Experiment at -196°C, Ferrofluid in Quantum Levitation | Magnetic Games
Вставка
- Опубліковано 14 жов 2022
- With the use of liquid nitrogen, which has a temperature of -196 °,the YBCO compound is cooled to become a superconductor, and a superconductor placed in a magnetic field has amazing behaviors. Ferrofluid alone cannot levitate on a superconductor, but if we cover a magnet it seems to levitate because it completely covers the magnet.
Thanks to supermagnete.com for providing me with these magnets for free. Here the products used in this video.
For the magnetic track i used this cube sumag.net/w-10-n-x01
Ferrofluid sumag.net/ferrofluid-xmg01
Other levitating magnets
Copper Coated Disc sumag.net/s-15-08-k-x01
Ring Magnet sumag.net/r-12-05-12-n-x01
If you want to learn more about the physics behind this experiment look for Messnier Effect en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meissne...
LIKE & SUBSCRIBE HERE: bit.ly/Sub2MagneticGames
WATCH MY TOP VIDEOS HERE: bit.ly/MagneticGamesTopPlaylist
On my channel you will find all the ways to have fun with magnets divided into 3 main categories:
Classical magnetic experiments such as magnetic levitation, homopolar motors, small magnetic weapons, Gauss cannons, gears, magnetic field viewers and much more.
Satisfaction video like the construction of magnetic sculptures, slime and magnetic putty and product review.
ASMR relaxing videos to watch but above all to listen preferably with stereo headphones to be able to appreciate the particular sounds of the magnets
Follow me:
www.magneticgames.eu/
Facebook
/ magneticgamesit
Instagram
/ magneticgames_it
Twitter
/ magneticgamesit
About Magnetic Games:
All ways to have fun with magnets.
The magnetism has always intrigued me. The strength of the magnets is scientifically explainable but there's something "magical" about its interaction with the world. My Channel offers you curious experiments and fun games to do with magnets.
Experiment at -196°C, Ferrofluid in Quantum Levitation | Magnetic Games
• Experiment at -196°C,...
Magnetic Games
/ kappaquellobello
#magneticgames #ferrofluid #quantumphysics - Розваги
Thanks!
thank you very much :)
Wow
Why wasting money
it's called being grateful and giving a tip.
@@Sphendrana yes it is
You can try to explain it as much as you want, but in reality it's just a bug. The developers of the simulation just didn't expect us to deep freeze weird hockey pucks and mess around with them with magnets
There are no bugs in the universe.
@@iillegally Actually, there are reportedly over 10 quintillion estimated bugs, and that's just on earth. Who knows how many more could be scuttling about in the far reaches of the universe
@@vlastasusak5673 you dont actually believe that do you?
Hope they never patch it!☝️🫠
@@dominicdudebromtl9380 he spoke the absolute, factual truth. There are an estimated 10 quintillion bugs on Earth alone. Google it. You'll become a believer too.
The fact that people can play around with quantum locking at home with a somewhat-reasonable amount of expense is a good indicator of how close we are to actually utilizing this technology for a whole new generation of mechanical innovation.
Maglev in Japan
I don't think that's necessarily true. Scale is an issue. Some scientific phenomenon will always be relegated to a novelty.
@@ameunier41 maglev is a different tech. Electromagnets instead of superconductors.
Incorrect. The amount of energy expended to supercool the base components far exceeds any energy gain you would get from reduced friction. This is nothing new. 100 years ago humans were playing with this pseudoscience. And 100 years from now our ancestors will be doing exactly the same thing. No closer to breaking the laws of physics than we are.
@@MalleusSemperVictor Why?
His monthly liquid nitrogen bill would be more than his monthly electricity bill
I think he is a billionaire as he wastes such amount of money
@@allworlddifferenttopicshor3227 billionaire? LOL
Liquid nitrogen is actually quite cheap because it's a byproduct of making liquid helium, which is very expensive.
