I agree it was an emotional statement but to me it feels like she's repeating a statement she's been repeating to people when they ask her why she keeps hope in seeing him again. She says it like that bc she's been saying it to others for so many years. But that's imo
Consider this: when you were 5 years old, living from age 5 to age 6 meant experiencing 1/6 of your life. However, when you were 19 years old, the span from 19 to 20 represented only 1/20 of your life. By the time you reach 59 years old, living from 59 to 60 accounts for just 1/60 of your life. The conclusion is that as you get older, each passing year constitutes a smaller fraction of your entire life. That's why it feels like time is passing faster as you get older-it's not that time is speeding up, but rather your perception of time changes. Each year becomes a smaller fraction of your life, making it seem shorter in comparison to when you were younger.
Doesn’t account for the phenomenology of life and what it is you’re actually doing. Kids don’t remember much of their lives, and then there’s a salience to all kinds of new experiences. Adults with dreary repetitive jobs feel a passage of time different from somebody in a war zone, or a farmer who works his land and saliently experiences each season. And compare all those to somebody who spends much of their adult life on the sofa playing video games or otherwise attached to screens. The phenomenology of time is also disputed by ‘flow’ states of optimal performance or being in the Zone. Fulfilling moments. There’s a radical difference in time experience when out in the wilderness on a thru-hike where day after day you’re in a remote area and detoxed from mobile phones. A long walk in the sun can feel like a week, or a long walk in the rain. The mathematics of percentages as we get older doesn’t even come close to capturing the diverse ways people can experience time and, so, their lives.
Just wow! This is in my top 5 of favorite movies. I watched it with my daughter when she was about the same age. I held her tight walking out of the theater. Never seen these details about Cooper being a different dad from a another timeline! Dope!.
The way it was explained to me by physicists is how women take 45 minutes to get ready to go out and men taking only 10. That's time dialation. In the womens mind she perceives it as quick but reality it's taking forever.
Which is a total bs scenario given how he would have seen what happened(albeit playing out painfully slow), understood they weren't going to get back for decades and therefore he would have rightfully left them behind. Don't forget he himself was also subjected to time dilation being also very close to the event horizon, but just not as severe as the cooper expedition so as he left orbit of Millers planet he could have gone back and reported what happened and in the many more decades of "normal time" away from the black hole another expedition could have, should have and would been sent from earth, including placing an AI controlled rescue vessel in orbit of Millers planet for whenever Cooper and his crew finally returns from the planets surface. So all things considered, this man was stupid to remain there and realistically wouldn't have nor needed to have.
You know people dont really go insane just because theyre alone right? Its a common nonsense trope that doesn't really happen irl. Humans are more resilient than that.
Also this man could have switched to an orbit trajectory around the planet rather than around the black hole which would have somewhat equalised his time to their time. Sure, Cooper and his crew may have reached orbit to find this man and ship were now in orbit much closer to the event horizon than they are on the other side of the planet furtherest away from the black hole, which would take decades relative to their position to meet him, BUT, not if they then move to intercept it and the spacetime would equalise rather quickly as they get closer.... ya the whole scenario is bs though and as touched on in this vid, such extreme gravitational and centrifugal forces would absolutely shred the planet unless it was... Pffff... neutron star levels of density lol, in which case you don't approach for many obvious reasons!!
@@jerometruitt2731 Some do, don't. It's possible but highly unlikely this guy would given how NASA very carefully hand pick people resilient to such mental breakdowns.
The part where Murph refers to her father on the 3rd person I'd argue this is simply her maturity in language. Since it has been such a long time she's simply referring to a very old promise
Time Dilation is such a scary and screwed concept. I will never forget the time dilation in the book "The Forever War" since it was the main point of the book showing the reader the problems that comes with time dilation when entering a galactic war. Watching all your comrades die just to return to earth and see humans evolving into a utopia and that the war ended hundreds of years ago even though you just fought a bloody battle a few days ago was so sad. Still one of the cutest and happiest endings to a book I've read though. (Won't spoil that bit)
Seriously, because when this movie came out, we had never been able to actually capture what a black hole looked like & could only speculate. But then almost 10yrs after the movie came out, we finally managed to take a grainy, fuzzy picture of one in real life... and it looked EXACTLY like how they had depicted it in the film! The real life picture is facing the black hole at a different angle from what we see in the movie, however, when you adjust what is shown in the film & peer at it looking down from the perspective of it's "North Pole", if you will... the movie got it PERFECTLY accurate. Nolan spared no effort in making sure to give the audience something very accurate & also very special. 🥲🪐🕳
Why would like a hard science fiction movie and the most idiotic piece of fantasy nonsense ever made? Contact is trying to show what could potentially happen if we intercepted a message from an advanced intelligence, whereas Interstellar is fantasy rubbish about people coming up with an idiotic solution to a problem which could never happen, with so much impossible science, magic, and plot holes in it that it's impossible to take seriously. I mean ... the overall message of Interstellar is that you don't have free will, but it's one of your favourite movies???
@@philsurtees Contact by Sagan and with some physics foundations (some purely theoretical and completely unproven) Interstellar is pretty much along the same lines, just not written by Carl Sagan...
@@philsurtees I’m not sure why your mansplaining my favorite movies to me then telling me why they shouldn’t be MY favorite movies. I never said these are documentaries, I said I like the movies. Furthermore, I’m indicating the physics being explained in this clip are concepts I have a hard time understanding but that it’s very interesting nonetheless. The thought experiment behind it is fascinating. Did I explain that simply enough?
@philsurtees Besides tastes and quality of filmmaking, free will is not a scientifically proven fact. In fact, many scientists lately deduce that true free will doesn't exist (try Sabine Hossenfender). This might be the hypothesis picked up by Interstellar. It's not a hard sci-fi by any means, but attempts at portraying conterintuitive relativistic concepts are done better than any other i've seen, despite the glaring impossibilities. It's for general public and less stupid than average US entretainment sci-fi.
Tremendous video! I loved the way you mentioned the subtle point that on Miller's planet, since they are both in free fall around the black hole, the astronauts don't "feel" the blackhole. However, since they are in the potential of the black hole, time is affected.
I didnt understand half this video but man I watched the whole thing and it was interesting. Also shout out to all the smart people in the comments. I like when people explain stuff to other people.
I recently suffered a brain infection and for a period of time my heart stopped and I died. Around the week of this happening I experienced many strange visions, dreams and hallucinations. One thing particularly strange and disturbing was that I experienced different time zones. I experienced a place without time and I also experienced time slowing down to an unbearably slow rate here on earth. My experience of 1 minute was about an hour. I was observing people around me moving extremely slowly, and the sun rising over a period of about 10mins, but for me it felt like about 10 hrs... It was honestly the most excruciating and horrible experience. This was just the tip of the iceberg of what I experienced, I was lucky to survive.
