Cosmic Inflation: The Solution to the Big Bang Theory and the Universe

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  • Опубліковано 7 чер 2024
  • Signup for your FREE trial to Wondrium here: ow.ly/yxkR30s9btS
    Follow up video on Eternal Inflation:
    • Eternal Inflation: The...
    References:
    Gary Felder's Wondrium lectures on Big Bang: t.ly/emdPY
    Alan Guth paper summary and lecture: t.ly/WqKQ
    Alan Guth paper: t.ly/wF3x
    Paul Steinhardt list of articles on Inflationary cosmology: t.ly/ZqmH
    Excellent article on Inflation: t.ly/rrZU
    Chapters:
    0:00 - Popular models of Big Bang are incorrect
    2:27 - Observations not explained by original Big Bang model
    4:37 - Common misunderstandings of Big Bang
    7:12 - How Inflation "fixes" the Big Bang
    11:56 - What caused cosmic Inflation?
    15:23 - Next video: Eternal Inflation!
    Summary:
    The Big Bang theory: In the beginning, the universe was packed tightly together into a point of infinite density. It then exploded into the universe we see today. This is actually INCORRECT.
    There was no explosion. There was no substance like stars, galaxies, or even atoms that went flying. The universe did not have zero size or infinite density. It is just a moment in time when the universe was very hot and very dense.
    And contrary to popular belief, the big bang model is not a theory of how the universe began. We don't know how it began.
    The early model of the BB failed to explain some later observations about the universe - its homogeneity, its flatness, and no magnetic monopoles. The theory of cosmic inflation proposed by Alan Guth and others, solved these puzzles.
    What is this theory of Inflation? How does it fix the big bang? What caused Inflation to happen?
    Cosmic Inflation is a sudden expansion, faster than the speed of light, whcih happend from about 10^-36 seconds after the beginning to 10^-32 seconds. It expanded a factor of at least 10^78x
    How could inflation occur faster than speed of light? Einstein’s theory of special relativity shows that speed limit applies only to things moving within space, not the expansion of space itself.
    Some descriptions of inflation say the universe started out smaller than an atom, then expanded to the size of a grapefruit. This is misleading because it implies that the universe has an edge. It doesn’t.
    Other common misunderstandings about the Big Bang: The universe did not come from a point of infinite density and heat. This is purely due to mathematical extrapolation. A singularity is probably not a physical thing.
    Universe is expanding, but galaxies aren’t actually moving at that expansion rate, only the space between galaxies is becoming larger, and only on very large scales. But on smaller scales gravity still holds stars together within a galaxy, and certain galaxies are still attracted to each other.
    There is no center of the universe or location. Every point moved away from every other point.
    The universe is extremely homogenous and isotropic which means that it appears roughly the same anywhere. This can be seen in the cosmic microwave background, or CMB, where the tiny differences you see on its image represent temperature fluctuations of only 0.0001 Kelvin.
    How did the universe smooth out? Imagine it like the surface of deflated balloon. There may be tiny imperfections like wrinkles randomly distributed on it. If the balloon is suddenly inflated to a very large size, the wrinkles get smoothed out.
    How does inflation explain the flatness issue? If you were the size of an ant on a small balloon, and the balloon expanded to the size of the Earth, it would appear flat to you, even though it is still a sphere, that it's flat. Note "curvature" means an overall curvature of the universe in FOUR dimensions. This is usually shown as 2D surface on a 3D object like a balloon.
    How does inflation solve the fact that we observe no magnetic monopoles?
    Monopoles can only theoretically form at very high temperatures, that were only present during the big bang. But once they formed they would be stable enough to survive. Since Inflation would have quickly cooled the universe, no new monopoles would be created after inflation. These would have been distributed so broadly that there would be hardly any left in any given part of space.
    The universe is not completely smooth. CMB shows that there were small temperature differences. This anisotropy explains the large scale structures of the universe.
    How did inflation start? What was responsible for inflation?
    This is not well understood. It is thought that there may have been a scalar inflation field during the time of the big bang, called the inflation field.
    #cosmicinflation
    #bigbang
    This field would have been in a false vacuum at very high temperatures, but moved to its true vacuum at lower temperatures, with the help of quantum tunneling. When the field reached the lowest minimum energy density in the potential, Inflation came to a stop. This is a very short process.
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 789

  • @hupekyser
    @hupekyser 2 роки тому +70

    I've said it many times but. Your explanations are absolutely remarkable, in that you can explain so many complicated ideas so straight forward and accessible. I have no idea how you can do it.
    Bravo, on another fascinating video.

    • @otienoroberts
      @otienoroberts 2 роки тому

      You seem to have understood everything in the video, kindly explain what infinite density is, and what would be making it infinite, is it the mass or volume? If its the mass, what would contain an infinite mass, and if its the volume, how can that be when the big bang is theorized to have originated from a point smaller than an atom?? Science is great, but I am getting the feeling more and more that people just aren't questioning things and are just swallowing whatever science presents, some of which is in my opinion ridiculous. How can density be infinite if you logically think about it? Even though I am not a physicist, I am willing to bet my life that there's no way something like mass can be infinite, it wouldn't make any logical sense.

  • @stanfordyu8829
    @stanfordyu8829 Рік тому +2

    Why do I found your videos addicting? Like, I can’t stop watching them… Ur my favorite educator so far.

  • @Raphael4722
    @Raphael4722 2 роки тому +5

    This channel always has the best physics explanations on UA-cam!