Could you imagine his electric bill if he created his own liquid nitrogen
LN2 is cheaper than beer . . .
I did not think it would ride the track upside down.. fascinating.
Most creative way to make me hit the 'thumbs up' button all month! That reflection was awesome.
Now at this point I think that he has an endless supply of liquid nitrogen 🤣🤣
Liquid nitrogen is actually very cheap
@@hipposheep where do you buy it?
@@_Cfocus You can get it from a lot of places, like industrial labs or hardware stores that sell materials, but honestly liquid nitrogen is probably obtainable even through private retailers like amazon, the only issue would be that you would have to be able to store it once purchased. I don't buy chemicals for use at home or anything, but I can access most of what I need in my university's labs.
@@hipposheep It's about as expensive as milk isn't it?
Mr Magneto by far the most amazing video. Kudos!
Awesome demonstrations! Thanks!
Everything you see in such videos (except "ferro") has been initiated and therefore invented by me!
They have read, copied and stolen all of that (except "ferro") from me!
I soon will make videos and go to police with cameras to get all my inventions, its patentrights and money back!
Thanks for this impressive video! Especially when the magnetic field was made visible was so amazing! 😀👍
Man, if that experiment didn't require some harsh conditions, I'd like to just have that sitting on my shelf for all to see as a cool science display.
What a great video with never seen setups!
This stuff never gets old... I want to understand it more deeply than it's currently understood.
Very beautiful demonstrations, thank you!
3:59 subtle way to ask for "like this video" 😂
Я как дикарь, который увидел зеркальце. Воистину мир гораздо интереснее чем нам кажется!
Wow! Super cool on so many levels!
I would love watching more Ferrofluid on differently shaped magnets. The cylindrical one would be cool. Great work on this stuff!
If we get to play "I would love" then I would love 500 gallons of it and all the magnets & electromagnets, and probably Hydraulic Press guy, and slowmo guys & I guess I'd love a reactor and vacuum chambers. I'm sure there's more.
edit, love all the comments
Well then outer space has to be a superconductor because of it's lower temperature. So not only is it a medium of perfect electrical system it also explains gravity/magnetic field of planets. If you consider the liquid nitrogen cooled puck as any planetoid in the universe, then space travel could be as simple as make spacecraft that has a core engine of structure that equals the magnetic field exhibited by the neodymium magnets displayed in this experiment.
🥂
That ferrofluid looks mesmerizing. Wish I could've it as a screensaver
Coolest looking magnetic liquid stuff I have ever seen!
This is one of the coolest things I’ve ever seen I didn’t know you could do that
Everything you see in such videos (except "ferro") has been initiated and therefore invented by me!
They have read, copied and stolen all of that (except "ferro") from me!
I soon will make videos and go to police with cameras to get all my inventions, its patentrights and money back!
@@damysticalone87ur weird bro
If / When you have money, health or "natural" catastrophe / disaster problems or if / when you are somehow affected by traffic accidents, traffic jams at some point, somewhen, anytime, somewhere, anywhere, then think of me, share my posts and my pages!
Care off and care of the trolls about / to my comments!
@@adamjosef5323 yeah, he is crazy
Awesome experiments!
Wow that black stuff with the round magnet is straight out of some sci-fi movie 😎👍🏻.
Чёрная левитирующая жидкость выглядит просто супер мега офигенно!
We’ve all just accidentally learned what happens when you flash freeze ferrofluid on a magnet
Pretty awesome.
I don't think I blinked for 4.5 minutes.
I like that no one has stated yet how brilliant this is, because it shows us the actual shape of the pressure from the superconducting.,
Awesome to watch.👍
Merci du partage ,magnifique expérience ....,
Hey nice video! That ferrofluid movement in 3:49, is it residual like some kind of inertia, generated by the nitrogen gas moving or is the magnet field oscilating?
I think the magnet was spinning before he put on the fluid.
My thought is the interaction between gravity and the magnetic force on the fluid. Rise and fall in a different way than we're used to seeing, maybe? Typically, ferro fluid is stuck on a stable surface, not levitated.
