Navigate Select ESC Close

Energy Can’t Be Created or Destroyed! Why?

2025-08-23 Science & Technology
128.6k
5.7k
997
Arvin Ash
Arvin Ash
1.1m subscribers

Noether's Theorem: Why Symmetry Governs Conservation Laws

Discover the profound mathematical reason why fundamental laws like energy and momentum conservation must hold true. Uncover Emmy Noether's theorem, which connects every conservation rule directly to a deep symmetry in the universe.

Short Summary

  • Energy, momentum, and charge conservation link directly to time translation, space translation, and gauge symmetry, respectively.
  • This connection reveals conservation laws are mandatory structural consequences woven into the fabric of physics.
  • Conservation laws were observed rules of thumb until Noether proved they are necessary results of underlying universal symmetries.

This discussion breaks down the three VIP conservation laws and connects each one to its governing symmetry using Emmy Noether's powerful theorem. Understanding this link explains the bedrock order of physics, revealing why these rules must hold universally.

Unlock all features

FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.

Description

👉 To learn for free on Brilliant, go to https://brilliant.org/arvinash . Get a 20% discount on the annual premium subscription if you subscribe! Your subscription will help us create more videos like this! Thank you so much! TALK TO ARVIN https://www.patreon.com/arvinash FURTHER VIEWING Physics of chemical energy: https://youtu.be/VMqCj_wC0VY Quantum Field Theory: https://youtu.be/eoStndCzFhg CHAPTERS 0:00 Symmetry leads to Conserved quantities 1:40 Three major conservation laws 4:03 What is symmetry in physics? 5:43 Emmy Noether's theorem and genius! 6:29 What does symmetry have to do with Energy conservation? 8:26 How does space symmetry lead to momentum conservation? 9:59 Gauge symmetry lead to charge conservation. How? SUMMARY I discuss Noether's theory. Her brilliant logic is the reason Conservation is bedrock: Energy can’t be created or destroyed—only transformed. When you kick a soccer ball, muscle energy becomes the ball’s kinetic energy plus heat and sound; the total stays the same. Likewise, momentum is conserved in collisions—it’s just passed around. These are examples of fundamental conservation laws. Three VIP laws (in closed systems): Conservation of energy (First Law of Thermodynamics): energy changes form (chemical → kinetic → heat, etc.) but the total is constant. Conservation of momentum (linear and angular): the vector sum of mass×velocity (and total angular momentum) stays fixed; e.g., billiards transfers momentum among balls. Conservation of electric charge: total charge is constant; charge can move between objects (e.g., via electron transfer in chemistry) but can’t be created from nothing. Others exist (e.g., lepton and baryon number, mass–energy equivalence), but energy, momentum, and charge are the broadest, most universal. Why these laws hold: symmetry. In physics, a symmetry means the equations (the rules) are unchanged under a transformation—an invariance. Everyday symmetry (mirror images, rotating a snowflake) illustrates the idea. In nature: Time-translation symmetry: doing the same experiment today or tomorrow gives the same laws. Space-translation symmetry: the same laws apply in New York, Beijing, the Milky Way, or Andromeda. Rotational symmetry: turning a setup doesn’t change the rules. Gauge symmetry: shifting certain “reference choices” (like electric potential’s zero point) doesn’t change physical outcomes. Noether’s Theorem (1918): For every continuous symmetry, there is a conserved quantity. Time-translation symmetry ⇒ energy conservation. If energy could spontaneously appear or vanish, there would be “special moments” when the rules changed—violating time symmetry. Because the rules don’t depend on when you run the experiment, energy must be conserved. Space-translation symmetry ⇒ momentum conservation. If momentum could change for no reason (e.g., a boat starts moving with no push), the rules would depend on where you are—violating spatial symmetry. Thus total momentum stays constant. (By the same logic, rotational symmetry ⇒ angular momentum conservation.) #energyconservation #physics Gauge symmetry ⇒ charge conservation. Choosing a different zero for electric potential (like choosing a different “zero height”) doesn’t change real physics. If charge could pop in or out of existence, changing that reference would alter outcomes—breaking the gauge symmetry. Because gauge symmetry holds, total electric charge is conserved. Intuition/examples used: Energy transforms but totals match (soccer kick, car braking, candles). Momentum transfer shown with billiards and a two-boats-and-basketball scenario (ignoring water friction for simplicity). Gauge symmetry explained with “zero height” vs. “zero electric potential” analogy; shifting the reference shifts numbers, not reality. Big picture: Before Noether, conservation laws were observational rules of thumb; after Noether, they became necessary consequences of symmetry—revealing a deep order behind physical law. (Einstein lauded Noether as an extraordinary creative mathematical genius.) What the video will do: break down the three major conservation laws, connect each to its symmetry, and show how Noether’s insight exposes “why” these rules must hold.

Top Comments (10)

@fernanda_plays 2025-08-24

Noether is such an underrated, underrepresented genius. Thank you for doing her justice, her work was as magnificent as it was incredibly wide in scope.

54 6 replies
@BirukYenesew 2025-08-23

Arvin’s way of teaching is powerful and truly astonishing. Thanks a lot for all your amazing videos

30 2 replies
@SSmitar 2025-08-24

Something important to note here is that law of conservation of energy only if change is observed over small amount of time. And by small amount I mean (my estimate) tens to maybe thousands billions of years. Over VERY long periods of time, Time Translation Symmetry breaks thus breaking law of conservation of energy. If universe keeps on expanding, it will end in a big chill.

23 11 replies
@ArvinAsh 2025-08-23

👉 To learn for free on Brilliant, go to https://brilliant.org/arvinash . Get a 20% discount on the annual premium subscription if you subscribe! Your subscription will help us create more videos like this! Thank you so much!

21 8 replies
@michaeljames5936 2025-08-27

"Mom! Mom! If you can hear me up there. I did finally grow to be six feet tall. You should have measured from sea level."

4
@TheCatzilla1 2025-08-24

Thank you for this video, Arvin. I always wondered about this

2
@vartannazarian2437 2025-08-26

Thank you for a great explanation of Noether's theorem. I enjoy all your videos.

1
@scotth1946 2025-08-27

Noether made an amazing connection. Bravo! This seems to be a more "why" video than "how." Is it "just the way it is?" Thank you for explaining the Why so intuitively Arvin!!

1
@davidschuy 2025-12-09

This is THE BEST video on this subject! By far! ❤❤❤

0
@josemfersev 2025-08-28

Good video. Very well explained. Kudos to Noether.

0

Unlock the Data Inside
Turn Videos into Knowledge

  • Get FREE 10/day: transcripts, summaries, chats
  • Chat with videos, export text & PDF
  • $1 free API credit for RAG, chatbots & research

Free forever plan • All features unlocked

App screenshot