How to make a Water Bridge
Вставка
- Опубліковано 20 бер 2019
- Hey! thanks for watching the video... again this is dangerous, so yeah. Anyways, I have been posting so few videos recently just due to the time I have to spend on university stuff, and research, as I need to publish a couple papers by the end of the year. I will try and post more though!! :)
Thanks guys!
Papers mentioned:
Physics of Fluids 22.12 (2010): 122104.
Physical Review E 86.2 (2012): 026302.
Join the discord discussion! : / discord
Refrigerator Vacuum Pump: goo.gl/pvV5Gb
Arc Glove: goo.gl/vDMskG
High Voltage Supply: goo.gl/eg6C9s
Follow me on Twitter! / keyst0nescience
@Keyst0neScience
Support me on Patreon to fund better experiments: / keystonescience
The pen I use was donated by: hobblecreekcraftsman.com
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Inquires: Sequence01123581321@gmail.com
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
music:
Broke for free, Night owl ;
Enthalpy, Rolemusic
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Facebook : / keystonescie. . ( I never get on facebook though ) - Наука та технологія
Long time no see dude. Amazing work keep it up!
Nice work Nate! Great seeing you back in UA-cam land!
Thanks! :)
@@KeystoneScience Your channel has still grown in your relative absence. This is a great sign of a strong channel. Cheers, mate.
Physics : water and electricity don’t mix.
This guy: *in my world it does*
You said *SEE YOU NEXT TIME*. Is that mean see you after 1 yr
yes
It does
You seem to get happier with time. So nice to see you doing the experiments with such mood.
Never clicked on a video faster.
Same
Hey didn't expect to see you here
I saw the thumbnail, then I read the title, then I took a good look at it and clicked on it.
Never subscribed faster😂
I assume the largest resistance in the circuit is the water bridge, and that’s where most of the heat is created, and since there is a flow of water over the bridge most of the heat will go towards the negative beaker? Btw, great to see you again!
underrated comment
lol..manage to incorporate fire into your water experiment.. that's how you know you're on the right track.
Well done! Great to see you back on YT and still making quality content!
Thanks! It’s nice seeing you aswell ;)
Can't wait for next weeks video! :) haha
Looks cool! Definitely trying this one at home
The Best part is him plugging the papers in the description of the video
Great video :) love your channel, long time follower. , Please never give up!
love your videos dude
I'm happy to see this experiment--I wanted to do it, but I don't have a variable-voltage power supply. I did a bunch of other experiments, though--the bridge is birefringent, interestingly. I also added some pH dye to the beakers and got an interesting result.
Best "weekly" show ever.
Sweeeet glad ur back 👍
Remember kids,
Be safe with science, or you'll end up like topsy the elephant. :)
It was murdered
Bobs burgers?
Henry Kirkwood yes
They’ll say, “Aww, Topsy at my AAUUTOPSY!”
I wonder if a magnet suspended above the bridge would increase the distance.
@@Psyden5757 Water is a polar molecule. I'm wondering if, with all that high voltage around, their behaviour would be affected.
Hoooolllly crappp your back!
Nice work Keystone
Was waiting for your arrival friend.
One of the good rare videos :')
This was really cool
Maybe due to the higher electron concentration on the negative side (obviously) there was a rather huge current flowing via capacitance to the environment therefore heating it up
Thanks for the interesting video!
Can you show us how to make a DRSSTC?
Propably the Water is heated up by the electricity and this heated water rises to the top and than flows to the negative beaker.
ok so i tried it and it is so cool Thanks!
Cool experiment man, can it also work with other liquids?
What would be a good project for complete beginners to curcuts and high voltage electronocs? Ive been wanting to build a desktop jacobs ladder but I have never used anything remotely close to sautering iron.
Always great to see a new science video Keystone, but I feel like everybody's doing this experiment these days. I don't think you added much to what's already been done. After 3 months, I just expected something more... unique.
Hopefully your next project will be well worth the wait.
P.S. It's nice to see you're still around. Hope college is going well for you.
P.P.S. Edited this comment to be less "cunty"
@@TheCrazyBird844 I see what you did there. That's funny.
FYI, I'm not leaving that comment maliciously. I like Keystone Science and feel that criticism is well deserved. If I didn't care, I'd just leave. I did edit it to make it less "cunty" though - I can take criticism too. Thanks.
P.S. Cool comment.
Could this possibly work with an arclighter because that would be pretty safe. Or do the water bridges require lots of current to form?
PLEASE Hold a flame up to the Water Bridge, maybe need it to run for a bit, not sure, try it at different distances and voltages. IF I am correct the flame should act like the water is helping it in some manner, or the water just sustaine it's own flame when you pull yours away!
Cheers data that was awesome
HE'S BACK
HES BACK GUYS
Love the music
are you and cody still planning on doing the fusion reactor?
welcome back 😆💙
Yay, you aren't dead!
Wow if you can put together a quantum eraser that would be cool. I think that would be a challenging project that could require some $pecial equipment. Good luck. Thanks for all the nice work.
Could you some how use this as a pump?
Has it been "a week" already?
Will a higher current (greatly) influence the length of the bridge too? (Maybe also linear rising, but way less efficient?)
I think the Water on the cathode is hot, because it's the side you got the arcs at the moments of "bad connection".
Maybe because the hot water is dragged to this side too, but this shouldn't make that much of a difference.
Very much enjoyed the comments that flash on the screen haha
Would this work with non-polar fluids as well? or is it important for the electron-flow that the molecules are polar?
What was the incident that occurred here at 4:36?