Amazing experiment
Sweet! Now where can I pick up some liquid nitrogen??!! I will use gloves tho"
This is cool but still just another of man discovering fire. Now that we now magnetic fields are a thing can you make the object push or pull at will?😎
Fantastic! (And fantastic filming!) 3:20 Looks like candy making! 😎✌🏼
It's not exactly "levitation". It's more an entanglement in the field lines, a phenomenon called "quantum locking". Imagine invisible tracks that the superconductor locks into and you've got the right idea. That's why it's equally comfortable no matter what position you rotate the whole setup into.
It's still levitation though.
@@nielsunnerup7099 I guess so technically whatever. I feel like the term is an insult to the reality of the mechanics of it. It implies that something is floating above a repulsive force when the actual mechanics is FAR cooler.
I guess this explanation should be presented in the video l. It's more amazing than the magnetic levitation itself.
3:21 . . . Best part of this video demo shows good liquid mirror behavior in areas below Rosensweig Instability Limit.
This is absolute magic. Science fiction. We need more classes teaching why this occurs.
I say that politely but its not magic or science fiction. You can search for supraconductors and find out.
"Quantum physics is not 'weird'. You are weird. You have the absolutely bizarre idea that reality ought to consist of little billiard balls bopping around, when in fact reality is a perfectly normal cloud of complex amplitude in configuration space. This is your problem, not reality's, and you are the one who needs to change." -Eliezer Yudkowsky
@@ianyboo But... but... they DO bop around too!!
Everything you see in such videos (except "ferro") has been initiated and therefore invented by me!
They have read, copied and stolen all of that (except "ferro") from me!
I soon will make videos and go to police with cameras to get all my inventions, its patentrights and money back!
@@ianyboohile there is nothing per se weird about wave functions the measurement problem makes it weird. And while a many minds interpretation may ultimately prove to be an answer to actually make that work you need more than handwaving about how experience supervenes on the Hilbert space.
Have you tried the 4 magnet (NSNS) arrangement on ybco, the ybco would probably levitate evenly then, would be interesting to see what would happen with the magnet arrangement for pyrolytic graphite levitation 🤔🧐
I had already prepared the magnets ... but I ran out of nitrogen ... I'll try it later
@@MagneticGamesIT 😲😲😲😲😲
This whole video is so alien, it barely registers as strange when the fluid starts pouring sideways...
👌 👍
(.... just mimicking your reflection in the ferrofluid lol)
Fascinating 👍🏻👍🏻
Красиво и интересно.
Very cool!
everyone watching this : hey that's pretty neat!
me, getting ready for apex season 15 : •_• now build a wall with it. •_•
I am jealous of him he has so many magnets and liquid nitrogen also ☹️☹️
That's because liquid nitrogen is very cheap
That ferrofluid looks like Venom from Marvel. Cool stuff. Literally.
That video was uplifting :)
Yep
The great pyramids are known to have a highly reflective white coating. We also know that metals have reflective properties.
I believe much more in a technological theory of transporting stones as seen in the video, than using tree trunk and wicker rope.
Интересно как эта система будет себя вести в вакууме? Как долго будет бегать магнит по кругу?
Не будет бегать, так как пара не будет
Всё работает только в земных условиях, если можно так сказать...
Неограниченно долго, пока нет какого-либо внешнего сопротивления
It was fun to see a superconductor, while seemingly defying gravity, still had the good sense to obey conservation of momentum.. 🤓
i like how smooth the surface is. its almost perfectly smooth
Wow!...Wow!...Just WOW! Frozen magnetic field lines?! WOOOOOW!!🤪
Very Nice!
