Relativity of Simultaneity | Special Relativity Ch. 4

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  • Опубліковано 25 кві 2018
  • Go to brilliant.org/MinutePhysics for 20% off a premium subscription to Brilliant!
    Mark Rober's youtube channel: / markrober
    The previous videos in this series:
    Chapter 1: Why Relativity is Hard • Why is Relativity Hard...
    Chapter 2: Spacetime Diagrams • Spacetime Diagrams | S...
    Chapter 3: Lorentz Transformations • Lorentz Transformation...
    This video is chapter 4 in my series on special relativity, and it covers how things that appear simultaneous from one perspective in our universe aren't simultaneous from other moving perspectives - that is, from inertial reference frames moving at different speeds. This is explained via the Lorentz transformation of coordinates of the events in question, enacted with a mechanical minkowski diagram, aka mechanical Lorentz transformation, aka spacetime globe.
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    Minute Physics provides an energetic and entertaining view of old and new problems in physics -- all in a minute!
    Created by Henry Reich
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 909

  • @acapellascience
    @acapellascience 6 років тому +1164

    This series has already given me more intuition for relativity (especially simultaneity problems) than I got from two physics degrees.

    • @strategen9124
      @strategen9124 6 років тому +7

      acapellascience oh hi

    • @fabulator2779
      @fabulator2779 6 років тому +2

      Yo!

    • @SatyamKumar-ts2jh
      @SatyamKumar-ts2jh 6 років тому +120

      That's an interesting way to say you have 2 degrees in Physics lol

    • @nelsonhoover8462
      @nelsonhoover8462 6 років тому +1

      Same

    • @cheezemonkeyeater
      @cheezemonkeyeater 6 років тому +50

      It's really quite amazing how this channel (and it's sister channel, Minute Earth) manages to repeatedly outdo our educational system in that regard.

  • @otto9141
    @otto9141 6 років тому +1223

    This is a relatively good video

    • @bayardop
      @bayardop 6 років тому +35

      I think your comment happened before this video was posted. I SAW IT FIRST!!

    • @mr.j_krr_80
      @mr.j_krr_80 6 років тому +7

      Get out.

    • @RoboBoddicker
      @RoboBoddicker 6 років тому +17

      Actually, it's equally good in all inertial frames

    • @3ckitani
      @3ckitani 6 років тому +6

      Bayardo Pinzon No, it happened simultaneously. You're just moving too fast.

    • @brendarua01
      @brendarua01 6 років тому +2

      Mercy!

  • @MisterAppleEsq
    @MisterAppleEsq 6 років тому +646

    “Simultaneously spontaneously combust” is fun to say.

    • @lyndawolf7532
      @lyndawolf7532 6 років тому +6

      Mister Apple It is, isn't it?

    • @kindlin
      @kindlin 6 років тому +10

      That is a pretty good one. I also enjoyed the title. Relativity of Simultaneity. Just saying it out loud is worth it once or twice, lol.

    • @5up3rp3rs0n
      @5up3rp3rs0n 6 років тому +6

      At 3:10 I was expecting "simultaneously spontaneously" for some reason, probably because I'm used to hearing these two together

    • @identicalgd2446
      @identicalgd2446 6 років тому +1

      Or is it?

    • @dqw4w9wgxcq32
      @dqw4w9wgxcq32 3 роки тому

      Correct.

  • @thomas.02
    @thomas.02 6 років тому +405

    Why do people simultaneously claim to be first? Maybe because in their worldlines they are first while they are in fact simultaneous to some other observer? Who knows....

    • @_Arminius
      @_Arminius 6 років тому +5

      Good one :D

    • @Felishamois
      @Felishamois 6 років тому

      can you uphold a beat simultaneously to a relatively polyrhythmic beat?
      watch?v=eQ3x2NSasg4 if you're bored with 3 against 4 and haven't got time for 4 against 7

    • @DPMixing
      @DPMixing 6 років тому +11

      I’d venture it’s because these individuals’ lives are so mundane and dull that something as insignificant as being the first to reply on one of the billions of videos on UA-cam enables them an artificial feeling of accomplishment and self-worth that they feel should be acknowledged by complete strangers on the internet. But that’s just my hypothesis...

    • @Robert08010
      @Robert08010 6 років тому +1

      Thomas Chow Maybe due to data compression, the space/time on UA-cam servers is not linear!

