Since I was a kid I always thought the droplet drinks on the bar scene in "A Bug's Life" fascinating. I'm so happy it's scientifically accurate, haha. Thanks for the awesome content Neil, Chuck and everyone else involved.
Spiders eat spiders. Often their children, mate, parents...depends on the spider. Might just be the bear equivelent spider eating a mouse equivalent spider.
i learned the weight and size and strength stuff in a basic algebra course - and the instructor used it to prove why giants (how we imagine them to be) couldn’t physically exist. that was probably 15 years ago, and i still remember that lecture.
That would only occur if you're moving at speeds nearing the speed of light. If you're referring to the galaxy sized being and it's reaction time then yes, but he did mention that.
Completely agree with Dr Tyson on the limits part, especially for mammals. There is a law called Kleibers Law :which has physical roots in biology of mammals.
@Aditya Pratap Singh I passed out in 1999 in Chemical Engineering. I had two papers in Microbiology. Further, I have competed courses in Animal Welfare, Astrobiology, Brain Chemistry on Coursera in near term (for HR minded questions : previous 4 years). So, I think it gets me enough credit to comment on this topic. Further, I quote The American boy learns unspeakably less than the German boy.Inspite of an incredible number of examinations, his school life has not had the significance of turning him into an absolute creature of examinations,such as the German. Max Weber
@Aditya Pratap Singh You asked me about NEET exam. I am active out of sincere interest and not specifically for an exam. If we pick subjects for our exams : for example people pick anthropology and psychology for UPSC exams, as they are easy to understand and get marks, instead of maths or Physics. That person is a "creature of the exam".
This episode was about a repeated topic that they did talk about already at least a half a dozen times along with surface tension. Of course Chuck doesn’t remember any of it.
@@nirabhradas6375 It's really more like a 5th-power/4th-power law, when it comes to the strength of bones in large mammals. Because the failure mode of buckling matters more than the failure mode of direct rupture. Buckling scales with the square of the length of a structural member in compression, and weight scales with the cube of linear dimensions. So on net, the potential to buckle scales with the 5th power of your linear dimensions. Resistance to buckling depends on the Young's modulus and second moment of area of the structural member. A property of geometry, that is analogous to moment of inertia, and often called that as a misnomer. This property scales with the 4th power of the linear dimension. If you consider two otherwise-identical solid rods, one twice the diameter of the other, the larger rod will support 16 times the load, before it buckles.
Love this conversation. My question: If a human were born in zero gravity , out in space somewhere, in a spaceship at constant velocity, how big would an individual grow ?
Possibly not much at all, even in space astronauts tend to lose muscle weight because the body, being an adaptive living thing, detects that very little strength is needed to do all things and small muscles work just fine. Besides this is mostly determined by genetics, gravity did its work during the evolutionary natural selection.
1-1-1 2-4-8 3-9-27 4-16-64 5-25-125 6-36-216 7-49-343 8-64-512 9-81-729 10-100-1000 - Just to emphasise Neil's point about how rapidly the cube of a number diverges from it's square.
Not specifically to the episode but advertising material often shows a 3d bar chart or pie chart comparision, when 2d is appropriate. The 3d tricks us because we see the volume of the bar chart when in fact we need to see the area in 2d, thus, deceiving us to make differences larger then they are.
"The fly" is a more accurate film. Or a true spiderman would look like the xenomorph from alien a little bit. But also spider-woman would be twice as big, five times as strong and prob eat him.
@@princeofallnegros4035 - I totally agree. Science is cool enough and not everything is a joke. I take science seriously. No need to joke about it every minute.
Alex Honnold is the name of the climber Chuck was talking about if anyone was curious. He completed a free solo of El Cap in Yosemite. The movie is appropriately named “Free Solo” I encourage everyone to watch it and get a dizzying dose of vertigo.
I believe the climber Chuck was talking about is Alex Honnold. The film is most likely Free Solo, which documents Alex's ascent of El Capitan in Yosemite without safety gear. If you're bored, watch it!
Hey Neil, at 13:50 you veered into the "sailboats on Jupiter" fallacy assuming galactic-sized life has human issues and limitations. Otherwise loved it.
