How To Go Faster Than Light Speed (Seriously…)

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  • Опубліковано 9 лют 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1 тис.

  • @besmart
    @besmart  Рік тому +624

    Nuclear reactors are cool. This might be the coolest thing about them. Thanks for watching! I hope I've earned your like and subscription. If you'd like to help me make videos like this one, check out the link to the Patreon in the description!

    • @pyeitme508
      @pyeitme508 Рік тому

      Ha ha

    • @gastonpossel
      @gastonpossel Рік тому +2

      I mean, nuclear reactors are the exact opposite of cool... they're hot! that's the whole idea XD

    • @meinkamph5327
      @meinkamph5327 Рік тому +1

      Tacobell has the ability to travel faster then light speed.......

    • @christianheichel
      @christianheichel Рік тому

      If neutrinos are producing Cherenkov radiation, they should be losing speed. Where are all the slow neutrinos? Why haven't we found them?

    • @linkonmazumdar8155
      @linkonmazumdar8155 Рік тому

      Sometimes I wonder why I watch these videos
      Most of the informations goes above my head 😂 but still these attract me and yeah I love biological videos rather than physics 🙃

  • @chillmaalda7333
    @chillmaalda7333 Рік тому +2594

    Gotta love how Joe just casually sits atop a nuclear reactor

    • @maxwyght1840
      @maxwyght1840 Рік тому +358

      Why would that be an issue?
      Nuclear power is perfectly safe, and with that volume of water, the background radiation is much higher than what's coming from the reactor.

    • @maksphoto78
      @maksphoto78 Рік тому +186

      @@maxwyght1840 It's not perfectly safe, but yeah, water is blocking the radiation here.

    • @maxwyght1840
      @maxwyght1840 Рік тому

      ​@@maksphoto78 people swim those pools all the time to perform maintenance.
      So yeah, it's perfectly safe.
      As long as it wasn't built by communists.

    • @mandelbraught2728
      @mandelbraught2728 Рік тому +123

      Lol exactly. I was worried through the whole video that he was gonna fall in. Lol. I can't tell if it was just the way it was filmed, but could someone fall in there?!

    • @DivineApparition
      @DivineApparition Рік тому +78

      This is small nuclear reactor, for test so it not much radiation, also water is the best shield

  • @see8chsee
    @see8chsee Рік тому +784

    As a particle physicist, I appreciate this video. Cherenkov radiation can be used to measure the speed of a high energy particle traveling through a medium as well as to distinguish types of particles such as electron vs muon.

    • @prateekkarn9277
      @prateekkarn9277 Рік тому +4

      The muons just existing cuz of time dilation?

    • @thomasciarlariello3228
      @thomasciarlariello3228 Рік тому +4

      Cosmic ray muons are from economic necessity given how expensive particle accelerators are even if Inai has a Japanese patent on ground based muon particle beams to supply rocket engines in flight so for relativistic spaceflights a ship and crew would turn into meson particles to sink into gravity wells and burst with force of a supernova.

    • @ThiagoFer93
      @ThiagoFer93 Рік тому +3

      Just a random question of someone that isn't physicist: If Cherenkov radiation is the "echo" of the light of a high energy particle and can be used to measure the speed of that particle, why can't we break the uncertainty principle with it? Measuring it's position and then using the "echo" to determine its speed?

    • @see8chsee
      @see8chsee Рік тому +5

      @@ThiagoFer93 No physical quantity can be measured with 100% precision. You can measure the position and the momentum, just cannot do it precise enough simultaneously to break the uncertainty principle.

    • @rosyidharyadi7871
      @rosyidharyadi7871 Рік тому

      does it work for neutral particles? because from the explanation from the video, it seems like it has something to do with its electric charge as well.

  • @xtieburn
    @xtieburn Рік тому +460

    This is why I quite like 'Speed of Causality' for light speed in a vacuum. I think its clearer, or at least gets people asking the right questions.

    • @ultraawakening4328
      @ultraawakening4328 Рік тому +14

      I agree 👍

    • @YayComity
      @YayComity Рік тому +60

      True. My car can go faster than a Lamborghini... through a car wash.

