What was the most surprising simulation to you? Let me know :) Also, make sure to share this video on social media so that more people can see my work on UA-cam!
It's interesting how, the less gravity, the more violent the shaking is, but the less damage there actually is to the buildings structure, although there are still damage from furniture flying around.
I think the only thing that might not be considered in this video is how the P and the S waves would travel in different planets due to their soil type. It might be the same quake, but the way it will normally shake will be different. Still, it’s awesome to see how planet’s gravity would effect on fall damage. Love the asthetics to represent each planet too. 👍🏻
Thank you for making Pluto a planet again! I still don't think it should've been demoted to a dwarf planet--to paraphrase Horton the elephant, "A planet's a planet, no matter how small!"
About Venus there is one factor which was not taken under consideration - the atmosphere density. If it would crush anybody standing there, it would also change the process of earthquake simulation
1:00 - Ugh, do you know how much an apartment that big would cost on the sun? Interesting video! Though I do wonder what it would look like if you also factored in the atmosphere of some of these planets- I know Venus's atmospheric pressure is at 93 bar and the wind blows as much as 200 mph, and the gas giants have even more violent storms, though Neptune has them beat- there, the wind literally blows faster than the speed of sound. I'm guessing in both cases the building would have been ripped apart by the winds.
Even if the sun doesn't have a solid surface it still flattens the building almost instantly but in reality it could completely disintegrate the building hundreds of thousands of kilometres away
Sun: NOPE. Just SQUISH. Insta-flat. XD Nice work on the details, such as having Mercury and Mars's gravity actually be the same number (because it is, pretty much) and how Venus's damage animation was really close to Earth's, becasue their gravity is. AND YOU INCLUDED PLUTO! Insta-thumb-up from me for that one. Also Jupiter almost pulled a Sun 2.0, lol.
You'd think those people would quit parking there.. If these space travelers had just brought some high-tension, heavy-gauge seismic suspension supports with them, and placed them around the columns between the first & 2nd floors? Most of these buildings would have survived much better.
Thank you Mike!! Took me 3 days to get to this point. I will be enjoying a very good night's sleep and celebrate with a good break tomorrow😁 than hopefully some swimming this weekend
Yep, that's a thing. Also changing the names of other planet-related things, such as technically, the geography of Mars is called "Areography". You can have a Martian satellite in an areosynchronos orbit. Etc. They're using the Greek god equivalent to the Roman Mars, which is "Ares", as the root word. Similarly, many words that start with "geo" are from "Gaia", not "Terra". Geography, geology, geocentric orbit... We have "Terra"-related words too, such as "terrain" and "terraform". The More You Know! :)
Even though they are not planets can you please do Makemake Sedna Criuthne Phobos Ganymede Io Europa Titan Enceladus Triton Callisto Eris Deimos Planet 9 Theias And Chariklo anytime?
I love your videos! Just a polite correction, the Sun is a star not a planet, but I understand why you put it, the simulation is just insane! Have a nice day!
It would be cool to see a simulation of quakes on a magnetar. BTW it's pretty awkward you call it Earthquake speaking about another planets. And you have something flying to the left on Neptune at 3:08.
Ok, I see a pattern, the stronger the gravity the faster the fall. So of course on pluto the building actually survives. The sun simulation cracked me up. Btw, you got the intensity wrong for saturn.
Fascinating that Saturn has about the same gravity although being nearly 10 times Earth's size. Reason is that he is less denser, so its center of mass is farther away if you "stay" on it and gravity accounts for this squared.
Venus Michael. I thought the intense heat might make the building much weaker, that is the lower floors would have failed earlier due to being softer while under compression?
Mercury, weirdly enough, has about the same gravity as Mars! That's because Mercury's heavy iron core is unusually big, compared to the rest of the teeny planet. So, Mercury is unusually heave/dense for its size, which is why it has the same gravity as much-bigger Mars. Scientists think that Mercury _used_ to be larger...but in the early days of the Solar System, something came along and WHACK and Mercury lost its upper layers. Isn't space fun? Oh, and also Mercury has ice, despite being the closest planet to the sun. Yup. :)
i see this sim is computed with square block type building, on the other planets they would be dome structures, pls re run the sim with a 6o foot dome structure. the sun surprised me the most. and the safest place to be was always on the roof ! or just somewhere else !
So in summary, if you want to experience an earthquake in a building with a high chance of survival and still enjoying the experience, go to a planet with the lowest gravity possible, but not too low until you fly off into space. 🤣
Were the building strength the same in those simulations, or were strength properties scaled along with gravity? A load bearing column holding 50 tons on Earth would operate much better in lower gravity. This is likely the reason for the buildings remaining intact under low gravity. Buildings won't be built with this much excess. It would be likely for the columns be made thinner and strength scaled down to parity on Earth, because materials are costly to acquire on those planets and profits need to be made. :D
I'd have to say the most surprising thing I noticed was the crappy construction of the building in general. Don't they have building codes on these other planets? For cryin out loud! I'll just stay here when trips to other worlds kick into gear.