  • @daffidavit
    @daffidavit 2 роки тому +4

    I've heard this explained by many others, but this is one of the better presentations.

  • @d_xnii
    @d_xnii 2 роки тому +4

    i love your videos so so much, thank you for putting so much work in to them💗

  • @thestragequack3598
    @thestragequack3598 2 роки тому +4

    Impatiently waiting for the next part!

  • @fellopiantube7607
    @fellopiantube7607 9 місяців тому +2

    thank you for addressing those many misconceptions. the story is now much more clearer for me.

  • @matkosmat8890
    @matkosmat8890 2 роки тому +10

    Thanks, Arvin, for another great video! My mind was still struggling with the X10^78 growth during Inflation when you said "unimaginably bigger"... I wonder what would be "unimaginable" to a person like you or Dr Guth :)

  • @johngrey5806
    @johngrey5806 2 роки тому +4

    Excellent lecture! Thank you, Mr. Ash.

  • @shmigelsky
    @shmigelsky 2 роки тому +2

    Thanks, that is super interesting. This has to be one of my favourite channels, please keep up the outstanding videos.

  • @kt420ish
    @kt420ish 2 роки тому +26

    Good timing. I literally just finished reading chapter 4 in the book "Origins" by Tyson that goes over this very subject. Seeing it after reading it makes it easier to understand. Always love your videos!

  • @KingBritish
    @KingBritish 2 роки тому +2

    Great verbal & visual explanations 👍🏻

  • @anthonyghossoub9403
    @anthonyghossoub9403 2 роки тому +3

    Simply amazing videos that makes us all more and more interested in physics

  • @zertyuz
    @zertyuz 2 роки тому +2

    Absolutely fantastic video as always sir. Can't wait for your video on eternal inflation - this topic absolutely fascinates me!

  • @jeancorriveau8686
    @jeancorriveau8686 Рік тому +2

    I watched videos from other sources (and read articles). Arvin's contribution clarifies a few concepts. I find inflation theory makes sense now. The timeline presented gives me a feel (sort of) for such tiny durations, like 10^-32 second. At the level of the Planck units, this is a huge duration. A lot can and did happen. That the universe expands from every single spot in the universe, and in all directions, can only be possible with a fourth dimension feeding space with energy (dark energy?). It's not the time dimension.

  • @claudew7763
    @claudew7763 2 роки тому

    Even though I know this stuff backwards and forwards I have never heard it explained so well! You've earned my subscritption!

  • @kingfisher8743
    @kingfisher8743 2 роки тому +1

    Arvin you make the best videos!

  • @sogesogekingu2961
    @sogesogekingu2961 Рік тому +1

    Such a great explanation!

  • @nektardymski6025
    @nektardymski6025 2 роки тому +2

    Now this is a quality content!

  • @the420aditya
    @the420aditya 2 роки тому +1

    absolutely brilliant. Keep it going.

  • @victorguzman2302
    @victorguzman2302 2 роки тому +1

    Wow! Great video. Thank you.

  • @robotaholic
    @robotaholic 2 роки тому +2

    Guth is the opposite of arrogant. He never brags or even gets heated in discussions. I really like his attitude and yours too sir

  • @rwarren58
    @rwarren58 2 роки тому +16

    As always a great presentation. In combination with your other videos, I think of the incredible odds it took to make our universe just right and for us to be inhabitants of this universe. Your next video will answer (or at least explain) my question about fine tuning, so I will ask this. What is the purpose of the Universe? Thanks again and welcome back. It feels like aeons since you last posted.

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  2 роки тому +6

      I made a video about cosmic purpose: ua-cam.com/video/SJ6943_Qtyg/v-deo.html - Do I think there is one? Let me sum it up in one phrase - "Shining piece of dust" -- the video above explains what that means.

    • @rwarren58
      @rwarren58 2 роки тому +2

      @@ArvinAsh Thanks Arvin! I should've known! I'll check it now!🧠

    • @charliemeyer6475
      @charliemeyer6475 2 роки тому

      It seems like incredible odds but if it's a deterministic universe the chance of us chatting about it was 100%.

    • @rwarren58
      @rwarren58 2 роки тому

      @@charliemeyer6475 May be a non-zero chance of happening which means it will happen over time. At least once. However; there is an equal chance of it happening only once.
      Was Copernicus wrong? Are we special?

    • @vitovittucci9801
      @vitovittucci9801 2 роки тому

      A@@charliemeyer6475 And so for you to be born among millions of spermatozoos.

  • @jasonemryss
    @jasonemryss 2 роки тому +1

    Excellent!! Good show!!

  • @fe90
    @fe90 2 роки тому +1

    Absolutely brilliant.

