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BBC: Inside Einsteins Mind (Science Documentary )

The story of the most elegant and powerful theory in science - Albert Einstein's general relativity. When Einstein presented his formidable theory in November 1915, it turned our understanding of gravity, space and time completely on its head. Over the last 100 years, general relativity has enabled us to trace the origins of the universe to the Big Bang and to appreciate the enormous power of black holes. To mark the 100th anniversary of general relativity, this film takes us inside the head of Einstein to witness how his idea evolved, giving new insights into the birth of a masterpiece that has become a cornerstone of modern science. This is not as daunting as it sounds - because Einstein liked to think in pictures. The film is a magical visual journey that begins in Einstein's young mind, follows the thought experiments that gave him stunning insights about the physical world, and ultimately reaches the extremes of modern physics.

Le Acharya

3 years ago

okay they win albert einstein the icon of genius his theory of general relativity is one of the greatest feats of thinking about nature to come from a single mind it is now 100 years old [Music] how do you even study the universe how can you study everything all this mass all the stuff all the energy in the universe at one time it turns out that you actually can do that with einstein's theory of general relativity one mathematical sentence and from it you can derive the understanding of the enti
re universe on the largest scales and that is beautiful how did a theory that explains so much come from one person einstein had a magical talent he could take a hard physical problem and boil it down to a powerful visual image a thought experiment this is the story of how a young albert einstein imagined a series of thought experiments that fundamentally altered our view of reality the problems are formulated simply but it turns out that the answers revolutionize the whole of science the seeds
for einstein's key thoughts were planted when he was just a child he grew up in a small house in munich in southern germany his unique personality was evident early on like many great innovators einstein was a rebel a loner but deeply curious he was slow in learning to speak as a child so slow that his parents consulted a doctor but he later said that that's maybe why he thought in visual thought experiments [Music] his sister remembers him building little card towers using playing cards he was
a daydreamer but he was deeply persistent einstein's father herrmann manufactured electrical equipment he nurtured his son's interest in science on one occasion he brought him a compass [Music] this needle kicks and points you where to go but you can't see how or why and that kind of puzzlement is very characteristic of young scientists now you and i maybe remember getting accomplished when we're kids and we're like oh look the needle twitches and points north but then we're on to something else
like oh look there's a dead squirrel but for einstein after getting that compass he developed a lifelong devotion to understanding how things can be forced to move even though nothing's touching them [Music] the young einstein became gripped by a desire to understand the underlying laws of nature he developed a unique way of thinking about the physical world inspired by his favorite book the book einstein loved told little stories like what would it be like to travel through space or go through
an electrical wire and it made einstein think visually these imagined situations that we often call thought experiments became a defining feature of einstein's thinking one of the critical thought experiments that einstein began to play with very young at around the age of 16 was trying to imagine what would happen if he could catch up with a light wave it's one thing to imagine light waves zooming past him at some impo seemingly impossible speed but what if he could somehow just propel himself
really quickly what would it look like if he could catch up with that light wave what would he see he said it caused him to walk around in such anxiety his palms would sweat now you and i may remember what's causing our palms to sweat at age 16 and it was not a light beam but that's why he's einstein [Music] this dreamlike thought about the nature of light was einstein's first step on the path to his great theory it stayed with him throughout his time at school and college he was extremely gift
ed in science and math as a young person and very bad at other classes mostly because he kept cutting class and being very rude to his teachers many teachers from when his high school days on were convinced he'd never amount to anything he was a discipline problem i mean he was bad news he applies to the second best university in zurich the zurich polytech and gets rejected i'd love to meet the admissions director who rejected albert einstein but eventually he gets in and he does moderately well
but not good enough to get a teaching fellowship and so he ends up at the burn swiss patent office as a third class examiner einstein started work at the patent office in 1902 aged 23. here his job was to assess the originality of new devices he was immersed in the kinds of of sort of technical details that he had been fascinated by as a very young kid and he or he was sitting in you know the kind of wave of of the modern age this was the era of electrification so all the latest clever ideas fo
r switching technology for coordinating clocks in particular those are all passing through his office time zones had recently been introduced in central europe and accurately synchronizing clocks within regions was a major challenge of the day [Music] switzerland was a world leader in time technology dozens of patents to link clocks passed through einstein's office he could whip through these patent applications and then out of his door he'd pull his physics notes and his boss was very indulgent