Yes it does! That's where those big dark spots came from. Cooled basalt that came to the surface earlier, when the Moon was actively volcanic. I love this kind of stuff. :)
Saturn is famous for how...what's the opposite of dense...un-dense, it is. It's insanely fluffy for its big size. There's that bit in all the Astronomy for Kids! books, where they say that "Saturn is so light, it would FLOAT in water!...if you could make a bathtub big enough." Followed by a cartoon of Saturn taking a bath. :P So, yeah. Saturn is huge, but literally less dense than water. That's probably why the low gravity.
Well the Sun was just throwing it in there and the Moon just because they are also celestial bodies. But the title is right, I have simulated the quake on each planet besides the Moon and the Sun😁😁
What was the most surprising
simulation to you? Let me know :) Also, make sure to share this video on social media so that more people can see my work on UA-cam!
I love Saturn, Neptun, Uranus and Mars.
@@RomanianMapper333 awesome😁
I think Jupiter and Saturn were surprising to me. I actually didn't know what to expect.
All the planets that have buildings only damaged and not collapsed at MMI XII
you should simulate pluto mmi xiii
I cannot imagine the work that went into these!
Incredible Achievement!
Thank you so much for your words! 🙂👍
Anyone notice that chair on the Neptune simulation just flying off into space?
Yes I noticed that too
I noticed it
I guess Neptune does not like quakes haha
Yes i noticed
Yes
Thank you for including Pluto! I still say the Astronomical Union had no business making Pluto into a "minor planet".
I literally laughed out loud at the sun one.
I honestly thought it would burn up
@@hinata167 It would not even exist in the first place xD
@@villebooks true
Me too!
@@villebooksthat’s why they’re Earth-quakes 😂
I just realized that the less the gravity, less damage the building suffers, and when it's higher it just collapses instantly
yep, very important lesson!
MMI XII in Pluto?
When the gravity is lower, the furniture flies all over the room easier, so it can't be that safer.
@@gav1233 that's such a good observation!
On certain planets, you have heat or cold to worry about more lol. (Venus anyone? Or Pluto.)
I love how you add the atmosphere for all the planets thats nice touch great video :)
Thank you for the feedback!! I love how Mars looks like and Pluto. It's so eerie!
Yea I noticed that too, so cool :)
It's interesting how, the less gravity, the more violent the shaking is, but the less damage there actually is to the buildings structure, although there are still damage from furniture flying around.
That is a very good point!! I'm glad you've noticed that!
I think the only thing that might not be considered in this video is how the P and the S waves would travel in different planets due to their soil type. It might be the same quake, but the way it will normally shake will be different. Still, it’s awesome to see how planet’s gravity would effect on fall damage. Love the asthetics to represent each planet too. 👍🏻
I also Wonder what effect atmosferic pressure and temperature could have,
Not to mention that the gas giants probably don't even have soil or solid bedrock.
Thank you for making Pluto a planet again! I still don't think it should've been demoted to a dwarf planet--to paraphrase Horton the elephant, "A planet's a planet, no matter how small!"
Would be interesting to see what nuclear explosions would look like on other planets.
About Venus there is one factor which was not taken under consideration - the atmosphere density. If it would crush anybody standing there, it would also change the process of earthquake simulation
you are right about that!
My dreams of a solar resort, utterly dashed 😭
1:00 - Ugh, do you know how much an apartment that big would cost on the sun?
Interesting video! Though I do wonder what it would look like if you also factored in the atmosphere of some of these planets- I know Venus's atmospheric pressure is at 93 bar and the wind blows as much as 200 mph, and the gas giants have even more violent storms, though Neptune has them beat- there, the wind literally blows faster than the speed of sound. I'm guessing in both cases the building would have been ripped apart by the winds.
Even if the sun doesn't have a solid surface it still flattens the building almost instantly but in reality it could completely disintegrate the building hundreds of thousands of kilometres away
Thank you for including Pluto!
Very interesting the video. Greetings from Argentina. I suggested that you make a video about how a good tunnel is affected by a earthquake.
Your videos are so cool! You always have lots of ideas for Earthquakes. And The simulations are super realistic!
thank you so much Dragos! I am constantly thinking what to create next
Keep it up By the end of 2023 you will make 100k and by the end of 2025 1M
Sun is like "Nope, no building here" it didnt mind the cars though
haha!! I would never befriend the Sun! I'm posting an epic video in one hour! :)
Very cool and interesting video would love to see different types of buildings on the different planets like this
that is something worth considering in the near future!
