It is incredible how easy this man explains such complicated mater. He does all this with a permanente smile on his face, using simple words and a humble approach. Unlike the man who introduced him, he is very humble, and just a wonderful human being.
there's no better inspiration in the universe to young aspiring physicists than Prof Brian Cox.One of my all time heros.Had i been watching this at a young age, i'd certainly be pursuing a career in the fascinating field of science.
He is really good at laying difficult and complex theories/ concepts/ facts in simple and down-to-earth language. Hopefully I can meet him when I come to Manchester to study the coming year!
Loved Brian Cox for so many years. I've now taken on an astronomy course....the maths side I'm struggling with but the physics I'm enjoying. I'll get there with his wonderful influence. He's my ♥️
It's amazing that he talks about Higgs particle and says that they use it in equations even though it might not even exist but just a year later they confirmed it's existence! Made me very happy.
They could tell you anything and you would believe it, wait till you find out it’s all nonsense, will you be able to fight the cognitive dissonance I know you’re going to experience, will you be able to be honest with yourself with an open mind when presented with evidence and an obvious proof and just obvious common sense, the real world laughs in the faces of these physicists of self proclaimed know it all’s Science isn’t what Brian says it is, there’s not one practical demonstration using tangible substances for ANY of the claims that the earth is a spinning ball in a vacuum, even Einstein said there’s not one observational experiment that can show the earth is in motion, water doesn’t conform to the exterior of shapes and objects, water has to be contained, once contained the surface will always be a level line, water is used in construction to find plumb and level, water doesn’t have the capability to support sheer stress, it’s called the horizon for a reason, horizontal, and the oceans are known as sea level, level doesn’t mean a curved line, in the real world level is a straight line, no experiment can show a gas pressure like our atmosphere existing next to a vacuum without equilibrium taking place, both have to be contained and can only exist side by side whilst both are contained, the globe is being shown for the scam it is
. ... or just look a the earths shadow on the moon ...lol . Although I do believe most or all theories held today will be disproven 100 years from now ... .
At 41:00 Dr. Cox talks about a particle that is theorized to exist in the Higgs field, and in the spirit of Feynman they'd have to go and look for it, in order for their theory to hold. As we now know, about a year later, Cox and all the amazing scientists at CERN discovered just that - the Higgs particle, effectively proving that the science was solid all along.
Amazing! How Brian Cox handles his response to the random question at the end was truly outstanding. What an opportunity the next generation have with stepping stones like this.
This was a brilliant lecture and really had my interest throughout. Brian Cox is a brilliant Professor and I am sure he is helping influence the next generation of Physicists.
I’ve finished A-level Physics and will begin my MPhys in September, but I thought I’d put this on to hear Brian talk - whether it’s tailored towards GCSE kids or 4th year quantum physics students I find his explanations riveting. 40:58 to 41:14 in particular really does make me smile when you realise this lecture was a year before CERN first witnessed the Higgs boson.
He is so fantastic, you can see he honestly adores science, as do i, he simplifies everything so well , even the hardest things to understand....brilliant!!!!
Professor Cox brings the wonderful complexity of the sciences into the home of the lamen, he explains in a way that can be quantified and understood, and if it inspires you to pick up a book and begin reading and drawing conclusions for yourself, you'll be all the better for it. May our curiosity of all things never diminish.
How can the BBC justify programs like Greatest dancer, The great british sewing bee and other saturday night rubbish and drop programs like Stargazing live? I understood that the BBC was here to entertain and inform,not to treat us like mushrooms.
I had a great GCSE science teacher called Miss Adams, circa 1996. She taught at Beauchamp College, Oadby, Leicester. She was a great teacher and I’m sure she still is.
This was an excellent lecture. Young people now need more than ever to have more of this kind of presentation in education, from an early age to different degrees of complexity. How to learn and why they should learn, and how infinitely awe-inspiring the Cosmos really is. Come to think of it, Carl Sagan's brilliant old Cosmos tv show should be standard school viewing for all! :)
I started watching this at midnight but couldn't bring myself to stop watching until the very end, I suppose that's when you know you've been successful in communicating how interesting physics and science actually are.
