The Loudest Sound In The Quietest Room

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  • Опубліковано 12 чер 2023
  • 3M delivers unique, science-based solutions at scale to help build a brighter future. See how 3M Science is shaping the future: bit.ly/3MxJamesYT
    In this video, I traveled to 3M to see how silence is science. Watch to see how the quietest room is used to study how sound waves move, which helps build the sound-damping products we use every day.
    Thanks to Davey for helping me out in this video! / @aprilanddaveyvlogs
    Shop the Action Lab Science Gear here: theactionlab.com/
    Checkout my experiment book: amzn.to/2Wf07x1
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1 тис.

  • @TheActionLab

    Who knows what I said in the reverberant chamber as I walked away from the camera?

  • @grovermatic

    I remember how weird it felt when I first tried noise cancelling headphones. Instantly felt like all my sinuses had plugged up!

  • @Ithenna
    @Ithenna  +419

    That balloon pop was unexpectedly hilarious. It went from a gunshot loud reverberating bang in the first room to a pathetic tiny blip in the second.

  • @TheDarkPacific

    Pretty sure the closest you could get to painting the quiest room, with the blackest paint, would be a sensory deprivation chamber

  • @BenjaminRay

    That weird empty pressure feeling also happens when you put your ear really close to an inflated balloon.

  • @deanlawson6880

    That's fascinating. I've seen articles people have written saying that you can't spend more than a few minutes in one of those super quiet rooms without becoming really bothered and some people can go crazy from the crushing silence. It doesn't seem (to me) like it would be a big deal really just being in a real quiet room, just interesting and different.

  • @Rainyalley

    2:11

  • @CountGremlin

    As someone with non stop tinnitus, i wonder how it would sound like being in that super quiet room

  • @GetMoGaming

    I think that "deafening silence" feeling is caused by your brain's expectation to hear reflections from the environment, and not hearing it. That's the VOID you feel. It's a kind of claustrophobia, induced by the abnormal surroundings.

  • @claytonharting9899

    Walking away from the camera in the super echo chamber is such an incredible effect, I want to use that for a game or movie or something

  • @justrelax8564

    You should do more of these visits. I love it. And ,

  • @DialogDontArgue

    Hahaha at

  • @shootinbruin3614

    Just for reference, most gunshots are far louder than 143dB, generally ranging from 155+ all the way to almost 170, depending on caliber and barrel length. The 140 range is actually closer to what a suppressed (silenced) 5.56x45mm rifle would generally meter. Unless they're chambered for relatively small cartridges, "silenced" guns are usually quite loud, loud enough that hearing protection is still recommended. Hope this helps. Great video!

  • @R.M.MacFru

    I've been in an anechoic chamber when I was younger. That room is just... oppressively quiet. What they didn't show was if you are not facing the person you're speaking to...they won't hear you even from three feet away.

  • @LoveHandle4890

    The Worlds Quietest Room really takes “Quiet people have the loudest minds” to a whole new level.

  • @ChesterManfred

    4:25

  • @santhoshsam40

    happy to see that this channel has grown this much in few years, from homemade science experiments to visiting companies

  • @MatVeiQaaa

    I used to sort an archive room once. Many stalls filled with paper. Quietest room I’ve ever been at. Instead of “feeing of pressure” on my ears I rather felt that the pressure I wasn’t even aware of was finally gone, it was just heaven. Sorting the archive was quite meditative too, loved it. I would compare the feeling with what it feels like using a high refresh rate screen after you are used to 60Hz: the screen is just easier to look at and feels more natural, you feel the lack of pressure on the eyes you didn’t suspect.

  • @darrylpioch2055

    The anechoic chamber is sick. The room I mix in is anechoic but not THAT anechoic haha. Tracking vocals or electric guitar in there or mixing in it on high end monitors would be amazing. Once you get used to working in that kind of acoustic environment nothing comes close to it.