    • @DarthVaderfr
      @DarthVaderfr Рік тому +43

      ​@@YayComity i can go faster than any airplane, if we are both in water

    • @scottmacs
      @scottmacs Рік тому

      Yes!

    • @dowesschule
      @dowesschule Рік тому +6

      That‘s why it‘s called c, right?

  • @gastonpossel
    @gastonpossel Рік тому +362

    I've seen the Cherenkov effect myself, on top of a pool of water with a small reactor core below too. It's beautiful. But I thought it had to do with neutrons shooting into the water, so you've corrected this mistake in my mind. Thank you. A shockwave of light, that's awesome!

    • @Selenes7
      @Selenes7 Рік тому +5

      I think that happens too. Like at the IceCube Neutrino Observatory in Antarctica...

    • @gastonpossel
      @gastonpossel Рік тому +2

      @@Selenes7 I was thinking about neutrons, not neutrinos. Anyway, that is interesting, since I understood from the video that the effect is caused by charged particles.

    • @Selenes7
      @Selenes7 Рік тому +1

      @@gastonpossel Oh I misread.. but yeah that is interesting.. need to look up how the emission from the neutrons passing through water happens!

    • @MrMan20
      @MrMan20 Рік тому

      Photonic wave

    • @bsadewitz
      @bsadewitz Рік тому +3

      @@Selenes7 "Neutrinos are detected in water Cherenkovs when they interact by W exchange, converting into the equivalent charged lepton (muon or electron for νμ or νe respectively), or when they elastically scatter off electrons (when the recoil electron can be detected)."

  • @bluehairedemon
    @bluehairedemon Рік тому +551

    to anyone wondering how joe is still safe;
    the water between him the the rods is protecting him, even if he was in the water he would be alright, there's more than actually needed, to be extra safe

    • @Gamertaque
      @Gamertaque Рік тому +42

      True water blocks radiation very well, why else is water inside space stations’ walls but to protect you inside, ask any person at nasa about radiation in space and the answer is just water, except the janito ofc

    • @threemooseqateers9689
      @threemooseqateers9689 Рік тому +18

      Hot tub :D

    • @vaingloriant
      @vaingloriant Рік тому +29

      @@threemooseqateers9689 Forbidden hot tub

    • @jackwastakenx2
      @jackwastakenx2 Рік тому +4

      @@vaingloriantbut not cuz radioactivity, you just ain’t allowed cuz it’ll make the water dirty (also it’s more a cool tub)

    • @msmohexon3087
      @msmohexon3087 5 місяців тому

      ​@@jackwastakenx2iirc from whatifs video they tend to be 36°C

  • @mycosys
    @mycosys Рік тому +138

    Cherenkov radiation in a spent fuel pool is genuinely one of the most beautiful things ive seen, truly unforgettable

    • @mycosys
      @mycosys Рік тому +27

      @Diesel Techie Wow, that is utterly untrue. Spent fuel from traditional reactors is actually about 5% consumed. There is enough energy in 'spent' fuel reserves to power humanity for about 500+ years with more efficient reactors. The best and ONLY practical way we have to get rid of nuclear fuel waste is fast neutron reactors.
      Why didnt we use them in the first place? they dont produce enough of the nuclear waste they wanted to make weapons.

    • @draghettis6524
      @draghettis6524 Рік тому +14

      @@mycosys And when the technology was finally explored, anti-nuclear activists were not happy, for some reason.
      Like, here in France we had two, Phénix and Superphénix, two prototypes of fast neutron reactors, and inarguably two successes.
      During its construction, Superphénix was the target of an unclaimed terrorist attack. With a rocket launcher.
      It was shut down in 1997, despite a stellar 1996, because of the "ecologists"

    • @CraftyF0X
      @CraftyF0X Рік тому +3

      @@mycosys That's not entirely correct reasoning, fast spectrum reactors are perfectly capable to produce weapon material via breeding. Matter in fact they are much better at it than the commercially used moderated reactors, because those don't necessary need fuel reprocessing or at least not as extensive to acces the materials.

