I desired a teacher that was an actual scientist meaning someone that actually contributed their own work to science. Frauds are terrible teachers and usually arrogant like him.
I like how Neil wanted to imitate the thunder, realized it probably wont sound anything like it, but knew it was too late to stop so he commited :D A+ just for that
@@vasilzhekov9245 Oh no! 😱 Chant aloud: “Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn." I dispatched a unit to help you! Stay put. And do not let any cats in the room no matter what!
I remember reading accounts when Niagara falls froze and everyone woke up and did not know what was wrong. Just that something was wrong. It was the absence of the rumble of the waterfall.
My parents tought me about the timing a lightning and determinig how far away it is when I was a kid. Love the fact you mentioned it ) and as always, amazing episode. Keep looking up
Best show ever. I’m always amazed by Neil’s ability to explain everything. Chuck also has a good grasp on things. Keep up the fantastic work gentlemen! 👏👏👏
I've commented the same thing about Chuck many times. He has an above average understanding of all these concepts and is very good at applying it to future topics/discussions. He seems to recall things that Neil taught him very, very well.
When us meteorologists hear non-meteorologists explain weather-related phenomena, one phrase you're bound to hear is "Well, actually..." BUT, Neil has it down! Excellent episode! :)
got a NDT Masterclass Ad on this video... and I’m not complaining😌 I watch the ads all the way through as my small way of contributing to all the knowledge NDT has given me. Thanks Startalk!
This is a relevant episode for me right now, one project I'm working on is sounds of rainfall, thunder, and lightening made with analog synthesizers. A lot of the acoustic variables you're talking about are quite related.
I am late but even string theory is based on this basis. String theory is a grey area but huge start on quantum physics. You could break down your paper to the quantum level
I once experienced a freak blizzard/thunderstorm on a January evening and it was so weird because you felt the thunder more than you heard it because it was muffled and sort of isolated and the flashes of lighting were isolated and diffused. It was strange and felt kind of ominous and foreboding but an amazing experience I'll never forget.
Chuck also has a degree. So dont let it fool you that he is from the streets. He has a good understanding from the higher education he learned simply because he has a higher education.
"The thunder that sounds like it's tearing the sky." I love the sound of an approaching storm. Star talk should be required material to view in an educational science curriculum .
I actually had lightning strike my house once and it was bizarre. At the same moment as I heard/felt it( and I felt it in the very core of my being), I also saw the light come in through two windows of the house. One in the kitchen and one directly behind my chair where I was sitting. It didn't go light, then sound. Both seemed to happen instantaneously. The next morning, I went outside to check it out, and I could see two separate spot where it had penetrated the bricks on the side of the house. The coolest part was where it hit the ground though. The lightning went into the concrete of my driveway and formed a glass-like substance where it had struck. It utterly terrifying, but undeniably awesome.
Shooting my shot! Thanks Neil and Chuck for such a great year! I have a very general question. Neil, you have a master class on scientific thinking and communication. I just graduated from the University of Colorado at Boulder with a degree in Communication and a minor in the novel Space minor (our professor, Chris Koehler, and a personal interview with you. We sent you a "Thank you Neil" photo in 2019 and I was the one in a shoulder brase holding the "N" of your name). My question for you is what would you do for a career if you only studied what you teach in master class, communication and scientific thinking (a space minor)? Again, thank you both so much, you both absolutely made my year!
6:40 That is exactly what it sounds like, I experienced an extremely close lighting strike sitting in my car. It was such a strange sound, in fact thanks to this channel, I now have a better understanding as to why I heard, what I assumed was the slightest of a mini pre-thunder clap just before the fabric of space ripped apart. Will never forget it.
I live in Northern Ontario and have seen the Aurora. I can confirm that when it's very strong and flickering there is a faint sound in the air....it sounds a little like rice krispies popping.
It’s electrostatic discharge. Anything on the ground that can easily conduct electric current will make that crunchy sound. A researcher walked around during an auroral storm with a Shure 58 microphone and found out that the hard way when he touched the metal bits lol.. Shortwave radio can pick up other sounds too. If you can find one that changes stations with a dial (a potentiometer kind??) you can move the dial in between stations and find sounds from the Aurora. It’s also called “Natural Radio”.
The method of guessing how far away a storm is by timing the thunder after you see the lightning flash was taught to me when I was cub scout at the age of eight. I still use it and taught it it to my grand-daughter in Florida a couple of years ago. They live near Orlando Florida which according to every one living there is the lightning/thunderstorm capital of the world!
