Watch gravity pull two metal balls together

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  • Опубліковано 13 тра 2024
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    The cavendish experiment shows that even the very week force of gravity can be seen between two room scale objects. Even with the naked eye.
    MyLundScience's video on the Cavendish experiment: • The Cavendish Experime...
    A video derivation of the Cavendish experiment equation: • The Cavendish Experime...
    Experimental procedure: www.ld-didactic.de/documents/...
    Equipment user manual: www.ld-didactic.de/documents/...
    Chapters:
    00:00 the beginning
    00:44 The Cavendish experiment
    07:30 I get it working!
    Corrections:
    4:53 This isn't a fair comparison. Actually, if you changed the mass of the hanging masses in the experiment, it WOULD change the deflection angle. That's because the value of T in the equation would change. The torsion pendulum would oscillate more rapidly with lighter masses. Thanks James Gilbert.
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  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 6 тис.

  • @SteveMould
    @SteveMould  4 місяці тому +4150

    EDIT: I want to address the comments that say gravity isn't a force, it's the curvature of space time. There's an interesting philosophical point here. The way I think of it is this (I'm not the first to say this but I can't remember who was): physics just gives us models for how the univers works. None of them are "true" but some of them are useful. Newton's model of gravity that describes it as a force is really useful. It doesn't work in certain circumstances. Einstein's model, that describes gravity not as a force, works in more circumstances but is more cumbersome. You pick the mode that best suits what you're doing. In this vide Newton's model is the most appropriate in my opinion. So talking about gravity as a force is perfectly reasonable. Like, imagine being in a physics lab with some springs and pulley or whatever, and you're trying to balance the forces, and every time you mention the force of gravity, someone pipes us and says "I think you'll find gravity isn't a force". That person is unhelpful. Other commenters are saying gravity isn't a force for another reason, which I believe is related to a non spherical model of the earth that they believe in. We can safely ignore those comments.
    Here's a fun fact: if you scaled down the earth and moon system until the earth was the size of a bowling ball (keeping the density the same), it would still take the moon 27 days to orbit the earth. This is true in general. Like if you scaled down the ISS as well, that would take the same 90 minutes to orbit as it does now. It's true at any scale, not just bowling ball scale! The sponsor is Brilliant: Visit www.brilliant.org/stevemould for 30 days free access. The first 200 people will get 20% off an annual premium subscription.

    • @commanderofthewind
      @commanderofthewind 4 місяці тому +57

      Great video once again Steve. You were mentioned in a question in my school's yearly Christmas quiz, seeing at you went there.

    • @zverh
      @zverh 4 місяці тому +25

      How do we know if the masses move towards each other due to gravity or the motion results from the rotation of the earth?

    • @ImieNazwiskoOK
      @ImieNazwiskoOK 4 місяці тому +74

      @@piranhaofserengheti4878 Similar reason why a magnet sticks to the fridge even though it's still pulled down

    • @ThisSteveGuy
      @ThisSteveGuy 4 місяці тому +14

      Would using flat objects instead of spheres make a difference?

    • @DoobooDomo
      @DoobooDomo 4 місяці тому +26

      @@ThisSteveGuy I was wondering the same thing since flatter objects should allow for the center of masses to be closer (which I think would be more significant than the change in moment of inertia)

  • @Rubrickety
    @Rubrickety 4 місяці тому +5398

    I’m glad you showed your homemade experiment even though it didn’t work. That took balls.

    • @Jo24Park
      @Jo24Park 4 місяці тому +393

      of 14kg steel

    • @dan-nutu
      @dan-nutu 4 місяці тому +33

      I wish I had those! 😃

    • @Lucius_Chiaraviglio
      @Lucius_Chiaraviglio 4 місяці тому +147

      Normally I don't like expressions that equate courage with "balls", but in this case it's technically correct, which is the best kind of correct, and thereby too good to pass up.

    • @faq_is_love
      @faq_is_love 4 місяці тому +42

      r/techicallythetruth

    • @ohthatsclever
      @ohthatsclever 4 місяці тому +15

      Giant 14kg iron balls

  • @Impatient_Ape
    @Impatient_Ape 4 місяці тому +6878

    Great job, Steve! 10% error is typical for what physics majors get when they do this lab experiment using the 2nd apparatus you used.

    • @tormodhag6824
      @tormodhag6824 4 місяці тому +167

      What about using a bunch of photoresistors to measure the fluctuations in the laser? It could keep measuring for longer, and would probably give a better value?

    • @GerinoMorn
      @GerinoMorn 4 місяці тому +178

      @@tormodhag6824 yup, and then you find out more precise G :D

    • @wallyhall
      @wallyhall 4 місяці тому +30

      I was thinking similarly - with a measuring rule on the whiteboard and a time-lapse overnight 😀

    • @Impatient_Ape
      @Impatient_Ape 4 місяці тому +153

      @@tormodhag6824 Real undergrad physics lab experiments are always messy, and you need a human to see what should and shouldn't be counted as "data". The experiment Steve shows with the physics lab apparatus is one we use to educate physics students in experimental techniques -- especially the use of mirror and laser to measure angular changes; it's not to try and improve the known value of "G".

    • @bholdr----0
      @bholdr----0 4 місяці тому +14

      @@tormodhag6824
      I wonder if a jewlled bearing (like those in high-end mechanical watches, which are as close to frictionless as one can easily get) would make the results more easily observed? (Though, that would complicate the measurement of G... Increasing the length of the wire suspending the moving weight would also aid in taking an accurate measurement, eh?)
      Once in college, a pal and I built a foucault's pendulum, just to see it work, which it did! (I mean, of course it did. Cool to see, though.)
      We used monofilament fishing line to hang the (45lb) weight, I can't think of any line as light and strong as that... What is used in these setups? Did he mention that?
      Cheers!

  • @FelipeKana1
    @FelipeKana1 4 місяці тому +998

    Remember folks, an experiment with a failed result is still an successful experiment! It's very important in science to not hide the mistakes, but to document them throughly and try to understand the failure. Great video

    • @doofismannfred4778
      @doofismannfred4778 4 місяці тому +29

      This is a very important takeaway. Documenting processes shortcuts the thinking process for others who may want to offer suggestions, seeing what was already tried.

    • @jemfalor
      @jemfalor 3 місяці тому

      sounds like anybody could do it

    • @seppdipode2203
      @seppdipode2203 3 місяці тому +27

      ​@@jemfalorand anybody _should_ do it if they can, if they want to discover it for themselves. That is the whole point. The only requirement is that you note down and publish the parameters you used to the best of your ability. Regardless of success or failure, everyone must be able to indulge in science.

    • @melonenlord2723
      @melonenlord2723 3 місяці тому +1

      But it's only really useful if you know what went wrong.

