The Map of Physics
Вставка
- Опубліковано 26 лис 2016
- Everything we know about physics - and a few things we don't - in a simple map.
#physics #DomainOfScience
If you are interested in buying a print you can buy it as a poster here:
North America: store.dftba.com/products/map-...
Everywhere else: www.redbubble.com/people/domin...
French version: www.redbubble.com/people/domi...
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Or on a load of other objects: www.redbubble.com/people/domin...
Also you can download a digital version here: www.flickr.com/photos/9586967...
I made the music, which you can find on my Soundcloud if you'd like to get lost in some cosmic jam. / dominicwalliman
Errata and clarifications.
I endeavour to be as accurate as possible in my videos, but I am human and definitely don’t know everything, so there are sometimes mistakes. Also, due to the nature of my videos, there are bound to be oversimplifications. Some of these are intentional because I don’t have time to go into full detail, but sometimes they are unintentional and here is where I clear them up.
1. “Isaac Newton invented calculus.” Actually there is controversy over who invented calculus first Isaac Newton or Gottfried Leibniz. Regardless of who it was I have used Leibniz’s mathematical notation here and so he definitely deserves credit. I did’t know about all this so thanks to those who pointed it out. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leibniz...
2. “Maxwell derived the laws of electromagnetism.” This is a simplification as Maxwell’s work was built on the backs of other scientists like Hans Christian Ørsted, André-Marie Ampère and Michael Faraday who discovered induction and saw that electricity and magnetism were part of the same thing. But it was Maxwell who worked out all the maths and brought electricity and magnetism together into a unified theory. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electro...
3. “Entropy is a measure of order and disorder”. This is also a simplification and this does a good job of explaining it better en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entropy
4. Einstein and Quantum physics: I made it sound like quantum physics was built by people other than Einstein, but this couldn’t be further from the truth. Einstein got a Nobel prize for his work on the photoelectric effect which was a key result to show the particle-like nature of light. Funnily enough he never got a nobel prize for his work on Relativity!
Also, if you enjoyed this video, you will probably like my science books, available in all good books shops around the work and is printed in 16 languages. Links are below or just search for Professor Astro Cat. They are fun children's books aimed at the age range 7-12. But they are also a hit with adults who want good explanations of science. The books have won awards and the app won a Webby.
Frontiers of Space: nobrow.net/shop/professor-astr...
Atomic Adventure: nobrow.net/shop/professor-astr...
Intergalactic Activity Book: nobrow.net/shop/professor-astr...
Solar System App:
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/ dominicwalliman
/ dominicwalliman
/ dominicwalliman - Наука та технологія
I'm curious to see what will be added to that map in 20 years
20 days.
I will be the one to add... Stay tuned🔥I'm working on it
@@gontrandhuguesnoah1065 I hope we'll see your achievements soon
Ohh really do something for that
@Abhijeet Singh why you are stupid? Allah put to every one a specific age!!!
"Physicists are not quitters"....you've saved my life :)
I don’t understand are you saying you were trying to suicide?
@@5people829 emo boy's typical cringe suicidal comment..ignore it
@@adnanhowlader143 what on earth is your fucking problem. OP clearly was saying that he was encouraged to continue pursuing physics. I'm sure with your intelligence, you won't really make it far in the world of science - at least not as far as OP. Not to forget your attitude, you seem like the immature type. I'm gonna laugh my fucking ass off if you end up calling my comment cringe as well. It's like a broken player repeating the same shit over and over again
@@adnanhowlader143 tf they prob mean that they got encouraged to pursue physics😭😭
Who the hell is op
as an astronomy major and studying astrophysics, this makes me more excited in the field i'm currently learning
Hey, I am looking forward to becoming an astronomer, please can you help me a little here.🥺
Ps: I am currently in grade 12 right now please it would mean a lot if you could guide me!
