3:32 Fun Fact: During covid, a bunch of nerds got together with their computers using a program to network them together and created a network with a total processing power that was around that same computer's power. What was it used for you ask? Finding the tallest possible cactus in minecraft.
@@Trump.is.a.nazziiHe was referring to the fact that the cobbled together network had approximately the same processing power as the supercomputer ‘Trinity’ mentioned in the video at the timestamp he cited.
Worked with a woman whose job was literally, "unscrew panel, look at indicator, mark it down on clipboard, put panel back, move on to the next." In her years in the Air Force the little indicator only came up wrong once and that's when she found out they will, in fact, lock you in the bunker while they get EVERYBODY to come look at the bomb. It was fine.
Why? Edit: I'm guessing that this was to ensure that nobody had tampered with the bomb or did anything to accidently break it. I know military tech is supposed to be rugged, but anything can get broken if you mess with it.
I think HAI stockpiling a million videos will just force RLL to stockpile a million videos, creating an informative videos arms race with the end goal of mutually assured education
@@LeafBoye because RLL (and even more so Kurzgesagt) are incredibly poorly researched, misinformation-spreading brain rot clickbait for room temperature IQs
Hi Sam! Big thanks to Amy for going into the bunkers and testing out each one of the US's 5000 nuclear weapons personally. That's dedication! That deserves a raise!
"What were you all doing in the wardrobe?" *Peter desperately tries to shove a missile three times his size in a closet* "You wouldn't believe us if we told you..."
"Theory is just making some guesses" Listen here you little ship, I'ma theorize an anti-matter IAH at your exact location... Then! we'll see who has the capacity to procure a guess
It's to do with Israel having nuclear weapons in violation of the non proliferation treaty. That's why they won't ratify any additional arms restrictions
Time traveler: Hey, I just arrived from 100 years in the future! Me: Oh, good! So no all-out nuclear war then? Time traveler: Oh, no, there was. Just that all the nukes didn't work after so long, so nothing happened and we all just went home...
I'm reminded of a comic where a superhero tricks everyone into firing their nukes at a hostile alien. Only to reveal there was no alien threat, it was all a ploy to get rid of all the nukes. So the leaders are like "Hey so that means there's no nuclear deterrent anywhere..." Newspaper headline: "Everyone declares war on everyone!"
Please don't nuke Narnia. Narnia was inspired by the landscape of County Down, Northern Ireland as seen from CS Lewis's childhood home and school in East Belfast. I also live in that part of East Belfast and, if you decide to nuke Narnia, things might get a little hot around here.
For those wondering why we no longer do atmospherical detonation test..... Because it is bad for all humans. Atmospherical test released radiation particles into the air which get carried around the globe, and released gamma radiation which ionized air, which also get carried around the globe. The most famous of which Carbon-14, yes that Carbon-14 we use to date stuff from millions years ago, had increased significantly in concentration since the nuclear age started in 1945, but luckily now dropping back to pre-1945 level. Excessive nuclear test in atmosphere will increase Earth's background radiation and eventually lower human life expectancy due to genetic defaults caused by ionizing particles, so hopefully we will never had to detonate one ever.
This is pretty much how all nuclear engineering is done now a days. While physical testing is important for the data, it takes SOOOO fucking long to get good results and it's way to expensive. Thus, we've built mathematical and computational simulations to test what ever we want, which is pretty handy. The actual experiments are mainly to get better data for the models, such as more accurate cross section information, or to verify the model's results. When you hear about the field, you probably imagine people in hazmat suits working on massive detectors with large barrels of radioactive sources, but in reality it's 90% just computer models and statistics. To be fair, that's most engineering fields in reality, but at least they get to actually build something more than once a decade!
Neat. Yeah, I've known about nuclear simulation since I had a friend many years ago who worked as a programmer for Sandia National Labs writing the networking code for ASCI Red, the then state-of-the-art supercomputing cluster for nuclear simulation.
The Narnia thing is a misdirect. I saw the documentary about where the US military is actually testing big weapons, including a nuclear weapon enhanced with naquada. The test treaty does not cover tests executed on other planets! Muahahaha!!!!
