@@Sir_Hammock major no worst injury I’ve seen was a fellow artist was taking a larger piece out of the kiln it was like a weeks worth of work it started to fall so he pushed it in out of panic with his hands lol had second degree burns and had to stop for a few weeks other than that no lots of minor cuts and burns but nothing crazy
Wow. I thought I was badass for distilling sulfuric acid. You built your own closed-system glass distillation apparatus. What kind of fuel does your torch run on? MAPP gas? Brown’s gas? It melts borosilicate glass like sugar.
@@G0RSHK0V Depends a bit on the thickness of the glass, doesn't it. I guess you could work on that glass with propane only, but it takes so long, would give great results and probably produce a lot of soot. We uses a propane torch with oxygen, too
@@johncheetham4607 And match girls developed Phossie jaw... And pottery artists had to deal with exotic glazes that also substances like uranium oxides, cadmium etc etc.. be careful what you ask for. 🧙🏼♂️
One thing that channels like this have taught me over the years is that learning actually is, unironically, really fun. It was school itself that sucked
I think that it's one of the prettiest elements I've ever seen, it's a metal, great start, it's pretty reflective, it has a gold like color, and it emits blue light when charged, it amazing, and it's reactive 10/10
@@Phantom-309-e9p When Cesium-133 is irradiated with radiation having an energy level corresponding to the difference between its hyperfine ground states, it will reemit that radiation at exactly the duration after it's absorbed every single time. As a result, it can create an exceedingly accurate clock. Rubidium atomic clocks are more common, but less accurate.
@@Phantom-309-e9p Sure, you can do a google search for "NIST’s Cesium Fountain Atomic Clocks". Cesium and rubidium are metals who can be used to create very stable reference standards. Also, check the Wikipedia page for "Caesium standard". These reference standards are so accurate, if you have a watch with a cesium timebase, it would drift one second in 31 million years! Believe it or not, scientists are still not happy with this precision and they are working to create even more precise time reference standards.
I love these chemistry youtubers. Even their short form content is good - no minecraft or subway surfers, no annoying captions, no AI voices, just pure information.
Most stuff is made freehand it's not really as hard as it looks. Joins are a bit on the lumpy side but I'm assuming he's more on the lab tech side instead of manufacturing stuff to sell (which I do)
There's a Brazilian tragedy linked to Cesium 137(a radioactive isotope of cesium), where people of a city thought that the blue-like shininess of Cesium was pretty, and started to share it among the neighborhood. A bunch of people were poisoned with the radiation and died the following days.
And months and years later too I believe roughly 1,100 people ended up being contaminated, a few hundred needed hospitalization, and a whole city block was demolished. The family and junkyard workers and owners who lived were ostracized from the town. The little girl who thought it was fairy dust and died was buried in a lead coffin with massive protests where the city police had to hold back protestors so she could be buried and her aunt (or mother) who had passed and was buried also had massive protest from the city too.
id like to add that the ppl were dumpster diving at a junkyard, ignored all the skull symbols and what not, and then cracked open the fuel cell of an MRI device. it was 4 morons killing 200+.
@@tarkitarker0815 Not even that. They broke into an abandoned cancer treatment facility and cracked open a clearly labeled radiotherapy machine, if I'm not mistaken.
I've always known of the origin of Caesium's name, but had never actually seen that sky blue emission. I love that we're able to see all of these reactions thanks to modern technology and the internet.
Right and like the fact that it's named after the blue color we were shown here implies that it was first seen that way? Soooo that just adds a lot of questions for me lol.
Top comment, wildly underrated. Tell us how dangerous to human life. " Highly reactive" also wildly underrated. Gotta be a lit off to play with that shit like a toy.........iynyn
@@VideoGameCookie I'm sad you are not alone. Screw Video Gojira and whatever next piece of crap grind-centric non-game he and his monkeys make. With Hollywood stars, ofcourse !