I've heard that, when listening to music your heartbeat will sink up with the beat. This is because sound is a form of energy, just like light and heat. I can relate to Chuck on the children noise, there have been moments that my children go to their mother's house and I'll say "sounds like the kids are doing something they're not supposed to, it's too quiet."
The amazing timing of the statement " that's why if you own a dog (and with lightning on the horizon) they might be trembling, you don't know why, because you can't hear it" as I'm looking at lightning in the distance and my dogs huddled in a corner.
"Noise", as opposed to musical tones or chords, is made of lots of different frequencies of sound without anything close to simple integer ratios between them, usually something that can be thought of as a continuous distribution of frequencies over some range (so that a graph of amplitude vs frequency looks like a continuous curve rather than a bunch of separate spikes like what musical sounds look like). When he mentioned the irregularity of lighting, that's the first thing I thought of, but then I thought about the fact that all explosions sound noisy and I don't know exactly where the frequencies of sound explosions make come from. I guess the noisiness comes from chaos in flames or irregularity in the environment or something like that.
This is very interesting👍🙂 I can still remember when I was a kid living in Mesa, Arizona in the early 80's during Monsoon season and a powerful storm was over our house, I can remember seeing the large window looking out to our back yard from the livingroom shaking with the the powerful sounds of the thunder, expecting that the window would eventually shatter because it was shaking so much from the sounds of the thunder. Trying to stay away from the window but also being amazed by the lightning show outside, it was scary and very exciting at the same time🙂
The intricate interplay between weather conditions and sound propagation is truly fascinating! For instance, have you ever noticed how sound can travel further on a cold, crisp morning compared to a warm, humid day? What specific weather factors do you find most interesting in relation to acoustics?
LOL, I have done this before! Like on a slow news day, and when nothing much interesting to me is on TV, and I'm not in the mood for just music, I'll line up several of these in a queue on here, link it to my TV, and just have NDT on my TV all day (or all night, if I'm especially insomniac that night!). Great way to enjoy science and relax, at the same time!
I remember i was a kid running to get home in a thunderstorm i heard the loudest thunder clap i ever heard and scared me so bad i swear it felt like i jumped 10 feet in the air lol
Likely the cold air is chilling your earlobes, LOL! Really, my ears got slightly frostbitten, once, due to having a vehicle breakdown & having to walk for help in the freezing cold with no hat on. Wasn't that far, but sure seemed like it! But after that, the cold has always made my ears hurt worse. ~shrug~ Edited to add: you also might be just missing the normal sounds, and straining to hear what your mind thinks you should be hearing.
Many people confuse hail and sleet. Sleet is a winter weather phenomenon created by a warm/cold layer of air where a piece of precipitation ...starting as either an above freezing rain drop or below freezing snow flake is at some point on its journey to the ground above freezing and is a rain drop but freezes in a colder layer of air as it falls through the layers of atmosphere. This creates sleet. Hail as explained is caused by powerful updrafts that lift the warm thunderstorm precipitation high into the thundered cloud and it reaches a level of atmosphere below freezing. Then it escapes the updraft and falls but can be recaptured in the updraft again and lifted and add another layer of ice. This cycle can repeat many times creating very large hail which at some point is heavy enough to overcome the updraft and fall to the ground. Sometimes the most hail dumps out as the thunderstorm begins to weaken and the updraft collapses and all of the hail dumps out at once.
Loved this! Have an Explainer-Worthy Question for you... ? When you suddenly drive into/out-of a rain storm and there is a distinctive wet-dry line on the pavement? Fascinated me as a child when Parents took us on a day trip to Bear Mountain from NYC... THANKS ❣
For as long as I can remember, whenever I saw a lightning flash I would count off the seconds the best I could until I heard the thunderclap. If the thunderclap came when I had counted up to five, I knew the lightning was coming from roughly a mile away owing to the huge difference between the speed of light and the speed of sound.
As a non native english speaker, this was nice for learning that we can use the word "Kinks" in an other way than the one I use it for normally. Thanks Neil ;)
Dr. Tyson I have a question about the universe. Is it possible that the End of the Universe only exists in our Minds as it is something we "can" think about. We cannot think about what happens after this end so therefore there is no end? How does our thinking or our consciousness affect the whole universe?
Universe doesn't care what you think ........our consciousness or our thinking will not have any affect on whole universe ( just an answer from my side )
@@apoorv_sharan no. Its a detector, or any particle really, having some exchange with the particle you observe. Its just we use particles to "see" so how do you look at a particle without another particle interacting some how? Never has been to do with consciousness. Especially on a non-quantum size.