@@zheel2048 hey thanks for asking, i'm actually still in my first year and i'm really not yet an expert here lol, but since you're currently in 12 grade rn maybe i could give you some advice. First before going to astronomy you need to make sure you know where you're going and what's your plan for the future because according to my teachers there's not a lot to do in my country at least for an astronomer. But you'll probably ends up in government institution or in university doing research and stuff. My professor even once told me "if you're not interested in astronomy, don't take astro unless you're very interested in it". Even if you're not going to do research, many of astronomy alumni from my uni goes into tech companies working as software engineer or data scientist. For the curriculum, astronomy major requires lots of math and physics. Astronomy courses are usually the same as physics major which includes things like mechanics and electromagnetic field but then you'll also have astronomy specific courses like astrophysics, celestial mechanics, physics of galaxy, cosmology, etc. Oh and also coding and programming are a must. Modern day astronomy are usually doing more analyzing data from the telescope rather than looking at the telescope itself, so knowing how to code is a requirement. I don't know where you live but in my country, uni entrance is done with a nationwide test and or done with your high school grade. You'll need to score good at math and physics there, chemistry is also helpful. Hope this helps you to know a little bit about astro ^^
Sorry if i made some mistakes in my wording 🙏
@@zheel2048 oh and one more, even though astronomy is really interesting but i suggest you take your bachelor as a physics major first then take your masters in astronomy since becoming an astronomer you'll probably need a masters degree or a PhD and by taking bachelor in physics you'll also has the fundamental knowledge of astronomy. Physics major is also a lot flexible than astronomy major since if after you got your bachelor you wanna change career you could become for example a field engineer. But if you're really into astro then sure take it, if you're passionate and good at it there's always people who needs you
@@kzym thank you so much dear for giving me this information, oh and btw I am from India though and you're right that "this field" is quite different like you'll find few people and that's what makes me confused on what to do and what not to do. But will surely follow your advice👍🏻😊
@@kzym that's very sweet of you, thanks🥺 well will currently focus on my 12th and attain good results hopefully.🤞🏻
I remember watching this when i was at highschool on a random day and deciding i want to be a physicist... 4 years later and here I'm finishing my bachelor's degree in physics
I’m contemplating the same thing except I graduated high school about six years ago. Congratulations!
Nice video. Though, I think the "Chasm of Ignorance" and "The Future" should cover over 99% of the map.
That would be way too depressing.
Katzen4u but it's true. And I wouldn't see it as depressing, but a call to action, an inspiration to turn the unknown into the known.
Katzen4u It's only depressing if we were really this close to solving everything we don't know. The unknown is exciting!
Yeah, I guess...
Actually, the map of physics that you seem to want may as well be a poster that reads "YOU DON'T KNOW ANYTHING", and 1% in the corner with this crammed in.
"He also invented calculus, "
*Sad Leibniz noises*
The two came up with similar things at the same time. Unfortunately, Newton was more powerful then.
sad...
ua-cam.com/video/WRRXxYUYJ-g/v-deo.html
In German speaking countries Leibniz is credited for Calculus, not Newton.
Good thing is , the notation we use for integration is leibniz one and not the newton's. So we are using Leibniz integration.
It just amazes me how deep down we humans have explored this universe
We don't know anything
@@hussein4152 Oh we know a lot. Extremely lot. There’s just a lot more to know
@@mridulnarain484 Greatly put.
@@bsherman8236 Define "Real Knowledge"
@@ijsbeermeneer9952 experience
I am currently a student of grade 11. I have decided to take astronomy as an career path. This made me realise how interesting physics can truly be if it's understood properly
same but stuck between choosing astrophysics and software engineering
@@meklitkiros9323 whatever you truly want. We’re all going to die anyways. Choose a path will give you enough to live and that you truly love.
@@meklitkiros9323 same..tbh
@@meklitkiros9323 there’s Computational physics, which is about making computer simulations
All the best to you !
1900 physicists :"We've discovered everything there is to physics boys!"
Albert Einstein :"I'm about to end these people's whole career."
This meme is not exactly applicable since Einstein expanded their career but whatever.
@@kanishksharma1716 haha
@@kanishksharma1716 I swear, I see this même under almost every fucking video recently. And only about 5 times out of a hundred is it actually well used and somewhat funny
Technically relativity and quantum physics were discovered before Einstein in the mid-late 1800s, but in 1900s the knowledge of them expanded a lot, partly thanks to Einstein
Classical Physical can be classified in modern and classical
Classical 0 - 1900
Modern 1900 - .....
Fun fact: My school has this poster in their physics class. I saw it was from UA-cam and searched it.
whoever thoguht about putting it there is cultured
kinda cringe
@Reflex idc lel
@@cat1800 then why are you even here lmao
@@cat1800 you care enough to answer to his comment
I loved this! It was very informative and a great overview. Could you perhaps do a map of engineering too?
It would just read pain in black ink
Fortunately I think they made it
lmfao@@octillionZ
The “mind mapping”-like method of presentation is excellent.
I'm watching these videos just to get away from my degree program for a while, which is Philosophy, never expected that the video will redirect everything back to philosophy
P I L O S O P A U L Well science is based on philosophy. If philosophy had not been existed, science would have been existed also.
physics is basically the philosophy of nature
@@kostasgamer1345 On second thoughts...erm! no, but everything that exist, does so, because everything is imperfect, a result of physics that is imprecise, otherwise, there would be no universe.
@Varoon what are you studying?