@@viewtiful1doubleokamihand253 why yes I think Hideo Kojima (that’s his name you’re not a five-year-old speak like a person) I personally think Kojima is a little eccentric and has a bit of an overinflated ego but I do think ultimately he does mean well and creates amazing video games that just sometimes lack direction i.e. death stranding
@ Hideo Kojima is dead, murdered and replaced by an alien known as Video Gojira, he started screwing up the career of the decist by making a decision to NOT cast Hayter and from there on he decided to make that lasts MGS into a half-assed grind with two acts and no ending, which fools loved so much he got celebrated even more then previously. Afterwards the alien’s plan to lower everyone’s standards and self-reapect with a literal game where a guy LITERALLY transports stuff on himself throughout a utterly barren, uninteresting and dead landscape. And people, serious, real, hard-working people loved it. Their minds altered, their standards completely degraded, in need of some serious and extensive rehabilitation with only the best of actual Kojima and preferably all of Hideki Kamiya games. Only non-existing god knows what travesties the race of these “they live”-like degrader aliens will send our way. Beware - they are already here, who will they get next ? Maybe Hideki Kamiya himself ? Maybe the next President ? Maybe your relatives ? Or yours ? Or yours ! *Or yOuRs !*
@@zavier-l1h What german artist do you mean? Mustache man was austrian. And since him there have been tens of thousans of german artists. I don't get why people feel the need to poke and jab like that at strangers. I guess talkin sh*t gives you pleasure or something... You should swallow it instead of spreading it around.
@@louiscolborn6715 As an atheist I can confirm I do use the words "God" "Christ" and "Jesus" in my sentences sometimes. It just adds character and tone.
You haven't heard that many older Germans speak English then... They can be outright hard to understand because of their accent, even if their written English looks perfect. I've got a fair few colleagues in that category. Losing one's accent usually takes a long time and usually it won't happen unless someone spends months or years almost exclusively talking to native speakers. Some (mostly neurodivergent) folks can almost completely lose their accent within hours, though - often even picking up regional dialects as we travel and ending up with an odd mixture of accents and dialects from all over the map that "just feels right" when not trying to fit in.
Great demonstration! Your glassblowing skills as well your experimental skills, reminds me the great C.L. Stong, the experimentalist who was at charge of the Scientific American Magazine section called "The Amateur Scientist" in the 1960's - early 1970's. Congratulations!
You're thinking of a radioactive isotope (Caesium-137). This Caesium began as a stable, non-radioactive metal. For example stable Iodine is a beneficial nutrient while radioactive Iodine-131 is used in radiation therapy.
That is absolutely amazing. Thank you so very much for taking the time to share with us this video. I've always lived chemistry. That was absolutely beautiful.
Ha, yeah, it is. Since it is mostly lab-made and is almost impossible to find, for all intents and purposes cesium functions as the most reactive metal.
From what I know it won't. The reaction is with O2, I've not heard of it being weaponised (173 exempt) Also it burns too fast to be used alike to thermite in Ukraine
For everyone saying “Francium is more reactive” Yes, Francium is the most reactive metal on the periodic table, so it is slightly wrong. But in terms of reactivity, Francium is a laboratory-procured element and only minute quantities have ever been made because of how unstable and radioactive Francium can be (~22 minute half-life). So for practical use cases, Cesium which is above Francium on the periodic table is the most reactive element that is accessible and ethical for use.
The idea that francium is more reactive than cesium is actually a common misconception. Although francium is located below cesium in the periodic table, its ionization energy is slightly higher, making it less reactive. This is due to relativistic effects caused by the size of the francium atom.
@AdvancedTinkering no offense but wouldn’t the slight difference in ionization energy get canceled out by the electron shielding which is higher since Francium is located the furthest down on Group 1
could this be used as a fuel? like what would happen if you injected it into an engine? alone or even with gasoline? does it burn so hot it would just melt through the pistons? or block even? hmmm now where did i put that flask????...
Even if it only reacted with oxygen somehow (like, it was the only fuel and the oxidizer was completely dry) the product is cesium peroxide. Which melts at 590C, the average exhaust system has an exit temperature < 200C so it would form solid crystals in the exhaust.
Should we name it by its colour? Nah. The colour when you heat it, distill it, put it in an ampule, hook it up to a Tesla coil, and heat it again. Sounds great!
great joints on glass work. i cant imagine how scary it is to seal off both ends with that stuff inside. for those who dont know, sealing off both ends creates a vacuum can pull the hot glass inward thinning it out to the point where it breaks. Thus exposing the Caesium to air.
I can attest to the sodium/water reaction. Back in the '70's when in high school we had a student get some sodium from the chemistry supply room. They surrounded it with toilet paper and then flushed it. Never found out who did it but it did some pretty bad damage to the floor and sewer system in the immediate area.