    • @JamesPetts
      @JamesPetts 6 років тому

      A more pertinent comment, I suspect, than you imagined, since both the relativistic effects described in the video and what you describe are as a result of the fact that the dissipation of information (including information as to whether somebody else has yet posted a comment) takes time.

  • @livewireOrourke
    @livewireOrourke 3 роки тому +100

    "The takeaway here is that our universe has neither an absolute notion of time..."
    I tried explaining that to my boss last time I was "late" for work.
    Needless to say, it fell on deaf ears.

    • @vishnuvarma8019
      @vishnuvarma8019 Рік тому +5

      Relatively speaking

    • @livewireOrourke
      @livewireOrourke Рік тому +2

      @@vishnuvarma8019 Exactly, but that argument didn't work either.
      jk

    • @LeAdri1du40
      @LeAdri1du40 7 місяців тому

      But there is 2 axis so that means no absolute notion of distance either. Both time and distance shrink or expand to accommodate relativity
      My mind is officially fucked up now

  • @WilliamDye-willdye
    @WilliamDye-willdye 6 років тому +23

    For me, the "oh, I get it now" moment was at 2:18, when he connected relative event-time to relative position. Well done.

  • @phil8378
    @phil8378 6 років тому +41

    I love this relativity series. It’s awesome that you’re making relativity accessible to people who would otherwise know nothing about it

  • @JugheadJones03
    @JugheadJones03 6 років тому +36

    Seeing stuff like this always makes me feel we are just living in an amazingly advanced graphic engine! : )

    • @eyefeelpineal2617
      @eyefeelpineal2617 4 роки тому +6

      To an extent, we are :)

    • @karliesukowaty
      @karliesukowaty 2 роки тому +1

      If you are talking about the quantum level…technically…you’re not wrong

  • @TaliesinMyrddin
    @TaliesinMyrddin 6 років тому +12

    I like how the square thing moves stuff

  • @ewutermohlen
    @ewutermohlen 6 років тому +5

    "Moving perspective" is a thing that changes location relative to another thing. I understand why some people don't get it, because they didn't watch and understand the previous video's.
    Great video on this topic, easy to follow and visually apealing.

  • @Emmylatif
    @Emmylatif 6 років тому +2

    i'm learning so much from this series, I'm always checking your channel for new episodes. thank you for making this so simple to understand

  • @vtron9832
    @vtron9832 6 років тому +122

    Space Time Grids should one day be as common as globes

    • @theramendutchman
      @theramendutchman 6 років тому +9

      Agreed.
      I was thinking that throughout the entire video, it makes everything so much clearer having that physical guideline!

    • @bend.manevitz8261
      @bend.manevitz8261 4 роки тому +2

      Someone (not me) should connect with the other UA-camr guy who built it, make it more mass-producable, and it'll have a niche in all those science-gizmo stores and probably hasn't classrooms.
      Come to think of it, maybe I'll try to do it after all.

    • @ASLUHLUHCE
      @ASLUHLUHCE 4 роки тому

      @@bend.manevitz8261 Are you serious about doing it?

    • @bend.manevitz8261
      @bend.manevitz8261 4 роки тому

      @@ASLUHLUHCE I'd love to, but I don't even know where to begin

    • @2h74webere
      @2h74webere Рік тому

      @@bend.manevitz8261 I found this today and FYI I would buy one for $100. MAKE THEM!

  • @shaillykeshari5408
    @shaillykeshari5408 6 років тому +3

    This is a great series! You make great content.

  • @anantdixit3831
    @anantdixit3831 6 років тому +74

    so, did Han shoot first?

    • @aliensinnoh1
      @aliensinnoh1 6 років тому +24

      That depends on whether you view that event from the theatrical perspective or the special edition perspective.

    • @matthewalexander9277
      @matthewalexander9277 6 років тому +6

      Cause and effect still apply, so Han either responding to Greedo firing, or preemptively attacking, would still have to be a "One or the other" sort of thing I'm afraid. Relativity isn't going to bring the fandom together. =p

    • @anantdixit3831
      @anantdixit3831 6 років тому +4

      That's assuming we know the causal structure of what happened. If we are trying to determine the sequence from observation alone, then we still don't know who shot first. :)

    • @matthewalexander9277
      @matthewalexander9277 6 років тому +1

      Anant Dixit True, but Han’s perspective gives us a far more relevant answer. :p

  • @SoufianeSaidi
    @SoufianeSaidi 6 років тому +1

    The Table you've made is incredible!
    Great work

  • @christianspradlin3929
    @christianspradlin3929 6 років тому +2

    Fantastic job on these videos, I'm thoroughly enjoying them! As a student who took AP Physics 1 and is prepping for the AP Physics 2 test, this is an incredibly helpful review for one of the most confusing and unintuitive topics covered. My mind was blown when you made the comparison between the relativity of time to the relativity of velocity! Keep up the good work!