and sort of turned a blind eye as einstein was doing his theories in his spare time it's really important to remember that theoretical physics was new when einstein was a young man you could do quite a lot of this work by reading a relatively small number of science journals and making the calculations yourself einstein's world in 1905 was dominated by two kinds of physics one was about 200 years old founded by isaac newton british natural philosopher for newton all there is in the world is mat
a moving newton showed that the motion of falling apples and orbiting planets are governed by the same force gravity his equations are so effective we still use them today to send probes to the farthest reaches of the solar system the other important theory of einstein's day covered electricity and magnetism that branch of physics had been revolutionized in 1865 by the scottish physicist james clark maxwell maxwell's theory describes light as an electromagnetic wave that travels at a fixed speed
this prediction that the speed of light will be an absolute fixed value never faster never slower never stopping that is so surprising as ordinary things don't have a prediction from fundamental law what their speed is a basketball can be fast or slow or it can stop there's no fundamental fact of the speed of a basketball this notion of a fixed speed of light captivates einstein he visualizes it in a brilliant thought experiment [Music] he imagines a man standing on a railway platform a lamp tu
rns on a beam of light rushes past him and he observes the speed then he imagines a train traveling at close to the speed of light a lady on board sees the same beam einstein visualizes that in newton's world because the lady is moving at close to the speed of light she would see the beam past her train window relatively slowly but in maxwell's world the speed of light must be the same for both the man and the lady einstein could see immediately that there's a contradiction between newton and ma
xwell they just don't fit together the reason they don't fit together is that if newton is right then if you measure the speed of light it will be different depending on how you're moving and what the maxwellians were saying was the speed of light is always going to turn out the same those two things cannot simultaneously be true and one of the things einstein hated hated was contradiction if there's one kind of physics that says this and another kind of physics that says that and they're differ
ent that's a sign that something's gone wrong and it needs fixing for months einstein wrestles with the problem eventually he makes his breakthrough he focuses on a key element of speed time he realized that any statement about time is simply a question about what is simultaneous for example if you say the train arrives at seven that simply means that it gets to the platform simultaneous with the clock going to seven he feels this crucial notion of things happening at the same moment should depe
nd on how you're moving [Music] and that would mean the flow of time might not be the same for everyone [Music] he explores this radical idea in another thought experiment again he imagines the man standing on the platform this time two bolts of lightning strike on either side of him the man is standing exactly halfway between them and the light from each strike reaches his eyes at exactly the same moment for him the two strikes are simultaneous then einstein imagines the lady on the fast-moving
train at close to the speed of light what would she see as the light travels out from the strikes the train is moving towards one and away from the other light from the front strike reaches her eyes first for the lady time elapses between the two strikes for the man on the platform there is no time between the strikes [Music] this simple thought has mind-blowing significance if different observers can't agree on what's simultaneous then they can't agree on the flow of time itself if there's no
such thing as simultaneity then there's no such thing as absolute time everywhere throughout the universe and isaac newton was wrong lady on the fast-moving train does measure the speed of light to be the same as the man because relative to him her time runs slower this concept that time and space are flexible depending on how you're moving became known as special relativity it led to remarkable results such as the famous equation relating energy to mass einstein published this article in 1905 t
o exactly no acclaim host people ignored it this was not uh setting the world on fire two years go by before a very eminent physicist uh johannes stark invites einstein to write a review article on einstein's own work precisely because no one was paying attention and he begins thinking about ways to generalize him to push his own results from 1905. what if he considers not only a train moving at a fixed speed past the platform what if that train begins to speed up or slow down what if there's ac
celeration adding acceleration to the equations was his first task then there was that mysterious newtonian force of gravity to contend with in newton's theory gravity is a force that acts instantaneously but special relativity says that's impossible nothing can travel faster than light what newton's theory tells you is that suppose the sun were to disappear the orbit of the earth should change at that very moment but the notion of at that very moment in two different places is exactly one of th
ese notions that special relativity has told you isn't a good physics notion so you've now got this challenge of trying to work out how to take the success of newton's theory of gravity but fit it into this new special relativistic picture einstein begins to think about how objects fall one of the major features that gravity has was pointed out by galileo that everything falls at the same rate in a gravitational field if you can ignore the effects of air resistance even heavy objects and light o
