Lecture 1 | Modern Physics: Classical Mechanics (Stanford)
Lecture 1 of Leonard Susskind’s Modern Physics course concentrating on Classical Mechanics. Recorded October 15, 2007 at Stanford University. This Stanford C…
Video Rating: 4 / 5
Lecture 1 of Leonard Susskind’s Modern Physics course concentrating on Classical Mechanics. Recorded October 15, 2007 at Stanford University. This Stanford C…
Video Rating: 4 / 5
Thank you so much for posting this, o Stanford! This is true science for
all. What wonderful spirit! And also very many thanks to Chaz Shand for
taking the trouble to put them in order.
This guy could talk about hypothetical systems all day and I’d follow it,
up until he started talking about the formulas. I guess I can’t rely on
understanding concepts forever and might have to buckle down and learn math
beyond high school algebra if I’m ever going to learn about the universe.
~_~
When I first saw this video, I thought that the whole business of
transitioning between states was a very simplistic and academic exercise.
But when you get to the next quarter, Quantum Mechanics, physical objects
can be in a superposition of multiple states, and this understanding turns
out to be hugely useful. Lesson: Don’t question Susskind :-D
Check out this video on YouTube: Modern physics: classical mechanics.
i love the lectures!!!
some may call me a nerd because of this but it is pretty cool
you are just great…
thankyou very-very much
47:14 – end. Can someone elaborate on this?
It is because position velocity and acceleration are all derivative: 1st
and second order–>n order, that we need to add a another dimension in the
phrase places to accumulate for the change in the order of derivative?
Por fa tradusca ya a espanol latino o con subtitulls en espanol
how about
HH goes to T
TT goes to H
HT goes to T
TH goes to H
Cool dude!
Is this the same idea as finite state automata then?
Jesus people. The whiteboard in this Lecture 1 has the stuff from the last
Lecture 9 ! What is this? A comical interpretation of the concept of “Self
Contained Class”?
Weird.. very weird… haha
20 min. in,,, what about pie,,, or hypergeometrics?
Awesome! Glad I found this :)
Excellent lecturer, except 40 idiotas did not like it.
thx for great and free lectures! Coming from computer engineering
background you recognize state machines in the beginning of the video.
Thats so awesome that science is interconnected. The more you learn about
physics / chemisty / math / computer science the more you realize its
fundamentaly the same laws and rules
I’m still skeptical of string theory and Leonard’s involvement in it
(sounds like crystalline spheres and epicycles to me) but he did teach me
what a phase space is in this lecture .(Not a math person, me.)
Am I a particle?
You have to know everything to know what will happen next : )
He’s very explanatory, nothing wrong with that. Maybe these kids had
nothing else better to do anyway, lol.
Holy shit! Science! LOTS OF IT!!