    • @CalebDiT
      @CalebDiT 3 місяці тому +6

      In many cases, however, it may mean your experiment was not well designed, perhaps due to a misconception or whatever. There's no telling how many discoveries have not been made because the experiment, as designed, was never going to answer the question. Similarly, there are false discoveries that have been made because the person didn't understand the influence of his design.
      I'm not saying either of those is the case in this video, but being artful and imaginative in ways that are helpful to discovery are no small part of the design of the experiment. Science can't be done by just anybody.
      _"The formulation of a problem is often more essential than its solution, which may be merely a matter of mathematical or experimental skill. To raise new questions, new possibilities, to regard old problems from a new angle, requires creative imagination and marks real advance in science."_
      -- Einstein and Infeld (qtd from _Collective Electrodynamics_ by Carver Mead)

  • @smitajky
    @smitajky 4 місяці тому +245

    I did this same experiment in a classroom with my year 12 class. I used piano wire and 50 kg of suspended masses. It had an oscillation frequency of over an hour from which we could know the stiffness of the spring. By introducing the stationary masses we found the shifting of the centre of the oscillation. That gave us G to one significant figure. It was the only time that I was actually able to demonstrate Cavendish experiment. Taking many hours to achieve a result.

    • @11moonshot
      @11moonshot 4 місяці тому +9

      Oh yeah... this sort of experimenting is tiiiiiiime - consuming... If you are married ... it can bec ome an issue;-)) I did nearly the same...here in Dresden

    • @Bob_Adkins
      @Bob_Adkins 2 місяці тому +1

      Did you reverse the stationary masses a few times and note how closely they repeated? If they repeated very consistently, it would make your experiment very convincing!

    • @pyropulseIXXI
      @pyropulseIXXI 2 місяці тому +1

      Weird. They don’t even do this experiment in the best colleges of undergraduate physics because it never works.
      I would know, since I majored in physics at UC Berkeley.
      We have multiple Nobel Laureate professors, and still this experiment never works, so it is skipped at an undergraduate level.
      Also, the ‘oscillation frequency’ is so long that you are basically choosing what value to use, thus nearly all experiments are choosing the value that gives agreement with the accepted value of G.
      The turn around time at the top of the wave is so slow that the error bound in where it actually turns around, and thus what your oscillation time turns out to be, is so huge as to produce any value you want in a huge range around the ‘accepted value.’

    • @vnarayan18
      @vnarayan18 14 днів тому

      @@pyropulseIXXI :( Yeah it is weird to me too but that's just how it is in Asia

  • @SUCKASOUP
    @SUCKASOUP 4 місяці тому +686

    A spring “oioioing” is the technical term

    • @andersgrassman6583
      @andersgrassman6583 3 місяці тому +22

      Yeh, I loved that!😄

    • @brownranger1797
      @brownranger1797 2 місяці тому +15

      I was not ready for that 😅

    • @Ekvorivious
      @Ekvorivious 2 місяці тому +12

      He genuinely made me boioioing as well 🤣 it's called laughing.

    • @ChrisNachoss
      @ChrisNachoss 2 місяці тому +4

      i refuse to not believe that

    • @TakeMeToYourLida
      @TakeMeToYourLida 2 місяці тому +5

      That perfect balance of technical and just really likeable

  • @jasonpatterson8091
    @jasonpatterson8091 4 місяці тому +2150

    The Cavendish experiment and Millikan's oil drop experiment were the two historical experiments that really struck me when I was studying physics. Being able to see gravity directly, or being able to see the influence of a single electron's charge - it's just mind blowing. I love Von Jolly's version of the thing as well.

    • @Michaelonyoutub
      @Michaelonyoutub 4 місяці тому +55

      When I was doing physics in university I did both of those experiments and I completely agree. Millikan's oil drop is especially interesting as measuring such a single charge seems absolutely impossible initially, way harder than just showing the effects of gravity between two objects in a room.

    • @manpreet9766
      @manpreet9766 4 місяці тому +25

      Me too. I consider it to be one of most important experiment in science history. The another one is Michalson Morley Morley experiment paving way for theory of relativity

    • @replica1052
      @replica1052 4 місяці тому

      (where gravity is shielding from cosmic radiation gravity can never exeed the speed of light )

    • @slightanxiety
      @slightanxiety 4 місяці тому +21

      I got to do Millikan's oil drop experiment in college, and got pretty decent results (I think we were within 50% of the actual value, and we had distinct peaks for 1e and 2e charges). There's something really magical about being able to measure such a tiny quantity to any degree of precision.

    • @impaler331
      @impaler331 4 місяці тому +40

      I wish I knew about this experiment when I was a teenage flat earth tard. Would have saved me a year or 2 😅

  • @redwood9120
    @redwood9120 4 місяці тому +136

    The experiment brought me here…and the haircut at time stamp 6:15 that happened in under 7 seconds blew me away. Great video and smooth editing for sure!

    • @quantumbacon
      @quantumbacon 2 місяці тому +4

      "static electric shock"

    • @gtwgtwgtw
      @gtwgtwgtw Місяць тому +5

      HA HA!! I was sure I was the only one who found that distracting...I had to go back and look to see if I was just having a mini-stroke or if it indeed was different! :)

    • @robertgill5865
      @robertgill5865 Місяць тому +1

      And he grew some serious facial hair in those same 7 seconds too!

  • @thegamesforreal1673
    @thegamesforreal1673 2 місяці тому +27

    In my first year at university physics, we did the exact same Cavendish experiment you did to measure G, laser pointer and all. By sheer statistical wonder, despite the extreme finickyness of the experiment, me and my lab partner somehow got the value nigh-bang-on at 6.68*10^-11. The professor simply didn't believe we were that close until he looked at our measurements directly. He said it was the first time he'd seen that anyone measured it to within 0.02*10^-11 accuracy. But then when we calculated the error margin on our measurements, it turned out we had a margin of error of nearly 10x that...

    • @TomJacobW
      @TomJacobW 4 дні тому +1

      xD
      ah, I remember those. good times, good times. I had one graph in second semester that I hand drew (out of time constraints; deadline was closing in) on a single page of my report & I still remember the assistant actually bursting out laughing when she turned the page; hard to describe, it was absolutely comical. To be fair, it *did* look like a 4 year old drew it with fingerpaint, sooo.. 🤷‍♂️🫠

  • @reinerwilhelms-tricarico344
    @reinerwilhelms-tricarico344 4 місяці тому +907

    We did this experiment in a physics lab many years ago using a small mirror attached to the center of the horizontal bar so we could use a light beam to more accurately observe the deflection, noting the angle every minute or so to make a graph. It took several hours. When it was finished we found it was a damped oscillation as expected, but there was a moment when the amplitude increased instead of continually decreasing. We later found out that a small earthquake had occurred during the experiment.

    • @SeedashLoud
      @SeedashLoud 4 місяці тому +56

      That has got to be a lucky catch. Amazing!