Prof: Brian Cox was fascinating in this video and recently, in 2019, I watched him 'LIVE' at the Wembley Arena in London and he was even more fascinating. I never get tired of listening to him.
The idea that someone could work out that time slows down relative to speed by just sitting there and thinking about 2 mirrors and light bouncing between them is really mind bending stuff. I get the sense that Brian himself is in awe of Einsteins genius.
I've always had a problem with that diagram. As soon as the mirrors move, the light bounces away and you can no longer measure it between the mirrors. You know if you shine a light at a mirror and you change the angle of the mirror, the light goes off in a new direction and not back to it's source. Light will not follow the mirrors as they travel.
I have the same problem with the diagram of gravity. If mass bends space, it would do that in 3 dimensions, not 2. Therefore you can't diagram gravity by warping space in a 2 dimensional plane.
DJ TBOne You are completely correct. The models and diagrams that you see involving a 2d representation of gravity is just for the sake of explanation for the masses. It’s very easy to understand and relate to. Essentially what is happening in the 2d model is what’s happening in 3D space.
@@djtbone001a you have to imagine it's a single photon. the experiment only works in the brain, you can't reproduce it. it proves the point, that's all.
Very interesting although i have read this in books and i have watched his shows, a really good DVD is "So you think you know reality" It features Brian, its about quantum physics and includes all the stuff from "What the bleep do we know" and more, its almost 3 hours long, great for quantum beginners and if you have a thirst for understanding you will love it. It seems very hard to come by though.
A brilliant lecture and a wonderful testament from Brian to the importance of scientific research. Long live this kind of research! Allow the accidents of science to enrich our world - Penicillin, MRI, the internet ★
I finally made it to my first physics lecture yesterday in Minneapolis. Brian Cox is much better in real life to listen to although I still enjoy listening to his older lectures. I'll return to every lecture he has within 200 miles for the rest of my life
Unbelievable! I'm absolutely thrilled by the ease with witch he's talking! Everything seems so simple! I wish I had a chance to talk with Brian Cox someday....
ARGH!!!! Those lucky bastards! XD Seriously though this guy is incredible, I find myself fighting tiredness when I listen to other guys, but Brian is so easy to understand and has gotten myself interested in Physics and Cosmology again. There's like a 25% rise in students taking A-Level Maths and Physics, that can only be good for the future. A true inspiration for us all, not just this generation. He's made science easy for all of us to understand; he honestly deserves more than an OBE.
Something I've noticed in all of the Brian Cox lectures I've watched is that he is always smiling. I don't think that he is faking any of his enthusiasm; he really enjoys physics.
i loved this lecture, i wonder if there is one where he spends more time on the problem of gravity, but i imagine he would have needed another hour at least.
You and Jim Khalili are such an inspiration. My life would've been so different had I had teachers like you in high school. I hated maths and found physics so obtuse. In a few lectures, you made me fall in love with both.
@@sidstevens9035 I think he's right. Religion and Science both seek to explain why we're here. Christianity's creation story and The big Bang theory can coincide with one another. One is just based off of scientific experimentation, and one made hundreds/thousands of years ago to find meaning in a complicated world. - Coming from an atheist
I've lived around Oldham for the last 12 years, and just found out Brian Cox grew up here... I'm gobsmacked as there are no indications anywhere of this, and strongly believe there should be!
@ Lol science these days are per definition a religion. Brian Cox is a fraud or deranged if he truly believes in the current "scientific" field of physics.
The analogies that Brian Cox presents are definitely one of the easiest ones to grasp. I've been interested in astrophysics and astronomy for 8 years now, and there are concepts which are so hard to grasp.. Like the expanding universe. The raisins in the bread analogy just made it really CLICK for me, and suddenly my mind could grasp and visualize what actually happening RIGHT NOW. When he said that I literally laughed until I cried, because something clicked in my head and I knew I finally really understood it for the first time.. I'll go out on a limb and say Brian Cox is an equal caliber of educator and science-presenter as Richard Feynman was.