One more to add to you list of snow sounds: If it gets REALLY cold, (around -15°F) the snow starts getting 'squeaky' ! It sounds similar to what you get when you rub Styrofoam on a window. Also, the consistency starts feeling more like walking in sand than snow.
Yes, hail sizes are directly related to updraft wind speed. For example: Pea size = 24mph updraft. Quarter size = 59mph, tennis ball = 77mph, and if you see softball size hail, know that the destruction to your roof, car and other property took an updraft speed of 103mph to keep those stones lofted.
I've been told that sound travels "better" in the fog but I think that's b.s. I think everyone is quieter in the fog so we pay closer attention to quieter sounds. Anyone else experience this?
Another thing about Snow is when it was actively snowing the temperature was actually warmer then when it wasnt. Snow insulated the immediate area it covered. Id notice 15 degree shifts while I lived in the interior of Alaska
The science teacher we never had but always wanted :)
Exactly!
I desired a teacher that was an actual scientist meaning someone that actually contributed their own work to science. Frauds are terrible teachers and usually arrogant like him.
Extremely correct.
Perfect description of Neil
I liked his little "check the math backwards" at 8:00
I like how Neil wanted to imitate the thunder, realized it probably wont sound anything like it, but knew it was too late to stop so he commited :D A+ just for that
I always thought Thunder sounded like the Guitar riff of WHITE WEDDING...
10 POINTS TO GRIFFINDOOR
dumbest comment ever
Neil's lightning will be my new ring tone
“Ohsnapquakleknapoopptupftkukuburbhroom!”
Neil DeGrasse Tyson 2021
Need help. I read this and accidentally summoned a strange creature. Pls tell me how to get rid of it.
@@vasilzhekov9245 Oh no! 😱 Chant aloud: “Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn."
I dispatched a unit to help you! Stay put.
And do not let any cats in the room no matter what!
@@Morfeusm Too late my cat pushed the creature from the window. She thought it was the remote control.
@@vasilzhekov9245 We hear you, agent ZhEkoV. Sending Samsara team to your location. Prepare amnestic measures.
That's 2020 did to you
I remember reading accounts when Niagara falls froze and everyone woke up and did not know what was wrong. Just that something was wrong. It was the absence of the rumble of the waterfall.
There's nothing better than a new StarTalk upload with Chuck and Neil. Love the show guys.
I’ll never get tired of watching these videos.
My parents tought me about the timing a lightning and determinig how far away it is when I was a kid. Love the fact you mentioned it ) and as always, amazing episode. Keep looking up
3:19 would be another clip in "Neil without context"
Best show ever. I’m always amazed by Neil’s ability to explain everything. Chuck also has a good grasp on things. Keep up the fantastic work gentlemen! 👏👏👏
I've commented the same thing about Chuck many times. He has an above average understanding of all these concepts and is very good at applying it to future topics/discussions. He seems to recall things that Neil taught him very, very well.
I will never get bored of star talk or weather sounds or whatever you have to say. This was so interesting 🔥🧡
Neal's everyone's national science teacher and I have to say one of the only teachers I have paid attention to without effort.
*running late for a date*
Me: Hold on, I need to get chemically prepped.
“The beep boppers” Neil just sounded whiter than me 🤣 love the show & learned stuff cheers chaps
Don't worry, you out whited him again with "Chaps"
@@LewisWilkins-Lighting I know 🤣🤣🤣
@@LewisWilkins-Lighting And he isn't even British 😭😭😭😭
Alright mate? top blokes in this thread.
Good call!!!
When us meteorologists hear non-meteorologists explain weather-related phenomena, one phrase you're bound to hear is "Well, actually..." BUT, Neil has it down! Excellent episode! :)
got a NDT Masterclass Ad on this video... and I’m not complaining😌
I watch the ads all the way through as my small way of contributing to all the knowledge NDT has given me.
Thanks Startalk!
This is a relevant episode for me right now, one project I'm working on is sounds of rainfall, thunder, and lightening made with analog synthesizers. A lot of the acoustic variables you're talking about are quite related.
I am late but even string theory is based on this basis. String theory is a grey area but huge start on quantum physics. You could break down your paper to the quantum level
I once experienced a freak blizzard/thunderstorm on a January evening and it was so weird because you felt the thunder more than you heard it because it was muffled and sort of isolated and the flashes of lighting were isolated and diffused. It was strange and felt kind of ominous and foreboding but an amazing experience I'll never forget.
