If this video had been a few seconds longer and showing light speed from start to finish, that would've been the distance between the Earth and the Sun
Another fun fact: if the sun where to explode or dissapear. Then we wouldn't notice it untill 8 minutes later. Yess 8 full minutes untill we realised the sun is "Gone" that's
The universe is just too vast, and when you think about it, that's probably why we haven't communicated with alien life yet-they could be living in galaxies millions of light years away.
Imagine an alien civilisation 100 million light years away with a telescope capable of seeing Earth's surface. What they would see is the dinosaurs, not us - it has taken the light 100 million years to reach them. What we see of the Sun is as it was 8 minutes ago. Truly looking into the past.
Light is not slow. There's nothing faster than light. If light is slow then the concept of being fast doesn't exist (yeah, imagination is nice but let's talk what's real). And no: not all things are relative or subjective. C is the absolute maximum speed anything can go in the universe (light, gravity, information/causation. There's nothing relative or subjective about that. If light is slow, compared to which other speed?) In short: light is not slow, the universe is just fucking huge. I find this makes the universal scale much more mind blowing.
@@pepok318I remember reading somewhere (don't remember where, but I think it had some scientific plausibility) that one way of thinking of it was like "nothing can move faster than light in spacetime, but the very fabric of spacetime can expand faster"
Your editing skills are insane with ultimate precision. Definitely one of the best channels YT has to offer. You always manage to bring something new with a different perspective. Keep up the good work 👍
The famous scene where Superman flies several times over the Earth's orbit, making several turns, in this video that scene came to my mind From the 1978 movie
This may be a challenge, but I wonder if you could do an animation showcasing the relitivistic effects of traveling closer and closer to light speed. Maybe introducing each effect separately and slowly bringing them together and/or how they change your perception as you get closer to c.
My character moves at Mach 27. This is a great visual cue and allows me to narrate more meticulously exactly what he sees and what’s happening in the world around him as he flies. Thanks for this, it’s awesome!
At Mach 5000 in Earth's atmosphere, friction with air would cause the surface temperature of an object to reach nuclear explosion levels-approximately 1.5 billion Kelvin. This temperature could theoretically trigger effects similar to a nuclear blast. The result would be catastrophic, potentially causing the deaths of millions or even billions, depending on proximity and scale. In reality, unlike in movies, achieving such a launch speed would itself require an energy source equivalent to a nuclear explosion. Additionally, upon reaching this speed, atmospheric friction alone could initiate a second nuclear-level energy release. This dual explosive phenomenon-first at launch and then from atmospheric friction-demonstrates the extreme physics at play
Fun fact: The manhole cover of operation plumbomb was one of the fastest human-made objects ever. It was launched into the atmosphere by an underground nuke at about mach 170, or 130,000 mph! Which means it was moving about as fast as this when it was launched into the atmosphere 3:17
This Ep 1 view seems to be launching from Tunis in Tunisia, Northern Africa. The 1C speed orbit was awesome RedSide! It really make a perspective! You could also do a an episode from earth to moon or something. Or from sun to different planets at different speeds.
Thanks for putting in the G forces, as it gives a great perspective. The human body can handle momentary spikes in G's but sustained G forces, of even a low amount is fatal.
There's something always forgotten in this kind of videos: the number of mach is not an absolute speed unity such as kph, but it's relative. So, when you say "1 mach = 1,235 km/h", it's true only at the sea level. For example, at an altitude of 80 km, the speed of sound is barely 1,000 km/h, and it decreases with the altitude (to reach almost 0 in space).
We can't reach the speed of light because we're literally restricted by the physical limitations of our biological and physical bodies. The equation for the speed of light is c = sqrt (E ÷ m) from the relativity equation: E = mc^2 That means we would literally have to have a mass of 1 kg for energy (E) to equal a square of the speed of light. In other words, we somehow would have to literally turn ourselves into a pure being of energy while still keeping our consciousness (which requires a physical brain and nerve system, and the brain requires constant supply of blood, and blood requires constant oxygen from lungs, and everything requires constant energy from food as well as a waste system) somehow.
Pessoal eu adoro os vídeos de vocês! Eu acho as animações muito lindas, eu gostaria de pedir uma coisa se vocês conseguirem, façam um video Remake daquele video "Fastest Man Made Objects" com a qualidade de animação atual, eu conheci o canal de vocês por esse vídeo.