bjects they all fall the same way when gravity pulls on them this bowling ball and feather inside the airless environment of a vacuum chamber fall in perfect unison einstein figured that if everything falls at the same rate in a gravitational field then imagine that all you're allowed to do is look at the things around you you're not allowed to look at the wider world then you wouldn't even be able to tell that you are falling in a gravitational field because everything would be doing the same t
hing whatever that thing was so einstein said well that's a very strange feature for a force of nature to have the things that are next to each other can't even tell that that force is there and again being einstein he started to think well what kind of force of nature would have that property what what would it mean for a force of nature to act on absolutely everything in the same way einstein feels that there must be an important link between gravity and acceleration [Music] we all know that i
f when we are accelerated and of course now we have uh cars and airplanes to uh give us the physical feeling if you're in an airplane and it's taking off you are pushed back in your chair you feel actually kind of a force pushing you back which feels very similar to the force of gravity but you need kind of the brilliance of einstein to explain why they are related we have another moment here where einstein is looking at something familiar but then seeing it in a different way and concluding som
e remarkable new principles about it [Music] suddenly he hits upon what he describes as the happiest thought of his life what if gravity and acceleration are really the same thing again he examines the idea in a beautiful thought experiment he imagines a man in a box floating weightlessly in a distant region of space in zero gravity suddenly the man stops floating and finds himself on the floor [Music] what has happened [Music] either the box is now close to a planet and the force of gravity has
pulled the man downwards or someone has attached a rope and the box is now being pulled and accelerated upwards [Music] so which is it gravity or acceleration without being able to see outside the man can't tell why he's on the floor einstein realized that there is no way to tell the difference between sitting in a gravitational field and being accelerated and these are equivalent situations the fact that these two effects are the same give the same result means that gravity is acceleration it'
s not just like acceleration it's the same thing it's a big breakthrough by extending his theory of special relativity to include acceleration he could begin to formulate a new theory of gravity [Music] by 1912 einstein is living in zurich with his wife maleva and two young sons hans and edward the academic world had realized the importance of special relativity and his career had taken off he's now a professor at the esteemed swiss federal institute of technology but spends as much time as poss
ible working on his theory he needs to describe how objects move in space and time and soon realizes that the best tool for the job is a strange but powerful concept called space-time if i think of space i know that i can find anything if i know where it is north south east west and up down three points but that doesn't mean i can find it because i also have to know where it is in time and so if we start to think to know everything about an event in the universe i have to know not just its spati
al coordinates but also its time coordinate i can begin to think about where it is in space time imagine a camera filming an action capturing each moment in time as a single frame einstein basically tells us think of the movie real so you have all these little pictures now cut them apart one by one and stack them on top of each other you get this pile and if you go up in a pile you go up in time and now kind of glue them all together into one big block and that block has both space and time and
that's the space time continuum it's almost looking at a movie not frame by frame but seeing the whole movie at once [Music] there would now be kind of two strands going up in space and time and there would be kind of spaghetti strands the fact we all are spaghetti strands moving in this pace time einstein feels that space-time is the natural arena in which his theory of relativity should play out but now he needs sophisticated mathematics by your standard or mine einstein was good at math he wa
s einstein but he was not really a mathematician per se he didn't prove theorems he didn't pour over math books he was a physicist he did thought experiments he thought a very tangible concrete situations and what would happen so when it came time for him to really bear down to the absolute cutting edge mathematics of his day he required help he has to have a better grasp of how to describe paths of objects as they move through space-time he needs new mathematics and he doesn't have that at his
fingertips so he has to go look for it [Music] at university einstein had skipped the geometry classes letting his friend marcel grossman take notes for him grossman had excelled in geometry and was now chairman of the math department he suggests einstein uses advanced mathematics in which the shape of space and time could be curved [Music] because space-time has a geometry he thinks to himself well maybe it's the actual shape of space-time itself that is giving rise to gravity after months of w