40:00 Watching this video 10 years later and seeing Prof B. Cox calling a prediction of a particle that may not even exist because a mathematical equation and then realize that this particle was the higgs boson and this video is from 2012 and the higgs was discovered on 2015 is just 🤯. When he was giving this lecture the higgs boson wasn’t discovered yet and he said the math predicted it, 3 years later BOOM 💥 the particle is here, science is awesome indeed 🔥🔥🔥
Such a passionate man.....i read his first book and was totally sucked into his love for the beauty of math and physics etc.... I love this kind of doc as it helps to keep me grounded as to what is really important..... so tiny compared to all of it.
Really great lecture by Brian. In fact all of them are. What I just learned from this one is, if I just keep moving , well I guess relative to you, I'll live longer! Gotta go cause it's not easy typing this when you're jogging :-)
Mr B Cox has had an influence on my life with out me even realising it. He can connect with people in a way that only a very select people are allowed to.
I've watched this from beginning to end and I don't know alot about what he's saying but I try to ,and sometimes I try to think my brain could be as smart as a physicist like Einstein, and I close my eyes and try to think differently like him but nothing comes out ..still normal..but im very interested in these topics and also other topics alike
Hello Professor, The parsec is a unit of length used to measure the large distances to astronomical objects outside the Solar System. One parsec is approximately equal to 31 trillion kilometres (19 trillion miles), or 210,000 astronomical units, and equates to about 3.3 light-years. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parsec also 100,000 million is 100 Billion (US not UK)
Mind was blown when he explained how einstein's time dilation equation is used for gps navigation. Also, he did an amazing job putting the genius of Einstein into perspective.
This is why we need all of us.... Out of the billions of people ever born it only takes one to understand the complexities of any really complicated part of nature and explain to us other mortals. Flight first finally happened in 1903 - but we were on the moon in 1969. Someone somewhere over the next few decades will tell the rest of us about those missing pieces of the jigsaw so we can go to the stars; I hope I'm still around to see it.
regarding the age of the universe, it seems ive heard that the hubble constant is increasing, in other words that the rate of inflation is getting larger. This implies that it hasn't always been "42" or the equivalent worked out, and that the age of the universe might not be 13.7 billion years at all, since the inflation rate might have been slower in the past
Such a fantastic speaker. He brings an implausibly complex subject to the masses through the art of storytelling. Superb.
He"s just ok! However, he's nit in same league as the American physists, especially Brian Green, and Neil De Grass Tyson!
It is incredible how easy this man explains such complicated mater. He does all this with a permanente smile on his face, using simple words and a humble approach. Unlike the man who introduced him, he is very humble, and just a wonderful human being.
there's no better inspiration in the universe to young aspiring physicists than Prof Brian Cox.One of my all time heros.Had i been watching this at a young age, i'd certainly be pursuing a career in the fascinating field of science.
Big thumbs up for Brian Cox. He's engaging, super bright and charismatic. I hope his enthusiasm for science rubs off on lots of young people.
Can't get enough of this guy, totally absorbing. Thanks for posting.
Brian Cox is the Sagan of our time. Such an eloquent and well-spoken man who helps others understand the Universe in a fun and lay way.
He is really good at laying difficult and complex theories/ concepts/ facts in simple and down-to-earth language. Hopefully I can meet him when I come to Manchester to study the coming year!
you've probably finished your studies by now, did you end up meeting him? I might be studying there this year too!
Loved Brian Cox for so many years. I've now taken on an astronomy course....the maths side I'm struggling with but the physics I'm enjoying. I'll get there with his wonderful influence. He's my ♥️
Where did you find the course? Is it online?
It's amazing that he talks about Higgs particle and says that they use it in equations even though it might not even exist but just a year later they confirmed it's existence! Made me very happy.