Theory isn't making guesses. It's generating the math used in simulations, and confidently ruling out certain things while allowing for others. It's the foundation for the entire nuclear franchise. Scientific theory is the foundation.
Seems to me that having a staff to write a million HAI scripts would not keep Real Life Lore at bay, but rather give them more targets for scripts they could steal.
I’m glad we test so much. It’s like a killer asteroid deflection system. We pray we never ever need to use it, but if we do need to, it absolutely has to work perfectly.
What if countries allow nuclear testing but are given a limit to how often they are allowed to do it and where they can do it. Like, America is only allowed to Nuke New Mexico and Nevada and Russia is only allowed to Nuke Siberia. They are only allowed to perform 1 nuclear test every 4 years. If anyone is killed during these nuclear tests (even by accident) they have to wait 10 years before being allowed to test nukes again.
The following scene is from the NCIS: Los Angeles episode “Rude Awakenings” (4x06) Owen Granger: So the answer is yes, the bombs are viable. Eric Beale: Short answer? Owen Granger: Yeah, short answer. Eric Beale: Depends on what your definition of "viable" is. Owen Granger: Boom. That's my definition. Will they go boom? Eric Beale: Boom? Yes yes, they will.
They also keep the underground nuclear testing site ready at all times in case the President ever wants to test a nuclear weapon. They have huge doors that close within femtoseconds along with fiber optic telemetry to try to prevent as much spread and capture the most amount of data. Everything around nukes is so impressive.
Nuclear deterrence is one of the fucking scariest things out there. Because for it to happen, we need people in charge that are both sane enough NOT to ever use nuclear weapons, while also giving the impression that they actually WILL use nuclear weapons.
Very interesting, Scott Manley has a very interesting video on this topic too! And it includes a look at the old systems that were inside the bombs they tested that had to work at an insane speed to gather the data before they were vaporised (all those reactions occur in millionths of a second) and this was in the 50's!
We’re actually in the middle of a huge storm at the moment, tornado sirens and all, so the only thing I had to do was stop and listen for a couple seconds. The rain is very loud on the roof. Score one for not having to go outside
There's generally more at stake with nuclear weapons than if I get rained on. However, deterrence is all about the appearance of being able to retaliate, and so we should put on a good show of it.
I've actually been thinking about this recently, because Pu-239 decays relatively quickly. I suspect there's actually a good chance that much of the world's arsenal could probably fizzle. Oh, and nice job of throwing a small amount of shade at RLL. Shit had me crackin up.
Another masterpiece, Sam. Especially the idea of outsourcing your talent team. Just watch out for those weasels at at Wendover. I see them circle your studio. Or is that just you?
I grew up in Livermore and my brother would say if you climb the fences around the lab they’d shoot you on sight. Probably not the but I still don’t walk on that side of the sidewalk.
Fun fact about older nuclear weapons, they fired 192 trigger points on the explosive, it's no coincidence the laser focused the same number on the target.
We perfected the nuke, you mathematically cannot get a better yield. The only question is how big do you want the bomb? Which, strategically speaking, isn't very big usually.
The Z-machine is a wonder facility. Working with magnetic reconnection for fusion (through a crossed field z 'pinch') is probably as close to playing god as we get at the moment.
Oh cool - this IS the guy from Wendover! Ok, well, I subscribed a while ago but will now be a regular listener. Oh wow, we tested 1,054 nuclear bombs? Ok, I was off a bit - I didn’t even think we tested a hundred. Can only shudder to think how many the Soviets and Chinese set off, especially the Soviets.
I remember a Star Trek episode where some alien must have gone back in time and was talking about testing nukes. He’s flabbergasted and says “You irradiated your own PLANET?” I mean, like that’s shocking. Who doesn’t?
That's the Deep Space 9 episode “Little Green Men” (4x6). Quark and Rom take Nog to Earth and Starfleet Academy, but a malfunction with the ship takes the crew back in time, to Roswell, New Mexico in 1947.
I was about to blow up my window with a nuke to see if it was raining but remembered that it was illegal, immoral, and I am not in possession of a nuke. Wait, that wasn’t the implication of the question, was it?
