Brian Greene Explains The Most Powerful Explosions In The Universe

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The Late Show with Stephen Colbert

The Late Show with Stephen Colbert

8 років тому

Theoretical Physicist Brian Greene explains supernovas and demonstrates how a star like ours eventually dies. Oh, and he breaks a world record, too.
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Stephen Colbert took over as host of The Late Show on Tuesday, Sept. 8, 2015. Colbert is best known for his work as a television host, writer, actor, and producer, and best known for his charity work teaching English as a second language on Tunisian date farms. Prior to joining the CBS family -- and being officially adopted by network president Les Moonves -- Colbert helmed “The Colbert Report,” which aired nearly 1,500 episodes and required Stephen to wear nearly 1,500 different neckties. The program received two Peabody Awards, two Grammy Awards, and several unwelcome shoulder massages. It won two Emmys for Outstanding Variety Series in 2013 and 2014, both of which appear to have been lost in the move. Colbert is pronounced koʊlˈbɛər, according to Wikipedia. His understudy is William Cavanaugh, who will be hosting The Late Show approximately one third of the time. Good luck, Bill!"

КОМЕНТАРІ: 2 100
@onceavamaravilla
@onceavamaravilla 8 років тому
I love how Stephen invites people who actually matters.
@Kisolee
@Kisolee 8 років тому
Yeah I agree, it's what differentiates this show from many others, is that they actually target topics that everyone should be concerned about like science.
@conchobar0928
@conchobar0928 8 років тому
I kind of wish he wouldn't so Brian would actually update his MOOC site.
@snowdjagha
@snowdjagha 8 років тому
Meanwhile, Kimmel invited Trump (or just being paid to).
@whammo12
@whammo12 8 років тому
This guy matters?
@lizardperson2293
@lizardperson2293 8 років тому
lol
@dazzaspc
@dazzaspc 8 років тому
Twinkle, twinkle, little star, how I wonder ..and we're dead.
@AGeeksTouch
@AGeeksTouch 8 років тому
Hah. I spit out my cheerios with this one.
@bigdog4574
@bigdog4574 8 років тому
Haha... I think I just pissed myself!
@AndorianBlues
@AndorianBlues 8 років тому
Twinkle Twinkle Little Star, I don't wonder what you are, for by my spectroscopic ken, I know that you are hydrogen
@dazzaspc
@dazzaspc 8 років тому
+AndorianBlues Indeed. Hydrogen, and then some helium, and later on some carbon, and then oxygen, and silicon, and tiny amounts of other heavier elements.....and some lead..... Wait! Did you say lead? Back up, back up, get the hell out of here! Faster man! why are we moving so slow! You fool! The parking brea....and we're dead.
@apllDgrapllD
@apllDgrapllD 8 років тому
😳🔥😖💀😀😂😂😂😂
@alansmithee419
@alansmithee419 4 роки тому
3:15 "This is called the Galilean cannon" "Did Galileo come up with it?" "Idk but he dropped a lot of stuff and we're gonna drop some stuff" One of the many reasons I love physics.
@danielrodriguez248
@danielrodriguez248 4 роки тому
Gallaleo did not know about super Nova's ,
@alansmithee419
@alansmithee419 4 роки тому
@@danielrodriguez248 super novae were just an example of a real-world phenomenon in which this kind of action takes place, it was not by any means an exhaustive list, and Galileo could well have come up with this experiment.
@santyclause8034
@santyclause8034 3 роки тому
@@alansmithee419 The little ball is the lighter particles all over the outermost layer of a star, I think. Maybe some neutrinos or something, but I do get how the outer layers just cannon off the core, like striking a drum skin, in all directions. Without fusion pushing out energy against the mass pressure of the star, the core 's matter just collapses on itself under both the inward pressure of its entire stellar mass and, I guess, the final inbound push of the Gallileoan cannon effect. The original load comprising the star's entire mass including its ejected matter equally loading in the opposite, against a fractional mass reduced to just the stellar core. Pretty involved process.
@sirmarkkevin954
@sirmarkkevin954 3 роки тому
Hahaha these lines had me.
@michaelcreek3813
@michaelcreek3813 Рік тому
@@danielrodriguez248 On the contrary, Galieo observed the 1604 super nova along with Kepler and other contemporary astronomers. The super nova convinced Galileo that the common belief dating all the way back to Aristotle that the stars were fixed and unchanging was wrong.
@machninety7334
@machninety7334 4 роки тому
Notice how quiet the audience was when he was explaining everything? That’s because PEOPLE LOVE SCIENCE!! We’re all born curious, so this satisfies that thirst for knowledge of how things work.
@hedegaard8
@hedegaard8 4 роки тому
What amazes me though, is that a room full of adults, they were intent on listening, because they DIDN'T know this simple stuff already! That is the remarkable thing. Either that or it just went above their heads.