They could tell you anything and you would believe it, wait till you find out it’s all nonsense, will you be able to fight the cognitive dissonance I know you’re going to experience, will you be able to be honest with yourself with an open mind when presented with evidence and an obvious proof and just obvious common sense, the real world laughs in the faces of these physicists of self proclaimed know it all’s
Science isn’t what Brian says it is, there’s not one practical demonstration using tangible substances for ANY of the claims that the earth is a spinning ball in a vacuum, even Einstein said there’s not one observational experiment that can show the earth is in motion, water doesn’t conform to the exterior of shapes and objects, water has to be contained, once contained the surface will always be a level line, water is used in construction to find plumb and level, water doesn’t have the capability to support sheer stress, it’s called the horizon for a reason, horizontal, and the oceans are known as sea level, level doesn’t mean a curved line, in the real world level is a straight line, no experiment can show a gas pressure like our atmosphere existing next to a vacuum without equilibrium taking place, both have to be contained and can only exist side by side whilst both are contained, the globe is being shown for the scam it is
@@andrewcalvert2801 that comment was almost as long as the video
@@andrewcalvert2801 You can literally go on a road trip with a stick and a ruler and confirm the curvature and size of the Earth.
Me too! It makes me so happy that we continue exploring and trying to understand the universe we come from.
.
... or just look a the earths shadow on the moon ...lol
.
Although I do believe most or all theories held today will be disproven 100 years from now ...
.
Brian is always so happy and enthusiastic
Professor Cox is one of the most eloquent popularizers of science! Bravo!
At 41:00 Dr. Cox talks about a particle that is theorized to exist in the Higgs field, and in the spirit of Feynman they'd have to go and look for it, in order for their theory to hold. As we now know, about a year later, Cox and all the amazing scientists at CERN discovered just that - the Higgs particle, effectively proving that the science was solid all along.
I seriously just love this guy. What an amazing communicator. His enthusiasm is contagious. I love how he always talks with a smile!
And a Mancunian
@@jospinvanraat8730 !
@Javier Tamargo: Because he loves what he does.
Lecture starts at 8:45
Haha thnx i was looking for this
Thanks, you saved me nearly 9 minute of boredom.
You are a gentleman and a scholar!
ashish19 legend
ty
Dr. Cox is such a great communicator of science, we need more people like him.
Amazing! How Brian Cox handles his response to the random question at the end was truly outstanding. What an opportunity the next generation have with stepping stones like this.
This was a brilliant lecture and really had my interest throughout. Brian Cox is a brilliant Professor and I am sure he is helping influence the next generation of Physicists.
I love how exactly when the man at the beginning says, "No flash photography," a flash goes off.
FracturedFrames I saw that too XDD
Seems kinda snooty... But damn flashes constantly, jesus. Learn to use a camera people.
Many many flashes went off after he said that. Incredible rebellious behavior. Almost like shooting spit wads at the teacher through a straw.
" . . . No flash photography . . ."
Me: Runs to the comments section. :)
😂😂😂😂😂😂Exactly i noticed that too.
I’ve finished A-level Physics and will begin my MPhys in September, but I thought I’d put this on to hear Brian talk - whether it’s tailored towards GCSE kids or 4th year quantum physics students I find his explanations riveting. 40:58 to 41:14 in particular really does make me smile when you realise this lecture was a year before CERN first witnessed the Higgs boson.
He is so fantastic, you can see he honestly adores science, as do i, he simplifies everything so well , even the hardest things to understand....brilliant!!!!
im 60 this yr ? and it seams you can teach old dogs new things very very interesting thanks xxx
Brian Cox is the most elegant gentleman in physic community I have ever seen.
gilbert Chen yet he was in a 80’s hair band...
he's the guy all my girlfriends parents have been disappointed that I'm not.
I disagree. Neil Turok
He's the most elegant gentleman, period!
He's the most elegant gentleman period!
Professor Cox brings the wonderful complexity of the sciences into the home of the lamen, he explains in a way that can be quantified and understood, and if it inspires you to pick up a book and begin reading and drawing conclusions for yourself, you'll be all the better for it.
May our curiosity of all things never diminish.
How can the BBC justify programs like Greatest dancer, The great british sewing bee and other saturday night rubbish and drop programs like Stargazing live? I understood that the BBC was here to entertain and inform,not to treat us like mushrooms.
U Tube favorite there running out of idea's
Agreed.
Agreed
What kinda 🍄 we talkin? 🤔😜
Because they seem to be on a dumbing down mission
I had a great GCSE science teacher called Miss Adams, circa 1996. She taught at Beauchamp College, Oadby, Leicester. She was a great teacher and I’m sure she still is.