Love this channel ❤
So in theory if you made these structures in space they would be cold enough that you wouldnt need the liquid nitrogen right? Could make a magna rail and accellerate a sattelite to 99.9% lightspeed with something big enough
@Magnetic Games
Thank You
Fascinating video
🌬🕊💚
3:50 Враг в отражении))
Amazing 👍
Dr. Magnettttto😁😁😁😁😁😁😎
As you could see the magnetic field lines were constantly in motion causing a secondary field in the object. This field held the ferro fluid in place. My 2c on that, so I might be wrong.
So cool, literally and otherwise!
Everything you see in such videos (except "ferro") has been initiated and therefore invented by me!
They have read, copied and stolen all of that (except "ferro") from me!
I soon will make videos and go to police with cameras to get all my inventions, its patentrights and money back!
@@damysticalone87 Keep your anti-semetic nazi profile off my comments. You've been reported.
If / When you have money, health or "natural" catastrophe / disaster problems or if / when you are somehow affected by traffic accidents, traffic jams at some point, somewhen, anytime, somewhere, anywhere, then think of me, share my posts and my pages!
Care of the trolls about / to my comments!
Cool!
물리덕후를 격하게 자극하는 자기부상 ♡
That's the coolest thing I've seen 😎
The Ferro fluid I would expect to build at the poles but the smaller nodules forming were interesting
Waw.. that were some amazing experiments 👍🏼😊
Be careful with them fluïds you. .
Liquid nitrogen can be very dangerous.. and we wouldn't wanna mis the art works you share with us..
Thanks for this mindblower
😉👌🏼
Why is liquid nitrogen dangerous?
@@andreasschmitt2307 cus it's -196°C, if you touch it your finger will freeze instantly and you can probably get permanent dameges
@@ettore677
That's not true. In a Christmas lecture at our university the professor gave a styrofoam box with liquid nitrogen to us students. It went though the rows and everybody put their fingers into the nitrogen. It was cold but it boiled instantly, so no liquid nitrogen touched the skin. Some guys even started to splash it around... Very different was the dry ice, it started to hurt after seconds.
@@andreasschmitt2307 that makes sense, my mistake
@@ettore677
I don't think you're wrong that it can cause heavy burns, but more than 200 students fooling around with liquid nitrogen does say something about how dangerous it is. I did in fact burn my hand on the dry ice ;-)
👍 that was so cool
So cool 👍
this is incredible
Hey, this is finally rotation without friction! If we remove air and put a superconductor in thermos, it will be rotating forever.
Also levitrones do rotation without friction. But this is not as useful as this.
It's not frictionless. It's just very low friction.
Wouldn't eddy currents happen, slowing it down and heating it up?
Ваууу как круто 👏
Я сам растворился в этом эксперементе 💪👍🏼
Cool eyecandy, but it’s neither quantum nor levitation 😂 It is a lot of fun to play with, but we use it to make a living. This effect reduces our production time from 10 hours, down to about 10 minutes. Involves ultra high vacuum, 9-stage cryocooling loop, precious metals, and superheated plasma. The science and engineering is interesting, but the failure modes 🎉 are nothing short of spectacular!
What do you do for living?
"I play with magnets."
Blowing a cold air source onto the moving Ferrofluid would be interesting to see what speeds it could reach also if it maintains shape.
You'd think he'd say mkae sure to turn on the closed captions as he explains everything through them. Maybe he did and I just missed it. But either way make you guys have captions turned on.
Nice! I was surprised that you were able to get copper to do the same thing. I have watched videos in which copper has a different kind of like a halfhearted resistance to a magnetic field. Was it because you used a superconductor instead?
it's a copper coated neodymium magnet
@@MagneticGamesIT An alloy? I have never heard of this. Thanks for the info.
@@williamburroughs9686 Just a neodymium magnet coated with copper xd
@@williamburroughs9686 yeah, coatings are not alloys
To further this, it's the same way that neodymium magnets have a nickel coating. (although I don't know if they're pure nickel, or like US 5¢ coins which are cupronickel; like 60:40 Cu:Ni)
The neodymium inside is brittle and crumbly, so the coating's function is partially serving as a containment vessel heh
(I don't know enough to say whether in nickel's saw, if it further acts like a flux ring 🤷♂️)
Now that I think about it.... The copper may even just be electroplated to the nickel?