  • @PKMKB93000
    @PKMKB93000 6 років тому +36

    I understood everything but from 0:00 I LOST IT

  • @mihirbindal4012
    @mihirbindal4012 6 років тому +6

    Yay.. finally. I was waiting for this video from long time. Seemed to me like an year. Maybe I am too fast.

    • @mihirbindal4012
      @mihirbindal4012 6 років тому

      HettGutt, Henry is slow or maybe he is heavy.

  • @pariterre
    @pariterre 6 років тому +1

    This is an amazing serie, thanks for all off this important and educate work!

  • @YanivGorali
    @YanivGorali 6 років тому +1

    Your videos are amazingly intuitive! Thank you so much

  • @abhishuoza9992
    @abhishuoza9992 6 років тому +203

    Take that, people who comment 'first' !

  • @justinz.3993
    @justinz.3993 6 років тому +26

    If I play this video at half speed do I understand twice as much or cut my learning over time in half?

  • @betulbaysal1465
    @betulbaysal1465 4 роки тому +1

    i love space time grids so much! i have studied simultaneoity and time dilation ect., had understand somewhat.. BUT this representation was great, so clear! thank you so much for this.

  • @ozzyfromspace
    @ozzyfromspace 4 роки тому +2

    this idea hit me while studying pdes in the context of fluid mechanics. glad to see other people thinking about it ☺️🙌🏽

  • @CrzyMan_Personal
    @CrzyMan_Personal 6 років тому +3

    I'd love to see how Mark made that space-time globe!

  • @rakshitharsh6169
    @rakshitharsh6169 6 років тому +315

    Einstein was great
    But your videos are awesome

  • @lemniskate_ayd
    @lemniskate_ayd 6 років тому

    Thank you very much! You can explain very well complicated things in no time!! I love your videos !

  • @jensphiliphohmann1876
    @jensphiliphohmann1876 6 років тому

    I really love these videos - and I love the amazing Lorentz-transforming device.

  • @H4XO5
    @H4XO5 6 місяців тому +4

    Do the boxes not burn at the same time but it just takes light longer to reach the other person to 'notify' him of this since the boxes are not the same distance away from him?

  • @saultcrystals
    @saultcrystals 6 років тому +5

    How out of sync will events be when observed from 10 billion light-years away or on opposite sides of the observable universe? Since objects at this distance have incredibly high redshifts (i.e., they're moving away from us incredibly fast), how does this affect the apparent distortion? How successfully have astronomers and astrophysicists incorporated these effects into their observations, calculations, theories, etc.?

    • @thedeemon
      @thedeemon 6 років тому +2

      Expansion of the universe is governed by general relativity equations, not Lorentz transformations, so the effects are different there. There is indeed some time dilation (and it was observed for distant galaxies), but I'm not sure how simultaneity is affected. Good question!

  • @dancarlson9248
    @dancarlson9248 6 років тому +1

    Outstanding and most enjoyable way to take in such a generally difficult subject. What teaching skills! I can only imagine the time and energy expended to have developed and created this 3.47 Minute video, but as one in the audience i greatly applaud you for having done it. Thanks very much. Whatever it is you do for a living i sincerely hope it has something to do with teaching :)

  • @lyndawolf7532
    @lyndawolf7532 6 років тому +2

    I really appreciated your special relativity series. Thank you so much for the time you put into it. Let's not get into who's viewing the time though. ☺

  • @feynstein1004
    @feynstein1004 6 років тому +12

    Lovely video, Henry. But I CAN'T believe you didn't give us the full story. Relativity of simultaneity only works for causally unconnected events. If event A causes event B, then all frames of reference will agree that event A happened before event B. In terms of spacetime diagrams, relativity of simultaneity applies only to those events that lie outside an observer's lightcone. This basically means that these are (causally) irrelevant events and it doesn't matter (to you) which event happened before which, because neither event can affect you.

    • @natasharoddy
      @natasharoddy 5 років тому +1

      I'm pretty sure in previous videos he mentioned that no mass can move at or faster than the speed of light, and as you stated, causality is preserved in all inertial reference frames so long as velocity does not equal or exceed c.

