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What if the most boring object you can think of — a rock — is carrying more energy than a nuclear reactor? Not metaphorically. Literally. The physics of what happens when you split an atom doesn't just explain nuclear weapons. It exposes something deeply unsettling about the nature of matter itself. Something Einstein saw in the math decades before anyone proved it. In this video, we rebuild nuclear fission from the ground up using Richard Feynman's legendary teaching approach — starting with a simple rock and peeling back layer after layer until the true relationship between mass, energy, and reality reveals itself. Based on Feynman's own lectures on atomic forces, binding energy, and E=mc², this is the talk he might have given if someone asked: what's really happening when you split an atom? 📚 SOURCES: Richard P. Feynman, Robert B. Leighton, Matthew Sands — The Feynman Lectures on Physics, Volume I, Chapters 1–4 ("Atoms in Motion," "Basic Physics," "The Relation of Physics to Other Sciences"), 1963 Richard P. Feynman, Robert B. Leighton, Matthew Sands — The Feynman Lectures on Physics, Volume I, Chapters 39 & 42 ("The Kinetic Theory of Gases," "Applications of Kinetic Theory"), 1963 Richard P. Feynman — The Character of Physical Law, Chapter 2 ("The Relation of Mathematics to Physics") and Chapter 7 ("Seeking New Laws"), 1965 Richard P. Feynman — QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter, Chapter 3 ("Electrons and Their Interactions"), 1985 Kenneth S. Krane — Introductory Nuclear Physics, Chapters 11–13 ("Properties of Nuclei," "Nuclear Fission," "Chain Reactions"), 1988 Albert Einstein — "Ist die Trägheit eines Körpers von seinem Energieinhalt abhängig?" (Annalen der Physik, Vol. 18), 1905 Emilio Segrè — Enrico Fermi: Physicist, University of Chicago Press, 1970 🎬 CREDITS: Script: AI-generated using Claude (Anthropic) Voice: AI-generated (synthetic TTS) Visual production: AI-generated Inspired by the teaching of Richard P. Feynman ⏱️ TIMESTAMPS: 00:00 — The fire hiding inside a rock 03:15 — If an apple were the size of the Earth 07:40 — Rutherford's artillery shell and the empty atom 12:50 — Ninety-two protons that want to kill each other 18:30 — The short arm of the strong force 24:10 — The valley with iron at the bottom 30:20 — Splitting uranium in a trillionth of a second 36:50 — The mass that literally vanishes 42:40 — One raisin, one city — the math of E=mc² 48:00 — Chain reactions, critical mass, and the grapefruit problem 52:15 — Quarks, confinement, and the revolving door 56:30 — You are holding frozen fire What's the first object you looked at differently after understanding what mass really is? Share your answer below 👇 ⚠️ WARNING: [This video is AI-generated (synthetic voice and visuals). It is an original, fictional lecture inspired by Richard Feynman's teaching style and public ideas, and is not an authentic recording, endorsement, or statement by Richard Feynman or his estate. Any resemblance is for educational/creative purposes]