  • @Dragrath1
    @Dragrath1 2 роки тому +4

    Given that recent observations have largely falsified the cosmological principal assumption of the existence of any scale where the universe is isotropic and homogeneous up to 4.9 sigma (meaning there is only a 1 in 2 million statistical odds of the observations being a statistical fluke arising by chance within a universe where the cosmological principal largely applies) I have personally become extremely skeptical of the so called inflationary model.
    What has been conveniently forgotten with the standard narrative for modern cosmology is that we have *never* had proof that the dipole observed in the CMB is "kinematic" that was merely assumed for convenience in the absence of any data. However there was an experimental test proposed in the 1980's which could test this assumption either verifying or falsifying the kinematic dipole assumption. The catch is that the test requires millions of cosmologically distant sources all across the whole sky which can be used to construct a dipole to compare to the CMB dipole in magnitude and direction data which hasn't existed. As such the field of cosmology largely went on assuming their assumption since then as an initial premise despite warnings of other cosmologists and mathematicians
    Last year this test was finally performed by Nathan J. Secrest et al. using 1.36 million quasars measured over the various initial and extended missions of WISE that are cataloged into the meta catalogue catWISE.
    The Dipole differs in 8 degrees of direction with over twice the magnitude of the CMB dipole which is at 4.9 sigma disagreement with the kinematic dipole assumption which requires that both dipoles be the same in both magnitude and direction. Citation: Nathan J. Secrest et al 2021 ApJL 908 L51
    This is significant enough to rule out the pure kinematic dipole assumption, i.e. the cosmological components of the CMB dipole arising from inhomogeneities and anisotropies encoded in the CMB epoch must be nonzero.
    Remember the observed dipole in the CMB is in general a combination of the kinematic component of the dipole but also two cosmological components that respectively represent both the initial inhomogeneities and anisotropies at the time of recombination when the CMB was emitted and all the distortions from intervening inhomogeneities in density.
    The standard cosmological model is built on the *assumption* that all of these components are zero except the kinematic term. This has now been experimentally *falsified* showing that at least one of these other components must be significantly nonzero.
    *The existence of a nonzero cosmological component to the CMB dipole automatically is sufficient to falsify the existence of the cosmological principal within the observable universe.*
    This in turn is sufficient to falsify one of the main lines of "evidence for inflation namely the supposed "smoothness" of the early universe, hence inflation is now on far more shaky ground as the reason it appears smooth turns out to be that you have applied a correction to eliminate the large temperature and density fluctuations that were actually encoded in the CMB because they looked to large for cosmologists to except.
    TDLR *the CMB fluctuations appear small not because they actually are small but because cosmologists have removed the large fluctuations from the data set before they analyzed it because they seemed too large to be fluctuations in their assumed model.*
    If you want the paper to check for yourself I have cited it above and if needed I can provide a link to the paper so you can read it for yourself.

    • @ysc6896
      @ysc6896 23 дні тому

      Holy you dont punctuate anything
      Very techy, but...wouldn't a simple "inflationary model is garbage" suffice?
      Very impressive techhead

  • @MacedonianHero
    @MacedonianHero 2 роки тому +2

    Awesome video Arvin! Looking forward to eternal inflation!

  • @FilterYT
    @FilterYT 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you for tackling this subject, inflation is always just passed over in the popular sources, this was a real help, thanks again!

  • @crazypapercraftwithkeshav2312
    @crazypapercraftwithkeshav2312 2 роки тому +2

    Amazing video ❤️🔥🤜👍

  • @sabarapitame
    @sabarapitame 2 роки тому +6

    Here, in Argentina, economic inflation grows almost in the same way as cosmological inflation every year.
    It just occurred to me watching the video, couldn't we be a black hole that exploded in another universe by Hawking radiation?

  • @stevemonkey6666
    @stevemonkey6666 2 роки тому +5

    Your explanation of inflation starting at about 13:20 is very interesting. I have never seen anything like it on a popular science channel 👍

    • @periurban
      @periurban 2 роки тому

      That's because it's not an accepted or proven part of the hypothesis, but just one of many ideas.

    • @gravitonthongs1363
      @gravitonthongs1363 2 роки тому

      @@periurban BB is *theory, and the inflaton state is the best explanation. Do you have a superior alternative?

    • @periurban
      @periurban 2 роки тому

      @@gravitonthongs1363 I take your point. I think there is a great deal of circumstantial evidence that surrounds our cosmological observations, leading to the idea called the big bang.
      I don't think inflation is an explanation. Someone said elsewhere in these comments that observing that two cars have collided is a good description of a car crash, but fails to explain the events.
      I think inflation is the same, as far as it is required for the BB theory to make sense.
      Even so, there are a few other ways that the modern universe doesn't quite look like the theory predicts.
      The good news is that the JWST will be looking back in time to perhaps 100m years after the BB. That will give us some great new observations that should help focus our minds.
      No, I don't have a better theory, and I know the anomalies don't necessitate a radically different idea, but there is something missing, and I cannot wait to see what it might be.

    • @gravitonthongs1363
      @gravitonthongs1363 2 роки тому

      @@periurban well said

    • @jamesmnguyen
      @jamesmnguyen 2 роки тому

      @@gravitonthongs1363 There is CCC theory (i forgot the full name, something Conformal Cyclical...) that still technically says the Big Bang happened but for a different reason.

  • @EugeneHaroldKrab
    @EugeneHaroldKrab 2 роки тому +1

    Another great video

  • @mayurjain5452
    @mayurjain5452 Рік тому

    great work

  • @HeavyMetal45
    @HeavyMetal45 4 місяці тому

    Thank you for this video!! The conceptualization of the Big Bang finally clicked for me.

  • @rajneesh75sharma
    @rajneesh75sharma 4 місяці тому

    Brilliant eye opening video

  • @ionutandrei4224
    @ionutandrei4224 2 роки тому +8

    Very good episode! But I have a one question.
    How is related symmetry breaking to cosmic inflation? It's a bit hard to understand how symmetry breaking is related to the quantum field responsabile for inflation.

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  2 роки тому +4

      I believe you are referring to electroweak symmetry breaking causing the Higgs Field mechanism? The decay of the inflation field is separate from that and occurred earlier at higher temperatures.