I've had stuff like that happen to me before, not trying to compare anything, but one REALLY crazy thing happening to me recently is..... I've been remembering past deaths. Like reliving them. Some through dreams and the others are like, memories.... Y'all have EVERY RIGHT to not believe a fucking word of this tho...😮
I also had an heart attack and was dead nearly 5 minutes, and I share the different timezones or lack of time feeling,. It's as though I had become unsynchronized with the universal flow of time.
This movie went over a lot of peoples head even till this day. You're the first person to explain it how I saw it in my head... amazing job my friend. The only thing I wish you would have spoke more about is the diemntal 1D, 2D, 3D, 4D, 5D to where they're now and how you can have access to trassend across time the higher you go. Kinda like the movie, "FLATLAND", one of my altime fav movies about the world we live in and how we precive it.
This is one of the greatest scifi movies of all time. And Matthew McConaughey is such a fabulous actor. I used to not like him until I saw True Detective, and he completely won me over.
No it isn't. It is WOEFULLY bad. It isn't even science fiction, it's fantasy nonsense. There is no magic in science fiction. At least Star Wars gives the magic a name and puts some rules around it, whereas Interstellar just pulls any old magic out of the hat whenever it's convenient. It is EASILY the worst, most ridiculous piece of fantasy garbage that has been made in DECADES. The tragedy is that so many people are so ignorant about science that they actually believe it is a science fiction movie! That's without mentioning all the plot holes, the schmaltzy dialogue, and the fact that the overall message is that we don't have free will. How on Earth can you enjoy such mindless trash??? You think it's special because you hadn't heard of time dilation before? _"Love is a force,"_ said Coop, before he crossed the event horizon, after which he sent a contradictory message to his past self, and used magic to make the second hand of a watch tick out complex mathematics for 20 years. _HA HA HA!_ Utter garbage...
i am absolutely fascinated with the idea of space and time and everything interstellar related. These videos make me have an existential crisis and i love it.
This movie has so many ideas theories and topics that can be discussed and dissected for years to come! Which is why it remains my favorite film , truly timeless.
Thank you so much for your time and efforts for bringing up this video, this by far was the most detailed and understandable explanation of the science used in the movie and more of clear picture (for me) of time dilation etc.
It’s cool seeing UA-cam videos exploring the same movie that at 13 started my journey into exploring quantum mechanics, astrophysics, string theory, and theoretical physics. I had so many unanswered questions after watching this movie when it came out and found myself reading various books related to this topic and putting in hundreds of hours of online research trying to satiate my curiosity. And again 10 years later I’m still finding information to hopefully expand my understanding, or to pass time in an interesting way
Time does not exist for God. God is a different dimension but gave us sun and moon for our day time activities and sleep when we need it...worship at certain times amongst other things. its necessary for humans but not for God
you will find some interesting verses in the Holy Quran regarding time dilation....honestly so much people or science cannot explain but may if you will find answers that you are looking for
Just found this video and it somewhat answered some of the questions that was bothering me about this movie. Very good take and ideas. I didn't realize that Cooper wasn't the same Cooper in his daughter's timeline. That's actually crazyband very interesting.
Did Cooper get any credit for what he did in Murphy's world? She didn't know it was from him until he came back when she was dying. Did anyone realize their mission was successful? Or just think it was due to Murphy unlocking the equation?
Script pages 99 and 141, she knew it was him before she figured out the equation. static1.squarespace.com/static/5a1c2452268b96d901cd3471/t/5b95b7b0032be4f0cd3a8db2/1536538544682/Interstallar.pdf
I think many years passed, for people to know who he was. Space exploration was "banned" while Murph was a kid. The mission was kept as a secret to the world. They thought the same of the 12 first astronauts. Only after she solves the equation, they are back to public knowledge. People on earth didn't knew they were successful. Remember they could receive messages from earth to gargantua system but couldn't respond back. That's why they only have videos filmed from earth and not from the endurance. My theory is that "radio waves" (or any other way they use to communicate) are also affected by gravitational pull from the black whole. "Not even light scapes from a black whole. Even if Brand sent a message, it would take years to scape the orbit in gargantua side. Same as in the water planet. Machines can receive data in real time and save data who they received in the past. So receiving a message a message from "the future" would be impossible. Because they just can't. One thing I can't figure out. When Cooper arrives to Edmunds planet, where Brand settle the camp. How old would she be? Why did Edmunds died? While Cooper detach from the endurance and falls into gargantua. They say it's going to cost like 50 ish years. So what I think is that in Edmunds planet time goes even slower than the water planet. And possibly Cooper arrives just after the last scene. Or would have passed many years?
“Remember in university level math, you had to solve a tesseract problem…” I have a degree in computer science, the only university level math class I was forced to take was Statistics, where the final exam was balancing a sample checkbook.
Is it time thats moving faster or is your perception of time different now because youve lived alot and have less to go instead of lived less and have alot more to go???
The story of the how Zimmer stumbled on the organist needs a vid. The soundtrack is addicting. And read Flatland to try and wrap your head around dimensions.
WOW!! Some pretty out of this world speculation here!! Loved Interstellar and the way it tried to reconcile everything we know about the cosmos, and what might be; I saw this movie three times on its release, and rejoiced in its very serious attempt to keep to respected physics and astronomy
Nice video! I hope one day someone can answer MY burning question from Interstellar: why Murph’s family (which is also Cooper’s family) acts like he’s some strange weirdo they want nothing to do with when he shows up literally out of space and time. They MUST know things about him. It makes no sense.
Tell me about it!! I always think the same thing. It's so strange. I get that Murph is way more famous than Cooper ever was... but still. Everyone has to know about him. But they treat him like a nothing. And to add insult to injury -- he has to STEAL a spacecraft to go find Amelia! Rather than them stocking him up nicely and sending him on his way. It makes no sense.
Would you believe someone that told you the same things right now? Realistically, Murph wouldn't be able to tell anyone that Cooper was communicating through the watch, she would look insane
@@wastedroach sure but forget about the watch. She should be screaming "this is my dad! Look everyone, it's my dad who's been gone for decades!". And even if they were like "shhh, grandmaw, you're senile", fine. It's the lack of anything that rubs me the wrong way.
I believe there will still be videos being posted about Interstellar even 100 years from now. Its ten years already and the movie still being dissected- shows how great Interstellar is. Can't wait for Sept 27, 2024 to witness Nolan's and Zimmer's masterpiece once again.
the true triumph, aside from the hyper-real fate of the planet, was the *visualization* of a tesseract, not so much the physics (a wormhole) but the visual depiction of theoretical ideas.
wow this very video got me subscribed, its like interstellar for dummies in the intro but it takes you thru the whole complexity of the movie, epic video bravo
@@dudewrapsupremeNo, not necessarily. He assumed that as soon as the big bang happened, the black hole is formed along with the big bang. However, his assumption is is based on an incomplete knowledge of the big bang.