Kappa you got Jebaited man im sorry
Physicist are not quiters.....the best line in the video....hats off for you and your work man... Keep it up...
The mask man are you a physicist
warun parker ...no I am a student...but wanna be ....
warun parker ..where are you from...
The mask man I'm from India
Been taking some freelance physics classes.. Much interested in them..
This is the most interesting video I have ever watched about physics in general. Thank you!
@Dino Sauro how stupid can u be🤡
@Dino Sauro A classic hypocrite😅
I remember watching it 4 yrs ago and it still warms my heart .
Lovely video
Lovely channel
🐢💜💜
"Physicists are not quitters" just what i needed to hear to keep me motivated. Thanks! (Great job by the way, and nice drawings/animations/whatever they are)
*Shows a big ass map of everything we know about physics and the universe*
"All of our physics only describes 5% of the universe and everything else is a mystery"
Assuming it's 5% is assuming that we don't know 95% but as we don't know what we don't know, we have no idea, that 5% could very well be 0.000001% for all we know LOL
How would we know that we only know 5% of it
@@melinakorovessi713 ua-cam.com/video/QAa2O_8wBUQ/v-deo.html
It's kinda depressing tbh
5% of the universe is absolutely immense.
What an incredible video...I would like to believe I have a fair knowledge of physics but watching this map let me know how some branches relate to others. I appreciate you taking your time to write this and compile this WITHOUT going into too much detail and summing everything up so nicely. These are such dense and intricate topics and watching breeze over them so easily was refreshing. My mind was blown when the cloud of philosophy rolled in...I find that we cant have one without the other. One asks why we exist and the other demonstrates how. Amazing video thanks again !
Here is how to make a sinusoide wave 2000 Inverter ua-cam.com/video/tCgWO6uxh-U/v-deo.html
Your site creates enthusiasm and gives birth to a scholars journey which all welcomes the young and old, especially dropouts, please! PLEASE! continue this style of education, it is a very humble process.
Thank You!
0:29 Classical Physics
Issac Newton
+ Laws of Motion
+ Law of Universal Gravitation
+ Calculus
+ Optics (Microscope 🔬 , Telescope 🔭 , Camera 📷 )
1:38 Waves
2:00 Electromagnetism (James Clerk Maxwell)
2:24 Classical Mechanics
2:38 Fluid Mechanics
2:58 Chaos Theory
3:09 Thermodynamics
Entropy- Measure of Order and Disorder
3:23 ** Energy **
3:34 Eternalism (Pre-Determined)
Strange Things
3:56 Orbit of Mercury
4:20 Relativity
4:25 Special Relativity (The Speed of Light is constant for all observers)
General Relativity: Spacetime. Masses bend Space and Time
5:04 Quantam Physics
- The Atom
- Condensed Matter Physics
- Nuclear Physics (Fission And Fusion)
- Particle Physics
The Standard Model
- Quantum Field Theory
(Does not include gravity)
*Chasm of Ignorance*
The Future
- String Theory or Quantam Gravity
- Dark Energy/Dark Matter
7:05 Philosophy
+ Nature of Reality?
+ Free Will?
+ Why is it the way it is?
+ Can we know everything?
Good job
Much Appreciated!!!!
You sir, are a Hero
❤️ Precise, exhaustive, organised.
You are jesus
“Maxwell discovered the relationship between electricity and magnetism.”
May I introduce you to Michael Faraday.
Ahh, yes boy
yessss!! Everyone forgets about Michael Farady! He discovered the relationship between electricity and magnetism experimentally and Maxwell did the maths.
*laughs in Oerstaed*
He just combined all those formulas to predict the existence of em waves.
May i introduce you to 'oersted'
physics is insanely beautiful. One of those study fields that one could easily dedicate its entire life studying. truly amazing.
Your way of explaining things through animation is really enjoyable and understandable. 🙂
Hey thanks for all the positive feedback everyone! I'm really happy with the response. Lots of people interested in a map of mathematics which I think is a great idea! I'll get my thinking cap on. And I think I'll do more videos with this cartoon animation style, it seems popular.
Thanks for the video. You covered quite a lot in this video but separating out the "branches" I think you miss how a lot of stuff is inter-related. For example you really can't talk about nuclear physics as a branch of Quantum Mechanics and leave out Relativity's E-mc^2 which describes the energy released by a nuclear bomb. Nor can you talk about ionising radiation without Relativity. And then there's Cosmology which needs to embrace both Relativity and Quantum Mechanics. I think you should have come back to those relationships before you spoke about "the chasm of ignorance" and also explained what Dark Matter and Dark Energy are a little more.
