How We're Redefining the kg

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  • Опубліковано 9 лип 2024
  • In 2018 the kg will be defined by Planck's constant, not a hunk of metal.
    Try a free book from Audible for 30 days ve42.co/audible
    Special thanks to the staff at NIST who made this possible: Darine Haddad, Jon Pratt, Stephan Schlamminger, and Ben Stein.
    Additional footage and animations by Sean Kelley, Jennifer Lauren Lee, and Frank Seifert.
    I have been obsessed with measurement for a long time and I'm not sure quite how it happened. The world's roundest object played a role in this. I guess I'm just fascinated by how difficult it is to pin down a quantity like a kilogram. A physical object seemed like a good idea until the mass of the international prototype kilogram wasn't as constant as expected. These methods of the Kibble balance and silicon sphere have shown better precision than 20 parts per billion, making them superior to the old method. The agreement between Avogadro approaches
    Special thanks to Patreon Supporters:
    Tony Fadell, Donal Botkin, Jeff Straathof, Zach Mueller, Ron Neal, Nathan Hansen
    Support Veritasium on Patreon: ve42.co/patreon
    Interferometer video by TSG Physics: • Michelson Interferometer
    Music from epidemicsound.com "ExperiMental1" by Gunnar Johnsén
    Studio filming by Raquel Nuno

КОМЕНТАРІ • 4,9 тис.

  • @1lamafarmer
    @1lamafarmer 3 роки тому +1783

    It's a good thing they went with the Plank's Constant in the end. I've weighed loads of avocados and none of them were close to a kilogram.

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen 3 роки тому +51

      Ba-dum-tsss! :P

    • @xGOKOPx
      @xGOKOPx 3 роки тому +150

      I hope the plank they've chosen weighs a kilogram tho

    • @philipptielmann
      @philipptielmann 3 роки тому +25

      and the avocados also weigh differently and change their mass a lot over time!

    • @MinhiNug
      @MinhiNug 2 роки тому +30

      You need to use Avocado’s number

    • @gallium-gonzollium
      @gallium-gonzollium 2 роки тому +3

      @@MinhiNug or Plank’s constant

  • @smartereveryday
    @smartereveryday 7 років тому +2257

    I appreciated the giggle at the end. The guy basically said "solve this simple algebra equation and redefine the two fundamental units of ALL OF PHYSICS".

    • @odin_3
      @odin_3 5 років тому +7

      Hello

    • @DustyyBoi
      @DustyyBoi 5 років тому +4

      @@odin_3 Yes

    • @kumarsrijan8377
      @kumarsrijan8377 5 років тому +2

      @Mukund Ranjan Tiwari yes you may want to learn about what the founder of wolfram alpha has to say about it. Look for his ted talk

    • @mikaylamerna62
      @mikaylamerna62 5 років тому +5

      Like what my physics teacher used to say the physics equations are simple math...

    • @camplethargic8
      @camplethargic8 4 роки тому +10

      I'm pretty sure I had this guy for high school physics 8:23 - mumble mutter something-or-other (very fast and in a difficult to understand accent), "simple -don't you see, dummkoff?" 🤔

  • @Zorgongola
    @Zorgongola 6 років тому +956

    Hey Veritasium
    I was part of the team working with Bryan Kibble on the NPL mkII Kibble Balance (aka Watt Balance, aka Moving Coil experiment) between 1991 and 2000. Firstly I'd like to congratulate you on a great video. It's not easy explaining this elegant but complex method of redefining the kg and you guys did a good job.
    One thing to possibly add is the importance of keeping the magnetic field constant. Both weighing and velocity measurements are not quick and are conducted over a long time period. Back then it lasted over an hour, and the field strength is highly susceptible to temperature changes, so keeping the large magnet at a constant temperature is imperative. I worked on the NPL system and we managed to keep the temperature drift down to a millikelvin or two over the duration of measurement, usually overnight.

    • @idjles
      @idjles 5 років тому +8

      How do you measure g without knowing what a kg is? this seems circular.

    • @raymondo737
      @raymondo737 5 років тому +55

      If I understand your question correctly, I think you are mistaken. The "g" in the equation is g as in "Gravitational acceleration", not g as in "gram". It's measured in m/s^2. The video at 7:31 explains how they determine the local value of g with very high accuracy.

    • @raymondo737
      @raymondo737 5 років тому +33

      Hello Robin,
      My mind boggles at how we've improved accuracy from measuring in sticks, stones and body parts to tiny fractions of fundamental constants.
      Also, I find it poetic that we use equipment that needs a crane to lift and assemble to perform measurements so sensitive, that would be affected by the operator's kids changing the TV channel at home.

    • @andrewm9425
      @andrewm9425 4 роки тому

      @@idjles you measure the free-fall acceleration due to gravity. they do that by dropping a reflecting cube down an evacuated pipe and using a laser to measure the acceleration.

    • @braveecologic2030
      @braveecologic2030 4 роки тому

      I agree from an external perspective too

  • @yuvneesh
    @yuvneesh 5 років тому +154

    Watching this on May 20, 2019.
    SI units have been officially redefined today, kg is defined by Planck’s constant.

    • @bhupendrasingh8242
      @bhupendrasingh8242 5 років тому +2

      You know what I hate Plank's Constant

    • @elendilion
      @elendilion 5 років тому +14

      @@bhupendrasingh8242 and the Planck's constant hates you.

    • @Milesco
      @Milesco 4 роки тому +17

      ​@@elendilion : That's right. A team of scientists from the National Institute of Standards & Technology went to a local Home Depot and took a random Planck of wood off the shelf and measured the weight, divided that weight by Planck's constant, and that became the basis of the new kilogram.

  • @trun_k
    @trun_k 7 років тому +530

    One Balance to rule them all, one balance to define them.
    One balance to standardise them all, and into light forever bind them.

    • @rydaddy2867
      @rydaddy2867 7 років тому +34

      That's beautiful...needs to be on a sticker stuck to the side of the Kibble Balance.

    • @pizzamannetje79
      @pizzamannetje79 7 років тому +21

      RyDaddy i agree, perhaps with "into the light" replaced by "into Planck"

    • @Theraot
      @Theraot 7 років тому +38

      Oh no, the sticker is gonna screw the measurement

    • @fadyel7946
      @fadyel7946 7 років тому +1

      lol

    • @khadija7530
      @khadija7530 7 років тому +6

      Ash nazg durbatulûk, ash nazg gimbatul,
      ash nazg thrakatulûk, agh burzum-ishi krimpatul.