1:07 P A N C A K E
Just sumbitted a photo for your art gallery!
got it!
@@EarthquakeSim :D
I love the way the atmo changed with each planet. I'm curious if the simulaton took into acount the heat of the materials?
Idk about surprising, but the Sun cracked me up. 3, 2, 1 and nope.
Splat!
@@Orca19904 haha yes indeed!
it was so fast that I HAD to put a countdown before... people wouldn't be prepared to watch and react
Sun: NOPE. Just SQUISH. Insta-flat. XD
Nice work on the details, such as having Mercury and Mars's gravity actually be the same number (because it is, pretty much) and how Venus's damage animation was really close to Earth's, becasue their gravity is. AND YOU INCLUDED PLUTO! Insta-thumb-up from me for that one. Also Jupiter almost pulled a Sun 2.0, lol.
3:01 THE CHAIR 😂
4:29 The chair again
Great video! Keep it up.
you are so welcome!! gave you a shout out in the video description
You'd think those people would quit parking there..
If these space travelers had just brought some high-tension, heavy-gauge seismic suspension supports with them, and placed them around the columns between the first & 2nd floors? Most of these buildings would have survived much better.
Worth watching over and over. It is almost mesmerizing. Great job, my friend.
Thank you Mike!! Took me 3 days to get to this point. I will be enjoying a very good night's sleep and celebrate with a good break tomorrow😁 than hopefully some swimming this weekend
So if you have "earthquake" on otherplanet then its "name-quake"
Like marsquakes. And yes this is formal name used by nasa or jpl
Yep, that's a thing. Also changing the names of other planet-related things, such as technically, the geography of Mars is called "Areography". You can have a Martian satellite in an areosynchronos orbit. Etc. They're using the Greek god equivalent to the Roman Mars, which is "Ares", as the root word. Similarly, many words that start with "geo" are from "Gaia", not "Terra". Geography, geology, geocentric orbit... We have "Terra"-related words too, such as "terrain" and "terraform".
The More You Know! :)
Sun: Nope f this me and the building are outta here
Fascinating, thank you for sharing.
you are welcome! glad that I am able to provide educational content!
Even though they are not planets can you please do Makemake Sedna Criuthne Phobos Ganymede Io Europa Titan Enceladus Triton Callisto Eris Deimos Planet 9 Theias And Chariklo anytime?
Do a simulation of the 2012 film with the buildings of Los Angeles
Next time, use more rebar. That building looks it was made of stacked blocks, and not the lego kind.
Here to boost! This is one of my favorite sims!
that physics engine looks sooo good man!
The Sun surprised me brcause I had no idea that it's gravity was so high. I was also surprised by the Moon's lack of damage.
I love your videos! Just a polite correction, the Sun is a star not a planet, but I understand why you put it, the simulation is just insane!
Have a nice day!
Well and the Moon is a moon and Pluto is a dwarf planet :D
Never mind :)
@@Delibro yes! Haha :)
@EarthquakeSim could you do 10 story apartment right after this premiere?
I saw u building this while u were streaming. U did so well!
I'm glad you were watching :)
Pluto lives!!!!
I was surprised that the sun building didn't instantly collapse and vaporize. That said, this is a cool video. (not me 7 months too late)
This is such a intresting idea!
thanks for feedback! you are amazing for being here and always supporting me :)
I am really surprised that The gravity on Saturn Uranus and Neptune aren't much different from Earth's. 🤔 The animation on the sun is hilarious. 😂
I was surprised too! Thanks for watching😁
@@EarthquakeSimFastest response Ive ever had to a UA-cam comment. 😮😂 Thanks for making the video. 👏👍
1:07 **insert lego breaking sound effect**
This is art in motion! Beautiful!
thank you so much for saying this!!
It would be cool to see a simulation of quakes on a magnetar. BTW it's pretty awkward you call it Earthquake speaking about another planets. And you have something flying to the left on Neptune at 3:08.
I didn't realize Saturn's gravity is less than Earth? Is that right?
Ok, I see a pattern, the stronger the gravity the faster the fall. So of course on pluto the building actually survives.
The sun simulation cracked me up.
Btw, you got the intensity wrong for saturn.
The Sun's the BOSS
When where these buildings constructed, in the 30's? They crumble like unreinforced masonry 🤔
Great vid! Lighter gravities save lives
Fascinating that Saturn has about the same gravity although being nearly 10 times Earth's size.
Reason is that he is less denser, so its center of mass is farther away if you "stay" on it and gravity accounts for this squared.
"Magnitude" of a earthquake is the total enery released. It does not directly correlate to how intense the shaking is.