@philipvernejules9926
@philipvernejules9926 4 роки тому
.......I picked up that entertainment and stupid wisecracks are the rule. Education comes second
@danielrodriguez248
@danielrodriguez248 4 роки тому
No those idiiots in the audience have no clue of what Dr Green is saying, collbert is an idiiot as well,
@ateoforever7434
@ateoforever7434 4 роки тому
@@danielrodriguez248 Stupid has made his point.....
@pabillonkurt7584
@pabillonkurt7584 4 роки тому
And, the important part is, he makes it sound interesting. Very few people make science sound interesting. That's why some classes with teachers or professors that lack the capacity to make the lesson "interesting" tends to have noising and talking students. They fail to catch the attention of the curiosity within people
@gomezdaperez
@gomezdaperez 8 років тому
I love that he's bringing on scientists
@mjs28s
@mjs28s 8 років тому
Um....How is he not a very academic scientist? He is still highly involved in research and has been active for decades and he is also still a professor of math and physics. So we have your opinion on one side and on the other we have decades of working in his field while currently working as a math and physics professor and continually doing research on string theory and cosmology on the other side of the scale. Is it because you think he should be using $10 words all the time rather than addressing people in in context and who his target audience is when he is on a TV show or a PBS science show?
@mjs28s
@mjs28s 8 років тому
I see. Make a claim that gets countered with correct information and then come back with some other comment rather than defending your initial claim. Me thinks nothing you say stands up to any scrutiny.
@5erazoR
@5erazoR 8 років тому
We call that a theory.
@robertoolvera2918
@robertoolvera2918 7 років тому
+JR S. Well, google it. It's actually very interesting if you're into noobie physics
@creedishere420
@creedishere420 7 років тому
Peder Hansen it was a physical demonstration aka an experiment.
@neekedese8974
@neekedese8974 8 років тому
Well, that escalated quickly.
@proutytyler1
@proutytyler1 8 років тому
Haaaaaaaaah.
@agriperma
@agriperma 8 років тому
Supernovas are like that.
@mybrainsondrums
@mybrainsondrums 7 років тому
this. I like this. 15 points for Ravenclaw
@benm5221
@benm5221 6 років тому
N3D A belated bravo.
@edawg0
@edawg0 5 років тому
Well played
@abdullah.a.nahyan
@abdullah.a.nahyan 6 років тому
at least a thousand of teens get eencouragement from this single interview to take Physics as college major.... world would get at least one scientist for sure.
@KvDenko
@KvDenko 5 років тому
I wish I had this show when I was in high school. I actually never took physics and only had introduction to chem 😭I thought I was lucky that I skipped it because all of my classmates complained how hard it was.. I feel like I lost a lot
@cheesywiz9443
@cheesywiz9443 5 років тому
Kv Denko its never too late! You could still give it a try You can start with a book called 'The six easy pieces' by Richard Feynman He won the nobel prize in physics and was the first man to introduce some of the technical sciences to the public and that book that I mentioned gives a reallly good introduction to physics If you like that you could continue reading more physics books ..good luck :)
@sh230968
@sh230968 4 роки тому
and you will get 999 failures. At this success rate, scientists are not a good business proposition.
@ishworshrestha3559
@ishworshrestha3559 4 роки тому
Ol
@ishworshrestha3559
@ishworshrestha3559 4 роки тому
Ok
@esruez
@esruez 3 роки тому
Wtf I wanted to see the transmission of energy from ball to ball. I was expecting a slow-mo at the end tbh.
@robertsamson4610
@robertsamson4610 3 роки тому
You're right they should have used two cameras.
@uncleben7306
@uncleben7306 3 роки тому
it's probably on the internet
@mikmik4443
@mikmik4443 3 роки тому
They should've hired the slowmo guys.
@gobblinal
@gobblinal 3 роки тому
@@mikmik4443 You should ALWAYS hire the Slowmo Guys!
@ebarling4730
@ebarling4730 3 роки тому
There's a tiny bit at the very end of the video. The bottom, largest ball doesn't bounce all that much at all. The yellow one shoots right up. I'm wondering if it's a bit like those desk toys with the swinging balls where the middle ones don't move much but the end ones are the ones to absorb the energy?? That's what it looks like is happening. Kinda cool! (But yes, even better if they showed a clearer view! Lol!) 🙌😋💫
@mvp4lithuania
@mvp4lithuania 8 років тому
So much cheering for a star dying
@RantingRamsay
@RantingRamsay 8 років тому
*Read this with the voice of Neil DeGrasse Tyson in your head* ...but the death of that star spreads the stuff of life throughout the cosmos. Don't think of it as the end of a giant; think of it as the beginning of life facilitated by the passing of a giant. We are all made of star-stuff, and when we die, our atoms will eventually become the stuff of stars. Thus, we will some day become the stuff of other stars, or other life.
@giannis5250
@giannis5250 8 років тому
We are made from dead star stuff so it's only logical that we would celebrate star deaths.
@17Haru17
@17Haru17 8 років тому
What is dead may never die.
@stiimuli
@stiimuli 8 років тому
stars dying is why we're here...literally.