DominicWalliman could you do a video on biology too? I'm a biophysics major and would love to see a video done on the amazing world of biology too. Keep up the great work, awesome video! -cheers
DominicWalliman Yes Please keep doing this work.Idk bout others but I'll keep on sharing your videos with my friends
DominicWalliman I want you to know if you didn't already, I found out about this video from an article done about this from Flipboard.
cllax14 wo, I wonder what biophysics is, is it nanotechnology biotechnology or some culmination of both so interwoven to be distinguished. Hey, a wild guess is mri amd ct scan a product of it?
Nobody:
Not a single soul in the universe:
Highschool physics: friction is fiction
You reduced the humor in your comment by -10 times upon using the "nobody:" meme. I'm sorry bro.
enzo queijão why tho man :0
@@adastrizzy Its wayyy too overused by little kids on the internet, so putting it in inherently makes your comment a tad bit less funny. Still a good joke nonetheless
That sad part about this is that in many cases you could put "undergrad physics" in place of "highschool physics" ;)
So you mean you are very good in calculus to beat problems with every resistance and factor included?
Love your maps and explanations. It gives a broad overview which is important to know. Thank you for that.
I love the format in terms of its content, the illustrations and the duration. It would be helpful if you could direct me to a video in which you make reference to all your previous videos and how best to navigate them. Your Playlist is quickly becoming my favorite Playlist in all of UA-cam.
My boi Einstein just one day kinda creates an entire new field of physics that changes everything...Holly shit
GameWorldRS and at the beginning they told him this ain’t it chief.
2 new fields. He is also one of the fathers of the quantum mechanics.
GameWorldRS except einstein stole most of his ideas from a French scientist named Jules Henri Poincaré
Not just in a day brother.. It took years of hardwork to come up with those highly successful theories.. Saying he just done it in one day is just so disrespectful to him.
Grow some respect brotha.....Don't call Albert Einstein "boi"... call him Sir....coz our brains combined is probably not equal to his...and of course we do love him.
"physicists are not quitters" I loved that line😘😘
Great video, please keep making such videos.
ua-cam.com/video/WRRXxYUYJ-g/v-deo.html
@@braveboy2376 I studied physics for 2 semesters and quit.
It's one of the most interesting videos that I've ever seen in my life. I wanted to get an idea (a kind of overview) of the laws of our physical reality being represented as a total picture which you've rightly named as the Map of Physics and you've shown it wonderfully in your video. I'm very thankful & grateful to you for enlightening us with the gift of knowledge in such an orderly & interesting form in its totality. And many thanks to you for adding Philosophy to its end for addressing the unending quests of mankind for the unknown & unknowable truths.
Very nice video! The entire gamut of Physics explained in a condensed manner within 8 minutes! Great! All the best for your efforts!
Please do another science maps. Please!
- -physics-
- -maths-
- -biology-
- -chemistry-
- -computer science-
- material science
- astronomy
- geology/earth science
- economy
- sociology
- history
- geography
Map of History ? Maybe too short
I don’t think history is a science
@@putinsgaytwin4272 errr.... i dont really know that tho
But in indonesian high school, there is history class for only social science major.
What about psychology?
You should part. Social science (economy sociology history geography philosophy ) / Nature science (earth science biology chemistry physicz maths) / tech (computer science material science engineering astronomy)
Hello I'm a high school student from Turkey and I randomly found this video on UA-cam. Firstly thank you so much for this video, it really helped me a lot!! And another thing that I appreciate is adding English subtitles! It can be hard sometimes to understand science talks for me as a language learner. Thank you soo much! 😊😊
Hey you are very welcome! I really happy it helped you out. Yes I'm adding subtitles to all my videos as I think it is very helpful, and lots of people are translating them as well, including Turkish which is awesome!
Hey you are very welcome! I really happy it helped you out. Yes I'm adding subtitles to all my videos as I think it is very helpful, and lots of people are translating them as well, including Turkish which is awesome!
Me too, I found this video on UA-cam, I'd like to see subtitles on your videos, I speak Spanish but can understand almost everything haha
I've heard there's a big brain drain over in Turky with the theocracy arresting Students and teachers that has affiliations to the Americans. Is that true?
Well, it is true that Erdoğan's arresting people. But he's arresting the people who have affiliations to terrorists that tried to do coup in Turkey. The Turkish Government blames "Fetullah Gülen" for coup who has lived in self-imposed exile in the United States since 1999. So it is believed that arrested people have been went along Gülen's widespread and influential religious movement. If you want to know more about this you can read these " www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/12/turkey-failed-coup-attempt-161217032345594.html " " edition.cnn.com/2016/07/18/middleeast/turkey-failed-coup-explainer/ "
Excellent video! I love all of your map videos, very informative and straight to the point. The animations are wonderful as well. Good job!