  • @smartereveryday
    @smartereveryday 7 років тому +787

    Another thing.. I thought the fact that you've locally mapped g in the room was FASCINATING.

    • @veritasium
      @veritasium  7 років тому +219

      +SmarterEveryDay yeah, I thought that was fascinating- not only did they have to map it, they then had to calculate what it would be at the center of mass including the influence of the balance itself

    • @kuroshite
      @kuroshite 5 років тому +5

      Hi Mr. Potato

    • @chuckborris804
      @chuckborris804 5 років тому +18

      How crazy is that?!!
      That's an insane amount of precision. Just mind-blowing.

    • @moos5221
      @moos5221 4 роки тому +18

      @@chuckborris804 Imagine doing that for the USA measurements like cups, tablespoons and handfulls.

    • @edydaou
      @edydaou 4 роки тому +4

      Well, the 2 most channels I watch are here @SmarterEveryDay and @Veritasium. when are you doing an episode together?

  • @smortboi1320
    @smortboi1320 3 роки тому +253

    No one:
    Bryan Kibble: “I want to weigh myself with *electricity”*

    • @donottrustanyonelol
      @donottrustanyonelol 3 роки тому +4

      i understood none of what Ver just said but *yes yes yes yes*

    • @thehouseofcha1nsaw_
      @thehouseofcha1nsaw_ 2 роки тому +2

      Isnt that how most scales work anyway?
      I think Kibble was thinking more like "bro, gravity be lackin"

  • @makc3887
    @makc3887 5 років тому +218

    The official day has come....
    Today kilogram definition is changed

    • @JamBos11
      @JamBos11 5 років тому +4

      the kilogram is now the energy of a gamma-ray photon which does not exist, which cannot be produced, and which is completely 100% fictional and has a wavelength which is approximately a million times smaller than the width of a quark. What does that say about the level of scientific development...? Not something science should be proud of.

    • @eggue9598
      @eggue9598 5 років тому

      @@JamBos11 Explain?

    • @JamBos11
      @JamBos11 5 років тому

      @@eggue9598 the kilogram's redefinition equates the mass of 1kg to the energy of a gamma ray which is so energetic that has a wave length a million times smaller than the smallest matter particle present day physics has concieved - the quark. this gamma ray photon is so energetic that radiation of photons with that same frequency can never be produced on Earth. it is a fictional photon, that humans cannot experiemce, produce, interact with, etc.

    • @eggue9598
      @eggue9598 5 років тому +37

      @@JamBos11 just because humans can't intact with it doesn't mean it does not exist

    • @JamBos11
      @JamBos11 5 років тому +1

      @Eggue, but it does mean that it doesn't exist for humans because humans cannot produce it (too much energy - 20 Mtons of TNT equivalent per photon) or measure it (no equipment to measure such radiation), and if humans were unlucky enough that the planet gets exposed to radiation of such photons passing by, each photon from that radiation will deliver a blow over 1000 times larger than Heroshima.

  • @conure512
    @conure512 7 років тому +336

    R.I.P. the 1-kg mass in France. You'll be remembered.

    • @toucaninterieur8011
      @toucaninterieur8011 7 років тому +53

      #dicksoutforthekilogram

    • @rojirrim7298
      @rojirrim7298 7 років тому +27

      Parrot-hD Actually those cylinders will probably still be used. They won't be used as a definition anymore, but as a pattern. You can't have a Watt Balance on every laboratory, what they do is send their instruments to a place where these will be calibrated, and for the calibration they will probably still use the cylinders because of sheer convenience.

    • @mkb6418
      @mkb6418 7 років тому +3

      Well it was time. All other constants are constant, it is time for kilo

    • @danilooliveira6580
      @danilooliveira6580 7 років тому +11

      Gabriel, actually they will most likely make new weights instead of changing the ones they already have. the mass in France will probably end up in a museum

    • @pizzamandhx
      @pizzamandhx 7 років тому +19

      But they'll be remembered as they should be: in a museum, for the value they contributed to humanity. The prototype kilograms helped put people into space, make metal ships that can float in our oceans, helped us determine Planck's Constant. They have been immensely useful. We're graduating to something better, moving on as a species. Aren't all of these good things?

  • @fizizy6415
    @fizizy6415 7 років тому +1508

    5:00 Yes, I can definitely see why they call it the "Watt", because that's what everyone says after you explain it to them.

    • @N3G4T3
      @N3G4T3 7 років тому +24

      Fizizy Or if you go back to school and study physics it'll make sense.

    • @msolec2000
      @msolec2000 7 років тому +11

      I only know that Watt's on second. :P

    • @noname-sg6qx
      @noname-sg6qx 7 років тому +14

      VI=P, P= power, unit for power is watt

    • @NikhilTawde
      @NikhilTawde 7 років тому +5

      nice one

    • @lachlansutcliffe4308
      @lachlansutcliffe4308 7 років тому +2

      Fizizy ahahahha lol good one

  • @shadowfall2011
    @shadowfall2011 3 роки тому +1

    Your videos are beautifully made, entertaining, and wholesome. Thank you!
    You can see the labor of love that goes into them.

  • @observingrogue7652
    @observingrogue7652 5 років тому +77

    I couldn't stop smiling through this whole thing. My face hurts.
    As an amateur Electrical, Mechanical, and Structural Engineer. Just seeing what it takes to maintain the consistency of measurements, is really interesting & exciting to me.
    Thank you, this channel, for showing me this. And I thank the scientists doing that.

  • @Tool8x
    @Tool8x 7 років тому +347

    The kg is dead, long live the kg! All hail the kg!

    • @gnochhuos645
      @gnochhuos645 7 років тому +29

      SEIZE THE MEANS OF MASS

    • @woodzy136
      @woodzy136 7 років тому +19

      First the weight, then the height, then THE WORLD

    • @danielw832
      @danielw832 7 років тому +3

      Vietnam Mapper By any Mass Necessary

    • @MrtinVarela
      @MrtinVarela 7 років тому +85

      You could say it was...
      mass murder

    • @cheat200
      @cheat200 7 років тому +6

      WE MUST MASS IMMEDIATELY AND STOP THIS MASS GENOCIDE!

  • @James__123
    @James__123 7 років тому +1496

    4 years of my physics degree later and I'm still like "ah yes I know some of those words"

    • @emgb1
      @emgb1 7 років тому +192

      4 years of your physics degree later and you can start again at the beginning because all your calculations are now false.

