TRANSCRIPTEnglish

Why Does The Universe Have 62 Layers?

1h 19m 17s11,451 words1,839 segmentsEnglish

FULL TRANSCRIPT

0:00

This apple is at the center of the

0:03

universe.

0:06

There are roughly 100 million cells

0:08

inside an apple and 10 the^ of 25

0:10

individual atoms. Each one stretching

0:12

for no more than a nanometer across. The

0:15

highest number of things that you could

0:16

fit inside an apple would be roughly 10

0:18

the^ of 102 measured in the smallest

0:21

possible cubic unit, a plank volume.

0:25

Looking upwards, you could fit roughly

0:27

100 apples inside the volume of the

0:29

average person and about 10 the^ of 25

0:31

inside the volume of the Earth. Roughly

0:34

10 the^ of 66 could fit inside the Milky

0:36

Way and around 10 to the^ of 84 could

0:39

fill the entire extent of the known

0:41

cosmos.

0:43

And so the apple and you sit at a nexus,

0:47

a confluence of competing forces,

0:49

interactions, and laws. A place where

0:53

all the competing powers of the universe

0:55

reach an uneasy truce. The apple is at

0:58

the balance point of sizes in the

1:00

universe.

1:03

The apple at about 10 cm across is

1:05

roughly 35 orders of magnitude larger

1:07

than the plank length, the smallest

1:09

conceivable measure of distance. [music]

1:11

And it's about 27 orders of magnitude

1:14

smaller than the observable horizon of

1:16

the cosmos.

1:17

And so 62

1:20

62 orders of magnitude separate the

1:23

smallest to the largest scales within

1:25

the universe. A random number that

1:28

describes [music] the entire cosmos and

1:30

all its components.

1:33

At least it may seem random at first.

1:37

For halfway to the bottom, halfway to

1:39

the top, the apple is at the center of

1:42

the universe. And why it sits precisely

1:45

at that balance point may explain why

1:47

the cosmos exists at all.

2:01

In 2013, NASA's [music]

2:03

K10 rover, while being tested at Ames

2:06

Research Center in California, was

2:08

remotely controlled from a pretty

2:09

extreme location.

2:12

Space astronauts aboard the

2:14

International Space Station guided its

2:16

movements and science operations using a

2:19

laptop interface and live data links. A

2:22

remarkable feat and one that opened up

2:24

the possibility of humans being able to

2:26

command robots on Mars and the moon from

2:29

orbit. Sometimes it's useful to be able

2:32

to control your tech remotely, perhaps

2:34

not in deep space, but certainly on the

2:36

other side of the globe. [music] And so

2:38

if you're looking to remotely control

2:39

your computer for personal or business

2:41

reasons, Anyesk can help. Anyes is a

2:46

lightning fast remote access tool that

2:48

makes it feel as if you're sitting right

2:49

in front of the remote machine. Indeed,

2:52

here at History of the Universe, we find

2:54

it great for video and audio editing

2:56

whilst away from the main machine and

2:58

also very useful for transferring large

3:00

files. Anyes secure direct file transfer

3:04

bypasses the cloud entirely. This is

3:07

ideal for us to move high-quality

3:08

footage or even entire documentaries

3:10

around between team members and could

3:12

have any number of uses for other

3:14

businesses and projects. And Anyes is

3:16

available across all major platforms, is

3:19

backwards compatible with older

3:20

operating systems and has 99.98%

3:24

uptime reliability, so you can depend on

3:26

being able to use it when you need to.

3:28

And what's more, personal use is totally

3:31

free with tailored plans for team and

3:33

business environments. [music]

3:35

And so head to anyes.com to try this

3:37

premium remote access tool free of

3:40

charge.

3:49

As I began my university studies, I

3:51

asked my venerable teacher for advice

3:53

regarding the conditions and prospects

3:55

of my chosen field of study. He

3:58

described physics to me as a highly

4:00

developed nearly fully matured science

4:02

and that theoretical physics is

4:04

noticeably approaching its completion to

4:06

the same degree as geometry did

4:08

centuries ago.

4:10

So said Max Plank of his teacher Philip

4:13

von Jolly under whom he studied in 1875.

4:17

And 25 years later, Max Plank would, to

4:20

the constonation of his former mentor,

4:22

almost entirely revolutionized the

4:24

supposedly fully matured science of

4:26

physics, and he didn't even mean to.