I simply adore it, thanks. It reminded me why I loved physics at the first time. Although i am not a physic student but i believe that these are general information that we all should know. Thanks
I just came across your channel. This is the second video I'm on, the first being the Map of Mathematics. You lay out everything so well. Subscribed.
Barnard Rabenold
Whoa, same also, came from math first, then physic, then sub XD
Me too :v
same as well...this is freaky...
Barnard Rabenold What a coincidence, me too...
I love how the music switched to upbeat when he talked about relativity and Albert Einstein
These are great! Thank you for creating them. I myself have become very curious about independent self-directed learning, and ur videos have been super helpful!
I have found it a very comprehensive way to learn what you have said in your video using the animation and I kind of understand a lot better than I used to know about physics.
this made me remember how much i love physics. thank you!
I wasn't sure if I should keep watching after 5:46, but a sick guitar solo started playing in the background and I knew I had to finish the video.
As a non-physicist… I can’t really get my head around but I am interested in philosophical questions. Therefore, I am here to explore more for understanding this universe! This video is really helpful and gives me a glimpse about physics!
All is one in nullo space
What an awesome video! So well done. Not dumbed down but understandable for all! Keep up the great work. 🙏
I love Physics. I can't express it in words.
Nature rules 🙂
Same--
Hey for those of you who are looking for a print, you can now buy a poster here, with bonus quantum physicists! www.redbubble.com/people/dominicwalliman/works/24105984-the-map-of-physics?asc=u&p=poster&rel=carousel
The aspect ratio of the posters is different to the video so I rebuilt it to make it fit pleasantly. I had some extra room in the design and so added in four foundational quantum physicists.
Some people also asked for a screensaver image so I have also uploaded the map from the video as a .png at 2560x1440 which you can get here. I happy for you to print this out for yourself or use for educational purposes, but please no commercial use.
www.flickr.com/photos/95869671@N08/30976775430/in/dateposted-public/
One again, thanks for all the interest! It's been great! More videos soon :D
Just ordered three. One for home, and one as a gift for each of my kids' science teachers!
Hey that's awesome! I hope they enjoy them. Thanks!
DominicWalliman I live in another country can I buy?
I think it depends on which country, but I think redbubble is somewhat global so give it a go. :)
DominicWalliman actually I live in Brazil
I like the animation style because I think it makes it accessible to more people, more ages. Thanks for your input 👍
love your summaries ! they are worth gold !
I wanted to say thank you for your amazing video.
Right now I am studying second year of a physics degree, and although I am just standing in the fist part of the map, I am eager to get to the edge of "The Chasm of Ignorance".
I am greatly interested in philosphy of physics, although some of my classmates make fun of it. I believe it is really important to understand why we do physics, and the implications that cutting edge discoveries have on our understanding of reality and knowledge itself. I wish that I could work on this field in the future.
Thank you.
Well said. Knowing why you're doing or learning something is important, whether it's only personal or universally applicable.
Don't take the description of "ignorance" too literary, it displays something of an ignorance in the v-author as well since people can't agree on what it is. For example, many would say with physicist Sean Carroll that we do know to merge quantum physics with gravity in a coherent and useful quantum field theory. [Read his last book on that, or look up his recent Gifford lectures on the toob if you want a rapid intro.]
E.g. Feynman's path integrals are the basis for Wilczek's suggested term Core Theory (Standard Model of particles and gravity combined) and it works same as each separate quantum field theory. It is just that quantum field theory is known to break down right above the inflation/non-gravity unification scale (or gravity wouldn't exist, see e.g. Cumru Vafa et al on that), way before black hole innards does. Here is where our ignorance starts at the latest.
Re philosophy, the reason most make fun of it is that it hasn't - contrary to the video - inspired to results. In fact its absence of published results - even on the claimed 'philosophy of science/physics' - has judged it, including its grandiose claim to explain everything else as it is apparent that science is doing that. (E.g. the absence of empirical results means the practical "science of philosophy" is that philosophy is buffoonery at best. Not that buffoonery or anything else can't be an inspiration for scientific hypotheses...)
Well, since I am self-aware and a physicist (PhD in Electronics), my opinion is that I couldn't be more informed on physics and how to (successfully, if I may say so myself) do science as a physicist.
Philosophy has never published any empirical result, and in as much as that is a test it has failed.
We can make it a formal one if you wish, just apply a binomial yes/no test on the relative rate of philosophy/science papers. We need < 4k peer reviewed science papers to do a hypothesis test at 3 sigma. That is why I feel confident in claiming that the science of philosophy is that philosophy does't work as it claims (derive or inspire facts about the world, and notably as it pertains to the science it haughtily wants to 'explain').