ork einstein has an extraordinary idea what if space-time is shaped by matter and that's what we feel as gravity in struggling to figure out what causes gravity then einstein has this great insight it is simply that a mass distorts the shape of space-time around it so we get rid of this force of gravity and instead we have curvature of space-time in einstein's universe then if space were empty it would be flat there'd be nothing going on but as soon as you put objects down they warp the space an
d time around them and that causes a deviation of the geometry so that now things start moving [Music] everything wants to move as simple as possible through space and time but einstein tells us that mass sculpts based on time and it's the curved motion through this sculpture as the force of gravity we have this feeling that the reason i can feel pressure on the soles of my feet that the reason things are going to drop when i throw them are because there's a force attracting us down to the cente
r of the earth what general relativity tells you is that's not the right way to think about what's going on there what's really going on is that your natural path in space time would take you to the center of the earth and what's actually happening is the floor is getting in the way it's pushing you upwards we look at it we go ah the force of gravity but einstein says no no the curvature of space time it's a stunning insight just as an ant might feel forces pulling it left and right as it walks
over crumpled paper when it's simply the shape of a surface dictating its path einstein saw that what we feel as the force of gravity is in fact the shape of the space time we're moving through [Music] that move to stop treating gravity as something spooky and inexplicable and start thinking of it as something that's absolutely to do with the very geometry of the world that then allowed him to begin to complete a general a universal theory of relativity einstein now has everything he needs to fo
rmulate his final theory of gravity but he makes a critical mistake he misinterprets one of his equations and unaware of his error continues working on incorrect ideas [Music] the point at which einstein is going to give the most essential equations of the theory einstein considers something like them and then says ah but these don't work and then writes down the wrong equations what follows are alternations of confidence and despair as he convinces himself that everything's fine with this theor
y and then he realizes that things aren't so good with the theory it is a long dark period for einstein as he struggles to reconcile himself with a theory that is just not working two years later einstein is in berlin at just 36 years old he has one of the most prestigious positions in physics but he is still struggling with his theory by 1915 he's reached the pinnacle of the profession he's in the prussian academy and a professor at the university of berlin but his marriage has fallen apart his
wife and his two kids have moved back to switzerland so he's pacing around almost all alone in this apartment in berlin he changes fundamentally the way that he does his physics he had relied on physical intuition all the way through here and he'd let the mathematics take a back seat he decided that that was a mistake that he should have listened to the natural mathematics first and einstein adopted that new method and started to write down not the equations that he thought were physically the
most plausible but the equations that were mathematically the most natural but now he has a competitor einstein had enthusiastically shared his ideas with the brilliant mathematician david hilbert hilbert was so impressed he decided to work on the theory himself einstein is now in a race to the finish with one of the world's best mathematicians [Music] this is unfolding in a remarkably dramatic period in history world war one has begun to ravage central europe einstein is not just toiling sort o
f in the abstract he's toiling as as the world seems to fall apart that affects whom he can send letters to it affects what journals from other countries he can even receive in the midst of the blockade the world is certainly from the point of view of the middle of germany is not looking like a bright happy place einstein's feeling uh dejected because his work is not going well he's concerned that he's now in a race with a remarkably gifted colleague his family life is not particularly happy and
the headlines every day scream war devastation and carnage by november 1915 einstein is scheduled to present his work in a series of four weekly lectures at the esteemed prussian academy but he's struggling to formulate his ideas in the midst of this ordeal letters arrived from his wife in zurich pressing the issue of his financial obligations to his family and discussing contact with his sons as his lectures begin his theory is still far from complete the pressure on einstein is huge he would
give a lecture revise it give it again spot mistakes correct them get up on the podium explain what was wrong in the previous week's lecture correct it and then move on and then do that again and again for four weeks running his work to convince them of the truth of this absolutely radical new theory of relativity that he was proposing is one of the most intense periods of work in the history of science somehow he's able to focus on his theory with an incredible intensity and he makes his breakt
hrough he tests his equations on a problem that newton's theory of gravity couldn't solve the orbit of mercury mercury's path around the sun has an anomaly that newton's theory can't explain it deviates slightly each time it goes round einstein calculates the orbit with his new equations the answer is correct exactly what astronomers had observed he'd found the final equations for his general theory of relativity [Music] you have to think about the hubris of being albert einstein he had already