    • @JohannaMueller57
      @JohannaMueller57 7 років тому +29

      wait, 8 semesters of physics only last for knowing some of those words? :-o

    • @AlqGo
      @AlqGo 7 років тому +85

      University nowadays = all about degree certificates. Genuinely skilled graduates are those who invested countless hours teaching themselves cause Uni courses are typically not great in imparting knowledge that lasts long in the brain.

    • @youssefmousa2830
      @youssefmousa2830 6 років тому +7

      because that is algebra not physics

    • @chrisdock8804
      @chrisdock8804 6 років тому +17

      ... You should really know most of this stuff. Maybe not Josephson Junctions or Quantum Hall but hopefully you would have seen those in a Lab. Everything else is first year stuff though? If that.

  • @salimbouhezza5473
    @salimbouhezza5473 5 років тому +324

    my head after 35 seconds:
    INTERNAL SERVER ERROR 500
    NO BRAIN CONNECTION DETECTED

    • @AnhThuNguyen-zz2hm
      @AnhThuNguyen-zz2hm 4 роки тому +3

      Me: huh
      Most people:
      *INTERNAL SERVER ERROR 69*
      *INVALID FORMAT*

  • @avici0182
    @avici0182 6 років тому +239

    Watt?

    • @falsonaga
      @falsonaga 5 років тому +17

      Volt you don't understand

    • @sideoutside
      @sideoutside 5 років тому +1

      Cause.

    • @billyjoejimbob75
      @billyjoejimbob75 5 років тому +8

      That joke was lame, scAmpere off.

    • @AnhThuNguyen-zz2hm
      @AnhThuNguyen-zz2hm 4 роки тому +5

      I Resist the urge to laugh.

    • @darwinvironomy3538
      @darwinvironomy3538 3 роки тому +1

      @@AnhThuNguyen-zz2hm Watt? i thought it's MASSive object with GRAVITional acceleration in a VELocity.

  • @harshachoudhary7847
    @harshachoudhary7847 7 років тому +1325

    ''Derek changing the world, one kilogram at a time''

    • @JellybellyWaffles
      @JellybellyWaffles 7 років тому +4

      One kilogram at a time? How long would that take?

    • @agioiutdrdgfyfyfhgky
      @agioiutdrdgfyfyfhgky 7 років тому +14

      JellybellyWaffles that depends on the rate at which the kilograms are being changed.

    • @nikhildrogbacena
      @nikhildrogbacena 7 років тому +3

      JellybellyWaffles well, assuming time here means a single moment (1 second (give or take)), it would take 10^24s to change it entirely.

    • @paletreker
      @paletreker 7 років тому +9

      +JellybellyWaffles ask vsauce

    • @SidekickTrail
      @SidekickTrail 7 років тому

      Braden Krause well time in the S.I(international system)is set as 1 second(s) so one can only guess a second

  • @hassanallama9376
    @hassanallama9376 7 років тому +534

    drugs dealers are going back to school because of this

    • @SpydersByte
      @SpydersByte 5 років тому +4

      best comment

    • @dirtyp4670
      @dirtyp4670 5 років тому +1

      One meter of skunk please.

    • @Chunkboi
      @Chunkboi 5 років тому +1

      “Could I get 28.35g of weed?”

    • @its_kamau
      @its_kamau 5 років тому +1

      hahaha they better go back to school or business is over

  • @schroeder1112
    @schroeder1112 4 роки тому +14

    I am quite happy i don´t have to learn this definition in physics class and could stick with the old definition. So this new definition alone could be enough for a single exam.

  • @omhekde9033
    @omhekde9033 5 років тому +42

    Its true now!
    Commented on 16 Nov 2018

  • @Kraigon42
    @Kraigon42 7 років тому +181

    This kind of thing is what restores my faith in humanity.

  • @Hatch61
    @Hatch61 7 років тому +223

    I will not lie, and tell you that I understood everything that you just said, but enough to understand that an amazing amount of work happens behind the scenes to provide the folks like me that use these standards daily to be able to rely on them being constant. I enjoy your channel.

    • @Wave1dave
      @Wave1dave 6 років тому +3

      I'm doing my semestral project on this topic and I have to admit it's really crazy! That amount of work they put into this is just astonishing. Everything has to be perfect, everything has to be measured precisely many times and when they are done, they improve the Watt balance and have to start all over again.

    • @xxportalxx.
      @xxportalxx. 5 років тому +3

      Well, unless you're a physicist you probably don't rely on this, considering that all of the measuring equipment that anyone uses is going to be off by magnitudes more than those 'innacurate' standard weights they spoke of at the start

  • @LonDiffenderfer
    @LonDiffenderfer 2 роки тому +19

    Although I understand the need to change the method of defining the kilogram (thanks to you), I still have no idea how it is done. Those calculations are still currently beyond my abilities to comprehend. I often have difficulty grasping all of what is said in your videos, but I still appreciate that you produce them for our benefit. Thank you for your time, effort, and desire to educate us. :) Very best to you and yours!

    • @naufalmEZa
      @naufalmEZa 2 роки тому

      The fact that you watched this still, is heartwarming.. Really, you gotta see where you're lacking to start learning.

    • @pyropulseIXXI
      @pyropulseIXXI Рік тому

      You should read some books; this is at basic algebra level, which is 6th grade level, I would say. Our education system does a good job in making easy things seem hard, by not properly teaching them.
      For instance, I learned calculus at 13 on my own, just from reading a textbook. And yet, they don't teach proper calculus until college. Therefore, the system is stunted by at least 6 years

    • @jimmysyar889
      @jimmysyar889 Рік тому +1

      @@pyropulseIXXI wow you must be very smart

    • @ontime.
      @ontime. Рік тому

      ​@@pyropulseIXXI Bruh this is physic, not algebra. Veritasium talked about p, and any of that formula, and that gravitational thingy which idk how can they came up with that idea. I only understand the basic mgv and VI the rest about planck & magnet thingy not really stuck in my head.

  • @IAmTheRealUsopperGoddamnit
    @IAmTheRealUsopperGoddamnit 8 місяців тому

    Great video. I was having a hard time understanding it from the basic definition from my textbook and wikipedia, but after watching the process behind it and the equations involved it is crystal clear now.

  • @JOELwindows7
    @JOELwindows7 7 років тому +76

    R.I.P., Elder Kg, 1799-2017 You'll be missed.