3:32 Fun Fact: During covid, a bunch of nerds got together with their computers using a program to network them together and created a network with a total processing power that was around that same computer's power.
What was it used for you ask?
Finding the tallest possible cactus in minecraft.
I love mankind
So the sum of the whole was less than the parts added together? What happened
@@Trump.is.a.nazziiHe was referring to the fact that the cobbled together network had approximately the same processing power as the supercomputer ‘Trinity’ mentioned in the video at the timestamp he cited.
wouldn’t it just be 3
Wasn't something similar done to find the seed and location of the Minecraft menu screen?
Worked with a woman whose job was literally, "unscrew panel, look at indicator, mark it down on clipboard, put panel back, move on to the next." In her years in the Air Force the little indicator only came up wrong once and that's when she found out they will, in fact, lock you in the bunker while they get EVERYBODY to come look at the bomb. It was fine.
That job sounds very appealing to me right now.
What was her title? That still sounds like a cool job.
Why?
Edit: I'm guessing that this was to ensure that nobody had tampered with the bomb or did anything to accidently break it. I know military tech is supposed to be rugged, but anything can get broken if you mess with it.
At least the sensors only died when it got interesting... they got to experience half as interesting
Ha
ICWUDT
@@EpicGhostShadowHAI*
@@battlesheep2552 InterContinental What U Doing Today?
@@battlesheep2552O, I2CWYDT
I think HAI stockpiling a million videos will just force RLL to stockpile a million videos, creating an informative videos arms race with the end goal of mutually assured education
And then SciShow will come in and blow them both away.
Calling RLL “educational” is real bold
@@herpderpinson6117and why is that?
@@LeafBoye because RLL (and even more so Kurzgesagt) are incredibly poorly researched, misinformation-spreading brain rot clickbait for room temperature IQs
Watch a video for the full 50 mins and let us know why it is educational
Hi Sam!
Big thanks to Amy for going into the bunkers and testing out each one of the US's 5000 nuclear weapons personally. That's dedication! That deserves a raise!
i looked outside my window
I could hear the rain
Rip
I looked IN your window. 👀
I windowed your look
[explosion]
"What were you all doing in the wardrobe?"
*Peter desperately tries to shove a missile three times his size in a closet* "You wouldn't believe us if we told you..."
Lol
Best before November 1959? Dammit, Bob. There were plenty of brand new bombs, but you had to go for that retro 50s charm!
That's the reason B52 bombers are still flying . You need a delivery device that works.
Simpsons did it!
"It's a BOMB! You can only use it ONCE!"
Lower decks is surprisingly good.
We tried the boomer, but when we tried again, it didn't work no more.
Found the person with wit, grace, and intelligence in the comments! 😂
Anyone else think of Jeff Dunham all of a sudden?
"Theory is just making some guesses"
Listen here you little ship, I'ma theorize an anti-matter IAH at your exact location... Then! we'll see who has the capacity to procure a guess
"just a theory"
matpat is in shambles
If that happens we'd need Sam from Wendover to replace him
@@Pain9682real life lore can be Amy
an anti-matter International Airport of Houston?
@@JohnCena-fd5ywit stands for Interesting As Half mate 🙄
The fact that Egypt hasn’t ratified it makes me question if they are building nukes.
Neither did Mauritius. I think they are up to something.
It's to do with Israel having nuclear weapons in violation of the non proliferation treaty. That's why they won't ratify any additional arms restrictions
Well yeah they're getting their first reactors from Russia soon
@@dougerrohmerMauritius global superpower by 2026 💪💪💪🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺
Meh they already have capabilities@@BanterEdits
4:37 Really bloody hot Celsius.
Time traveler: Hey, I just arrived from 100 years in the future!
Me: Oh, good! So no all-out nuclear war then?
Time traveler: Oh, no, there was. Just that all the nukes didn't work after so long, so nothing happened and we all just went home...
I'm reminded of a comic where a superhero tricks everyone into firing their nukes at a hostile alien. Only to reveal there was no alien threat, it was all a ploy to get rid of all the nukes.