I've one experienced hail on a sunny day on a scooter ....
The dead silence from a gentle snowfall is one of the only good parts of winter. Love going out for a walk when it happens
I have always loved the tranquility that the snow brings with is muffling effect.
Like it's just amazing to see that there are many people out there who are nerds like me! Keep the hard work!
😉
Hello fellow nerd
hi
haha nerd
@@burgelar4790 and..?
@@burgelar4790 you say that like it's a bad thing. It isn't. 😁
Chuck's excitement is me every episode
Same.
lol true
Yep lol
Chuck also has a degree. So dont let it fool you that he is from the streets. He has a good understanding from the higher education he learned simply because he has a higher education.
Just over night here in Sydney Australia we had a storm with lightning and now listening to this what a science lesson
"The thunder that sounds like it's tearing the sky." I love the sound of an approaching storm. Star talk should be required material to view in an educational science curriculum .
I actually had lightning strike my house once and it was bizarre. At the same moment as I heard/felt it( and I felt it in the very core of my being), I also saw the light come in through two windows of the house. One in the kitchen and one directly behind my chair where I was sitting. It didn't go light, then sound. Both seemed to happen instantaneously.
The next morning, I went outside to check it out, and I could see two separate spot where it had penetrated the bricks on the side of the house. The coolest part was where it hit the ground though. The lightning went into the concrete of my driveway and formed a glass-like substance where it had struck. It utterly terrifying, but undeniably awesome.
I second "The Explainer Zone" name. It needs to be a thing!
[09:55] Not only does snow muffle the sound of the city, thick fog can do that too.
Why would people dislike STARTALK. Keep doing what you guys are doing and don't stop.
Shooting my shot! Thanks Neil and Chuck for such a great year! I have a very general question. Neil, you have a master class on scientific thinking and communication. I just graduated from the University of Colorado at Boulder with a degree in Communication and a minor in the novel Space minor (our professor, Chris Koehler, and a personal interview with you. We sent you a "Thank you Neil" photo in 2019 and I was the one in a shoulder brase holding the "N" of your name). My question for you is what would you do for a career if you only studied what you teach in master class, communication and scientific thinking (a space minor)? Again, thank you both so much, you both absolutely made my year!
I Loved the enthusiastic thumbnail.
Great video as always. Thank you ♡
That’s absolutely fascinating. Love the way you guys talk about science and life.
Explainer zone sounds dope, just putting that out there 👏🙌
6:40 That is exactly what it sounds like, I experienced an extremely close lighting strike sitting in my car. It was such a strange sound, in fact thanks to this channel, I now have a better understanding as to why I heard, what I assumed was the slightest of a mini pre-thunder clap just before the fabric of space ripped apart. Will never forget it.
This was an incredible episode. Thank you very much for this information.
This duo works so well!
9:25 I audibly gasped when I realized what he was about to explain. How did I never think of that explanation
I live in Northern Ontario and have seen the Aurora. I can confirm that when it's very strong and flickering there is a faint sound in the air....it sounds a little like rice krispies popping.
It’s electrostatic discharge. Anything on the ground that can easily conduct electric current will make that crunchy sound. A researcher walked around during an auroral storm with a Shure 58 microphone and found out that the hard way when he touched the metal bits lol.. Shortwave radio can pick up other sounds too. If you can find one that changes stations with a dial (a potentiometer kind??) you can move the dial in between stations and find sounds from the Aurora. It’s also called “Natural Radio”.
"600 divided by 60"
"so how far?"
"i don't know"
LITERALLY ME lmfaoo 7:10
The method of guessing how far away a storm is by timing the thunder after you see the lightning flash was taught to me when I was cub scout at the age of eight. I still use it and taught it it to my grand-daughter in Florida a couple of years ago. They live near Orlando Florida which according to every one living there is the lightning/thunderstorm capital of the world!
🥰 love watching these explainer videos and the ever entertaining host & co-host 😎🤯❤
I love star talk because a concept like constructive interference that we spend an entire class period on in physics Neil can explain in a minute
The Explainer Zone, I like that B)
Fly. In . To. The . STRANGER ZONE.
I've heard that, when listening to music your heartbeat will sink up with the beat. This is because sound is a form of energy, just like light and heat.
I can relate to Chuck on the children noise, there have been moments that my children go to their mother's house and I'll say "sounds like the kids are doing something they're not supposed to, it's too quiet."