    • @ionutandrei4224
      @ionutandrei4224 2 роки тому +1

      @@ArvinAsh Well I was reading Lawrence Krauss book "A Universe from Nothing" and at some point he disscus the idea about inflation but in a different way.
      He made a good analogy by saying that the universe went through a phase transition to a low-energy state similar to supercooled water and symmetry is breaking when ice crystals are instantly formed on it. So lower energy state I suppose it's mean symmetry breaking and inflation it's generated when this happens. I was currious how it is your explanation of scalar field it's related to this.

    • @KenLord
      @KenLord 2 роки тому +1

      Hey @@ArvinAsh did you look into Pangburn before you agreed to be a speaker at the Vancouver event? Are you aware of Pangburn's history of not paying speakers or performers, and of not reimbursing ticket holders for cancelled events? Do you approve of the misogynistic posters they've used to advertise the event? Or Pangburn's long history of promoting right-wing anti-science / fox news / breitbart "philosophy"? Are you aware that you'll be sharing the stage with a man who has been penalized for sexual misconduct, and who chose to associate with child sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein?

  • @openyoureyesandseethefutur5802
    @openyoureyesandseethefutur5802 2 роки тому +1

    big thanks,

  • @lucasjeemanion
    @lucasjeemanion Рік тому +1

    Hey Arvin, can I ask a personal question? You don't have to answer of course. But do you make all these videos by yourself or do you work with a team. The reason I ask is I've been watching a lot of your videos and you cover so many different topics with such great knowledge of it all in simple explanations which is a serious gift and ability which demonstrates great wisdom imo. It's hard for me to image how you could do so much by yourself!! And thank you so much for making me smarter!!

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  Рік тому +3

      I create the concepts, write the scripts and direct the videos. But I have a team that creates the various and animations, and does the visual and sound editing. Thanks for watching my friend. I'm glad these videos are enjoyable.

    • @lucasjeemanion
      @lucasjeemanion Рік тому +1

      @Arvin Ash Wow man, that is very impressive. You're such a great personality, and your voice is strangely unique and recognizable as such. But above all I love how passionate you are, I can tell you are just loving it and having a great time... I geuss I can't know that for certain but so it appears. Really have taught me so much about the universe and myself and I appreciate it because that kind of stuff is very important to me, self-realization and things of that nature. Thanks Arvin!!!

  • @ranjith6902
    @ranjith6902 2 роки тому +1

    Sir! Really great👏👍😊

  • @someguy1914
    @someguy1914 2 роки тому +1

    Hi I've got a question, I'm wrapping my head around the relationship between gravity and time-space, so our experience of time is influenced by gravity, and if we were to manage to travel at a very fast speed somewhere very far away from any large gravity source we would experience time differently, so my question is whats influencing our experience of time when we travel very fast, is it the lack of the gravity or the velocity that we're travelling, which somehow causes some kind of effect on timespace and our experience of time, sorry for the long question and thank you.

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  2 роки тому

      We do not experience time any differently whether we are traveling fast or whether we are in a large gravitational well. We experience time exactly the same regardless of these factors. The only effect you would notice is when you compare the ticking of your clock to the clock of on a different reference frame. And paradoxically, it would appear to you that you are standing still, and everyone else is moving fast. So your clock on your fast spaceship would run faster compared to say a clock on earth. See this video for deeper explanation: ua-cam.com/video/mTf4eqdQXpA/v-deo.html

  • @mateid6695
    @mateid6695 2 роки тому +2

    Do the particles created after the reheating of the universe by the decay of the inflaton have the same temperature as the pre-inflation particles that achieved thermal equilibrium in that small space which was streched? And where do those pre-inflation particles come from?

    • @jason666king
      @jason666king 2 роки тому

      Exactly. This entire "theory" is a band aid. Trying to cover the wound created by a Catholic priest to avoid the inevitable.

  • @colt5189
    @colt5189 2 роки тому +2

    Well this explains a lot. As I always wondered how all of the matter in the Universe could be compacted so small. And essentially what this is saying, is that at the dawn of the Big Bang. That it was just space itself that started expanding. And then shortly after is when matter started appearing. i.e. where a matter and an anti-matter start popping into existence, and for some reason not all of the matter got destroyed by the anti-matter, which is what makes up all of the galaxies, stars, planets, etc. that we see today.

    • @robokill387
      @robokill387 Рік тому

      Yes, matter did not exist at the very beginning, it was created during the big bang through a bunch of interactions.

  • @TNTsundar
    @TNTsundar 2 роки тому +4

    Could space and particles be generated for each galaxy separately? As the galaxy expands, the space encompassing it also expands and kind of overlaps with neighbouring galaxies allowing light to pass through from farther galaxies?

    • @Rampart.X
      @Rampart.X 2 роки тому +1

      Like bubbles coalescing?

    • @TNTsundar
      @TNTsundar 2 роки тому +1

      @@Rampart.X yeah something like that

  • @dziban303
    @dziban303 Рік тому

    Thanks Marvin

  • @zamilhoquesiddique3249
    @zamilhoquesiddique3249 2 роки тому

    Hey, I had question. If the 4D is indeed curved, the time axis must be curved as well, right? If so, we should get a gravitational effect due to the geometry of the universe itself, even if the universe contained no massive objects?

    • @Vacuous789
      @Vacuous789 2 роки тому

      Good👍but the effect of time dillation will too tiny/around second maybe microsecond since the gravity isn't from massive objects

  • @tresajessygeorge210
    @tresajessygeorge210 2 роки тому

    THANK YOU DR.ARVIN ASH...!!!

