If you don't know why you are subscribed to this channel, I just changed the channel name from DominicWalliman, so you probably subscribed after my Map of Physics or Map of Mathematics videos. Even though I changed the name, everything else is the same, and I'll be doing more of the same kind of videos! Sorry for any confusion.
Domain of Science next topic electricity map with batteries , types of solar electricity , machanical electricity , etc imagine and relate electricity to create , store , use in form maps
Domain of Science I get that you referenced the book that you used in this video but I think it would be really nice if you could provide free online sources for further reading. Obviously we can all just go and look this up on our own but I'm lazy and the time you spend would save time for everyone else too.
Domain of Science I feel that your are able to create same knowledge in creative way .. I think you can give creative ways to express science . best wishes
The problem with quantum biology is that it has an explanation for everything and is not testable or specific. So the reason we can't smell things that are cold is simply because when there's less humidity there's less volatile compounds in the air so less compounds a nose can detect. So when molecules move across a cell membrane parts of it can fit into a receptor. The volatile compound doesn't stop reacting with the nose after it reacts with one part of it, it keeps moving along the nasal passage and most probably another part of the molecule reacts with the nose receptors. This makes the compound have a more complex smell. Smell is more like the rods and cones cells in your eyes. You have specific cells and receptors that can recognize specific functional groups aldehydes, esters, alcohols, ketones, thiols, etc. These combinations lead to different smells
@pyropulse I understand you want quantum biology to explain sense of smell, probably many other things too, but you said it yourself, life is complex so something so simple most likely wouldn't suffice for the answer. The prevailing theory on smell is what I just described. If you've ever smelled formaldehyde you know it has a very distinct strong smell. Most chemicals that are just a functional group or only has one functional group are particularly sharp when detected that's how we know functional groups are what interacts with nose receptors. All you have to do is Google "how does sense of smell work" and you'll see I didn't just pull this out the air. Actually I learned this in undergrad in my behavioral psychology and neuroscience class. I have nothing to gain from making false statements.
We cannot smell cold objects because the molecules can't travel from the cold food to our nose. And molecules in cold objects(solids)are more tightly packed than liquid or gaseous form.
As a med student, I really appreciate that you explained the complex concepts in such an entertaining way. I recently was taking my receptor classes of physiology and I was particularly interested in sense of smell and that how little we know about it. Great video.
After watching the science part of UA-cam for about 6-7 years, I had never learned this before and you explain things so well it's amazing. Keep up the great work!
That also means taste is effected by quantum physics, it's been stated quite a lot that heavy water tastes sweet. Also with mirrored molecules, it should make a tiny difference how they are since the atoms outside of the benzene ring interact with each other in a very small manner. Or as you said, they just do both.
Yeah I'm unsure. There is a large smell component to taste, so it could be that heavy water actually smells different, but tastes the same. I think taste receptors work differently to smell receptors, but I'm going to have to look that up! :D
I discovered this channel today and I was totally impressed by all the science videos. I'm going to be a college freshman by this fall, and my major is probably physic or applied physics. Physics has been a huge part of my life since my junior year of high school and I found it extremely fascinating and enthralling. I just wanted to say thank you so much for making all the videos, keep up the good work! (tbh, all these videos should be on UA-cam trending)
I love your videos and the posters are so good! Never did I have a clearer picture (quite literally) of all kinds of sciences. This is amazing, thank you so much for divulging knowledge to those who are not experts in this field, great work.
Just finished chapter 5 of “Life on Edge” and needed additional help to understand inelastic quantum tunnelling. This is such a great video and animation to visualise the mechanics covered in that chapter, love it!
Never imagined how quantum physics could have such a strong link to something like our sense of smell. This opened my eyes to a whole new world i had completely ignored until now. Thank you very much, this was such a great video!!!
Love the video, thanks! I wonder how you would explain varying smelling ability. For example, dogs can smell seizures coming - presumably chemical changes in the body prior to a seizure. But, even staying within the human species, there are people with more adept senses of smell. More receptors? Ability to sense different vibrations? Interested in your thoughts. Thanks again - love the mapping.
From my research here are a few bonus facts: Bloodhounds have a 40x larger olfactory epithelium, and so physically more smell neurons, plus a larger area of their brain dedicated to smell. Bears have the best noses, 7 times more sensitive than a bloodhound's and can smell a carcass 20km away. Within humans the sense of smell does vary, but I don't know what causes this variation but my guess would be more or fewer receptors.
