@ScienceClicEN

A little precision at the end to avoid confusion : At 14:19 the symmetry which is referred to is not the color charge symmetry of chromodynamics (which is also based on the number 3), but the flavour symmetry. I've been a bit sloppy in the animation and the colors I've chosen might seem to suggest that this is the color symmetry (even though quarks do indeed respect the color symmetry)

Many thanks to my friend Thomas who helped me write this video : https://www2.physics.ox.ac.uk/contacts/people/harveyt

@user-hy6ew6hm5e

You are explaining stuff much better than most other youtube channels. You don't add any unnecessary or disturbing things to the videos (no stupid jokes, no 5-minute spinning logo etc). You repeat the most important things in a non-disturbing way. Also the narration is great, it's not too fast and you make pauses, that help to better understand what you are talking about. Keep it up.

@theopantamis9184

Physist: "It's too long to explain intuitively gauge theory and covariant derivatives"
ScienceClic: "Hold my nuclear beer"

How lucky we are to have you to explain us all of this !

@Yeslipoi2

This channel is a marvel of physics pedagogy, animation and editing

@Neurophile2844

Art meets science. Please never stop making these videos. They're amazing, intuitive, and captivating.

@secondone1233

Brilliant. This is what physics students need to stay motivated to study.

@curiodyssey3867

Dude. This finally made all that abstract stuff physicists talk about such as fields etc as if it's an actual physical thing make sense to me. 
Thank you.

@-_Nuke_-

This guy explained supersymmetry in 15 minutes better than University can accomplish in an entire semester... This video is a pure educational goldmine, I have no words to explain how I'm feeling right now...

@rushofblood994

I always breathe a sigh of relief when he says "to understand..."

@SimulatingPhysics

These videos are really inspiring and I think they make you want to know much more.
It would be awesome if traditional education could be updated to include more visualizations of abstract concepts like this.
Keep up the good work!

@hitbox7422

I'm soaking in theoretical and intuitive knowledge about physics like a dry sponge, it's my hobby since I'm a little kid. This channel just opened knowledge to me that I just wasn't able to fully grasp because I never went to colleague, I only partly understood the mathematical principles behind these concepts. Thank you for everything you did for us hobby physicists, great channel!

@williamblake7386

i love you man. first moment the music starts i am already in a good mood.

@MrBendybruce

It never ceases to amaze me at how clearly this channel is able to communicate complex scientific principles to a general audience. I watch a lot of very good science channels, but when it comes to communicating complicated ideas clearly, no one else does it better.

@kseriousr

You are definitely going to blow up! For me, you're like 3blue1brown for Physics. I've been hearing about symmetry for ages and never quite understood it well enough for my liking, and then here you are. Such a complex topic yet you explained it so elegantly, almost as a matter of inevitability!

I've been a fan since your GR visualization video, and loved the later series exploring the maths behind the pretty animations. This is how science communication should be like, as in at the end one should realise that even at the highest level Physics makes perfect sense and it doesn't have to be mind numbingly inaccessible. I once read a quote somewhere, like, if you can't explain something well then you haven't yet understood it well. There's surely a lesson there for pop scientists that for the sake of romanticising science either over exaggerate or use stupid analogies to dumb it down too much. You've found a good balance.

@bencressman6110

daaaaamn. As someone who has casually consumed science related content on youtube for a while now, this unlocked a completely new tier of understanding for me. And answered some long existing wonderings, mostly about the arbitrary-ness of what seem to be the most fundamental aspects of the universe. It would be so beautiful, and reasonable, if everything came from one fundamental thing. Anyways, the setup and trajectory of this video were so expertly tailored, that I actually mostly understood what was going on. And that's an incredible achievement.

@beauthetford7608

the best video about Noether's theorem I've found. Love how you tie in Mach's principle, GR, quantum field theory, supersymmetry very elegantly. The animations support the explanations very well too.

@ngruhn

Wtf the guy making these videos is 22 and can not only explain these concepts extremely well but also does the sound design and these killer animations.

@matej.mezera

Hi! I am a physics major and I am just studying for my QFT exam. This video helped me to understand the topic more efficiently than any of my university professors. Thank you!

@Redant1Redant

By far the best description of symmetry I’ve ever seen. I’ve read about it for years and have struggled with it as a concept. Most explanations stay at a very trivial level and just MoveOn. This actually explains what’s going on and why we get the science we do. Bravo good work.

@rayyan21d

This is just crazy. I don't know how much would the production costs be but the results are remarkable, i wish i was not a student and would somehow pay guys for such a cool job. I can already see how much glad the next generation will be when they discover you.