    • @supertaakot
      @supertaakot 7 років тому +7

      Hey that's actually a nice name for the platinum-iridium weight in Paris xD
      HAIL ELDER KILOGRAM

    • @JohnSmith-kt3yy
      @JohnSmith-kt3yy 7 років тому +6

      TheOneAndOnly Tako ALL HAIL ELDER KILOGRAM

    • @walkinmn
      @walkinmn 7 років тому

      Joel Robert Justiawan well according to the video, is not death yet, may be it can survive 2017

    • @MrMineHeads.
      @MrMineHeads. 7 років тому +1

      Joel Robert Justiawan actually it should be 2018

    • @E1craZ4life
      @E1craZ4life 7 років тому +1

      There are still going to be kilogram replicas around even after the kilogram is redefined; it'll just be easier to track fluctuations in mass.

  • @kcwidman
    @kcwidman 7 років тому +2902

    The kilogram is being redefined in the United States? How ironic.

    • @arda9437
      @arda9437 7 років тому +15

      Kai Widman the us got roasted by kg

    • @Hauketal
      @Hauketal 7 років тому +78

      Kai Widman Not only, but also in the US. See the overview at 8:20 for some of the others. I can't identify all, but at least France (LNE), Japan (NMIJ), and Germany (PTB) are involved. This is for the balance only, others must be added for Avogadro counting. It's a worldwide cooperative effort, by about everyone having enough money to participate.

    • @WarheaddVids
      @WarheaddVids 7 років тому

      My phone got stolen so?

    • @sparqqling
      @sparqqling 7 років тому +71

      Indeed the Americans already converted, the 9mm is the most used.

    • @WarheaddVids
      @WarheaddVids 7 років тому +1

      My phone got stolen it doesn't matter

  • @gabemoser1
    @gabemoser1 6 років тому +69

    I’d like to see how the standard kilogram diverges from the new definition

    • @rumhave9632
      @rumhave9632 2 роки тому +3

      3 parts per billion in 100 years.
      Scientists are bored, however, i still watched the whole video.

  • @akashpatel-cb1dq
    @akashpatel-cb1dq 5 років тому

    You described it so beautifully.I understood the head wrenching process to define the units using the best available methods.

  • @SiddheshNan
    @SiddheshNan 7 років тому +2469

    brain.exe has stopped working

    • @nagajoj
      @nagajoj 7 років тому +17

      SiddheshNandurkar I feel you bro.

    • @conexant51
      @conexant51 7 років тому +45

      Yeah, you should delete that file permanently.

    • @DarkLink1996.
      @DarkLink1996. 7 років тому +6

      Инесса Осипова
      I have more than a few questions.

    • @parodoxis
      @parodoxis 7 років тому +33

      Stop running it on Windows

    • @BluntforceJ
      @BluntforceJ 7 років тому +34

      nice to see people who are not like "this is easy to understand if you know basic high school science"
      this dont look or sound basic to me

  • @RamiShreds
    @RamiShreds 7 років тому +638

    I will have to come back and watch this video again when I am not high

  • @peppermintmiso4341
    @peppermintmiso4341 4 роки тому

    I didn't really understand much like I know what you mean, but I really just like how you talk and I like listening to it while doing something. The talks and your voice are soothing, really

  • @robertginsburg8113
    @robertginsburg8113 2 роки тому +5

    As a kid who grew up with public education and working parents I just wish videos like this would have been around when I was a kid. Not that I have any complaints because I don't but I can only imagine that my life would have probably taken a much different path. Physics is such a fascinating subject.

  • @Dodo-rb4zf
    @Dodo-rb4zf 7 років тому +1414

    How about we eliminate Galon, Pounds, Foot, Inches?

    • @Boz1211111
      @Boz1211111 7 років тому +123

      Nah why would you simplify the world if you can screw it up even more

    • @sparkyenergia
      @sparkyenergia 7 років тому +61

      Trump is probably working on that.

    • @GeminiWoods
      @GeminiWoods 7 років тому +45

      Trump is "working" on a lot things. Doesn't mean it's actually getting done, or making any progress.

    • @my3dviews
      @my3dviews 7 років тому +23

      The U.S. has its own gallon (3.78 litres, vs 4.54 litres), which is different than the imperial gallon used in most other countries (that don't use metric or use both).

    • @wundsalz6831
      @wundsalz6831 7 років тому +8

      Why would you want to discard the superior imperial system in favor of this overly complex SI-nonsense?
      Being able to measure mass, weight and money using the same unit is convenient.

  • @koosnaamloos4291
    @koosnaamloos4291 7 років тому +497

    My physics teacher literally recommended your channel to our class, guess who's watching your videos now? Edit: As a VWO6 student I should know how to speak English XD, dutch people will understand

  • @M.A.S.-SuperiorService-
    @M.A.S.-SuperiorService- 5 років тому +58

    I like absorbing as much knowledge as i can from your vids bc even if i didn't get it all I'm at least a little less ignorant than i was 949 secs. Ago

  • @ignispurgatorius5297
    @ignispurgatorius5297 3 роки тому +72

    Seeing your examples in the beginning, somehow it feels like we missed a huge chance here to redefine the meter or the speed of light to be a fraction/multiple of 300.000.000 ;)

    • @vesper7312
      @vesper7312 3 роки тому +30

      While that would be really handy, it wouldn't be an easy change, countries would have to change road signs to match the new definition, programs that use measurements like modeling software would have to redefine their definition of a meter, anything involving the old definition of the meter would be invalidated. On the other hand, you couldn't just round the speed of light up and keep the meter the same because then the speed of light wouldn't reflect the actual speed of light.

    • @ignispurgatorius5297
      @ignispurgatorius5297 3 роки тому +13

      @@vesper7312 I know it would require quite a bit of change for measuring equipment, though I think as far as everyday stuff goes the difference would be non-existent. Any significant change only occurs at the 4th decimal place. That is a prescision that would hardly effect normal things people use, like roadsigns. Software is also among the more easily things to fix, as that is just definitions that can be adjusted. The real pain would be measuring equiment in industries which actually require this kind of prescision.
      My comment was obviously a joke though. ;)

    • @andrew7955
      @andrew7955 3 роки тому +4

      The radius of the earth would be redefined as 4km different to what it is now... seems like basically no different. I'll keep using c=3×10^8 m/s

    • @vesper7312
      @vesper7312 3 роки тому +6

      @@andrew7955 It practically isn't a difference for most things, but different tasks require different levels of precision. It's perfectly fine to use c=3x10^8 as an approximation, but any result that is derived from using that value is limited to a single significant figure.