Hey, Dominic, thanks for this incredibly good video explanation of the quantum biology involved in olfaction. I've been searching all over the internet for just such an explanation and almost gave up. I have linked to it in an answer to a question on Quora. Thanks again. We need more science communicators like you.
Can you do some poster style videos on some of the formalism and basic ideas we use such as the notation of chemistry in it's various forms and how it has changed over time? As well as maybe other elementary/secondary areas of study for the hard sciences? I find this format incredibly entertaining and I think it suits my style of learning.
Your work is extraordinary! Keep doing the mapping teaching, according to the brain plasticity, there are many individuals that could change their way of understanding thanks to your maps.
If it hasn't been spotted already, I did notice starting at 8:31 there is a typo error for the word "experience". No big deal... I learn a tremendous amount from your videos and am very grateful for your kind and clear explanations! Much appreciated, I look forward to watching and learning more! :)
I like that this has quantum tunneling involved in not just human, but many animal's ability to smell. It shows that these organisms seem to use the same molecular apparatus to identify the molecules and I just think it's awesome that quantum physics takes place inside my face every time I breathe in. But what's even more awesome is that if this is possible here in this one example, what else could be possible through quantum technology? Other senses? There's always quantum computers, which seem to be getting on nicely. But what I find truly crazy is the potential for organisms on other planets around other stars - and what they might have done differently with such a crazy versatile tool. Then again, we're getting smarter and learning about it so I suppose it's now one of our new tools to explain things and test against - Hooray for progress!
Thank you very much for the excellent explanation.The scent is to me our most metaphysical experience. Since TV and digital communication don't use it at all, our imagination doesn't do much with it. We don't really dream of perfume like we do with images or music still when it hits us, it can get so intense and emotional.
Can you share the way you use to create your videos? Yes, your videos is comprehensive and coherent, easily learned and worth spreading. I would like to learn your way of illustrating knowledge to spread it out widely for teaching aspects. I think it would help a lot of student struggling with scientific subjects.
Excellent video. Quantum biology will be a hot topic this century. Not only in Vibrational Smell, but electron-transfer Photosynthesis, entanglement Bird Migration, etc. As a physicist, I am amazed that quantum effects are appearing in biology - BUT, think of this: If quantum physics effects are real, Nature and Evolution would have figured a way to use them to advantage. Nature has had eons to experiment. We physicist just stumbled upon the quantum world a century ago. Of course Nature beat us to it.
Your videos are excellent! They are simultaneously educational and entertaining. I hope you continue to create more content. I'm looking forward to it!
Fascinating. On a side note, it makes me sad that natural sciences are so popular and social sciences are not. There are so many channels on youtube about "pop-ifying" natural sciences but nothing comparable regarding social sciences that are so important for the progress of our civilization and our well-being as social beings. I wish someone with the required knowledge would create a channel like this about social sciences!
Nice videos as always! I think the new name is just a perfect description of your new content. Maybe you can do some videos about some of the Millennium Problems where you explain more in detail their history and current research status. Thank you!
I love these videos, the design is sooo good and learning something new at "the scienctific way" is very entertaining. Good luck!! Greetings from Chile!!
This is amazing and so well vulgarized. While I am a neuroscientist, I am far from having a good understanding of physics. You have helped me in this respect so thanks. So, I have an "out-there" question. Can humans detect smells that arise from basic human emotions, specifically fear and could we measure it. Ex: expose a participant to stimuli that induce a fear response while wearing a simple cotton t-shirt. take another blind subject and expose them to the odour and ask what emotion they think the person wearing the shirt was feeling. I know this sounds crazy but I do have a rationale behind it.
Quantum tunneling actually describes how an electron approaches the interface (at some energy) and can appear at both sides simultaneously. That is the "tunneling" effect, kind of like it is depicted in science fiction movies. Whether the particles does bleed into and through another dimension, that is yet to be debated. As of the moment, there has been a lot of computing and modelling work based on classical and quantum equations which guys like Einstein, Bohr, Schrodinger have formulated, but no one really understands this stuff. I have been working in gas sensing technology and interfaces for over a decade (Ph.D. and all) with about 50 publications. There also thermodynamic and magnetic components that we haven't even conceived of, let alone electron spin-up or spin-down. It becomes very very complicated to model, however for simplicity, 'the nose works'. We have yet to really scratch the surface...