  • @Rampart.X
    @Rampart.X 2 роки тому +1

    What does the uniformity, or lack thereof, in the universe say about determinism and real randomness?

  • @NNiSYS
    @NNiSYS 2 роки тому +1

    Excelente mi admirado y apreciado Arvin! Excelente.

  • @shushuborriiito
    @shushuborriiito 3 місяці тому

    amazing video

  • @kali90000
    @kali90000 2 роки тому +1

    What is temperature at quantum level? Ex. If rise of heat in water increases its temperature, then at quantum level temperature is just exchange of photons.
    So how can temperature exist before formation of particals? If it did, in what form?

  • @Physics__guy
    @Physics__guy 2 роки тому +1

    I was enjoying this video a lot but suddenly at time 14:02 my mother called me for dinner and after dinner i continued the Video but I didn't able To understand, I think Dinner Has Done Something with my Mind. Now i will See this Video Again In morning...

  • @ThrashmIO
    @ThrashmIO 2 роки тому +1

    With expansion (and it never ceasing), wouldn't space effectively be negatively curved since parallel lines would expand apart from each other over time?

  • @louiej.3219
    @louiej.3219 2 роки тому +4

    Dear Arvin, thank you for another great episode! However, I am still having a great deal of difficulty wrapping my head around or rather reconciling a potentially infinite universe with the singularity of Big Bang. If the universe (by "universe" I meam our cluster of universe that appeared as a result of "slowing down" of part of the eternally inflationary universe) is currently infinite in size, then it must have been infinite at the Big Bang as well. If so is it true that space-time wise only the point in the center of this universe ("central volume"/"singularity point") had all the building blocks that eventually turned into matter and energy and everywhere else in this infinite universe had nothing at all even at quantum levels (or maybe just the "quantum foam")? I am having even hard time to elaborat what I am trying to say :) but simply put I cannot reconcile the infinity of universe with the Big Bang theory and it is really nagging me

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  2 роки тому +4

      Stay tuned for the next video where I talk about eternal Inflation - this will show you how the universe could be infinite even though our universe had a beginning.

    • @chrisrace744
      @chrisrace744 Рік тому

      @@ArvinAsh just admit nobody knows the answer. We wil never know.

  • @jonathanjackson7047
    @jonathanjackson7047 2 роки тому +2

    There's a very good reason there are no magnetic monopoles and it has nothing to do with cosmic inflation. It's a quirk in the way we choose to represent the magnetic field. Early on, we decided to define the magnetic field as a vector, or more correctly as an axial vector (through the cross product). But the cross product is a poor way of defining the magnetic field. Taking two vectors and multiplying them with the cross product results in a strange vector pointed in an arbitrary direction. It doesn't even transform properly when reflected. The magnetic field is better represented by a wedge product; ie. a directed area. Seen in this light, if we apply Gauss' Law to a magnetic charge and look at the surface surrounding the charge, we see that integrating over the surface by looking at infinitesimal areas of magnetic field, the edges of all those surfaces cancel out. Each of those areas can be viewed as tiny circulating currents and the currents at the edges cancel to give an total integral of zero. Of course you can poke a hole in the surface and the areas wont cancel. This is essentially what Dirac did. But it's kind of a cheat.

  • @mnahmedlimited6022
    @mnahmedlimited6022 2 роки тому +1

    you should make a video daily, i find them very therapeutic.

    • @gravitonthongs1363
      @gravitonthongs1363 2 роки тому

      Anton Petrov for that. These high quality productions take far to much resources.

  • @mushinhublikar5014
    @mushinhublikar5014 2 роки тому +1

    Brilliant

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 2 роки тому

    Would the cosmological constant be the lowest energy state of inflation field (point C)?

  • @lovenishkumar2265
    @lovenishkumar2265 2 роки тому +1

    That's a great video sir with very great explanation. But i want to ask a question which is, to where universe expands? Like when you use the analogy of the inflating balloon, the volume of balloon is increasing in spacetime itself, so to where the spacetime itself expands?

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  2 роки тому +1

      The balloon analogy only works for the 2D surface. It does not expand into anything. Universe does not have an outside. It expands into more universe.

    • @lovenishkumar2265
      @lovenishkumar2265 2 роки тому

      Ok sir, so universe is not expanding into anything its just the apparent distance between two objects in space is increasing with time which appears us to be expansion of universe. But couldn't it be due to decreases in strength of interaction of matter and energy with spacetime.Like I do not know in early stage of universe but it can be true for now because we do not know why matter interacts with spacetime afterall and latter is true by a simple analogy of a plane sheet of cloth. When the cloth is stretched and we put a heavier ball at the center of it and mark any point on it and measure the distance between them and repeat the same with a lighter ball, the distance between them is appeared to be reduced and can be termed as expansion.

  • @ThatCat-aclism
    @ThatCat-aclism 2 роки тому

    Monopoles would be expected much more in 2D scenarios. And i expect maybe in some format in higher dimensions that fall on even whole numbers. Example 4d,6d,
    Maybe it acts more like a single proton or electron on a larger scale in such bigger dimensions. Not found seperately often but performing as a monopole item.
    The interior of a 2d item and the exterior are the only 2 interaction zones. Allowing the entire outer area to become the thin bubble of area seperated from exterior fields. Making a 2d bubble feeds toward my other comment/idea's on (notablackhole) dimensional gearing energy syphon thingy

  • @poojarakshit1000
    @poojarakshit1000 2 роки тому

    Please make a video on Conformal Cyclic Cosmology.

  • @youtube.scientist
    @youtube.scientist 9 місяців тому

    Brilliant.