So the leaders are like "Hey so that means there's no nuclear deterrent anywhere..."
Newspaper headline: "Everyone declares war on everyone!"
I can hear it raining, so I'd assume it is raining.
You fool, I was playing my rain white noise youtube playlist as I slept!
I can hear a nuclear explosion so I'd assume I'm getting nuked.
@@TuftyTaltansorry fr had to test your hearing bro
Are you sure? Maybe hundreds of leprechauns are tap dancing on your roof. That sounds about the same.
Oppenheimer - "Theory will take you only so far."
And this is the result when you need theory to go really really far
6:40 REAL LIFE LORE
So nice of him to come all the way for that little featuring.
Please don't nuke Narnia. Narnia was inspired by the landscape of County Down, Northern Ireland as seen from CS Lewis's childhood home and school in East Belfast. I also live in that part of East Belfast and, if you decide to nuke Narnia, things might get a little hot around here.
For those wondering why we no longer do atmospherical detonation test.....
Because it is bad for all humans. Atmospherical test released radiation particles into the air which get carried around the globe, and released gamma radiation which ionized air, which also get carried around the globe. The most famous of which Carbon-14, yes that Carbon-14 we use to date stuff from millions years ago, had increased significantly in concentration since the nuclear age started in 1945, but luckily now dropping back to pre-1945 level.
Excessive nuclear test in atmosphere will increase Earth's background radiation and eventually lower human life expectancy due to genetic defaults caused by ionizing particles, so hopefully we will never had to detonate one ever.
7:33: That's cavatappi! Yes, it is the *best* pasta shape. 😋😋😋
We Americans know about cavatappi because we sometimes use it for macaroni and cheese. (Elbow macaroni is more common, though.)
Rigatoni
I completely forgot the last U.S. nuke was detonated the day before I was born.
You're welcome.
Damn
doxxed :3
Welcome back US Nuke!
i was born on 7th August too
@@Santrix125 You mean Sept 24th?
This is pretty much how all nuclear engineering is done now a days. While physical testing is important for the data, it takes SOOOO fucking long to get good results and it's way to expensive. Thus, we've built mathematical and computational simulations to test what ever we want, which is pretty handy. The actual experiments are mainly to get better data for the models, such as more accurate cross section information, or to verify the model's results. When you hear about the field, you probably imagine people in hazmat suits working on massive detectors with large barrels of radioactive sources, but in reality it's 90% just computer models and statistics. To be fair, that's most engineering fields in reality, but at least they get to actually build something more than once a decade!
Neat. Yeah, I've known about nuclear simulation since I had a friend many years ago who worked as a programmer for Sandia National Labs writing the networking code for ASCI Red, the then state-of-the-art supercomputing cluster for nuclear simulation.
The background music absolutely slaps
3:31 Hey! I worked on Piz Daint, number 37 in the list! 😂
I think sam haa forgotten something we could just be nuking Narnia and just claiming they are running tests.
The Narnia thing is a misdirect. I saw the documentary about where the US military is actually testing big weapons, including a nuclear weapon enhanced with naquada.
The test treaty does not cover tests executed on other planets! Muahahaha!!!!
@@MonkeyJedi99 GOOOLD?
@@MonkeyJedi99 but the outer space treaty does, gotta repesct the comon heritage of mankind
I feel personally attacked by your incredibly accurate comment that I haven't been outside the last few hours
Only hours?
Only days?
As a Canadian I really appreciate the conversions to Celsius. I feel so seen!
The Radiohead reference was unexpected
An American FINALLY got the imperial to metric conversion right 5:19 .
Theory isn't making guesses. It's generating the math used in simulations, and confidently ruling out certain things while allowing for others. It's the foundation for the entire nuclear franchise. Scientific theory is the foundation.
Don't worry Sam, real life lore will always be store-brand-wendover to me.
Seems to me that having a staff to write a million HAI scripts would not keep Real Life Lore at bay, but rather give them more targets for scripts they could steal.
Wait, is that something they've done?