As we are manifestations of the physical world, emerging from its womb in the microscopic realm and crawling up to the macroscopic world, it's unsurprising to me that we are immersed in all of its details, at all scales :) We are cities of cells, who themselves are cities of molecules, cohabitating and exchanging energy. Of course vibe-sensitive life would take advantage of the vibrations of molecules. It's also plausible to imagine this physical structure emerging and fine-tuning, given that life loves to create membranes that fold themselves up and stack themselves close together with small gaps in between (see: mitochondria, chloroplasts, intestines...) What is most interesting to me is that scientists are able to tune into the world, build models, make predictions, and test them with such a fine, intricate level of detail. Truly, huge round of applause for everybody involved in this process of discovery.
Its not that I go around smelling babies, that would be weird. But that is a thing, that babies have a smell that people find pleasant. Right? Please someone back me up... :P
I think it's something related to an evolutionary advantage. (To find our babies's smell pleasing would increase the chances of that baby not being thrown away) [Sorry for awful english]
I have 7 little siblings, so I have firsthand experience with baby smell. Newborns are totally clean right from the womb, so they smell perfect. Their breath smells like honey.
I don't remember ever subscribing to you, but somehow I still am. Yours is the second channel this happened to for me in the past week. Do you pay UA-cam to promote your channel?
heres my instantaneous hypothesis of a late night chem student who hasnt even gotten a B.S. I also didn't think for more then a second so it could fall apart easily. perhaps shape dictates a molecule's orientation such that the electron excites a particular chiral constituent. That is to say, some enantiomers smell different because a CH bond is vibrating more freely than a C-halogen bond for example. Jk no idea.
Hey just a quick question, what scientific field do you think is the most important to understand? Biology, Chemistry, Physics and others if there are any that I don't know about .. What is the most important to you and why? Also, I love the color schemes you choose for your maps!!
An impossible question to answer. Physics is my favourite, but there is no sense in saying it is more important than others, they are all great! The most important thing to me is the goal of the scientific method as a way of thinking and unpicking what is real and what isn't. Critical thinking and evidence based reasoning is fundamental because you can bring it to any discipline. Thanks! :D
HomeSkillenSLICE I think the most useful is having a good grasp of ALL of them. Great Insights come when trying to reconcile different models with each other. 😊 PS you don't have to officially Study all of them. Just follow your nose to hop from one to the next. Haha 😉
No problem and awesome, thank you for your time, great perspective I tend to think that Physics is the most important field, because it is the one field that determines what can and can't be done in other fields ex. is it possible to transfer hundreds of pages worth of information in 2-3 seconds flat? Well yes it is, because light can travel the earth 7 times and we can use this light to represent streams of information that are re-interpreted into words or forms of media Awesome video, looking forward to your future work!
Great video! Can't the fact that the proteins that participate in quantum tunneling are chiral account for the different smells of enantiomers? Like having a chiral Raman spectrophotometer?
Very interesting, thanks a lot! I think, this is just the tip of the iceberg. The brain as a whole is a quantum sensitive antenna for all kinds of influences. an interface for spirits. Now waiting for more mechanisms like this one to be revealed. And btw, the name is "Planck"
it fascinates me that we can have very different molecules smelling just the same!! that being said I have a question: to what substance would you be comparing isovanilin with when you say it smells "medicinal"? What is the smell of nasty, sickly medicinal?
If you don't know why you are subscribed to this channel, I just changed the channel name from DominicWalliman, so you probably subscribed after my Map of Physics or Map of Mathematics videos. Even though I changed the name, everything else is the same, and I'll be doing more of the same kind of videos! Sorry for any confusion.
i did not
and you so kind and awesome *_*
Domain of Science
next topic electricity map with batteries , types of solar electricity , machanical electricity , etc imagine and
relate electricity to create , store , use in form maps
Domain of Science I get that you referenced the book that you used in this video but I think it would be really nice if you could provide free online sources for further reading. Obviously we can all just go and look this up on our own but I'm lazy and the time you spend would save time for everyone else too.
Hey Peter, yeah you make a good point. I'll add it to my to-do list and see if I can find some good online resources. Thanks!
Domain of Science
I feel that your are able to create same knowledge in creative way .. I think you can give creative ways to express science .
best wishes
Your method of visually presenting everything does an amazing job of hammering in concepts and better understanding it all. Keep it up!
wrr
and if you don't eep it up, let it go!
