文本记录English

What Really Is Everything?

43m 1s5,778 字数1,047 segmentsEnglish

完整文本记录

0:03

a barren stretch of desert is dimly lit

0:06

by the brightening sky

0:08

there are still 30 minutes before

0:10

sunrise but above the clouds the stars

0:12

have already faded and a deep blue

0:15

shadowless light suffuses the desert

0:18

floor

0:20

in the last few months the flat

0:22

featureless ground has been transformed

0:24

a 30 meter tall steel tower bearing a

0:27

terrible payload stands alone at the

0:30

foot of the ascora mountains surrounded

0:33

by little more than criss-crossing tyre

0:35

tracks leading three kilometers from a

0:37

now empty adobe ranch house

0:40

beyond situated to the north west and

0:42

south all at a deliberate nine kilometer

0:44

radius from the tower are three part

0:47

buried shelters each with their windows

0:50

turned towards their joint focus the

0:52

scientists and soldiers now encamped

0:54

within these shelters cannot see the

0:56

tower at the circle's epicenter

0:58

but they will soon see all too well the

1:01

effects of its fateful payload

1:04

not knowing what to expect they lie on

1:06

the ground feet pointed towards the

1:08

invisibly distant tower and listen to

1:11

the countdown as it crackles over the

1:14

public address system

1:17

at precisely 5 30 a.m on the 16th of

1:20

july

1:21

1945 an earth-shaking boom marked the

1:25

beginning of a new era of civilization

1:33

and the birth of a new branch of physics

1:37

the so-called gadget bomb which had been

1:40

hoisted to the top of the firing tower

1:42

imploded beginning a devastating nuclear

1:46

chain reaction within its plutonium core

1:48

the nuclear bomb exploded with a force

1:50

equivalent to 21 000 tons of tnt within

1:54

a fraction of a second the steel tower

1:56

was vaporized and the desert floor

1:58

melted to a green glass

2:00

dim dawn turned to bright day in an

2:03

instant as the blast ballooned and then

2:05

mushroomed into the now iconic symbol of

2:08

the nuclear age

2:11

this was the trinity test the first ever

2:13

full-scale detonation of a nuclear bomb

2:16

which would come to shape the course of

2:18

history and the field of science

2:24

the 1930s had seen monumental advances

2:27

in atomic science and radiation research

2:30

and the spectacular discovery of nuclear

2:32

fission in 1938 was overshadowed by the

2:35

outbreak of war just a year later but

2:37

physicists were quick to realize the

2:39

devastating potential of their new

2:41

discovery albert einstein co-signed a

2:43

letter to then-president roosevelt with

2:45

a warning it is conceivable that

2:48

extremely powerful bombs of a new type

2:51

may thus be constructed

2:53

so the u.s developed their own bomb

2:56

before any other nation could

2:59

the test was considered a great success

3:01

and just 21 days later the united states

3:05

dropped a similar atomic bomb the

3:08

so-called fat man on the city of

3:10

nagasaki japan

3:12

[Music]

3:14

if it had not been for the deadly

3:16

pressures of war nuclear science may

3:18

have followed a very different and

3:20

likely slower path

3:22

the exploration of the atom one of the

3:24

tiniest particles of matter had until

3:26

then been little more than a curiosity

3:28

the domain of at first philosophers and

3:31

then gentlemen's scholars small

3:33

improvements in experimental methods and

3:35

equipment brought small breakthroughs

3:37

until the fateful revelation that atoms

3:39

and their nuclei were indeed not the end

3:43

of the russian doll

3:44

a discovery that led directly to new

3:46

mexico and then japan

3:48

[Music]

3:53

as the glow from that first nuclear

3:55

explosion faded it left behind a new

3:58

thirst to understand what our universe

4:01

was actually made of

4:03

and how it came to be

4:06

that journey the quest to discover what

4:08

makes up everything would see scientists

4:11

delve ever deeper down a rabbit hole of

4:13

matter and mass of fields and particles

4:16

and even further back in time in a

4:19

century-long quest to answer the

4:22

immortal question

4:23

what is

4:25

at its most fundamental level everything

4:29

and perhaps even more importantly

4:32

is any of it

4:33

really real

4:35

at all

4:50

[Music]