    • @pansepot1490
      @pansepot1490 4 місяці тому +63

      Earthquake detector. 😊

    • @ezdispenser
      @ezdispenser 4 місяці тому +17

      wow, that's really cool

    • @henriquedolzane
      @henriquedolzane 4 місяці тому +6

      That's awesome!

    • @spikeman5103
      @spikeman5103 4 місяці тому +10

      Well, during the 80th in German HighSchools this has been a standard experiment, even with the mirror and a scale on the wall (but normal light).

  • @robadkerson
    @robadkerson 4 місяці тому +228

    Mould's Law: a stiffer spring boyoyoings faster

    • @heatshield
      @heatshield 4 місяці тому +7

      Pretty sure it sproings quicker too.

    • @R_Euphrates
      @R_Euphrates 4 місяці тому +4

      Man you beat me by an hour lol. Well done

    • @unibiker8087
      @unibiker8087 4 місяці тому +2

      Thats what my wife says

    • @jwigeland
      @jwigeland 2 місяці тому +1

      Literally made my day! 😂

    • @guerra_dos_bichos
      @guerra_dos_bichos 2 місяці тому +1

      ​@@heatshieldthis is a place of science , stop this mumbo jambo

  • @marcinsocha1500
    @marcinsocha1500 2 місяці тому +25

    "Other commenters are saying gravity isn't a force for another reason, which I believe is related to a non spherical model of the earth that they believe in. We can safely ignore those comments."
    So elegant:)

    • @Cowtymsmiesznego
      @Cowtymsmiesznego 7 днів тому

      Fun fact - a non-spherical model of the Earth is ALSO useful in some circumstances, but again far fewer than the spherical model

  • @cyrilmeynier8868
    @cyrilmeynier8868 3 місяці тому +28

    Concerning Mr Lund's experiment : I looked up for common impurities in crude, unrefined lead.
    I found it typically contains measurable amounts of 6-7 other metals, including up to 1% of nickel. Nickel is ferromagnetic. Could there be some magnetic interaction from that?

  • @KnowArt
    @KnowArt 4 місяці тому +721

    I vote for a sister series to Matt's calculating pi by hand series in which you calculate g in more and more elaborate ways

    • @Becky_Cooling
      @Becky_Cooling 4 місяці тому +8

      That would be cool!

    • @ploploprob
      @ploploprob 4 місяці тому +2

      Or e!

    • @Hinotori_joj
      @Hinotori_joj 4 місяці тому +37

      im not sure theres that many ways to calculate G, but i would also love to see steve calculate physical constants in various ways alongside Matt's Pi.

    • @Impatient_Ape
      @Impatient_Ape 4 місяці тому +8

      IMO, the best and *cheapest* way -- hands down -- to estimate little "g", is just a dense metal pendulum bob on a very long cord timed for multiple periods over a very long time at a small displacement angle. You can actually use this technique measure the difference in "g" at sufficiently different altitudes (like say, between Denver and Philadelphia).

    • @idjles
      @idjles 4 місяці тому +24

      g is easy to calculate, G is much more interesting

  • @kickasskris
    @kickasskris 4 місяці тому +245

    “the boi-oi-oing” 😂😂😂
    Well said! Efficiently and effectively conveyed what you were talking about. Honestly brilliant. 👏👏👏

    • @2eanimation
      @2eanimation 4 місяці тому +14

      It should be adopted as a scientific term, like "spaghettification".

    • @footballkickerswag
      @footballkickerswag 4 місяці тому +11

      Came straight to the comments when he said that 😭

    • @maxgood42
      @maxgood42 4 місяці тому +2

      Now I know what that is called.

    • @kenfryer2090
      @kenfryer2090 4 місяці тому +2

      Amateurish and childish. Obviously this channel is meant for small Children

    • @kickasskris
      @kickasskris 4 місяці тому +13

      @@kenfryer2090 troll

  • @suspicioussand
    @suspicioussand 2 місяці тому +8

    Flat earthers are gonna say it's fake ☠️

  • @DrSimonFoster
    @DrSimonFoster 3 місяці тому +8

    I helped set this experiment up and I can tell you that Steve has the patience of a saint! He very much downplays just how tricky and finickity this experiment was to set up! I had to leave as I thought I was losing my mind and it reminded me why I am not an experimentalist! Frankly, I am blown away with how well this came out!

    • @SkemeKOS
      @SkemeKOS 3 місяці тому +1

      And yet he still didn't wait for it to fully stop, completely invalidating this silly 'experiment'.

  • @roy28372
    @roy28372 4 місяці тому +815

    I did this experiment during my undergrad at IUP. We found that we could get extremely accurate results if we set the device (which took results electronically instead of via laser) to work overnight. Even in the basement of a concrete and brick building, the footsteps of people inside threw off the results. We took results overnight on two nights. About 140k datapoints if I remember correctly. We ended up off by 1.4%. The next group used the procedures we had come up with and were off by about 1% as well. Basically, it was a good lesson in looking into sources of error.
    (In that course, we had to design our own labs with given equipment to reproduce some of the most famous discoveries in classical physics.)

    • @MikkoRantalainen
      @MikkoRantalainen 4 місяці тому +44

      I think you will always end up with some error because the masses in the walls of the building will affect your local gravity, too.

    • @DUKE_of_RAMBLE
      @DUKE_of_RAMBLE 4 місяці тому +12

      Now, while I know first hand that buildings, sizable ones, move with a person's footsteps... But at the same time, it'd be pretty wild if it were OUR masses just being in proximity, that caused those error rates!

    • @UCreations
      @UCreations 4 місяці тому +18

      I did it too (back in 1997 at the University of Utrecht) in a basement. The setup was placed on 5 concrete tiles on a crate of tennis balls on some foam rubber mats. I could see exactly when people came in the building every morning. The experiment took 3 days. I came also within a few percent of the real value of G.

    • @chuvzzz
      @chuvzzz 4 місяці тому +5

      I don't think this is a good video, it was unconvincing. This measurement was supposed to be based on this great achievement, requiring great care and precision. There's people walking around, touching things, potentially introducing charge, who knows what. Sure the measurement was "relatively" close, but is that actually significant? Doubt. If we are just supposed to take Steve's word for it, sure, but then what is even the point of a 12 minute long demonstration video? If it is potentially misleading, better not to do it at all. This is G we are talking about.

    • @doofismannfred4778
      @doofismannfred4778 4 місяці тому +25

      @@chuvzzz What was the video supposed to convince you of? He got the same kind of results that secondary education students get on their own. I had a similar experience with a similar kit. Everything in this video seems alright.

  • @broccolihighkicks708
    @broccolihighkicks708 4 місяці тому +47

    He is so dedicated, his hair cut was oscillating the entire video.

    • @vitorsales2492
      @vitorsales2492 4 місяці тому +2

      lol, not everyone noticed that

    • @redmed10
      @redmed10 4 місяці тому

      Ha ha nice one.