I can honestly say I learned something completely new today.
Great video, thanks!
Rico Reyes I
I agree too
"because we can smell in the dark" is such a great line out of context
In fact we can smell more in the dark due to sensory depravation
@@sledgehamr6303 now what's sensory deprivation x)
i don't get it
I can't believe u haven't found your channel before now! As soon as I'm able I'm buying some posters, these are AMAZING 🤩
dude your science communication is ON POINT!
You should've mentioned that the both Vibration and Quantum tunneling theory explains why we can't smell relatively cold objects.
I hadn't even thought of that! That is very interesting.
The problem with quantum biology is that it has an explanation for everything and is not testable or specific. So the reason we can't smell things that are cold is simply because when there's less humidity there's less volatile compounds in the air so less compounds a nose can detect. So when molecules move across a cell membrane parts of it can fit into a receptor. The volatile compound doesn't stop reacting with the nose after it reacts with one part of it, it keeps moving along the nasal passage and most probably another part of the molecule reacts with the nose receptors. This makes the compound have a more complex smell. Smell is more like the rods and cones cells in your eyes. You have specific cells and receptors that can recognize specific functional groups aldehydes, esters, alcohols, ketones, thiols, etc. These combinations lead to different smells
@@xavierxrc good point
@pyropulse I understand you want quantum biology to explain sense of smell, probably many other things too, but you said it yourself, life is complex so something so simple most likely wouldn't suffice for the answer. The prevailing theory on smell is what I just described. If you've ever smelled formaldehyde you know it has a very distinct strong smell. Most chemicals that are just a functional group or only has one functional group are particularly sharp when detected that's how we know functional groups are what interacts with nose receptors. All you have to do is Google "how does sense of smell work" and you'll see I didn't just pull this out the air. Actually I learned this in undergrad in my behavioral psychology and neuroscience class. I have nothing to gain from making false statements.
We cannot smell cold objects because the molecules can't travel from the cold food to our nose.
And molecules in cold objects(solids)are more tightly packed than liquid or gaseous form.
As a med student, I really appreciate that you explained the complex concepts in such an entertaining way. I recently was taking my receptor classes of physiology and I was particularly interested in sense of smell and that how little we know about it. Great video.
you should make a map of engineering. I feel like it'd be really interesting
YES!
OH YEAH
OBVIOUSLY YES
Ohh my god ... I have been searching about Smell for months now and did not understand a thing .. This video is godsend !!
After watching the science part of UA-cam for about 6-7 years, I had never learned this before and you explain things so well it's amazing. Keep up the great work!
That also means taste is effected by quantum physics, it's been stated quite a lot that heavy water tastes sweet.
Also with mirrored molecules, it should make a tiny difference how they are since the atoms outside of the benzene ring interact with each other in a very small manner. Or as you said, they just do both.
Yeah I'm unsure. There is a large smell component to taste, so it could be that heavy water actually smells different, but tastes the same. I think taste receptors work differently to smell receptors, but I'm going to have to look that up! :D
It would be very interesting to find out! Anyhow, amazing job on your videos man, fell in love with this channel instantly. ♥
@@domainofscience Smell and taste actually do use the same kind of receptors. Thanks for the video.
@@JeffreyPhillipsFreeman then we should be able smell by mouth. Isn't it?
I discovered this channel today and I was totally impressed by all the science videos. I'm going to be a college freshman by this fall, and my major is probably physic or applied physics. Physics has been a huge part of my life since my junior year of high school and I found it extremely fascinating and enthralling. I just wanted to say thank you so much for making all the videos, keep up the good work! (tbh, all these videos should be on UA-cam trending)
Hey Tammy! How is your undergraduate degree in physics going? I am in my senior year of chemistry and I absolutely love it!
This is actually one of the best videos I've watched ever. Thanks for your time and good explanations always
I love your videos and the posters are so good! Never did I have a clearer picture (quite literally) of all kinds of sciences. This is amazing, thank you so much for divulging knowledge to those who are not experts in this field, great work.
Just finished chapter 5 of “Life on Edge” and needed additional help to understand inelastic quantum tunnelling. This is such a great video and animation to visualise the mechanics covered in that chapter, love it!
Fantastic video, interesting as always. Keep it up!
Your channel is kind of a gold nugget, which I've found recently.
Great work, waiting for more!