Высокотемпературные свехпроводники великолепны
I've seen that dark portal in event horizon it didn't end well ;)
So is it that when you make the molecules of the puck more uniform in their alignment (liquid nitrogen slows the pucks structure down and its molecular alignment is stabilized) the polarity of the puck becomes like that of a magnet and it glides along the path the magnets have created by your placements?
Something like that?
Awesome
Best air hockey table ever
Bellissimo!
прям завораживает спасибо отличный контент, можешь купить букет цветов заморозить его в той жидкости и разбить его об стол, в тайм лапсе😁
Now we just need transportation that uses this mechanic.
Strong enough to utilise earths magnetic field
Maglev
@@thepowerfulkiller8474 Thing is, that would also require earth's magnetic field to be strong, but relatively speaking, it's not. Earth's magnetic field measures in at about 0.00005 tesla, while even an average fridge magnet clocks in at 0.001 tesla.
Everything you see in such videos (except "ferro") has been initiated and therefore invented by me!
They have read, copied and stolen all of that (except "ferro") from me!
I soon will make videos and go to police with cameras to get all my inventions, its patentrights and money back!
@@damysticalone87 What? This is the Meissner Effect and was discovered in 1933.
Wow im really liking this, you could say that I'm magnetized
Interesting
Фантастика!
Nice
Amazing
Every time I see one of your videos I just want to do it myself! But unfortunately, they do not ship to the US. Do you or anyone else know how to around it? Possibly ship to a local po box and then here.
i`ve been waiting for you to loop that string and send pock to make circles. I wonder how long will it go.
Why did you put magnets on both sides of the strip? Was that needed to increase the field strength or just to make sure the magnets didn't fall off?
What is the resistance of the last tube shape, would it spin forever if you could maintain the temperature of the black piece underneath it?
looong time, but *never* forever!
is this the future of travel? looks very energy efficient, maybe not so efficient considering the cooling of that piece hmm 🧐
If you were to utilise the cold vacuum of space though....
I think it would be fascinating to see magnetize the balls in a bearing using feral fluid as an oiling mechanism
where in the wild would you go to catch feral fluid?! 🤔
@@mho... Harvest from wild Magnezone.
@@mho... Hiding in the corners of old, abandoned and rundown machine shops maybe? Where water leaking in has causes machine lube/grease to migrate there, bringing with it various metal powders?
😊
Now I just need to convince Attenburough to read that... 👍
feral fluid - ingredient
Never hears of oil/air bearrings? It does the same..
Why does the ferro seem to flow towards the superconductor when levitated above it? Does the quantum locking phenomena cause that?
Gravity
@@Jeremy.Bearemy I have ferro, it doesn't behave that way on a magnet, it doesn't flow down due to gravity as the magnetic field is much stronger locally.
@@Mmouse_ I think it has something to do with the superconductor being unstable. A stable magnetic field doesn't do that and it's permanent (more or less) while this one is temporary.
@@glenwaldrop8166 maybe... I'm "just" am electrical engineer so there's probably other stuff involved, like superconductors and zero resistance break things.
Voltage = currant * resistance
Current = voltage / resistance
Resistance = voltage / currant
Resistance = 0
So... Currant = voltage / 0
.... What?
Edit: don't talk about ohms law whilst drunk on new years eve, you'll end up talking about fruit.
@@Mmouse_ More likely this is just one of those points where our understanding or the math breaks down. Superconductors definitely do weird things. I think the math is based on how much force is required to send current through a conductor, if resistance is zero then it requires zero force...
Fact is it is unstable though, otherwise there would be no movement in the ferro-fluid. Stable in this case would mean little to no observable change.
I can see it right there, the smoke shooting out of it is making it float.
Ferrofluid is so mesmerising
Gravitational pull or magnetic pull to keep the liquid to the magnet?