You would have to make a few more assumptions, but one that I can think of is the time it would take for the micro black hole to consume enough matter to reach its current size. And if micro black holes don't exist, then you need to account for the time it would take for a star to form with enough mass to collapse into a black hole and the time it would take for the black hole to consume enough mass reach its current size. There are assumptions that needs to be made to get a more exact time, but i am not sure what those are atm.
We should start with the fact that such planet would not be able to exist in such a close vicinity to the black hole. The planet and everything around it would be shredded into pieces.
It's really hard to wrap my head around this type of physics. We can't all be Einstein. It's mind boggling to think there are possible scenarios where you could end up being much younger then your children once back on earth.
I really don't think it is that hard to grasp that time goes slower when moving at speed. I have had a lot of thought about how it could work on a very small scale as on the atomic scale or even smaller. The following is my explanation. If you think about a particle as a circle or ball you would not be far from the truth. If this ball has anything measuring time I can only see it to be an electromagnetic signal (EM signal) going from side to side and then back (oscillation between the walls). EM signals can at the most move with the speed of light (near 300,000 km/sec) so it will take a little time to get across from one side to the other. It will take a little longer if the particle is moving in the same direction. (Remember EM signal speed is NOT added to the particle speed as a ball speed would be to a moving car as this would break the maximum speed possible (any speed added to 300,000km/sec would be more than 300,000km/sec.)) Also speed radar wouldn't work. If you do the calculation (as I have (hopefully not wrong)) then you will find that the forward time takes longer than the two speeds added together would suggest and even though the reverse time is much shorter the total will be more than it would be if at stand still. My calculations validated the time dilation formula so I suspect I did it right. It also shows that even though Einstein (and explanations about time dilation) always show it with a light clock going perpendicular to the travel direction then it works equally as well if the time signal goes forward and backward along the travel direction. If you then have that very fast travel slows down time a lot for the traveller then it is not so strange that he will be younger than people left behind and this is really not much different to that frozen meat last longer (kind of stays younger) than fresh meat. That acceleration has anything to do with it as well (except you must accelerate to get a faster speed) as some people postulate I can not see. As I see it it only has to do with speed. Personally I have some problems with relativity. I find it easier to believe that these calculations would be the same for every body and every thing so that we have the fastest time at an "absolute stand still" and not that we can arbitrarily pick our own spot as stand still.
How does quantum entanglement work with time dilation? I'd like to hear an explanation of how simultaneous events between coexisting particles occur when time dilation is a factor between the two.
To be fair, Interstellar was not the first to demonstrate or explain time dilation on a planet differing from orbit. Star Trek Voyager episode "In the Blink of an Eye" did it 14 years prior. (Voy S06E12)
Great movie, but I find myself depressed for many moments. The water planet creeps me out, along with the extreme in aging. Matt Damon's planet is quite creepy as well.
One thing I have not seen answered satisfactorily about this movie, perhaps someone could help. If the gravity on the planet was so extreme as to slow time that much, wouldn’t it have been too strong for them to stand on? If it’s just dramatic license that’s fine, I just want to know.
I will try my hand at answering this but I'm likely wrong. The gravity felt on the planet is proportional to the size and mass of the planet (I believe) The strength of the gravity created by the sheer size and scale of the black hole is effecting space time, the bending of space. Each are independent of one another Example, the gravity pull between ourselves and the sun is independent of one another. Anyway, I am likely wrong but thought I'd give it a go whilst I eat my breakfast haha!
Not a physicist but very into the topic. The huge time dilation is a result of being in close proximity to the black hole, not the planet. The planet, like all mass, causes a bending of spacetime that results in a gravitational pull. But as you said, it’s weak enough for humans to stand on and even escape from, given they have the velocity to do so. The important point, though, is the proximity of the planet (and thus the characters) to the black hole. The mass of the black hole causes enough of a spacetime bend to severely distort time around it (from others perspective), an effect which increases as you get closer. If you’re on a planet that’s orbiting the black hole, you will still only feel the gravitational pull of the planet, while both you and the planet “experience” time dilation from the black hole. Edit: I put “experience” in quotes at the end because, from your perspective, time always ticks forward at the same rate. From your perspective, the universe farther away from the black hole appears to fast forward.
I don't agree with the A time line Cooper having a different origin, it's the same cooper. His time in the tesseract also cannot exist on a time line, as it is outside of time itself.
That was awesome. I still am trying to figure out why time can be going on in different places at different speeds but i think we need a universal clock. Maybe one of the furthest distances galaxies (the past) could be used as a standard time.
The time dilation near Miller's planet is due to Gargantua's immense gravity right So why does Romily have to wait 23 years for Cooper n Co. To come back ? He is also affected by Gargantua's gravity
If the Flux capacitor is/was/will be fully charged.... And if the inverse Square law rings true then: Watch the part about the green laser beam astronaut and the red microwave beam astronaut floating in space again. I believe the word your thesaurus wants you to read is relativity and relative.
It is kind of just a movie as well, once you get past the fact that the science behind the plot is mostly back of the envelope chicken scratch tally marks....... Mathematics
I dont understand the difference between orbiting millers planet and landing on it? If times dilated do to the black hole, then what difference does landing on it make? Also in order to orbit a black hole wouldnt you need to be traveling incredibly fast? So would the speed be dilating time or the gravity?
According to the law of conservation of energy time travel would be impossible. We've all heard "matter cannot be created or destroyed" and travelling to the past would "create" matter. Let's say I bought a shirt from a store ten years ago. I put on that shirt, hop in my time machine and travel back ten years and one day. I visit the store where I bought it and there's the shirt hanging on the rack, but I'm also wearing the shirt. Now two shirts of the exact same material components exist, so I've created matter. That actually goes for anything. The "stuff" that makes up your body will have existed in different forms in the past, so you'd be making copies of that matter if you traveled back in time. Even sending a single atom of hydrogen back five seconds in time would create matter. All of the above assumes that we and everything else exists in a closed system. As far as we can tell this is a closed system but if it isn't then it would remove the matter creation issue from time travel. Let's hope it is a closed system and that time travel is impossible because it only took me a few minutes to think about lots of ways to abuse the matter creation part of time travel and you know there's plenty of people who wouldn't just think about how to abuse it.
What's convieniently over looked is the gravity on Millers planet is many times that which those astronaugts would be able to endure. It would be very hard to even get out of the ranger at just 3 times gravity. A 200 lbs man would be 600 lbs, not to oversimplify but that is going to be a major effor. They seemed to just walk normally in the water.