All physical matter in the universe has limitations. Those are the limitations set upon all life, including hypothetical life at this time because we have nothing else for reference. To presume physical laws would not apply to other life within this same universe is quite a bit short sighted, and is the reason why the attempted correction was flawed from the start. Remember, you are failing to correct a person with much more education than anyone found in these comment sections. Chances of failure are rather high given the topic. Now, sure. There could be life which has learned how to bend physical laws at will. But until we have evidence, we must consider that all life is tied to the very physical laws of which we are tied.
@@Phantom-bh5ru I am extremely sure of the physical laws which govern the entire universe. That includes any possible life. Assuming there is any, just because life exists elsewhere in our universe does not negate those laws in any way. All physical matter is tied to those laws. To presume otherwise is short sighted.
@@Phantom-bh5ru Well, I opted for a much politer word to be truthful. I wanted to use the words wrong or intentionally ignorant. But those terms do not really apply here as much as not seeing the bigger picture does. And that bigger picture is, physical laws are just that. Laws. There is no altering them to fit a hypothesis. It's called English. And in English, many words have ulterior meanings. Short sighted can mean one is not seeing all of the information, hence why it was used here and not some other more insulting word(s). His "correction" was incorrect from the start due to not considering all of the information. I.E. Short Sighted. Or "wrong" if you will.
Man! I actually thought you had changed your camera equipment for this one because the B drops are pretty neat. Until I saw the iPhone in driver’s mirror
Neil, I really love hearing from you👊😂...wish you could interact with us little bit more often on the comments...But I Know you're busy "Astrophysicing"😂😂😂 it's okay!!!❤️
It's not so much that he is busy, which he is. It's more the fact that he has no involvement in the social media accounts. Paid "admins" from different countries operate those accounts. Basically, we are not necessarily talking to the man himself. lol
Don’t miss the incredible Geminid’s meteor shower the earth is passing through right now. The best dates are December 13th & 14th. I live in the Midwest on the High Plains and when my friends & I go out in the country to watch meteor showers or just star gazing, it’s beautiful because it is pitch black, no city lights and the view is phenomenal. It’s handy to have a pickup or borrow one like I do and bring tons of blankets & quilts to stay warm and just lie in the bed of the truck and “ Keep looking up!” 😊
So molecules are atoms grouped together. I always wonder if maybe atoms are also made of something even smaller. I mean after all we can split them, so it must be made of something right? We just dont have the equipment to measure anything smaller.
The word you are searching for is Quarks. I'll copy and paste because my answer would not be as easy to understand. **A quark is a type of elementary particle and a fundamental constituent of matter. Quarks combine to form composite particles called hadrons, the most stable of which are protons and neutrons, the components of atomic nuclei. All commonly observable matter is composed of up quarks, down quarks and electrons.**
Darkness is merely the absence of light. Matter can exist without light. While there is no calculation for the absence of light, light itself does have a calculation supporting it. If you are talking about before there was matter and energy, you might as well use a big 0 because all physical laws break down at the initial point of expansion. (big bang)
Hmm you can measure how much a body radiates or reflects light. They say black-body even if its a bright star because it doesnt reflect. But if you want to measure how black an object is thats positive amounts of absorption and not a nothing its absorbing all the light.
@@jorgepeterbarton okay but like the universe is expanding what’s that space beyond the universe like right before it comes into our existence, what is that nothing that our universe consumed, what if 3D is what we see the line is 4D and outside is a 5D with laws of physics we can calculate yet? Because we can barely describe the line 🤯
It’s Jesus Lizard a basalisk, and it does have wide feet. But would someone tell me why paleontologists think that a pterasaur ten times the size of any modern flying creature can not only fly but at very high speed. I would think that the power to weight ratio could not be one tenth of any modern bird.
I like rivers but I choose highways because they are faster. But you’re right. Life is like the choice between a highway and a river. Thanks for your poetic analogies. Very creative.
yep. I work at a museum and we have a gecko in our animals area and there's a reason the gecko can attach itself to the side of the glass enclosure. I believe the force is called the Van Der Waals force.
He is mistaken a lizard with an insect. Is called green basilisk and it is also known as the Jesus Christ Lizard.ua-cam.com/video/leSN6WI1KwU/v-deo.html
2 quick comments: 1, I’m a biologist and I love physics, especially Van der Waals forces keeping spiders on glass, and 2, they are Jesus lizards, the common basilisk, that can run on water without sinking.