  • @Acid_Viking
    @Acid_Viking Рік тому +94

    When I was a kid, my friend Todd used to steal Red Bull from his dad and we would ride our bikes faster than the speed of light. We had fun observing the relativistic effects as our velocity increased. Time always seemed to fly by. We'd get started in the afternoon, and by the time we got home, dinner had been over 40 years ago. Those were good times.

    • @SuperMarioOddity
      @SuperMarioOddity Рік тому +10

      I thought red bull gave you wings, not bike powers?

    • @melissaleigh8019
      @melissaleigh8019 Рік тому +1

      fr fr i can relate

    • @Crusader1648
      @Crusader1648 11 місяців тому +1

      @funkytrickster618 It’s the new line of Redbull they released, didn’t you hear?

    • @GregJumpscare
      @GregJumpscare 11 місяців тому +1

      @@SuperMarioOddity red bull breaks realityyyyy~

    • @tetzy3882
      @tetzy3882 10 місяців тому +2

      This read like a quote from a novelist

  • @Beryllahawk
    @Beryllahawk Рік тому +72

    I absolutely love that you also showcase how chill you can be around a nuclear reactor. Yes, it's small, but ALSO it's built such that you can absolutely sit right there and be perfectly fine, even if you did fall in.
    I'm also giggling a lot, because the first time I learned about Cherenkov radiation was after it was mentioned a little (possibly infamous) article called "Man of Steel, Woman of Kleenex" by Larry Niven...

    • @singularityscan
      @singularityscan Рік тому +2

      You can showcase getting a lethal dose of radiation while remaining absolutely chill 😂 Filming it without camera distortion is harder though.

    • @jackwastakenx2
      @jackwastakenx2 Рік тому

      @@singularityscanwell it’s still not lethal in most cases; I’ve been to a reactor; I’m not even in university/college

  • @NishantKumar-nq6nl
    @NishantKumar-nq6nl Рік тому +26

    this is sure the best time to be living in, just think how much information we normal people have access to, which would be a dream for a scientists back then, thank you for explaining such a complex thing in a very easy way

  • @luismijangos7844
    @luismijangos7844 Рік тому +48

    Great video, Dr. Joe!!! Just one thing: at 8:27 it's implied that you can use Cherenkov radiation to detect neutrinos, but technically neutrinos can't produce Cherenkov radiation because they have no charge. The neutrino has to decay in other particles in order to be able to produce Cherenkov radiation.

    • @tomlxyz
      @tomlxyz Рік тому +5

      You can use it for neutrinos, in that case muons or electrons are first created which in turn do have a charge and thus it can be detected the same way

  • @jeroenrl1438
    @jeroenrl1438 Рік тому +21

    One of the most beautiful things I have ever seen. Going to a nuclear power plant while studying Physics at university. Cherenkov radiation makes all the water light up. Really magical.

  • @Mike-mu7tk
    @Mike-mu7tk Рік тому +9

    Thanks for giving me that '"click" Oh, I get it now!' moment. Such a great feeling

  • @hamsterclamper
    @hamsterclamper Рік тому +62

    Superbly well explained. Well done😊

  • @NewMessage
    @NewMessage Рік тому +24

    Pretty enlightening.

  • @derekofbaltimore
    @derekofbaltimore Рік тому +5

    The reason my brain isnt hurting is because youve done an excellent job at explaining it

  • @Petriefied0246
    @Petriefied0246 Рік тому +28

    I love these quirks of physics!

    • @tri-ify8852
      @tri-ify8852 Рік тому +1

      Wait how was this 2 days ago

    • @rykehuss3435
      @rykehuss3435 Рік тому

      Its not a quirk of physics. Light is not decelerating

    • @mycosys
      @mycosys Рік тому +1

      quark quirks!

    • @Petriefied0246
      @Petriefied0246 Рік тому +1

      @@tri-ify8852 Patreon innit.

    • @Petriefied0246
      @Petriefied0246 Рік тому

      @@rykehuss3435 light changing speed when it changes medium is a quirk of physics.

