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becker

and it makes UV light it on the surface it goes kind of crazy but as soon as you realize Jack's talking about equals mc squared you can create light from atoms like the semiconductor industry has been doing it since the 1950s and it's amazing to me that these guys in Silicon Valley can do it but me and uberman if we say it we're kooky you know who's kooky dude it's everybody else and not only that when I come to Andrew and say Andrew because I knew he didn't know about Becker
Concept
becker
Score
4 · causes · because
Status
candidate — not yet promoted to canon

Corpus evidence — top 10 passages

Most-relevant passages from the entire indexed corpus (67,286 paragraph chunks across YouTube transcripts, PubMed, arXiv, archive.org, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, OpenAlex, and more) ranked by semantic similarity (bge-small-en-v1.5).

  1. 01 · yt0.759

    that's why the visible spectrum what we're  optimized to electromagnetic waves are photons   photons are partially electric partially  magmetic they're 90 degrees to each other   you can induce an electric current from a  magnetic induction engine which is exactly   what you're an expert at that's what the cochlea  does that's why it's spiral it's got melon in it   and when people actually learn really how hearing  works you hear Light and turn it into sound   so our light and sound does the same thing well  no the

    yt/zs82rGFo6qg-jack-kruse-andrew-huberman-rick-rubin-tetragrammaton-podcast/transcript.txt

  2. 02 · yt0.759

    What was the power source of light then? So what did I do? I sat down just like Einstein did. I said what were the thermodynamic givens of Earth 4.6 billion years ago? So 4.6 billion years ago we were an anoxic planet filled with horrible atmosphere. But here was the big one. You guys know that we're protected now by an ozone layer. >> Ozone is made from oxygen, but I told you we had an anoxic planet. So what did that mean? Told me that the stimulus that had to power this was likely the sun, specifically UV light, because UV light really had a huge effect. >> So then you think abou

    yt/yTrSFddva8Q-dr-jack-kruse-fix-the-money-fix-the-body-orange-pill-order-e/transcript.txt

  3. 03 · yt0.755

    But Jun's optical clocks are so accurate that even a small difference in elevation between two clocks will reveal a discrepancy in the passage of time. When the clock changes elevation by a few hundred microns, basically size of a human hair, you will start to be able to see that time is actually running differently. ♪ ♪ NARRATOR: With that much accuracy, a clock transforms into something more than a timepiece. It becomes a new window into the nature of the universe. ♪ ♪ YE: Making a clock is much more than just a piece to keep time. It is a sensor to explore fundamental physics, to expand our

    yt/t06aTX9jM34-decoding-the-universe-quantum-full-documentary-nova-pbs/transcript.txt

  4. 04 · yt0.751

    He got the Nobel Prize for predicting the photon, rather than for the Theory of Relativity, which was still controversial at that time. So he predicted the photons, based on actually fairly complicated thermodynamic statistical mechanics arguments. But one way to understand it is in terms of what's called the photoelectric effect. If you take a metal and you say "Where are the electrons in the metal?" As you know most electrons are orbiting the parent nucleus. But in a metal, some electrons are communal. Each atom donates one or two electrons to the whole metal. They can run all over the metal

    yt/uK2eFv7ne_Q-19-quantum-mechanics-i-the-key-experiments-and-wave-particle/transcript.txt

  5. 05 · yt0.751

    He wrote down the thermodynamic givens of the ultraviolet catastrophe, and he looked at the thermodynamic givens. He goes, "How do these things all fit together?" And what happens in his miracle year? One of his four papers is called the photoelectric effect. Now, people like to believe that everything should be simple, that you could explain it to a third grader. That's like Occam's razor. And I always tell people when they say to me, "There's no way this could be right, Jack." I say, "Well, tell me, what is Occam's razor parsimonious about the photoelectric effect? That it only works with UV

    yt/yo4h0B_JMQY-dr-jack-kruse-explains-how-sunlight-controls-leptin-melanin-/transcript.txt

  6. 06 · yt0.747

    This is what you know it's a jargony term. We call it a reprompt laser where I use the I use this light to, you know, put atoms that move out of the two levels, the two energy levels that I like to use to cool them. Uh, I put them back into that manifold so I can uh send resonant light, cycle them between these two energy levels and produce the the cooling and trapping forces that I need. Okay, this is essentially what this whole table is for, producing cooling and trapping light for a video. This other part is the science table. This is where the actual experiments happen. Uh right in this re

    yt/ZxHgKUP5PoU-physics-club-october-18-2021/transcript.txt

  7. 07 · yt0.744

    apppp SL Breedlove yeah I want to ask you about photosynthesis mhm cuz you have said this I think this continues with what we were talking about already but your quote was sunlight splits water to create a battery so it's a capacitator water effectively is an electromagnetic capacitator at a physics level yep and so the sunlight's splitting the water into positive and negative charges and then it's using that to create a battery and that's that's what life is yeah this is this is the basis of where actually life all begins this is the Compton scattering that we talked about with light and wate

    yt/mYMUiOMkKMM-optimize-your-health-in-the-modern-world-with-dr-jack-kruse-/transcript.txt

  8. 08 · yt0.742

    And I'll explain to you scientifically why I started there. It turned out that SETI looks at light, water, and magnetism as the basis when they put the Hubble telescope up looking for life in other places. >> Yeah. >> Well, who else solved uh the a big problem in the world this way that you know your country, my country and another country in Europe was tied to uh or at the turn of the century there was two guys Helm Holtz and Herz. They did some really cool experiments and they found this thing called the ultraviolet catastrophe. They couldn't understand it. Nobody in physics coul

    yt/yTrSFddva8Q-dr-jack-kruse-fix-the-money-fix-the-body-orange-pill-order-e/transcript.txt

  9. 09 · yt0.741

    You know the difference is? In the middle of it, you got an iron atom. Iron has a different atomic number. It It has um a few more electrons than magnesium. Why is this a big deal? Cuz the same thing that happens in chlorophyll happens in Joe. Happens in Jack. And and here's the irony. Go back to that guy we talked about earlier, Einstein. He won a Nobel Prize for the photoelectric effect. You know what that means? The only way you can deliver light to different tissues in that tree or me is through the electrons that you collect. So, what's the difference between a tree and us fundamentally f

    yt/jtMu-KFyKxM-bitcoin-is-a-time-machine-with-dr-jack-kruse/transcript.txt

  10. 10 · yt0.740

    It produces light through thermal radiation-- an electric current passing through the filament heats it up. Its tungsten atoms become excited and vibrate at different speeds, which causes them to emit photons in all directions, across a variety of wavelengths. Compared to a laser, this is chaos. ADHIKARI: The way you should think about a light bulb is something like, they're just a mob of people, all singing at different pitch, so it's like a rock concert audience. CROWD (singing): ♪ We will, we will rock you ♪ But a laser, a laser is more like if you go to Juilliard or Berklee School of Music

    yt/t06aTX9jM34-decoding-the-universe-quantum-full-documentary-nova-pbs/transcript.txt

Curation checklist

  • ☐ Verify excerpt against source recording
  • ☐ Tag tier (axiom · law · principle · primary derivation · observation)
  • ☐ Cross-cite to ≥1 primary source (PubMed / arXiv / archive.org)
  • ☐ Promote to bucket-canon/05-biophysics/