Brian Cox on how black holes could unlock the mysteries of our universe

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,1 тис.

  • @momszycat4148
    @momszycat4148 Рік тому +5494

    Please have Brian Cox on more often.

    • @xacbe
      @xacbe Рік тому +35

      Ok, we are going to do whatever it takes to accomplish that 😊

    • @captaintoyota3171
      @captaintoyota3171 Рік тому +45

      This should be said to the human population of earth, "put Prof. Briam Cox on"

    • @saumyadeepbhaumik6792
      @saumyadeepbhaumik6792 Рік тому +11

      Exactly this I was going to type

    • @alexbranton426
      @alexbranton426 Рік тому +30

      Was this a careful second attempt at wording “more cox please!”

    • @hindugoat2302
      @hindugoat2302 Рік тому +16

      Your mother loves Cox

  • @StefBelgium
    @StefBelgium Рік тому +1869

    Brian Cox is probably one of the best at explaining complex things so that we can all be part of those discoveries and be part of that fantastic astronomy journey.

    • @michaelc3977
      @michaelc3977 Рік тому +14

      Insert valueless sycophantic comment above

    • @streetchronicles5693
      @streetchronicles5693 Рік тому +6

      is it the accent? the soft voice? or the science that doesnt add up?

    • @StefBelgium
      @StefBelgium Рік тому +33

      @@michaelc3977 your insecurity turns you into a hater. Bro must be very sad in his life.

    • @oldmate99
      @oldmate99 11 місяців тому +3

      Botox lips

    • @dademags77
      @dademags77 11 місяців тому +1

      He confuses you with stuff most of us know nothing about and none of us can dispute because we wouldn’t know where to look. He speaks the biggest lot of rubbish ever. He’s never been near a black hole, never sent a probe near a black hole, so how on earth he can make these assumptions is based on no actual knowledge, no 100% proved knowledge it’s just another type of faith.

  • @charliesophia75
    @charliesophia75 8 місяців тому +461

    “Information is conserved by the universe” this is such a nice way to think of those who have left us, and those who we’ve lost. No one is ever really gone.

    • @Erri-kb6et
      @Erri-kb6et 7 місяців тому +31

      That was the exact reaction of my mother when I told her about Lavoisier's law for chemistry reactions. No atoms or molecules dissapear, they just change form, they interact but are still there.

    • @HighHell99
      @HighHell99 7 місяців тому +6

      So afterlife does exist?

    • @JimStyslinger-hq9sq
      @JimStyslinger-hq9sq 7 місяців тому +21

      @charliesophia75 in other words, the matter of your body that was left behind is that "information" you're referring to... But once a person dies, they lose their consciousness and it's pretty much game over for their "soul" so to speak...

    • @JimStyslinger-hq9sq
      @JimStyslinger-hq9sq 7 місяців тому +10

      @HighHell99 no lol. Think again pal.

    • @HighHell99
      @HighHell99 7 місяців тому +5

      @@JimStyslinger-hq9sq What makes you so sure?

  • @staticsound1422
    @staticsound1422 11 місяців тому +692

    Brian has a gift of assembling the right words together when he talks about physics. He helps you think the way a physicist does in simple terms. Not many scientists have this talent because their minds think so quickly, they can't put the words together that make any sense to us. I think the ah-ha moment when one begins to understand what Brian is talking about is what so many young want-to-be scientists are looking for. He provides that one, thought-provoking spark that you find yourself thinking all day about. He will inspire many of our youth to be scientists and they will continue to unlock the secrets of the universe for all of us.

    • @OriginalPuro
      @OriginalPuro 9 місяців тому +22

      A professional can explain to professionals.
      And expert can explain to anyone.

    • @joejoe7562
      @joejoe7562 9 місяців тому +6

      He appears to be doing the lecture ad-hoc w/o notes. He doesn't seem to be screen reading.

    • @AlphaWasSpotted
      @AlphaWasSpotted 7 місяців тому +2

      ​@@OriginalPurowell said

    • @tamarasmiles5196
      @tamarasmiles5196 6 місяців тому +1

      After reading a book on the concepts of quantum physics and black holes about 20 yrs ago , the concept about them actually being a star or planet which has broken down and is in its last stages or cycles of existence seemed like a reasonable personal theory to me - very interesting. Really enjoy feeling curious about the world . Thank you for putting out such a well done talk or presentation.

    • @bekiedude
      @bekiedude 5 місяців тому

      If he would add some witty humor he'd become the next Richard Feynman!

  • @KevinJB1966
    @KevinJB1966 Рік тому +637

    Brian Cox is undoubtedly the best communicator of science to the "common" person. His ability to take such complex topics and make them accessible to non specialists is amazing.

    • @SteveNinetyski
      @SteveNinetyski 10 місяців тому +4

      Undoubtedly the best? I personally find him unbearable....so that ruins your point.

    • @SteveNinetyski
      @SteveNinetyski 10 місяців тому

      You have no idea how malleable you are. You are the perfect 2024 type of citizen....suckerrrrrrrr.

    • @bokiNYC
      @bokiNYC 10 місяців тому +22

      ​@@SteveNinetyskiI mean, OK, that's your point of view but what do you find unbearable exactly? And who else in this field do you prefer listening more? Genuinely interested. Thanks.

    • @antonioMaiquezPenadez
      @antonioMaiquezPenadez 10 місяців тому +2

      Maybe now but Richard Feynman was the best for me.

    • @porkchopexpress2437
      @porkchopexpress2437 10 місяців тому +12

      Agreed. He has a wealth of knowledge and he's very humble as well.. Doesn't talk down to the general public. Very informative too. The best there is at the moment. Much 🙌.

  • @bleue_comme_une_orange
    @bleue_comme_une_orange 7 місяців тому +31

    I could listen to Brian Cox for hours, not only because he enables us to catch a glimpse of progress being made in cutting edge physics but also because his enthusiasm and his insatiable curiosity stimulate mine even further.

  • @devdas8204
    @devdas8204 Рік тому +1104

    This is the best explanation of black holes I have ever heard. I believe Brian Cox is able to explain so well because he really understands the concept. Reminded me of Feynman. Great editing.

    • @meatpie29
      @meatpie29 Рік тому +9

      He is truly gifted yes.

    • @Robinson8491
      @Robinson8491 Рік тому +7

      Also total ASMR I love it

    • @Zod_JB
      @Zod_JB Рік тому +11

      @@Robinson8491 100%!
      I don’t know what it is about this man’s voice but I might have to related to this just to hear him talk 🤣

    • @remnantime3672
      @remnantime3672 Рік тому +1

      I don't understand it😢..
      It's all assumptions that's all it is

    • @Damaxyz
      @Damaxyz Рік тому +25

      ​@@remnantime3672 If you don't understand it how can you come to the conclusion that it's all assumptions?