And now to the remaining fragments of the comment that can be further discussed:
No, I haven't read Carroll's book yet, but I know he accommodates philosophy, as does other scientists. That behavior is inconsequential of course. To promote it as somehow an argument is the same confusion that some people make between subject and object when religious accommodationists point out that some scientists are religious. They are likely personally identifying with the subject ('if someone criticizes religion, that person criticizes *me and how I am*') and oblivious to their analysis error.
Finally, analogous to some theologians you insert the history of science as it was still growing apart from its societal roots of the time. Physics succeeded when it was liberated from those religious and philosophical roots.
[Here you touch a pet peeve of mine when you imply science is based on "induction", when it obviously isn't. It is rigorous testing that distinguishes science from other areas and explains why we can know facts. C.f. the well known model of hypothesis testing in statistics which can be applied from observations on up, and the well known competition between more or less well tested results - "There Can Be Only One" to quote a cult film.
(Hypotheses may be induced, but they can generally be inspired by anything. Dreams even, c.f. Kekulé and his hypothesis on the aromatic ring.)]
Hello chuvzzz and thank you for your comment. I agree with you in many of your points and with Sean Carroll's post too, thank you for sharing it. In my experience I have found that some scientists and specially some physicists exhibit some kind arrogance, as if the study of physics made them be the elite of science or knowledge.
It is good to see people with a broader scope of interests than just whatever you are studying / working on.
Kind regards.
What a gentleman
1900 PHYSICISTS: now we know everything
ALBERT EINSTEIN: general relativity
1900 PHYSICISTS: 😐
@Pete you must be a typical flat earther american
@Pete why is it a bs? interested to know your answer
@Pete lol 🤡
ua-cam.com/video/BhD3AwTAYSI/v-deo.html
Absolute great work. Very direct and clear presentation for such a vast theme. Congratulations.
Came here to say that I absolutely loved this content 👍 it's visual and wraps up everything in an easy way
Nice!
Did you know, Feynman once tried to create a map of physics. You can read it in "feynman's tips on physics". He said something like it wasn't doable (at least for him in his lectures). So, I guess, you did it!!
I wonder it it would have passed his scrutiny! :)
DominicWalliman I just looked it up bc I am reading the book right now. So, on page 17 at the top Feynman says: "[...] But there's no map, "guide to the perplexed", you see. So I want to make a map. But it turns out it's not a feasible design. I mean, I just never made such a map".
He wanted to make a map because he wanted the freshmen in Caltec to know where they are in physics. This quote is part of an interview on the 4th march 1966 in Altadena, CA if anybody wants to look it up (I dont know if it is available online)
thanks for this comment. It's witty, educational, and helps people like me to stumble upon another one of Feynman classics :)
I am reading the lectures as well. Just finished Vol 1 and starting on 2. Felt like such a boss when I finished the first volume. Where are u at now in the lectures?
Sean Dafny I am not reading the lectures; just a small book which contains a few review lectures of him including general tips on studying physics and a bit of background information on how the lectures were created etc.
But I am studying Physics in University right now. It is a pitty but I dont have the time to read them.
"It was a out the year 1900"
Says: "Albert Einstein"
Badass music starts playing
These videos are very much useful to me as a 16 year old trying to figure what are the things that I need to know. UA-cam recommended your channel so lately. Thanks for your videos.
This is a very beautiful video, it shows us how simple the thing is when we had already convinced our minds the opposite, great work keep up!.
a branch of mathematics would be awesome! I loved this video and added it to my math and physics playlist, thank you so much. btw I came across this video because vox wrote an article about it. but let me not get side tracked, we'd love a mathematics map
Whoa! Yes, a map of the world of math would be fabulous...particularly for us fine art types.
This is the map of Zogg from Betelgeuse, right?
Ooh, can I see your playlist mate?
I feel math would look more like a tree than a map, stretching into the unknown rather than mapping reality ;)
I personally would also like a map of chemistry, which is often forgotten in favor of physics or biology :(
Map of philosophy!!!!????
Map of philosophy = map of all the knowlodge
Weed, crack, meth...
@@kenjinho123 *Map of all "knowledge"
@@UserName-ii1ce hahahaha
Marijuana marijuana
I was in search of this type of video for a long time and glad that you made this ❤️❤️.Hope you will make more videos in future which will be educational and interesting.
As you continue to make more and more maps, these maps could possibly be intros to playlists that dive deeper into each subject.
Now that i have this map overview, I want to see examples, neat things, notable steps in subject progress.
your video is just perfect, it's really important to have someone explaining us why... just why physics is so interesting
7:37 "Those are the big (philosophical) questions. Ones which we may or may never answer, but there is no reason to give up trying. After all, physicists are not quitters".