4:57

this video is sponsored by magellan tv

5:00

the documentary streaming service

5:02

question how long does it take for a

5:03

black hole to die a 10 to the power of

5:06

67 years b google years or c it never

5:10

dies it just sort of lingers like a bad

5:13

smell

5:14

that's right it's 10 to the power of 67

5:17

years

5:18

ages and the fact they evaporate at all

5:21

is due to heisenberg's uncertainty

5:23

principle something you can find out

5:25

plenty more on by watching our

5:26

recommendation on magellan tv this week

5:29

secrets of quantum physics 4k with jim

5:32

alcaledi a fascinating mind-melting dive

5:36

into the achingly confusing quantum

5:38

world

5:39

they're a sort of netflix for

5:41

documentaries with more than 3 000

5:43

documentaries to choose from on a wide

5:45

range of topics including a great

5:47

selection on space cosmology and physics

5:51

so click on the link in the description

5:52

for an exclusive month-long free trial

5:55

for history of the universe viewers

5:58

thanks

5:59

[Music]

6:03

it was ancient indian philosophers of

6:06

the 8th century bc who first asserted

6:09

that nothing we experience

6:12

is in fact

6:13

real

6:14

such an extreme reductionist philosophy

6:16

is simple enough to follow a cart can be

6:19

broken down to its component parts

6:21

wheels axles yoke those components can

6:25

too be broken down a wheel becomes a hub

6:28

rim and spokes each succession of

6:30

smaller parts can be broken down further

6:32

by hand and with specialist tools until

6:35

nothing remains but a collection of

6:37

minuscule specs each indistinguishable

6:41

from the next

6:42

what then are the objects of our

6:44

experience is everything if not piles of

6:48

such specks amassed and organized to

6:51

give the appearance of something greater

6:54

these looming existential puzzles were

6:57

visited again by ancient greek

6:59

philosophers some 400 years later

7:02

considering the same problem democritus

7:04

and lucipus came to the same conclusion

7:07

ultimately everything we can see and

7:09

touch can be broken down time and time

7:12

again until an impasse is reached of

7:14

tiny particles that can be divided no

7:17

further democritus gave these

7:19

hypothetical particles a name defining

7:22

them by their fundamentally indivisible

7:24

nature

7:25

at thomas meaning uncutable

7:29

today we know them

7:31

as atoms

7:35

and yet it wasn't until the 19th century

7:38

that science rather than philosophy

7:40

allowed researchers to probe the nature

7:43

of these mysterious uncuttable atoms

7:47

in the early 1800s english chemist john

7:50

dalton spent his summers in the

7:52

mountains of the lake district in

7:54

northwest england before the advent of

7:57

comprehensive maps of the region he was

7:59

an authority measuring their altitude

8:02

and distances through his own hiking

8:03

experience one can imagine his mind

8:06

wandering in these hills both measuring

8:08

and musing upon the remarkable theories

8:11

he was forming within his manchester

8:14

laboratory

8:15

for dalton spent the rest of his time

8:17

analyzing the nature of various chemical

8:20

compounds

8:22

[Music]

8:24

these compounds were as distinct as the

8:26

peaks he knew so well what was it about

8:29

their basic nature that made them behave

8:32

so differently

8:34

all of these chemicals he posited were

8:36

composed of simple indivisible building

8:39

blocks that related to the elements that

8:41

made them up so methane as a combination

解锁更多

免费注册以访问高级功能

互动查看器

观看带有同步字幕、可调节叠加层和完整播放控制的视频。

免费注册以解锁

AI 摘要

获取由 AI 立即生成的视频内容摘要、要点和结论。

免费注册以解锁

翻译

一键将字幕翻译成 100 多种语言。以任何格式下载。

免费注册以解锁

思维导图

将字幕可视化为交互式思维导图。一目了然地了解结构。

免费注册以解锁

与字幕聊天

提出关于视频内容的问题。直接从字幕中获取由 AI 驱动的答案。

免费注册以解锁

从您的字幕中获得更多

免费注册并解锁交互式查看器、AI 摘要、翻译、思维导图等。无需信用卡。

    What Really Is Everything? - 完整文字记录 | YouTubeTranscript.dev