorkuzco
    @realemperorkuzco Рік тому +22

    1:30 Muons got more game than me.

  • @josephmann6675
    @josephmann6675 Рік тому +22

    You sometimes remind me how much fun you are talking about science. I’m glad that sometimes Google (or whatever the massive conglomerated corporate evil they are goes by these days) let’s me see you occasionally. Nicely done. Miss you in my feeds.

  • @roundhouse2616
    @roundhouse2616 Рік тому +20

    Hey I was thinking about the ‘does gravity affect antimatter the same way it does matter’ thing a while ago! It’s good to see it actually being studied!

    • @astat1
      @astat1 Рік тому

      And what conclusions did you come to?

    • @roundhouse2616
      @roundhouse2616 Рік тому +8

      @@astat1 Uh, none. I don’t have access to antimatter

    • @nikhiljajatinanda1066
      @nikhiljajatinanda1066 Рік тому +2

      ​@@roundhouse2616 Definitely antimatter is different

    • @geo3106
      @geo3106 Рік тому

      @@nikhiljajatinanda1066 Not so fast.

  • @arnusdarnus4944
    @arnusdarnus4944 Рік тому +61

    Extremely interesting. I'm very interested to learn what the findings are for how antimatter interacts with gravity. Because if they are the same mass, and mass has an effect on the interaction with gravity,(as I understand it), then that seems like an exceptional base for comparison. The prospect of shedding light on the dark spots in our knowledge is so exciting!

    • @lordgarion514
      @lordgarion514 Рік тому +4

      That is something they'll probably never figure out TBH.
      One of the biggest problems in science is that quantum mechanics, and special relativity don't play nice.
      Actually they don't play at all.
      Special relativity is the science of gravity. When they put QM and SR together, trash comes out.
      In other words, they can't even figure out how subatomic particles of regular matter, and gravity work together.

    • @franck3279
      @franck3279 Рік тому +2

      What I understood is that they may have a normal mass but have their time reversed, so we would see them ’unfalling’

    • @adilsongoliveira
      @adilsongoliveira Рік тому +3

      @@franck3279 Antimatter has the exact same characteristics as "normal" matter except for the charge so gravity, time, etc affacts them exactly the same.

    • @franck3279
      @franck3279 Рік тому +5

      @@adilsongoliveira except they are known to follow CPT symetry, so if time is reversed, eithercchirality orctime is too.

    • @HiEv001
      @HiEv001 Рік тому +3

      @@franck3279 Just to be clear, while the Feynman-Stueckelberg interpretation allows _modeling_ of antimatter as though it's traveling backwards in time, physicists don't think that antimatter _actually_ goes back in time.

  • @cjr4908
    @cjr4908 Рік тому +14

    The question this brings to mind for me is, how do we determine what is matter and what is antimatter? It's easy for anything made out of electrons and quarks - that's what _we're_ made of, so antimatter is the opposite. But how does it work for muons and other, separate fundamental particles? If nothing is made of them and the only difference between a given fundamental particle and its antiparticle is the charge, how do we decide which is which? This occurred to me because I thought it was very interesting that the _muon_ forms stable configurations with _anti_ electrons while the _anti_ muon forms stable configurations with _regular_ electrons. Why don't we just call the first one an anti muon and the _second_ one a muon?

    • @drewprice9284
      @drewprice9284 Рік тому +2

      the first one is called a muon and not the second be because it a lepton, which are all negatively charged. Electrons are also leptons.

    • @DanielBohnen
      @DanielBohnen Рік тому +1

      Sometimes scientists get things wrong but the name stays the same for instance negative and positive charge electrons flow from negative to positive opposite to what was initially considered but they kept the name the same anyway

    • @EEE-1409
      @EEE-1409 Рік тому +1

      I think regular matter consists of the usual protons neutrons and electrons. But it's interesting seeing what we can do with subatomic particles that have opposite charges.

