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B1 중급 영어 18:06 3,232 단어 Science & Tech

The Top 5 Problems of the Standard Model

SciShow · 212,908 조회수 · 추가됨 2개월 전

AI 요약

This video provides a fascinating look at the **Standard Model of Particle Physics**, explaining why it is the most successful theory in science despite being fundamentally "wrong." By watching, you will learn about: * **The Higgs Boson:** Why its observed mass challenges our current mathematical models. * **The Fine-Tuning Problem:** Why physicists find the precise "balancing acts" in nature suspicious. * **Dark Energy & Expansion:** The extreme discrepancy between theoretical predictions and observed cosmic expansion. * **Cutting-Edge Hypotheses:** Emerging concepts like supersymmetry, quantized spacetime, and quantum foam that may eventually resolve these scientific mysteries.

학습 통계

B1

CEFR 레벨

3,232

총 단어 수

984

고유 단어

5/10

난이도

어휘 다양성 30%

자막 (304 세그먼트)

00:00

This video is sponsored by Squarespace.

00:03

The Standard Model of Particles Physics is  

00:05

the best theory we have for how the  universe works on subatomic scales.

00:09

It’s not even a close competition.

00:11

Like Lebron versus a  snail in a dunking contest.

00:14

No other theory is as good at describing the  

00:16

particles that make up reality and  how they interact with one another.

00:20

But despite how impressive the  Standard Model is, it is also wrong.

00:24

And it’s wrong in ways that leave some absolute  whopper mysteries for scientists to solve.

00:29

So here are five of the biggest  problems with the Standard Model,  

00:32

as well as some ways physicists  are trying to patch the cracks.

00:36

[♪ INTRO]

00:39

In 2013, two physicists won  the Nobel Prize in Physics for  

00:42

predicting the existence of a single  subatomic particle: the Higgs Boson.

00:47

They made their predictions back in the 1960s,  

00:50

but the Higgs Boson wasn’t officially discovered  through experimental observations until 2012.

00:54

The Higgs Boson helps give all the  other subatomic particles their mass,  

00:58

so the Standard Model just  doesn’t make sense without it.

01:00

Hence why physicists spent  so long trying to find it.

01:03

In the annals of particle physics  history, this was just one of  

01:06

many times the Standard Model described a  thing before we knew it actually existed.

01:10

And by “we” I mean humanity as a collective.

01:12

Because, you know, some of us were too busy not  being born, or being teenagers, to contribute.

01:16

But for the Higgs Boson, there was one major  problem: The particle that CERN discovered  

01:21

had a mass of 125 gigaelectron volts, or  roughly 130 times the mass of a proton.

01:27

That might sound kinda big for  a single subatomic particle.

01:30

But it’s too light.

01:31

Much too light.

01:32

It might be as many as 34  orders of magnitude too light.

01:37

That’s ten million billion billion  billion times what it “should” be.

01:42

Now, I had to pull out the scare quotes because  the Standard Model can’t really predict the mass  

01:47

of the Higgs Boson at all, because the equation  for its mass depends on a number that’s unknown.

01:53

It’s called the UV cutoff, and it’s  the point at which the energy levels  

01:56

of the thing we’re observing are  too high for our math to work.

01:59

But like I said, we don’t actually  know the exact value of the UV cutoff.

02:03

It’s just vaguely…over there, somewhere.

02:07

Since we don’t actually know  that number, our theories have  

02:09

to work for all possible values of the  cutoff, including really enormous ones.

02:14

Which means the equation would need  equally enormous negative values  

02:17

somewhere else to balance that out and give us  the mass we’ve observed for the Higgs Boson.

02:22

What could cause this uber  convenient cancellation?

02:24

We have no clue.

02:25

And unfortunately, that means we’ve  run into a case of finetuning.

02:29

And finetuning gives physicists the willies.

02:31

It’s not impossible that nature could  

02:33

so carefully and so precisely balance  the energy checkbook of the Universe.

02:38

But when a theory requires such  a precarious balancing act,  

02:41

physicists get jumpy and try searching  for something entirely different.

02:44

One of the leading ideas to explain  

02:46

the mysteriously-normal-sized  Higgs boson is supersymmetry.

02:50

We don’t have time to get into the physics of  exactly how it helps, but it poses there’s a  

02:54

whole set of particles lurking at energies higher  than we’ve been able to create in experiments.

02:59

These new particles would be paired  with Standard Model counterparts.

03:02

Like traditional quarks would  be partnered with supersymmetric  

03:06

squarks, and leptons would be  partnered with, yes, sleptons.

03:10

These new guys have some properties that are  opposite from their Standard Model partners,  

03:14

and this opposite-ness shows up  in our equations as a minus sign.

03:18

So if supersymmetry particles really do exist,  

03:21

the calculation for the Higgs mass would better  agree with what we actually observe…without  

03:25

scientists having to just add a number  without knowing why it should be there.

03:29

There’s still no solid evidence of supersymmetry,  

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핵심 어휘 (47)

you A1 pronoun

당신은 누구십니까? (Who are you?)

problem A1 noun

문제는 해결이 필요한 어려운 상황을 말합니다. 예를 들어, '제 휴대폰에 문제가 있어요.'

force A1 noun

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