@@buttersquidsyes
Those bums
@@buttersquidsRRL and HAI are owned by the same people, Sam’s the narra for both
@@williamrheiner698 Sam is the narrator for Wendover Productions, Joseph is the narrator for Real Life Lore.
The hope is that they don't need to be used.
Although for dismantling this is important
Man, BEEF is truly one of the best acronyms ever!
I love the upbeat music, feels so fitting
BTW also blowing a nuke is not cheap (if you need to properly use the data gathered during the blast)...
Also "clean up after a blast is not cheap".
Los Alamos and Sandia are both located in the US state of New Mexico.
I’m glad we test so much. It’s like a killer asteroid deflection system. We pray we never ever need to use it, but if we do need to, it absolutely has to work perfectly.
I agree, that those temps the difference between C and F is pointless
What if countries allow nuclear testing but are given a limit to how often they are allowed to do it and where they can do it.
Like, America is only allowed to Nuke New Mexico and Nevada and Russia is only allowed to Nuke Siberia. They are only allowed to perform 1 nuclear test every 4 years. If anyone is killed during these nuclear tests (even by accident) they have to wait 10 years before being allowed to test nukes again.
Can confirm, it is sunny, not rainy.
Same.
The following scene is from the NCIS: Los Angeles episode “Rude Awakenings” (4x06)
Owen Granger: So the answer is yes, the bombs are viable.
Eric Beale: Short answer?
Owen Granger: Yeah, short answer.
Eric Beale: Depends on what your definition of "viable" is.
Owen Granger: Boom. That's my definition. Will they go boom?
Eric Beale: Boom? Yes yes, they will.
I would love to test a nuke without blowing it up.
That escalated quickly.
Jokes on you; I just walked the dog so I know for a fact it is (checks out the window) NOT raining!
Joke's on you, I just got back from the dog park, sat down, and resumed my mindless consumption of media.
They also keep the underground nuclear testing site ready at all times in case the President ever wants to test a nuclear weapon. They have huge doors that close within femtoseconds along with fiber optic telemetry to try to prevent as much spread and capture the most amount of data. Everything around nukes is so impressive.
It's doesn't rain in Dessert for hundreds of years.
Nuclear deterrence is one of the fucking scariest things out there. Because for it to happen, we need people in charge that are both sane enough NOT to ever use nuclear weapons, while also giving the impression that they actually WILL use nuclear weapons.
What's this MADness @6:38 between y'all and Real Life Lore?
I've been told that later underground tests included a stripped down VAX-785 to pump data out as fast as possible before it was consumed.j
Fun fact:
Amarillo TX is so close to Pan-Tex that there's no nuclear fallout treatment in the hospitals (its so close to what would be ground zero)
Correct! I haven't been outside in hours because I just woke up.
Sam: "you would either trust in tech or get drenched in the rain."
Me: "what about looking outside the window?"
Windows are tech : )
Oiled paper > Windows /j
Very interesting, Scott Manley has a very interesting video on this topic too!
And it includes a look at the old systems that were inside the bombs they tested that had to work at an insane speed to gather the data before they were vaporised (all those reactions occur in millionths of a second) and this was in the 50's!
Tbf, it has rained indoors for me multiple times. I don't even have to look outside
too keep real life lore at bay was funny af
Funny that you ask if I was just outside. Because, literally 10 seconds before this video, I was just outside.
We’re actually in the middle of a huge storm at the moment, tornado sirens and all, so the only thing I had to do was stop and listen for a couple seconds. The rain is very loud on the roof. Score one for not having to go outside
There's generally more at stake with nuclear weapons than if I get rained on. However, deterrence is all about the appearance of being able to retaliate, and so we should put on a good show of it.
I checked the weather 2 days ago and it said 0% likelihood for the next 2 weeks. Also the rainy season doesn’t start until April.
Two weeks without rain sounds like a nightmare
@@pdote Mediterranean climate go brrr
0:12
Man I just woke up and HAI is attacking me for it lmaooo
I've actually been thinking about this recently, because Pu-239 decays relatively quickly. I suspect there's actually a good chance that much of the world's arsenal could probably fizzle. Oh, and nice job of throwing a small amount of shade at RLL. Shit had me crackin up.