This was an excellent lecture. Young people now need more than ever to have more of this kind of presentation in education, from an early age to different degrees of complexity. How to learn and why they should learn, and how infinitely awe-inspiring the Cosmos really is. Come to think of it, Carl Sagan's brilliant old Cosmos tv show should be standard school viewing for all! :)
I started watching this at midnight but couldn't bring myself to stop watching until the very end, I suppose that's when you know you've been successful in communicating how interesting physics and science actually are.
Prof: Brian Cox was fascinating in this video and recently, in 2019, I watched him 'LIVE' at the Wembley Arena in London and he was even more fascinating. I never get tired of listening to him.
The idea that someone could work out that time slows down relative to speed by just sitting there and thinking about 2 mirrors and light bouncing between them is really mind bending stuff. I get the sense that Brian himself is in awe of Einsteins genius.
Bennko Smith everyone is but other very good scientists can understand how impressive he is even more
I've always had a problem with that diagram. As soon as the mirrors move, the light bounces away and you can no longer measure it between the mirrors. You know if you shine a light at a mirror and you change the angle of the mirror, the light goes off in a new direction and not back to it's source. Light will not follow the mirrors as they travel.
I have the same problem with the diagram of gravity. If mass bends space, it would do that in 3 dimensions, not 2. Therefore you can't diagram gravity by warping space in a 2 dimensional plane.
DJ TBOne You are completely correct. The models and diagrams that you see involving a 2d representation of gravity is just for the sake of explanation for the masses. It’s very easy to understand and relate to. Essentially what is happening in the 2d model is what’s happening in 3D space.
@@djtbone001a you have to imagine it's a single photon. the experiment only works in the brain, you can't reproduce it. it proves the point, that's all.
How amazing. After a lecture like this you end up knowing more and knowing less.
You certainly can tell that Brian admired Carl Sagen. His excitment is infectious much like Mr Sagan's was..
I love Professor Brian Cox, the way he talks and explains things, has a way of really drawing you in and holding your attention.
He's so poetic and passionate about his field, you can't help but be drawn in. I would LOVE to have a Professor like him.
Very interesting although i have read this in books and i have watched his shows, a really good DVD is "So you think you know reality" It features Brian, its about quantum physics and includes all the stuff from "What the bleep do we know" and more, its almost 3 hours long, great for quantum beginners and if you have a thirst for understanding you will love it. It seems very hard to come by though.
A brilliant lecture and a wonderful testament from Brian to the importance of scientific research. Long live this kind of research! Allow the accidents of science to enrich our world - Penicillin, MRI, the internet
★
I finally made it to my first physics lecture yesterday in Minneapolis. Brian Cox is much better in real life to listen to although I still enjoy listening to his older lectures. I'll return to every lecture he has within 200 miles for the rest of my life
Fluent, lucid, inspirational, entertaining....a joy. Thank you.
I find Professor Cox to be an important figure for mainstreaming science back into civilization. Magnificent!
The short Feynman video was a nice touch. Thanks for posting this!
Unbelievable! I'm absolutely thrilled by the ease with witch he's talking! Everything seems so simple! I wish I had a chance to talk with Brian Cox someday....
The process of drawing conclusions through experiment is simply wonderful, thank you Mr Feynman.
ARGH!!!! Those lucky bastards! XD Seriously though this guy is incredible, I find myself fighting tiredness when I listen to other guys, but Brian is so easy to understand and has gotten myself interested in Physics and Cosmology again. There's like a 25% rise in students taking A-Level Maths and Physics, that can only be good for the future. A true inspiration for us all, not just this generation. He's made science easy for all of us to understand; he honestly deserves more than an OBE.
Something I've noticed in all of the Brian Cox lectures I've watched is that he is always smiling. I don't think that he is faking any of his enthusiasm; he really enjoys physics.
I got a A in physics because of Brian Cox
Amazing lecture. Thank you Mr Cox. I do love listening you.