@asain79able
@asain79able 8 років тому
we are actually living on the star's memories.... like physically
@okrajoe
@okrajoe 8 років тому
I love science -- glad Colbert is featuring astronomy.
@Melyeaw
@Melyeaw 5 років тому
Astronomy???
@DrAsshole
@DrAsshole 5 років тому
Syed Haider the fucks your problem?
@Sabinsandinsky
@Sabinsandinsky 5 років тому
Syed Haider triggered dumbass, knowledge is knowledge, doesn't matter where it comes from.
@marinaproger2324
@marinaproger2324 5 років тому
Read his books. .
@abrahamhmar7317
@abrahamhmar7317 5 років тому
Can't get enough of astronomy.
@johndeluca-howard4442
@johndeluca-howard4442 2 роки тому
Brian Greene is awesome. Someone gave me one of his books, and it’s really good. He explains difficult ideas so well.
@manqobahlanze6258
@manqobahlanze6258 3 роки тому
I wish I had been introduced to Prof. Greene when I was in high school. I would be a Physicist today, bringing the excitement of science to South Africans 🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦 .
@rifaldisaputrawan1089
@rifaldisaputrawan1089 3 роки тому
Well atleast south africa already had elon musk :)
@MrFungus420
@MrFungus420 3 роки тому
It's not too late...
@elethumbalane480
@elethumbalane480 3 роки тому
Bra yam khululeka ungabuyela eskolweni uyofunda iScience it's not too late. I was also talked out of studying sciences which is a decision I regret now.
@manqobahlanze6258
@manqobahlanze6258 3 роки тому
@@elethumbalane480 akuyinto enhle ukuthi teachers and parents/elders to project their own fears and feelings towards such subjects. Thank you for your encouragement, but I feel like that ship has sailed.
@elethumbalane480
@elethumbalane480 3 роки тому
@@manqobahlanze6258 Ngiyakuzwa mfowethu.
@snausages43
@snausages43 8 років тому
Seems like a pretty easy record to break.
@stellarfirefly
@stellarfirefly 8 років тому
It kinda is, as long as they allow the balls to be strung along with, I think, string. What is really difficult and impressive are stacks of balls that are simply dropped on top of one another without any kind of string guides. Even a 3-stack of basic solid rubber balls bounces higher than this string-tethered setup, it's just super-difficult to make sure they all hit right on top of one another so that they bounce straight upward.
@SarthorS
@SarthorS 8 років тому
I was also pretty unimpressed by the balls. But considering this was a world record, either no one bothered setting it before, or there is a hell of a lot more involved to getting it to work than we saw.
@shane4622
@shane4622 8 років тому
It looks easy, but think of the balls it took to do.
@smaarmy
@smaarmy 8 років тому
thus...the joke.
@smaarmy
@smaarmy 8 років тому
ouch.
@-bdl2696
@-bdl2696 8 років тому
Amazing how this went from educational to reality show in the blink of an eye.
@bobsingh11
@bobsingh11 8 років тому
Sadly because reality tv is what general public is interested in.
@flurbanmoran7797
@flurbanmoran7797 5 років тому
Bobby Singh Yeah, it's so sad.
@hassaneeen
@hassaneeen 3 роки тому
this really saddens me, instead of focusing on sparking science interest in people, the focus of the show went to the Guiness World Record gimmick... Its because of things like this that we never revisited the moon...
@ritwikreddy5670
@ritwikreddy5670 3 роки тому
@@hassaneeen visiting moon became impractical after semiconductor technology gained momentum. Because of that, sending rovers and satellites is much cheaper and more useful than sending a human. Moonlanding was more of an effort to win at the space race than actually studying the space.
@SustainaBIT
@SustainaBIT 3 роки тому
@@ritwikreddy5670 I like your comment, sums up a lot of history
@lecielo
@lecielo 7 років тому
This was great. PLEASE HAVE MORE SCIENTISTS AS GUESTS!!!
@tomd5678
@tomd5678 3 роки тому
When this was filmed the world seemed normal
@killer1963daddy
@killer1963daddy 3 роки тому
More so today, post insurrection
@SnakeonFlag
@SnakeonFlag 8 років тому
Colbert is great on this show. He doesn't just have some dumb bubbly celebrities on, he also has scientists and what not, helping educate the public or at the very least get them interested in things, rather than always just have mind numbing guests and topics.
@ljv2094
@ljv2094 8 років тому
yess
@JasonZakrajsek
@JasonZakrajsek 7 років тому
He did that on the Report as well
@templarrising6299
@templarrising6299 5 років тому
and now it's a show filled with left-wing hate propaganda... sad how things change
@Irfan87
@Irfan87 5 років тому
He had Anita Sarkeesian on it. That's absolute failure.
@RobbyIbarra
@RobbyIbarra 5 років тому
@@templarrising6299 im sorry. Everyone give him room. He needs his safe space e
@dalilbaby4238
@dalilbaby4238 8 років тому
I read one of Brian Greene's books for my physics class and THAT made my brain implode on itself.