I love this tenet-like take on interstellar! Remind me of one of the dialogue from the movie.. “This whole operation is a temporal pincer… who’s???…. YOURS!!!!!
1:42 If there are any physicists reading this, please chime in here and shed some light on things. And please correct me if I get something wrong. Would the laser experience red shift to this degree if it is traveling between two stationary objects? I thought red shift occurred when, either, the source of the light or the observer are moving away from the other. And you get blue shift if you or the source of the light move toward one another. I remember reading something about astrophysicists being able to discern a star's movement, toward or away from us in their orbits, by the way the light from them changes from blue shift to red shift and vice versa. Is this correct? And, if so, would a laser beam fired from a stationary location to a stationary target, experience any red shift? I would think the answer would be, "No.". Red shift is a lengthening, or stretching of the beam, caused by the source of the light and/or the observer moving away from the other. I imagine the light "losing energy" over distance,though, similar to sound growing more faint over distance. Sounds get weaker over distance but don't experience a "Doppler effect",unless there is movement by the source of the sound or the listener. I realize that two objects floating in space,like shown in the animation, would be technically moving due to universal expansion. But I'm not talking about the narrator's two astronauts floating in space. I'm going by his words. Which made me think of this question; Would a light experience red shift if it was traveling from a stationary location to another stationary location? With no change in the distance between them caused by expansion of the universe, or anything along those lines. Two,completely stationary, objects, with a laser beam shining from one to the other.
If you were visiting Miller’s planet using a ship that utilizes anti-gravity as its mode of travel, the bubble of space time formed around the vehicle would protect you from the time dilation unless you were to exit the vehicle.
Truly respect your opinion. However, It's not an easy feat to present the 4th dimension in a medium that's relatively accessible to common men, I believe it was a great artistic choice by Nolan with some hint of actual science (as described in this video) to provide us with this cinematic experience.
May be another movie which tried to portrait this was twin peaks final episode the red lodge scene. Moving in side rooms it he moved in other dimensions. Moving forward was like moving into the future.
My favorite all-time movie & you covered some fascinating perspectives of the movie. I am still left with a question... as you noted escape velocity for Miller's planet would be greater than any thrust we could conceivably generate; but would humans even be able to withstand the pull of such gravitational force?
Stay tuned for more intriguing topics, later this month!
Can you do the show Dark at some point. One of the best shows ever!!
29:13 "check out this video" ... and, of course, there's no link. Anyway, fun video!
Wait wait wait
11:29
Why would your body SPLIT? And in what way? Could you link me an explanation?
I’m genuinly curious.
Bang, Anda hebat
I want this video in hindi language for indian audience 🙏🙏
I felt she spoke in 3rd person "because my dad promised me." As a way to tell Coop she forgave him.
Specifically referring to him as dad.
I agree it was an emotional statement but to me it feels like she's repeating a statement she's been repeating to people when they ask her why she keeps hope in seeing him again. She says it like that bc she's been saying it to others for so many years. But that's imo
Consider this: when you were 5 years old, living from age 5 to age 6 meant experiencing 1/6 of your life. However, when you were 19 years old, the span from 19 to 20 represented only 1/20 of your life. By the time you reach 59 years old, living from 59 to 60 accounts for just 1/60 of your life. The conclusion is that as you get older, each passing year constitutes a smaller fraction of your entire life.
That's why it feels like time is passing faster as you get older-it's not that time is speeding up, but rather your perception of time changes. Each year becomes a smaller fraction of your life, making it seem shorter in comparison to when you were younger.
Dude. I have to screenshot this
Also children live in the moment. Each moment. Adults live for the end of the shift, for Friday. Always for the future
Very interesting perspective
Doesn’t account for the phenomenology of life and what it is you’re actually doing. Kids don’t remember much of their lives, and then there’s a salience to all kinds of new experiences. Adults with dreary repetitive jobs feel a passage of time different from somebody in a war zone, or a farmer who works his land and saliently experiences each season. And compare all those to somebody who spends much of their adult life on the sofa playing video games or otherwise attached to screens. The phenomenology of time is also disputed by ‘flow’ states of optimal performance or being in the Zone. Fulfilling moments. There’s a radical difference in time experience when out in the wilderness on a thru-hike where day after day you’re in a remote area and detoxed from mobile phones. A long walk in the sun can feel like a week, or a long walk in the rain. The mathematics of percentages as we get older doesn’t even come close to capturing the diverse ways people can experience time and, so, their lives.
WHAT!!!! Time doesn't speed up as you get older....🙄🙄🙄
Just wow! This is in my top 5 of favorite movies. I watched it with my daughter when she was about the same age. I held her tight walking out of the theater. Never seen these details about Cooper being a different dad from a another timeline! Dope!.
That is awesome!
What is your top 5?
Time dilation and time travel are the 2 most interesting subjects to study yet they're complicated to understand. I love it!
The way it was explained to me by physicists is how women take 45 minutes to get ready to go out and men taking only 10. That's time dialation. In the womens mind she perceives it as quick but reality it's taking forever.
The most insane fact was that the guy staying back and remaining in space did not go insane and flew away, leaving people stranded. Humans are fickle.
Yeah they got back and opened the door and he said he sat there 23 years
Which is a total bs scenario given how he would have seen what happened(albeit playing out painfully slow), understood they weren't going to get back for decades and therefore he would have rightfully left them behind.
Don't forget he himself was also subjected to time dilation being also very close to the event horizon, but just not as severe as the cooper expedition so as he left orbit of Millers planet he could have gone back and reported what happened and in the many more decades of "normal time" away from the black hole another expedition could have, should have and would been sent from earth, including placing an AI controlled rescue vessel in orbit of Millers planet for whenever Cooper and his crew finally returns from the planets surface.
So all things considered, this man was stupid to remain there and realistically wouldn't have nor needed to have.
You know people dont really go insane just because theyre alone right? Its a common nonsense trope that doesn't really happen irl. Humans are more resilient than that.
Also this man could have switched to an orbit trajectory around the planet rather than around the black hole which would have somewhat equalised his time to their time.
Sure, Cooper and his crew may have reached orbit to find this man and ship were now in orbit much closer to the event horizon than they are on the other side of the planet furtherest away from the black hole, which would take decades relative to their position to meet him, BUT, not if they then move to intercept it and the spacetime would equalise rather quickly as they get closer.... ya the whole scenario is bs though and as touched on in this vid, such extreme gravitational and centrifugal forces would absolutely shred the planet unless it was... Pffff... neutron star levels of density lol, in which case you don't approach for many obvious reasons!!
@@jerometruitt2731 Some do, don't. It's possible but highly unlikely this guy would given how NASA very carefully hand pick people resilient to such mental breakdowns.