    • @PropheticShadeZ
      @PropheticShadeZ 5 років тому

      Also he avoided acceleration which is good

    • @jessrevill1852
      @jessrevill1852 5 років тому +1

      Some things are not too hard to understand until somebody tries to explain them.

    • @steve1978ger
      @steve1978ger 4 роки тому +2

      Consider c the speed of causality, represented by the 45° lines (or rods of the globe), which never change regardless of transformation. You can now look at the different boxes, and see what events could have been causally linked in your original perspective, and which ones could not have been; and you can see how these relation of possible and impossible are preserved after the transformation.

  • @agiar2000
    @agiar2000 6 років тому +3

    So, if from perspective α, two events can be simultaneous and yet not simultaneous from perspective β, then it also follows that a scenario can be arranged whereby, from perspective α, event A occurs first followed by event B, whereas from perspective β, event B occurs first, followed by event A.
    Does this introduce problems with causality? Could the scenario be such that someone with perspective α reasonably conclude that events A and B are related, and that, since they are related and since A occurred first, then A _caused_ event B? If so, then such a claim would be nonsense to perspective β, since it is a premise of basic causality that effects cannot precede their causes.
    This seems vaguely reminiscent of the sorts of paradoxes that arise when one hypothesizes reverse time-travel, wherein one could take an action to cause or prevent something that had already happened.

    • @Arkalius80
      @Arkalius80 6 років тому +4

      No. If there are two events, A and B, separated such that A is before B and something could move from event A to event B at some speed slower than light (or put another way, there is a valid frame of reference where A and B happen at the same location), then A will precede B in all reference frames. The time between them may change but it will always be greater than 0. Conversely, if the relative ordering if events A and B is frame dependent, then there is no valid reference frame where A and B happen at the same location. It is the difference between spacelike separation (first situation) and timelike separation (second situation). The border between them is lightlike separation, events that can be neither in the same location nor occur simultaneously (and for which the order in time is not relative).

    • @agiar2000
      @agiar2000 6 років тому +2

      Arkalius80
      Thank you for the excellent answer!

  • @davidwoek3041
    @davidwoek3041 3 роки тому +2

    As a first year physics student, this visual representation is very, very helpful. I liked this video before I was studying it, now I REALLY like this. Thanks! :)

  • @jacomohodnik7161
    @jacomohodnik7161 5 років тому +1

    It's pretty nice that this chapter is short and exists on its on. Because it gives us viewers time to let those concepts to sink in

  • @askemervigbahnson333
    @askemervigbahnson333 5 років тому +3

    I have a question: when we say two simultaneous events are no longer simultaneous from a moving perspective, do we then mean that
    A: they actually happen at different times
    or
    B: They still happen at the same time, but the light from the events hits us at different times?

    • @colejohnson260
      @colejohnson260 5 років тому

      Both of your answers are correct - given relativity, the time that it takes for light to reach us defines how we view simultaneity. So, if two things happen the objectively same time then they given some viewpoint can happen at different times. Hope this helps, not sure if what I said makes much sense.

    • @SchrodingersPlatypus
      @SchrodingersPlatypus 5 років тому

      @@colejohnson260 Hahaha mad person too

    • @KiemPlant
      @KiemPlant 5 років тому +1

      Yeah, I was confused about this too. Because if you would be traveling towards the moon from Earth at c/2 as soon as the explosions would happen simultaneously from a viewpoint on earth wouldn't they also be simultaneous from the moving perspective because of the light having to catch up to you?
      I litteraly can't stop thinking about relativity anymore which is the reason I went back to this video. It's driving me nuts...

  • @yusefdanielhassounharmouch1520
    @yusefdanielhassounharmouch1520 6 років тому +7

    When will paradigm (i think that was the channel's name) be available to other countries?

  • @OldGamerNoob
    @OldGamerNoob 6 років тому +1

    Thanks so much. After scraping my mind off the walls watching fermi lab's description of time both space compressing and synchronous stuff being out of sync, I just HAD to see it on the Spacetime Globe (TM) to get my head around it.
    Great stuff.

  • @AlmightyXI
    @AlmightyXI 6 років тому +1

    You quoted Mark Rober but it felt more like rewatching PBS Spacetime's episodes about spacetime all over again, even down to the diamond shaped grid you used to represent spacetime. Also "relativity of simultaneity" best phrase ever!

  • @itsrudetostare673
    @itsrudetostare673 6 років тому +176

    *Pretends to understand whats going on*

    • @adityabhat4523
      @adityabhat4523 6 років тому +6

      Have you watched the previous videos?