  • @Sunflowersarepretty
    @Sunflowersarepretty Рік тому +21

    I'd need to watch it twice or even thrice to understand it better. Also the analogies were great especially the duck going at turbo speed and the ripples behind it bunching together. Something just clicked in my head then. (English is not my native language so my bad if something feels off in my wording) I love these videos.

    • @gavinhicks7621
      @gavinhicks7621 Рік тому +1

      Your English is amazing! I wish I could speak more languages. As an American, foreign languages aren’t taught well here. I know most other places teach a few languages throughout all of their schooling. In America, we touch on Spanish a couple times and move on.

  • @zolacnomiko
    @zolacnomiko Рік тому +7

    This is really cool! I knew about Cherenkov detectors (although not necessarily by that name) and how they give off light when particles pass through the water, but I'd never had a detailed explanation of *how* and *why*!

  • @ggtt2547
    @ggtt2547 Рік тому +5

    Great, just great visuals. Thank you for the constant quality!!

  • @KurtQuad
    @KurtQuad Рік тому +5

    I’d love to see a collaboration with Be Smart and PBS space time.

  • @ballgoodman
    @ballgoodman Рік тому +6

    I think we should call it a superluminal shock wave, it sound cooler than photonic boom, and its also a better description of what is actually happening

  • @orange-micro-fiber9740
    @orange-micro-fiber9740 Рік тому +3

    9:35 what did he say? Shedding light. Oh. Shedding. That's not what I heard at first.

  • @minuteenglish8538
    @minuteenglish8538 Рік тому +1

    as expert in psychology of light i can say that the blue glow is just light protesting because it is not used to be outrun

  • @kamabokogonpachiro6797
    @kamabokogonpachiro6797 Рік тому +3

    9:41 as a fellow dude i can confirm we all wanted to jump into it

  • @cmuller1441
    @cmuller1441 Рік тому +126

    The trick is not going faster than c. The trick is slowing down light in water...

    • @MNSalty
      @MNSalty Рік тому +3

      …………..god forbid they make a video to educate people that don’t know…………

    • @phoenixsmaug1568
      @phoenixsmaug1568 Рік тому +16

      ​@@MNSalty Then maybe without such pathetic clickbait

    • @Shadow_banned_by_YouTube
      @Shadow_banned_by_YouTube Рік тому +1

      @@phoenixsmaug1568 agree

    • @spiguy
      @spiguy Рік тому +9

      ​​@@phoenixsmaug1568 just 1:30 into the video he clarifies the meaning of the statement

    • @emreyurtseven23
      @emreyurtseven23 Рік тому +3

      @@phoenixsmaug1568 Meeh it's ok if more people are going to learn because of it, I think

  • @edgeeffect
    @edgeeffect Рік тому +1

    Excellent work... I started this video thinking "'faster than light'? I don't (expletive deleted) think so!" and finished it thinking "Oh... so that's why neutrino detectors are in gigantic buckets of water".

  • @Vordb666
    @Vordb666 Рік тому +6

    I like that since it's 2023 it's completely acceptable to casually use stock death metal music in your science education video

    • @besmart
      @besmart  Рік тому +7

      Oh I've been droppin' death metal stings since at least 2019

    • @_mmuffe_3079
      @_mmuffe_3079 Рік тому +2

      We only need more stock death metal in science education :))

    • @Vordb666
      @Vordb666 Рік тому

      @@besmart oh you know what you're right LOL

  • @DigSamurai
    @DigSamurai Рік тому +4

    This video has the best clickable but not clickbait title in the history of UA-cam!
    It's immensely provocative and on its face, seems easily disprovable and yet it's 100% accurate and scientifically provable. Prodigious!
    You are clearly a man of sagacity and wit. 😎

  • @waynecribbs8853
    @waynecribbs8853 Рік тому +2

    This was an excellent explanation of light and Cherenkov radiation!

  • @orlevzach
    @orlevzach Рік тому +3

    Excellent video. It's astonishing how you (all of you, include the animators!) succeed to explain such complicated issues.

  • @illuminum8576
    @illuminum8576 Рік тому +1

    Wanted to know that thanks, actually much more straight forward than I expected

  • @markusnl
    @markusnl Рік тому +16

    But Joe, nothing can travel faster than the speed of light!