  • @dasinagary
    @dasinagary Рік тому +2

    mindblown. I realized that the universe could be in different forms!

  • @neville1353
    @neville1353 2 роки тому

    Great video, I have also listened to Sir Roger Penrose alternative theory of Conformal Cyclic Cosmology, could you comment on his theory as it does have some interesting ideas.

  • @dhanabalan8546
    @dhanabalan8546 2 роки тому +2

    Love from INDIA🇮🇳

  • @gravitonthongs1363
    @gravitonthongs1363 2 роки тому +1

    Please answer Arvin:
    Q: what is the approximate minimum size that the observable universe had to be at 10^-43 seconds in order to be 93 billion light years diameter now?

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  2 роки тому +1

      I don't know for sure. I would go with the minimum size, a universe having a radius of one Planck length - 1.6x10^-35m.

    • @gravitonthongs1363
      @gravitonthongs1363 2 роки тому

      @@ArvinAsh thank you my friend 🙂🌌🙌

  • @LowellBoggs
    @LowellBoggs 2 роки тому

    I guess I missed the explanation of why inflation fixes the conundrum of missing magnetic monopoles. What time s it discussed?

  • @BROWNDIRTWARRIOR
    @BROWNDIRTWARRIOR 9 місяців тому

    How can time ever =0 if time can be infinitely chopped up into smaller and smaller measurements even though the planch scale is the smallest we can currently measure? If there were sensitive enough instruments, could not smaller units of time be infinitely measured?

  • @jvlppm
    @jvlppm 2 роки тому

    Could this inflation field have a negative value and consume space instead of creating it? Could mass interfere with this field so gravity is space being consumed?

  • @randalljsilva
    @randalljsilva 2 роки тому +3

    Is it important that the universe had a pre-inflation period, albeit short? How would the universe be different if inflation started at t=0?

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  2 роки тому +7

      The time is chosen because that's when the strong force is thought to have separated from the electroweak force. This is when a scalar field would have dumped its energy into radiation, quarks, and other particles.

  • @ThatCat-aclism
    @ThatCat-aclism 2 роки тому

    So with the idea being that dimension's unspecified, (probably fractul dimensions..) Are all of the unobservable universe. But existent and stable in some cases.
    Would it be plausible to make an energy device that has a zone of space time energy within, that functions as unobservable universe matterial and space/time. With which you could arc or otherwise incrementally store and distribute power from by having a gear ratio system between prime dimensions and thier force carrying expression particle. Some 4d structure in a 4d environment being strained out into a 2d matter area. And is it also plausible using some clever mechanical tricks/inventions, that it could transfer enough power and pressure through static means, (pressure tank under water, drain outer tank to change pressure, as a fine tune static method example.....) Or solar etc... To run it sustainably as some form of reactor for eating waste materials and pumping out energy...
    As a suggestion. This could work both ways. Depending if you want More immediate power or power over time. Gearing....
    Also a good material to start with would be Graphene i expect. Feeding in an iron core and making it spin in containment with magnetic fields that should cancel out other influences. Im hoping that graphene and iron in the right pressure scenario with the right stabilising tweaks like pressure adjustment mid process. May be able to create a dynamo with incredibly limited friction....

  • @mockupguy3577
    @mockupguy3577 2 роки тому +1

    When saying “the universe was small” does that primarily refer to the observable universe?
    If the entire universe is infinite it should become more dense but not really smaller as you rewind the clock?

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  2 роки тому +1

      No it refers to the observable as well as the part we can't observe because light has not reached us yet.

  • @GHTorell
    @GHTorell Рік тому +1

    The best description of the inflation I've seen so far!
    I've also been disturbed by the grapefruit, or golf ball, or small galaxy representing the size of the universe after the inflation, which we can read about in popular science books concerning the expansion of the universe and the Big-Bang theory, but for it's size rather than it's lack of flatness. Today the expansion rate (r) is something like 0.074 per billion years. meaning that any distance in expanding space will be about 7 % bigger when a billion years have past, than it was before. Also, because the expansion is supposed to have been accelerating over the last billions of years, the expansion rate must have been lower before. And 13.8 billion years of expansion would mean that the "diameter" of the universe has grown less than 2.8 times (e^(r*t), with t=13.8) since then. Going backwards 13.8 billion years, to the time directly after the inflation phase, would mean a diameter at more than 30 billion light years (only for the visible part of the universe, said to be about 90 billion light years today). That is not exactly the medium size of a grapefruit! Our grapefruit would at best be the size of a watermelon today. Houston, we have a problem! There's some expansion missing in our universe. Also I have a hard time realizing that "distant parts" of the grapefruit should be beyond communication by the speed of light from each other. So, how would we account for the invisible part of the universe, surrounding us out there, if it wasn't the inflation that ripped the regions apart? Was the phase of slowing down from the inflation-rate long enough to fix this leap? Why not include that time, then, into the inflation phase? Or was the grapefruit just a joke, passed on by the next storyteller?

  • @stephenwest6738
    @stephenwest6738 5 місяців тому +1

    I never thought of the big bang in terms of the beginning of time, or even being a moment in time. More like thats when the universe began its expansion, an expansion made possible by its sudden interaction with a dimension it previously had no interaction with, time. Had the universe not been in the dimension of time, then the entirety of our universe cannot change. Essentially everything existing simultaneously with no means to interact at all.

  • @effectingcause5484
    @effectingcause5484 Рік тому +5

    Why is the flatness problem not just assumed to mean the universe is so HUGE that we cannot even measure the curvature due to a lack of experimental sensitivity to the curve?