  • @ashleyellis182
    @ashleyellis182 Рік тому +661

    Every single video or TV show that Brian Cox is a part of, is just simply mesmerising. Explains things in such amazing and beautiful detail, it's not something that anyone could ever get bored of.

    • @ukleth
      @ukleth Рік тому +3

      We already knows most of this from an old book 1400 years ago

    • @budweiser600
      @budweiser600 Рік тому

      Dude, your standards are so low.

    • @alexanderthegreatsdad.3831
      @alexanderthegreatsdad.3831 Рік тому +21

      ​@@ukleththe Quran is nothing but an old Harry Potter story book of hate.

    • @ukleth
      @ukleth Рік тому +1

      @@alexanderthegreatsdad.3831 ok i guess if that make you sleep at night

    • @ashleyellis182
      @ashleyellis182 Рік тому +4

      @@ukleth Don't know about him, but makes me sleep well at night.

  • @RedGrant2008
    @RedGrant2008 6 місяців тому +13

    The way in which Brian Cox articulates his explanations of all things science, not limited just to the discussion of black holes, (and their mysterious nature) is a flawless, grammatically perfect way that is simply unprecedented among public speakers.

  • @Fallenhazel
    @Fallenhazel Рік тому +513

    I've always found Black Holes fascinating, but I've never connected them with that line, "End of Time." It's very poetic.

    • @momszycat4148
      @momszycat4148 Рік тому +9

      I don't know,I'm a dummy but I'm thinking it could be the beginning of somthing?

    • @Fallenhazel
      @Fallenhazel Рік тому +20

      @@momszycat4148 You're no dummy, and yes, it could be the beginning as well as the end. Maybe, like a Yin and Yang.

    • @izy205
      @izy205 Рік тому +20

      ⁠@@momszycat4148not dumb at all it’s no coincidence that the two unexplainable singularities in our theories (the big bang and black hole singularities) are so similar. Curious how our maths break down in the same way when trying to explain them

    • @paulmichaelfreedman8334
      @paulmichaelfreedman8334 Рік тому +4

      @@Fallenhazel What happens to matter after it has fallen beyond the event horizon? According to Kip Thorne there is no singularity, but pure warped spacetime which means it creates gravity without mass. The energy of the mass was put into the curvature of spacetime. So there could well be a firewall behind the event horizon that reduces all matter to energy.
      But, that is all moot if the black hole represents the end of time, this means that all matter is hanging against the event horizon, from outside perspective, seemingly frozen in time and nearly black. Another paradox.

    • @axle.australian.patriot
      @axle.australian.patriot Рік тому

      @@paulmichaelfreedman8334 An interesting concept that I have held personal theorys on for some time goes like this (Mr Cox eluded to this in the presentation). Theoretically, space-time changes or swap states (Think of it a little like space time as a particle for a moment with a positive and negative pole, but in this case the 2 opposing states are space and time). When this change occurs, space becomes time, and time now becomes space. Time now stopped at the event horizon is in essence now infinite, so after the swap space now become infinite and what was space now become the component of time.. We have found ourselves emerging (Maybe even inflating) into a new infinite universe.
      It's a weird concept for us humans to conceptional but has many implications that not only explains the big bang (Inflation) but many other missing parts of physics. The hardest thing is to depart from our normal 3D thinking to be able to accept that "after"crossing the event horizon and looking back it would appear as if we are emerging from a central point (Like the big bang in some sense). Obviously we would not be alive to see it as it would be likely that all matter would be reduced back to some kind of primordial plazma durring the transition.

  • @coreyyandle2142
    @coreyyandle2142 Рік тому +65

    I love how gentle and soft spoken he is. Plus i tend to comprehend what he says much better than other scientific speakers.

    • @sonyavincent7450
      @sonyavincent7450 Рік тому

      It's a gift. To pull people in. Perhaps he's a black hole.....

  • @wudangmtn
    @wudangmtn 10 місяців тому +19

    I won’t pretend to understand much of what he is saying, but I could listen to him all day.

    • @woutervanlent5181
      @woutervanlent5181 8 місяців тому +3

      Me neither but here and there a sentence which makes it useful to listen . It must be fantastic if you have such brains . Quite lonely too i am afraid . With who can you talk ?

    • @simpleguy2557
      @simpleguy2557 6 місяців тому +1

      @@woutervanlent5181 bro u wanna talk on these kinda topic??

    • @woutervanlent5181
      @woutervanlent5181 6 місяців тому

      @@simpleguy2557 Ha ha ha , good one ! I'll stick with my wife

  • @sherifaljeddawy2467
    @sherifaljeddawy2467 Рік тому +35

    Brian Cox speaking without interruptions is a sermon... salute from Egypt.

  • @s4awd2
    @s4awd2 11 місяців тому +134

    I love that no matter how mind boggling the universe is, scientists treat it like any other puzzle and are grinding it out. Instead of being blown away, they keep digging and using math/science to figure it out like any detective not affected by the tragedy of a brutal crime but figuring out how it happened getting the full explanation of events, motive etc.

    • @georgie5870
      @georgie5870 9 місяців тому +2

      that's a perfect comparison for it

    • @TommyCollins-qv4yi
      @TommyCollins-qv4yi 9 місяців тому +1

      chasing after the wind is meaningless

    • @4po11yon.
      @4po11yon. 9 місяців тому

      Exactly. To the point where they had to use new type of physics, quantum mechanics

    • @W.0.W.
      @W.0.W. 9 місяців тому

      That’s one way of looking at it

    • @RealTurbidHere
      @RealTurbidHere 9 місяців тому

      No. Black Holes can not unlock mysteries of our universe. To do that.. you have to make contact with E.T they existed before the big bang. Cheers.

  • @ExtremeFader
    @ExtremeFader Рік тому +47

    That part about space and time being an emergent property from something deeper and hidden made me cry. I am so moved by this video. It is so beautiful. Thank you. The mysteries of life unite us all.

  • @Salad-Cream-Binge
    @Salad-Cream-Binge Рік тому +138

    This is really well shot and edited. The music, the grading, the pacing, the closeups, the wides, the graphics. Cox seems very relaxed here and it's very well constructed as an edit. Thank you!