@LydCal999
@LydCal999 8 років тому
And that made your balls fly into Steven Colbert's mouth
@lochestnut
@lochestnut 6 років тому
Love all of his books! :D
@devendrapratapsingh241
@devendrapratapsingh241 6 років тому
Which one??
@ZesPak
@ZesPak 5 років тому
Calvin Dang I like his books and he is undoubtedly a very intelligent man, but I don't like him in talks or videos at all. I do like NDT though, so what do I know.
@devilshoez1098
@devilshoez1098 5 років тому
Name of the book?
@verumsemita4333
@verumsemita4333 4 роки тому
so this video exploded 3 years ago and now it reach my recommendation,good thing it was not yesterday it would've wipe me out.
@ericaamodt4004
@ericaamodt4004 4 роки тому
hahaha
@stanleyjohnson8579
@stanleyjohnson8579 3 роки тому
Bryan is cool and I appreciate Stephen's genuine curiosity and not making cheap jokes at the expense of understanding
@cloudofthought
@cloudofthought 8 років тому
Thanks Stephen and CBS for featuring non-sensationalist or dumbed-down science on your show! I hope this becomes a trend for others.
@cloudofthought
@cloudofthought 8 років тому
Yes, of course. I meant in reference to some other shows that play to the absolute lowest-common denominator treating the audience like they're slow witted 2 year-olds. I've seen some of that even on the Science Channel, and it's annoying because they often fail in their attempt to simplify the complex, so that the science itself seems suspect, if not bunk, when it isn't. For the time allotted, Brian Greene's bit was sufficient for his goal. *****
@Jrock420blam
@Jrock420blam 8 років тому
I agree, it was simplified and not dumbed-down. That is a very important distinction.
@brokenwave6125
@brokenwave6125 7 років тому
Not dumbed down? He compared bouncing balls to a supernova... This is the epitome of dumbed down. This is a middle school science class demonstration.
@jondunmore4268
@jondunmore4268 6 років тому
I agree cloud... but good luck getting a scientist on Fallon. Jimmy'd probably fake-laugh at him and make him throw balls at a target of Pauly Shore.
@starboxxxchrononaut5707
@starboxxxchrononaut5707 5 років тому
Broken Wave There's a difference between something being "dumbed down" and something being explained in terms laypeople can easily visualize.
@xslonk
@xslonk 8 років тому
I didn't expect that experiment to end in confetti lol
@ericaamodt4004
@ericaamodt4004 4 роки тому
if there was a record brocen then of coarse
@theone31man
@theone31man 2 роки тому
I love Brian Green. That was incredible. Thank you Steven for sharing him with us.
@matin563
@matin563 4 роки тому
Stephen: ... hyernova ... Captions: ... *HYPERNOVEMBER* ...
@anarkyah4440
@anarkyah4440 8 років тому
this dude was so excited by start that it made ME excited
@SMBrwnie
@SMBrwnie 8 років тому
Same, he has great energy
@GetOffMyLawnYouDangKids
@GetOffMyLawnYouDangKids 8 років тому
Isn't that the same guinness guy they just had on dude perferct?
@alongforthememories
@alongforthememories 8 років тому
That's what I was thinking
@IatAS
@IatAS 8 років тому
the same guy
@yoadhordan2809
@yoadhordan2809 8 років тому
lol I was so expecting this comment
@DaveAp7
@DaveAp7 8 років тому
that's what I thought!
@cewl20
@cewl20 8 років тому
It sure is! Pretty sure at this point, Guinness is just this one dude who prints out certificates and wears that outfit like it's the opening ceremony of the Olympics.
@zazzzy
@zazzzy 7 років тому
Stephen Colbert is goofy af. That face on the ceiling was hilarious. This is really lighthearted comedy we need right now. Thank you Stephen!!
@ihatelordvoldemort5899
@ihatelordvoldemort5899 3 роки тому
He isn't interested in breaking records he is just more concerned about how he could comprehend this magic to the people. Just look at his eyes 4:25
@alphaduck2926
@alphaduck2926 2 роки тому
It’s not magic but rather physics but I get what you mean.
@JohnMichaelStrubhart2022
@JohnMichaelStrubhart2022 8 років тому
If you don't see something truly beautiful there, there is something sadly missing in the core of your being. Thank you, Stephen and Brian! Great exposition!
@daniellaviolet6207
@daniellaviolet6207 8 років тому
Now this is why I love Stephen Colbert's Late show rather than the other Late shows, he actually interviews people with intelligence, talks about current important issues as well as being funny, not just throwing pies at people's faces who are as thick as a brick #soznotsoz
@andrewbell2712
@andrewbell2712 4 роки тому
Oh, come on. Queen Elizabeth I interviewed both Tycho Brahe and Wayne Newton, Isaac Newton's grandfather, in 1588 when she founded BBC 2. Then Johnny Carson had Carl Sagan on his show regularly during much of his run on TV. Jay Leno and Dave Letterman always brought scientists on their shows as well. Stephen Colbert is just carrying on a tradition here. Neil deGrasse Tyson has also been a frequent guess on late shows in the past. This obviously isn't an ideal venue for them, but they have even made it there. A much better venue is Ira Flato's radio show on NPR called Science Friday. Did you know that some of the best scientists in the world are women? Science Friday features outstanding scientists from all corners of the world, many of whom are women. Check it out on your radio dial on Friday's at 3:00 p.m., E.S.T., on NPR.