Fun fact its also highly water soluble and if released as a radioactive byproduct into the environment it is one of the biggest contributors to wide area contamination.
No one’s gonna mention his glassblowing skills that was clean
oh thats what the thing he did is called noice
He’s not technically blowing glass here, it was super clean though
@ it is the literal blowing part is only sometimes I blow glass for a living lots of melting and shaping
@@falldown7xstandup8x just curious since you seem like you do this a lot have you had any major injuries whilst performing glassblowing?
@@Sir_Hammock major no worst injury I’ve seen was a fellow artist was taking a larger piece out of the kiln it was like a weeks worth of work it started to fall so he pushed it in out of panic with his hands lol had second degree burns and had to stop for a few weeks other than that no lots of minor cuts and burns but nothing crazy
Wow. I thought I was badass for distilling sulfuric acid. You built your own closed-system glass distillation apparatus. What kind of fuel does your torch run on? MAPP gas? Brown’s gas? It melts borosilicate glass like sugar.
It is a propane/oxygen torch. You need oxygen otherwise the flame will not get hot enough in my experience.
Oxygen will get it hottest though a slight mixture is best
I worked with borosilicate glass using a simple propane torch, no oxygen needed unless you also want to work with quartz glass as well
@@G0RSHK0V Depends a bit on the thickness of the glass, doesn't it. I guess you could work on that glass with propane only, but it takes so long, would give great results and probably produce a lot of soot. We uses a propane torch with oxygen, too
@@AdvancedTinkering That was cool but the worlds most reactive metal is ----------------MOTORHEAD------------------
Yeah let met just make a distillation apparatus on the fly. Amazing
Remember that saying...'mad as a hatter'. The folks making the hats in Victorian times, used to use Mercury.
@@johncheetham4607
And match girls developed Phossie jaw...
And pottery artists had to deal with exotic glazes that also substances like uranium oxides, cadmium etc etc.. be careful what you ask for. 🧙🏼♂️
No doubt. If chemistry fails he can always make glass art & animals at fairs around the world.
Chemistry is indeed spectacular ✨
Yup, it's almost like real magic.
Indeed, what we call Chemistry now started as Alchemy.
Yeah
Chemistry is like modern day alchemy.
Sorry can I ask a question? there's a caesium with numbers attached to it that is radioactive. What makes it radioactive??
"BRO I FOUND GOLD-"
*explodes as he tries to show*
Bruh 💀👍
Mehr als das. Cäsium ist 10 mal so teuer wie Gold!
Forgot to put f ing before expplodes
@@neckashi6971I prefer to keep it simple
@@Arthurmondo OK KISS
That purple and sky blue color is just mesmerizing 🤩🤩🤩
Chemistry in school : I hate it
Chemistry in UA-cam: Wow😍🤩
I really wish UA-cam was around years ago. I would have been a scientist.
One thing that channels like this have taught me over the years is that learning actually is, unironically, really fun. It was school itself that sucked
Less math + more boom = more fun
I don’t have to do stoichiometry or calculate the dipole-dipole moment on UA-cam.
Kids should be playing. School should be reserved for when we actually want to learn this stuff. This is why school fails. Now I love learning.
The people from the Developing Countries : " You guys have Chemistry Classes?! "
I think that it's one of the prettiest elements I've ever seen, it's a metal, great start, it's pretty reflective, it has a gold like color, and it emits blue light when charged, it amazing, and it's reactive 10/10
And it is also used to create the highest accuracy time reference sources.
francium is much for reactive.
@@nick1f, could you elaborate more please?
@@Phantom-309-e9p When Cesium-133 is irradiated with radiation having an energy level corresponding to the difference between its hyperfine ground states, it will reemit that radiation at exactly the duration after it's absorbed every single time. As a result, it can create an exceedingly accurate clock.
Rubidium atomic clocks are more common, but less accurate.
@@Phantom-309-e9p Sure, you can do a google search for "NIST’s Cesium Fountain Atomic Clocks". Cesium and rubidium are metals who can be used to create very stable reference standards. Also, check the Wikipedia page for "Caesium standard". These reference standards are so accurate, if you have a watch with a cesium timebase, it would drift one second in 31 million years! Believe it or not, scientists are still not happy with this precision and they are working to create even more precise time reference standards.