thrown out newtonian mechanics with special relativity and then he had gone off in his little personal quest to incorporate gravity and at the end of the day he boils it down to a prediction for a number that had been observed the procession of the orbit of mercury and miraculously when the pages of algebra work out to their end you get the right answer and suddenly it's not just playing with equations anymore he realizes this is how the world works all this abstract nonsense is the correct theo
ry of reality [Music] einstein is at last able to present a successful theory that's a triumphant moment one of the great moments in the history of physics and for einstein a victory very much against the odds and he'd won on the 25th of november 1915 einstein lays out his findings in his climactic fourth lecture at the prussian academy he presents general relativity the theory can be written as a single equation it condenses sprawling complexities into a beautifully compact set of symbols so th
e formula is really simple g minor equals to g for the shape of space time c to the fourth and t for the distribution of mass and energy so this very simple formula captures all of einstein's general relativity it's a beautiful simple equation but it's a lot of work to impact the symbols the mathematical symbols and see how in this very simple formula the whole geometry of the universe is hidden it's kind of an acquired taste to see the beauty it's also a signature formula for einstein the true
mark of his genius is that he combines two elements that actually live in different universes the left-hand side lives in the world of geometry of mathematics the right hand side lives in a world of physics of matter and movement and so perhaps the most powerful ingredient of the equation is this very simple equal sign here these two lines that actually are connecting the two worlds and it's quite appropriate they're two lines because it's two-way traffic matter tells space and time to curve spa
ce and time tells matter to move [Applause] [Music] the idea that gravity is the curving of space and time is completely alien to most of us it's hard to imagine that time itself can be warped but it's real we can measure it the earth's gravity the distortion of space and time reduces the further you are from the mass of the planet time flows quicker at altitude to put this to the test a team of specialists has placed a highly accurate atomic clock at the top of new hampshire's mount sunapee two
thousand seven hundred feet above sea level [Music] after four days they collect their clock [Music] and take it down the mountain to their [Music] lab there they compare it to a second atomic clock that has remained just a few feet above sea level and the master clock and channel b you guys ready this is it right here the time interval counter is going to show us the time difference between these two clock ticks 20 nanoseconds you can see the time difference between them represented here graph
ically of the clock that was up at the mountain for four days and our master clock since gravity is weaker at altitude while the test clock was up the mountain time ticked faster it's now 20 nanoseconds 20 billionths of a second ahead of the sea level clock just as general relativity predicts this is really awesome but back in 1915 atomic clocks weren't available einstein needed a way to show the world the bizarre features of his theory the general theory of relativity made predictions of things
which look really strange for example the idea that light bends when it passes near a very heavy body no one had ever looked for that no one had ever observed it einstein was desperate desperate to get astronomers to make that test einstein's theory predicts that when light from a distant star travels close to the sun the warped space around the sun bends the light's path in may 1919 the english astronomer arthur eddington traveled to the african island of principe to record images that would s
how this phenomenon right at the end of the war arthur eddington very much keen to work with einstein first because he took the general theory of relativity very seriously he was a huge admirer of einstein but also because he was a quaker a pacifist he wanted as quickly as possible to as he put it solve the wounds of war to bring the british and the germans back together what eddington had been able to do was take photographs of stars during a total eclipse of the sun so the moon blocked most of
the brightness of the sun and little pinpricks of light could be seen around the sun otherwise would be lost in the glare and eddington and his colleagues were able to measure that the appearance of those stars had been shifted compared to where they would have been had that big mass of the sun not been deflecting that light from far away eddington's able to show in november of 1919 just one year to the day after the end of world war one that einstein's general relativity theory is right and a
revolution in science has been accomplished [Music] when the eclipse experiments prove einstein's theory right he rockets the fame not just because he's explained a new way of looking at the universe but at the end of world war one you had the predictions of a german scientist be proven right by some british astronomers and it becomes headlines across the world new york times says lights all askew at the heavens men of science more or less a gog this is back when newspapers knew how to write gre
at headlines but einstein kind of loves this fact that he is now an icon of science [Music] einstein becomes a worldwide celebrity the icon of genius we still recognize today the only person who was more widely known was charlie chaplin and they got on like a house on fire chaplin said the reason they all love me is because they understand everything i do and the reason they love you is that they don't understand anything you do can you explain that and i said but in 1930s berlin the nazi party