The part where Murph refers to her father on the 3rd person I'd argue this is simply her maturity in language. Since it has been such a long time she's simply referring to a very old promise
Murphy*
@@LordOfThePancakes I thought cooper called her Murph?
@@FatHeadDave that’s Dr. Cooper to you… and that’s besides the point
@@LordOfThePancakes haha roger that
@LordOfThePancakes
10:15
my all time fav movie.. still unbeatable after a decade..
@@_theAuthorityFor me, it was a good movie with a ridiculous ending.
@@_theAuthority lol
omg its been that long
To each their own
When it finally got interesting it ended. I was not amused.
Time Dilation is such a scary and screwed concept. I will never forget the time dilation in the book "The Forever War" since it was the main point of the book showing the reader the problems that comes with time dilation when entering a galactic war. Watching all your comrades die just to return to earth and see humans evolving into a utopia and that the war ended hundreds of years ago even though you just fought a bloody battle a few days ago was so sad. Still one of the cutest and happiest endings to a book I've read though. (Won't spoil that bit)
I loved this movie. It was ahead of its time. Thank you for taking the time to illustrate how this stuff all works in reality.
"It was ahead of its time"....or was it behind it? 😉
@@grrarg9319My brain is already stretched way too thin…lol!
This movie really WAS ahead of it’s time. What an absolute rarity these days.
Seriously, because when this movie came out, we had never been able to actually capture what a black hole looked like & could only speculate. But then almost 10yrs after the movie came out, we finally managed to take a grainy, fuzzy picture of one in real life... and it looked EXACTLY like how they had depicted it in the film! The real life picture is facing the black hole at a different angle from what we see in the movie, however, when you adjust what is shown in the film & peer at it looking down from the perspective of it's "North Pole", if you will... the movie got it PERFECTLY accurate. Nolan spared no effort in making sure to give the audience something very accurate & also very special. 🥲🪐🕳
Contact and interstellar are my 2 fav movies. My brain can’t wrap around a lot of these concepts but it’s still fascinating
Why would like a hard science fiction movie and the most idiotic piece of fantasy nonsense ever made? Contact is trying to show what could potentially happen if we intercepted a message from an advanced intelligence, whereas Interstellar is fantasy rubbish about people coming up with an idiotic solution to a problem which could never happen, with so much impossible science, magic, and plot holes in it that it's impossible to take seriously. I mean ... the overall message of Interstellar is that you don't have free will, but it's one of your favourite movies???
Indeed also my 2 favourite real physics based scifi movies of all time!
@@philsurtees Contact by Sagan and with some physics foundations (some purely theoretical and completely unproven) Interstellar is pretty much along the same lines, just not written by Carl Sagan...
@@philsurtees I’m not sure why your mansplaining my favorite movies to me then telling me why they shouldn’t be MY favorite movies. I never said these are documentaries, I said I like the movies. Furthermore, I’m indicating the physics being explained in this clip are concepts I have a hard time understanding but that it’s very interesting nonetheless. The thought experiment behind it is fascinating. Did I explain that simply enough?
@philsurtees
Besides tastes and quality of filmmaking, free will is not a scientifically proven fact. In fact, many scientists lately deduce that true free will doesn't exist (try Sabine Hossenfender). This might be the hypothesis picked up by Interstellar. It's not a hard sci-fi by any means, but attempts at portraying conterintuitive relativistic concepts are done better than any other i've seen, despite the glaring impossibilities. It's for general public and less stupid than average US entretainment sci-fi.
Can we just appreciate amount of work put into this video
Tremendous video! I loved the way you mentioned the subtle point that on Miller's planet, since they are both in free fall around the black hole, the astronauts don't "feel" the blackhole. However, since they are in the potential of the black hole, time is affected.
I didnt understand half this video but man I watched the whole thing and it was interesting. Also shout out to all the smart people in the comments. I like when people explain stuff to other people.
Thanks for watching, batman!
I like your humbleness.
I recently suffered a brain infection and for a period of time my heart stopped and I died. Around the week of this happening I experienced many strange visions, dreams and hallucinations. One thing particularly strange and disturbing was that I experienced different time zones. I experienced a place without time and I also experienced time slowing down to an unbearably slow rate here on earth. My experience of 1 minute was about an hour. I was observing people around me moving extremely slowly, and the sun rising over a period of about 10mins, but for me it felt like about 10 hrs... It was honestly the most excruciating and horrible experience. This was just the tip of the iceberg of what I experienced, I was lucky to survive.
You have drain bamage?
Yea right
Only 4 likes??? This deserves a thousand....
I've had stuff like that happen to me before, not trying to compare anything, but one REALLY crazy thing happening to me recently is.....
I've been remembering past deaths. Like reliving them. Some through dreams and the others are like, memories....
Y'all have EVERY RIGHT to not believe a fucking word of this tho...😮
I also had an heart attack and was dead nearly 5 minutes, and I share the different timezones
or lack of time feeling,. It's as though I had become unsynchronized with the universal flow of time.
This movie went over a lot of peoples head even till this day. You're the first person to explain it how I saw it in my head... amazing job my friend. The only thing I wish you would have spoke more about is the diemntal 1D, 2D, 3D, 4D, 5D to where they're now and how you can have access to trassend across time the higher you go. Kinda like the movie, "FLATLAND", one of my altime fav movies about the world we live in and how we precive it.
Flatland was a movie? I've heard of it loads but has always been referenced to as a book
@@Onestringpuppet Sure is my friend its up on youtube for free 1h+ long. 😊
I'll give that a watch
This is one of the greatest scifi movies of all time. And Matthew McConaughey is such a fabulous actor. I used to not like him until I saw True Detective, and he completely won me over.
Fabulous?! 🤣🤣🤣😆😆Lmao.
Fruitcake…
No it isn't. It is WOEFULLY bad. It isn't even science fiction, it's fantasy nonsense. There is no magic in science fiction. At least Star Wars gives the magic a name and puts some rules around it, whereas Interstellar just pulls any old magic out of the hat whenever it's convenient. It is EASILY the worst, most ridiculous piece of fantasy garbage that has been made in DECADES. The tragedy is that so many people are so ignorant about science that they actually believe it is a science fiction movie! That's without mentioning all the plot holes, the schmaltzy dialogue, and the fact that the overall message is that we don't have free will.
How on Earth can you enjoy such mindless trash??? You think it's special because you hadn't heard of time dilation before?
_"Love is a force,"_ said Coop, before he crossed the event horizon, after which he sent a contradictory message to his past self, and used magic to make the second hand of a watch tick out complex mathematics for 20 years.
_HA HA HA!_
Utter garbage...
True Detective was good. This was hot garbage during mosquito days.
Contact was the shift in perception for me… Hollywood tried to typecast him. Thankfully he fought back and gave us some of the best media in decades…
Go watch ‘Mud’
4:59 nearly?