I'm so happy you chose chemistry over painting.
this is very dark 😂😂
Oh man
Came for the gold, stayed for zee German accent
He, ned über uns Witze macha
@@Brudigamer germany isnt immune.
@@Brudigamer Most Americans like German accents. He means it in a good way.
@@Brudigamer der Akzent ist aber auch heftig 😂
@@AlphaSections most germans don't have that fake holywood accent
I love these chemistry youtubers. Even their short form content is good - no minecraft or subway surfers, no annoying captions, no AI voices, just pure information.
More likes for this gem, please!
Oh yes, sir!
Many people use AI voices because they're not english speakers.
I agree with your point, except for the captions part. I'm a bit hard of hearing, so captions help me actually understand what videos say better.
@@aristat you can turn the auto generated captions by clicking the 3 dots at the top right corner
How do you mine a metal like this if it catches fire when coming into contact with oxygen?
Great question!
You don't mine it. You probably have to synthesize it in a lab.
It's mined in impure form.
Then purified in lab.
Simple.
Like iron is mined as a complex rust.
Purified in the furnace.
no more heroes rocks
Was not expecting to see you here lol
??? bro just casually makes a distillation setup freehand.
I mean you make a mini soxhlet nearly all at the bench
Most stuff is made freehand it's not really as hard as it looks. Joins are a bit on the lumpy side but I'm assuming he's more on the lab tech side instead of manufacturing stuff to sell (which I do)
That was a beautiful short. Your skills are nothing short of amazing!
Why is nobody talking about the fact that my dude just home-brewed some SKY???
He homemade a neon bulb. Sky is nitrogen atoms being excited by solar radiation.
@@michaelthemadsoldiertist nerd
@@burberguy5736 It's a chemistry channel. Who did you think was going to be hanging out here?
@@akizeta Omega nerds.
what
I LOVE ZE CHEMISTRY YOUR DOING
Very original. Also sort of bullying by making fun of his accent. Nice job.
Also, it's _you're*_ instead of your.
The guy above me has never heard a joke nor laugh once in their lives
@@peartryfr 😂
@@Lostachillesyou have got to be ze most boring person on zhis earth
*You're
Ceasium when encountering virtually any inconvenience, such as air: *FKING EXPLODES*
Beautifully done, incredible glass skills. Real multi-disciplinary scientist
There's a Brazilian tragedy linked to Cesium 137(a radioactive isotope of cesium), where people of a city thought that the blue-like shininess of Cesium was pretty, and started to share it among the neighborhood.
A bunch of people were poisoned with the radiation and died the following days.
And months and years later too
I believe roughly 1,100 people ended up being contaminated, a few hundred needed hospitalization, and a whole city block was demolished.
The family and junkyard workers and owners who lived were ostracized from the town. The little girl who thought it was fairy dust and died was buried in a lead coffin with massive protests where the city police had to hold back protestors so she could be buried and her aunt (or mother) who had passed and was buried also had massive protest from the city too.
Goiana incident, if I recall correctly?
id like to add that the ppl were dumpster diving at a junkyard, ignored all the skull symbols and what not, and then cracked open the fuel cell of an MRI device. it was 4 morons killing 200+.
@@tarkitarker0815 Not even that. They broke into an abandoned cancer treatment facility and cracked open a clearly labeled radiotherapy machine, if I'm not mistaken.
@tarkitarker0815 thats horrendous 😵💫
The crap Rick Sanchez loves so much
I've always known of the origin of Caesium's name, but had never actually seen that sky blue emission. I love that we're able to see all of these reactions thanks to modern technology and the internet.
How exactly does the emission work?
Right and like the fact that it's named after the blue color we were shown here implies that it was first seen that way? Soooo that just adds a lot of questions for me lol.
I’m not going to lie, hearing “dirty Cesium” in that accent jumpscared me for a second
I love that scientists somehow did all that to figure out it makes that blue color BEFORE naming it.
_Forget about the tagline..._
_-Release the Kraken-_
_...Release the Caesium !_
Top comment, wildly underrated. Tell us how dangerous to human life. " Highly reactive" also wildly underrated. Gotta be a lit off to play with that shit like a toy.........iynyn
That’s chiral crystals
Yes! Couldn’t stop thinking this, glad I’m not alone
It immediately occurred to me where the inspiration came from.