Never imagined how quantum physics could have such a strong link to something like our sense of smell. This opened my eyes to a whole new world i had completely ignored until now.
Thank you very much, this was such a great video!!!
I never posted a comment before but I feel I owe you this much. Great presentation!
Love the video, thanks! I wonder how you would explain varying smelling ability. For example, dogs can smell seizures coming - presumably chemical changes in the body prior to a seizure. But, even staying within the human species, there are people with more adept senses of smell. More receptors? Ability to sense different vibrations? Interested in your thoughts. Thanks again - love the mapping.
From my research here are a few bonus facts: Bloodhounds have a 40x larger olfactory epithelium, and so physically more smell neurons, plus a larger area of their brain dedicated to smell. Bears have the best noses, 7 times more sensitive than a bloodhound's and can smell a carcass 20km away. Within humans the sense of smell does vary, but I don't know what causes this variation but my guess would be more or fewer receptors.
Hey, Dominic, thanks for this incredibly good video explanation of the quantum biology involved in olfaction. I've been searching all over the internet for just such an explanation and almost gave up. I have linked to it in an answer to a question on Quora. Thanks again. We need more science communicators like you.
One of the most interesting videos i've ever seen on UA-cam 😍
Nice video. Would love to see more about our senses, how we taste, see, etc.
Can you do some poster style videos on some of the formalism and basic ideas we use such as the notation of chemistry in it's various forms and how it has changed over time? As well as maybe other elementary/secondary areas of study for the hard sciences? I find this format incredibly entertaining and I think it suits my style of learning.
👋 Hello I am a request:
'Map of Philosophy' por favor
:)
MinionNoMore carneades.org already have one ;)
Unfortunately says "under construction", and I believe nothing can be as beautiful as Dominic's style (:
I have*
Idk why i think this comment is so adorable
joao skate it wasn’t as clear as these videos tho
I really like the way you present the information, especially the evidence and flaws of the conclusion. It makes the learning so much more interesting
Please more of this! The way of explanation is just so soothing... and conveniently, it's about quantum stuff!!
Your work is extraordinary! Keep doing the mapping teaching, according to the brain plasticity, there are many individuals that could change their way of understanding thanks to your maps.
If it hasn't been spotted already, I did notice starting at 8:31 there is a typo error for the word "experience". No big deal... I learn a tremendous amount from your videos and am very grateful for your kind and clear explanations! Much appreciated, I look forward to watching and learning more! :)
Hey thanks! Yeah someone pointed that out to me and I fixed it in the posters. The video will have to stay as it is though. Thanks very much! :D
Very informative, keep doing these fantastic videos! Can you do a video on Entropy?
I like that this has quantum tunneling involved in not just human, but many animal's ability to smell. It shows that these organisms seem to use the same molecular apparatus to identify the molecules and I just think it's awesome that quantum physics takes place inside my face every time I breathe in.
But what's even more awesome is that if this is possible here in this one example, what else could be possible through quantum technology? Other senses? There's always quantum computers, which seem to be getting on nicely. But what I find truly crazy is the potential for organisms on other planets around other stars - and what they might have done differently with such a crazy versatile tool. Then again, we're getting smarter and learning about it so I suppose it's now one of our new tools to explain things and test against - Hooray for progress!
Yep, I did not regret my subscription. That was hugely interesting and nicely explained. The animation and map format suits your style.
Thank you very much for the excellent explanation.The scent is to me our most metaphysical experience.
Since TV and digital communication don't use it at all, our imagination doesn't do much with it. We don't really dream of perfume like we do with images or music still when it hits us, it can get so intense and emotional.
map of biology, chemistry, and medicine please.
Oh medicine please!
I really like the high level science content of this videos and you have a very simple way of explaining things.
Can you share the way you use to create your videos? Yes, your videos is comprehensive and coherent, easily learned and worth spreading. I would like to learn your way of illustrating knowledge to spread it out widely for teaching aspects. I think it would help a lot of student struggling with scientific subjects.
Your videos are phenomenal! You make learning difficult subjects so easy : )
Thank you for an interesting video. I appreciate that you provide references in the description.
I learn something new with every one of your videos. Keep it up!
what software are you using for edit this video ?