It messed with me as well.
i am absolutely fascinated with the idea of space and time and everything interstellar related. These videos make me have an existential crisis and i love it.
This movie has so many ideas theories and topics that can be discussed and dissected for years to come! Which is why it remains my favorite film , truly timeless.
Thank you so much for covering this topic 🙏😌, I'm eager to learn more.
Keep making such informative videos, they are the oxygen of my brain
My pleasure 😊
Thank you so much for your time and efforts for bringing up this video, this by far was the most detailed and understandable explanation of the science used in the movie and more of clear picture (for me) of time dilation etc.
Glad you enjoyed it!
It’s cool seeing UA-cam videos exploring the same movie that at 13 started my journey into exploring quantum mechanics, astrophysics, string theory, and theoretical physics. I had so many unanswered questions after watching this movie when it came out and found myself reading various books related to this topic and putting in hundreds of hours of online research trying to satiate my curiosity. And again 10 years later I’m still finding information to hopefully expand my understanding, or to pass time in an interesting way
Time does not exist for God. God is a different dimension but gave us sun and moon for our day time activities and sleep when we need it...worship at certain times amongst other things. its necessary for humans but not for God
you will find some interesting verses in the Holy Quran regarding time dilation....honestly so much people or science cannot explain but may if you will find answers that you are looking for
Just found this video and it somewhat answered some of the questions that was bothering me about this movie. Very good take and ideas. I didn't realize that Cooper wasn't the same Cooper in his daughter's timeline. That's actually crazyband very interesting.
Awesome, thank you!
Great presentation and professional production. Thanks.
My brain hurts
~√π÷ק∆£¢€¥^°=™®©
Technically your brain can’t feel pain
@@Blue3berry219🙄
Exercise it more
Did Cooper get any credit for what he did in Murphy's world? She didn't know it was from him until he came back when she was dying. Did anyone realize their mission was successful? Or just think it was due to Murphy unlocking the equation?
Script pages 99 and 141, she knew it was him before she figured out the equation.
static1.squarespace.com/static/5a1c2452268b96d901cd3471/t/5b95b7b0032be4f0cd3a8db2/1536538544682/Interstallar.pdf
No, Cooper received no credit. Murph knew it was him but no one believed her so she had to receive all credit.
Remember "Cooper Station"?
He thought it was named after him.🙃
I think many years passed, for people to know who he was. Space exploration was "banned" while Murph was a kid. The mission was kept as a secret to the world. They thought the same of the 12 first astronauts. Only after she solves the equation, they are back to public knowledge.
People on earth didn't knew they were successful. Remember they could receive messages from earth to gargantua system but couldn't respond back. That's why they only have videos filmed from earth and not from the endurance.
My theory is that "radio waves" (or any other way they use to communicate) are also affected by gravitational pull from the black whole. "Not even light scapes from a black whole.
Even if Brand sent a message, it would take years to scape the orbit in gargantua side. Same as in the water planet. Machines can receive data in real time and save data who they received in the past. So receiving a message a message from "the future" would be impossible. Because they just can't.
One thing I can't figure out.
When Cooper arrives to Edmunds planet, where Brand settle the camp. How old would she be? Why did Edmunds died?
While Cooper detach from the endurance and falls into gargantua. They say it's going to cost like 50 ish years.
So what I think is that in Edmunds planet time goes even slower than the water planet. And possibly Cooper arrives just after the last scene. Or would have passed many years?
“Remember in university level math, you had to solve a tesseract problem…”
I have a degree in computer science, the only university level math class I was forced to take was Statistics, where the final exam was balancing a sample checkbook.
Yea, I was like dude! Am I supposed to be watching this video?😅
Wow, that is just sad. You should demand a refund on that education. Seems to me like your university is in an actionable position
Balancing a checkbook is an arithmetic problem, not a statistical problem.
One of my all-time favorite movies. You just blew my mind bro!
The older i get the faster time moves
Ain’t that the truth. Man.
Is it time thats moving faster or is your perception of time different now because youve lived alot and have less to go instead of lived less and have alot more to go???
As you grow up, your mass increases, hence time (in your perspective) moves faster?
Death is knocking.
@SinCityEsk8 people aren’t stupid. You know what they meant
This movie was like no other movie. One of my fav tbh. Everything about it, the music the story etc was bloody good imo
The story of the how Zimmer stumbled on the organist needs a vid. The soundtrack is addicting. And read Flatland to try and wrap your head around dimensions.
Actually, gave the features disc a spin last night, said interview is on it. Sorry I am Bill of little brain.
You earned a subscriber. It's absolutely wonderful to be able to think like this.
Really appreciate that!
WOW!! Some pretty out of this world speculation here!! Loved Interstellar and the way it tried to reconcile everything we know about the cosmos, and what might be; I saw this movie three times on its release, and rejoiced in its very serious attempt to keep to respected physics and astronomy
I know, right?
This may be the best video ever to explain Interstellar. I had so many questions but you just answered them all!!
That's so good to hear! 👍
Nice video! I hope one day someone can answer MY burning question from Interstellar: why Murph’s family (which is also Cooper’s family) acts like he’s some strange weirdo they want nothing to do with when he shows up literally out of space and time. They MUST know things about him. It makes no sense.
Tell me about it!! I always think the same thing. It's so strange. I get that Murph is way more famous than Cooper ever was... but still. Everyone has to know about him. But they treat him like a nothing. And to add insult to injury -- he has to STEAL a spacecraft to go find Amelia! Rather than them stocking him up nicely and sending him on his way. It makes no sense.
Would you believe someone that told you the same things right now? Realistically, Murph wouldn't be able to tell anyone that Cooper was communicating through the watch, she would look insane
@@wastedroach sure but forget about the watch. She should be screaming "this is my dad! Look everyone, it's my dad who's been gone for decades!". And even if they were like "shhh, grandmaw, you're senile", fine. It's the lack of anything that rubs me the wrong way.
Because Cooper died and only Murph can see him. When a person is dying or death bed it is normal thing to see deceased relatives.
I asked myself the same question, him also didn’t bother to know his grand children .
I believe there will still be videos being posted about Interstellar even 100 years from now. Its ten years already and the movie still being dissected- shows how great Interstellar is. Can't wait for Sept 27, 2024 to witness Nolan's and Zimmer's masterpiece once again.
the true triumph, aside from the hyper-real fate of the planet, was the *visualization* of a tesseract, not so much the physics (a wormhole) but the visual depiction of theoretical ideas.
wow this very video got me subscribed, its like interstellar for dummies in the intro but it takes you thru the whole complexity of the movie, epic video bravo
On Miller's planet, the Big Bang would happened only 225'000 years ago...
then wouldnt the black hole had to have been created at the same time as the universe?