@@VideoGameCookie I'm sad you are not alone. Screw Video Gojira and whatever next piece of crap grind-centric non-game he and his monkeys make. With Hollywood stars, ofcourse !
@@viewtiful1doubleokamihand253 why yes I think Hideo Kojima
(that’s his name you’re not a five-year-old speak like a person)
I personally think Kojima is a little eccentric and has a bit of an overinflated ego but I do think ultimately he does mean well and creates amazing video games that just sometimes lack direction i.e. death stranding
@ Hideo Kojima is dead, murdered and replaced by an alien known as Video Gojira, he started screwing up the career of the decist by making a decision to NOT cast Hayter and from there on he decided to make that lasts MGS into a half-assed grind with two acts and no ending, which fools loved so much he got celebrated even more then previously. Afterwards the alien’s plan to lower everyone’s standards and self-reapect with a literal game where a guy LITERALLY transports stuff on himself throughout a utterly barren, uninteresting and dead landscape. And people, serious, real, hard-working people loved it. Their minds altered, their standards completely degraded, in need of some serious and extensive rehabilitation with only the best of actual Kojima and preferably all of Hideki Kamiya games.
Only non-existing god knows what travesties the race of these “they live”-like degrader aliens will send our way. Beware - they are already here, who will they get next ? Maybe Hideki Kamiya himself ? Maybe the next President ? Maybe your relatives ?
Or yours ?
Or yours !
*Or yOuRs !*
I always wonder whether the discovery of these reactive metals were destructive or not
As a chemist i can tell you are elite... it requires insane skill to build a closed destillation apparatus with a torch. Damn im amazed.
...didn't even notice the hand wound tes coil as well lol
Your German right I’m German too although I have it myself I just love this accent it’s just soooo fucking funny😆
Einfach English Vokabel Buch English
Und Ze und das T scharf aussprechen nicht vergessen 😂
finds schrecklich wie es sich zu oft anhört, wenn deutsche englisch sprechen. xD
Ажывает:._в_другом_образе..1нацыть..😢🦜🧐🥸👱🏻👪✨🦓🦇🦐🦗🥑🧄🥜🫓🍟🫕🍱🍡🥠🍦
@@RustyBearсеит_.-/-&+°=\✓©^°∆π~`¢😊
Specially when ur trying to take over the world!
I don’t know why but in my head. All I can hear is, “Now Mr. Bond. You are going to die.” 😂
Nope... the correct quote is:
Bond "Do you expect me to Talk?"
Goldfinger "No, Mr. Bond, I expect you to die!"
@@tillposer Godfinger 😂
@@alexb5548 Sigh... Thx
99.6% pure blue , you're a god damn artist
"It's not art, it's chemistry." -W.W.
@@zavier-l1h What german artist do you mean? Mustache man was austrian. And since him there have been tens of thousans of german artists.
I don't get why people feel the need to poke and jab like that at strangers. I guess talkin sh*t gives you pleasure or something... You should swallow it instead of spreading it around.
@@alexlupei1228 good point mb gang
What's my name?
@@alexlupei1228 sorry i offended hitler he might be upset
God I love chemistry
I love nature (basically the same thing)
If you truly understood it god would not be in your vocabulary.
@@louiscolborn6715 bruh god is used to increase meaning in the sentence not to mix science and religion
@@louiscolborn6715 negative IQ
@@louiscolborn6715 As an atheist I can confirm I do use the words "God" "Christ" and "Jesus" in my sentences sometimes. It just adds character and tone.
Ive played too much death stranding i almost thought that was an chyrocrystal 😂
Bro sounds like Richtofen from COD Zombies
This specific flavor of German accent is the best (and Richtofen is my king)
Was scrolling to find this comment
One of the Best narrators!
You’ve got a golden voice!
Cesium vs Flourine
Duel to the death who wins? (Both very reactive)
Both win, becoming caesium fluoride
Ich habe noch nie so einen starken deutschen Akzent gehört außer wenn er halt aus komödiantischen Zwecken benutzt wurde
You haven't heard that many older Germans speak English then... They can be outright hard to understand because of their accent, even if their written English looks perfect. I've got a fair few colleagues in that category.