    • @DUDE607-ft7hq
      @DUDE607-ft7hq 4 місяці тому +2

      Took me so long to find a comment saying this, as I thought I was just being crazy

    • @Sednas
      @Sednas 4 місяці тому +1

      I noticed it and i was so confused

    • @plogger74
      @plogger74 2 місяці тому

      👍 I thought I was the only one who was wondering...

  • @lordiblees
    @lordiblees 2 місяці тому +4

    This is one of my most favorite experiments. As a teenager, I really looked up to Cavendish. The idea that you could "weigh" the earth in a clever setup in a lab was just so mind-blowingly spectacular to me.

  • @ginnya4246
    @ginnya4246 4 місяці тому +11

    I actually did mathematics workbooks as a kid as well, my babysitter would take me to the bookshop and we would pick out newer and harder ones. I loved doing them and I am now one of the top students in my maths and physics classes. It really does make a difference.

    • @DrunkenUFOPilot
      @DrunkenUFOPilot 24 дні тому

      When I was 5 or 6, the day before I went to the hospital for a tonsillectomy, my mom took me to a store to choose some coloring books. I grabbed all the math workbooks I could!
      I also grabbed regular coloring books. I remember fuzzily one with a drawing of a steam shovel in it.
      Let's see.. I had two math workbooks and two coloring books, so I had a total of.... [scratches head]... seven? No....five? Um.... oh, *you* figure it out!

  • @anmolagrawal5358
    @anmolagrawal5358 4 місяці тому +45

    2:51 That boi-oi-oing was so well delivered, I felt the springiness within

  • @IngmarSweep
    @IngmarSweep 2 місяці тому +1

    Thank you for not disturbing your nice video's with background music, like so many others do.

  • @weejockrock
    @weejockrock 2 місяці тому +7

    This was one of my lab projects as a physics undergraduate at Imperial College! The apparatus shown here is much nicer than the version I used 20 years ago.
    Thank you for another interesting video, very nostalgic for me.

  • @exel001
    @exel001 4 місяці тому +405

    Finally, someone on UA-cam has calculated the proper deflection angle! Props to the author. :)
    Before that, I watched a bunch of videos about someone quickly cobbling together a setup to observe gravity in their room without even realizing how tiny the deviation should be. That includes the video the author showed as example.

    • @joeomundson
      @joeomundson 4 місяці тому +64

      Yeah, that other video immediately seemed glaringly wrong. Just intuitively, if that reaction really was due to gravity then you'd expect to almost feel pulled by big rocks and buildings when you walk by.

    • @-ZH
      @-ZH 4 місяці тому +10

      @@joeomundson
      Its not that glaring since the video was playing at 30x speed

    • @bigsiege7684
      @bigsiege7684 4 місяці тому +1

      If Steve also dropped rocks from a height, found g, and then calculated the mass of the earth, it would be doubly cool.

    • @joeomundson
      @joeomundson 4 місяці тому +7

      @@-ZH I know it was sped up but even still the magnitude seemed like a lot

  • @carykh
    @carykh 4 місяці тому +312

    That idea of using laser reflections to get a finer measurement of rotation is so clever! It reminds of, when I was in a car on a sunny day playing with a reflective Rubik’s Cube, even the tiniest turn of a layer of the cube (like under 1 degree) would send the reflections of the 9 squares of a side way out of alignment!

    • @bencressman6110
      @bencressman6110 4 місяці тому +3

      Cary!! I miss you! Are you still posting videos? I will now go and find out

    • @SacsachCCABP
      @SacsachCCABP 4 місяці тому +4

      Hey look, it’s Cary Knowledge Holder himself! He’s the guy who made BFDI! And now, he’s revived EWOW! I didn’t expect to see him on THIS vid
      Ok but that Rubik’s cube story is actually pretty fascinating. Light works in such strange ways…

    • @terigonUSAS12
      @terigonUSAS12 4 місяці тому +2

      i cant believe they made a human named after the dwarf planet

    • @douggale5962
      @douggale5962 4 місяці тому +1

      Unless they aimed the laser perfectly, it would be applying force to the mirror. It would be a terrible light sail.

    • @6F6G
      @6F6G 3 місяці тому

      Photon pressure from the laser could affect the reading.

  • @GwynLionhart
    @GwynLionhart 4 місяці тому +1

    This is such amazing timing. I was just reading about gravitational forces. Seeing such a perfect video released so recently is great

  • @sarahkatherine8458
    @sarahkatherine8458 Місяць тому +6

    Flat Earthers be like: That is static electricity, not gravity

  • @MusicBent
    @MusicBent 4 місяці тому +264

    I did this experiment for my 8th grade science fair and had the same issue with sensitivity. I replaced the wire with fishing string, used 2 pound lead weighs on my bar, and 15 pound lead weights on the floor. I used a small paddle hanging from the bar into a dish of water to dampen the noise from air currents.
    My setup meant I couldn’t use the torsional rigidity of the string, which was now almost zero, but using a time lapse I could measure the position of the bar as the bar swung from ~80 degrees off, to the lead weights touching. Position -> velocity -> acceleration. I think I was quite off, but within 2 orders of magnitude. Basically just confirming gravity’s pull was measurable, but very weak.
    That was pushing my limit of understanding of physics at the age. I remember being really awed at being able to see gravity behave in a way I’d never seen before

    • @HeatherHolt
      @HeatherHolt 4 місяці тому +9

      Wow, very impressive for 8th grade! Very cool.

  • @jacksonbruns9429
    @jacksonbruns9429 4 місяці тому +54

    2:49 petition to make
    boi-oie-oing the official scientific name for a spring springing

    • @jacksonbruns9429
      @jacksonbruns9429 4 місяці тому +4

      having a conniption over if it’s oi or oie someone let me know 😂

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 3 місяці тому +3

      who do we need to talk to to get this to happen
      like the SI or something

    • @jacksonbruns9429
      @jacksonbruns9429 3 місяці тому

      @@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 prolly faucci 🫠🤣

  • @Gunbudder
    @Gunbudder 4 місяці тому +6

    i LOVE this experiment, and have always been fascinated by it. i used to think that gravity could be "overshadowed" by larger masses, and reading about this experiment wrinkled my brain hard. i love it

  • @alirezadanish2038
    @alirezadanish2038 4 місяці тому +1

    Great Video indeed. Hope you will bring such interesting videos for the physics enthusiasts. Thank you Steve.

  • @orthochronicity6428
    @orthochronicity6428 4 місяці тому +43

    We had this experiment as a possible advanced lab during undergraduate. Most people purposefully avoided it because it was notoriously finicky. There, it was pretty big torsional pendulum placed inside a Faraday Cage. Improper grounding will absolutely mess up the experiment. A friend of mine did the experiment and discovered a grounding fault that was the source of all her error; no one knew how long the fault was present. There was also a case when I was taking the class, that one of the members of the group doing the Cavendish experiment came into the common room very animated a cursing. We immediately asked him what was wrong, and apparently a friend in the class though it would be funny to lightly slap the faraday cage. That one impulse set the pendulum oscillating so much it was going to take most of the remaining lab period to settle down (we had three weeks to do each of these experiments); I'm pretty sure the friend got in trouble with our professor, both specifically for doing that to them, and more generally for incredibly inappropriate laboratory behavior and, effectively, data tampering.