    • @M-N00
      @M-N00 6 років тому +1

      me 'n' pure thank you for clearing that up for us

    • @jackmckeown1013
      @jackmckeown1013 6 років тому +1

      I think its hard to grasp not because of the math involved or the concept. Its trying to picture the same event appearing to happen in two different times.

    • @neutronstar6739
      @neutronstar6739 6 років тому

      Azmen thx for making it clear.

    • @typingcat
      @typingcat 6 років тому +1

      I have a PhD in understandology.

  • @Xardis
    @Xardis 6 років тому +4

    Fun fact, Lorentz transformation is a matrix of rotation with hyperbolic sinus and cosinus.

    • @oreole9608
      @oreole9608 6 років тому

      What is sinus

    • @someolddude3858
      @someolddude3858 6 років тому +1

      Oreole1
      I don't know in some other modern language than English, but in English, any mathematical use of sinus and cosinus are incorrect snobbish affectations, apparently derived from some Latin mistranslation of a medieval Arabic math term.

    • @TheRABIDdude
      @TheRABIDdude 4 роки тому

      Oreole1 a sinus is a bone cavity which gets filled with snot when you have a cold. Glad I could help :)

  • @DerguteZweck234
    @DerguteZweck234 6 років тому

    Space Time Globe.. Nice!
    The first time for me to see such a "complex/mindboggling/hard to grasp" matter illustrated in such an easy/intuitive way.
    Brilliant is what it is.
    Thanks for that!

  • @zacharyhodge3065
    @zacharyhodge3065 6 років тому

    This video and the space time globe are awesome! Helped me better understand special relativity, and it's just fun to watch and listen to these videos. Thoroughly enjoyed this 😁!

  • @yusefdanielhassounharmouch1520
    @yusefdanielhassounharmouch1520 6 років тому +3

    Minutephysics, a question, shouldn't the universe in its early state have merged into several black holes considering that it was so dense?

    • @nekoma7194
      @nekoma7194 6 років тому

      Yusef Daniel Hassoun Harmouch It was like a black hole in the sense it was a singularity. But, weirdly it was not a black hole. Do you have a background in General Relativity?

    • @ewutermohlen
      @ewutermohlen 6 років тому

      Yusef Daniel Hassoun Harmouch
      The universe didn't end up like that, this means that the expanding force was to big for it to happen. But several blackholes did form in the early stages of the universele though, hence the supermassive black holes in the center of galaxies. However no one really knows exactly what happend, it all is just a theorie after all. We may discover something new that changes our theorie.

    • @yusefdanielhassounharmouch1520
      @yusefdanielhassounharmouch1520 6 років тому +1

      Ouma Shu not really, but i understand more or less some of the stuff, is it necessary to understand the answer?

    • @mr.j_krr_80
      @mr.j_krr_80 6 років тому +1

      Yusef Daniel Hassoun Harmouch it's always cool to know.

    • @yusefdanielhassounharmouch1520
      @yusefdanielhassounharmouch1520 6 років тому

      Mr. J_Krr_ that's my motto! (not really, but from now on i will say it is)

  • @Ndo01
    @Ndo01 6 років тому +12

    This is some crazy shit

  • @kinomora-gaming
    @kinomora-gaming 6 років тому

    You made this concept very easy to understand, and, the best part is, it seems so simple.

  • @basilg695
    @basilg695 4 роки тому +1

    I NEVER KNEW THIS AND I'VE BEEN WATCHING PBS SPACETIME TO LEARN LARGER CONCEPTS BUT IM MISSING FUNDAMENTALS LIKE THIS BECAUSE THERE IS JUST SO MUCH TERRITORY TO COVER. AHHH THANK YOU ❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @JeffreySushi
    @JeffreySushi 6 років тому +41

    > “world line”
    >steins;gate confirmed

    • @kyles7430
      @kyles7430 6 років тому +10

      Well, steins;gate took inspiration from physics

    • @guaymaster
      @guaymaster 6 років тому +5

      Physics are a Jojo reference

    • @benfrizzell1244
      @benfrizzell1244 6 років тому +9

      I think that literally every time he says World line XD

    • @vivekthomas8
      @vivekthomas8 6 років тому +2

      guaymaster Za Warudo line.

    • @mandalamarcho8060
      @mandalamarcho8060 6 років тому +5

      Mmmmmm i think i saw weeaboo here

  • @mihirbindal4012
    @mihirbindal4012 6 років тому +6

    Isn't Lorentz transformation similar to Eigen vectors and Eigen value?