Losing one's accent usually takes a long time and usually it won't happen unless someone spends months or years almost exclusively talking to native speakers. Some (mostly neurodivergent) folks can almost completely lose their accent within hours, though - often even picking up regional dialects as we travel and ending up with an odd mixture of accents and dialects from all over the map that "just feels right" when not trying to fit in.
I think it’s AI
@@SaHlGood Absolutely no way. I know what an AI Voice sounds like. That's for 1000% a real one
@SaHlGood why?
How's that I dont notice any accent, let alone think it hard when I hear a none native oxford english speaker (from a hungarian guy)?
Great demonstration! Your glassblowing skills as well your experimental skills, reminds me the great C.L. Stong, the experimentalist who was at charge of the Scientific American Magazine section called "The Amateur Scientist" in the 1960's - early 1970's. Congratulations!
I was amazed by the reactivity demonstration, and then blown away by your glass blowing skills, holy shit
as a brazillian, I don't mess with caesium at all, a container was scavenged from a abandoned hospital and hell was let lose in a city some years ago
thankfully not all caesium is radioactive like the kind used in hospitals.
Aquele cara era burro mesmo 😂
You're thinking of a radioactive isotope (Caesium-137). This Caesium began as a stable, non-radioactive metal. For example stable Iodine is a beneficial nutrient while radioactive Iodine-131 is used in radiation therapy.
@@Peaches-i2istop yapping lil bro
@@Gravenor7 🤡
So poetic. Something so dangerous is also something incredibly beautiful.
So are tigers, leopards, jaguars, and Rottweilers.
@PaulBrower-bw4jw Yes, cesium is the Rottweiler of the periodic table ...
So are women.
Builds his own apparatus 🙌🏽 we bow down to thee o supreme alchemist
That is absolutely amazing. Thank you so very much for taking the time to share with us this video. I've always lived chemistry. That was absolutely beautiful.
What's about Francium? Isn't Francium more reactive than Caesium?
Yes it is
Good luck finding the two ounces of Francium that allegedly exists on Earth
Ha, yeah, it is. Since it is mostly lab-made and is almost impossible to find, for all intents and purposes cesium functions as the most reactive metal.
exactly what I was thinking!
yes and no. it is more reactive... but it is also highly radioactive, it doesn't really last long enough in any to do much in the way of chemistry
bro got the STARRDENSTARRTENDBURG accent: 🤣🤣🤣☠☠☠
Its not the yellow from the egg 😂
Making your own ad hoc distillation apparatus. Nice!
When you had 7 hr journey without bathroom break.😂
Quick question, since it burns when exposed to air, ampules or this metal can be used as incindiary granades?
From what I know it won't.
The reaction is with O2, I've not heard of it being weaponised (173 exempt)
Also it burns too fast to be used alike to thermite in Ukraine
For everyone saying “Francium is more reactive” Yes, Francium is the most reactive metal on the periodic table, so it is slightly wrong. But in terms of reactivity, Francium is a laboratory-procured element and only minute quantities have ever been made because of how unstable and radioactive Francium can be (~22 minute half-life). So for practical use cases, Cesium which is above Francium on the periodic table is the most reactive element that is accessible and ethical for use.
The idea that francium is more reactive than cesium is actually a common misconception. Although francium is located below cesium in the periodic table, its ionization energy is slightly higher, making it less reactive. This is due to relativistic effects caused by the size of the francium atom.
@AdvancedTinkering no offense but wouldn’t the slight difference in ionization energy get canceled out by the electron shielding which is higher since Francium is located the furthest down on Group 1
@@kennyvo6695 Great discussion going on here, actually curious to see the reply.
Not a Chemist so no clue what’s going on in the discussion. Just wanted to say hi to my mum
@@kennyvo6695f subshell electrons are not good at shielding the nuclear charge so the ionisation energy is slightly higher (I think)
Screw the lethal substance inside, you made a distillation apparatus yourself! I'm inspired.
This was super interesting, I love learning new things like this. Keep them coming
i think bro might be the medic from tf2
bro stol the australium
more like reverse medic, see what happened in brazil with cesium lol
" Forbidden Gold " 💀
"I can then distill the metal" in reference to explosively angry liquid pop rock is so wild to hear.