is gaining power as a jewish scientist einstein becomes increasingly caught up in the political unrest einstein's theories became a target they were deemed sort of aesthetically repugnant to a kind of aryan sensibility so people attacked not just einstein the jewish scientist but they would actually have people denouncing general relativity in january nobel prize mathematician albert einstein visited california he begins to make trips to america where he is welcomed with open arms america's and
in 1933 he settles in princeton taking up a position at the institute for advanced study [Music] today the institute is headed by professor robert dygraf he basically was still very much by himself just actually as he was in berlin uh just concentrating on his honest deep ideas and struggling with the understanding the universe of course its office was here at the institute einstein worked to unify his theory of gravity with the other laws of physics with einstein you see this phenomena you see
with many great scientists that they climb this very high mountain and instead of celebrating their success uh they privileged to see a much wider landscape and they see all these mountains behind it and i think he was very much aware how much still there was to be done till the very last days of his life he was trying to push these equations and and find a description of nature all of nature in terms of the geometry of space and time but general relativity was fading from mainstream science phy
sics was now focused on the quantum theory of atoms and tiny particles a theory incompatible with einstein's ideas but one that could be tested in the lab most of general relativity was then beyond the reach of experiment when einstein died in 1955 aged 76 the wider scientific community presumed his theory had reached a dead end but they couldn't have been more mistaken the best theories in physics always take us to places where the people who invented them didn't imagine and a truly wonderful t
heory like general relativity predicts all sorts of things that einstein didn't conceive of the theory has a life of its own we understand general relativity much better right now than albert einstein ever did today huge telescopes peer deep into the universe [Music] it is general relativity that allows us to make sense of what they see [Music] and there's one prediction of einstein's theory this technology has allowed us to explore that is straight out of science fiction a black hole everything
that we're familiar with in ordinary life is made from matter but not black holes black holes are made from warped space and time and nothing else a black hole is an object that is spherical like a star or like the earth with a sharp boundary called the horizon through which nothing can come out so it casts a shadow on whatever is behind it it's just a black black shadow unbelievably black this simulation shows the distortion of starlight around a black hole even though einstein knew his theory
predicted black holes he found it hard to believe they would really exist in nature in the 1960s professor kip thorne worked on the mathematical concept of black holes the idea made sense on paper and he began to feel that these science fiction-like objects might actually be real it must be here somewhere it's in one of these piles kip made a bet with fellow physicist stephen hawking about whether or not a strong source of x-rays known as cygnus x-1 was in fact a black hole yeah there we go rel
atively stars and black holes yeah there it is so that is a copy of the famous bet um the bet says whereas stephen hawking has such a large investment in general relativity in black holes and desires an insurance policy whereas kip thorne likes to live dangerously without an insurance policy that's a that's a good characterization of myself as much to my wife chagrin therefore be it resolved that stephen hawking bets one year subscription to penthouse magazine is against kip thorn's wager of a f
our-year subscription to a political magazine called private eye that cygnus x-1 does not contain a black hole of mass above the chandrasaka limit its witness this 10th day of december 1974 while stephen is at caltech with me we made that bet under circumstances where there was mounding evidence that cygnus x-1 really is a black hole stephen hawking had a terribly uh deep investment in it actually being a black hole and so he made the bet against himself as an insurance policy that at least he w
ould get something out of it if cygnus x one turned out not to be a black hole the amount evidence mounded thereafter over the period of the 70s and 80s and in june 1990 stephen snuck into my office and signed off on the bet that finally the evidence was absolutely overwhelming that cygnus x1 really is a black hole and penthouse magazine arrived he sent me the british version of penthouse which was ever so much more raunchy than the american penthouse actually enough to make my face turn red whe
n i received it at first today thanks to concepts built on einstein's theory we have evidence suggesting there are millions of black holes in our galaxy alone and his general relativity tells us more just as a collision of two objects produces sound waves the collision of two black holes generates waves in space time [Music] there are huge things in the universe happening like black holes colliding or stars exploding then they create these gravitational waves waves in the shape of space and time
that travel through the universe at the speed of light and so right now the space around me is being squeezed and stretched by gravitational waves just getting here from let's say two black holes colliding a billion light years away but the squeezing stretching is so minute i absolutely could not personally detect it and so what we're trying to do is build an instrument that can in louisiana and washington state a vast experiment called ligo is in the final phases of calibration it's hoped that