@YG-rr6zv
@YG-rr6zv 2 місяці тому
I love how Stephen invites scientists and makes it interesting with real examples, but I would love to see a psychologist on there or something with the same passion and enthusiasm
@tvortbox
@tvortbox 4 роки тому
2:45 who could have predicted the scientist describing nuclear-astrophysics would fumble a sports analogy
@hedegaard8
@hedegaard8 4 роки тому
" a very stiff surface"
@AADITYAAPANDYA
@AADITYAAPANDYA 8 років тому
I've a feeling that he is NOT going to be able to hold this record for a very long time
@1014p
@1014p 5 років тому
Aaditya Pandya get some really good rubbers and probably not.
@ericaamodt4004
@ericaamodt4004 4 роки тому
hell he is!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@shkotayd9749
@shkotayd9749 8 років тому
There is hope for the world when major talk shows like The Late Show has scientists on it and they get a good reception :D And as for the title? Well, OUR world will end when our sun goes red giant and either cooks us from a close distance, or envelops us. We'll be a wee little crisp. And it'll finish with a little bang and settle into a tiny white ball. faculty.wcas.northwestern.edu/~infocom/The%20Website/end.html
@mohmoony3918
@mohmoony3918 8 років тому
I rather go out with a boom rather than a sizzle.
@chicken6944
@chicken6944 8 років тому
Ah man, bummer, you mean we all are going to one day die? And the buzz-kill of the year award goes to.........Shkotay D. For somebody interested in such scientific knowledge you'd think you would be able to come up with a better screen name, instead of some crap that's not even a word. Your email address is probably 1Tl1l1%@aol.com
@shkotayd9749
@shkotayd9749 8 років тому
chicken Oh its a real name, just not english. You could have asked what it meant: Ojibway word for "Fire". Thanks for the ignorant comment of the day :D WELL DONE!!
@chicken6944
@chicken6944 8 років тому
Shkotay D Oh good come back. That's like saying: 'I know you are but what am I?' I was going to end it on peaceful terms but then I just had to click the 'show more' button. God this world is going to blow itself up; people are so stupid.
@shkotayd9749
@shkotayd9749 8 років тому
chicken K :D
@ARC87
@ARC87 5 років тому
Nice to see a Late Show interested in explaining science in a fun way to audiences... much more interesting than gossiping about "celebrities" 👍
@GUFFmaster97
@GUFFmaster97 5 років тому
I love that Stephen takes genuine interest in this stuff! Why did he stop having Brian on the show?
@hassaneeen
@hassaneeen 3 роки тому
Cuz DeGrasse Tyson became the new science popstar 😂
@c24c24c24
@c24c24c24 8 років тому
Brian Green dropping kowledge like Trump dropping nonsense
@IatAS
@IatAS 8 років тому
"take cover, small arms fire imbound!!!" (shots)
@robzen2713
@robzen2713 8 років тому
Dropping science like Galileo dropped the orange.
@Deadpool-su2po
@Deadpool-su2po 7 років тому
Christian Mora *knowledge
@abrahamntienjem2659
@abrahamntienjem2659 7 років тому
More like Trump dropping The Mother of all Bombs
@ROOKTABULA
@ROOKTABULA 7 років тому
Abraham Ntienjem That was a Russia gate obfuscating, penis compensating device, not a bomb.
@GregRogers503
@GregRogers503 8 років тому
So much more interesting than some random celebrity plugging their latest movie or tv show.
@b-2466
@b-2466 3 роки тому
Brian Greene is awesome.
@peternilsson6310
@peternilsson6310 8 років тому
Thank you Stephen, for doing this type of segment and not just comic bits, thank you for inspiring people to not only be comedians or work in showbusiness, but to be scientists and engineers as well, someting that the world truly needs
@imeredithc
@imeredithc 8 років тому
This is what I love about The Late Show: Stephen will not only have celebrities on it but also physicists and other important people!
@augijyotbali2131
@augijyotbali2131 3 роки тому
In love with brian greene , as a person, professional , his beautiful looks , decency,humour, enthusiasm everything!
@TLHockeyCards
@TLHockeyCards 4 роки тому
I wish they showed that part again in slowmo
@frankguy9772
@frankguy9772 3 роки тому
Let go my purse! I dont kneewwyouuu! 😁
@TLHockeyCards
@TLHockeyCards 3 роки тому
@@frankguy9772 Lol bobby in the ymca
@cardboardclown
@cardboardclown 8 років тому
2:14 Stephen was thinking about Sauron
@nashrarig4439
@nashrarig4439 8 років тому
Ok now I'm going to demonstrate how a black hole works. Alright, so I got my calculator here, and then I'm gonna take one divided by zero--NO WAIT!!!!!!!!
