+Emilio Natera He has an amazing youtube channel. I like how he illustrates/describes the topics he presents. I am certainly a long term fan of him, and hearing him in a place i never would have expected just jaw dropped me.
So cool! At 14:08 Tom explains they are taking Chris' temperature to do studies on how the body handles late nights and lack of sleep. This is to do further studies for the people down on earth. They really did mean it when they said they are doing 100s of experients just then. I wonder what kind of other things they are researching for people like us :)
Watching this video I just found myself smiling and feeling so happy. These men, and all the ones supporting them on the ground are such great role models, much more inspiring than a sports athlete could ever be in my opinion. Going to space is such an awesome human accomplishment, and it belongs to all of us regardless of gender or race, we rock!
HA 3:16 its Destin from smarter every day..how cool. I've seen the episode with the cats =) Must be a cool feeling to be in that hangout..knowing your voice is travelin to space and the guys up there answer. Guess it feels a bit like the inventor of the phone had when making his first call and people faaar away answer =)
These guys are great and seem like such incredibly good-natured and solid individuals. They're sort of nerdy - and they neither play up that idea nor try to hide it. They know who they are and seem in love with life, not self-obsessed in any capacity. Wish there were more people in the world with that level of security!
They literally know so much about so much!! lol Im in awe of the amount of hours of studying they put in and the knowledge they have to have in order to conduct all those experiments...not to mention the training they go through to just stay alive and do daily things like use the toilet! You guys are awesome!! Thanks giving up so much for the betterment of mankind! They're out of this world ;)
+Victor Ocasio A fly's world is not anyway near as dominated by gravity as the human-scale world. Fly's life is dominated by fluid dynamics, friction and electrostatic forces, so I would think they'd fly pretty much the same on the space station. But then I looked it up. There were living flies (as a food for a spider) and fruit flies in space. And there are some videos on youtube. The flies (even though born in space) are mostly just tumbling, hovering in the middle of nowhere, and when they try to get somewhere, they are bumping around with seemingly no coordination. I don't know, it looks like they can't orientate, which would make sense if they used gravity for that.
What a staggering achievement and experience for humans and the guys and gals who manage to get the chance to hang out on the space station for a while. So envious! Extremely inspiring just watching you, and allowing us to share your insight.
Any dream could become reality 'It doesn't matter how hard you hit, it's about how hard you can get hit and carry on chasing and making your dreams come true'.
Correction: They use England time. Because it is right between Kazakhstan and Houston (Time zones, I mean) So they are able to communicate with both at reasonable hours.
I cant imagine some of the dreams/nightmares these astronauts have while sleeping in space. Like drifting out of the solar system into a far off frontier in another system. Very creepy.
There is something so cool in this... Just the thought that we have come this far is amazing! I love how the ISS is the one place where nationality is nothing. People are people, regardless of nationality there!
I love all of videos from the space station and am and a big fan of these guys. How does the drill stick to the wall at 10:07. I find this interesting because in some cases felcrow is used to "adhere" objects to the space station wall. Thanks for any response.
9:00 I would bring Excetera, She always gets left at the end of other important discoveries and deserves some time in the spotlight. She has a great personality and an endless supply of stories and good jokes.
would it be posible to make a long term video from the Tranquility node. I would love to go to that to see and hear what it would to be their and hear that when I fall asleep. love you guys keep up the great work Good luck with the dragon.
People asking "what's on Chris' head?" are really ignorant as they obviously didn't watch the video as it gets answered in it. Also to DerPm4N101: The Earth is spinning and the ISS is travelling at something like 17000 mph. The spacestation needs to travel that fast to stop the Earth's gravity pulling it down. It's a lot of physics but basically it needs to fall sideways as fast as it's falling to earth to cancel it out so it can stay up there.
Creed Bratton Lazy? It's the opposite, we don't have any spare time because of working hard. I was simply interested in the content, but didn't have time to watch it all, is that a crime?
Chris Hadfield seems to be the 'nicest' and easiest going one of the expedition, but no one beats Sunita Williams overall. She comes across as a favorite aunt to me. =)
I would like to know if the space station rotate, would they feel like they are upside down or side way? can they do their tasks by stand upward? does it really matter for them to distinguish up and down inside the space station?