I'd love to see what reactions were required to get it in the ampule in the first place
Then watch his videos about it
@@hantrio4327 oh dang, he's got a cesium video
Honestly I’m way more impressed by your glass craftsmanship skills, you are building your own stuff and that’s so cool
Easily all around one of the best videos ever produced
Diggah was waren das für pornöse Kristalle am Anfang🤤
What a surprise to see you here 😂
Why does he have the accent of a bond villain
could this be used as a fuel? like what would happen if you injected it into an engine? alone or even with gasoline? does it burn so hot it would just melt through the pistons? or block even? hmmm now where did i put that flask????...
cesium doesn’t vaporize or atomize as readily as gasoline, so it would probably get stuck in the pistons and not burn
@@_thisnameistaken It would also leave a highly-corrosive residue of cesium hydroxide. Add to this, cesium is rare and costly.
Even if it only reacted with oxygen somehow (like, it was the only fuel and the oxidizer was completely dry) the product is cesium peroxide. Which melts at 590C, the average exhaust system has an exit temperature < 200C so it would form solid crystals in the exhaust.
Should we name it by its colour?
Nah. The colour when you heat it, distill it, put it in an ampule, hook it up to a Tesla coil, and heat it again.
Sounds great!
It was discovered by its plasma colour before it was even made
That would be flavium or auroflavium
great joints on glass work. i cant imagine how scary it is to seal off both ends with that stuff inside.
for those who dont know, sealing off both ends creates a vacuum can pull the hot glass inward thinning it out to the point where it breaks. Thus exposing the Caesium to air.
incredible demonstration and a wonderful narration too, thank you 🙏
I can watch this short again and again my whole life without getting bored for a mere moment, such is the beauty of truth(science) 😍
This is exactly how I'd expect someone who knows about this stuff to sound
Sodium, in its metallic form, is also highly reactive with oxygen. Also, quite spectacular when immersed into H20.
I can attest to the sodium/water reaction. Back in the '70's when in high school we had a student get some sodium from the chemistry supply room. They surrounded it with toilet paper and then flushed it. Never found out who did it but it did some pretty bad damage to the floor and sewer system in the immediate area.
Fun fact its also highly water soluble and if released as a radioactive byproduct into the environment it is one of the biggest contributors to wide area contamination.
Didn’t know I needed this but I really did today 🙌🏼
Learned more on you tube than i ever did in school.
finally a good channel making good shorts
I love this. One of my favorite things from chemistry class was seeing this incredible metal turned into a beautiful blue gas
Man, I'd like to see a longer video about your distillation apparatus and how you avoided oxidation during that process
Is this why blue and gold are such complimentary colors >.
Equally fascinating and beautiful! Thank you.
How did they decide the name AFTER they figured out how to do all that!?
im pretty sure the original name was exploding gold.
❤ Amazingly Beautiful
Demo. THANK YOU ! ! !😊
Ok, clearly, this is a "best use" for the technology behind online video sites. Awesome stuff!
Did not know this. Huge amateur chem nerd. That’s awesome, and your ampule work is crazy man! Sick!
Beer company ads: ‘that Caesium looks refreshing on a hot day’
Cesium is also used to measure exactly how long 1 second is
The complexity of this work 😮
It's such a stunning shade of pale gold!
Thanks for sharing.
It doesn't ignite spontaneously, its requires precise conditions to ignite when exposed to air.
Thanks for the useful info!
And you've got some great glass blowing skills too👍👍👏
Great demo
I will forever mourn the fact that I maybe couldve been a chemist. This is absolutely fascinating.
I love your cats. Please take good care of them.
Just so you understand. This is genuinely magic to me. You may think it's "normal" man mate, this is mind blowing.
So cool, I learned a lot about the radioactive decay element cesium-138, but I never knew plain old cesium was this crazy!
This metal is so reactive that it only lasted 15 secs on Twitter before it get ban.
It's so beautiful ❤ thank you for showing it to us!
That was fascinating. I love science. And great glass working skills.
Incredible! Thank you for a beautiful upload
Bro just casually makes his own distillation apparatus I'm crying 😭
That's beautiful. Thanks for showing me something cool that I've never seen before. ❤
I love the cutaway to the cesium just spontaneously burning up as his way of warning us to not play with it lol
My bro's a legendary chemist ! 🧪 Extreme respect my man!
That's a lot of steps before deciding to name something
Thank you. I didn't know I needed to know this