    • @studio48nl
      @studio48nl 3 роки тому +1

      Yeah, like they almost redefined pi to be 3 . because it would be easier ... lol

  • @TheLittleGuy1
    @TheLittleGuy1 7 років тому +800

    Video on the Quantum Hall Effect ?????

    • @veritasium
      @veritasium  7 років тому +226

      maybe at some point...

    • @mesaprime4368
      @mesaprime4368 7 років тому +8

      TheLittleGuy frost prime, what are you doing here?

    • @TheLittleGuy1
      @TheLittleGuy1 7 років тому +6

      nearly mastery 22 got to rep my favourite game

    • @ajayrawat9317
      @ajayrawat9317 7 років тому +3

      Veritasium which nextflix series were you talking about ? I would really like to watch that. Also Digits was amazing

    • @BrillouinBoi
      @BrillouinBoi 7 років тому +16

      The Quantum Hall effect is crazy complicated. You need grad physics background to really understand even it's simplest integer form. More complicated fractional forms are still being researched to this day. Really cool though. I hope Derek is up to the challenge.

  • @DigitalDiabloUK
    @DigitalDiabloUK 7 років тому +152

    You lost me right after "basement"

    • @GozUnlimited
      @GozUnlimited 7 років тому +7

      Sub-basement dude. Sub-basement.
      Probably best to avoid the rest of the video

    • @user-fx7ce8xc1d
      @user-fx7ce8xc1d 5 років тому +1

      @@GozUnlimited lol

  • @chitrasingh44
    @chitrasingh44 3 роки тому

    Veritasium, that's a brilliant job in explanation!! What we need is a children's book explaning this, so young students learn to appreciate what 'exactly' are we speaking of when we talk about physics ( the basic building blocks), instead of just learning to solve equations.
    Will work wonders for many!!!

  • @arif4896
    @arif4896 6 років тому +13

    this is what makes me even more loves in the field of physics

  • @SchiferlED
    @SchiferlED 7 років тому +207

    It somehow makes me sad that they didn't redefine the meter such that light was 300,000,000 m/s

    • @KaosFireMaker
      @KaosFireMaker 7 років тому +11

      Eh. could always go with the plank system of measurement. The speed of light in that is one plank length per plank moment. The gravitational constant is one cubic plank length per (plank mass times plank moment squared).

    • @HakingMC
      @HakingMC 7 років тому +47

      It'll be costly if they did, as there would need to be a lot of changes in the world.

    • @Saki630
      @Saki630 7 років тому

      that is not the exact speed of light sir. You have a meter set by a velocity that is incorrect which would make your meter incorrect and so your judgement.

    • @vigneshr6644
      @vigneshr6644 7 років тому +47

      Saki630 he means that the length of the meter itself be altered to get a a number of 300000000 m/s

    • @poisonouspython1410
      @poisonouspython1410 7 років тому +3

      +SchiferlED Yeah, I agree since the meter is technically an arbitrary unit of measurement I'm not sure why they didn't set it to a nice round number in relation to light speed. I guess changing the standardized length of a meter would cause too much hubub around the world so they had to leave it alone. Bummer though since they're going to all the trouble to redefine the kilo they may as well do the meter while they're at it so it's all neat and tidy.

  • @kcwidman
    @kcwidman 7 років тому +28

    Even though I have only taken a basic level high school physics course, I still really enjoyed the use of the equations to illustrate the complicated nature of this problem. I tried to follow along, and I'm sure I failed, but I got the gist of it.

    • @megatrix500
      @megatrix500 7 років тому +3

      I mean, having taken all of the high-school physics lessons and having touched on college physics too, I can certainly tell that those formulas were quite simple for something as huge and important. Still not SO simple, and also they're used with high-tech measurements, so not at the reach of any physicist, but it's really cool that something as important is also so understandable.

    • @chandel9449
      @chandel9449 7 років тому +3

      Kai Widman Everything he did with the math is basic Algebra. No physics knowledge is needed to see what is happening. If you want to know more about why these particular formulas work, you need knowledge of physics.

    • @kardo7837
      @kardo7837 7 років тому +2

      I've only taken my high school courses, and I understood the whole concept easily after watching it twice

  • @movax20h
    @movax20h 5 років тому

    This is brilliant. The gravimeter doesn't even require calibration per se. It needs to be only traced back to distance and time, not easy to do using frequency standard and laser interferometry. Brilliant.

  • @crisrose9707
    @crisrose9707 5 років тому

    I am glad you went into as much detail as you did since even though some might not know everything that you talked about, if you skipped it all then nobody would have understood it whether they knew what you were talking about or not :)

  • @Biochemguy
    @Biochemguy 7 років тому +27

    I always knew that the Kilogram would be made into a true constant similarly to how the meter and other units of measure have been. This solution is just so elegant in its simplicity (despite not being simple to carry out) that I find it beautiful.

    • @yepok5120
      @yepok5120 6 років тому +1

      you spelt metre wrong

    • @EGL24Xx
      @EGL24Xx 5 років тому +4

      @@yepok5120 you spelled meter wrong

  • @prathameshkale9011
    @prathameshkale9011 7 років тому +175

    make kilogram great again

    • @Donglator
      @Donglator 7 років тому

      make America before am bad good now again

  • @matiasvf2520
    @matiasvf2520 3 роки тому

    your series on the kilogram saved an essay I had to do for tomorow :) thank you

  • @rifdifirebolt
    @rifdifirebolt 6 років тому

    it's 2018
    I'm still waiting on the final result for the definition of the Kilogram.
    Oddly excited for it.

  • @nikoladragovic9283
    @nikoladragovic9283 7 років тому +104

    8:42 *Hey V-sauce, Michael here*

  • @soulstealingginger3612
    @soulstealingginger3612 7 років тому +92

    Did I hear that we're setting the new definition of the kilogram in... America? Hopefully more changes to follow...

    • @cowardly_wizard
      @cowardly_wizard 7 років тому +1

      TheSoulStealingGinger With a sphere crafted in Australia. I don't remember the video very well, that's where he was right?

    • @slendy9600
      @slendy9600 7 років тому

      Two Good i feel like i woulda heard about it if its being done over here. you sure it wasnt Austria?