    • @MajikkanCat
      @MajikkanCat Рік тому

      I think it's because the ones that are like heavier versions of the electron (muon, tau) are considered matter, while the ones which are like heavier versions of the positron (antimuon, antitau) are considered antimatter. {Disclaimer: I'm just some random person and haven't got any degrees or anything.}

  • @vintageswiss9096
    @vintageswiss9096 Рік тому +4

    What's even more exciting for this, is that we explore the elemental table by combining elements of different molecular masses to hunt for new elements.
    This gives us a brand new ingredient to use in future elemental "recipes" while hunting for new elements.

  • @AccidentalNinja
    @AccidentalNinja Рік тому +15

    As someone who was just learning about chemistry this evening, this is fascinating. It also sounds like it might be able to form an isotope if a neutron can get attached to the muon, though it's decay rate would probably mean that the atom is very short-lived.

    • @AbruptAvalanche
      @AbruptAvalanche Рік тому +11

      I’m no physicist, but muons don’t take part in the strong interaction like protons do, so I don’t think it would be possible to stick a neutron to one.

    • @dweebteambuilderjones7627
      @dweebteambuilderjones7627 Рік тому +5

      @@AbruptAvalanche You're correct. Muons, like all leptons, don't do the whole color charge thing by their very definition.

  • @LinksAwakenr
    @LinksAwakenr Рік тому +6

    It’s cool how they decided muonium is made of anti-muons, and anti-muonium is the one that uses regular muons. You know, makes things easy to remember.

    • @msimon6808
      @msimon6808 Рік тому

      That is nothing. Unobtainium is made from money. If you want a little Unobtainium, you can't get it. If you want a lot, it will cost you and will take a long time.

  • @achyutrastogi8080
    @achyutrastogi8080 Рік тому +1

    I love SciShow, I just love it. With the advent of the internet all interests are diluted but your channel keeps curiosity alive. Thanks.

  • @Brown95P
    @Brown95P Рік тому +19

    I was wondering why muons sounded familiar and why I was relating them to quarks, so I went back and took a look at those popular quark tables, and there they were; not as quarks, but as *leptons* -- a family which, incidentally, also includes _electrons._
    Science is funny sometimes, that you can make atoms -- once called the "building blocks" of all visible matter -- out of nothing more than leptons and antileptons.

    • @DrDeuteron
      @DrDeuteron Рік тому +1

      but they aren't stable. Only protons and electrons are stable, while neutrons can become stable in a nucleus b/c their decay to a proton is blocked. Some atoms are stable, but when ionized, the neutron decay is no longer blocked and they become radiaoctive. That is quantum weirdness at its best.

  • @glenngriffon8032
    @glenngriffon8032 Рік тому +31

    Muonium absolutely deserves a place on the periodic table!

    • @onlythetruth883
      @onlythetruth883 Рік тому +10

      Glenn
      So muonium gets into the periodic table without having any protons?

    • @hunterball7938
      @hunterball7938 Рік тому +12

      It's what I call quasi-atomic. Not necessarily atomic, but behaves like one

    • @aetheriox463
      @aetheriox463 Рік тому +9

      @@onlythetruth883 i mean its got a positively charged nucleus and an electron in an orbit, sounds pretty atom-adjacent to me

    • @daBuzzY90
      @daBuzzY90 Рік тому +7

      Close! They’re called exotic matter. Positronium, geonium, etc. All go into this category

    • @franck3279
      @franck3279 Рік тому +10

      As cool as it would be, I’m more inclined to see it as an exotic isotope of the hydrogen.

  • @mattsmith1859
    @mattsmith1859 Рік тому +6

    I know this is a real science show but I would pay good money to watch someone like Hank go through the Three Body Problem and just see what they think.

  • @therockbottom5256
    @therockbottom5256 Рік тому +8

    These videos continue to inspire me to go back to school for science. Makes it unbearably to utilize the new degree program (?) now that it’s started

  • @Arlothed1no
    @Arlothed1no Рік тому +17

    Do you ever think aliens are really excited to meet us and they see humans discover things like this and are like "YES! you're so close! You've almost got it!"