    • @Silverfish-qv8ig
      @Silverfish-qv8ig 9 місяців тому

      It's a horrible balance for his skin tone though! Brutal!

    • @ShredEngineerPhD
      @ShredEngineerPhD 8 місяців тому

      Exactly. This is unbelievably pleasant to watch. Great work!

  • @djlovebug
    @djlovebug 29 днів тому +2

    3:50 I have watched so many videos trying to explain this concept as I have recently become fascinated with the space time, continuum. This is the most succinct explanation I have heard so far. My mind is still blown, but at least I can now put it into words.

  • @MonkeyJedi99
    @MonkeyJedi99 Рік тому +42

    The escape velocity explanation just increased my understanding of the topic about 20-40%. And I have a B.S. in Physics and have been reading and learning about cosmology for a few decades.
    This alone makes the time spent watching worth more than I can tally.

    • @tylerchassie7273
      @tylerchassie7273 Рік тому +5

      Right? Why have I never head it explained that way before? Kind of annoys me and makes me happy at the same

    • @TheD4VR0S
      @TheD4VR0S Рік тому

      heres what i dont understand : people can escape the first 100 thousand feet of earths gravity where gravity is at is strongest by traveling at only a few hundred mph (lockheed sr71) so why do they need to speed up to 8 miles per second to travel all the subsequent lots of 100k foot distances i'm pretty sure if a vehicle could maintain an upward motion of 10 mph it would eventually escape gravity or people could walk into space if there was a big enough mountain.
      edit: just found out the Saturn 5 rocket only had a max speed of 4.35 miles per second

    • @saf6996
      @saf6996 Рік тому +4

      Yup! Agree with you. This is a profoundly simple way to explain blackholes. Such a worthwhile lecture from Cox.

    • @sophosinio
      @sophosinio Рік тому

      @@TheD4VR0S Saturn V never did escape the earth gravity though. Yes, it went to the moon, but it was still under the earth's influence. Planes don't escape the gravity, air resistance at high speed is generating enough lift to overcome the gravity.

    • @TheD4VR0S
      @TheD4VR0S Рік тому

      @@sophosinio Are you claiming that if saturn 5 instead of going to the moon was instead traveling toward a distant star at 4.3 miles per second it wouldn't get there (granted it may take billions of years) it would only get there if its speed was greater than 6.9 miles per second ?
      ps: a if you want a star at a distance of greater than 4.5 billion light years because i know your going to claim that's how far earths gravity extends because of the age of the earth and the speed of gravity.

  • @alexpapa8354
    @alexpapa8354 Рік тому +19

    To be honest I dont know anything about what he says but he's calming nature when he talks makes me understand. I would listen to him the whole day.

  • @robertfrost5189
    @robertfrost5189 9 місяців тому +35

    I am not a physicist, nor a scientist. I am a simple retail employee in California. But, if entanglement happens near the event horizon of a black hole and if, as professor Cox suggests, black holes have a finite lifespan, then could a black hole become large enough and live long enough to pull in so much matter over it's lifetime, that it could eventually collapse on itself again and then detonate as it did when it first went supernova? And if we have not observed or do not have the tools to measure such an occurrence, isn't it possible that our universe was once itself a black hole? If true, could there be other similar black holes that have spawned other universes? If so, because black holes bend the fabric of space time, isn't it possible that we simply aren't able to detect these other universes because the space time in these universes don't overlap?
    Professor Cox is far and away my favorite scientist to listen to.

    • @johncurtis142
      @johncurtis142 Місяць тому +4

      For a simple retail employee, you are a deep thinker.

    • @cipisekmanka3111
      @cipisekmanka3111 Місяць тому +3

      You are correct! Qne cannot rely on what we see in the universe and the main reason is..... the speed of light is FINITE. And this triggers optical illusions. Gor examle if the speed of light was infinite, the black hole would not be black bit it would look like a gigantic star, very bright star. But the finity of light triggers an illusion it is black. To understand this, take the speed of sound which is as finite as a speed of light. If you go supersonic in a plane and thunder strikes behind you, you will never hear it! if you emit sound from supersonic plane backwards to a plane that goes subsonic your sound will never reach the subsonic plane! You are beyond event horizon so there is no way you can hear anything from subsonic plane and vise versa. And the same parallel works with the speed of light. This time however you swap the sound with light. So this time it is not the sound that cannot be heard, it is the image/ the light that cannot be seen. That is why black hole appear to be black when in fact it is pretty bright.

  • @Finutanslask
    @Finutanslask Рік тому +49

    I could listen to Brian Cox all day, what a storyteller he is and he’s describing complicated and complex subjects so well.

  • @kevinjenkins6986
    @kevinjenkins6986 Рік тому +123

    Brian Cox is a brilliant teacher! I love hearing him speak because you can tell he genuinely understands the very big and very small pictures and is at the cutting edge of theorizing how they interact. It’s cool to think about how time “stops” inside a black hole, so as it is a point in space with no time. The thing that intrigues me is what happens to matter in the singularity, especially in a super massive black hole

    • @fett713akamandodragon5
      @fett713akamandodragon5 Рік тому +2

      It's a super dense mass of particles, quarks, bosons, leptons or fermions etc. For super massive Black Holes, I'd have to imagine it squashes down even beyond the particles we're aware of.

    • @TheAGreenA
      @TheAGreenA Рік тому +3

      Time is impossible to imagine when entering a blackhole. Atoms that enter the blackhole get ripped apart into it’s smallest subatomic components and eventually squeezed into what is known as the singularity. As Brian Cox states we still don’t truly understand and probably will never understand what happens to matter when it enters into the blackhole and where it goes. Imagine gravity is so strong that light which travels at 671 million miles an hour cannot escape the gravitational pull of these monsters. At that speed you would be able to reach jupiter in less than hour. Just to give you an idea if you were to drive a car going 210 km/h on a straight highway towards jupiter it would take you 425 years to reach the gas giant…

    • @fett713akamandodragon5
      @fett713akamandodragon5 Рік тому

      @repentandbelieveinJesusChrist1 Your imaginary friend has no business in discussions of science, keep it to yourself freak.

    • @willkelly7370
      @willkelly7370 Рік тому +4

      It’s not really a point in space without time. Space-time is one construct. Keyword Brian used is time stops for the observer, if you were near the singularity time would still be moving normal for you. But for an external observer it would seem to stop. Such is the beauty of relativity

    • @fett713akamandodragon5
      @fett713akamandodragon5 Рік тому +1

      @@TheAGreenA The matter doesn't go anywhere but onto the singularity's surface, it's still a physical object.

