0:00:00.240,0:00:04.040 Atoms are ridiculous and unbelievably[br]small. 0:00:04.180,0:00:06.760 A single human hair is about as thick as 0:00:06.760,0:00:10.160 500,000 carbon atoms stacked[br]over each other. 0:00:10.460,0:00:15.400 Look at your fist, it contains trillions[br]and trillions of atoms. 0:00:15.600,0:00:19.779 If one atom in it were about as big as a[br]marble, how big would your fist be? 0:00:19.920,0:00:24.820 Well… about the size of Earth.[br]Hm… still hard to imagine? 0:00:24.820,0:00:26.260 Let’s try something different 0:00:32.659,0:00:34.116 Look at your little finger. 0:00:34.116,0:00:37.833 Imagine that its tip is as big as the[br]room you’re sitting in right now. 0:00:38.203,0:00:40.448 Now fill the room with grains of rice. 0:00:40.818,0:00:43.715 One rice corn represents one cell of your fingertip. 0:00:44.313,0:00:46.305 Now let’s zoom in on the rice corn. 0:00:46.475,0:00:50.137 And now, one cell is as big as the[br]room you’re in right now. 0:00:50.745,0:00:54.845 Let’s fill it with rice again.[br]This is about the size of a protein. 0:00:55.380,0:00:59.170 And now, let us fill all the empty spaces[br]between the rice corns 0:00:59.174,0:01:00.549 with fine grains of sand. 0:01:00.989,0:01:04.208 This is roughly how small atoms are. 0:01:04.875,0:01:06.571 What is an atom made of? 0:01:06.960,0:01:10.176 Let us just pretend that atoms look[br]like this for a minute 0:01:10.176,0:01:11.844 to make it easier to understand. 0:01:12.363,0:01:15.058 An atom consists of three[br]elementary particles: 0:01:15.058,0:01:18.147 neutrons, protons and electrons. 0:01:18.917,0:01:22.915 Protons and neutrons bind together and[br]form the atom core, 0:01:22.915,0:01:24.993 held together by the strong interaction, 0:01:24.993,0:01:27.743 one of the four fundamental forces in[br]the universe. 0:01:28.340,0:01:31.683 They are made from quarks and[br]held together by gluons. 0:01:31.683,0:01:35.026 Nobody knows exactly how small quarks are. 0:01:35.026,0:01:38.369 We think they might literally be points,[br]like in geometry. 0:01:38.369,0:01:41.529 Try to imagine them as being[br]zero-dimensional. 0:01:41.760,0:01:43.986 We suspect that quarks and electrons are 0:01:43.986,0:01:46.707 the most fundamental components[br]of matter in the universe. 0:01:47.333,0:01:53.530 Electrons orbit the atom core. They[br]travel at a speed of about 2,200 km/s, 0:01:53.530,0:01:57.120 fast enough to get around the Earth in[br]just over 18 seconds. 0:01:57.120,0:02:01.440 Like quarks, we think electrons are[br]fundamental particles. 0:02:01.640,0:02:07.680 99.999999999999% 0:02:07.680,0:02:12.740 of an atom’s volume is just empty space…[br]Except that it isn’t. 0:02:13.260,0:02:18.920 What we perceive as emptiness is actually[br]a space filled by quantum fluctuations, 0:02:18.920,0:02:23.540 fields that have potential energy and[br]build and dissolve spontaneously. 0:02:23.600,0:02:28.160 These fluctuations have a fundamental[br]impact on how charged particles interact. 0:02:28.170,0:02:30.070 But that’s a topic for another video. 0:02:30.400,0:02:34.120 How much space do the core and[br]electrons actually fill? 0:02:34.380,0:02:37.516 If you were to subtract all the spaces[br]between the atom cores 0:02:37.516,0:02:41.032 from the Empire State Building,[br]it would be about as big as a rice corn. 0:02:41.312,0:02:44.780 All the atoms of humanity would[br]fit in a teaspoon. 0:02:45.020,0:02:48.890 There are extreme objects where states[br]like this actually exist. 0:02:49.073,0:02:52.646 In a neutron star, atom cores are[br]compacted so densely 0:02:52.646,0:02:57.180 that the mass of three Suns fits into an[br]object only a few kilometers wide. 0:02:57.440,0:03:00.840 By the way, what do atoms look like? 0:03:00.980,0:03:03.320 Well, kind of like this. 0:03:03.680,0:03:07.560 Electrons are like a wave function and a[br]particle at the same time. 0:03:07.780,0:03:11.400 We can calculate where an electron might[br]be at any given moment in time. 0:03:11.400,0:03:14.410 These clouds of probability,[br]called orbitals, 0:03:14.410,0:03:18.190 are where electrons might be[br]with a certainty of 95%. 0:03:18.320,0:03:21.053 The probability of finding an electron[br]approaches 0 0:03:21.053,0:03:23.376 the further we get away from[br]the atom core, 0:03:23.376,0:03:27.160 but it actually never is zero, which[br]means that, in theory, 0:03:27.160,0:03:30.910 the electron of an atom could be on[br]the other side of the universe. 0:03:30.910,0:03:32.536 Okay, wait a second. 0:03:32.536,0:03:36.082 These strange thingies make up all[br]the matter in the universe. 0:03:36.252,0:03:38.321 For many dozens of known elements, 0:03:38.321,0:03:42.033 you don’t need many dozens of[br]elementary particles, just three. 0:03:42.570,0:03:46.419 Take one proton and one electron,[br]and you have hydrogen. 0:03:46.540,0:03:49.860 Add a proton and a neutron,[br]you have helium. 0:03:50.140,0:03:53.433 Add a few more, you get carbon,[br]a few more, fluorine, 0:03:53.433,0:03:56.326 even more, gold, and so on. 0:03:56.326,0:03:59.420 And every atom of an element is the same: 0:03:59.540,0:04:03.200 all hydrogen atoms in the universe,[br]for example, are the same; 0:04:03.200,0:04:07.740 the hydrogen in your body is exactly[br]the same as the hydrogen in the Sun. 0:04:08.040,0:04:11.000 Do you feel confused right now?[br]We certainly do! 0:04:11.000,0:04:14.599 Nothing on this scale of the universe[br]makes any sense in our world, 0:04:14.599,0:04:18.629 and we’ve not even begun talking about[br]quantum mechanics or the particle zoo, 0:04:18.629,0:04:19.881 which are even stranger! 0:04:20.384,0:04:24.550 Our model of atoms has changed a number[br]of times since we first conceived it, 0:04:24.550,0:04:27.120 and the current one will certainly[br]not be the last. 0:04:27.130,0:04:29.903 So let us support scientists and research 0:04:29.903,0:04:33.256 and wait for the next wave of[br]mindboggling new information 0:04:33.256,0:04:37.720 about this strange world that is the[br]basis for our existence.