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  • The basic laws of physicsthings like F=ma, “gravity is inversely proportional

  • to the distance squared”, Schrodinger’s equation, and so ondon’t say anything

  • about the direction of time.

  • Sure, they relate what’s going on now to what happens next, and to what happened previously,

  • but there’s no distinction between forwards and backwards in time.

  • The past and future are on an equal footing, as far as the microscopic laws of physics

  • are concerned.

  • In the macroscopic world, however, there is one rule that does have time going in one

  • direction only: the second law of thermodynamics.

  • That says that any isolated system will tend towards increasing entropy, or disorder.

  • Like how cold milk and hot coffee mix together into luke-warm coffee-milk, but will never

  • unmix”.

  • Once a system gets to its fully-disordered state -- its equilibrium -- there’s no more

  • direction of increasing entropy to determine the arrow of time.

  • So the fact that we experience the flow of time right now means that were not in equilibrium.

  • There are basically two ways that could happen.

  • Either the universe just happens to be, right now, in this particular, low-entropy, configuration

  • with two directions of time flowing out forward and backward from it with increasing entropy

  • in both directions; or at some point in the far distant past the universe started with

  • even lower entropy, and disorder has been increasing ever since.

  • [Spoiler alert: it’s option number two.]

  • That low-entropy configuration was the Big Bang.

  • 13.8 billion years ago, the universe was hot, dense, smooth, and rapidly expanding.

  • A smooth dense plasma of particles might not seem organized & low-entropy, but when the

  • density of matter is extremely high, the gravitational force between particles is enormous.

  • Smoothness, in the face of such tendencies, is not equilibrium, but is actually a very

  • delicately-balanced, low entropy state.

  • Things want to be gravitationally clumped together into concentrated configurations

  • like proto-stars, proto-galaxies, or even black holes.

  • What would a high-entropy, equilibrium universe look like?

  • It would be empty space.

  • And indeed, that’s where were headed: the universe is expanding and diluting, and

  • eventually all the stars will burn out and black holes will evaporate and well be

  • left with nothing but emptiness in every direction.

  • At that point, time’s arrow will have disappeared, and nothing like life or consciousness will

  • be possible.

  • The fact that our sky is decorated with billions of stars and galaxies, and our biosphere is

  • teeming with life, is a reflection of our low-entropy beginnings.

  • We don’t know why the universe started in such an orderly initial state, but we should

  • be glad it did: it gave us the non-equilibrium starting point that’s necessary for the

  • flow of time, as we know it, to exist.

  • Everything that followed -- from the formation of stars and galaxies to the origin of life

  • -- has been a story of increasing entropy.

  • Time’s arrow isn’t a deep feature of the most fundamental laws of physics; it owes

  • its existence to the specific initial conditions of our universe.

  • Hey, Henry here, thanks for watching.

  • This is the first [second, third, etc] video in a series about time and entropy made in

  • collaboration with physicist Sean Carroll.

  • The series is supported with funding from Google’s Making and Science initiative,

  • which seeks to encourage more young people (and people of all ages) to learn about and

  • fall in love with science and the world around them, and the videos are based off of Sean’s

  • bookThe Big Picture: On the Origins of Life, Meaning, and the Universe Itself,”

  • which you can find online or in bookstores around the world.

The basic laws of physicsthings like F=ma, “gravity is inversely proportional

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