The sun and planet Pluto 😊❤
Sun makes building go splat
I love this so much
thank you so much for watching friend!!
Venus Michael. I thought the intense heat might make the building much weaker, that is the lower floors would have failed earlier due to being softer while under compression?
Mercury was the most unusual and surprising to me
Mercury, weirdly enough, has about the same gravity as Mars! That's because Mercury's heavy iron core is unusually big, compared to the rest of the teeny planet. So, Mercury is unusually heave/dense for its size, which is why it has the same gravity as much-bigger Mars.
Scientists think that Mercury _used_ to be larger...but in the early days of the Solar System, something came along and WHACK and Mercury lost its upper layers.
Isn't space fun? Oh, and also Mercury has ice, despite being the closest planet to the sun. Yup. :)
@@robinchesterfield42 the deep sea is even crazier.
@@robinchesterfield42also, thank you for the info dump. This resonates with my entire way of being. I appreciate you. ❤
Didn't need a quake for the building to collapse on the sun 😂
thought this was live ;-;
It was. At 12:30 am EST
these are live video premieres :) you're watching my upcoming videos with other subscribers for the first time
i see this sim is computed with square block type building, on the other planets they would be dome structures, pls re run the sim with a 6o foot dome structure. the sun surprised me the most. and the safest place to be was always on the roof ! or just somewhere else !
Holy crap that’s Interesting
Don't even need quakes when you're in the Sun, just gravity alone is enough, lol
Don't build on the Sun! 🌞😅
So in summary, if you want to experience an earthquake in a building with a high chance of survival and still enjoying the experience, go to a planet with the lowest gravity possible, but not too low until you fly off into space. 🤣
Happy birthday EQS!
Please make a comparation building with seismic base isolation and base Fixed joint
The sun. Whoa! Am I heavy there!
Were the building strength the same in those simulations, or were strength properties scaled along with gravity? A load bearing column holding 50 tons on Earth would operate much better in lower gravity. This is likely the reason for the buildings remaining intact under low gravity.
Buildings won't be built with this much excess. It would be likely for the columns be made thinner and strength scaled down to parity on Earth, because materials are costly to acquire on those planets and profits need to be made. :D
Surprising? I'd say for me the surprise was Saturn gravity being less than Earth. How did I not know that?
Very cool
The sun was the most surprising.
I was also pretty surprised!!!
please tell me software name
please
Happy birthday EQS 🎉
Can you explain building 7 in this simulation
The sun was the most surprising
It was so fast!!!
For the records, I was here
I'd have to say the most surprising thing I noticed was the crappy construction of the building in general. Don't they have building codes on these other planets? For cryin out loud!
I'll just stay here when trips to other worlds kick into gear.
i like the part where there was an earthquake on uranus
do buildings really shakes and bends this much ?
Would be interesting to see what nuclear explosions would look like on other planets. like what @Tijaboo said
Very realistic!!! 🤩🤩🤩
0:28 Moonquakes are a series of moon tectonic plates on the moon
becuse the moon has also magma
Yes it does! That's where those big dark spots came from. Cooled basalt that came to the surface earlier, when the Moon was actively volcanic.
I love this kind of stuff. :)
How is it possible for Saturn to have only-9m/s ,when earth has -9.8m/s ?
It is a gas planet🙂👍
Saturn is famous for how...what's the opposite of dense...un-dense, it is. It's insanely fluffy for its big size. There's that bit in all the Astronomy for Kids! books, where they say that "Saturn is so light, it would FLOAT in water!...if you could make a bathtub big enough." Followed by a cartoon of Saturn taking a bath. :P
So, yeah. Saturn is huge, but literally less dense than water. That's probably why the low gravity.
i see every Video from you😆
amazing :D
Felt.. one light seeing simulation another sound hearing simulations..abstracted..I lost..the sound cues..
The sun part is so funny hahahahahahahahahahhahhhhhhhhh😂😂😂😂😂
I just learned that the sun is a planet. And all my life I thought it was a star !!
Well the Sun was just throwing it in there and the Moon just because they are also celestial bodies. But the title is right, I have simulated the quake on each planet besides the Moon and the Sun😁😁
As gravity increases, the building collapses more easily.
nice
The one of the sun is funny.
Hmmm... I think at the all part of the simulation are great tho 👍
It it all MMI XII?
Yes it is :)
@@EarthquakeSim that means in Pluto MMI XII is not as destructive as Earth MMI XII(Pluto still caused damage but didn't collapse unlike earth)
The sun looks like it was det charged and collapsed
Pluto and the sun aren't planets, but my favorite was mars
They aren't but I put them in the simulation anyways 😁
All 9 planets, I'm in
3:00 Chair