    • @thedeemon
      @thedeemon 6 років тому +3

      no

    • @ChenfengBao
      @ChenfengBao 6 років тому +8

      A transformation is not "similar to" some vectors and values, that's comparing apples to oranges. The word you're looking for is "related". The Lorentz transformation is a linear transformation that has eigenvalues and eigenvectors, and its eigenvectors correspond to light rays, which is expected since speed of light should be constant under this transformation.

  • @karansapolia2676
    @karansapolia2676 6 років тому

    I am loving this Special Relativity Series! Awesome! This should be a Grade 6 Physics 101. Much needed for the modern science kid.

  • @lucasf.v.n.4197
    @lucasf.v.n.4197 6 років тому

    Amazing explanation! Now I have some intuition of special relativity; can't wait to see general relativity

  • @DysnomiaFilms
    @DysnomiaFilms 6 років тому +16

    I've never been so early... or so confused...

    • @SmartinatorPlus
      @SmartinatorPlus 6 років тому

      DysnomiaFilms ya same here

    • @PropheticShadeZ
      @PropheticShadeZ 5 років тому

      What specifically didnt you get? Its a bit of a mindfuck, but if you take the assumptions it should be easier

  • @Kredige
    @Kredige 6 років тому +6

    If relativity ruins simultaneity, does it also ruin causality? If two events take place right after each other in time from one worldline, could the order of the events be reversed after transformation to another worldline? What if the object, said events happened to, was moving?

    • @kyles7430
      @kyles7430 6 років тому +5

      This is where the speed of light comes in. MinutePhysics hasn't covered it much/at all, but on the "globe" the x=t line is the speed of light. Causality is preserved for all events that are within this "light cone" in the region between x=t line and the t axis. You can only observe a change of order for things that would require FTL signals (which we assume are impossible, preserving our idea of causality)

    • @LordPelegorn
      @LordPelegorn 6 років тому

      causality is a basic principle of physics that must not be affected by the reference frame
      so even though the order of 2 completely unrelated events might be reversed depending on your own movement relative to the events
      a event that happens because of the event before will always be seen as after
      iirc it is because for there to be an "influence" of the first event to the second information has to travel from the first place to the second (with max the speed of light) meaning that the time between the events themselves is at least the time it takes light to reach the second place after the first happened

    • @igorbednarski8048
      @igorbednarski8048 6 років тому

      That would happen only if you went faster than light. This is one of the problems with FTL travel - a spaceship with warp drive would seem to arrive at a destination before It left (from some frames of reference)

    • @redjr242
      @redjr242 6 років тому +2

      This is a fantastic question. It relates to the geometry of flat space-time and the invariance of a distance metric, called the spacetime interval, under Lorentz transformations. The sign of the spacetime interval indicates whether two events could be causally related to each other. If two events can be causally connected (light has enough time to travel between the two), then the order of these two events is the same in all reference frames. If two events cannot be causally connected (light does not have enough time to travel between the two), then there exist reference frames where one event occurs before the other and vise versa.

    • @mitchellchyette6537
      @mitchellchyette6537 6 років тому

      Good question! The replies don't really answer the question (IMHO): If A observes two events as simultaneous, A can conclude that Event 1 did not cause Event 2 because "c". But if B observes Event 1 occurring before Event 2, then to B it would be possible for Event 1 to cause Event 2. Also, is there a frame of reference where everything is simultaneous? Would that occur if the observer is travelling at "c"?

  • @JediNachos
    @JediNachos 6 років тому

    Might be my favorite video from this channel.

  • @macbuff81
    @macbuff81 6 років тому

    I love that box! Very creative and intuitive. I want that globe

  • @fbifbi1740
    @fbifbi1740 6 років тому +4

    Time to make .myself feel smart by noding my head while he says big words

  • @donat880
    @donat880 6 років тому +3

    this hurts my brain

  • @luckynater
    @luckynater 6 років тому +1

    Man, I love this series

  • @bonbondojoe1522
    @bonbondojoe1522 4 роки тому

    Very nice visualisation!!

  • @ExhaustedPenguin
    @ExhaustedPenguin 6 років тому +3

    is there a game where these effects are exaggerated?