    • @redstocat5455
      @redstocat5455 Рік тому +2

      We don't want you bad, exempt you start it, like...
      Like we are an.older brother, we help you exempt you enerve us,
      So wanna do big particule accelerators an liitle faster that light ?

  • @kmarasin
    @kmarasin Рік тому +1

    Me:
    Hank: dismisses my entire research field as "two other weird particles"

  • @conlon4332
    @conlon4332 Рік тому +10

    1:10 I'm still wondering about those "other weird subatomic particles", and also what happens to Muonium when the anti-Muon decays.

    • @jdkoz98
      @jdkoz98 Рік тому

      @Jordan Rodrigues woah dude you’re smart

  • @conlon4332
    @conlon4332 Рік тому +22

    It's so fun to watch Hank get this excited! Haha! 1:46 2:21 5:16 6:07

    • @ubertoaster99
      @ubertoaster99 Рік тому +1

      I've only ever seen him out-of-his-mind drunk playing board games, so this video made for a refreshing change.

  • @MervynPartin
    @MervynPartin Рік тому +3

    Wow! This is something about which I was totally unaware. Excellent presentation.

  • @Jlewismedia
    @Jlewismedia Рік тому +5

    6:06 waiting for it to hit the corner

  • @DJ-1986
    @DJ-1986 Рік тому +9

    4:16 Particle physicists are not making all these exotic particles for fun. They make muonium to use experimental techniques from the well-developed field of atomic physics to study our murky subatomic reality => Probably exactly their definition of fun ;)

  • @fyukfy2366
    @fyukfy2366 Рік тому +1

    "a quarky kind of hydrogen" I see what you did there Hank

  • @DeFaulty101
    @DeFaulty101 Рік тому +28

    Fun fact, an anti-electron is called a positron.

    • @MarcusAsaro
      @MarcusAsaro Рік тому +3

      ...And the bound state between the electron and positron is called positronium, the lightest hydrogen-like atom in the universe.

  • @JGHFunRun
    @JGHFunRun Рік тому +4

    There's also positronium which is even lighter and a positron (anti-electron)/electron pair. It can form bonds, somehow, and decays incredibly rapidly. Funnily enough I just realized that since some elements create positrons when they decay (potassium in particular, but also others) it may be far more common than muonium, relatively speaking of course

  • @mydogbrian4814
    @mydogbrian4814 Рік тому +1

    > The key point for me in this presentation was to remind me that it's not just spontaneous matter/antimatter annihilation on contact but that they have to have opposite charges too.

  • @paulbennett7021
    @paulbennett7021 Рік тому +4

    STOP PRESS: Antimatter falls downwards.

  • @kennethphillips963
    @kennethphillips963 Рік тому +7

    Great video as always but what about positronium - an electron and positron orbiting each other? I presume it’s even lighter than muonium.

  • @EagleAngelo
    @EagleAngelo Рік тому

    Thanks!

  • @blueckaym
    @blueckaym Рік тому +10

    You mentioned that Muon is very unstable and decays in about 2 millionths of a second.
    But what about Muonium (and anti-Muonium)? Are they more stable? And how much?

    • @cck4863
      @cck4863 Рік тому

      Unstable on EARTH. Who know . Maybe 99.999% of the whole Universe is made up of Muon. The whole space between each Star System is filled with them.

    • @arpitsharma7495
      @arpitsharma7495 Рік тому +2

      @@cck4863 they are only stable in high energy areas like some may be present in the cosmic rays and all.

    • @cck4863
      @cck4863 Рік тому

      @@arpitsharma7495
      You need something to react with. For example, You can consider Hydrocarbon as high energy BUT without oxygen, it won't burn.

    • @arpitsharma7495
      @arpitsharma7495 Рік тому +2

      @@cck4863 ya that's the thing provided by the cosmic Ray's.