  • @Jjernsberger
    @Jjernsberger 2 місяці тому +2

    Had the pleasure of seeing Mr Cox on his Horizons tour in 2022, right after we started receiving photos back from the JWST. He had an incredible HD screen for which to view these new, stunning images. Between his talk, and seeing those images with such clarity, it allowed for one of those beautiful moments in which I realized how infinitely small and insignificant (or significant) we really are. It was an amazing experience. Brian Cox is a treasure.

  • @kapilsharmaWorld_uncensored
    @kapilsharmaWorld_uncensored Рік тому +113

    It's almost magical that we can see such quality content for free.

  • @j.d.blitch5552
    @j.d.blitch5552 Рік тому +46

    Big Think and Brian Cox is a dream combo. Need more of it.

  • @Manoj_Gangineni
    @Manoj_Gangineni 9 місяців тому +20

    my son is just 3 years 5 months , he always talks about black hole and he is very much interested on these things . Every time he ask me to put Tv to learn about solar system , asteroids and collisions. Nebula ( which I even don’t know ) and galaxies .He wants to know more and more about black hole and nebula . Not sure what’s going on him. Better I want to take him with best astro physicist. He don’t like to watch or see anything apart from solar system . Being 3 years 5 month old , he likes you more . Everyday night , I want to tell him stories about universe , galaxies etc . To make him understand I’m learning these topics . Thanks for inspiration

    • @spicy_ketchup
      @spicy_ketchup Місяць тому +2

      Typical bs trying to make certain people seem smart.

  • @joghaella9500
    @joghaella9500 Рік тому +34

    Videos like this bring tears to my eyes because they make me realize just how small and irrelevant my daily life is, and how large and mysterious the world is. A black dot in space being not a place, but a moment in time? That is crazy to think about.

    • @mackieincsouthsea
      @mackieincsouthsea Рік тому +5

      See for me, we're the birthright of such an immeasurably complex system alongside an impossibly unlikely chain of events. To me, that it ended with 8bn fleshy lumps that can shed a tear in awe of it, surely that's enough relevance, and in ways it all being connected makes nothing "small". I find it all fascinating!

    • @friedricengravy6646
      @friedricengravy6646 Рік тому +1

      As Carl Sagan reminded us in life & since through recorded messages.
      Yet, there r men who stake claim to & who kill to defend a tiny spec of land on a tiny planet in the vast space of the universe.
      (paraphrasing)
      It really makes borders & war seem ignorant, as we r all human beings living on a single planet. Imagine the progress & functionality of collective thought. Sharing resources, information, experience, & labor. What if human beings measured success by the fate of all humans? Good for many in place of the few……
      What a world it would b. Instead we r lead by greed & fear.

    • @Coolcarting
      @Coolcarting Рік тому

      @@friedricengravy6646 Who is lead by greed and fear?

    • @friedricengravy6646
      @friedricengravy6646 Рік тому

      @@Coolcarting 🙄
      We live in a world where borders r created for 2 reasons, to protect the citizens & resources. Then at times, countries invade other countries for??? Land, resources, wealth, & power.
      Thats the macro level. We can then follow the same hierarchy down as far u like. To the state level? Local? Individual family? Personal space?? Its a generality only in the sense that some within the systems/structures/communities, r not focused on greed, wealth, & power, but otherwise, its exactly how our planet is organized. This is why I intentionally used the phrase ‘lead by’.

    • @jo2lovid
      @jo2lovid 11 місяців тому

      "A black dot in space being not a place, but a moment in time?"
      And what if that time is NOT the 'end of time', but the beginning of time.
      The release of Hawking radiation could then be the source of the beginning of the universe, the moment of the 'Big Bang'.
      Perhaps time would then be circular, where Black holes aggregate matter back to the beginning of time, and become the source of all data/matter again?

  • @DawleyDude
    @DawleyDude Місяць тому +2

    What I like most about him is that there is no antagonism with him, there's no aggression, he takes what he's learned and says "I believe" or "I think" and its based on what he's learned, so someone like myself who believes in God and have a good understanding of science can enjoy his work. He's an atheist but said "we don't know" which is uncommon in today's aggressive "pick a side" generation. I enjoy all his work as a result because his mind isn't thinking about the things that divide us as people, he just genuinely loves what he does and then enjoys passing on what he's learned and what he thinks these things mean without belittling those who don't know or those who may feel differently.

  • @ericherman5413
    @ericherman5413 Рік тому +123

    Dr. Cox is so good at telling all of us regular people about complex stuff.

    • @TheAslakVind
      @TheAslakVind Рік тому +1

      Professor :)

    • @Acanofbeer
      @Acanofbeer Рік тому +7

      @@TheAslakVindand a doctor. He is a PhD which is a Doctor of philosophy.

    • @bradgarrett7159
      @bradgarrett7159 Рік тому

      @@TheAslakVind He is a doctor, just not the medical type.

  • @mrpearson1230
    @mrpearson1230 Рік тому +75

    One of my favorite people to listen to. Physicist & rock star Brian Cox

    • @harryhay-fz7gs
      @harryhay-fz7gs Рік тому

      🎉

    • @mikenewtonninja9379
      @mikenewtonninja9379 5 місяців тому

      I'm not sure he's a rock star bruv, the Labour Party (Tony Blair at the time) used his bands song to promote thier manifesto. hardly biting the heads off bats or slaying stuff!

  • @Jemeni99
    @Jemeni99 3 місяці тому +2

    It's amazing how Mr Brian Cox can speak so eloquently about the universe, and we hang on every word, trusting it without a second thought hopeful we're not all doomed.

  • @jameswilkes451
    @jameswilkes451 Рік тому +125

    Man... Brian Cox always manages to touch something within my soul and give this sense of incredible awe, especially in the way that he gets you to think about the most fundamental things in reality. It's all down to the way he says things; on a good day he can make you almost feel what the universe is trying to say, and his quote from Einstein "a glimpse into something deeply hidden" made me relate to the many times in my life where I almost came upon an incredible answer, then forgot about it moments later.
    Meditating on why things exist, while staring at things that exist just because, i.e. rocks, plants, clouds, can really get you into this state and provoke thought. Really thinking about why a rock exists, down into the small vibrations within the atomic lattice itself, really tickles something deep in my soul! Haha.

    • @remnantime3672
      @remnantime3672 Рік тому +1

      Try the bible it makes more sense

    • @Mellerrrs
      @Mellerrrs 11 місяців тому +1

      I absolutely love this comment

    • @xristosrizos8406
      @xristosrizos8406 11 місяців тому +6

      ​@@remnantime3672why not the Lord of the Rings instead? It's a better fairy tale.