The amazing timing of the statement " that's why if you own a dog (and with lightning on the horizon) they might be trembling, you don't know why, because you can't hear it" as I'm looking at lightning in the distance and my dogs huddled in a corner.
"Noise", as opposed to musical tones or chords, is made of lots of different frequencies of sound without anything close to simple integer ratios between them, usually something that can be thought of as a continuous distribution of frequencies over some range (so that a graph of amplitude vs frequency looks like a continuous curve rather than a bunch of separate spikes like what musical sounds look like). When he mentioned the irregularity of lighting, that's the first thing I thought of, but then I thought about the fact that all explosions sound noisy and I don't know exactly where the frequencies of sound explosions make come from. I guess the noisiness comes from chaos in flames or irregularity in the environment or something like that.
Neil deGrasse Tyson Explains the Sounds of Weather at 3:18 😄🌩⛈
This is very interesting👍🙂
I can still remember when I was a kid living in Mesa, Arizona in the early 80's during Monsoon season and a powerful storm was over our house, I can remember seeing the large window looking out to our back yard from the livingroom shaking with the the powerful sounds of the thunder, expecting that the window would eventually shatter because it was shaking so much from the sounds of the thunder. Trying to stay away from the window but also being amazed by the lightning show outside, it was scary and very exciting at the same time🙂
Its an honour to be able listen to Neil talk.
The intricate interplay between weather conditions and sound propagation is truly fascinating! For instance, have you ever noticed how sound can travel further on a cold, crisp morning compared to a warm, humid day? What specific weather factors do you find most interesting in relation to acoustics?
I could listen to stuff like this all day long. Brilliant 👍
This was an awesome awesome video thank you Chuck and Neil
Teacher: "Who can give an example of an onomatopoeia?"
Me: 3:19
I wish I have had a teacher like Neil. Not only because knows a lot and knows how to explain, but because his charisma and he is funny!
I could listen to these alllll DAY!
LOL, I have done this before! Like on a slow news day, and when nothing much interesting to me is on TV, and I'm not in the mood for just music, I'll line up several of these in a queue on here, link it to my TV, and just have NDT on my TV all day (or all night, if I'm especially insomniac that night!). Great way to enjoy science and relax, at the same time!
I remember i was a kid running to get home in a thunderstorm i heard the loudest thunder clap i ever heard and scared me so bad i swear it felt like i jumped 10 feet in the air lol
That happened where I live a couple of weeks ago. Scared us all!
@Deal Negrasse Bison He jumped right to it!!
lol
I just love you guys! In a forest, during a snow fall, there is no sound, but why my ears feel kind of a pain?
Likely the cold air is chilling your earlobes, LOL! Really, my ears got slightly frostbitten, once, due to having a vehicle breakdown & having to walk for help in the freezing cold with no hat on. Wasn't that far, but sure seemed like it! But after that, the cold has always made my ears hurt worse. ~shrug~
Edited to add: you also might be just missing the normal sounds, and straining to hear what your mind thinks you should be hearing.
These two are hilarious. Makes the video all the more enjoyable.
Anyone ever drive into a thunder storm? I think it’s one of the coolest experiences seeing sheets of rain heading your way then wam!
One time I was driving along with the storm for a few moments. So my windshield was getting rained on but my rear window wasn't! Very cool.
For 2021 I just hope we will get at least a explainer video everyday
The "Explainer Zone" is a great titled for this segment.
Thank you Mr.Neil. And Chuck 🤜🤛🤝
That frequence is when sound drops below 20 Hz, lovely feeling :)
Science is always fun with Neil and Chuck!
Many people confuse hail and sleet. Sleet is a winter weather phenomenon created by a warm/cold layer of air where a piece of precipitation ...starting as either an above freezing rain drop or below freezing snow flake is at some point on its journey to the ground above freezing and is a rain drop but freezes in a colder layer of air as it falls through the layers of atmosphere. This creates sleet. Hail as explained is caused by powerful updrafts that lift the warm thunderstorm precipitation high into the thundered cloud and it reaches a level of atmosphere below freezing. Then it escapes the updraft and falls but can be recaptured in the updraft again and lifted and add another layer of ice. This cycle can repeat many times creating very large hail which at some point is heavy enough to overcome the updraft and fall to the ground. Sometimes the most hail dumps out as the thunderstorm begins to weaken and the updraft collapses and all of the hail dumps out at once.
Ok, Neil, thunder snow! First time I heard it was during a huge blizzard, and it has happened rarely after that. Scary, and fascinating!