    • @benjidoerr
      @benjidoerr Рік тому +1

      Muonium is just as unstable, because unlike the instability of chemical bonds or atomic nuclei, muons decay via the weak force. Chemical bonds are broken because of the electromagnetic force (the state of the bond was less electrically favorable than the outcome), and radioactive nuclei split apart because the strong force can't hold them together tight enough. So atoms are good at dealing with the strong and the electromagnetic force- like, that's what chemistry and nuclear physics are about -but they don't really have anything to do with the weak force. So the muon inside of Muonium decays just the same.
      Hypothetically, if the muon didn't decay, muonium would be quite stable electrically. It wouldn't experience the strong force, because its "nucleus" is a single lepton, but it would have an electrically stable conformation and could react with stuff pretty similarly to atomic hydrogen.

  • @egotist-ical
    @egotist-ical Рік тому +12

    The Second Page of Google:

  • @sethbrooks8889
    @sethbrooks8889 Рік тому +1

    I haven't been this excited and blown away about psychics in a while, I hope the sciences continue to shine brightly

  • @photovincent
    @photovincent Рік тому +6

    6:20 Elementary school, haha 😂

  • @pnwscitech1589
    @pnwscitech1589 Рік тому +28

    I am officially starting a petition to put muonium and antimuonium on the chart. THIS IS AWESOME!

    • @yodo9000
      @yodo9000 Рік тому +4

      Don't forget positronium (and mononeutron matter maybe?).
      Having both muonium and antimuonium isn't necessary I think, each element has an antimatter version as far as we know, and some, like antihydrogen, have been observed.

    • @SolomonUcko
      @SolomonUcko Рік тому +2

      @@yodo9000 Wikipedia's article "Chemical symbol", section "Other symbols", list "Exotic atoms" lists muonium (mu), protonium (Pn), and positronium (Ps)

    • @ItsMeAttilaGameplay2018
      @ItsMeAttilaGameplay2018 Рік тому +1

      @@SolomonUcko Sad neutronium and quarkium crying the corner.
      Neutronium is matter made of neutrons (found inside neutron stars) extreme unbelievably ultra massive. Quarkium is matter made of up, down and strange quarks (possible to find inside quark stars but hypotheticel yet) extreme unbelievably ultra super hyper uber massive (if real).

    • @yodo9000
      @yodo9000 Рік тому +1

      @Solomon Ucko, cool I hadn't heard about protonium yet. Sadly it seems that no compounds have been observed yet, which would really cement its status as an element to me (or maybe it is more appropriate as an 'isotope', (anti)protonic hydrogen (see muonic atoms, ex: muonic hydrogen, muonic helium...)), though compounds are predicted.
      @ItsMeAttila-Gameplay, I wouldn't call neutronium an element, but I would prefer mononeutron matter (free neutrons).

    • @danielmorton1606
      @danielmorton1606 Рік тому

      @@yodo9000 What's wrong with 'free neutrons'.
      Also muons cannot form a helium like atom because they don't interact via the strong force or have a strong force parallel.

  • @pandajfry
    @pandajfry Рік тому +2

    When my relationships don't last as long as a muon...

  • @camramaster
    @camramaster Рік тому +4

    Atoms are numbered based on the number of protons they have.
    Muonium has 0 protons.
    Therefore, is Muonium also Element Zero?

  • @NathanBreese
    @NathanBreese Рік тому +16

    is anyone else bothered that muonium is made with anti-matter and antimuonium is made with normal matter?

    • @orthotron
      @orthotron 9 місяців тому

      They're both made of matter and anti-matter

    • @bjornfeuerbacher5514
      @bjornfeuerbacher5514 6 місяців тому

      _Both_ muonium _and_ antimuonium are made _both_ from matter _and_ antimatter.
      In muonium, the electron is matter, the anti-myon is antimatter. In antimuonium, the positron is antimatter, the myon is matter.