Even if i know that neither of those 2 guys will answer, or even take the time to read this comment, i will still right it... Massive heavy body animals with skinny legs: Horses Mooses Camels Girafes ...
Their mass is nowhere close to the mass of the animals mentioned in the video. Their mass is much less, therefore they can have smaller diameter legs. And even if they do not see the comment, those running the social media accounts are paid or at least motivated to go through the comments looking for questions for future episodes.
14:30 There's a youtube video that actually talks about how hypothetically, there could be life within stars that are made of subatomic particles that make up atoms, forming bonds that mimic helixes, they would live unimaginably quick because of their size and environment, the heat, pressure, generations flashing by within billionths of a second, of course this isn't your typical life and there would be no way for us to find evidence of it, also I'm not talking about a person being subatomic and living on a star, I would imagine something like a single celled organism, but of course on a drastically smaller scale, and much more hardy since they're swimming in billions of years worth of nuclear explosions. There was also talk about using silicon instead of carbon for life, this one wasn't about smaller than molecule life though, we all know that silicon sits below carbon and they create the same four way bonds with other elements, it's a possibility that silicon could too but those life forms would need such extreme heat for their silicon to be as effective as carbon that our bodies would be vaporized while they just feel a cool breeze if we were on their home world, silicon is too brittle at colder temperatures that it can't easily make the bonds that carbon can at room temperature, but in a sea of molten rock, on a silicon based planet, it might make for some interestingly spicy sushi. (I feel like I should say it now; Do not eat the lava fish.)
Your comment is super interesting! Do you remember by any chance which video talks about life within stars that are made of subatomic particles that make up atoms?
Started in the beginning of the pandemic, out of curiosity, now watching your videos is a must every week! Thanks guys!
Welcome aboard!
Yeah this some sort of "guy" seems to be cool, nah? Man... humanity will miss him bad one day. Cheers friend :-)
My people
I forgot about that actually 💀💀💀
Same as me
I am watching a video every night before i go to bed u guys made me addicted.
Enjoy your daily dose of Neil Tyson
Same
Same lol it helps me sleep
Yeah can relate to that. Watching at least 3 of them every day.
ikr!!
me too!!
"Physics sets the rules"
Every superhero movie: We don't do that here.
This is why AntMan is strongest superhero, when he is smaller than atoms with the mass of a human the density is in the millions
@@UCjNrKLyRJI-abFA8qiNo92Q I think Spawn is strongest. He isn't necessarily a hero, but he is stupidly overpowered.
@@UCjNrKLyRJI-abFA8qiNo92Q he can become a black hole
That is why it is called "science fiction" and not just "science"
🤣🤣🤣
Since I was a kid I always thought the droplet drinks on the bar scene in "A Bug's Life" fascinating. I'm so happy it's scientifically accurate, haha. Thanks for the awesome content Neil, Chuck and everyone else involved.
Science & Comedy goes well together.
You linked both hosts in one liner
"lions...remember those elephants with the skinny legs?" 🤣🤣🤣
I was binge watching Star Talk than I see a new video... yesss sirrr more of these please!!!!
Spiderman spiderman does whatever a spider can.......
I've never seen him eating insects
@@Shenmasterzen communion wafers?
Well, to be fare, he could...
Nor has he ever crawled inside me ear while I slept and laid his eggs.
@Unfolding Ideas Leela - theres already a soda made out of people, soylent cola
Fry - how is it?
Leela - it varies person to person
Spiders eat spiders. Often their children, mate, parents...depends on the spider. Might just be the bear equivelent spider eating a mouse equivalent spider.
Combining comedy with something as deep as physics is such a brilliant idea. It pairs like cheese and wine in this podcast.
i learned the weight and size and strength stuff in a basic algebra course - and the instructor used it to prove why giants (how we imagine them to be) couldn’t physically exist. that was probably 15 years ago, and i still remember that lecture.
Around 6:30 Chuck is talking about Alex Honnold in 'Free Solo'.
Yup. Freaking love that movie/documentary. Dude's a legend!
7:52 Chuck’s all high and vibing dude Sunday morning goals🤣🤣😍😍
That was interesting, an amazing explainer video like every single time.I love star talk explainer videos. I watching a least two videos per day.
He forgot the Fact that when you’re big or small you perceive time differently
Some don't perceive time at all
That would only occur if you're moving at speeds nearing the speed of light. If you're referring to the galaxy sized being and it's reaction time then yes, but he did mention that.