Red side you forgot to put the fraction on speed of light the real speed is in speed of sound for 1 speed of light is 874,030.4897959184 speed of sound that’s why you need to put fractions of to convert calculators within correct answer with 1 speed of light to speed of sound is 874,030.4897959184 speed of sound that is all today
This was a very interesting video. Accidents in IndyCar and NASCAR have made it clear that if the gravitational acceleration exceeds 200G even for a moment, it becomes very difficult for humans to survive. Even in space rockets, the continuous gravitational acceleration is less than 10G, but only a limited number of humans have the aptitude to withstand this. Even if we were to develop a spaceship that could accelerate up to the speed of light, how long would it take to reach the speed of light while maintaining a gravitational acceleration that humans can withstand?
✅ Take a look to this Surreal Speed Comparison : ua-cam.com/video/Y-y3lYFAPQk/v-deo.htmlsi=rvRfN12Y2fdfUtPm
And it takes 8 minutes for the Sun's light to reach the Earth. Crazy how far it really is!
Also, the size... the sheer size of the sun is something us humans cant even fathom to be honest.
And that there are stars out there 2000+ times bigger then the sun.
How small and powerless we are
Wait so the light was 8 minutes late
@@IntelFormulax always has been 🔫
If this video had been a few seconds longer and showing light speed from start to finish, that would've been the distance between the Earth and the Sun
mind-blowing
Yup, 500 seconds. 93 million miles to Sun, vs 186 thousand miles per second, exactly 500 times. What a coincidence.
Yeah. food for thought mate :)
PS. I missed that little detail. Sharp eye there. May I commend you for it!
Indeed, but the video should last another 12 seconds to perfectly match the time
Another fun fact: if the sun where to explode or dissapear. Then we wouldn't notice it untill 8 minutes later. Yess 8 full minutes untill we realised the sun is "Gone" that's
The light speed is very amazing for the human,but it is still too slow for the universe🙈
The universe is just too vast, and when you think about it, that's probably why we haven't communicated with alien life yet-they could be living in galaxies millions of light years away.
Imagine an alien civilisation 100 million light years away with a telescope capable of seeing Earth's surface. What they would see is the dinosaurs, not us - it has taken the light 100 million years to reach them.
What we see of the Sun is as it was 8 minutes ago. Truly looking into the past.
Light is not slow. There's nothing faster than light. If light is slow then the concept of being fast doesn't exist (yeah, imagination is nice but let's talk what's real).
And no: not all things are relative or subjective. C is the absolute maximum speed anything can go in the universe (light, gravity, information/causation. There's nothing relative or subjective about that. If light is slow, compared to which other speed?)
In short: light is not slow, the universe is just fucking huge. I find this makes the universal scale much more mind blowing.
@@TheOneAndOnlySame
I'd say the expansion of universe is faster than light. That's why it redshifts so much from far away.
@@pepok318I remember reading somewhere (don't remember where, but I think it had some scientific plausibility) that one way of thinking of it was like "nothing can move faster than light in spacetime, but the very fabric of spacetime can expand faster"
Your editing skills are insane with ultimate precision. Definitely one of the best channels YT has to offer. You always manage to bring something new with a different perspective. Keep up the good work 👍
Appreciate that
agreed! redside and metaballstudios are two of my favourite channels for this kind of stuff. both have absolutely mindblowing animating skills!
@@REDSIDEofficial what software do you use?
speed comparison beyond the speed light 3d animation
lol thanks fam
7:42 Superman reversing time.
And he did it to save Lois!
The famous scene where Superman flies several times over the Earth's orbit, making several turns, in this video that scene came to my mind From the 1978 movie
Superman Simulator ? 🤨
There's nothing I like more than speed comparisons, it fascinates me so much.
The first few is what it must feel like to be Hulk jumping
Thought the same thing actually
And the last one - Superman turning back time.
Thats what im saying you read my mind
Or Saitama jumping off the moon. But that was supposedly faster than the speed of light.
@@Fanchen No it wasn't
Great one Vani! Loved the "engine" sounds at the end and the breathing in space
🤝🤝
This may be a challenge, but I wonder if you could do an animation showcasing the relitivistic effects of traveling closer and closer to light speed. Maybe introducing each effect separately and slowly bringing them together and/or how they change your perception as you get closer to c.