    • @NathanBreese
      @NathanBreese 6 місяців тому

      ​@@bjornfeuerbacher5514🤯

  • @toddkatz9700
    @toddkatz9700 Рік тому +1

    "I can't believe it's not hydrogen!"
    Now with 84% less mass!

  • @chx1618
    @chx1618 Рік тому +10

    Has anyone gotten Muonium cold enough to get its molecular form? Also, I imagine that the dipoles could be tricky for electric interaction, but maybe they've got a plan for that.

    • @spshkyros
      @spshkyros Рік тому +2

      yes. This is the basis for MuSR. When you wack a beam of lower energy muons into a material, it will scatter around ionizing things for a bit before slowing down enough that it can bind to things. I doubt you would get muonium itself, but you will absolutly get muons at least briefly integrated into molecules.

  • @buhbird4698
    @buhbird4698 Рік тому +4

    So after the anti muon decays into a positron (I’m assuming) would they not annihilate each other?

  • @jacksonking718
    @jacksonking718 9 місяців тому

    whoever made this thumbnail deserves props. One of the best ones I have seen.

  • @DrMcSpankus
    @DrMcSpankus Рік тому +5

    This has me wondering: with a positive anit-muon technically forming a valid element, is it at all possible to pair its counterpart, a negative muon, with an anti-electron (positron)? Would the relationship between positive and negative charges still apply? Could this theoretically form an "anti-hydrogen"?

  • @amandao6686
    @amandao6686 Рік тому +16

    I had wondered if an hybrid atom like this could exist, like neutron, anti proton, and positron to make up a weird hybrid hydrogen atom.

    • @SuperUAP
      @SuperUAP Рік тому

      Next up.. the futon particle.

  • @RecoveringNihilist
    @RecoveringNihilist Рік тому +2

    We finally have a way to make a blimp more exciting than the Hindenberg.

  • @Grunttamer
    @Grunttamer Рік тому +6

    Could antimuon forms of all the elements exist? Would be interesting to make Pb to have lighter radiation shielding. Obviously the lifespan of the particles is another hurdle.

    • @geoff2504
      @geoff2504 Рік тому

      Weird thought from a physics imbecile, could the antimuon forms of all the elements lead to the discovery of antimatter as something that really exists? Finding a way to measure it would be the next discovery I guess. 🤪 ok, I know, the first sentence explains the rest of this post. DOH!

    • @davinchristino
      @davinchristino Рік тому

      Don't quote me on it, but I'm pretty sure you can make an atom out of literally anything, as long as there is stuff orbiting other other stuff (with electrostatic force). Of course, the lifetime is a huge issue.

  • @novantha1
    @novantha1 Рік тому +4

    This makes me wonder if in the long run we could see anti-muon based alternative atoms produced to produce lighter products dependent on chemical interactions, such as incredibly light batteries, for instance. Not sure how practical that would be with their current rate of decay, however 😅

  • @Radio.Raptor
    @Radio.Raptor Рік тому +1

    This is what I love with science: You never know when a discovery will throw a curveball like this!

  • @unilajamuha91
    @unilajamuha91 Рік тому +5

    6:12 *Spoiler:*
    It didn't

  • @mariakhan6090
    @mariakhan6090 Рік тому +3

    after watching so many videos of Hank, I can totally recognize his voice even blindfolded

  • @duncanhoward5045
    @duncanhoward5045 Рік тому +1

    Presenter: Physicists are not making all these exotic atoms just for fun...
    Physicists: Let's make some cool new atoms, it'll be fun!

  • @igoromelchenko3482
    @igoromelchenko3482 Рік тому +16

    When I grow up I want to be like Muonium.

  • @cougerror2887
    @cougerror2887 Рік тому +4

    If it falls upwards, would it be possible to make a space propulsion system out of it?

    • @uliwehner
      @uliwehner Рік тому

      why would you want to propel space?