This really helps locate this vast field within an architecture of relationships and brings to focus overarching systems. Thank you for the visual clarity. Really enjoying your creation of maps to illuminate knowledge to create tangible understanding and learning.
I like your way of defining each subject in a simple way. Good job. Keep it up.
I like the scope and the animations. The maps are really helpful. Thank you!
I realized how much I have missed Physics becoming an Electrical Engineer...I sometimes think I may have made a mistake pursuing engineering...
Love Physics😍😍✌
It’s never too late to pursue your passion!
Same as you I'm studying to be an engineer but love physics
I learnt over half of this in high school, but obviously we dont go too deep into it. I properly understand most of this but the equations we learn are not nearly as difficult as the ones i assume we would learn in uni. I dont plan on pursuing this in uni, but i still learnt a fair amount in school already.
So how isbit I mean electrical engineering is it hard 🤔and easy to understand
@Science Revolution shut up bot.
Do some research
this is he best video i've watched recently!! congrats for such a great content
Thank you so much for this video. It was very informative and gave me a brief look at what I will be learning this year.
This.. this is the best thing I've ever seen on UA-cam concerning physics.. you nailed it man.. you nailed it😢
Digging that snazzy beat which kicks in when you first mention Einstein
ua-cam.com/video/WRRXxYUYJ-g/v-deo.html
This is agreat video. I love how simply and effectively one gets a big picture of all Physics. Thank you!
That was superb! A complete visual of what is. Keep up the good work.
Einstein : finally i can say we understand this universe
max plank : hold my Quantas
NERRRD
Spelling is wrong
@@zehrasaleem2424 you right, i'll fix it thanks
That'd make a good wall poster...sell it.
Great idea! www.redbubble.com/people/dominicwalliman/works/24105984-the-map-of-physics?p=poster&finish=semi_gloss&size=small
I was thinking the same, until I saw the description. :P
@@domainofscience hello; i checked your website nd all the items are amazing but they're little too expensive according to Indian rupees like i added 1 hoodie nd 4-5 stickers to the cart nd total was of something 103 dollar which is seven thousand rupees md that's hella expensive 😭. Can you plz keep the prices a little low ;(
This is very colourful and amazing. It has a great flow like this leads to this and etc. I'mma include my ginormous syllabi to this and modify to learn Physics even better. Seriously, thanks man.
Wow !! Loved watching your video. Gave a clear concept of where actually the things are. ❣️
I have not seen anyone mapping all of the scientific disciplines like this - excellent work. The graphics are incredible. An expanded map of engineering and medicine would be great.
I’ve been coming back to this video for several times now - it’s so concise and wholesome! Physics is just such a great and diverse science AND it tells you so many things about reality.
+ we should watch this 100% in physics class
Yeah me too and o was woried about what major of engineering to choose cause they depends on physics
Wow, SO awesome! You somehow communicated all that in a way that made an awful lot of sense! Thank you and keep it up!!!
"Math is the language of physics": what a nice formulation and a great graphical description of physics! Very well prepared video, thanks!
I had had heard this phrase 40 years ago. And do you know that notes are the language of music? And that mathematicians are not physicists? And physicists are mathematicians?
@@user-ky5dy5hl4d Nice! Richard Feynman would disagree with the last aphorism, or is a "not" missing? He explains that in a UA-cam video.
ua-cam.com/video/obCjODeoLVw/v-deo.html.
And I would say that music is a language in itself: the language of love, of the soul, ...
@@andreasbleeke I have never liked Feynman. But as far as physicists to me Erwin Schrodinger is unbeatable. And math is a strange issue. I have always said that 1x0=1.
well youre wrong.@@user-ky5dy5hl4d
I took freshman physics from Lowell S. Brown in the early 1970s. That is long before he wrote the book on Quantum field theory. That was just a bunch of math. I have been watching youtube physics videos every day for a couple years, and I was able to verify everything in this Map video. This Map video is great. It could have been made 2 years ago, instead of 2 days ago. That would have helped.
as a student of physics, i adore this! thank you!
This is a very good introduction of Physical without the using formulas and equations! I enjoy it! Thank you.
this was so cool, as a biotech engineering major finishing the introduction to physics course this was amazing tysm!
Really great work. My physics classes will be seeing this tomorrow.
Map of medecine (differents types of medecine and domains within) would be incredible!😊
Wow, that’s an incredible interesting and detailed video. Thank you so much for it
Love this channel. Amazing content and awesome way of expressing it as well.
