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What Is Something?

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    The simple questions are the hardest ones to answer.
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    What is a thing?
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    Why do things happen?
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    And why do they happen the way they do?
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    Let’s try to approach this step-by-step.
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    What are you made of?
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    You are matter which is made of molecules
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    which are made of atoms and those are made of elementary particles.
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    But if elementary particles are the smallest things that exist,
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    what are they made of?
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    To answer a simple question, let’s start simply - let’s wipe the universe clean.
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    Away with matter ,antimatter, radiation, particles… anything.
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    Now let’s take a closer look at absolutely nothing.
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    What is empty space?
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    Is it what we call a vacuum?
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    There are no atoms, no matter, nothing.
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    Is it really all that empty?
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    Nothing gives us the building blocks for everything.
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    In a sense, empty space is a lot like a vast calm ocean.
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    While the water is very still when nothing is happening,
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    a stiff breeze create some serious waves.
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    Our universe works a lot like this.
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    There are these "oceans" everywhere -
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    Physicists call them “fields”.
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    This might be strange and new.
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    But think about radiation for example.
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    By exciting what’s known as the electromagnetic field
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    a little kink is created which is the particle we called the photon
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    The particle that carries radiaton we perceive it as light
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    This isn’t unique to light.
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    Every particle in the universe is made this way.
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    There are fields for every particle of matter all with their own rules.
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    For example, along with the electromagnetic fields,
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    there is an electron field everywhere in the universe
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    and little kinks in that field are electrons
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    Altogether, the fields of our universe can produce 17 particles
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    which can be divided into three categories -
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    The leptons, and the quarks and the bosons.
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    Leptons consists of the electron as well as its cousins muon and tau particles.
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    Each has an associated neutrino.
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    Then, there are quarks.
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    The quarks are the nuclear family of particles.
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    They’re always found bound together in groups and pairs,
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    and makeup protons and neutrons which make up the nuclei of atoms
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    Together, electrons and quarks are the matter particles.
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    They make up all the things you see.
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    The air you breathe,
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    the sun that warms you,
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    the computer you’re using right now
    to distract yourself from the stuff you should be doing.
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    But things don’t just exist,
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    they also do stuff.
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    In some philosophical sense, the properties of a thing
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    are just as much a part of it as existence itself.
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    This is where the bosons and the fields that make them come into play.
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    While the quarks and leptons are made by matter fields,
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    the bosons are made by force fields.
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    We call a rule of the universe a force,
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    and so far four fundamental forces have been discovered -
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    Electromagnetism, gravity, and the strong and weak nuclear forces.
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    These forces are the rule book of a game
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    where the pieces are particles,
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    and the game is the universe.
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    They tell particles what they can do and how they can do it.
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    Bishop’s more diagonally, massless particles move at the speed of light,
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    nights can jump, gravity attracts.
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    The forces are the rules for how particles interact,
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    which ultimately make them the rules for
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    help articles assemble into all the big things we see in the universe.
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    Gravity isn’t just the rule for orbits around the Sun
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    or Apples falling from trees.
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    As a rule, it says matter attracts which build planets and stars.
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    Electromagnetism isn’t just a rule for magnet attracting
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    or repelling, or electric currents in light bulbs.
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    It governs all atomic bombs, building every molecule.
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    Together, forces and particles are sort of like the tinker toys of existence.
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    The bosons are like messengers passed between,
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    you could say connecting the matter particles,
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    which they used to tell each other how to move.
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    Each particle uses a certain set of the forces
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    to interact with other particles.
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    Quarks, for example, can interact with each other
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    with electromagnetism and the strong nuclear force
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    but electrons don’t use the strong force,
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    just electromagnetism.
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    The quarks exchange strong force bosons,
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    communicating the strong nuclear attraction to each other,
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    while the protons they build exchange particles of electromagnetism,
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    photons with the electrons.
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    Thus the quarks end up locked up in nuclei,
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    while the electrons remain attached
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    by their electric attraction building atoms.
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    Even though the university has lots of big messy phenomenon
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    like life, supernova and computers that seem complex on the surface,
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    if you zoom in far enough on anything
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    you just get 17 particles emerging form underlying fields,
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    playing a game with four rules.
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    To summarize, in the most basic from we know right now,
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    this is what things are.
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    This theory is what physicists call
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    the Standard Model of Particle Physics.
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    You are basically nothing more than disturbances
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    on an ocean that’s excited by energy, and guided by
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    forces that make up the rules of the universe.
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    But why and what is a force?
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    We’ll have to explore a few more simple questions
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    to get to the bottom of this.
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    We made some wallpapers from some of the graphics
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    in this video, you can get them on patron.com.
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    If you want to help us make more videos,
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    you can do so there.
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    We really appreciate your support!
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    While you decide, here are some more videos we made.
Title:
What Is Something?
Description:

What is something? On the most fundamental level thinkable, what are things? Why are things? And why do things behave the way they do?

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What is something?

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
05:34

English subtitles

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