    • @hellomate639
      @hellomate639 4 місяці тому

      I drew a giant eyeball on the board while I did it.... lol.
      Maybe someone who went to my university will know what school it was if they see this comment.

  • @uxkwn4894
    @uxkwn4894 4 місяці тому +58

    Steve explained gravity so hard, his hair went back inside his head.
    truly a big brain moment.

    • @ianloh2647
      @ianloh2647 4 місяці тому +7

      Ikr. I was so into it but totally got thrown off by the haircut 😑

    • @johnnyasia7903
      @johnnyasia7903 4 місяці тому +1

      I had to rewind about half way through because I was sure something had changed. The hair grew straight back again shortly afterwards too. Glad I'm not the only one that got thrown by it.

  • @vaakasuora7608
    @vaakasuora7608 4 місяці тому +2

    In Finland, in 80's Tampere University students were defining gravitation constant on a first year laboratory work course just as described here. Nice and easy task to do and result was quite accurate.

  • @Erikve
    @Erikve 4 місяці тому

    That's cool, you took me back to an experiment I did during my first year physics university-study. Thanks for re-experiencing me this!

  • @nothingissimplewithlloyd
    @nothingissimplewithlloyd 4 місяці тому +14

    Did anyone else notice that he got a haircut between shots at 6:25?

  • @AmongSusOfficial
    @AmongSusOfficial 4 місяці тому +17

    2:55 boyoyoing 😂😂😂

  • @kumarchetan6954
    @kumarchetan6954 2 місяці тому +2

    When I was in school, I had an intuition that it would be difficult to measure G by ourselves without any precise equipment, but when I saw your setup I thought that it would definitely work because of how heavy the weights were. But as you showed the problems with your setup, one by one, I got a taste of how thorough and precise experiments really have to be for them to be of any credibility, even for such a simple case. Great Video.

  • @shnrbtlle18
    @shnrbtlle18 Місяць тому +1

    I love all the great science stuff, but above all that, I love a great sense of humor, "a stiffer spring boyoyoings more quickly" had me laughing so hard, lol!! Great gravity visual, I did enjoy the video.

  • @Impatient_Ape
    @Impatient_Ape 4 місяці тому +268

    The surface of that PVC tube separator is very easy to charge and notoriously difficult to discharge -- even friction with dry air or skin can leave a residual charge on it. Since it's highly unlikely that such charge is uniformly distributed over the plastic, then the PVC acts a bit like an electric dipole, so it's an effect you have to try and eliminate. As far as the torsion in the hanging wire goes -- the longer the wire, the better.

    • @carlosgaspar8447
      @carlosgaspar8447 4 місяці тому

      wouldn't the charges neutralize once the two masses made contact?

    • @Suleiman212
      @Suleiman212 4 місяці тому

      But the Virgin (presumably Mary) didn't call her son (Jesus) Immanuel. So who is that prophecy referring to? Better go back and read the context in Isaiah to find out.​@@Repent-and-believe-in-Jesus1

    • @Impatient_Ape
      @Impatient_Ape 4 місяці тому

      @@carlosgaspar8447 If one or both of the metal balls initially have some charge on them, it is likely to be unequal. When they make contact, some charge will shift from one to the other resulting in a *net* charge which will be shared by both balls. Then both metal balls will end up with the same polarity charge, causing repulsion and not attraction. However, the larger metal balls don't need to be charged to be attracted to the charged PVC or copper balls. This sort of attraction occurs because of "induced charge", where the external metal ball is overall neutral, but it has one charge polarity at one end and the other charge polarity at the other end. The presence of the external charge causes this separation of charges in the metal.

    • @fakestory1753
      @fakestory1753 4 місяці тому +13

      ​@@carlosgaspar8447he said pvc pipe not the mass

    • @samstarlight160
      @samstarlight160 4 місяці тому +8

      ​@@Repent-and-believe-in-Jesus1Nobody asked xD please dont spam random videos

  • @kierana.carroll672
    @kierana.carroll672 4 місяці тому +249

    Steve, as always, very enjoyable. This one particularly so for me, as I spent 14 years as part of a team working on developing an instrument that was a several-generations-later descendant of Cavendish's torsional pendulum --- a gravity gradiometer, which measures the spatial gradient of the gravitational force field, and is used in geophysical exploration. The inventor of the first gravity gradiometer, the Hungarian physicist Loránd Eötvös, based his design on Cavendish's experiment; with the aid of what is effectively tensor math (although he did his derivation in scalar closed-form equations), we was able to show that by using a modified Cavendish torsional pendulum, making measurements with the base oriented sequentially in several different directions (over the course of several hours, to let the oscillations damp out), he could directly measure several of the components of the gravity gradient tensor, as well as compensating for the instrument's bias term. And with that information, for measurements taken at multiple locations throughout a region, inferences could be made about the subsurface density distribution --- which circa 1900 turned this into a powerful tool for discovering oil & gas deposits. Brilliant work! Our particular instrument (at a company that's now gone, called Gedex) was a variant of his, customized to be able to operate aboard a small aircraft flying low and slow over the ground (!) --- we managed to get it working, and demonstrating far, far greater sensitivity than Eötvös did in his ground-based measurements, despite being aboard an aircraft bouncing around through the sky...and then the money ran out 😞...
    Anyway, I wonder if there's anything you could do with the concept of a gravity gradiometer, and/or gravity gradients...

    • @elmoking95
      @elmoking95 4 місяці тому +14

      Incredible story and work. Thank you for your contribution to science and humanity. I hope he sees your comment and gets back to you!

    • @ianglenn2821
      @ianglenn2821 4 місяці тому

      is synthetic aperture radar on satellites used for this now?

    • @kierana.carroll672
      @kierana.carroll672 4 місяці тому +5

      Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) is indeed used for remote sensing of Earth from orbit. However, it works differently from a gravity instrument, and measures different things, and so tells you different things. A gravity-measuring instrument detects changes in the gravitational field of the Earth, and it does that passively, just by measuring the tiny changes of position of a test-mass inside the instrument itself (as in Steve's video). It tells you something about how much variation there is in the density of the rocks inside the Earth, which in turn can help to understand the geological structures underground --- the types of rock (as different types of rock have differing densities), and their structure (layering, presence of fault-lines, etc.). Whereas SAR is an active method, that involves beaming a powerful radar signal towards the Earth, then measuring its reflection (as in any radar system), followed by very complicated post-processing of that signal in order to create something that looks like a picture of the Earth's surface (not its interior). (Canada's Radarsat was one of the early SAR missions, and I actually did a bit of work on that too.)