    • @capjus
      @capjus 6 місяців тому +2

      You are on the right track. Pity arvin and co don't realize it but repeating.

    • @effectingcause5484
      @effectingcause5484 6 місяців тому

      @@capjus I think it’s obviously a tell… If we measure no curvature, and our best theories say it should be curved either inwards or outwards, then obviously the entire universe is quite huge indeed, so huge that we might be silly to even try measuring that with current instruments. We are even sillier to not realize that the universe is something huge and we are infinitesimally small against the size of it. We must be a lot like bacteria living in a toilet bowl, thinking the porcelain molecules are galaxies and seem to go on forever with porcelain molecules as far as we can see… We think the entire universe and the physics of it all is the same everywhere as it is inside the toilet bowl. We haven’t yet realized there is a kitchen and refrigerator, oven, microwave, etc.. there’s an entire house outside our toilet bowl of an observable universe. There’s an entire city outside the house! An entire universe outside our toilet bowl. We think we can derive a theory for EVERYTHING! Wow now wouldn’t that be an accomplishment - To derive a “theory for everything”, all from down inside this little toilet bowl, wow!

    • @yalexander9432
      @yalexander9432 4 місяці тому +3

      You need prove that it's curved in the first place

    • @effectingcause5484
      @effectingcause5484 4 місяці тому

      @@yalexander9432 Well what if I say, you need to prove that it's small enough to measure a curvature with current technologies "in the first place" ... No i think the simplest explanation is that the universe is big enough, that our instruments are laughable in trying to measure such a curvature.

    • @yalexander9432
      @yalexander9432 4 місяці тому +3

      @effectingcause5484 no, because 1. curvature is more complex than flatness, meaning flatness is actually the simplest solution.
      2. There is no evidence of curvature. Curvature would also imply that there is a higher dimension beyond normal space and time that we observe...

  • @aiart3615
    @aiart3615 2 роки тому

    How time affects virtual photons In electromagnetism? It may be connected to gravity in small scales

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 2 роки тому

    Could inflation energy be pulling or stretching the universe out, rather than pushing from within?

  • @carlstanland5333
    @carlstanland5333 2 роки тому +1

    Would the monopoles attract each other, N and S, and make the dipoles we see? Would they have been created in equal amounts like matter and antimatter?

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  2 роки тому +1

      Yes, but if inflation is true, the theory goes that they could have survived and pulled apart far enough away to continue existing.

  • @kataseiko
    @kataseiko 2 роки тому

    With the Webb being the new infrared telescope.. Could it be used to create a more detailed CMB picture than ever before?

  • @filipve73
    @filipve73 2 роки тому

    Abstract
    I always thought that the Big Bang was the event where the Mobius strip glued together ?

  • @Physics369lover
    @Physics369lover Рік тому +1

    Sir i have a question why light had enough time to travel uniformly if space was accelerated by inflation rather than decelerated by gravitational effect ?
    And why in supercooled state energy of particles becomes high?

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  Рік тому

      There was no light that traversed the universe during the time of inflation. The first light that you can see, CMB, came about 380,000 years after the big bang.

    • @Physics369lover
      @Physics369lover Рік тому

      @@ArvinAsh then sir why CMB is uniform throughout the universe and why it was necessary that the universe should be supercooled to inflate , why symmtery should not be broken between forces?

  • @jge123
    @jge123 2 роки тому +1

    For me what’s most fascinating is what happens after death, all those weird many still mysterious or undiscovered forces of the universe and beyond will converge to perhaps send us instantly to another place, it’s like experiencing your own personal singularity, I wish I was brave enough to try it, the portal is always here open in front of each and every one of us.

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  2 роки тому +4

      ...Or it could be the end of your pursuit to find meaning in death.

    • @alexsloan4976
      @alexsloan4976 2 роки тому +2

      Lol idk where people make this stuff up

  • @RuiLeTubo
    @RuiLeTubo 2 роки тому +4

    So, is it fair to say, The "Big bang" is the "moment" when General Relativity and Quantum Mechanic Theories started not to disagree with each other?

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  2 роки тому +4

      Well General Relativity is incomplete, so it would not hold up at quantum scales. But it would be fair to say that all forces, including gravity, were united by some laws we have not discovered yet.

    • @ll7868
      @ll7868 2 роки тому

      In other words Entropy. Yup, pretty much.

  • @catchdafever9207
    @catchdafever9207 2 роки тому +1

    Perfecto.

  • @Shortstuffjo
    @Shortstuffjo Місяць тому

    I have a question. How long would it take for our universe to get to the point that it ends up expanding as quickly as it did during the inflationary epoch? And is that point anywhere near the amount of time it's been estimated it would take to spawn a universe such as our own just based on random quantum fluctuations?

  • @taziefahmed9750
    @taziefahmed9750 10 місяців тому

    what is the singular element at the bigbang that gave us all the known elements in the periodic table?

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  10 місяців тому

      I guess you could say hydrogen because in order to form bigger atoms, a single proton has to exist first.

  • @johnimusic12
    @johnimusic12 2 роки тому +1

    I like to think that each thought is just another instantaneous Boltzman Brain disconnected from space and time....wonder how cosmic-inflation jives with Boltzman Brains.
    Keep up the great educational/philosophical videos!!!

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 2 роки тому

    Is energy of the cosmological constant expansion making the universe flat or near flat?