And, due to all the clear explanations behind some *_real_** Science* ...well, *_I'm your latest Sub!_*
_Edit =_ Also, you don't treat your audience like 5 y/o's. _That's_ huge! Bell rung.
_Cheers!_
Crossed wires, happens all the time!!! My proof? The flashes are orange, because the arc is burning the insulation!!
Interesting video. I would liked to have seen a more scientific mechanism for separating the beakers like a motor connected in series to the water bridge so when it breaks the motor stops tho
You should make an optical tweezer where the floating lense moves along the laser if it's possible. Maybe the lense that projects the laser into the other could become slightly more convex when an action is applied which would cause the floating equilibrium location of the beam where the lense is floating to be moved. Like using a laser to project an object
High Vlotage is scary...
*High Voltage is **_a_** scary **_boy_*
It's awesome !
I really love your videos. Why you make them so rare?
the psu in the video is ac output, di you have a rectifier or use ac?
Can you tell us how you setup the potentiometer to the high voltage transformer to control the output please?
Thank you in advance!
Omg!! He is still alive.
Can you try to make a crude MP3 Player xD ?
pls make a fusion reactor (seriosly) pls
There is energy being created as the electric passes through the water faster displaces off into heat. Like a car battery one side of the terminals are more corroded more than the other
If Tom Holland and Anthony Micheal Hall had a baby, that would be you. Cool video man
H2O is slightly polar. The 105 degree angle created by the two oxygen atoms means that there is a proton, the hydrogen nucleus, the 'sticking out' a bit, relative to the other side (oxygen side). Surely this plays a role in making a 'linkage'. See Rotar Wolf comment too.
Such a good youtuber
Good youtubers upload
Quantum eraser??!! Good for you if you can do that at home! Super looking foward
Would a higher current instead of voltage make the bridge go longer?
How would it behave in the presence of high voltage ac, especially just right before the two sides touch? Imagine the frequency would have to be pretty low to deal with the capacitance of the water.
9:58 because the water flows from the positive beaker to the negative beaker. Thus moving almost all of the water heated by the plasma to the negative beaker.
What voltage Is the water bridge convergence and does the electrically charge water carry a electrostatic charge in both anodic and cathodic containers?
I have an industrial application for this phenomenon.
Wow after a long time
Superb
Wasn't the hot water on the side that the bridge was flowing towards? Because you can assume that the 'resistance' of the water is the highest at the narrowest parts. More energy dissipated in a small volume means that the water heats up more when flowing through the bridge, towards the cup that thus warms up the most
The quantum eraser sounds pretty sweet
thank you
Maybe the thin water bridge has a high resistance so it heats up. Ans since the water travels only towards the negative side, the hot water heats up that side only
i'd like to see if you could make a very small internal combustion engine, or at least take one apart and tell us about it
Yeet new video!
Talking as fast as ever. love your contents mad
How do you measure the high voltage?, not easy with a multimeter...
Same with the negative leads while drawing an arc with a zvs driver. It melts.
how do you measure this high voltages?
The negative Is hotter because the water is heated in the bridge and flows towards the that side?
Finally a vifeo After 3 months
show us your big tesla coil and show us how it works!
The water being hotter on the negative side might be because the electrical potential is greatest at the bridge and more energy is dissipated as heat at the bridge. Since the water is moving towards the negative side more heat will be stored in the water on the negative side.
This would be a great Physics 145 final project
Amazing !!!!!!!☺☺
Amazing 🎉🎉🎉🎉❤
Sparks fly ⚡️
Could you please make a mini radar or explain how a radar works thanks! PS please make it so you can connect to a analog screen.
can you post more videos?
Build a laser tube! Or buy a helium neon laser tube, and build a power supply for it!
General Kenobi!
Why hello there.
Do you use an isolation transformer?
Good channel
i could imagine that the temperature difference between the two cups is originating by the acceleration of the molekules so when they start to acdcelerate they are not as fast thus not carrying much energy. on the other side they should be fast thus creating more heat on impacting other molecules.
Correct me if im wrong (pls with explanation)
I would say that will work with any nonconductive liquid, due to the capacitor effect.
Wait a minute, shouldn't the right beaker be the positive side because the electrons are flowing to it as shown by the water?
Also I think that the reason that the beaker on the right got hotter was due to it receiving the electrons. I believe when welding metal, the workpiece is connected to positive because the side receiving electrons get hotter.
Just some thoughts although I am probably completely wrong.
(sorry if my wording and reasoning sounds bad.)
Electrons move to the positive, atoms/molecules move to the negative depending on available space. Water is the atom/molecule and forces created by the electrons moving to the positive and/or the momentaneous positive states of the water molecules moving toward the negative that cause us to see the water move to the negative.Probably could even think of the water molecule as a sphere/wheel that is rotating counterclockwise as the electrons move left, which gives the water more ability to move toward the negative as opposed to more rigid structures. Something like that - I didn't bother verifying any of it with up-to-date information so expect some discrepancy, maybe a lot.
Pls can you make for a future video a MOT Teslacoil😋😋😋 I want to see how you will do this😏
4:50 😂 lol
water on negative side is warm because hot electrons/water heated by them travel from positive to negative side :)
4:45 you can see: oouuuouuu
Making a sprengel pump, like Cody did. But with the minimum amount of Mercury needed. Using a pump to pull the Mercury back up automatically.
Or it'd be cool to see how chromatic aberration works.
Or, if I look at a bright light, (I need glasses) it turns into a ball larger than the light is. If I close my eyes slowly, I can actually see the surface of my eye. WHY?