3:56 γ©γ€γγγγ (Leibniz) 14:08 γ«γ«γγΌ (Carnot) 22:21 γ―γ©γ¦γΈγ¦γΉ (Clausius) 29:59γγ«γγγ³ (Boltzmann
Prof. Jim is right up there with Brian Cox, as one of the most engaging and inspiring teachers of our time
I just revised my second law of thermodynamics at my age 91. In my college days I worked a lot with Entropy when working on steam cycle. I also happened to visit Fusion laboratory in Oxfordshire on a College trip and was intrigued by a 700 ton flywheel was used to give a sudden burst of energy required for Fusion experimement. I read scientists are gradually aproaching the temperature required for sustained fusion. Great lectureby Prof. Al Khalili.
Years ago I watched these series and they actually blew my tiny little mind and I feel like my life since then has been perpetually falling down this rabbit hole over and over and over.
I'm 56, when I was around 9 yrs old in northern Wi. I was lucky enough to watch my friend's great uncle send and receive telegraphs at the railroad depot. We've come a long way.
He has a unique way of explaining relatively complex and difficult to explain ideas and processes so that they become accessible
This is one of the best and most beautiful documentaries on science in existence today.
Everything Jim writes or creates is simply awesome !
Cambridge Prof Simon Schaffer's commentary was particularly wonderful to listen to. Thank you, Wonderful program. Beautifully edited.
Our universe is composed of ordinary matter (4.9%), dark matter (26.8%), and dark energy (68.3%). Ordinary matter consists of atoms that form planets, stars, and galaxies.
This is probably the best documentary channel on youtube right now. Always excited when they upload!
Anything Jim Al Khalili does is brilliant. He keeps it easy to understand and always interesting. The thing about these videos, the amount of adverts! Does anyone watch them or does everyone press skip ASAP?
Enjoy your great explanation, with love and prayers from Nigeria π³π¬
One of my favorite science educators, Al-Khalili is the British Sagan of our times. Of course I remember the OG when Cosmos was first broadcast, and though I was already in my early 20s it changed my life.
That silk portrait of Jacquard was hanging on the wall in the living room in my grandparents' house, and the cousins and I never had any idea what it was. Our family came from Lyon and started a silk works in Pennsylvania way way back in the day. Glad I watched this!
I normally don't find these interesting, but I like this episode π
The car shot with you talking is brilliant. Keep up the great work !! β€π€²π»
One of the most exciting episodes of popular science videos. I am watching it for the third time and it is still a mesmerizing amalgam of facts, history, and most of all, a great narrative.
Understanding the universe is fantastic.
@SparkDocs