Great idea 🥇
UP
Impresive! Really love it!
The fact that this video is 8 minute long, the time needed for light to reach Earth, is astounding. Also, quite a random place of start on Tunisia.
the graphics IS FUCKING GOD CLEAN
Anyone getting dizzy watching the circular motion part?
Yeah, that one got to Mach 5 and I was like "Oh I'm not gonna enjoy this."
It’s a video. How are you gonna get dizzy from a video?
It made me feel dizzy and triggered my fear of heights for some reason. Imagine that in VR.
My character moves at Mach 27. This is a great visual cue and allows me to narrate more meticulously exactly what he sees and what’s happening in the world around him as he flies. Thanks for this, it’s awesome!
Ok
@@nimbites OK?
@@agamerscoven ok
cool
0:04 1.4 m/s
0:09 14 m/s
0:14 28 m/s
0:20 56 m/s
0:26 140 m/s
0:32 343 m/s
0:38 686 m/s
0:44 1.7 km/s
0:50 3.4 km/s
0:56 6.8 km/s
1:03 17 km/s
1:09 34 km/s
1:15 68 km/s
1:20 102 km/s
1:26 137 km/s
1:32 171 km/s
1:39 343 km/s
1:45 686 km/s
This is waaaay more conceivable than km/h Thanks!
@@schadowsshade7870 You can't even manually count how long an hour is, therefore it's easier to understand units per second
The amount of details and time taken on this is really breathtaking u even add the heavy breathing in space sound impeccable ❤❤
broooo this is amaaaaazing!!!
6:37 taco bell bathroom soundtrack
DAMN
7:47 When girlfriend is home alone
Kudos to your editing skill. It's gives new prespective to thinking.
Is that what flash and superman feel like
That's how I felt watching it!
The Flash one would be on ground level and that'll be wild.
Great video. You get a good sense of how fast Superman goes when he flys from ground level.😮
One of the only few channels I follow that I'm always eager to see what video you'll come out with next. Keep up the great work my friend!
DAYUM, that is a detailed simulation
2:36 Sound like wither minecraft
This is what i want, in every angle, every place, the distance meter, and everything i wanted❤😄
At Mach 5000 in Earth's atmosphere, friction with air would cause the surface temperature of an object to reach nuclear explosion levels-approximately 1.5 billion Kelvin. This temperature could theoretically trigger effects similar to a nuclear blast. The result would be catastrophic, potentially causing the deaths of millions or even billions, depending on proximity and scale.
In reality, unlike in movies, achieving such a launch speed would itself require an energy source equivalent to a nuclear explosion. Additionally, upon reaching this speed, atmospheric friction alone could initiate a second nuclear-level energy release. This dual explosive phenomenon-first at launch and then from atmospheric friction-demonstrates the extreme physics at play
The detailing on all of these videos are actually insane
Seus vídeos sempre são incríveis! parabéns!!!👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
7:40 Made in Heaven
Fun fact: The manhole cover of operation plumbomb was one of the fastest human-made objects ever. It was launched into the atmosphere by an underground nuke at about mach 170, or 130,000 mph! Which means it was moving about as fast as this when it was launched into the atmosphere 3:17
0:26 The Flash passes by sprinting very fast from the left while Superman Takes off
1:15 POV: Omni man after beating the crap out of invincible
This is funny
@@emongrier5391 or... is it? HEY, vsauce, michael here, what IS funny, and why do we laugh?
Waited too much for your videos
Incredible video, very impressive!
the fact man made some the speed of light in a render is crazy
These videos are like godsend to writers and artists
this man is to underated
I love the animation ❤.I also like the different parespative 😮
This Ep 1 view seems to be launching from Tunis in Tunisia, Northern Africa. The 1C speed orbit was awesome RedSide! It really make a perspective! You could also do a an episode from earth to moon or something. Or from sun to different planets at different speeds.
Good video speed comparison.
7:53 you don't need any sound effects, you can record your fan sound.
Great video dude. Thumps up.
your work is of very high quality, I like the several types of angles!
insane!
Keep up the content, thanks !
Thanks for putting in the G forces, as it gives a great perspective. The human body can handle momentary spikes in G's but sustained G forces, of even a low amount is fatal.
Crazy Work ❤🔥
nice buddy u have progressed alot in every video keep it up
amazing video as always (feel dizzy afterwards)😂
hell yeahhh!!! I love your vids.