With StarTalk, you are always in the Goldilocks Zone of Knowledge.
"It's like the twilight zone; but when you leave you know what's going on!" Best description
Chuck at some points seemed like: I'm not rly listening but if i repeat the last 2 words the teacher said now and then he won't notice" :D
Yes, I had the same feel.
I use to think so too but then he follow up with questions and statements that make sense lol
Loved this! Have an Explainer-Worthy Question for you...
? When you suddenly drive into/out-of a rain storm and there is a distinctive wet-dry line on the pavement? Fascinated me as a child when Parents took us on a day trip to Bear Mountain from NYC...
THANKS ❣
Frozen hail is kinda like The candy jaw breakers. It's how dipping dots are made too.
I've seen Golf size hail in Tx too.
For as long as I can remember, whenever I saw a lightning flash I would count off the seconds the best I could until I heard the thunderclap. If the thunderclap came when I had counted up to five, I knew the lightning was coming from roughly a mile away owing to the huge difference between the speed of light and the speed of sound.
You guys are a great team.
7:13 😂 reason #345 why I love this channel.
As a non native english speaker, this was nice for learning that we can use the word "Kinks" in an other way than the one I use it for normally. Thanks Neil ;)
"Down pause" educational and informative 👍
Awsome to hear you!
Dr. Tyson I have a question about the universe.
Is it possible that the End of the Universe only exists in our Minds as it is something we "can" think about. We cannot think about what happens after this end so therefore there is no end? How does our thinking or our consciousness affect the whole universe?
*hits blunt*
Universe doesn't care what you think ........our consciousness or our thinking will not have any affect on whole universe ( just an answer from my side )
@@aspirine24 but seeing the photon in a double slit experiment, the act of us seeing the particle makes it change it's form right?
@@apoorv_sharan we may find an answer for that particular question............(but questions never end )
@@apoorv_sharan no.
Its a detector, or any particle really, having some exchange with the particle you observe.
Its just we use particles to "see" so how do you look at a particle without another particle interacting some how?
Never has been to do with consciousness. Especially on a non-quantum size.
One more to add to you list of snow sounds: If it gets REALLY cold, (around -15°F) the snow starts getting 'squeaky' ! It sounds similar to what you get when you rub Styrofoam on a window. Also, the consistency starts feeling more like walking in sand than snow.
Hey Neil, awesome StarTalk convo. I was wondering if you could discuss the "Polar Vortex" subject that seems to be a rising world topic.
A Loren Emmerich production likes this program, Sir deGrasse Tyson and Chuck a happy new year!
Thank you for explaining this! I always wondered why thunder sounded the way it does
Yes, hail sizes are directly related to updraft wind speed. For example: Pea size = 24mph updraft. Quarter size = 59mph, tennis ball = 77mph, and if you see softball size hail, know that the destruction to your roof, car and other property took an updraft speed of 103mph to keep those stones lofted.
I will isolate Neil's thunder and convert it to my ring tome on the phone!
Love the down pause. Will use that next rain.
4:57 this is why i love them
tchuuuuk.
I like how Neil says it every time. Never gets old.
“Downpause” - perfect!
Great segue for a talk about the Schumann resonance👍😁
Neil is stellar... Chuck is funtastic!
I've been told that sound travels "better" in the fog but I think that's b.s. I think everyone is quieter in the fog so we pay closer attention to quieter sounds. Anyone else experience this?
" Neil's Thunder " is going to be the new meme template 😅
I want a StarTalk hoodie like Chuck!! 😭😭😭
I thought the exact same. Hope i will be available to buy in the near future.
wonderful 🌊 wishing all here peace and prosperity in the new year
Chuck. Thank you for making me feel ok about my own paltry math skills! I am in good company!😄
Love the « ‘splainer zone! » videos! 😀
I see heat lighting in mountain s near bye no sound .. horizontal often .
Why no sound from this type of lightning ?
Awesome channel.
7:14 i felt that laughter as if it was in my own house 😆 i love their ST shows
Me: opens a door while everyone's sleeping
The door: 3:19
Another thing about Snow is when it was actively snowing the temperature was actually warmer then when it wasnt. Snow insulated the immediate area it covered.
Id notice 15 degree shifts while I lived in the interior of Alaska
I always press the like button before I even watch the videos - that's how sure I am that I will have my mind blown or electrified 😎 (pun intended)
I will retain more if what I just learned because it was presented in an energetic, fun way. Down pause sounds like a musical term.