    • @Crausy
      @Crausy Рік тому +8

      I see what you did there...

  • @snake698
    @snake698 Рік тому

    What you did there is amazing, people that has a background will probably think that you're referring to the speed of causality until about 2 minutes in when they realized that you actually meant proper speed of light, you totally tricked me there, I was gonna argue

  • @balex7677
    @balex7677 Рік тому +6

    At 6:02 the positive partial charges of water are at the hydrogen atoms. Wouldn't the molecules turn their positive parts (hydrogen) to the passing electron (which is negative).

  • @Dionyzos
    @Dionyzos Рік тому

    That a channel like this has almost 5 million subscribers makes me happy

  • @kamigoroshi9459
    @kamigoroshi9459 Рік тому +13

    One interesting thing to think about is that the Cherenkov effect in case of the nuclear reactor is due to the interaction of the charged particle and the water molecules and the subsequent "piling up of the ripples of light", then how do the Cherenkov detectors work in case of neutrinos which do not interact with matter? Actually, they DO interact with matter, albeit rarely. The neutrinos interact through weak force which is very short range. And since these neutrinos are high energy as well, one can imagine the rarity of these interactions.

  • @martijn8491
    @martijn8491 Рік тому

    The explanation is already very good and thorough for a short UA-cam video, but the effect that of the light slowing down in a medium is only almost right.
    Indeed the electromagnetic wave tugs on the (mostly) electrons in the material, which moves along with the light and therefore, being an oscillating charge, creates its own wave, called a polarization wave. But then, this newly created field doesn't "tug" on the other field, because ligth does not actually interact with light. Instead, basically create a moving interference pattern, which is the light we observe going through the medium. The reason that the final wave is slower than the speed of light in vacuum is that the electrons (and other charged particles) have mass and therefore don't respond instantly. So the polarization wave therefore laggs behind the original wave as well.

  • @racecarrik
    @racecarrik Рік тому +3

    Like the video, one quick correction would be the graphic at 6:00 is slightly off, the positive end of water is the hydrogens, so that's the thing that would be attracted to the negative electron, not the oxygen as is shown.

  • @Mynameisgfbf
    @Mynameisgfbf Рік тому +2

    Nasa better sponsorin this video💀💀💀💀

  • @henriroggeman7267
    @henriroggeman7267 Рік тому +5

    This Danish lady professor slowed down light so much you could walk past it, Joe. I don't think this is what people have in mind when they talk about "traveling" faster than the speed of light 😀

  • @AironExTv
    @AironExTv Рік тому +1

    Great video. I had no idea this is how Neutrino detectors work.

  • @NeonVisual
    @NeonVisual Рік тому +6

    That's the warp core

  • @LuisCastillo-tg6xw
    @LuisCastillo-tg6xw Рік тому +1

    I'm sure the camera doesn't capture the glowing beauty of a reactor. But otherwise 99% of us would never get to see it, thanks team!

  • @Nell_Hell
    @Nell_Hell Рік тому +4

    sience like this always gets me hyped up like a jet turbine

  • @andrewwalledge6101
    @andrewwalledge6101 Рік тому

    You have the most amazingly good job - and you're incredibly good at it too. Staying curious.

  • @J_i_m_
    @J_i_m_ Рік тому +3

    Did anyone else saw the Mandelbrot set @7:00 ?

  • @-Slinger-
    @-Slinger- Рік тому +1

    Marie Curie - Glowing Personality is the epitome of tragicomic.

  • @calcaware
    @calcaware Рік тому +18

    Would the temperature of the water affect the color?
    I love how out of the entire spectrum it just happens to have the right energy to be bluish white instead of most of the spectrum being not visible.

    • @madonius
      @madonius Рік тому +8

      No, at least not in the perceived wavelength. There is a correlation of refractive index and temperature and a correlation between the refractive index and the maximum frequency that is emitted. But this would have no effect in the perceived colour of the glow.