    • @Farathus
      @Farathus 7 років тому +20

      TheSoulStealingGinger it's civil research. that kind of research doesn't know boarders for decades. you probably have dozens of scientists of different nationalities work on that.
      also that scientist has a very strong Austrian German accent ;)

    • @betaich
      @betaich 7 років тому

      The effort with the Silicon thing is a world wide effort. The raw silicon was created in Germany, than send to Russia for refinement, than send back to Germany to form a monocrystalline structure, than spheres were formed in different country, one of them Australia and measurements also take place around the world.

    • @yettameter
      @yettameter 7 років тому +2

      TheSoulStealingGinger
      I remember hearing from somewhere that the US govt. officially recognizes the metric system, but does not officially recognize the imperial system. In fact, all modern definitions of imperial measurements are defined by metric counterparts (the inch is defined as 2.54 cm for example). Measurements for science and engineering are always in metric. However, too much of the US's populace is too used to imperial, so changing all the signs and books in the country would be both be expensive and not very fruitful.

  • @TheoBerkhout
    @TheoBerkhout Рік тому +5

    Interesting to see that imperial units are a conversion of metric standards held in the USA.

  • @ingsve
    @ingsve 5 років тому +2

    You should do a video about the discrepancies between the Kibble balance and the Avogadro project. As you might have heard the measurements never had time to completely settle before the deadline to fix the constants so that left a discrepancy between the two constants with regards to the kilogram based on what method you use to realize it.

  • @MyNameIsSimple72
    @MyNameIsSimple72 7 років тому +25

    Kilogram machine 🅱roke

    • @BallistaBomber
      @BallistaBomber 7 років тому +7

      David DeGOAT Understanda🅱️le, have a nice day

  • @MrMakae90
    @MrMakae90 7 років тому +181

    How much h p n² f² / 4 g v do you weight?

    • @hanseidottersauger5663
      @hanseidottersauger5663 7 років тому +2

      Lucas Balaminut was "more" right but wrong since p, n, f, v are not constant

    • @moki2093
      @moki2093 6 років тому +2

      Lucas Balaminut weigh*

    • @mainBaisch
      @mainBaisch 6 років тому +1

      actually they are constant, because it will be defined by what measurements they take in that room

    • @jellybean4163
      @jellybean4163 6 років тому

      Lucas Balaminut jgf

    • @piyushsonone7
      @piyushsonone7 6 років тому

      so easy

  • @thaomy4293
    @thaomy4293 6 років тому

    Bro ur videos are so interesting man!!!! Keep up the work i love u dude

  • @poissondesruisseaux3650
    @poissondesruisseaux3650 5 років тому +1

    Thank you! I was looking for that video to explain me why h was better than the mass of carbon 12. Two thumbs up!

  • @anaangueira1797
    @anaangueira1797 7 років тому +4

    I've been waiting for this video for years.

  • @TheRostedChickenz
    @TheRostedChickenz 7 років тому +332

    Just imagine if the janitor erased that whiteboard

    • @Wumbolo
      @Wumbolo 7 років тому +116

      Imagine if the janitor was Matt Damon

    • @abadlydrawnsnowman1648
      @abadlydrawnsnowman1648 7 років тому +6

      verisatium loved your comment omg

    • @smidgeyify
      @smidgeyify 7 років тому +5

      Soooo, Matt Weighmon?

    • @dhkatz_
      @dhkatz_ 7 років тому +7

      If you really think they didn't write that down, you have a severe lack of brain function.

    • @dannydevito7000
      @dannydevito7000 7 років тому +42

      +Doctor Jew If you cant sense obvious humor you have a severe lack of brain function.

  • @Nikioko
    @Nikioko 4 роки тому +3

    Originally, the metre was defined as 1/10 million of the meridian from the north pole over Paris to the equator. And that is slightly longer than the second pendulum which is also said to be about 1m long.

  • @Moxie9
    @Moxie9 6 років тому +76

    -It's that easy, yeah.
    -It's that easy.
    Me: Ok, I am out of here :D

    • @Yolwoocle
      @Yolwoocle 3 роки тому

      They were joking, haha

    • @kagura7107
      @kagura7107 3 роки тому

      And you're smarter than you think :^)

  • @UmVtCg
    @UmVtCg 7 років тому +66

    The US has a Kg, now it is time to stop all the sillyness and to start using it.

    • @kallewirsch2263
      @kallewirsch2263 7 років тому +8

      :-) They already use it. It is just, that they have different names for it.

    • @nameofthegame9664
      @nameofthegame9664 7 років тому +8

      Allie Cat the pound is defined by a 96 year old man from Dallas. He walks out in the wood until he finds a rock that he deems the right one. Then he puts it in a bucket of 89% moonshine made of corn and drinks every drop that pours out. Then he takes a piss after 2 days and it must be a Wednesday. And then he weighs the urine and there you have it! 1 pound! The job as the guardian of 1 pound is a trait that's been passed down through generations.

    • @jakadirnbek7141
      @jakadirnbek7141 5 років тому

      Mars Climate Orbiter agrees 🔥

  • @amitanand7534
    @amitanand7534 7 років тому +135

    it would be cool if we measured a kilogram by how much light bends when it passes by 1KG due to the gravitational dip in the fabric of space time.. impossible but quantifiable

    • @Andrew0you0tube
      @Andrew0you0tube 7 років тому +3

      Amit Anand Wow, great idea actually

    • @illidur
      @illidur 7 років тому +14

      it would have to be close to a perfect sphere

    • @amitanand7534
      @amitanand7534 7 років тому +1

      ohh yea

    • @walkinmn
      @walkinmn 7 років тому +13

      That actually sounds great but i think that it would require a measurement system so sensible that i don’t know if it exists, a perfect sphere, and I'm not sure if you can do the measurements on the surface of the earth.

    • @sakshisaxena7587
      @sakshisaxena7587 7 років тому +4

      +walkin mn i agree. Also, if we miss it even once then we might have to wait for a very long time to measure it again and recheck it.

  • @balapesar
    @balapesar 6 років тому

    Super!! Thanks for all your wonderful efforts

  • @braveecologic2030
    @braveecologic2030 4 роки тому

    What an excellent video. Well described. Thanks.

  • @ThePaintballgun
    @ThePaintballgun 7 років тому +43

    This episode was way better than most of the others.

    • @Nihilore
      @Nihilore 7 років тому +9

      Watch his latest Veritasium2 video where he explains the recent drop in quality. it was an experiment all along!

    • @Austin-dm5bp
      @Austin-dm5bp 7 років тому +1

      Nihilore - Royalty Free Music
      Was going to say this too. I'm really enjoying watching Derek's videos and seeing his meta-experiment in action. I hope he shares if this much more technical video fares differently in UA-cam's algorithms than the other, more simple ones he's been experimenting with lately.