Excellent video. Quantum biology will be a hot topic this century. Not only in Vibrational Smell, but electron-transfer Photosynthesis, entanglement Bird Migration, etc. As a physicist, I am amazed that quantum effects are appearing in biology - BUT, think of this: If quantum physics effects are real, Nature and Evolution would have figured a way to use them to advantage. Nature has had eons to experiment. We physicist just stumbled upon the quantum world a century ago. Of course Nature beat us to it.
"inelastic electron tunnelling spectroscopy" sounds profoundly interesting. I'll have to look into that. thanks!
Finally a Video that actually explain what smell is, not only how it works or stupid facts about it
Your videos are excellent! They are simultaneously educational and entertaining. I hope you continue to create more content. I'm looking forward to it!
Well done! And I love the comments this has generated!
Wow, subscribed when the map of math video came out, and quality has only been improving!
Fascinating.
On a side note, it makes me sad that natural sciences are so popular and social sciences are not. There are so many channels on youtube about "pop-ifying" natural sciences but nothing comparable regarding social sciences that are so important for the progress of our civilization and our well-being as social beings.
I wish someone with the required knowledge would create a channel like this about social sciences!
Adrian Mena Look at the channel CGP Grey
Nice videos as always! I think the new name is just a perfect description of your new content. Maybe you can do some videos about some of the Millennium Problems where you explain more in detail their history and current research status. Thank you!
Well done sir. Hit all the points I’ve been wondering about. Thank you
I love these videos, the design is sooo good and learning something new at "the scienctific way" is very entertaining. Good luck!! Greetings from Chile!!
Can you please make a separate video describing quantum tunneling? Your videos are amazing thank you
Quantum mechanics/physics is super underrated for how cool it is.
This is amazing and so well vulgarized. While I am a neuroscientist, I am far from having a good understanding of physics. You have helped me in this respect so thanks. So, I have an "out-there" question. Can humans detect smells that arise from basic human emotions, specifically fear and could we measure it. Ex: expose a participant to stimuli that induce a fear response while wearing a simple cotton t-shirt. take another blind subject and expose them to the odour and ask what emotion they think the person wearing the shirt was feeling. I know this sounds crazy but I do have a rationale behind it.
I thought this was going to be a boring video, I was wrong! very informative.
Quantum tunneling actually describes how an electron approaches the interface (at some energy) and can appear at both sides simultaneously. That is the "tunneling" effect, kind of like it is depicted in science fiction movies. Whether the particles does bleed into and through another dimension, that is yet to be debated. As of the moment, there has been a lot of computing and modelling work based on classical and quantum equations which guys like Einstein, Bohr, Schrodinger have formulated, but no one really understands this stuff. I have been working in gas sensing technology and interfaces for over a decade (Ph.D. and all) with about 50 publications.
There also thermodynamic and magnetic components that we haven't even conceived of, let alone electron spin-up or spin-down. It becomes very very complicated to model, however for simplicity, 'the nose works'. We have yet to really scratch the surface...
brilliant channel!! I can't stop watching your videos! Great job!
I love your videos! can't wait to keep learning from you! im sure a lot of us would like to know your video making process!
Bro, Your Videos Are Always Nice And Gives Knowledge!! GOOD WORK
As we are manifestations of the physical world, emerging from its womb in the microscopic realm and crawling up to the macroscopic world, it's unsurprising to me that we are immersed in all of its details, at all scales :)
We are cities of cells, who themselves are cities of molecules, cohabitating and exchanging energy. Of course vibe-sensitive life would take advantage of the vibrations of molecules. It's also plausible to imagine this physical structure emerging and fine-tuning, given that life loves to create membranes that fold themselves up and stack themselves close together with small gaps in between (see: mitochondria, chloroplasts, intestines...)
What is most interesting to me is that scientists are able to tune into the world, build models, make predictions, and test them with such a fine, intricate level of detail. Truly, huge round of applause for everybody involved in this process of discovery.
This video made me unbelievably happy. :D Anyone else? Please, more videos on quantum biology! ;)
Always an intriguing watch, thanks!
Please also do a video about the quantum biology in photosynthesis or bird navigation!
Nice video man keep it up.I wonder would you ever make a Map of Computer Science or something like that :D.
Your videos are great! I think a cool video topic might be different number systems, base-8 or base-12 would be interesting.
videos are absolutely awesome please keep up the great work.
Brilliant. Absolutely brilliant work! Love it!
soo interesting, thanks for the video!
At 8:38 I started to smell some candy and it was the first time I smelled something knowing that my nose is some crazy quantum system. Incredible.