    • @remnantime3672
      @remnantime3672 11 місяців тому

      @@xristosrizos8406 .
      The bible is real... try reading it

    • @nikolaibuus5884
      @nikolaibuus5884 11 місяців тому

      lol@@remnantime3672

  • @andrewfrank7222
    @andrewfrank7222 Рік тому +22

    Brian Cox simply speaks with clarity that most mortals do not have. He says thinks like “we don’t know” and makes it sound incredible !!

  • @michaelsoderling9451
    @michaelsoderling9451 Рік тому +43

    Mindblowing. Also: My deepest admiration for Dr. Cox's magic ability to make such a complex issue understandable to a layman.

  • @betlogboy3
    @betlogboy3 11 місяців тому +27

    He explained everything so simply.. then he said "The simple way to say it.."
    This guy is amazing.

    • @davewalt1781
      @davewalt1781 9 місяців тому

      It's amazing how he comes up with theories that are virtually impossible. Read the first 5 chapters of Genesis in the Bible to learn the Truth about Creation. God created all things, visible and invisible.

    • @omi685
      @omi685 9 місяців тому +1

      ​@@davewalt1781Yeah, right, as if magic and the invisible daddy in the sky are totally possible 😂

    • @davewalt1781
      @davewalt1781 9 місяців тому

      @@omi685 I believe the Bible is totally God's Word and God created all things, visible and invisible. Please let me know what you believe. Maybe you can convince me I'm wrong.

    • @omi685
      @omi685 9 місяців тому

      @@davewalt1781 I believe in the Enlightenment.
      The bible is a collection of stories and myths. More than 3,500 different gods are being worshipped worldwide at the moment. More than 18,000 throughout our history. Your religion is an accident of birth.

    • @omi685
      @omi685 9 місяців тому

      @@davewalt1781 A piece of paper isn't proof, especially when there are more than 3,500 different gods being worshipped worldwide at the moment. More than 18,000 throughout history. Your religion is an accident of birth.

  • @Kratos-005
    @Kratos-005 17 днів тому

    Professor Cox always makes complicated topics more palatable for the average viewer. You can literally listen to him all day and actually work out some of the things he says with relative ease. Sure, some of what he’s saying are hard to work out, but he really does make it a lot easier for a lot of people.

  • @rbs6742
    @rbs6742 Рік тому +50

    Amazing! Very well commented, explained and illustrated. Thanks, Big Think and Brian Cox.

  • @beckichaplin1974
    @beckichaplin1974 9 місяців тому +3

    Black holes remind me of compost bins. You put the material in and it transforms into building blocks for something else. Fertile soil.
    Remarkable spark and curiosity, he has. Contagious.
    Brilliant.

  • @willyum3920
    @willyum3920 Рік тому +12

    Did he say he has a new book out? God I hope so because he'll be doing the rounds promoting it and I haven't seen him for a while. Even just 10 mins with Brian Cox is such a joy and fascinating without compare. He's just fabulous at explaining it and bringing it to life for everyone. Thank you for the vid

    • @anja2716
      @anja2716 Рік тому +1

      My sister made him a cup of tea once on set.😁

  • @Maxim.Nazarenko
    @Maxim.Nazarenko 9 місяців тому +36

    I never thought that Keanu Reeves knows so much about our universe.

  • @HunangsgreifiEldklof
    @HunangsgreifiEldklof Рік тому +10

    Absolutely blown away by your storytelling skills! Your soothing voice instantly turns any frown upside down. I'm so grateful for all the knowledge you share; it genuinely ignites a newfound interest in the content. Keep up the amazing work! 🙌 what a great human

  • @B0bby1122
    @B0bby1122 Рік тому +18

    One thing i find interesting is that before we observed black holes, equations showed such things exist. The same way Einstein equations showed that the universe is expanding before they observed it.
    So what about worm holes, although they may possibly not be naturally occurring, but the equations show they are possible. I see them as the key to allow us to be able to travel the universe, because even travelling at the speed of light is way too slow due to the size of the universe.

    • @BigNewGames
      @BigNewGames Рік тому +5

      Einstein's equations did not show the universe was expanding before they observed it. It was astronomers who discovered galaxies were moving away from us in every direction, to which led them to assume a big bang happened which started it all. They assumed because all the galaxies were moving away from us that our galaxy was located at the center of the theorized big bang. Einstein claimed the universe was static, not expanding or contracting.
      Einstein didn't know if the effects of gravity were infinite or not. He first proposed, if a big bang happened and gravity was not infinite then the most distant galaxies would continue to move away from us at a constant. So he came up with his cosmological constant and gave it a zero value, for not expanding or contracting. On the other hand, he wasn't sure if the influence of gravity was infinite. So he proposed if it were infinite, then the most distant galaxies would be slowing down, come to a halt relative to us and then begin reversing directions till everything in the universe came back together in what he called a big crunch.
      Never did Einstein's equations predict an accelerating expanding universe because he assumed it was static. Then, Edwin Hubble observed the most distant galaxies were not slowing down but actually accelerating. Einstein then admitted the cosmological constant was his biggest blunder. In fact, his big crunch was another blunder. Never did his equations predict the accelerated expansion of space with distance. If his equations did, then why the heck would he assume the universe might end in a big crunch?

    • @joehebert789
      @joehebert789 Рік тому

      Wormholes are thought to be profoundly unstable as far as we can tell at this time. They will remain a mode of travel only in science fiction for quite a while, if not forever.

    • @B0bby1122
      @B0bby1122 Рік тому +3

      @@BigNewGames well in 1927 Georges Lemaître who worked along Einstein saw that the general theory of relativity equations suggested the universe is expanding. The equations were showing it but Einstein didn't like the idea. He wrote it in a paper.
      Then in 1929 Hubble was the first to observe the universe is expanding.