  • @Roozyj
    @Roozyj 4 роки тому +10

    Up until now, I was able to understand almost every video of Veritasium I watched, but this goes waaaay over my head. Maybe because It's about electricity

  • @SaraBearRawr0312
    @SaraBearRawr0312 6 років тому +1

    Oddly, this is one of the few videos by you with math that i actually was mostly able to follow do to it using pretty basic physics based on DC electricity and standard mass units.

  • @neelimams5303
    @neelimams5303 7 років тому

    Thanks for the valuble informations expecting more from You 😊 !!

  • @andersonsmith8625
    @andersonsmith8625 7 років тому +91

    Why is the kilogram called the kilogram. It has a prefix even though its SI. Shouldn't it be renamed the gram and everything shifted down by 10^3?

    • @genessab
      @genessab 7 років тому +19

      anderson Smith we'd have to change every book including those written hundreds of years ago, it's just too annoying to matter.

    • @sytuma
      @sytuma 7 років тому +47

      originally the unit was the gram but since it is so small the more common unit of use was the kilogram.

    • @ZeroTehShadowz
      @ZeroTehShadowz 7 років тому +31

      A teacher once explained it to me. Here's what I remember!
      Back when the first metric system was being proposed the standard for mass was named 'Grare' (I don't know what it means, I don't speak French).
      The French Revolution was also happening at the same time and, apparently, 'Grare' also was a reference to the nobility, so for the sake of not being beheaded they changed it to gram, and they reduced its size to help bakers and stuff make small measurements (like the amount of flour they needed to make bread) more consistent.
      Later they realized that most people were not measuring small enough masses for the gram to be convenient, and since they couldn't go back to the 'Grare' they just multiplied the gram by a thousand and left it at that. After the French Revolution, most of the world just accepted the kilogram as a standard and asked no questions because it was convenient, I guess.
      Again, I may be forgetting a lot of details since I don't speak French and I heard the story ages ago, but that was the gist of it

    • @fatexx544
      @fatexx544 7 років тому +19

      anderson Smith I recommend looking up the "roundest object in the world" video, also by Veritasium. He not only explains the other method of fixing the kilogram (a sphere of silicon atom), he also explains how the kilogram got its name.

    • @AnirudhGiri
      @AnirudhGiri 7 років тому +7

      The SI unit of mass was actually the gram. But it was too small for practical use and so the Kilogram was made into the SI unit of mass. Renaming the kilogram and shifting everything down by 10^3 would just cause confusion.

  • @jonathanwilhelm8891
    @jonathanwilhelm8891 7 років тому +3

    I would like to know more about the quantum mechanics that is beyond the scope of this video. Thank you great video.

  • @betaneptune
    @betaneptune 2 роки тому

    Cool video. Also KUDOS! for not using and "musical" background. Nice and easy to listen to the narration and absorb and think about the content. Thank you!

  • @jiaminzhu406
    @jiaminzhu406 6 років тому

    Hey Derek. Love you video. Could you maybe also make a video about the experiment of redefining length?

  • @brojakishormandal1676
    @brojakishormandal1676 6 років тому +8

    Please a video on definitions
    Of all 7 si base units

  • @ScottLahteine
    @ScottLahteine 7 років тому +3

    I love seeing how previous technological discoveries help to form the scaffolding for new ones. At nearly every juncture we have been justified to say "this was never possible until now."

  • @concettamiccio5814
    @concettamiccio5814 9 місяців тому

    Great explanation! Thank you very much.

  • @ChristAliveForevermore
    @ChristAliveForevermore 5 років тому +2

    Everything in science can be distilled down to the relationships between weights and measures. Kinda blows the mind.

  • @florinsimion6466
    @florinsimion6466 7 років тому +870

    so four potatoes about a kilo...init?

    • @truebluekit
      @truebluekit 7 років тому +77

      Healthy potatoes you got there.

    • @eeshaan1539
      @eeshaan1539 7 років тому +23

      laughed so hard!

    • @RoScFan
      @RoScFan 7 років тому +8

      Simion Florin can you measure those potatoes to an accuracy of a billionth of an electron?

    • @florinsimion6466
      @florinsimion6466 7 років тому +10

      yes...as long as they are Irish potatoes init?

    • @minecrap5256
      @minecrap5256 7 років тому +5

      yes... as long as each potato is equal and weighs 0,25kg

  • @Hoshimaru57
    @Hoshimaru57 7 років тому +3

    I had a thought. We have a scientific definition of what a kilogram is, but is the scientific definition for metric length?
    Ah, here we go: "the prototype meter was defined as 1x10-7th of the length of the meridian through Paris through the pole to the equator." There's a more accurate definition now, but I wanted to know where it started.

  • @Mac1PC
    @Mac1PC 5 років тому

    Here is a question: Why is the unit of weight for solids is 1 kilogram and for liquids 1 liter? Should it not be 1 gram or 1 kiloliter? I mean 1 kg is already 1000g. Also 1 kg water = 1 liter kind of odd. It should be gram and 1 liter so then 1g=1l simple.

    • @sonicspring6448
      @sonicspring6448 5 років тому

      The liter is a unit of volume, not mass, which the kg is. The world "weight" is sometimes used for the downward force of an object, and sometimes for its mass. Besides, the volume of 1 kg of water is dependent on its temperature, to be precise. Re your final comment, the gram was defined when a different system of units was being used - CGS for centimeter, gram, second, and when the switch to MKS (meter, kilogram, second) was made it tied everything together.

    • @Mac1PC
      @Mac1PC 5 років тому

      sonicspring l know about weight and liquid. I was talking about different powers of 10 for similar units of measure. Thanks for the reply. I was hopin youtube gods would answer. I thought it was a worthy question.

  • @santeebandit3246
    @santeebandit3246 3 роки тому

    Stumbled across this channel this evening 3-2-21..and although I’ve zero scientific background, I find the subjects discussed on this channel to be amazing. I love science, although I never excelled at it. Still interests me regardless.