laser beams traveling four kilometers between precisely aligned mirrors will measure the squeezing of space caused by gravitational waves the experiment is able to measure the difference between two mirrors at four kilometers and two mirrors at four kilometers plus or minus a ten thousandth of the nucleus of an atom sometime between today and a few years from now we really expect to have made the first direct detection of gravitational waves to actually record the ringing of the shape of space
and time a direct measurement of pure gravitation we're not collecting light we're not talking about matter we're not talking about anything just measuring pure modulations in space and time so it's pure general relativity of all of einstein's theory's remarkable breakthroughs the most profound is that our universe has a beginning [Music] the discovery that distant galaxies are moving outwards and the detection of background radiation from the very start of the universe provided evidence for the
big bang and a universe that's growing with this picture of of the expanding universe there is natural questions is the universe slowing down as it expands is it so dense that someday it will come to a halt and collapse will the universe come to an end these seem like good questions to find answers in the 1990s saul and his team studied exploding stars called supernovae to track the growth of the universe when we made the measurement we discovered that the universe isn't slowing down enough to
come to a halt in fact it's not slowing at all it's speeding up the universe is expanding faster and faster in order to explain the acceleration of the universe within einstein's theory of general relativity we're considering a energy spread throughout all of space that we've never seen before we don't know what it is we call it dark energy and if so it would require something like 70 of all the stuff of the universe to be in this form of previously unknown dark energy so this is a lot to swallo
w and you might imagine at that point you should go back and revisit your theory the problem is that einstein's theory is so elegant and it predicts many many many digits of precision that it's very very difficult to come up with any other theory for a hundred years general relativity has proven correct time and time again but einstein himself knew that his great theory had limits the huge problem in theoretical physics now is to combine general relativity our best theory of space time and gravi
ty with quantum mechanics our best theory of very small things two phenomenally successful theories that don't automatically gel with one another [Music] here at the institute for advanced study where einstein worked the world's leading theoretical physicists are trying to solve the problem einstein never could finding a single set of rules that applies to both the cosmic and atomic scales a unified theory the holy grail of physics we are now in uh what at this time is the school of physics so h
ere uh people are still struggling with many of the same issues that einstein was struggled and are still trying to capture uh uh the laws of the universe uh from this very small to the very large uh in a single equation and it's still blackboards that are the uh the weapon of choice the brightest minds of the world are coming here uh to work 24 hours seven days a week uh struggling to to grasp the great mysteries of the universe and i think we're still driven by the same dream that at some poin
t we can capture everything in elegant mathematics one hundred years after einstein transformed our understanding of nature the stage is set for the next revolution quantum mechanics was very different than general relativity came about by many people stumbling into it maybe that will be the way that we do it next time einstein was this singular genius who managed to get gravity right he didn't manage to get quantum mechanics right when we finally move beyond einstein it might be another singula
r genius that comes along someone struggling in a poor school in kenya right now that we don't know about or it might be 20 different people with 20 different points of view gradually building brick by brick to finally figure out a more comprehensive view that includes general relativity in it i think the most important thing that you learn from einstein you're just the power of an idea if it's correct you know it's just you it's unstoppable it's extremely encouraging that though he was able wit
h pure thought to solve the riddle of the universe [Music] there are only a few moments in science history where we've had to completely rethink our picture of the world that we live in and this was one of those moments the moment you enter the world of general relativity you encounter claims propositions that are doing nothing less than calculating how much matter there is in the universe whether the whole of space is curved so that what we thought was in a way beyond experience becomes a syste
m that can be described can be tested that still seems to me to be an absolutely amazing fact [Applause] well you know you have the huge universe and it obeys certain laws of nature but where in the universe are these laws actually discovered where are they studied and then you go to this tiny planet and there's this one individual einstein who captures this and now there's a small group of people walking in his footsteps and trying to push it further and i often feel well you know there's a sma
ll part of the universe that actually is reflecting upon itself to try to understand itself [Music] you can watch more on albert einstein in the secret of quantum physics available to watch now on bbc iplayer what connects marmalade socks and one direction enter the mind-boggling ever-changing digital world next on bbc4 with dr hannah fry and the joy of data