  • @okithdesilva129
    @okithdesilva129 2 роки тому +2

    Thank you so much for this video Arvin

  • @EddyA1337
    @EddyA1337 2 роки тому

    It would be cool if you did a collaboration with Isaac Arthur! That and this channel cover such interesting topics but make it easy to understand.

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 2 роки тому

    Did inflation expansion cooling the universe bring about quantum fields?

  • @theosib
    @theosib 2 роки тому +1

    Some papers came out recently that showed that inflation doesn't work when you account for quantum mechanics. However a slow contraction then expansion model works better.

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  2 роки тому +2

      Citations please.

    • @ozymandiasnullifidian5590
      @ozymandiasnullifidian5590 2 роки тому +1

      @@ArvinAsh He probably means Paul Steinhardt... ua-cam.com/video/5JM9RJFMHgc/v-deo.html

    • @theosib
      @theosib 2 роки тому

      @@ArvinAsh Some work by Paul Steinhardt e.g. ua-cam.com/video/S7-HNi2ne44/v-deo.html

    • @gravitonthongs1363
      @gravitonthongs1363 2 роки тому

      @@theosib I actually watched that video you linked. It was the most unscientific hocus pocus I have heard for ages. It contradicts everything astrophysicists agree on.
      Two main points you should recognise is that:
      1. his objections are based on the Big Bang being a singularity which we all agree it isn’t. 1:05
      2. He doesn’t understand nucleosynthesis or when it occurred.
      Gather information from more reputable sources.

  • @RDL7Pro
    @RDL7Pro 2 місяці тому +1

    How can u say there is no outside if there was an expansion and a size? What space did the universe expand into?
    Could u Explain further

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  2 місяці тому

      We just know the the universe was smaller than it is today. But the universe has always been the size of the universe. There is no reference frame outside of it

    • @RDL7Pro
      @RDL7Pro 2 місяці тому

      @@ArvinAsh thank you for the reply 😊
      So are u saying the universe has always been, the Big Bang is just a thing inside that space that expanded into the uni we see today? I’m genuinely curious about the before even though ik that question is nonsensical
      Also, do know about Penrose’s theory on previous eons?

  • @johnjosephondrick699
    @johnjosephondrick699 2 роки тому

    There is no common point of the beginning.. but everywhere we look we are looking further and further back in time so in a sense we know that the universe began at the hubble sphere from our point of view.And that shell is moving further and further back in time.

  • @jasjitsingh5457
    @jasjitsingh5457 2 роки тому +1

    Dear Mr Ash: you say in the video that universe expanded by a factor of 10^78 during cosmic inflation. I am not following that comment. If universe was of the order of plank scale 10^-35m pre inflation, then that much expansion will put the diameter of the universe at 10^43m post inflation which seems to be much much much much (quadrillion times) larger than the current observable universe. Did you mean to say the rate of expansion of universe during inflationary phase was 10^78 orders of magnitude per second but lasted only for 10^-32 seconds ?

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  2 роки тому +3

      No, the former is correct. The universe is much larger than the observable universe. We don't know. Some physicists think it could be infinite. This minimum expansion comes from what's needed to get the observed curvature or flatness of the universe correct. Inflation could actually have been much larger. We don't know as of now, especially since we again don't know the real size of the universe.

  • @akashalampally712
    @akashalampally712 2 роки тому

    Can you explain brian greene classification of multiverse 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏

  • @ThrashmIO
    @ThrashmIO 2 роки тому +5

    Is it possible for gravity to be the result of mass resisting expansion? Like the ants forming dimples in the balloon as the balloon expands into them?

    • @MrGriff305
      @MrGriff305 2 роки тому +1

      Yes, it is possible. 😉 From, Alpha and Omega

    • @gravitonthongs1363
      @gravitonthongs1363 2 роки тому +1

      Sounds like a good explanation however, as the expansion rate changes value you would expect gravitational value to change correspondingly, but that isn’t the case.

    • @ThrashmIO
      @ThrashmIO 2 роки тому +1

      @@gravitonthongs1363 So the thing I was visualizing was the trampoline and balls demonstration but without friction inside a rocket (the thought experiment where you can't tell if its gravity or lift from your reference frame) where the expansion of the universe is that thrust. Basically, the acceleration of the universe's expansion corresponds to gravity's apparent acceleration.

    • @gravitonthongs1363
      @gravitonthongs1363 2 роки тому

      @@ThrashmIO an interesting thought.
      I think the main deterrent for your idea is the additional reference frame of travel through spacetime. We don’t experience significant changes to gravitational values depending on earths motion through spacetime. If gravity is dependent on the expanding motion of spacetime we would expect for the values to change correspondingly to our direction of orbit around the sun / spacetime reference.
      Feel free to correct me if I am off track.

  • @schlechtj1
    @schlechtj1 Рік тому +2

    So why did the universe need to be causally connected to be homogeneous? Could the homogeneity be due to a property of the universe? When I heat steel, it expands exactly the same way as the same composition of steel anywhere else in the universe no matter how far apart they are, they don't need to be causally connected. Inflation dosent explain why we can't separate magnetic poles either.
    Not well understood? I understand it to be total science fiction.

  • @nexus3112
    @nexus3112 2 роки тому +2

    Great job!

  • @Huizelogica
    @Huizelogica 2 роки тому

    i wish you good health

  • @orinhickman1721
    @orinhickman1721 2 роки тому

    If all the matter and energy where all in such close proximity right after the big bang then wouldn't the time dilation caused by all the matter and energy of the universe make it look like the expansion rate increased?