    • @davidroddini1512
      @davidroddini1512 Рік тому +1

      The charged particles are moving toward the top of the tank so the light is blue shifted. If you could see the particles moving downward through the water they would be red shifted since they are moving away from the observer. 😉

  • @relaxedpenny604
    @relaxedpenny604 Рік тому +1

    Mmmm, cool swimming pool, I like the mood lights

  • @andi5262
    @andi5262 Рік тому +16

    A light-boom?🤔🧐 Makes sense. Also, I never new there was anything that could move faster than the speed of light. That’s pretty cool.

    • @crewgunnight8987
      @crewgunnight8987 Рік тому +3

      Flash: am i a joke to u?

    • @badoem5353
      @badoem5353 Рік тому +1

      Actively, not cause the e= mc²
      But space could technically could be faster. Like light has no mass, space doesn't really need (added) energy to exist or accelerate. It's in homeostasis technically.

    • @pix23
      @pix23 Рік тому

      This idea intrigued me and I searched a bit, it seems the term used is "photonic boom". Although maybe "photonic flash" would better capture the redundancy present in the original term

  • @HelenaSavicMurphy-od5un
    @HelenaSavicMurphy-od5un Рік тому +2

    I'd love it for Joe to explain more about microcurrent in a longer form video! The foreo bear explaination was wonderful

  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam Рік тому +13

    To go faster than the speed of light you just need to be r34 artist

    • @joshuaosei5628
      @joshuaosei5628 Рік тому +2

      I want to understand this, but something tells me it’s better I don’t

    • @Guru_1092
      @Guru_1092 Рік тому +3

      ​@@joshuaosei5628 good intuition.

    • @lorenzoblum868
      @lorenzoblum868 Рік тому

      The speed of darkness on steroids.

    • @ryangainey94
      @ryangainey94 10 місяців тому

      ​@@joshuaosei5628 Rule 34: If it exists, there is porn of it. You can commission a "r34 artist" to create pornographic images of whatever you want. That being said, drawing pornographic matter going faster than the speed of light isn't the same thing as actually being faster than the speed of light, so I must admit I don't really understand what the joke is either, even though I know what a r34 artist is.

    • @joshuaosei5628
      @joshuaosei5628 10 місяців тому

      @@ryangainey94 Thanks for the explanation. I guess the joke was that people must be very quick to make the porn of that fandom or idea, and so they’re so fast they “go faster than the speed of light”

  • @anandha12
    @anandha12 Рік тому

    Really happy that I randomly landed on this video.😊

  • @kanshank
    @kanshank Рік тому +5

    Imaging going faster than light speed and not even be able to flex about breaking the laws of physics

    • @rykehuss3435
      @rykehuss3435 Рік тому +1

      Light does not decelerate. Its still traveling at c, even in water. It just takes more time since the photons are constantly being absorbed and re-emitted by the atoms of said medium.

  • @hrtbrk1
    @hrtbrk1 11 місяців тому

    Like a Shockwave with the speed of sound, but with the speed of light. Love it.
    Also love when you explain something and i get excited because it makes sense, then say "if your brain hurts right now its okay." When my brain isnt hurting!

  • @907-q7u
    @907-q7u Рік тому +6

    The speed of light is already variable.

    • @wolvenar
      @wolvenar Рік тому +6

      The speed of light != C C is not always equal in all space, as gravity affects the local constant, because all dimensions change and distort.

    • @907-q7u
      @907-q7u Рік тому

      My theory dwarfs all of the vaccum, constant & dimensional limitations. I can actually prove it with a small diagram, but ideally, I'd like to further test on a simulator.

    • @rykehuss3435
      @rykehuss3435 Рік тому

      @@wolvenar Wrong. The speed of light is always the same, even in mediums. It is not variable. Photons in water still travel at c, they just bump into atoms and get absorbed, re-emitted and then sent on their way.
      Photons cannot decelerate, anything with rest mass will ALWAYS travel at c. If you disagree then go ahead and disprove theory of special relativity.

    • @wolvenar
      @wolvenar Рік тому +1

      @@rykehuss3435 You might want to find out what happens mathematically to C and all the dimensions as you approach a gravity well, now work that relative to a second observer from a position well away from the gravity well.