Speed of light is insane ❤
That is one of your best videos!
Ultra speed! great work!!!
I think Tunis has grown a bit, hehe. Fantastic (multiple) visualizations!
There's something always forgotten in this kind of videos: the number of mach is not an absolute speed unity such as kph, but it's relative. So, when you say "1 mach = 1,235 km/h", it's true only at the sea level. For example, at an altitude of 80 km, the speed of sound is barely 1,000 km/h, and it decreases with the altitude (to reach almost 0 in space).
If you consider relavistic effects, then length contraction will occur, so you’ll measured everything contracted along your direction of motion
This really puts into perspective the speed of that one manhole cover
Every science classroom needs to see these videos
I almost thought you filmed this in real life...
wow this really is the one ive been waiting for
Speed of Light is Amazing i wonder when we will able to reach this speed
impossible in million years🗿
@@user-ys2lz1nn4qyou haven't seen my dog when I shout "BATH".
We can't reach the speed of light because we're literally restricted by the physical limitations of our biological and physical bodies.
The equation for the speed of light is
c = sqrt (E ÷ m)
from the relativity equation: E = mc^2
That means we would literally have to have a mass of 1 kg for energy (E) to equal a square of the speed of light.
In other words, we somehow would have to literally turn ourselves into a pure being of energy while still keeping our consciousness (which requires a physical brain and nerve system, and the brain requires constant supply of blood, and blood requires constant oxygen from lungs, and everything requires constant energy from food as well as a waste system) somehow.
Exactly what I wanted to see, nice
Awesome video. As always
I used to have dreams that looked very similar to this. Miss them.
I felt like Superman watching this!
This video kinda scares me....
Great job
That's si trippy, I live these videos
Superman’s capabilities gains suddenly a more scarier aspect.
Amazing as always!
“Im a shooting star leaping through the sky”
7:52 "Just... a little...push"
Amazing work ♥️👍🏻
Pessoal eu adoro os vídeos de vocês! Eu acho as animações muito lindas, eu gostaria de pedir uma coisa se vocês conseguirem, façam um video Remake daquele video "Fastest Man Made Objects" com a qualidade de animação atual, eu conheci o canal de vocês por esse vídeo.
The Masterpiece!
I love those videos
dziękuję za film😊
This is great! Just one thing - digits are supposed to go after the word MACH, with a space after the word.
Amazing stuff !!!
Legend is back
All your vids about speed are really cool, impressive. Maybe we could get an even bigger zoom out with the Earth and Moon at the relativistic speeds.
Red side you forgot to put the fraction on speed of light the real speed is in speed of sound for 1 speed of light is 874,030.4897959184 speed of sound that’s why you need to put fractions of to convert calculators within correct answer with 1 speed of light to speed of sound is 874,030.4897959184 speed of sound that is all today
The cameraman is a hero.
This was a very interesting video. Accidents in IndyCar and NASCAR have made it clear that if the gravitational acceleration exceeds 200G even for a moment, it becomes very difficult for humans to survive. Even in space rockets, the continuous gravitational acceleration is less than 10G, but only a limited number of humans have the aptitude to withstand this. Even if we were to develop a spaceship that could accelerate up to the speed of light, how long would it take to reach the speed of light while maintaining a gravitational acceleration that humans can withstand?
1:15 this is how fast the manhole cover from operation Plumbob was estimated to be moving at
Amazing video
2:47 MegamanX finishing his mission
At 0:50 and 2:53 you can approximately see the speed of Superman (based on Marvel it is around 10 Mach)
Wake up babe new Red Side just dropped
7:53 “MADE IN HEAVEN” 🗣️🗣️🗣️
0:13 That VAN 😂
?
@@aircraftsupport5800 Look in the bridge. Runs one
@@aircraftsupport5800 Hint : Bridge
@@zennitH3230 ???
As if that will help
Light ❌ UFO ✅
Good content. If language barriers are making things difficult, Immersive Translate can help with real-time translations for smoother communication.
So this is what Superman feels like when he is flying to the sky.
This is why we can't see some UFO's, super fast
Oh yeahhhhhh
Yay! Finally fastest recording to make a video!
Ep 3 gave me a headache 🥲
Beautiful
Unbelievable How do you make it such imagination