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B1 Intermedio Inglés 21:58 Educational

Group theory, abstraction, and the 196,883-dimensional monster

3Blue1Brown · 3,591,817 vistas · Añadido hace 3 días

Estadísticas de aprendizaje

B1

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5/10

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Subtítulos (349 segmentos)

00:04

Today, many members of the YouTube math community are getting

00:07

together to make videos about their favorite numbers over 1 million,

00:10

and we're encouraging you, the viewers, to do the same.

00:13

Take a look at the description for details.

00:16

My own choice is considerably larger than a million, roughly 8x10 to the 53.

00:21

For a sense of scale, that's around the number of atoms in the planet Jupiter,

00:24

so it might seem completely arbitrary.

00:27

But what I love is that if you were to talk with an alien civilization or a

00:31

super-intelligent AI that invented math for itself without any connection to

00:35

our particular culture or experiences, I think both would agree that this

00:38

number is something very peculiar and that it reflects something fundamental.

00:43

What is it, exactly?

00:45

Well, it's the size of the monster, but to explain what that

00:47

means we're going to need to back up and talk about group theory.

00:52

This field is all about codifying the idea of symmetry.

00:56

For example, when we say a face is symmetric, what we mean is that you

01:00

can reflect it about a line and it's left looking completely the same.

01:05

It's a statement about an action that you can take.

01:08

Something like a snowflake is also symmetric, but in more ways.

01:11

You can rotate it 60 degrees or 120 degrees, you can flip it along

01:15

various different axes, and all these actions leave it looking the same.

01:20

A collection of all the actions like this taken together is called a group.

01:26

Kind of, at least.

01:27

Groups are typically defined a little more abstractly than this,

01:29

but we'll get to that later.

01:31

Take note, the fact that mathematicians have co-opted such an

01:34

otherwise generic word for this seemingly specific kind of

01:37

collection should give you some sense of how fundamental they find it.

01:41

Also take note, we always consider the action of doing nothing to be part of the group.

01:46

So if we include that do-nothing action, the group of

01:49

symmetries of a snowflake includes 12 distinct actions.

01:53

It even has a fancy name, D6.

01:56

The simple group of symmetries that only has two

01:59

elements acting on a face also has a fancy name, C2.

02:03

In general, there is a whole zoo of groups with no shortage of jargon to their

02:07

names categorizing the many different ways that something can be symmetric.

02:12

When we describe these sorts of actions, there's

02:14

always an implicit structure being preserved.

02:17

For example, there are 24 rotations that I can apply to a cube that leave it

02:22

looking the same, and those 24 actions taken together do indeed constitute a group.

02:27

But if we allow for reflections, which is a kind of way of saying

02:30

that the orientation of the cube is not part of the structure we intend to preserve,

02:35

you get a bigger group, with 48 actions in total.

02:38

If you loosen things further and consider the faces to be a little less rigidly attached,

02:42

maybe free to rotate and get shuffled around, you would get a much larger set of actions.

02:47

And yes, you could consider these symmetries in the sense that they

02:51

leave it looking the same, and all of these shuffling rotating actions

02:54

do constitute a group, but it's a much bigger and more complicated group.

03:00

The large size in this group reflects the much

03:03

looser sense of structure which each action preserves.

03:08

The loosest sense of structure is if we have a collection of points and we consider

03:13

any way you could shuffle them, any permutation, to be a symmetry of those points.

03:18

Unconstrained by any underlying property that needs to be preserved,

03:21

these permutation groups can get quite large.

03:24

Here, it's kind of fun to flash through every possible

03:27

permutation of six objects and see how many there are.

03:41

In total, it amounts to 6!

03:43

or 720.

03:45

By contrast, if we gave these points some structure,

03:48

maybe making them the corners of a hexagon and only considering the permutations that

03:52

preserve how far apart each one is from the other,

03:55

well then we only get the 12 snowflake symmetries we saw earlier.

03:59

Bump the number of points up to 12, and the number

04:03

of permutations grows to about 479 million.

04:06

The monster we'll get to is rather large, but it's important to understand

04:10

that largeness in and of itself is not that interesting when it comes to groups.

04:14

The permutation groups already make that easy to see.

04:17

If we were shuffling 101 objects, for example,

04:20

with the 101 factorial different actions that can do this,

04:24

we have a group with a size of around 9x10 to the 159.

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