    • @cougerror2887
      @cougerror2887 Рік тому +1

      @@uliwehner better than rockets

  • @luna1534
    @luna1534 Рік тому +1

    I love how excited about this Hank seems

  • @DanielMether
    @DanielMether Рік тому +9

    Could you imagine a universe where antimuons vastly outnumbered protons and muons? Mass and weight would be a nightmare to measure (assuming life could even form under such conditions)

    • @Vagabond-Cosmique
      @Vagabond-Cosmique Рік тому +1

      But.. Why?

    • @3OHT.
      @3OHT. Рік тому +9

      It’s funny you ask “but why” to a hypothetical consideration when your profile picture is an impossible object
      Why not?

    • @garethdean6382
      @garethdean6382 Рік тому +4

      You'd certainly want the antimuons to be more stable than in our universe or all matter would cease to be quite quickly.

    • @jbradfield
      @jbradfield Рік тому +6

      extremely weird hypothetical, considering muons have a half-life of a little over 2 millionths of a second. if anti-muons vastly outnumbered protons shortly after the big bang, there would be.... still not a lot of anti-muons now (there would however be a catastrophic number of anti-electrons, which would overwhelm the number of electrons and cause the universe to have an *enormous* positive electric charge, which... would blow it to kingdom come? immediately collapse in universe-sized black hole because of the enormous potential energy density? I don't know actually). if on the other hand the number of anti-muons *now* outnumbered the protons, then... if you work backward to the number of muons that would have to exist in the past you hit matter degeneracy at *every single point in space in the entire universe* well before you make it back to the big bang, so.... enjoy *that* black hole.

    • @Vagabond-Cosmique
      @Vagabond-Cosmique Рік тому +1

      @@3OHT. I meant: "why would mass be a nightmare to measure?"

  • @NanashiCAST
    @NanashiCAST Рік тому +6

    I feel like muonium might need a new kind of classification because it's possible that other elements can be substituted the same way like this or something.

  • @GBart
    @GBart Рік тому +2

    I've wondered about whether or not mesons could form atoms, but this just blows my mind

  • @AILIT1
    @AILIT1 Рік тому +6

    Muonium is such a rebel.

  • @ikercalderon163
    @ikercalderon163 Рік тому +10

    I feel munionium and hidrogen would be chelically similar, but they would have differences. Deuterium has double the mass of hidrogen and it reacts a bit differently (so differently that if you substitude half of your hidrogen atoms with deuterium your metabolism would slow down so much you would die), and muonium being 9 times less massive than a hydrgen atom for sure would have cinetic differences with hydrogen

    • @Rimmsolin
      @Rimmsolin Рік тому

      So you’re saying swapping in munionium would then be one of the best diet regimens?

    • @ikercalderon163
      @ikercalderon163 Рік тому

      @@Rimmsolin till the muonium decays and kills you yeah, it's a great idea!

  • @alpaga4820
    @alpaga4820 Рік тому

    The video is very interesting, but at the same time I couldn't help but notice this incredible outfit ! The sweater and the suite already stand out on their own, but together they make an absolutely regalian ensemble !

  • @calhoon1113
    @calhoon1113 Рік тому +4

    What happens when an anti atter black hole and a regular black hole bump into each other and antimatter falls up. Ignoring the fact that they would always be falling up from each other from the beginning of time and would probably never touch, would all the stuff fall out of both?

    • @spshkyros
      @spshkyros Рік тому

      Practically? Probably nothing. The devisions of matter and anti-matter are shockingly symmetric. There is no evidence that anti-matter falls up, and while it is an interesting thought worth checking for (like the Alpha experimentalists are with anti-hydrogen), it's pretty unlikely to bear fruit. It's more of a "we should check this just to be sure" thing.

    • @9nikola
      @9nikola Рік тому +1

      I don't see why anything would "fall out of" a black hole when it's crashing into an anti-matter black hole. If anything, the two holes would just annihilate each other, unless they do repel each other or "fall up" as you put it, in which case they would likely propel apart before they could annihilate much.