A mosquito would see humans as slow moving living beings but a tree would see humans as fast moving living beings.
@@jett3197 He's probably referring to the fact that mass also bends space-TIME. More mass = more time dilation.
Completely agree with Dr Tyson on the limits part, especially for mammals.
There is a law called Kleibers Law :which has physical roots in biology of mammals.
@Aditya Pratap Singh I passed out in 1999 in Chemical Engineering. I had two papers in Microbiology. Further, I have competed courses in Animal Welfare, Astrobiology, Brain Chemistry on Coursera in near term (for HR minded questions : previous 4 years). So, I think it gets me enough credit to comment on this topic.
Further, I quote
The American boy learns unspeakably less than the German boy.Inspite of an incredible
number of examinations, his school life has not had the significance of turning him into an
absolute creature of examinations,such as the German.
Max Weber
@Aditya Pratap Singh You asked me about NEET exam. I am active out of sincere interest and not specifically for an exam. If we pick subjects for our exams : for example people pick anthropology and psychology for UPSC exams, as they are easy to understand and get marks, instead of maths or Physics. That person is a "creature of the exam".
Thanks. Looking it up
I love Neil’s sign off, “Keep Looking Up”
(Especially now with everything going on)
It's a nod to the show, Star Gazer, which preceded Star Talk. Here's an example:
ua-cam.com/video/eSB5RCQUfOA/v-deo.html
Neil’s smirk when Chuck is talking about size makes me laugh every single time I watch this video. 😂
This Episode should have been called "The Square Cube Law"
This episode was about a repeated topic that they did talk about already at least a half a dozen times along with surface tension. Of course Chuck doesn’t remember any of it.
@@lionman8523 Was the said yesterday a live session?
@@nirabhradas6375 It's really more like a 5th-power/4th-power law, when it comes to the strength of bones in large mammals. Because the failure mode of buckling matters more than the failure mode of direct rupture.
Buckling scales with the square of the length of a structural member in compression, and weight scales with the cube of linear dimensions. So on net, the potential to buckle scales with the 5th power of your linear dimensions.
Resistance to buckling depends on the Young's modulus and second moment of area of the structural member. A property of geometry, that is analogous to moment of inertia, and often called that as a misnomer. This property scales with the 4th power of the linear dimension. If you consider two otherwise-identical solid rods, one twice the diameter of the other, the larger rod will support 16 times the load, before it buckles.
If everyone could have a teacher like Neil we would have a Star Trek like Civilization already.
Cool explanation of the square / cube law...also covalent bonds.☺️
Love these guys. They make Physics fun!
You two are the best. Priceless videos.
There should be test for each topic to know how much chuck remember !!!!🔥🔥🎉🎉😅
Brilliant talk. Makes so much sense.
Very nice video Neil again. Moreover Kurzgesagt has 2 fantastic videos for the the size and life for everyone who wants more about it.
They have three now
Love the chemistry between these two.
The message in this episode, at least 1 of them anyway: Don't Skip LegDay 😅
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Never skip leg day
Uncle dom would disagree.
Dislike bc leg day.
Great stuff! Thank you.
As a biochemist I have to say this to all physicist: It's true that the platform is yours but the performers are us 😎
LOL!!!
With this one sentence, you have changed my way of looking at things👍🙏
The injection of Chuck is genius, he makes science so much more palatable. Your interaction is beautiful chemistry in keeping us engaged.
Love this conversation. My question: If a human were born in zero gravity , out in space somewhere, in a spaceship at constant velocity, how big would an individual grow ?
Possibly not much at all, even in space astronauts tend to lose muscle weight because the body, being an adaptive living thing, detects that very little strength is needed to do all things and small muscles work just fine. Besides this is mostly determined by genetics, gravity did its work during the evolutionary natural selection.
1-1-1
2-4-8
3-9-27
4-16-64
5-25-125
6-36-216
7-49-343
8-64-512
9-81-729
10-100-1000
- Just to emphasise Neil's point about how rapidly the cube of a number diverges from it's square.
Can we get more cosmic queries? I love those.
Love these star talks
10:48 there must have been a dead air here. Cmon Chuck
Not specifically to the episode but advertising material often shows a 3d bar chart or pie chart comparision, when 2d is appropriate. The 3d tricks us because we see the volume of the bar chart when in fact we need to see the area in 2d, thus, deceiving us to make differences larger then they are.