I dont think we can say that definitively because we don’t know when gargantua was created
@@dudewrapsupremeNo, not necessarily. He assumed that as soon as the big bang happened, the black hole is formed along with the big bang. However, his assumption is is based on an incomplete knowledge of the big bang.
You would have to make a few more assumptions, but one that I can think of is the time it would take for the micro black hole to consume enough matter to reach its current size. And if micro black holes don't exist, then you need to account for the time it would take for a star to form with enough mass to collapse into a black hole and the time it would take for the black hole to consume enough mass reach its current size.
There are assumptions that needs to be made to get a more exact time, but i am not sure what those are atm.
We should start with the fact that such planet would not be able to exist in such a close vicinity to the black hole. The planet and everything around it would be shredded into pieces.
the fact that you used a clip of the professor from the hilarious house of frightenstein you have me as a fan forever
This is totally real, it being explained, I am shocked, yet I understood this dilation before not in such an intellectual way.
Gratitude 🙏🏾
Thanks for sharing!
What an amazing job you have done for and with this video.
all of the concepts were explaint so well! the editing and formatting of this video was great
love the video
Glad you liked it!
I'd like to see you do a timeline analysis of the movie Primer.
Thanks for making my brain feel even more smooth
Woah, that was deep...Cooper not being the same Cooper.
Mind Blowing Insights! I am sure, lot of efforts would have gone behind deriving such insights...Amazing job
I’m sorry, but no one ever has explained time dilation so perfectly.
Apology accepted :)
I'm feeling really stupid. I still don't get it😂
Explained time dilation?? With those jumps in logic? I think not.
@@lifeinchina6032 Maybe it's because the "explanation" is bogus, and you noticed that.
Like dreams. Sometimes I feel like I'm gone for months. But I've only been asleep for an hour and a half
For me the movie ends here: “Love is the one thing we’re capable of perceiving that transcends dimensions of time and space.” ☠
The way the universe keep its check and balance is amazing. Nothing is missed or out of balance.
Absolutely!
It's really hard to wrap my head around this type of physics. We can't all be Einstein. It's mind boggling to think there are possible scenarios where you could end up being much younger then your children once back on earth.
I really don't think it is that hard to grasp that time goes slower when moving at speed. I have had a lot of thought about how it could work on a very small scale as on the atomic scale or even smaller. The following is my explanation.
If you think about a particle as a circle or ball you would not be far from the truth. If this ball has anything measuring time I can only see it to be an electromagnetic signal (EM signal) going from side to side and then back (oscillation between the walls). EM signals can at the most move with the speed of light (near 300,000 km/sec) so it will take a little time to get across from one side to the other. It will take a little longer if the particle is moving in the same direction. (Remember EM signal speed is NOT added to the particle speed as a ball speed would be to a moving car as this would break the maximum speed possible (any speed added to 300,000km/sec would be more than 300,000km/sec.)) Also speed radar wouldn't work.
If you do the calculation (as I have (hopefully not wrong)) then you will find that the forward time takes longer than the two speeds added together would suggest and even though the reverse time is much shorter the total will be more than it would be if at stand still. My calculations validated the time dilation formula so I suspect I did it right. It also shows that even though Einstein (and explanations about time dilation) always show it with a light clock going perpendicular to the travel direction then it works equally as well if the time signal goes forward and backward along the travel direction.
If you then have that very fast travel slows down time a lot for the traveller then it is not so strange that he will be younger than people left behind and this is really not much different to that frozen meat last longer (kind of stays younger) than fresh meat.
That acceleration has anything to do with it as well (except you must accelerate to get a faster speed) as some people postulate I can not see. As I see it it only has to do with speed.
Personally I have some problems with relativity. I find it easier to believe that these calculations would be the same for every body and every thing so that we have the fastest time at an "absolute stand still" and not that we can arbitrarily pick our own spot as stand still.
Fantastic video man! Thank you
My pleasure!
This blew my mind
8:36 You missed a great opportunity to make the ship look like the Planet Express ship from Futamara. Amazing video!
You're right!
How does quantum entanglement work with time dilation? I'd like to hear an explanation of how simultaneous events between coexisting particles occur when time dilation is a factor between the two.
I had never thought of them being the 5th dimensional people ... but man makes sense! Thank you for the AMAZING breakdown !!
Time is relative, it slows down when you're with your relatives.
.... No. 😐
Gravity of your problems
Loved this !
I thought he was gonna hit us with the, "that's not earth. It never was" meme
Sunday became interstellar. Please upload such videos on Sundays.
That's all fine and all but could you please speak on laundry machines and why their clocks don't seem to match local time either😎
Well that was FRAKKING AWESOME!!! Buuut, my head... This stuff is just so effed-up.
To be fair, Interstellar was not the first to demonstrate or explain time dilation on a planet differing from orbit. Star Trek Voyager episode "In the Blink of an Eye" did it 14 years prior. (Voy S06E12)
this made me realize my comprehension is so low. i’ve had to re wind the first 20 seconds 10 times.
I hope all of you got to see, or will go see it again in IMAX! I went last night. See it again before it's too late.
Great movie, but I find myself depressed for many moments. The water planet creeps me out, along with the extreme in aging. Matt Damon's planet is quite creepy as well.
There is no place like home.(earth)
This is amazing. I didn’t realize to two cooper theories.
Some constructive criticism, while the info in the video presented it quite good and the editing as well, the VO is flat and robotic.
I love your videos man thank you for this one
I appreciate that!
One thing I have not seen answered satisfactorily about this movie, perhaps someone could help.
If the gravity on the planet was so extreme as to slow time that much, wouldn’t it have been too strong for them to stand on?
If it’s just dramatic license that’s fine, I just want to know.
I will try my hand at answering this but I'm likely wrong.
The gravity felt on the planet is proportional to the size and mass of the planet (I believe)
The strength of the gravity created by the sheer size and scale of the black hole is effecting space time, the bending of space.
Each are independent of one another
Example, the gravity pull between ourselves and the sun is independent of one another. Anyway, I am likely wrong but thought I'd give it a go whilst I eat my breakfast haha!
Not a physicist but very into the topic.
The huge time dilation is a result of being in close proximity to the black hole, not the planet.
The planet, like all mass, causes a bending of spacetime that results in a gravitational pull. But as you said, it’s weak enough for humans to stand on and even escape from, given they have the velocity to do so.
The important point, though, is the proximity of the planet (and thus the characters) to the black hole.
The mass of the black hole causes enough of a spacetime bend to severely distort time around it (from others perspective), an effect which increases as you get closer.
If you’re on a planet that’s orbiting the black hole, you will still only feel the gravitational pull of the planet, while both you and the planet “experience” time dilation from the black hole.