@zacharysantos494
@zacharysantos494 8 років тому
I get what you are trying to say but zero divided by anything is zero.
@zacharysantos494
@zacharysantos494 8 років тому
Fair enough. I forgot to say except zero. Sorry.
@catradummy_ytp
@catradummy_ytp 8 років тому
+dahalofreeek 0/x = 0, but x/0 = undefined
@dirhido9665
@dirhido9665 8 років тому
+Falcø only when x>0
@nashrarig4439
@nashrarig4439 8 років тому
+Zachary Santos *FIXED*
@manojrai2327
@manojrai2327 2 роки тому
Good that Colbert invites IMPORTANT people
@hernankaufmann7688
@hernankaufmann7688 5 років тому
This kind of stuff is why colbert is better than anyone else in the air right now
@mizuhonova
@mizuhonova 8 років тому
I wish they allocated more time for this segment. The supernova explanation was very rushed and anyone who didn't already understand how it worked wouldn't have followed.
@JamesSmith-ek1or
@JamesSmith-ek1or 7 років тому
+supremebeing87 I think you're overestimating. The average American thinks Europe is a country. Cmon now. We're talking severe ignorance here. You probably frequen educated communities, but if you really meet an average American then it is quite sad. Almost appalling how slow and ignorant they are.
@flurbanmoran7797
@flurbanmoran7797 5 років тому
James Smith I don't get it.
@333pinkelephant333
@333pinkelephant333 4 роки тому
Yea, I don't understand why American talk shows only invite guests to talk for like 5-10 minutes only. I can literally talk about breakfast I had for longer than that.
@chrisofstars
@chrisofstars 3 роки тому
I didn't already understand and I feel this made me understand perfectly. How can it get any simpler when you're bringing out the colorful plastic candy balls?
@JoshRoweice
@JoshRoweice 8 років тому
Was pretty hard to spot that ball in all the confetti and the bitrate
@NoktynGaming
@NoktynGaming 8 років тому
Maybe you should learn what confetti actually does to cameras. Tom Scott just did a video on it actually. Also, why would you need to see the ball falling back down? You clearly see it go passed the Stephen cutout.
@Adlore
@Adlore 8 років тому
He literally mentioned the bitrate, which implies that he knows the effects of a large amount of changing data, and its relation to video compression.
@NoktynGaming
@NoktynGaming 8 років тому
ENTERUSERNAMEHERE555 Just because he mentioned the bitrate, it doesn't mean he know's why it is that way. You're inferring information. There was literally no reason for his comment to exist at all anyway. The bitrate obviously wasn't an issue for the demonstration...
@TheViolism
@TheViolism 8 років тому
It is a comment section there is no reason to write anything especially pedantic bs like you
@Adlore
@Adlore 8 років тому
Nokty So you're saying that even though he correctly used a term in the right context... he doesn't understand what it means or its implications?
@Azrael2812
@Azrael2812 6 років тому
great combination of education and entertainment. we need more of this.
@KHasan-de6yq
@KHasan-de6yq 3 роки тому
Superb...awesome explanation and demonstration condensed in just few moments...brilliant
@MuhammadEgypt
@MuhammadEgypt 8 років тому
Incredible! Really worth watching.
@nomimalone7520
@nomimalone7520 4 роки тому
Why are Guinness "officials" always dressed like flight attendants?
@ericaamodt4004
@ericaamodt4004 4 роки тому
ya
@ProdSketch
@ProdSketch 3 роки тому
that guy is always in Dude Perfect videos AHHA
@tofelipwithlove1150
@tofelipwithlove1150 7 років тому
I miss these kinds of interviews. I hope Stephen would bring these back. or maybe have a lotr segment where he explains it.
@aikotachibana2060
@aikotachibana2060 Рік тому
brian greene and brian cox and jim holt are my favorite scientists out there people should really check out their videos their explanation has made physics so much more fun for me
@siddjoshi9166
@siddjoshi9166 8 років тому
Finally something interesting @LSSC , which did not have trump in it.
@randyjoble4607
@randyjoble4607 8 років тому
it's good that supernovas and hypernovas use the same naming system as potions in pokemon
@zantomun
@zantomun 8 років тому
don't forget the masternova that only appears once per universe
@CartyCantDance
@CartyCantDance 8 років тому
+zantomun haha nice.
@rumpel_stiltskin1233
@rumpel_stiltskin1233 4 роки тому
It seems like every modern late night talk show has some sort of science segment, but what I really appreciate about Colbert's show is that he has the thought to bring on people (like Brian Greene) who can stimulate curiosity in cutting edge physics. There's no party tricks, only really interesting cut down versions of extremely important physics ideas. Although some of these explanations can be challenging to grasp for some, I hope at least a portion of viewers feel intrigued and potentially do their own research on the subjects. These types of guests really inspire the next generation of scientists and engineers who will take the human race further into the future. Thank you Stephen and Brian!