    • @axle.australian.patriot
      @axle.australian.patriot Рік тому

      I really don't think the universe is expanding. I think it is just an illusion created out of the same concept as Inflation. More likely the universe is "Deflating" from my perspective :)

    • @ViTiiONz
      @ViTiiONz Рік тому +1

      The difference is that there are no equations showing that wormholes should exist. It's true that there's no reason space couldn't distort such that 2 points touch and create a wormhole, but there's no equations pointing to any mechanism that would result in that happening. We know that spacetime in our universe is flat, so it's not really reasonable to expect it to be possible to distort it at our will to create wormholes between 2 places that we want to travel between.
      Your point about the universe being too big to travel even at the speed of light is also not quite accurate. Relativity tells us that time and length both distort with velocity. From the perspective of a photon, time doesn't pass at all as it travels. A photon will complete it's journey to infinity without any time passing at all. When we talk about light years, we're talking about the distance (as we measure it) that a photon can travel in a year from our frame of reference, not from the frame of reference of the photon. While we won't be able to travel at the speed of light, the closer we could get to it, the greater the distortion of time and length we will experience. If we ever do manage to explore the galaxy, it will likely be because we developed technology that allows us to travel at a great enough speed that these distances can actually be covered within a reasonable time frame.

  • @nicholasadams2374
    @nicholasadams2374 3 місяці тому +2

    This video just sparked an idea in my head. What if black holes are where universes come from? They fill and fill for billions of years, until BANG!! Brian mentioning the center of a black hole being infinitely dense is what triggered the notion.
    Brian reignited my passion for physics about 12 years ago. When I first discovered him while watching his series Wonders of the Universe. It's an absolutely brilliant watch, that I couldn't recommend more. The only other man that made physics so understandable for the layman was the legend Richard Feynman. It's an incredibly rare gift. But the voice, in that regard Brian stands alone. Just wonderful to listen to.

  • @kristoffermaurer9689
    @kristoffermaurer9689 10 місяців тому +7

    Simply amazing. If I had Brian as a teacher in school I would probably end up within the science field.

  • @WaqasADay
    @WaqasADay Рік тому +11

    “If you look at nature really carefully and keep pulling the intellectual threads, and keep going and keep delving down in what nature seems to be trying to tell us, then if you are lucky and persistent, you can catch a glimpse of something deeply hidden.”

  • @roloug95
    @roloug95 2 дні тому

    I keep coming back to this video. The way he describes the singularity as a moment in time rather than a point in space is just riveting

  • @shars.555
    @shars.555 Рік тому +12

    I so appreciate that Brian Cox with such an intelligent mind can explain things so clearly so that I can enjoy these fascinating concepts. Loved this video. Thank you. 🧘‍♂️🙏💙

  • @Andrew-lo5sc
    @Andrew-lo5sc Рік тому +5

    The way he describes it is very interesting. He genuinely wants to understand. His curiosity gives it away.

    • @everythingisalllies2141
      @everythingisalllies2141 Рік тому

      No, he genuinely want to tell you what to think. The real question should be "Why would anyone in their right mind believe in Black Holes"? And no, they dont have "photos of Black Holes" they have computer generated images of what they wanted to see.

    • @watts18269
      @watts18269 Рік тому +2

      @@everythingisalllies2141it must be so unbelievably tiring actively forcing yourself to be an ignoramus your whole life 😂

    • @everythingisalllies2141
      @everythingisalllies2141 Рік тому

      @@watts18269 better than not thinking at all, and just accepting nonsense pretending that its real science.

  • @alanbrown2888
    @alanbrown2888 9 місяців тому +3

    Brian is a gift to science & understanding.

  • @dawnshoolah5047
    @dawnshoolah5047 Рік тому +8

    I just love how Brian Cox explains things

  • @BruderAdrian
    @BruderAdrian 7 місяців тому +2

    I've been listening to Brian Cox to go to bed for years now. He's an awesome dude I gotta say his soothing voice just gets me right every time.

  • @itsaboutwhatsfair1532
    @itsaboutwhatsfair1532 6 місяців тому +4

    Please have Brian cox more 🙏🙏🙏

  • @Icemon09
    @Icemon09 Рік тому +11

    This man makes me weep tears of joy and makes me feel grateful to be a part of something terrifyingly unknown. We know so little. And this weird thing that we call the universe, has no beginning or end. It breaks my mind of fear and sets me free to live my life.

  • @cadencopley1617
    @cadencopley1617 9 місяців тому +2

    You can see how excited he gets about his work. It is beautiful

  • @photografr7
    @photografr7 8 місяців тому +1

    In my youth, I was the co-director of a public observatory. But this discussion is all new to me.

  • @jamesjones5020
    @jamesjones5020 Рік тому +25

    I've never been interested in black holes but this man engages you into his field of work quite extraordinary . I hope him and his colleagues have an astronomical discovery and it changes our concepts of black holes in general going forward . Mesmerising information.

    • @pondlakes
      @pondlakes Рік тому +2

      the greatest ambassador for physics and space sciences of all time

    • @gollese
      @gollese 11 місяців тому

      How can black holes NOT interest someone.

    • @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep
      @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep 11 місяців тому +1

      It's crazy how fine tuned the universe is that we have life and not a universe that is just black holes.

    • @SteveNinetyski
      @SteveNinetyski 10 місяців тому

      All that says to me is that you have a malleable brain like most people in this era.
      "Oh I like blackholes now, because Brian has such a big smile and soft voice and overuses the word profound"

    • @SteveNinetyski
      @SteveNinetyski 10 місяців тому

      Also, while I am here...what is YOUR concept of a black hole? (considering you said you had no previous interest)...and how would you like "our concept of black holes to change"?
      Your comment is the epitome of typing words but saying nothing.

  • @waffle8364
    @waffle8364 11 місяців тому +48

    I feel like death allows us to ask these crazy questions. Everyone reading this comment.... will die one day. but before that we have an insane desire to know why this is all happening. I envy the future because they will have the answers that we could never yet reach

    • @spencerroemer3253
      @spencerroemer3253 3 місяці тому +3

      Not me I’m not going to die

    • @Mohamed_El-derderi
      @Mohamed_El-derderi 2 місяці тому +7

      Ignorance is sometimes a bliss. Future generations might learn of the reality of black holes and its singularity, neutron stars, everything about antimatter. And that reality might be so terrifying that those future generation might envy your ignorance

    • @PlantNerdLady
      @PlantNerdLady 4 дні тому

      They may also never really know

    • @raymondwilliams185
      @raymondwilliams185 День тому

      We so death .😂😅😂😂😂

  • @Shafiullahsoomro
    @Shafiullahsoomro 7 місяців тому +1

    He explained very gently. I never understood the things he said before until I listened him. Amazing

  • @kristofferninovaquilar8573
    @kristofferninovaquilar8573 Рік тому +6

    More of Brian's understanding, please.