    • @Kycilak
      @Kycilak 4 місяці тому

      This is the first time I see Eötvös' name in the wild. I didn't know he did such a thing, I know him from his contributions to physical chemistry of surfaces. The scientists back then really did stick their finger in every field imaginable.

    • @lunam7249
      @lunam7249 3 місяці тому +1

      the money didnt run out, ....the military took it and said "thank you", its prolly been improved and part of a top secret program

  • @lennartgimm7454
    @lennartgimm7454 4 місяці тому +5

    This is one of the experiments my uni offers in the lab courses for physics bachelors. It's probably the most hated experiment among students because of the time it takes. Luckily it was taken off the roster when I did my labs so I only heard stories about how tedious this apparently was. I'm glad I got to see the experiment like this, and at a fraction of the time too!

  • @Skall-ex
    @Skall-ex 4 місяці тому +1

    You're a freaking genius, mate! Absolutely love your videos. Nicely done.

  • @dredaxgaming6099
    @dredaxgaming6099 4 місяці тому +13

    Bro got a haircut mid video 6:12

  • @estrheagen4160
    @estrheagen4160 4 місяці тому +163

    Getting not just the order of magnitude but also one significant figure in the lab is bloody amazing, top job

    • @fatsquirrel75
      @fatsquirrel75 4 місяці тому +11

      Sure. But the scientists get the credit there. Steve just turned up and used their kit.

    • @andrewfrance1047
      @andrewfrance1047 4 місяці тому +2

      We measured it this way with the torsion fibre and optical pointer when I was at school nearly 50 years ago. Our apparatus was less refined and it took hours to settle.

  • @PeterGaunt
    @PeterGaunt 4 місяці тому +2

    My A-level physics class had access to a set-up like Cavendish's in the late 1960s. Our measurements were miles out but there that there really was a force was clear.

  • @TobyAsE120
    @TobyAsE120 4 місяці тому +6

    I studied physics and there is a lot of stuff you learn.
    But I think the Cavendish experiment is my favourite "simple" experiment out there.

    • @melonenlord2723
      @melonenlord2723 3 місяці тому

      So do you know what could went wrong in the home made experiment?

  • @kamikazegargoyle
    @kamikazegargoyle 4 місяці тому +6

    steve having a haircut inbetween his two shooting sessions and then editing them together is breaking my object permanence :p

  • @tatatatmax
    @tatatatmax 4 місяці тому +175

    If you decrease the mass of the copper balls, the period of oscillation will get shorter; and by the equation, the measured angle will be less. You can counter that using a less stiff wire, but now you'd have a super light system that is more sensitive to things like air currents. The best experiment really is to use heavy masses that are as close together as possible.

    • @andrewharrison8436
      @andrewharrison8436 4 місяці тому +17

      Given that the important distance is between the centers of the pairs of masses then would disks work better? I think they would but the equation wouldn't be as simple.

    • @kiralycsavo0
      @kiralycsavo0 4 місяці тому +16

      Heavy and dense masses, e.g. tungsten balls are better than iron.

    • @CorePathway
      @CorePathway 4 місяці тому +26

      Or you could use yo mama for the stationary mass. She brings a lot of mass to the party.

    • @beefchicken
      @beefchicken 4 місяці тому +4

      Wouldn’t the best way to do the experiment be to do it in a vacuum?

    • @victorfinberg8595
      @victorfinberg8595 4 місяці тому +4

      the effect of air currents is removed by placing the central setup in a box

  • @Flopsaurus
    @Flopsaurus 4 місяці тому +1

    So cool to see practical experiments working how they should!

  • @quadplay2591
    @quadplay2591 4 місяці тому

    A very good video, it shows us the difficulties in making accurate measurements and how to prove if experiments are really working.

  • @Harkmagic
    @Harkmagic 4 місяці тому +62

    I've done this experiment before with something very much like what you used at the end. This experiment is unbelievably sensitive to vibrations. If you plot the position of the laser over time you can see people walking across the room in the plot. That's why you should do it when nobody else is around and have the laser pointing at a surface as far away as you can get it so that the person taking the measurements doesn't disrupt the experiment moving around.

  • @prian42
    @prian42 4 місяці тому +103

    Brings back memories of being a physics student and measuring G at Imperial College. In our lab experiment we had equipment that moved and tracked the laser beam resulting in the positions being recorded, thus making the final analysis easier 😀

    • @milkwater1204
      @milkwater1204 4 місяці тому +6

      No way, I'm an ICL Physics student, too!

  • @QuintBUILDs
    @QuintBUILDs 4 місяці тому

    Very nicely done!

  • @glennbrickhill
    @glennbrickhill 4 місяці тому +1

    I really enjoyed this - thank you

  • @Wintergatan
    @Wintergatan 4 місяці тому +211

    So cool, thanks for the top quality every time!

    • @WordHou
      @WordHou 4 місяці тому +16

      Oh, hey, it's the marble guy.

    • @amosbackstrom5366
      @amosbackstrom5366 4 місяці тому +22

      This is a guy who knows his balls

    • @lvn5609
      @lvn5609 4 місяці тому +15

      But the question is, can marble machine 3 play tighter music if it takes into account gravitational forces?

    • @flanger001
      @flanger001 4 місяці тому +2

      Thank you for your beautiful musical videos!

    • @TheRealDorran
      @TheRealDorran 2 місяці тому

      @@amosbackstrom5366 🤨Dude, it's marbles

  • @broccet
    @broccet 4 місяці тому +6

    "Just like how a stiffer spring boi-oi-oings more quickly"

  • @user-fb5ko5jp6q
    @user-fb5ko5jp6q 4 місяці тому +2

    Great video! I'd love to see you repeat your home experiment using the laser measurement system to see if you could measure the tiny fraction of change in theta with it.

  • @Afdch
    @Afdch 3 місяці тому +5

    "Watch gravy pull two meatballs together". I'm being totally honest, that was what I read and now I am a bit dissappointed it wasn't that. Dissappointed and hungry, apparently.

  • @pensivist
    @pensivist 4 місяці тому +253

    Thank you, Steve. The Cavendish Experiment from MrLund has always annoyed me because it is very clear that the movement is too big for what one would expect of the actual force of gravity. So many comments on that video think that is real. In fact, even the most subtle air current in your room could make more impact than the force of gravity. I was ecstatic to see how you would deal with the experiment, as it is a very hard to replicate. Watching you use professional equipment in a lab didn't disappoint!

    • @andrewm9425
      @andrewm9425 4 місяці тому +27

      Also he never did the obvious next step which would be to move the bricks to the other side and see if the thing turns the other way. And he didn’t film for nearly long enough.

    • @Scrogan
      @Scrogan 4 місяці тому +9

      Ah, the perturbation of air currents as a result of the stationary bricks could well have been the cause of the deviation.