    • @rykehuss3435
      @rykehuss3435 Рік тому

      @@wolvenar Nothing happens to it. You might want to find out about general and special relativity.

  • @DarkModeIndonesiaEdition
    @DarkModeIndonesiaEdition Рік тому

    Some scientists in black mesa:
    "Speedrunner Gordon doesn't need to hear all of this he's a highly trained professionals"

  • @Equisilus
    @Equisilus Рік тому +2

    Ah, you have got to love learning something new.

  • @emilymations
    @emilymations Рік тому +3

    0:35 *w o b b l e w o b b l e w o b b l e w o b b l e*

  • @sonicwaveinfinitymiddwelle8555

    5:22 when your dad sees you using incognito tab on chrome

  • @N3ur0m4nc3r
    @N3ur0m4nc3r Рік тому +3

    Can't help but imagine you oops-ing right into that reactor.

  • @subratamridha1339
    @subratamridha1339 Рік тому

    The opening scene is soo satisfying...

  • @Alec_Reaper
    @Alec_Reaper Рік тому +6

    I simply just run really fast.

  • @Neceros
    @Neceros Рік тому

    the swan segment was good. this pleases me

  • @akshay831
    @akshay831 Рік тому

    Just found your channel from the rainbow video and have commenced my weeklong binge of the backlog. Great stuff keep up the great work Joe!

  • @DuckSlinger11
    @DuckSlinger11 Рік тому +5

    Hey! Great video! I have 2 questions:
    1. In the portion where you explain Cherenkov radiation with electrons (5:58 to 6:25) the water molecules are re-orienting themselves due to the electric field the electron is giving off. I was just wondering whether the re-orientation of the water molecules was correct, since the e- is negative, and the water molecule being polar, the positive side (Hydrogen side) would be facing the e- as it went by. In the video the negative side of the water (2 pairs of e- on the O) face the e- as it goes by. Let me know if I am wrong or if it is due to other facotrs, such as the magnetic field the moving charge produces, or perhaps the field the e- produces is very small compared to the field the other water molecules produce and so it is a relativley small change etc.
    2. Lastly, I don't fully understand why the neutrinos produce Cherenkov radiation. I understand the e- doing it, since it interacts with the Electromagnetic force with it's neighbours (water), producing EM waves. However, as you stated in the video, neutrinos don't interact electromagnetically (since they are neutral charge), therefore I don't see how they can produce light. Perhaps it is a different sort of Cherenkov radiation, produced by other mechanisms such as the weak force, which eventually produces EM waves (Cherenkov radiation)
    Many thanks, again great video I enjoyed it alot!

    • @NightBlazr_
      @NightBlazr_ 11 місяців тому

      1. I think you're right.
      2. "Neutrinos are detected in water Cherenkovs when they interact by W exchange, converting into the equivalent charged lepton (muon or electron for νμ or νe respectively), or when they elastically scatter off electrons (when the recoil electron can be detected)."
      I got this from another comment.

  • @sharcblazer99
    @sharcblazer99 Рік тому

    That magical blue glow is so pretty, what I wouldn't give to see that in person.

  • @Ali_Fly
    @Ali_Fly 11 місяців тому +13

    I feel clickbaited

  • @iwansays
    @iwansays Рік тому

    Today I learned more about light. Thank you.

  • @DaMulletMan9
    @DaMulletMan9 Місяць тому +1

    Me and the boys going to get beans at 3AM

    • @RituSharma-tf8gk
      @RituSharma-tf8gk День тому

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @kushagrachaurasia5855
    @kushagrachaurasia5855 Рік тому +2

    Einstein's spirit would be around you trying to kill you.😂

  • @ehrenloudermilk1053
    @ehrenloudermilk1053 Рік тому

    Whoa dude. Youre blowing my mind right now

  • @TateIsaacs
    @TateIsaacs Рік тому +1

    I feel like more people need to see this just to understand how safe nuclear reactors are

  • @serenity8839
    @serenity8839 Рік тому +1

    Finally needed a tutorial on this.

