Yeah, I don't I don't thinkweknowenoughaboutittokindofsay, Oh, itdefinitelylookslikelessYeah, tome, it's, umit's it's equationsandnumbersontheonehandonobservationswehaveoftheuniverse.
Ontheotherhand, well, wehavesomeideasofwhatitis.
Sooneofthoseismoreis a thingcalledthecomedian, Sotheseareparticlesthatchangedtheirmass, dependingonwherethey'relivingandchangingthemassoftheparticleallowsittohidefromsomeofourexperiments.
So 70% ofthisstuffinthisroomaretheseparticleswhicharechangingmassanddoingtheirthing.
Andyou'retellingmewejustcan't seethem?
Wecan't seethem.
Yeah, somaybemaybenot 70% ofthestuffinthisroom, because 70% ofthestuffintheuniverse, Butobviouslymatterismoredenselyclumpsherethanonaverageintheuniverse.
Butbut, yeah, there's still a lotofthemaround, andwedon't seethembecausethey'rereallygoodatcamouflagingthemselves.
Thisfeels a bitlikeyou'retellingmetherewas a roomfullofelephantsandtheelephantcanchangeitsmassfromonetimetotwotonstohalf a tonneto 500 gramstoe, 90 tons.
It's a bitlikedoing a doubleslitexperimentwhereyouputtheparticlein a superpositionofstates, oneofwhichtravelsthroughtheleftandslipped, oneofwhichtravelsthroughtherighthandslipped.
Saywecouldputsomesomelumpofmatterinourvacuumchamberandthenbeanattractionbetweenouratomsandfoundthisonextracomedianattractionbetweenbetweentheatomsandan R sourcemass.
Andthenyoucanyoucansetupyourregimentinwhichis, uh, in a waysothatyouronlysensitivetohorizontalforcesandinthatwayyoucanyoucandecouplethetwoeffectsElectromagneticforceshavetoexistwithinourexperimentbecauseit's howwecontrolthetheatoms, howwemovethemaroundandsaythey'rethey're a bittrickiertodealwith.