  • @space_explore-
    @space_explore- 7 місяців тому +4

    Can hear Brian talk about space all day

  • @abonilla131
    @abonilla131 7 місяців тому +1

    Best person to ever explain a complex subject regarding black holes

  • @smmfdftbh
    @smmfdftbh Рік тому +5

    I could listen to Brian all day. He's so knowledgeable and explains things in such a way that you just can't help but be so interested in what he's saying

  • @mattp.272
    @mattp.272 11 місяців тому +6

    He is not beyond simplifying his language and complex concepts so the non-scientist can understand, yet he stays on topic and explains the subject in a way that is still super interesting.

  • @donnythedealer9761
    @donnythedealer9761 7 місяців тому +1

    Brian Cox was a part of my childhood, and he's now a part of my adulthood. He's remarkably good at explaining stuff.

  • @ito2789
    @ito2789 Рік тому +8

    This was beautifully presented and spoken. Dr. Cox is not only a brilliant scientist but a poet IMO.

  • @Netroníq
    @Netroníq Рік тому +5

    This was food for my soul! Very well produced...& and Prof always delivers the knowledge

    • @eternalsharringan
      @eternalsharringan Рік тому

      Ironic, considering these "scientists" are trying to tell you that you don't have a soul.

  • @jameslee8997
    @jameslee8997 6 місяців тому +1

    Brian Cox adds passion and humanity to abstract concepts such as quantum physics. Had he been my physics professor, I would have probably become a physicist- albeit a UA-camr one.

  • @n1msu
    @n1msu Рік тому +10

    I've not heard from Brian Cox for a good few years now, he is a remarkable teacher, and certainly hasn't lost his passion or his ability to teach in a way that most people can understand.

    • @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep
      @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep 11 місяців тому +1

      Aside from pretending the universe never had a finite start because it refutes his Atheism. That's an interesting way to teach science...

    • @brandonmcgregor9912
      @brandonmcgregor9912 10 місяців тому

      @@WaterspoutsOfTheDeep I take it you don't know what a "theory" is.

    • @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep
      @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep 10 місяців тому +1

      @@brandonmcgregor9912 I take it you don't know mankinds most proven knowledge the spacetime theorems have established the universe is not cyclical or eternal thus requires a finite start thus causal agent. Clearly you haven't the vaguest clue what I was referencing.

    • @brandonmcgregor9912
      @brandonmcgregor9912 10 місяців тому

      @@WaterspoutsOfTheDeep You are whining about Brian Cox "pretending" the universe never had a finite start. It's a *working theory*. Hence I suggested you don't know what a theory is as it is not a proven and undeniable fact. And then making a leap to insult his atheism. You are just acting childish.
      Not to mention you are clearly being verbose to try and sound more clever than you actually are.

    • @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep
      @WaterspoutsOfTheDeep 10 місяців тому

      @@brandonmcgregor9912 lmao I don't think you realize how much of a fool you are making of yourself. By your definition everything in all of human history is "theory" and can be denied outside of basically just math. There is no absolute proof of anything outside of basically just some math. Clearly we do not function as the ridiculous notion you just presented. It's actually mind boggling how dense you are to even have no self awareness to post something so utterly nonsensical.

  • @2liter8
    @2liter8 Рік тому +6

    This dude is a rare person. Someone you can listen to and who speaks slowly and clearly without redundancy and stumbling over words.

  • @chunkun4902
    @chunkun4902 23 дні тому

    Unrelated to the topic but I find it admiring how clearly he communicates complicated physics concepts to us like I could never.

  • @tera1755
    @tera1755 Рік тому +5

    I too have my own suspicions of black holes coupled with the fractal element of nature. I can’t help but suspect that we may find our universe was started by a back hole. As it were, the “center” of a black hole is an “output” that produces a universe. All speculative, but it’s the current conclusion I find compelling.

    • @-LSC
      @-LSC Рік тому

      This is based purely on speculation, but I believe black holes are portals to / from other dimension/ universe for creations that are able to go through, which our naked eye isn’t allowed to witness, say angels.

    • @richardbroad2848
      @richardbroad2848 11 місяців тому

      ​​@@-LSCI think this too. They collect material from one universe, strip it down to the most basic structures possible into a point over a very very (very) long time. At some point they spew it all out to the "other side". On that other side it's seen as a big bang, should any sort of life form from those elements be able to evolve somewhere info life that's able to eventually invent a JWST. In the spewed out universe eventually black holes form and it goes on and on and on. Nothing is ever lost. I think in this sense we never really die.

  • @SinisterBlackheart
    @SinisterBlackheart Рік тому +5

    Imagine on the other side of all these blackholes the energy is converging onto one spot. It's being compressed until all the energy in our universe is absorbed into the one singularity. It wouldn't be the process of entropy and acting chaotic, instead, it would be through the process of negentropy and becoming orderly. Eventually, the universe goes through labor and gives birth resulting in the big bang and tearing a hole back into this universe. The birth of a new universe, to grow and expand and eventually die again. The infinite cycle of life.

  • @Edgunsuk
    @Edgunsuk День тому

    Brian's explanation of entropy was possible the best thing i had ever heard I'm a big roughty toughty bouncer in my 50s , and I'm not ashamed to say when i realised i understood what he was talking about i tiered up , actually understanding a scientific principal for the first time could watch him for a year and not get bored i always come away with some thing significant to remember , like now , it had never really accrued to me that black holes are black because of the escape velocity of photons ....

  • @TheCircusofFail
    @TheCircusofFail Рік тому +4

    If black holes do have a finite lifespan based on the loss of HR, are we currently able to calculate how long they could exist for? Also, would it remain a black hole when it no longer possesses the mass to maintain the gravity required or would it just “cease to exist” as suggested in the video? Professor Cox is always so interesting, thanks for posting!

    • @alextaunton3099
      @alextaunton3099 Рік тому +1

      It does have a finite lifespan, and it basically "evaporates" away

    • @Hatemode_NJ
      @Hatemode_NJ 10 місяців тому

      There's a good video on UA-cam called the very last thing to happen in the universe by in a nutshell. Should check it out

  • @KrizTahimic
    @KrizTahimic Рік тому +4

    What an amazing explanation! I'm already fascinated by the black hole/escape velocity explanation, but it keeps getting better! Didn't expect to reach up to the latest research and somehow feel I have a better grasp of it!

    • @KevMcc-c2b
      @KevMcc-c2b 10 місяців тому

      *Laughs in taxes*

  • @jaredklements729
    @jaredklements729 6 місяців тому +1

    This man has the calmest voice of any physicist that I’ve ever heard.