@Nightstick24
@Nightstick24 7 років тому
I love Brian Greene, he's so excited and passionate about science you can't help but get excited yourself.
@babacane8952
@babacane8952 6 років тому
Finally found something I can do to get me onto the Guinness book of records.
@mistrofelis6600
@mistrofelis6600 8 років тому
Thank you for always giving prime time space to science Colbert, you are and the show is the best!
@rocknrollch1ck
@rocknrollch1ck 8 років тому
Agreed 👍
@iolaniherrera2704
@iolaniherrera2704 8 років тому
agree 2 👏👍
@jedi7699
@jedi7699 3 роки тому
Well spoken, very articulate, matter of fact and to the point. Well taught.
@realshlimshady8966
@realshlimshady8966 5 років тому
love it when Brian green is on the show. he is awesome and always demonstrates an amazing experiment
@legoblox01
@legoblox01 6 років тому
I love how Stephen always invites scientists onto the show
@Gabagool93
@Gabagool93 4 роки тому
Scientists always have the coolest demonstrations.
@SyzygyNoon
@SyzygyNoon 3 роки тому
I never realized that the transfer of energy on this scale could produce that much confetti.🤯
@bobbyandes
@bobbyandes 5 років тому
More of these on a regular basis,please.
@ThatGuyInVegas
@ThatGuyInVegas 4 роки тому
Who are these 1.5 thousand people who thought this wasn't good?! Have you no sense of wonder left?
@ryancoke9301
@ryancoke9301 4 роки тому
Religious people, that's who.
@ericaamodt4004
@ericaamodt4004 4 роки тому
ya
@artifexdebello2568
@artifexdebello2568 3 роки тому
People who think this is scripted and didnt watch it
@hassaneeen
@hassaneeen 3 роки тому
Not really, while I didn't hit the unlike button, I got a little disappointed in the end. The show is about exploding stars, and science, and suddenly it became a Guinness world record reality TV gimmick... I would have loved it, and respected it much more if the focus was purely on the science aspect of it... (Neil DeGrasse Tyson never reverted to gimmicks to explain science...) Also, at the end we only saw the ball pass through the colbert poster, no explanation, and no conclusion...
@ericpapilayaTV
@ericpapilayaTV 4 роки тому
i love astrophysics, but man does Guinnes make a Fool out of themselves
@ANunes06
@ANunes06 3 роки тому
@Ganiscol Meanwhile, the crazy australians at How Ridiculous launched a two stage galillean cannon some 40 meters. I get that Guiness is a business and all, but just watch the bit on Last Week Tonight about the Turkish royal to get a sense of how ... shady ... things are.
@ericpapilayaTV
@ericpapilayaTV 3 роки тому
Ganiscol exactly that is the problem.
@unnikuttan4069
@unnikuttan4069 4 роки тому
Great substance in such simplicity,,,amazing ''thank you
@Tubueller
@Tubueller 5 років тому
Never thought a talk show would do something like this. I love it!
@MagnusAnand
@MagnusAnand 8 років тому
I just love Brian Greene
@BrianGreeneRAD
@BrianGreeneRAD 5 років тому
Guz Man Thank you!
@mariadaluzmoutinho6691
@mariadaluzmoutinho6691 4 роки тому
Este Senhor é um grande comunicador ...a ciência divertida e bem explicada! ...
@rukh397
@rukh397 Рік тому
If late night shows invites people like Brian all the time, i might watch all of the episodes.
@DilminPerera
@DilminPerera 6 років тому
Thank you Stephen for inviting scientists to your show.
@chrismorgan7234
@chrismorgan7234 8 років тому
Wait...THAT's all I needed to do to win a lifetime supply of beer?
@xXxBladeStormxXx
@xXxBladeStormxXx 8 років тому
Record holders get lifetime supply of beer??
@Thorntonian
@Thorntonian 8 років тому
Well, if it's *Guiness* world records, i'd certainly hope so.
@Harry351ify
@Harry351ify 8 років тому
You also need to be a renowned professor of physics and a popular character in TV
@ericaamodt4004
@ericaamodt4004 4 роки тому
huh
@stevenbenitez1851
@stevenbenitez1851 8 років тому
It's great Stephen is incorporating people with actual intelligence into his shows
@rafabdc04
@rafabdc04 3 роки тому
Fr this is the best guest on this show
@buzzknutson
@buzzknutson 2 роки тому
Brian Green is amazing. Giving him such a large platform to help spark curiosity in science is far more important then a celebrity plugging there latest project. Good job Colbert
@supergoku4320
@supergoku4320 4 роки тому
My most powerful explosions come after I eat del taco
@Elitecommando501
@Elitecommando501 4 роки тому
Your stomach gases implode on itself and it rebounds to a hyperfart
@Krebzonide
@Krebzonide 3 роки тому
I feel like I could double that height in my backyard with $100.