  • @AnonymousAZ
    @AnonymousAZ 7 років тому +166

    Veritasium Sauce here

    • @supertaakot
      @supertaakot 7 років тому +22

      Verisaucium :^)

    • @MrtinVarela
      @MrtinVarela 7 років тому +1

      Veritasauce

    • @gautamdiwan5952
      @gautamdiwan5952 7 років тому +1

      Martín Varela vsauce

    • @nomadic-loyalist
      @nomadic-loyalist 7 років тому +26

      Veritasium Sauce
      Veritasiu Sauce
      Veritasi Sauce
      Veritas Sauce
      Verita Sauce
      Verit Sauce
      Veri Sauce
      Ver Sauce
      Ve Sauce
      V Sauce
      VSauce

    • @transcendentape
      @transcendentape 7 років тому +6

      It's Dirk from Veratablism.

  • @-.._.-_...-_.._-..__..._.-.-.-
    @-.._.-_...-_.._-..__..._.-.-.- 7 років тому +8

    Why is everyone so confused? Basically, the only new principle involved is that instead of power being generated by the relative motion of conductors and fluxes, it’s produced by the modial interaction of magneto-reluctance and capacitive diractance. The original machine had a base plate of prefabulated amulite, surmounted by a malleable logarithmic casing in such a way that the two spurving bearings were in a direct line with the panametric fan. The lineup consisted simply of six hydrocoptic marzelvanes, so fitted to the ambifacient lunar waneshaft that sidefumbling was effectively prevented. The main winding was of the normal lotus o-deltoid type placed in panendermic semiboloid slots of the stator, every seventh conductor being connected by a non-reversible tremie pipe to the differential girdlespring on the ‘up’ end of the grammeters. Moreover, whenever fluorescence score motion is required, it may also be employed in conjunction with a drawn reciprocation dingle arm to reduce sinusoidal depleneration.

    • @cinquine1
      @cinquine1 7 років тому +3

      David S. What a waste of words. You could have just said "they use a turboencabulator", and everyone would understand.

    • @megatrix500
      @megatrix500 7 років тому +1

      And people saying this video was complicated. What if Derek told us all of this with these technical words? I know quite some stuff about physics but I have no idea what a turboencabulator even is.

    • @TaiViinikka
      @TaiViinikka 6 років тому +1

      Sadly, many otherwise-smart people still don't know how to build their own turboencabulator. Some don't even know what it is!

    • @odavenport7smal
      @odavenport7smal 6 років тому +1

      David S. You actually had me up until the fourth sentence...

  • @shyleshsrinivasan5092
    @shyleshsrinivasan5092 5 років тому

    Thanks a lot for this video !

  • @samurlaxiv4907
    @samurlaxiv4907 6 років тому

    This is simply awesome !

  • @sandderi
    @sandderi 7 років тому +8

    It is awesome that there is a science channel that does not try to overly popularize a subject. For people with knowledge on physics this was extremely informative. I can now easily describe how the kilogram is defined. Thank you!

  • @zaza5042
    @zaza5042 7 років тому +4

    the new kg will be 1/1000000th of your debts paperwork

  • @tigertiger1699
    @tigertiger1699 5 років тому

    Well done! Really good👍

  • @janpieterwagenaar1608
    @janpieterwagenaar1608 3 роки тому

    Interesting and good explanation.

  • @deluxeassortment
    @deluxeassortment 7 років тому +6

    Man, that's heavy.

  • @shreyaskul
    @shreyaskul 7 років тому +5

    That's monthly dose of physics.

  • @Ethereal_Phoenix_
    @Ethereal_Phoenix_ 2 роки тому

    Watched the ORB video right before this, very cool to see how this story developed.

  • @waynepalmar6101
    @waynepalmar6101 6 років тому

    love this channel

  • @sheriif
    @sheriif 7 років тому +10

    This was all in my A2 Physics exams (including the hall effect), where we were asked to derive each of the individual equations stated in the video, except for the josephson effect...

  • @alexjago51
    @alexjago51 6 років тому +55

    /r/MapsWithoutNewZealand at 0:35
    Or at least, without the North Island

    • @holocaust_2.0
      @holocaust_2.0 5 років тому +13

      New Zealand doesn't really exist, does it?

    • @JaySybrandy
      @JaySybrandy 5 років тому +3

      @@holocaust_2.0 nah think it's a place in Australia

    • @AnhThuNguyen-zz2hm
      @AnhThuNguyen-zz2hm 4 роки тому

      Auckland exists

  • @RyanPaton
    @RyanPaton 4 роки тому

    It was a fascinating video and I would love to know more but it certainly was not explained in a way that I could understand fully.... I mean I understood broadly what the steps were but not actually why they were the way they were. .i'm looking forward to actually researching this more in-depth and to hopefully be able to actually understand and see the process of all these steps...

  • @leen8761
    @leen8761 5 років тому

    Love that book! Pinker is awesome

  • @SakuraiKunLikes
    @SakuraiKunLikes 7 років тому +3

    This give me nightmares, it reminded me when I took Electrical Engineering that I have to remember all those formulas for exams :'(((

  • @ApplepieFTW
    @ApplepieFTW 7 років тому +66

    Now imagine everything we know is wrong and plancks constant turns out to not be a constant value

    • @xiLoveYouix
      @xiLoveYouix 7 років тому +18

      but... it is constant. The relationship between a photon's energy and its frequency is absolute. There is no way that it could change?

    • @slaughterround643
      @slaughterround643 7 років тому +26

      I'm pretty sure he knows guys, he's just making a hypothetical situation

    • @Reydriel
      @Reydriel 7 років тому +5

      That's always a thought I had. What if these constants weren't fixed? Maybe, in some other part of the universe they change?
      It's all very sci-fi buts it's interesting to ponder :D

    • @DanielDeVito89
      @DanielDeVito89 7 років тому +21

      We'd have bigger problems than not having a fixed definition of the kilogram

    • @Kori114
      @Kori114 7 років тому +4

      Exactly what I was thinking. or what if they change in time and 10,000 years from now they won't understand how adult humans weighed 100 kg because it could have shifted an order of magnitude lower. The science does seem pretty clear right now that these are constant. But how will we know later if this changes? Also, it might be a stretch, but is it possible to measure these to such precision relative to each other? Does quantum uncertainty itself not affect our ability to measure these constants to such a degree of precision? I would imagine they considered that for this application though... But quantum theory has only been around 100 years, things could change... Like Feynman said, we don't really understand quantum mechanics.

  • @quantaviousowandle3211
    @quantaviousowandle3211 Рік тому

    Thanks you I needed dis for my chemistry HL hw

  • @physicsconceptsbytusharkha7638
    @physicsconceptsbytusharkha7638 4 роки тому

    Sir can you please make video explaining how the resistance measured is related to plank's constant. This will complete the explanation of this beautiful video.