Amazing explanation man, really appreciate it❤️
wow, nice video, i been wondering the same thing for so many years. Glad I found this video.
The book (life on the edge ) is awesome ❤️
wait... newborn baby smell? What? Is that like a fresh-out-of-the uterus smell or something else? How long does it last? So many questions
Its not that I go around smelling babies, that would be weird. But that is a thing, that babies have a smell that people find pleasant. Right? Please someone back me up... :P
Sure, man, sure. We won't question your baby smelling habit. ;)
I think it's something related to an evolutionary advantage. (To find our babies's smell pleasing would increase the chances of that baby not being thrown away) [Sorry for awful english]
I have 7 little siblings, so I have firsthand experience with baby smell. Newborns are totally clean right from the womb, so they smell perfect. Their breath smells like honey.
baby powder
I loved your video. Could you please put some of your references in the comment section. I m interested to read more about it as physicist.
how this video is made ???? please upload a video for that . your graphical representation of everything is super
I don't remember ever subscribing to you, but somehow I still am. Yours is the second channel this happened to for me in the past week. Do you pay UA-cam to promote your channel?
That's super weird. No I haven't paid for any promotion, and I won't be offended if you unsub :)
noreaction he renamed his channel and pic
That makes total sense, thank you. :)
Highly recommend the book he mentions in the description
heres my instantaneous hypothesis of a late night chem student who hasnt even gotten a B.S. I also didn't think for more then a second so it could fall apart easily.
perhaps shape dictates a molecule's orientation such that the electron excites a particular chiral constituent. That is to say, some enantiomers smell different because a CH bond is vibrating more freely than a C-halogen bond for example.
Jk no idea.
I read the title as "Quantum Noose"
Hey just a quick question, what scientific field do you think is the most important to understand? Biology, Chemistry, Physics and others if there are any that I don't know about .. What is the most important to you and why?
Also, I love the color schemes you choose for your maps!!
An impossible question to answer. Physics is my favourite, but there is no sense in saying it is more important than others, they are all great! The most important thing to me is the goal of the scientific method as a way of thinking and unpicking what is real and what isn't. Critical thinking and evidence based reasoning is fundamental because you can bring it to any discipline. Thanks! :D
HomeSkillenSLICE I think the most useful is having a good grasp of ALL of them. Great Insights come when trying to reconcile different models with each other. 😊
PS you don't have to officially Study all of them. Just follow your nose to hop from one to the next. Haha 😉
No problem and awesome, thank you for your time, great perspective
I tend to think that Physics is the most important field, because it is the one field that determines what can and can't be done in other fields ex. is it possible to transfer hundreds of pages worth of information in 2-3 seconds flat? Well yes it is, because light can travel the earth 7 times and we can use this light to represent streams of information that are re-interpreted into words or forms of media
Awesome video, looking forward to your future work!
love your channel dude
Very well explained, congrats.
This sounds like the observer effect, one approach looked for particles, the other waves, both kinda true.
I found this video very informative and well explained. Thank you for sharing. : )
Great video! Can't the fact that the proteins that participate in quantum tunneling are chiral account for the different smells of enantiomers? Like having a chiral Raman spectrophotometer?
I think I'm in love... 😍
Very interesting, thanks a lot!
I think, this is just the tip of the iceberg. The brain as a whole is a quantum sensitive antenna for all kinds of influences. an interface for spirits. Now waiting for more mechanisms like this one to be revealed.
And btw, the name is "Planck"
High quality videos man ☺
Can you do about magnetic sensors in birds too. Your map is so cool and amazing ❤❤❤
Just fantastic kindly just send me the papers links in order to a short lecture to our bio-students.
Great video, but I think you misspelled planck's contant when discussing the energy of photons.
Anyways, keep up the good work!
Amazing as always !
awesome video. deserves a subscription.
I really like the map style
Awesome stuff, I bet we humans have some many things we just don’t know we are capable of !
Do a Chemistry Map, great videos.
Could u try and put ur resources and references in the description for future videos?
Map of computer science!!! (and/or games too)
use that for quantum computer security and space saving memory ,,,not “memory” but KNOW when stimulated or click
it fascinates me that we can have very different molecules smelling just the same!!
that being said I have a question: to what substance would you be comparing isovanilin with when you say it smells "medicinal"? What is the smell of nasty, sickly medicinal?
Great video! It's mind blowing!😃