It’s raining. Love Britain
It’s a good thing they never lose critical data! Like how to make fogbank. That would be ridiculous
Don't worry, it'll only cost $100 million or so to figure it out again. Or at least we think we know what fogbank was.
They probably made a better version it and kept it classified
I think it's crazy that we can have TV dinners delivered to our door.
What if I'm outside watching this in the rain?
Honestly, all of the research and equipment that goes into this is far cooler than the nukes themselves.
Another masterpiece, Sam. Especially the idea of outsourcing your talent team. Just watch out for those weasels at at Wendover. I see them circle your studio. Or is that just you?
"I assume you havent been outside for several hours" Hey man I just woke up
Ah, finally something to watch while at midnight.
That Creep reference was great *Chefs kiss
Hours? He really underestimates us.
I just get back home 59 minutes ago, and it's raining outside proven by my wet pants.
I just checked, it’s not raining. You fibber.
This is just like how I like to blow up tnt in an obsidian block in Minecraft
0:04 im in a car and it’s raining
Im not in a car and its not raining
@@Deleted_Cat I’m also no longer in a car and it’s not raining for me either anymore
@@Deleted_Catsame
I grew up in Livermore and my brother would say if you climb the fences around the lab they’d shoot you on sight. Probably not the but I still don’t walk on that side of the sidewalk.
anyone who has blown up a bunch of tnt in minecraft knows how hard it is to run an explosion.
Ironically I'm still damp from coming in like 10 minutes ago. yes it is raining.
Fun fact about older nuclear weapons, they fired 192 trigger points on the explosive, it's no coincidence the laser focused the same number on the target.
We perfected the nuke, you mathematically cannot get a better yield. The only question is how big do you want the bomb? Which, strategically speaking, isn't very big usually.
The Z-machine is a wonder facility. Working with magnetic reconnection for fusion (through a crossed field z 'pinch') is probably as close to playing god as we get at the moment.
All I have learned is that I must hunt down a new pasta shape.
I'd say learning mission accomplished.
Oh cool - this IS the guy from Wendover! Ok, well, I subscribed a while ago but will now be a regular listener.
Oh wow, we tested 1,054 nuclear bombs? Ok, I was off a bit - I didn’t even think we tested a hundred. Can only shudder to think how many the Soviets and Chinese set off, especially the Soviets.
The launch computers are the main reason why 5 inch floppy discs are still being manufactured and the government is the only customer.
...I saw the eclipse today, and spent a couple hours around a fire pit after. I was outside plenty today!
ORNL has a couple of nice boxes dedicated to doing atomic decay simulation. Titan being one of them.
I tried really hard to work on Summit, but I so bombed the interview.
Ha, funny…’bombed’ the interview!
I was walking out of my workplace when I started this video, and it was raining. I blame you.
0:25 or I check one of public streaming cameras around my area
This question is been brought up by people in the know and their doubts are rather strong
I remember a Star Trek episode where some alien must have gone back in time and was talking about testing nukes. He’s flabbergasted and says “You irradiated your own PLANET?” I mean, like that’s shocking. Who doesn’t?
That's the Deep Space 9 episode “Little Green Men” (4x6). Quark and Rom take Nog to Earth and Starfleet Academy, but a malfunction with the ship takes the crew back in time, to Roswell, New Mexico in 1947.
Haha I'm outside as sam is saying he assumes I haven't been outside in hours. Sure I'm watching yourube, but I am still outside
I'm in the attic... I can hear when it's raining without even getting up to look out the window lol.
We really need to do live test and readyness drills . Russia had one today the UK failed twice.
There's a reason you access Narnia through a WARdrobe.
I’m outside right now, and I can confirm it is not raining
I was about to blow up my window with a nuke to see if it was raining but remembered that it was illegal, immoral, and I am not in possession of a nuke.
Wait, that wasn’t the implication of the question, was it?
I am shooting a archery tournament outside while watching this
Missed opportunity for the Chronukles of Narnia
I have not been outside in a few hours, but the continued presence of my migraine tells me it's probably still raining.