Edit: I put “experience” in quotes at the end because, from your perspective, time always ticks forward at the same rate. From your perspective, the universe farther away from the black hole appears to fast forward.
@@SweetShakes much more elegant than I said it
No. They can stand up fine.
@@FatHeadDave I just wasn’t eating breakfast at the time 😂
great video, great job!
Thanks for the visit
So technically there’s somewhere in the universe that humans could live forever depending on how fast we are moving
They wouldn't feel like they're living forever because of special relativity
This is the reason why this remains my favorite movie.
I don't agree with the A time line Cooper having a different origin, it's the same cooper. His time in the tesseract also cannot exist on a time line, as it is outside of time itself.
But how many dimensions does time have? Classically, only one. I wonder if there are two or more.
That was awesome. I still am trying to figure out why time can be going on in different places at different speeds but i think we need a universal clock. Maybe one of the furthest distances galaxies (the past) could be used as a standard time.
Wait where’s the video???
What background music is at 10.00mins? Lasts about 1 minute?
The time dilation near Miller's planet is due to Gargantua's immense gravity right
So why does Romily have to wait 23 years for Cooper n Co. To come back ?
He is also affected by Gargantua's gravity
If the Flux capacitor is/was/will be
fully charged....
And if the inverse Square law rings true then:
Watch the part about the green laser beam astronaut and the red microwave
beam astronaut floating in space again.
I believe the word your thesaurus wants you to read is relativity and relative.
It is kind of just a movie as well, once you get past the fact that the science behind the plot is mostly back of the envelope chicken scratch tally marks....... Mathematics
Because of quantum entanglement.
I think said in the movie that he parked just outside of the gravity well.
Exactly. The effect is there before they land. From the black hole. The tick should start way before.
I dont understand the difference between orbiting millers planet and landing on it? If times dilated do to the black hole, then what difference does landing on it make? Also in order to orbit a black hole wouldnt you need to be traveling incredibly fast? So would the speed be dilating time or the gravity?
According to the law of conservation of energy time travel would be impossible. We've all heard "matter cannot be created or destroyed" and travelling to the past would "create" matter.
Let's say I bought a shirt from a store ten years ago. I put on that shirt, hop in my time machine and travel back ten years and one day. I visit the store where I bought it and there's the shirt hanging on the rack, but I'm also wearing the shirt. Now two shirts of the exact same material components exist, so I've created matter. That actually goes for anything. The "stuff" that makes up your body will have existed in different forms in the past, so you'd be making copies of that matter if you traveled back in time. Even sending a single atom of hydrogen back five seconds in time would create matter.
All of the above assumes that we and everything else exists in a closed system. As far as we can tell this is a closed system but if it isn't then it would remove the matter creation issue from time travel. Let's hope it is a closed system and that time travel is impossible because it only took me a few minutes to think about lots of ways to abuse the matter creation part of time travel and you know there's plenty of people who wouldn't just think about how to abuse it.
It's not creating more matter, it's moving the matter to a "different" "time/location".
No matter how much I try to understand this thing, I'll die without proper understanding.
This movie reminds me of how incredibly dumb I actually am.
Nah, for me it was TeNeT and among my friends, in the geek.
Watch the movie idiocrasy so you can feel better
13:55 is this what the 4 dimension looks like? i’ve finally wrapped my head around it.
What's convieniently over looked is the gravity on Millers planet is many times that which those astronaugts would be able to endure. It would be very hard to even get out of the ranger at just 3 times gravity. A 200 lbs man would be 600 lbs, not to oversimplify but that is going to be a major effor. They seemed to just walk normally in the water.
I love this tenet-like take on interstellar! Remind me of one of the dialogue from the movie.. “This whole operation is a temporal pincer… who’s???…. YOURS!!!!!
So why are we still here if we know all this 🤔
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Excellent video!!!! Bravo!!!👏👏👍👍👌👌
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Thank you! Cheers!
I ran out of wiggles, can anyone spot me?
This is a brilliant comment, most people would not comprehend
I was going to mate but only just read your msg. Damn time dilation!😂
In this video, everytime he says "you" to refer to the viewers, remember, im not included as im underqualified.
Let’s bring Terence Howard for a 2nd opinion
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
1:42 If there are any physicists reading this, please chime in here and shed some light on things. And please correct me if I get something wrong.
Would the laser experience red shift to this degree if it is traveling between two stationary objects?
I thought red shift occurred when, either, the source of the light or the observer are moving away from the other. And you get blue shift if you or the source of the light move toward one another. I remember reading something about astrophysicists being able to discern a star's movement, toward or away from us in their orbits, by the way the light from them changes from blue shift to red shift and vice versa. Is this correct? And, if so, would a laser beam fired from a stationary location to a stationary target, experience any red shift?
I would think the answer would be, "No.". Red shift is a lengthening, or stretching of the beam, caused by the source of the light and/or the observer moving away from the other.
I imagine the light "losing energy" over distance,though, similar to sound growing more faint over distance. Sounds get weaker over distance but don't experience a "Doppler effect",unless there is movement by the source of the sound or the listener.
I realize that two objects floating in space,like shown in the animation, would be technically moving due to universal expansion. But I'm not talking about the narrator's two astronauts floating in space. I'm going by his words. Which made me think of this question; Would a light experience red shift if it was traveling from a stationary location to another stationary location? With no change in the distance between them caused by expansion of the universe, or anything along those lines. Two,completely stationary, objects, with a laser beam shining from one to the other.
I do Push-Ups for every like
If you were visiting Miller’s planet using a ship that utilizes anti-gravity as its mode of travel, the bubble of space time formed around the vehicle would protect you from the time dilation unless you were to exit the vehicle.
Great movie except for that whole tesseract thing. That whole final section of the movie was a massive disappointment. Still makes no sense at all.
Truly respect your opinion.
However, It's not an easy feat to present the 4th dimension in a medium that's relatively accessible to common men, I believe it was a great artistic choice by Nolan with some hint of actual science (as described in this video) to provide us with this cinematic experience.
It does though… it’s a 5D representation in 3D so Cooper could understand. Like how a cube can only be seen as a square to a 2D being.
May be another movie which tried to portrait this was twin peaks final episode the red lodge scene. Moving in side rooms it he moved in other dimensions. Moving forward was like moving into the future.
Yeah they ruined it with that bollox.
I think they didn't even know how to end it so just lost the plot and wrote nonsense
It’s called sci fi. Not hard to pretend.
wow. amazing video my friend.
Thank you! Cheers!
where's the video?
Great video!
Thanks for the visit
My favorite all-time movie & you covered some fascinating perspectives of the movie. I am still left with a question... as you noted escape velocity for Miller's planet would be greater than any thrust we could conceivably generate; but would humans even be able to withstand the pull of such gravitational force?