4:30

Plank had been hungry for a physics

4:32

education, but he'd found his lectures

4:34

to be stuffy and old-fashioned. Besides

4:36

the demonstrations of von Jolly, he also

4:39

considered his professors Herman von

4:41

Helmholtz disorganized and slow, and

4:43

Gustaf Kirchoff dry and monotonous. So

4:46

he largely taught himself the perfect

4:49

recipe for a revolutionary.

4:55

At the close of the 18th century, Plank

4:58

was attempting to mop up what Von Jolly

5:00

would have considered one of the final

5:01

long-standing puzzles in physics.

5:04

Mathematically describing the spectrum

5:06

of radiation emitted by [music] hot

5:08

glowing things, like a metal poker taken

5:11

out of a fire. Genius after genius had

5:14

tried their luck to no avail. But the

5:17

joke goes that there are two kinds of

5:19

physicists. Those who play by the rules

5:21

and those who get physical constants

5:23

named after them. And so Plank persisted

5:26

and after exhausting all other

5:27

possibilities, he introduced what he

5:30

called a mathematical trick. Instead of

5:33

pouring out light in all possible

5:35

quantities, Plank assumed that these hot

5:37

objects could only emit discrete chunks

5:40

or quanta of radiation. He then

5:43

introduced a special number to describe

5:45

the smallest possible chunk of light,

5:49

a constant. And so the unstoppable fires

5:52

of revolution were lit.

5:57

By plank's time, physicists had already

6:00

grown accustomed [music] to physical

6:01

constants. Of course, there are

6:03

artificial ones created by scientists,

6:06

standardized measurements of space,

6:08

time, and weight like the ounce and the

6:10

meter. But more importantly, and more

6:13

fundamentally, there were some that seem

6:14

to pop out of theories of nature, like

6:17

Newton's constant that described how

6:18

strong gravity was or the speed of

6:21

light. Values that seem to have no

6:23

explanation. They just were. But despite

6:27

centuries of consideration, no constant

6:30

had ever described something so tiny as

6:32

that which plank used to describe

6:34

quantum of light. Indeed, the most

6:37

precise measurements at the time were

6:39

around a thousandth of an inch or a few

6:41

microns. With this kind of equipment,

6:43

scientists could study bacteria and the

6:45

internal structures of cells. But

6:47

plank's constant went far, far beyond

6:51

that.

6:57

This number tells us where and when and

7:00

how quantum effects become overwhelming.

7:03

Where the certainties of the world we

7:05

know melt away into probabilities and

7:08

uncertainties.

7:09

At roughly equal to 6.626 * 10 ^ of - 34

7:14

JW seconds, plank was able to combine

7:17

this constant with three other

7:18

constants. the speed of light, [music]

7:20

Newton's gravitational constant, and

7:22

Boltzman's constant to create a system

7:24

of reference points for the quantum

7:27

world. And these are the plank units. A

7:31

plank time of around 10 ^ of - 44

7:34

seconds, a plank energy of around 10 ^

7:37

of 9, and a plank length of around 10 ^

7:41

of - 35 m.

7:44

These units tell us that any object,

7:46

system, event or occurrence that

7:48

approaches [music] these limits will be

7:50

affected by the world of the quantum.

7:53

And as to what happens when systems

7:55

reach the plank limits, nobody knows.

7:59

These seem to be the limits of the

8:01

universe. Beyond these numbers, quantum

8:04

chaos rules and our mathematics does not

8:07

allow us to go.

8:11

However, we shouldn't worry too much

8:13

because we're unlikely to run up against

8:15

these limits anytime soon.

8:18

The world's most powerful particle

8:20

accelerator is the Large Hadron Collider

8:23

with a peak design collision energy of

8:25

14 terra electron volts, which is 14 *

8:28

10 ^ of 12 electron volts. If they

8:31

collided a tennis ball with that energy,

8:33

it would burn as bright as 100,000

8:35

Hiroshimas.

UNLOCK MORE

Sign up free to access premium features

INTERACTIVE VIEWER

Watch the video with synced subtitles, adjustable overlay, and full playback control.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

AI SUMMARY

Get an instant AI-generated summary of the video content, key points, and takeaways.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

TRANSLATE

Translate the transcript to 100+ languages with one click. Download in any format.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

MIND MAP

Visualize the transcript as an interactive mind map. Understand structure at a glance.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

CHAT WITH TRANSCRIPT

Ask questions about the video content. Get answers powered by AI directly from the transcript.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

GET MORE FROM YOUR TRANSCRIPTS

Sign up for free and unlock interactive viewer, AI summaries, translations, mind maps, and more. No credit card required.

    Why Does The Universe… - Full Transcript | YouTubeTranscript.dev