I was sitting here fiddling with my mobile phone and all the sudden I tried to place it in the air in front of me without thinking about it and it fell on my keyboard. I've been watching to many of these videos!
OK, I'm gonna postulate this question for anyone to take. Since the legs are of little use in space, why not bind them together to prevent any unwanted movement? Also, why not recruit paraplegic and amputees to perform work in the station environment for the same reasons.
They would slow down slightly because of air resistance - but practically speaking, yes they could push off with their feet lightly and just glide from one end to the other without effort.
yeah ! youre right , im not really sure if weigh is the net sum of all the forces over you (would include centripetal force) or just the gravitational ones :P thanks for the feedback man ! PS: did you know centrifugal force its an ilusion you get when centripetal force acts on your body since your body momentum wants to continue in a linear movement, not circular? centripetal force (pointing inward towards the center)
Keep unifying the globe gentleman. We only have one rock, and you are helping us all to realize that we need to work together to conquer the large issues in front of us all.
Sound waves are pressure waves. They need a medium to propagate (air, water). So there is no sound in space. Electromagntic wave can propagate in vacuum (light, radio, micro wave etc.).
is the energy expended in making movements in zero gravity significantly less as there is little resistance? If so, does this mean that the quantity of food required for energy everyday is much less (ie just the amount required for vital body functions such as pumping blood, digesting, breathing etc)?
Hey astronauts I was wondering how the time differential works for example if you were in a real time call with someone on the ground and as time goes faster up their then it does down here does it feel faster or slower during the call
You realize that the time differential is so insignificant that you couldn't even blink in it even if you stacked the time differential of a whole year. So i highly doubt they will notice it in a call unless they are a computer.
Jayman2800 Half a nano-second per? because what you said is basically like, if there are 2 cars and 1 travels 60 mph and the other travels 50 mph then the differential is 10 miles. 10 miles per what?
Brilliant. Great questions from students. You can tell they are all science geeks, smart as a whip and proud of it. Astronaut in the red shirt: Your watch strap is way loose. Meaning you have too many links in it. Which equals wasted fuel getting your unnecessary watch strap links into space. Tut tut! Unless, of course, being in space makes your arms thinner?!
I don't remember which video, but I believe Chris Hadfield talked about this at some point - you'd expect to spend less energy in space, since you don't have to work hard to keep yourself upright - but what they actually find is that almost all astronauts spend 'more' energy in space than they do normally, and they aren't quite sure why. Sorry I can't find the specific video where they talk about it.
It also has alot implications for people that do night shifts or work extremely long hours and for astronauts living in space. How they can improve work efficienty and how they can improve rest aswell.
I believe you are confusing two things here. First: mass isn't equal to weight. The weight of an object is determined by a gravitational pull. The mass of an object stays the same, even in space. Second: E=MC2 isn't the right equation to calculate the energy of the object hitting your face, it should be E=1/2 mv2 (a half times m times (v squared)), where v is velocity, and m the mass. So if an object of 1 kg in space is thrown at my face with 2 meters per second, then E would equal to 2 Joule.
I live in Melbourne, Australia. I once went outside in the morning to see the ISS The odd thing was, it went up on a very high angle and came on a very high angle why?
Харесвам всички видеоклипове. Чудя се как така стоят полуседнали?...поне така мисля. как се придържат в космическото пространство. Всичко е толкова интересно?. Момчета, обичам ви! Вие сте страхотни! Бог да ви благослови!
Just watching Chris Hadfield sit criss cross floating is hilarious!
Chris is just so freakin' funny just sitting in mid air with that thermometer thing on his forehead.
My jaw dropped when i heard Destins voice!
OMG!! Me too!
+nevar108 aww, you spoiled it for me...Well I guess I did. Its a bad habit to read comments during the vid.
why?
+Monscent because he is awesome maybe? He is a really cool dude
+Emilio Natera He has an amazing youtube channel. I like how he illustrates/describes the topics he presents. I am certainly a long term fan of him, and hearing him in a place i never would have expected just jaw dropped me.
The only good thing Google+ ever did.
AHAHAHAHA thanks for the laugh man
Found the Australian.