    • @poznaniak8349
      @poznaniak8349 4 місяці тому +1

      It's not really hard to replicate. We did it at high school in a 90 minute lesson. Came out fairly close to the real gravitational constant. Standard experiment at my school.

    • @pensivist
      @pensivist 4 місяці тому +16

      @@poznaniak8349 In the video Steve mentions the awful amount of time that the torsion balance takes to settle in. I'm skeptical this experiment can be done properly in 90 minutes.

    • @SystemsPlanet
      @SystemsPlanet 4 місяці тому

      This is nothing but electrostatic attraction.
      Gravity is a myth.
      If you can't measure it, it's not real.
      Cavendish was a fraud.
      There is no way his crappy experiment worked.
      We are trapped in lower earth orbit.
      No one leaves lower earth orbit.
      Nasa is a fraud.
      Nasa is a giant CGI factory.
      Check out a list of nasa vendors and see where they spend our money.

  • @ArsenicDrone
    @ArsenicDrone 4 місяці тому +208

    A couple thoughts about what could cause the Lund result, in decreasing order of how likely I think they are:
    1. Disrupted the air currents in the room, creating areas of lower pressure between the lead bricks and the hanging blocks, which would compel them to move together.
    2. Affected the equilibrium of the hanging blocks by the force of setting down the lead bricks (some motion or vibration in the floor affecting his mounting structure)
    3. He says he got them from a cyclotron. Perhaps being blasted with protons had some effect on his lead bricks.

    • @mozartk465
      @mozartk465 4 місяці тому +20

      I wonder if there could be some beta decay generating electrons.

    • @kwindafidler7728
      @kwindafidler7728 4 місяці тому +5

      thought he would talk about your first point, greatly illustrated by 2 ships getting too lcose on open sea
      but does that mean the lab pendulum was evacuated?

    • @bluesbest1
      @bluesbest1 4 місяці тому +16

      @@kwindafidler7728 The lab pendulum isn't suspended in a vacuum, it's just separated by glass panes. Remember, it's not disrupted by air itself, just the movement of it.

    • @ceejay0137
      @ceejay0137 4 місяці тому +30

      If the lead blocks were slightly warmer, they would set up convection currents that would pull air towards the blocks and move the suspended masses in the same direction.

    • @kwindafidler7728
      @kwindafidler7728 4 місяці тому +1

      @@bluesbest1 oh but of course, thanks for pointing out

  • @frantisekvrana3902
    @frantisekvrana3902 3 місяці тому +8

    6:40 The cause can't be charge. Both objects are metallic, so if it was charge, it would just equallize on impact. But the weights did not rebound.

    • @larrywiniarski1746
      @larrywiniarski1746 2 місяці тому +1

      Great point, but I should note that probably only 1 side would make contact and the other is just artistically close, so I don't think charge is completely ruled out and I don't think I would bet my life on 2 pieces of weathered oxidized lead barely touching each other making a great contact either.

  • @WilliFromEarth
    @WilliFromEarth 22 дні тому +1

    We did the experiment with the mirror attached to the thread and the laser (pointer) in our physics 101 university class … in the 1980ies. Still impressive 40 years later. Thanks for this great video showing all the pitfalls of experimental physics.👍😉

  • @reginaldx
    @reginaldx 4 місяці тому +29

    In undergrad I had a little project to modify the Cavendish experiment to measure G using driven oscillations. The larger M was oscillated slightly farther from the axis than the smaller m, so that they wouldn't collide; to a first-order approximation the torsion balance would act like a damped driven harmonic oscillator. At the resonance frequency, the amplitude of oscillation would be much larger than a simple stationary attraction. It was a crude setup but I got a decent value for G (with large error bars, lol). Most importantly, it worked as a proof of concept. It's an interesting experimental challenge -- introducing oscillations means the oscillators can sync through all sorts of things other than gravity (the ground, the air, etc.).

  • @rsaunders57
    @rsaunders57 4 місяці тому +24

    The availability of optical fibre makes that a much better material than wire. I did this experiment for the local High School physics class as a guest experiment. The laser pointer was pointed to a ruler taped to the wall. Then with a time-lapse video recording, the students could calculate big G. This was so cool now that everybody has excellent access to time-lapse video.

  • @bencressman6110
    @bencressman6110 4 місяці тому +1

    Considering you guesstimated both the equilibrium points I’m AMAZED that your number was so close!

  • @robjohnston1433
    @robjohnston1433 4 місяці тому +2

    We had that EXACT experiment at my Comp School for 'A' Level Physics in 1974!
    Unfortunately, the bar & balls were suspended from the ceiling DIRECTLY under the stairs!
    So, we had to do the experiment on Wednesday afternoon, when the kids were out for Sport.
    As I remember, we DID get values very close to the known Gravitational Constant.
    They probably do a "computer simulation" of the Exp, these days.
    We also had the 'Millikan Oil Drop' equipment for finding the charge on an electron ... ANOTHER result very close to the known charge of the electron!

  • @cienciabit
    @cienciabit 4 місяці тому +3

    You can damp the laser taking advantage of eddy currents. Put the mirror on a magnet near a piece of aluminum, copper or silver. It will be very smooth, because at zero movement there is no opposition.
    Here is the device, in this case is a magnetometer.
    ua-cam.com/video/Vnq3n97YOwQ/v-deo.html

  • @kakarotz9296
    @kakarotz9296 4 місяці тому +24

    02:50 I think "boi-oi-oing" should be the technical term for a spring releasing tension

    • @sipjedekat8525
      @sipjedekat8525 4 місяці тому

      I second that. Boi-oi-oing should be in every scientist's vocabulary from now on.

    • @TylerTMG
      @TylerTMG 4 місяці тому

      Agreed

  • @MrManultra
    @MrManultra 3 місяці тому +1

    I remember doing this in University. The cavendish experiment just hangs in the corner of a seminar room all the time... menacingly.

    • @user-zz3sn8ky7z
      @user-zz3sn8ky7z 3 місяці тому

      I love how this is a pretty much universal experience

  • @prasasti23
    @prasasti23 2 місяці тому +2

    After all time and effort these brilliant figures have spent to make this experiment, some people still think gravity doesn't exist

  • @BillSevere
    @BillSevere 4 місяці тому +8

    This video is special to me. My 8th grade science teacher, who was awesome, made a contraption that had a laser pointer on one end and a copper sphere on the other, with 100ft of "lever" constructed between them in a sort of zigzag fashion. He took another copper sphere and when he slowly brought it really close to the other the laser would move on the wall because of gravity. I don't know how accurate it was with twenty 8th graders around, but that lesson has stuck with me since.

  • @sshuggi
    @sshuggi 4 місяці тому +25

    Steve: "I used to be a bad experimentalist."
    Steve: "I've gotten so much better at experiments."

    • @peterspencer6442
      @peterspencer6442 4 місяці тому +1

      It's not the apparatus but how you use it that counts!