Thank you for this video. Im a physics student and I've lost all motivation this week. I've been sad and depressed, not sure what I should do with my life. I wonder everyday if I even belong or what the fuck my purpose of living is. I remember that little dumbass kid who knew nothing of the world... who wanted to be a scientist but didn't even understand what science was. I wish I never let go of that little ignorant ( or innocent) side who difted to a world of deprivation.
This video made me feel a little like him. I wanted to become a physics major because I wanted to discover the secrets of the universe. I would continue and write out all the reasons why that statement dosent make sense. But for once I don't care. We will match to the secrets of the universe you and I kid.
Bruh I feel the same. I'm a physics major and this past semester has me really reconsidering my life choices but panicking because its waay too late to change my major now. This video kinda helped me rekindle that passion for physics that I had, but I still need to put in a lot of effort in the areas that confuse me the most like calculus
@@afia7425i'm sorry for annoying you but i have a question . I have always wanted to be a physics major but i'm just so hesitate , would be taking it as a minor a better choice ?
@@TheBlueKnight- I can't give you a proper answer without knowing your more about you, your work ethic and how easily you pick up on complex topics. The best answer I can give you is if you really like physics, and can handle the theoretical part, as well as all the math that comes with physics, then you can definitely do it as your major, if not then probably do it as a minor.
@@TheBlueKnight- I'm currently a physics major as well, in the UK. Know that first year is as fundamental as you're going to get, and in that sense, learning Physics is wonderful. There comes a point however when intuition fails, and you must follow the mathematics. Your work will be explained through mathematics and perhaps solely through physical concepts and terms which will be very difficult to explain to anyone outside of the field. If that brings you satisfaction, then go for it. Me personally, I realised that I prefer being able to communicate my ideas and inventions, so I'm switching to Mechatronic engineering :) . If you want to solve the questions of the universe, go for it - but keep in mind there will be a long road until you can understand the implications of mathematical solutions. Do not fall into pop physics (Neil degrasse tyson, bill nye, etc). You must have a passion for this subject to make it, it's an art, and at no point will you be able to consider your job prospects after your degree. You don't do physics for job prospects, unless your dream job is to do research. If you want to know for sure, find easy reports and see if they interest you - I recently did a literature review on Google AI team's quantum computer supremacy report (quite difficult to read even for me haha) but read it and see if you see yourself in it. Alternative, LIGO's gravitational waves report is also very good, and easier to read if you're interested in Astronomical data :)
Omg you are sooo me
Please do a map of mathematics, common causes of death, cort procedures , or computer algorithms
Any big word concept with tangled sub-fields that usually don't get simplified down to a 2d map
Please do.
Seconded!
I believe Zogg the alien made a map like this on his channel.
like hard rock and metal?
I wouldn't call the map in this video completely accurate. There is so much cross over between special relativity and quantum mechanics that these two areas have been fully merged into relativistic quantum mechanics, quantum field theory, and the standard model. Placing all this on the quantum side isn't that accurate.
Thermal dynamics and optics also cross over with quantum mechanics and relativity. Yet even the most advanced physics must line up with classical physics in what's called the classical limit. This means classical physics is used to test the sanity of all the most advanced theories because those advanced theories must match what's been shown to occur in experiments in the classical well-tested realm.
Physics has a lot of tangled sub-fields and it is impossible to accurately draw this in a 2D map.
Awesome video. You've helped me divide physics into digestible topics to study one at a time
How long did this video take to complete?
thats actually an interesting questiom. so i go thumb up and hope for an answer with you ;P
Mr. Sanchester sub
hmm...
A couple thousand years...
13.8 billion years you mean? :)
Thank you for this, its quite interesting to see how everything connects together and I dont think I've watched anything before that focused on it.
I enjoyed it,so nice video almost all about physics just within several minutes.
amazingly informative and beautifully animated, thank you
2:08
It was Danish scientist *Oersted* who found that electricity and magnetism are related. He found this when he observed that a compass needle is deflected when a electricity passes through a wire placed near it.
*Ampere* and *Faraday* supported this observation by saying that electric charges in motion produce magnetic field and moving magnets can produce electricity.
The unification was achieved by Scottish scientist Maxwell and Dutch scientist Lorentz.
happy danish noices. (im danish)
Would LOVE a print poster of this map!
Hey thanks, I just got it up for sale here. Thanks man! www.redbubble.com/people/dominicwalliman/works/24105984-the-map-of-physics?asc=u&p=poster&rel=carousel
love it... helps a lot navigating all info and their relation....BIG THANKS
I Just rewatched this Video in 2024 and I must say that this is a piece of Art. The way the Artwork is drawn and animated and the music that Changes into more rocky/funky tunes once Einstein disrupts the classical concepts is just genius. Love it.
Thanks for this :) it’s a great itinerary of my journey into physics and what I’ll be tackling in the future.