Oscillator Huh?
BEST PHOTO PROFIL I EVER SAW !!!!! :))))))))))))))
I love how they were all just wiggling around after destins question! haha.
4:21 Chris tries it himself xP
Ok so they have Internet in space....bye guys im going to space
So cool! At 14:08 Tom explains they are taking Chris' temperature to do studies on how the body handles late nights and lack of sleep. This is to do further studies for the people down on earth. They really did mean it when they said they are doing 100s of experients just then. I wonder what kind of other things they are researching for people like us :)
Chris is just floating in a ball, it's so funny to look at
Watching this video I just found myself smiling and feeling so happy. These men, and all the ones supporting them on the ground are such great role models, much more inspiring than a sports athlete could ever be in my opinion. Going to space is such an awesome human accomplishment, and it belongs to all of us regardless of gender or race, we rock!
the combined IQ in this video is about 400 I would guess
May be higher, 130-140ish is the breakpoint for genius level
NilleMr20 You don't need to be savant to get into space, just discipline and a good education and the ability to not be an idiot...
Jayman2800 Savant is more like 160+
140 is relatively common at their level, I'm sure.
SomethingCool51 I will have to agree with you there.. They obviously have above average intelligence, 140 would be a good guess.
lol
HA 3:16 its Destin from smarter every day..how cool. I've seen the episode with the cats =)
Must be a cool feeling to be in that hangout..knowing your voice is travelin to space and the guys up there answer.
Guess it feels a bit like the inventor of the phone had when making his first call and people faaar away answer =)
I knew it was him the second he started talking!
When they came back to Earth i bet they kept letting go things thinking it just float. Lol
I love Chris Hadfield so much. He's my inspiration. (づ。◕‿‿◕。)づ
These guys are great and seem like such incredibly good-natured and solid individuals. They're sort of nerdy - and they neither play up that idea nor try to hide it. They know who they are and seem in love with life, not self-obsessed in any capacity. Wish there were more people in the world with that level of security!
They literally know so much about so much!! lol Im in awe of the amount of hours of studying they put in and the knowledge they have to have in order to conduct all those experiments...not to mention the training they go through to just stay alive and do daily things like use the toilet! You guys are awesome!! Thanks giving up so much for the betterment of mankind! They're out of this world ;)
SMARTER EVERY DAYYYY
Smarter every day I seen that episode of when he messaged that so woo hoo me
These videos make me smile :)
Such great questions and answers. Can I like this more than once?
love who astronauts start kinda testing dat turning trick themselves.
PLEASE CONTINUE THESE VIDEOS
MOAR FLOATING STUFFS!!!! MOAR!!!
I srsly.. could watch a spinning camera floating in the station for HOURS.
what if a fly went to the space station? would it fly faster
+Victor Ocasio A fly's world is not anyway near as dominated by gravity as the human-scale world. Fly's life is dominated by fluid dynamics, friction and electrostatic forces, so I would think they'd fly pretty much the same on the space station.
But then I looked it up. There were living flies (as a food for a spider) and fruit flies in space. And there are some videos on youtube. The flies (even though born in space) are mostly just tumbling, hovering in the middle of nowhere, and when they try to get somewhere, they are bumping around with seemingly no coordination. I don't know, it looks like they can't orientate, which would make sense if they used gravity for that.
What a staggering achievement and experience for humans and the guys and gals who manage to get the chance to hang out on the space station for a while. So envious!
Extremely inspiring just watching you, and allowing us to share your insight.
I want to get my own space station. Why? Only for floating in zero gravity :D.
This is one of the best hangouts yet. Good questions!
Smartereveryday! Wouh just realized they anwserd the question coool!
Any dream could become reality 'It doesn't matter how hard you hit, it's about how hard you can get hit and carry on chasing and making your dreams come true'.
how can you tell the time in space? would it have its own time zone?
What time zone do ye go by on the ISS?
shanemaguire97 I think Kazakhstan time
Probably same as the place they left from, to keep sleep cycle.
Correction: They use England time. Because it is right between Kazakhstan and Houston (Time zones, I mean) So they are able to communicate with both at reasonable hours.