    • @thedeemon
      @thedeemon 6 років тому +5

      www.testtubegames.com/velocityraptor.html
      gamelab.mit.edu/games/a-slower-speed-of-light/

    • @supercables251
      @supercables251 6 років тому +1

      Just finished velocity rapter, good gosh that mind fuck

  • @it_was_my_cat
    @it_was_my_cat 6 років тому +3

    For people who don't quite understand, I find it helpful to think of time propagating at the speed of light. This is in essence true, since the fastest information about an event can travel to you is the speed of light. For example, if we look at a distant galaxy, we are effectively looking back in time.

    • @nekoma7194
      @nekoma7194 6 років тому +1

      CozmicK G Yeah, you might have it easier in that way, but you might get a bit stuck later. Consider this. The Lorentz transformations are very very symmetrical in space and time. If time moves at the speed of light, then so does space, but that messes things up. Doesn't it?
      Being a physicist, let me tell you something. Forget that there is something called a flow of time. Just think of time as a coordinate. That will actually help.
      You can even explain simultaneity like this! If you are stationary, you are more in time, and less in space (your world line does not move on the space-axis). Now, someone is moving wrt to you. He is less in time and more in space. This mismatch of relative time and space causes things to be not simultaneous for him if it's simultaneous for you.
      Cool isn't it?

    • @nekoma7194
      @nekoma7194 6 років тому

      German Pepe Exactly. See, it explains more than just meets the eye. It even explains why light bends twice as much around the sun as it should be.

  • @Hillelize
    @Hillelize 6 років тому

    Very good to spit such hard concepts in this pace. It makes suddenly science super clear and so easy to understand. The funny thing with those videos is that they give the sense the explanation was friendly but you understood zero.

  • @klausedwin
    @klausedwin 6 років тому

    This brilliant machine makes relativity much easier to understand. Thanks to your both.

  • @hamwheel8449
    @hamwheel8449 6 років тому +4

    My tiny brain doesn’t get it

    • @Awakeintheaether
      @Awakeintheaether Місяць тому

      Thats because its pseudoscience that has been falsified

  • @alphaq6316
    @alphaq6316 6 років тому +41

    97% of people don’t understand

    • @ohyeahyeahimasian392
      @ohyeahyeahimasian392 6 років тому +8

      Biniam_ Boss i lost him at 0:00

    • @srinivasaraokoppula2132
      @srinivasaraokoppula2132 6 років тому +8

      does that mean i am in that 3 percent.
      i know i am genius

    • @Sax4565
      @Sax4565 6 років тому +6

      "it's science so it's difficult to understand"; come on guys :D

    • @mr.j_krr_80
      @mr.j_krr_80 6 років тому +10

      Say you don't understand. Don't push it on other 96.99999% people.

    • @wat5361
      @wat5361 6 років тому +1

      Please be joking

  • @accouswk
    @accouswk 2 роки тому

    One of the very few videos on UA-cam I have to watch at reduced speed!

  • @JochCool
    @JochCool 4 роки тому +1

    2:15 That helped me so much in understanding this.

  • @d1st0rt037
    @d1st0rt037 6 років тому +10

    First
    To like my own comment 🤣

    • @whosmaya666
      @whosmaya666 6 років тому +8

      But... I.... You didn't...

    • @jakemiller4291
      @jakemiller4291 6 років тому +1

      The reply to your comment has more likes that the original comment about liking your own comment... or something.

    • @PydraxAlpta
      @PydraxAlpta 6 років тому +1

      Jake Miller No longer true

    • @tremen2140
      @tremen2140 6 років тому +3

      Depends on your frame of reference

    • @Ihteshambaig
      @Ihteshambaig 6 років тому +1

      First
      To hate you!
      Just kidding, I am fifth.

  • @tanijahanarabarbhuiya6084
    @tanijahanarabarbhuiya6084 6 років тому +5

    Can this comment Stay up
    I swear its my assigntment
    HELP ME!!

  • @anthonymichael3110
    @anthonymichael3110 6 років тому

    Excelente explicación del relativismo, simple y al punto.

  • @OverlordZephyros
    @OverlordZephyros 6 років тому

    Im amazed at that box dude. Way to simplify something hard to grasp.

  • @vinicius-barros
    @vinicius-barros 6 років тому

    Guys, I thought you were good before but this video brings it to a new level. Thank you for sharing knowledge in such a simple, efficient and funny way.

  • @JRexRegis
    @JRexRegis 6 років тому

    it helps if you visualize the events that are moved horizontally on the time axis as all being present on the time axis. so the box isn't a bit to the left and further up, it's just further up. same with the person, you can see how relatively, less time passes in one second for blue than for red, because blue's instances are closer together.
    we can do this because time is one dimension in our universe, not two, so events can only be on the w-axis.