@FirstnameLastname-wt5sd
@FirstnameLastname-wt5sd 3 роки тому
That escalated soo quickly
@jonlee7209
@jonlee7209 7 років тому
Loved his book "An elegant universe" great book!
@infirmux
@infirmux 7 років тому
oi, I want to see all the balls drop and rebound, not just the yellow one. And in slow motion, this is Internet after all .
@Fr8monkey
@Fr8monkey 8 років тому
This isn't how the world will end. The sun isn't massive enough to go nova. It will swell up to the orbit of Earth and fry everything. /nerdsoapbox
@MisterDewong
@MisterDewong 8 років тому
Yeah, although everything in the video is accurate, the title is not :(
@Fr8monkey
@Fr8monkey 8 років тому
Still cool though...
@ironiccookies2320
@ironiccookies2320 8 років тому
No. He was explaining how a supernova starts, not our sun
@tyler8253
@tyler8253 8 років тому
The Sun will undergo a regular nova, which is basically the sun expanding to a red giant, and eventually expelling its outer layers, leaving a white dwarf. Even the white dwarf will eventually die, but not for billions of years after that.
@UltimateBreloom
@UltimateBreloom 8 років тому
+Mel hooprah Title is mostly right. . Description not so much. .
@ITRIEDEL
@ITRIEDEL 7 років тому
Privilege to hear him talk last year. I even took a selfie with him. Such an animated individual that is so intelligent. It's very humbling to be in the same room as him.
@BigMTBrain
@BigMTBrain 4 роки тому
Fantastic analogy!!!
@marcoklaue
@marcoklaue 8 років тому
As world records go, this one seems pretty easy to break. We could make a bigger Galilean cannon at my place this weekend.
@jutco
@jutco 8 років тому
That's the same Guinness guy from the Dude Perfect video
@rgaud8
@rgaud8 8 років тому
Hard times at Guinness.
@willbesuccessful9125
@willbesuccessful9125 5 років тому
Gay
@ericaamodt4004
@ericaamodt4004 4 роки тому
ya i love dude perfect
@mafosa8519
@mafosa8519 5 років тому
Now that was cool! He explained it very well and Colbert asked all the questions! Larry
@biggucci3hunna741
@biggucci3hunna741 6 років тому
I understood the concept a little bit but the demonstration helped me visualize and conceptualize this phenomenon much more! Thank you Stephen!! I love and appreciate these scientists you bring on the show ❤️🙏🏽
@Smallville4613
@Smallville4613 8 років тому
Lol!!! That's the same World Record guy from the Dude Perfect video!!!
@ericaamodt4004
@ericaamodt4004 4 роки тому
i love dude perfect
@AUniqueBot
@AUniqueBot 8 років тому
You know what's the most powerful explosion in the universe? My life. Because it is now in pieces.
@UTUBESUCK666
@UTUBESUCK666 8 років тому
Think of the guy that was just underneath the bomb when it went off in Hiroshima and realize the enormity of what you just said. The dude was literally disintegrated and his atoms spreaded a few thousands miles across. Atoms travel far in the winds...
@AUniqueBot
@AUniqueBot 8 років тому
+Ramon Zarat uhhh... Sorry....?
@AUniqueBot
@AUniqueBot 8 років тому
+TheRedRaccoonDog It's not a bad life really. Sometimes I wonder if people take jokes a bit too seriously. But then this is the Internet, anything goes.
@AUniqueBot
@AUniqueBot 8 років тому
+TheRedRaccoonDog True that
@xaviercruze1111
@xaviercruze1111 3 роки тому
Finally some enlightening guest rather than feeding the egos of the Kardashians.
@byronp2311
@byronp2311 3 роки тому
Please, more mathematicians!! I know they tend to be weird, but they can be fun. This is pure awesome sauce.
@erichimes3062
@erichimes3062 4 роки тому
Dudes in the band be like: “dafuq??”
@zinaright
@zinaright 4 роки тому
😅😅😅
@matt8863
@matt8863 8 років тому
0:54 - 1:07 He meant to say "Half a Trillion"...Even incredible minds experience a brain fart every 3.8 billion years or so.
@hasch5756
@hasch5756 6 років тому
Glad someone else also uses the long ladder ^^
@brianegan3
@brianegan3 7 років тому
that escalated quickly
@jpseet1
@jpseet1 4 роки тому
Cool video featuring Brian Greene. Thanks! I found it entertaining. The talk about the anniversary of the discovery of the powerful supernova/hypernova was cool. It's instructive to learn about how a (massive) star can collapse, producing a shockwave and explosion. The core rebounds into the outer layers/shells. (I believe such a Hypernova explosion can sometimes be associated with a Gamma-ray burst as well). The tallest Galilean Cannon demonstration was nice too. The Guinness world record was cool, (though I believe it was surpassed in 2018). Likes/replies/comments welcome! Thanks.
@juancjuanc9
@juancjuanc9 5 років тому
"Did galileo come up with this?" That ladies and gentlemen is pure wit and humour. L
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