+Jayman2800 Not quite; they use UTC. British time is an hour ahead of UTC from the last weekend of March to the last weekend of October every year.
Nillie
Ah, Okay thank you
I cant imagine some of the dreams/nightmares these astronauts have while sleeping in space. Like drifting out of the solar system into a far off frontier in another system. Very creepy.
There is something so cool in this... Just the thought that we have come this far is amazing! I love how the ISS is the one place where nationality is nothing. People are people, regardless of nationality there!
Great down to earth guys :P
Destin's question from Smarter everyday was just awesome! Flipping cat physics... LOL
I love all of videos from the space station and am and a big fan of these guys. How does the drill stick to the wall at 10:07. I find this interesting because in some cases felcrow is used to "adhere" objects to the space station wall. Thanks for any response.
Magnets.
I think it might be Velcro
Is it just me or does the guy reading the questions aloud sound very similar to Kermit The Frog?
Smarter everyday
These Space vids are so cool.
yes i love that too that's part of the reason i watch all of these space videos!!
So nice feeling to flying around the internal area of the space !!!!!!!!!
DESTIN! Smarter every day!! Excellent.
Lol i love how they spin the microphone so nonchalantly
Chris Hadfield sounds like Clint Eastwood somewhat
They both look constipated as well.
Sam Keller Well most astronauts and cosmonauts always look like that.
I came here just to see if Chris would do an experiment with a multirotor .....
Iniesta became an astronaut..
this is so exciting and i have learned a lot and enjoy it immensely
Watch the video at 14:05. It's a temperature sensor.
9:00 I would bring Excetera, She always gets left at the end of other important discoveries and deserves some time in the spotlight. She has a great personality and an endless supply of stories and good jokes.
What time zone do you have your clocks/watches on?
Do you have to pay for hydro and other bills up there?
would it be posible to make a long term video from the Tranquility node. I would love to go to that to see and hear what it would to be their and hear that when I fall asleep.
love you guys keep up the great work Good luck with the dragon.
People asking "what's on Chris' head?" are really ignorant as they obviously didn't watch the video as it gets answered in it.
Also to DerPm4N101: The Earth is spinning and the ISS is travelling at something like 17000 mph. The spacestation needs to travel that fast to stop the Earth's gravity pulling it down. It's a lot of physics but basically it needs to fall sideways as fast as it's falling to earth to cancel it out so it can stay up there.
Some people don't have time to watch an entire 20 minute video...
Why would they bother commenting on it then.
Creed Bratton Because they're interested in what's on his head, but don't have time to find out where in the video they explain it?
Pro Era If they came to the video and didn't want to watch it then just leave. If they want to find out they can stop being lazy and watch it.
Creed Bratton Lazy? It's the opposite, we don't have any spare time because of working hard. I was simply interested in the content, but didn't have time to watch it all, is that a crime?
The Acoustics are fantastic
Hadfeilds watch...
Thank you for posting
Chris Hadfield seems to be the 'nicest' and easiest going one of the expedition, but no one beats Sunita Williams overall. She comes across as a favorite aunt to me. =)
I would like to know if the space station rotate, would they feel like they are upside down or side way? can they do their tasks by stand upward? does it really matter for them to distinguish up and down inside the space station?
these guys look like kids in space, like really smart kids up there, they really must love what they did/are doing
I was sitting here fiddling with my mobile phone and all the sudden I tried to place it in the air in front of me without thinking about it and it fell on my keyboard. I've been watching to many of these videos!
Tank you Space Station NASA
i love how after answering smartereveryday, the two other guys start trying the wiggle thing too.
OK, I'm gonna postulate this question for anyone to take. Since the legs are of little use in space, why not bind them together to prevent any unwanted movement?
Also, why not recruit paraplegic and amputees to perform work in the station environment for the same reasons.
What camera has Chriss got there canon or ?
Love this! Smarter Every Day by destinws2 thank you for the question.
Hi, do you regularly see extra terrestrials flying around ? have they tried to contact you/ disrupt your electronics
They would slow down slightly because of air resistance - but practically speaking, yes they could push off with their feet lightly and just glide from one end to the other without effort.
Do touchscreens, such as the ones on the iPad and Galaxy S4, work in space/Zero Gravity?