  • @xy_iron
    @xy_iron Рік тому +1

    7:52 Her real name was Marie Skłodowska-Curie

  • @MrDrProfJMF
    @MrDrProfJMF Рік тому +1

    I feel slightly betrayed that the explanation for traveling faster than the speed of light first involves lowering the speed of light

  • @IsntPhoenix
    @IsntPhoenix Рік тому +2

    0:09 IN THIS VIDEO, I WILL GO DIVING IN A ACTIVE NUCLEAR POOL - Mrbeast

  • @m3talHalide-rt2fz
    @m3talHalide-rt2fz 6 місяців тому

    the "speed of light" is usually convenient, but used so often we forget that its the speed of causality or interaction, which isnt close to being messed with by this phenomenon since the propagation will never get 'in front' of the fast-moving particle.

  • @UrsulaPainter
    @UrsulaPainter 10 місяців тому

    Thank you for teaching us about Cherenkov "thingies".

  • @Satelitko
    @Satelitko Рік тому

    That blue color is the most beautiful blue I've seen in my life. It's been my phone background for years.

  • @AaronOrtiz
    @AaronOrtiz Рік тому

    I had not understood the magnetic and electrical fields that make us light until seeing this video!

  • @PTRMAN
    @PTRMAN Рік тому

    Wow. That "celebrity walking through a crowd" analogy was fantastic!

  • @frenche4life
    @frenche4life Рік тому

    Such an amazing episode!

  • @WritingInEnglish100
    @WritingInEnglish100 Рік тому +1

    So clearly explained! Thanks 🙂

  • @RJ_Ehlert
    @RJ_Ehlert Рік тому +1

    Nice.

  • @yortgq
    @yortgq Рік тому

    Thanks for shedding light on weird physics, Joe

  • @zenbum2654
    @zenbum2654 Рік тому +2

    Another great video. Thanks.
    However, I think your animation of an electron passing through a bunch of water molecules was slightly wrong. As the electron passed, you showed each molecule rotating so that its oxygen side was closer to the electron. I think the torque on the dipole would actually turn the hydrogen side towards the electron.

  • @ancient4371
    @ancient4371 Рік тому

    Another good way to explain the speed of light in different mediums could be. Your walking on a stopped moving walkway, that's speed of light in a vacuum and once light goes through glass or water, the walkway moves against your walking slowing your movement speed but your walking speed to yourself doesn't change. Just a lil shower thought

  • @Metalkatt
    @Metalkatt Рік тому

    There's something about the way Joe said "It's the fastest speed there is" has me hearing Eric Idle singing about the universe.

  • @downykitten6439
    @downykitten6439 Рік тому

    Fun fact. Water does scatter light in every direction. The majority of the light from the source passes through straight but is much dimmer than if it wasnt in water. What you're seeing in the reactor is water insulating the photons being emitted, creating a glow.

  • @nadiposzata17
    @nadiposzata17 Рік тому

    WOW, EPIC video!!! Thank You!

  • @EldritchCypher
    @EldritchCypher Рік тому

    Like how you went full glowing Mr Burns at the end there! Lol

  • @stuartgibbel
    @stuartgibbel Рік тому

    Learned so much from this video. Thanks.

  • @Huggybear_
    @Huggybear_ Рік тому

    I just learned so much!

  • @byurBUDdy
    @byurBUDdy Рік тому

    Considering that the meter is tied to the speed of light, we could say that the speed of light was measured by a rubber ruler, as the length changes to always make the speed of light equal the constant that scientist established.

  • @najati
    @najati Рік тому

    Excellent video.

  • @JoeBuk724
    @JoeBuk724 Рік тому

    Great video, that glow is so cool and now I have a better idea of how those giant detectors work.

  • @jamielandis4606
    @jamielandis4606 Рік тому

    I wish I had you as a science teacher! ❤

  • @dennistucker1153
    @dennistucker1153 Рік тому

    The reason why this content makes sense is the reason why I believe the actual speed of light is infinite. I believe the whole "speed of light in a vacuum" is just another medium. A medium that cannot and does not remove all external effects on 'em' waves.