  • @kitrana
    @kitrana 6 років тому

    yay more of this!

  • @KekusMagnus
    @KekusMagnus 6 років тому +1

    man that's a really neat Lorentz transform mechanism

  • @SishGupta
    @SishGupta 6 років тому

    Feed me more! These are great!

  • @ankitroy6380
    @ankitroy6380 3 роки тому

    Man, this is awesome!!!

  • @TheTURKISHDELIGHT98
    @TheTURKISHDELIGHT98 6 років тому

    I understood that time appears different when you go fast but I never understood why till this video thanks can’t wait for the next one

  • @ilyagershman8516
    @ilyagershman8516 6 років тому

    Thank you so much! I finally get it :)

  • @firstnamelastname4752
    @firstnamelastname4752 3 місяці тому

    I really which you explained that moving box thing better. I had to watch multiple times before I realised I was supposed to be paying attention to the centre line to see the frame of reference.

  • @deeptheory6598
    @deeptheory6598 6 років тому

    Nice work
    Love your channel

  • @horariojoselo7178
    @horariojoselo7178 3 роки тому

    I would have never understood special relativity if I hadn't had this video, cause I don't have the time or the resources to study physics in college. So thank you MinutePhysics. Thank you VERY VERY much!

  • @ashokdarbhe5664
    @ashokdarbhe5664 6 років тому

    1.10 its not the box on right that combusted first, its my mind , my mind got blown watching this. I do not have any words to describe it. Just amazing...

  • @user-ce1eh
    @user-ce1eh 3 роки тому

    Great Video. Thanks!

  • @balajisriram6363
    @balajisriram6363 6 років тому

    Loved it as usual 😀

  • @LordDecapo
    @LordDecapo 6 років тому

    I like the way u did your Xs in this. Its minor. But it's a nice change to make reading it a bit easier.

  • @TheHumanHades
    @TheHumanHades 3 роки тому +1

    I liked the series very much as a student who knows very less about special relativity but please use the position on y axis and time on x axis as it gets very confusing otherwise and I think many people like me would have faced the same problem.Please try to implement that in future videos. Amazing series though 😀

  • @Alex-fr2td
    @Alex-fr2td 6 років тому

    love the series

  • @Conifera15
    @Conifera15 6 років тому

    I LOVE this channel.

  • @zef3k
    @zef3k 6 років тому

    This certainly helps with understanding of general movement. Although we can't witness events happening ever at a time that can be considered 'true' surely we must be able to say that two directly-controlled events happened at the same time, even if that can't be factually agreed upon by observers. Unless I'm mistaken this is specifically speaking of observation of motion, not actuality of motion. Which I'll admit is also susceptible to frame of reference, but kind of like how c is so large as to not matter, generalized location should be exact enough to be able to work out for actual movement, rather than observed. I think the difference is important.
    e: Reading about superclusters this quote seems to make sense to my point "The biggest cluster in the observable universe is called the Great Attractor. Its gravity is so strong that the Local Supercluster, including the Milky Way, is moving in a direction towards it at a rate of several hundred kilometers per second. Speeds at this cosmic scale are measured relative to the Hubble flow frame of reference." It seems specific frames of reference are considered more exact, kind of like different methods of dating artifacts are more specific or exact.

  • @Les537
    @Les537 6 років тому

    simultaneously spontaneously. When you said that I almost had a seizure. Nice.

  • @ezralevino3845
    @ezralevino3845 6 років тому

    I LOOVE THIS SERIES

  • @afnanm9564
    @afnanm9564 2 роки тому

    because of this explanation, i now feel like im on top of the world!, thanks to you and mark!

  • @Zweistein001
    @Zweistein001 6 років тому +1

    Your space-type globe really needs to became a teaching accessory.

  • @leosousa7404
    @leosousa7404 6 років тому

    Thanks! Good series! ; )

  • @LTdrumma
    @LTdrumma 6 років тому

    how did you make this so easy to understand, youre a genius. well we all knew that already

  • @colinwilliams7666
    @colinwilliams7666 6 років тому

    Just watched this before heading off to my physics final. Thanks for the last minute help, Henry!

    • @vignotum132
      @vignotum132 3 роки тому

      It isn’t called ”minute” physics for no reason

  • @tomasenrique
    @tomasenrique 2 роки тому

    These are freaking amazin!

  • @eaceves
    @eaceves 6 років тому +1

    MInd blown...I got goosebumps watching this video because I was able to understand.