Watching those videos makes me want to go to space!
yeah ! youre right , im not really sure if weigh is the net sum of all the forces over you (would include centripetal force) or just the gravitational ones :P
thanks for the feedback man !
PS: did you know centrifugal force its an ilusion you get when centripetal force acts on your body since your body momentum wants to continue in a linear movement, not circular? centripetal force (pointing inward towards the center)
can a disable person be less disable in the internayional space station?
do you ever run of experiments too in the internation space station?
Can you go in EVA?
i have a question....who iron the trousers..
Keep unifying the globe gentleman. We only have one rock, and you are helping us all to realize that we need to work together to conquer the large issues in front of us all.
Sound waves are pressure waves. They need a medium to propagate (air, water). So there is no sound in space. Electromagntic wave can propagate in vacuum (light, radio, micro wave etc.).
this is soooo sickkk
All of the astronauts seem to be genuinely the nicest men.
That's what I thought. Thanks!
is the energy expended in making movements in zero gravity significantly less as there is little resistance? If so, does this mean that the quantity of food required for energy everyday is much less (ie just the amount required for vital body functions such as pumping blood, digesting, breathing etc)?
Yey, Destins question got in :)
These guys are awesome. They manage to communicate a vital message: the importance of Mankind reaching for the stars.
Hey astronauts I was wondering how the time differential works for example if you were in a real time call with someone on the ground and as time goes faster up their then it does down here does it feel faster or slower during the call
lol
You realize that the time differential is so insignificant that you couldn't even blink in it even if you stacked the time differential of a whole year. So i highly doubt they will notice it in a call unless they are a computer.
The time differential is less then half a nano-second
Jayman2800 Half a nano-second per? because what you said is basically like, if there are 2 cars and 1 travels 60 mph and the other travels 50 mph then the differential is 10 miles. 10 miles per what?
-NineTailed- Less than half a second differential in time from earth to the ISS
cool hang out in space
Why are there only 40 thousand views? THIS IS SPACE, SPAAAAAAAAAAACE!
Chris just chilling there like the boss he is.
Brilliant. Great questions from students. You can tell they are all science geeks, smart as a whip and proud of it. Astronaut in the red shirt: Your watch strap is way loose. Meaning you have too many links in it. Which equals wasted fuel getting your unnecessary watch strap links into space. Tut tut! Unless, of course, being in space makes your arms thinner?!
Is that a "Makita" drill in top left corner??
I don't remember which video, but I believe Chris Hadfield talked about this at some point - you'd expect to spend less energy in space, since you don't have to work hard to keep yourself upright - but what they actually find is that almost all astronauts spend 'more' energy in space than they do normally, and they aren't quite sure why.
Sorry I can't find the specific video where they talk about it.
can you use a smart phone in space. because you need gravity to turn the screen. so what do you do?
How do you shave and trim that stach in space?
It also has alot implications for people that do night shifts or work extremely long hours and for astronauts living in space. How they can improve work efficienty and how they can improve rest aswell.
spinning stuff in space looks fun
FLYING CAMERAAAAAAAA *-* pretty cool for video
I came here because of SmarterEveryday. Space dougie at 4:20 :)
I believe you are confusing two things here. First: mass isn't equal to weight. The weight of an object is determined by a gravitational pull. The mass of an object stays the same, even in space. Second: E=MC2 isn't the right equation to calculate the energy of the object hitting your face, it should be E=1/2 mv2 (a half times m times (v squared)), where v is velocity, and m the mass. So if an object of 1 kg in space is thrown at my face with 2 meters per second, then E would equal to 2 Joule.
temperature monitor, its a question answered in the video.
Chris is just a natural boss.
My first reaction: OOOOO FLOATING PEOPLE I WANNA GO TO SPACE!
I live in Melbourne, Australia. I once went outside in the morning to see the ISS
The odd thing was, it went up on a very high angle and came on a very high angle
why?
Харесвам всички видеоклипове. Чудя се как така стоят полуседнали?...поне така мисля. как се придържат в космическото пространство. Всичко е толкова интересно?. Момчета, обичам ви! Вие сте страхотни! Бог да ви благослови!
Do you think they get 4g up there?