Thank you. It was wonderful. Brian Cox is a wonderful physicist.
i loved this lecture, i wonder if there is one where he spends more time on the problem of gravity, but i imagine he would have needed another hour at least.
Very beautiful lecture. I feel smart after watching. Thank you, Professor Cox.
Hola amigo
You and Jim Khalili are such an inspiration. My life would've been so different had I had teachers like you in high school. I hated maths and found physics so obtuse. In a few lectures, you made me fall in love with both.
As of July 16th 2020, 624 dislikes, what is wrong with people? This is amazing, LOVE Professor Cox
Wow oh what a brilliant lecture. He has so much enthusiasm and passion
In 1972 at school in London, my physics teacher for two terms was a young Brian May of 'Queen' fame.
You lucky lucky bastard.
And youare still fascinaded,I suppose..
As Rod Stewart used to say: Some guys have all the luck.
I'd love to have had Bryan May or Professor Cox as a teacher.
I didn't know he taught then. He's been public about his physics avocation during Queen's halcyon days and resumption of studies after that time.
Yes we have evolved
"Those who think there is a conflict of religion and science, have a poor understanding of both" ...that was amazing!
He is 100 % wrong
Science is evidence
Religion is faith
How much more different could they be ?
@@sidstevens9035 I think he's right. Religion and Science both seek to explain why we're here. Christianity's creation story and The big Bang theory can coincide with one another. One is just based off of scientific experimentation, and one made hundreds/thousands of years ago to find meaning in a complicated world. - Coming from an atheist
@@sidstevens9035 both are faith based these days
Creationists would like to have a word with you...
@@sidstevens9035 and faith is fake
Good ole Brian, I wish that he was around when I was at school. I hadnt even heard of Carl Sagan.
Carl Sagan was the Led Zeppelin of popularizing science. (You've heard of Zeppelin, right?) :)
32;50 Good old Ernest Rutherford (He was, in fact, a New Zealander doncha know)
Bloody fly. Tried to squash it. Haha.
Wonderful! I have so much respect for Professor Brian Cox.
I watched Carl Sagan's "Cosmos" series when it first came on TV in the UK and I totally agree with Brian's description!
This is a really great lecture. This is EXACTLY what i'd want to tell children to get them interested in science!
Brian Cox is such an amazing speaker! He sounds so passionate and humble (=
symphony of science brought me here. this is absolute brilliance.
He is the most likable guy and a great speaker and breaks things down for your normal person like me
This motivated me extremely to study physics.
The Deputy President/ Vice Chancellor near the beginning of the lecture made a terrific speech. Inspirational!
I've lived around Oldham for the last 12 years, and just found out Brian Cox grew up here... I'm gobsmacked as there are no indications anywhere of this, and strongly believe there should be!
If Cox's "Wonders"-series was available back when I went to school, you can bet your ass I'd be a whole lot more intereted in physics back then.
Correct
@ Lol science these days are per definition a religion. Brian Cox is a fraud or deranged if he truly believes in the current "scientific" field of physics.
I’m I’m hhI’m
O k ok k ok. Lll
WakeUp WakeUp, you don’t have to be rude, mate...
this is astronomy; effectively nothing to do with physics.
So happy to see a lecture of Brian's get so many views.
Not got a clue what Brian is talking about... But how fascinating and great voice to listen to
Very well done..loved the speech..very informative and I love the detective work about our ancestors in New mexico..really enjoyed it
"No flash photography..." *FLASH*
Every program Brian Cox has done has been great. Space shit is fascinating.
The analogies that Brian Cox presents are definitely one of the easiest ones to grasp. I've been interested in astrophysics and astronomy for 8 years now, and there are concepts which are so hard to grasp.. Like the expanding universe. The raisins in the bread analogy just made it really CLICK for me, and suddenly my mind could grasp and visualize what actually happening RIGHT NOW. When he said that I literally laughed until I cried, because something clicked in my head and I knew I finally really understood it for the first time.. I'll go out on a limb and say Brian Cox is an equal caliber of educator and science-presenter as Richard Feynman was.