  • @darianw.
    @darianw. Рік тому +6

    That’s so exciting! I would love to know more about the deeper nature of our universe. I think I was just born too early to understand all that. Maybe one day the humans will unlock all the secrets of the universe… Makes me crazy sometimes to know so little about the reality we life in

  • @robfut9954
    @robfut9954 Рік тому +8

    I googled black holes on high school computer class. Got detention, never looked into them since.

  • @superkool7
    @superkool7 Місяць тому

    Been a fan of this man for 20 years. UA-cam STILL recommends his content to me. Much love and respect brother.

  • @sohibjonsuhrobov1101
    @sohibjonsuhrobov1101 Рік тому +4

    🙏 thanks for your invaluable time and effort!

  • @syed1559
    @syed1559 3 місяці тому

    What a gifted teacher when it comes to explaining complex topics.

  • @RobCLynch
    @RobCLynch 3 місяці тому +2

    Brian Cox is almost poetic in his narration. He's like the English version of Carl Sagan.

  • @grapeshott
    @grapeshott Рік тому +12

    Wait, so how did Laplace know that light had a definite speed, 200 years before Einstein?

    • @Footballalwayswords
      @Footballalwayswords Рік тому +10

      Laplace did not specifically know that light had a definite speed, as this understanding developed after his time. However, he was involved in the gravitational measurements of Earth and the Moon, where he observed that the apparent position of a celestial body is not its actual position due to the finite speed of light. This discrepancy suggested to Laplace the possibility that light takes time to travel from one point to another. His work was influential in laying the groundwork for understanding the concept of the finite speed of light.

    • @arrowpaine
      @arrowpaine Рік тому +6

      In 1676, the Danish astronomer Ole Roemer (1644-1710) became the first person to measure the speed of light. Roemer measured the speed of light by timing eclipses of Jupiter's moon Io. So yeah, people knew the speed of light before Einstein.

    • @Footballalwayswords
      @Footballalwayswords Рік тому +5

      ​@@arrowpaine Rømer realized that this variation was due to the finite speed of light, and he estimated it to be around 225,000 kilometers per second. Although Rømer's estimate was not precise, it was the first demonstration that light does indeed have a finite speed.

    • @MikeGuerrero93
      @MikeGuerrero93 Рік тому

      Just guessing.
      Probably he did not think it had a definite speed. He might as well just thought anything could accelerate faster than light (whatever it's speed was).

  • @classic3052
    @classic3052 20 днів тому

    Brian Cox is a universal treasure. The way he explained black holes really had me thinking if this what happens to our consciousness when we die ? Is death our black hole with our life time of consciousness being released back into the universe after our death? Oh man heavy stuff

  • @obied1182
    @obied1182 11 місяців тому +9

    John wick after going to school

    • @AF92.
      @AF92. 7 місяців тому

      😂

  • @fatehalam
    @fatehalam 10 місяців тому +6

    It’s so amazing how this man can explain such complex ideas so easily. Just spectacular 🤩

  • @jivescript
    @jivescript 10 місяців тому +2

    when explaining these theories its so helpful to be able to see graphics and illustrations to help understand and imagine the what is being described.

  • @qfina
    @qfina 10 місяців тому +3

    Brian Cox is awesome. I have no place or business watching things like this, they go so far over my head. But somehow Brian makes it fascinating and curious, and keeps me hooked just with his enthusiasm.

  • @SDventurevoyages
    @SDventurevoyages 9 днів тому +3

    Keanu Reeves in an alternate universe

  • @luvnlago
    @luvnlago Місяць тому

    I really enjoy how Brian has touched on this subject. A bit of faith, a bit of science, a bit of harmony and a large amount of humility. It could be b
    Black holes are a universal recycling bin, or maybe the birthplace and recorder of every moment or vector.

  • @MikeH_41-33_LII
    @MikeH_41-33_LII 8 місяців тому +12

    This man is God. I’m convinced.

    • @chilling-boy
      @chilling-boy 7 місяців тому

      Which man is God?

    • @felix-qf3wl
      @felix-qf3wl 3 місяці тому

      STOP MADNESS, mike, no your boundaries

    • @MikeH_41-33_LII
      @MikeH_41-33_LII 3 місяці тому

      @@chilling-boy the guy you’re watching in this video.

    • @Onetimeonly1267
      @Onetimeonly1267 3 місяці тому +1

      ​@@felix-qf3wl*know

    • @AlexMbithi-v3w
      @AlexMbithi-v3w 3 місяці тому

      Noooooooooo, can never be!!!!!

  • @WenereiKaraka
    @WenereiKaraka 4 місяці тому +3

    You start off saying it’s all theoretical which means Black holes don’t exist

    • @popdop0074
      @popdop0074 4 місяці тому +1

      Lmao, no. A theory is a set of related pieces of knowledge regarding a given question. Not everything in a theory is theoretical, theories describe the nature of everything in our universe.

  • @greyjamiesod4989
    @greyjamiesod4989 8 місяців тому +1

    After 50 plus years of work, Brian is an entirely new view of every thing. Unlike Hawkins and Einstein, Brian makes it easy enough for an old man to understand. Thank you Brian.

  • @alexhawk1918
    @alexhawk1918 9 місяців тому +4

    God is real

  • @LesterWayneDobos
    @LesterWayneDobos 10 місяців тому +2

    Best person I’ve heard talk about black holes. Quantum gravity sounds exciting, just getting some answers to nature’s deepest questions is the most awesomeness thing!

  •  8 місяців тому +1

    The greatest storyteller of all time! It is such a joy to listen and learn these things with Brian! I am so happy I found this.

  • @shaniabailey-edmonds8621
    @shaniabailey-edmonds8621 5 місяців тому +1

    I've no true understanding to some of the jargon he ust shared. But this was incredibly moving to watch. Space and Time are one of the most interesting mysteries of life itself. This was so beautiful. I'm glad i came into contact with this today.

  • @ABitefLife
    @ABitefLife 9 місяців тому +2

    How can there possibly be a beginning? To me that is the ultimate mind bender . Even when you consider a big bang or a cosmicly condensed singularity.. there will always be “what was before that?” There is no point where there was nothing before a beginning . Every few years or so I come back to contemplate on that for a little bit, but it can’t be answered so it’s just a brief mind exercise. It’s ironic that the biggest and probably most important questions, at least for now, can’t be answered.

  • @generalcomments1239
    @generalcomments1239 Місяць тому

    I can only wrap my head around bits of this but OMG! Fascinating and exciting. Love Brian, he’s the best 🎉❤

  • @tamirleibovich
    @tamirleibovich 8 місяців тому +2

    I love astrophysics and from time to time there are videos that take me to an "out of body" experience