Comments

@andrewm139

Watch this every night it’s so good

@kafikfishna8806

@35:52 "Matter tells Space and Time to curve and Space-Time tells matter to move." As beautifully said as the equation itself.

@titinette331

I think I finally understood the General Relativity Theory!!! And much more!!! What a great documentary!! Thank you so much for posting it!!

@marksimpson2321

I am a huge fan of popular science and this is one of the best documentaries I've ever seen. It captures the brilliance of Einstein in a clear but mind-boggling way while not being dumbed down at all. Beautifully constructed , made, narrated and produced! BBC = 👍👍👍👍👍

@dr.exist0

A truly gifted man.

@chronicled4956

Imagine what would've happened if einstein and ramanujan had a collab at that time🤯

@wisdomkhan

Tysm for this documentary. Loved it.

@alexisaac4179

This was meant for me to watch. This genius fascinates me. Get it al. This guy is a legend a pioneer. Powerful man.

@eric.cartman7

Brilliant content man

@ss-mx2ob

cool to see a bit of Edward Witten in his lab

@Gaurav-um4oh

Awesome content ! Want more like this❤️

@theeducationspot5937

Well Einstein has done a great deal of work in his life but left it all for us now to study. I wish we were also allowed to do experiments ourself :(

@arshadayub7563

I couldn't believe how gifted human species is! What seems almost inexplicable and incompressible has been resolved through sheer hard-work of humanity! It is simply astounding!

@user-jt6ej7vh2p

Superb documentary

@ranveer273

Imagination is Power...

@Tripp2Deuce

I would like to see a stand up comic in conversation with these people as part of one of their bits on TV. Lol

@bbirongtong

this is so good

@naturalnajara

Iska hindi version pls upload

@mohammadkhan2500

Solute to Sir Einstein.