    • @GRBtutorials
      @GRBtutorials 4 місяці тому +1

      I think he meant he was bad at using the existing lab setup when he studied.

    • @Thorsummoner0
      @Thorsummoner0 4 місяці тому +1

      this describes software engineering to a Tee

    • @simonleeofficial
      @simonleeofficial 2 місяці тому

      Went to all the trouble of buying copper balls and such, but gave up with a laser pointer and a mirror?? Quite odd.

  • @duckey00123
    @duckey00123 2 місяці тому

    Your videos are bloody fantastic. Thanks steve. Keep up the awesome educational content. Really bloody hard to make these topics interesting.

  • @yoy4629
    @yoy4629 4 місяці тому

    Awesome job Mr Steve.

  • @bretfuzz925
    @bretfuzz925 4 місяці тому +10

    I looked at your original setup and concluded the value of r for yours was much greater than the other UA-cam one. This may have played a role in not observing rotation. Then, seeing the one with the laser system really cleared everything up. Excellent demonstration and very cool!

  • @jaygeorge2262
    @jaygeorge2262 4 місяці тому +17

    Love how you have different hairstyles throughout the explanation.
    You are gifted.
    Merry Christmas, God bless you.

    • @Taric25
      @Taric25 4 місяці тому +5

      Even his hair oscillates between long and short, just like the gravity apparatus!

  • @mitchellclark4377
    @mitchellclark4377 4 місяці тому

    This takes me back to doing this experiment as an undergrad... they made us derive the equation too, which was a nightmarish construction involving over a dozen variables.

  • @alexd.1091
    @alexd.1091 4 місяці тому

    Insanely impressive! well done!

  • @researcherchameleon4602
    @researcherchameleon4602 4 місяці тому +5

    The flat earthers are going to have a stroke reacting to this

  • @stephenschumacher1414
    @stephenschumacher1414 4 місяці тому +4

    The Cavendish experiment was my most memorable and delightful moment in undergraduate physics. Truly amazing to witness AND MEASURE the gravity force and constant.

  • @taladiv3415
    @taladiv3415 3 місяці тому

    2:50 I liked his use of onomatopoeia for describing the spring. 😄

  • @morticias5043
    @morticias5043 9 днів тому

    wow this was nice! :D i've been reading up on GR starting from newtonian gravity history, and yours was a help to show what cavendish did was so revolutionary. this was the first experiment that calculated the actual value of G, before which it was just indirectly estimated using the gravitation force F=GM/R^2

  • @00alexander1415
    @00alexander1415 4 місяці тому +8

    Learned a new Verb today thanks to this guy: "Boyoyoings"
    Also are those cannonballs?

  • @gleedads
    @gleedads 4 місяці тому +9

    I worked with an apparatus just like the higher precision one you show in the latter half of the video when I was a grad student and was TAing a 2nd year mechanics course. I'm amazed you were able to get it to work without much more vibration damping. Maybe our building was shaky. We had to have the apparatus sitting in a big tray of sand (to damp out high frequencies) with the tray resting on a layer of tennis balls (to damp out lower frequencies). Without all this damping it just never settled down to an equilibrium. Then a new building started to be built next door. During the construction we just couldn't run the experiment, no matter what we did to try to isolate it from vibrations.
    The lower precision setups you show in the first half would be less subject to vibrations from the environment because of the large masses and relatively stiff wires. But I'm suspicious that MyLundScience managed to see an effect. I agree that it is unlikely an electric charge effect. Lead is one of the more diamagnetic substances, but that also seems unlikely to be strong enough. So, I'm at a loss to explain how such a large effect was observed. Lucky air currents??

  • @agerven
    @agerven 2 місяці тому

    Beautiful!
    At first i was confusing this with Foucault's pendulum in my mind, but i'm really sure now that these are truly different things. Thanks for challenging us!

  • @Sibirsky_sibiryak
    @Sibirsky_sibiryak 4 місяці тому

    Круто. Спасибо. Не знал что есть такие простые установки для визуализации таких сложных процессов.

  • @0cgw
    @0cgw 4 місяці тому +7

    BlueMarbleScience has made a beautiful copy of the Cavendish experiment from scratch (a copy Cavendish's original design) and used it measure G to within a few percent. He has a large number of videos on this in his UA-cam channel. The apparatus is now housed in the physics department of the University of Tennessee.

  • @olleicua
    @olleicua 4 місяці тому +9

    You are so good at explaining this stuff. It's really inspiring.

  • @Galileosays
    @Galileosays 2 місяці тому +1

    Great to show the sophisticated modern set-up of Cavendish's balls. Not only we should thank the designer, but also the technician who build it.

  • @pjh2599
    @pjh2599 2 місяці тому

    Fascinating- thanks!

  • @cheeseburgermonkey7104
    @cheeseburgermonkey7104 4 місяці тому +25

    "So I bought some really heavy balls"
    -Steve Mould, c. 2023

    • @mralistair737
      @mralistair737 4 місяці тому

      "by the power of buying tow of them"

    • @CheatOnlyDeath
      @CheatOnlyDeath 4 місяці тому

      Good thing the shipping costs are tax deductible.

    • @ronald3836
      @ronald3836 4 місяці тому

      Now Steve can proudly declare that he has balls of copper.

  • @Scrogan
    @Scrogan 4 місяці тому +10

    Very cool, this is one of the experiments I missed out on in my undergrad physics labs that I wish I’d done, same for the oil drop experiment. Next up you can take all of Tycho Brahe’s observations and figure out Kelper’s laws from them. Measuring the electromagnetic and electrostatic forces would likely be a lot easier, using them to derive Maxwell’s equations would be pretty neat too.

  • @HelloKittyFanMan
    @HelloKittyFanMan 4 місяці тому

    Interesting video, thanks! Happy Christmas still! 🎄

  • @dinnoel3147
    @dinnoel3147 4 місяці тому

    Cool apparatus and good job! Would you mind to build a follow up experiment? Adding more weights and test how/if an object shields or weakens gravity from another object

  • @jonnyhifi
    @jonnyhifi 4 місяці тому +5

    What a cool video - wonderful ! I’ve only ever seen a drawing of the apparatus for this classic experiment so to see it for real, and you considering the problems with your “garden shed” version is awesomely illuminating in what’s going on, to be frank more so than if you pulled it off at home- so what might have been frustrating verging on a disaster whilst making the video has made the video a real masterpiece and triumph. Well done!

  • @reversefulfillment9189
    @reversefulfillment9189 4 місяці тому +10

    That's pretty cool Steve. I'm never disappointed with what you come up with in each video, I always learn something. Thanks

  • @dikkedorus
    @dikkedorus 4 місяці тому

    This is a great video, I would love to make one of those lab setups - would be a great build-yourself-setup

  • @prefeitobear9209
    @prefeitobear9209 Місяць тому

    More videos like this please!