40:00 Watching this video 10 years later and seeing Prof B. Cox calling a prediction of a particle that may not even exist because a mathematical equation and then realize that this particle was the higgs boson and this video is from 2012 and the higgs was discovered on 2015 is just 🤯. When he was giving this lecture the higgs boson wasn’t discovered yet and he said the math predicted it, 3 years later BOOM 💥 the particle is here, science is awesome indeed 🔥🔥🔥
Such a passionate man.....i read his first book and was totally sucked into his love for the beauty of math and physics etc....
I love this kind of doc as it helps to keep me grounded as to what is really important.....
so tiny compared to all of it.
Really great lecture by Brian. In fact all of them are. What I just learned from this one is, if I just keep moving , well I guess relative to you, I'll live longer! Gotta go cause it's not easy typing this when you're jogging :-)
Mr B Cox has had an influence on my life with out me even realising it. He can connect with people in a way that only a very select people are allowed to.
I've watched this from beginning to end and I don't know alot about what he's saying but I try to ,and sometimes I try to think my brain could be as smart as a physicist like Einstein, and I close my eyes and try to think differently like him but nothing comes out ..still normal..but im very interested in these topics and also other topics alike
I love lectures given by professor Cox. I like his theories on quantum mechanics and string theory.
Excellent.Should reach this type of lectures global youth.
"I think that anyone who says there is a conflict is really misunderstanding both" ...an awesome and intelligent statement
wonderful, I enjoyed every second. Thanks for putting this up!
Loved his interview about his work with professor Michael Gambon at the unfeasabley large Telescope.Gary Bellamy.BBC radio.Down TheLine
Very proud to say that Professor Cox is from my home town of Oldham
It pains to see such a wonderful lecture going un-noticed while beiber gets a million views. :/
Beiber gets a billion.. 😂
Innit though
I'd like to attend one of his lectures.
26:45 my state. And I've been there last year to see the milky way. It's a spectacular sight.
Hello Professor,
The parsec is a unit of length used to measure the large distances to astronomical objects outside the Solar System. One parsec is approximately equal to 31 trillion kilometres (19 trillion miles), or 210,000 astronomical units, and equates to about 3.3 light-years. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parsec
also 100,000 million is 100 Billion (US not UK)
Actually he is 52 . Could pass for 30. The existence of Brian Cox, and others like him if there are any, justifies the existence of humanity. 🇦🇺
Mind was blown when he explained how einstein's time dilation equation is used for gps navigation. Also, he did an amazing job putting the genius of Einstein into perspective.
28:02 wow...I finally learnt something new...that blows me away..about those people and that neat bit of detective work...fascinating....
This is why we need all of us.... Out of the billions of people ever born it only takes one to understand the complexities of any really complicated part of nature and explain to us other mortals. Flight first finally happened in 1903 - but we were on the moon in 1969. Someone somewhere over the next few decades will tell the rest of us about those missing pieces of the jigsaw so we can go to the stars; I hope I'm still around to see it.
one of my favorite out of many
Many important topics to talk about and marvels of our existence and world may the truth always prevail 🌍✌🏽and may we one day achieve world peace
I love this man so much
watching videos of this guy in a way helped me get better grades at a-level science ;') thanks brian
LOST: Higgs Boson.
Update: FOUND
@Mickey Finn it is found. This is a pre Highs Boson lecture.
Keep up. Lol
Simply extraordinary, I wish he'd hold a guest lecture in sweden some day, I would be at that lecure!
0:43
"we will have the answer to the Higgs Boson in about two years" Very accurate prediction.
Was it?
It's why the LHC was built. Higgs field had been hypothesized in the 60s
Didn't amount to much though, did it?
maybe tonight
Roger Spur at Mudfossil University has proven how light Interacts with matter.If you dont look at his findings you cannot call yourself a scientist.
regarding the age of the universe, it seems ive heard that the hubble constant is increasing, in other words that the rate of inflation is getting larger. This implies that it hasn't always been "42" or the equivalent worked out, and that the age of the universe might not be 13.7 billion years at all, since the inflation rate might have been slower in the past
What a very good lecture !! :)
@mattttg3 his 43yrs old. And to me gives the layman crash courses equivalent to a semester of physics