But, with huge spikes coming out of his hand and legs, spider-man might be real. But it would look weird though.
I'd go with gecko-like limbs
@@Kleyguerth You'll get free car insurance at least 😂
they have to be tiny in diameter in order to make use of the effects
Dr Oct was more accurate to what spiderman should have been
"The fly" is a more accurate film.
Or a true spiderman would look like the xenomorph from alien a little bit.
But also spider-woman would be twice as big, five times as strong and prob eat him.
Great clip
Say Uh oh again, I dare you, I double dare you!!!
My school book fair came today and I decided to buy the StarTalk book it seems interesting so far
Feed your curiosity, people will think you're clever, even if you don't think so. try to blow your mind once a day.
I was lied to in my childhood. . . "Spider Man, Spider Man. Does whatever a spider can." I feel so betrayed. 😂😂
The source of his powers are only like that in the Raimi film, it's much weird in the comics hahaha
love these videos!
Thanks, as always, Neil and Chuck: knowledge with some laughs as a bonus. What more do you want.
Chuck is absolutely hilarious! And this channel is just amazing, period. ☺❤
He's funny but I would rather just let Neil teach without cutting him off mid sentence. He never gets to finish his points. 🤕
@@princeofallnegros4035 - I totally agree. Science is cool enough and not everything is a joke. I take science seriously. No need to joke about it every minute.
Imagine politicians being half as bright
My vote for Chuck Nice, as a permant guest host!
Uh-Oh! Another StarTalk video!
Wow. This felt like 2mins
It was too short
Thanks Chuck and Neil
🤓
"Size is everything." ~ Dr. Tyson
I got you
0:22 Recovery 100
The fact that if life was the size of a galaxy it would literally collapse under its own gravity and become a sphere 😂😂
So planets were once... Titans?
@@TerryGrancho Never thought about that
Alex Honnold is the name of the climber Chuck was talking about if anyone was curious. He completed a free solo of El Cap in Yosemite. The movie is appropriately named “Free Solo” I encourage everyone to watch it and get a dizzying dose of vertigo.
That's the first time I've seen Neil compliment a movie 😂
This is the first time I have seen Chuck. He is exactly how I imagined
Neil teaching me just like Chuck not what I need to know, but love knowing. Also why there's no real life Spiderman.
Neil i love your podcasts
Thank you. You fellows brighten my day.
The best channel to get entertained and yet get some values
The Amazing Rock-climber!
Rock-climber: Far from home 😂 🤣
For years I have been thinking about this I always believed that the bigger things get the slower it becomes and it actually is true
I wish I was as smart as Dr. Tyson.
You probably are! What's holding you back?
Intelligence is 90% perspiration
@@DoubleDsp we need people like dan
I wish I were as smart as Chuck.
@@g4m3rguy86lol
This is the first StarTalk im catching early.
that was fun
Best Show Ever !! love it !
Clicked that notification so fast . Great channel 🌏 🌙 ⭐️
I believe the climber Chuck was talking about is Alex Honnold. The film is most likely Free Solo, which documents Alex's ascent of El Capitan in Yosemite without safety gear. If you're bored, watch it!
Hey Neil, at 13:50 you veered into the "sailboats on Jupiter" fallacy assuming galactic-sized life has human issues and limitations. Otherwise loved it.
All physical matter in the universe has limitations. Those are the limitations set upon all life, including hypothetical life at this time because we have nothing else for reference.
To presume physical laws would not apply to other life within this same universe is quite a bit short sighted, and is the reason why the attempted correction was flawed from the start.
Remember, you are failing to correct a person with much more education than anyone found in these comment sections. Chances of failure are rather high given the topic.
Now, sure. There could be life which has learned how to bend physical laws at will. But until we have evidence, we must consider that all life is tied to the very physical laws of which we are tied.
@@theduder2617 short sighted? You are quite sure life will be life as we know it
@@Phantom-bh5ru
I am extremely sure of the physical laws which govern the entire universe. That includes any possible life.
Assuming there is any, just because life exists elsewhere in our universe does not negate those laws in any way. All physical matter is tied to those laws.
To presume otherwise is short sighted.
@@theduder2617 you keep using shortsighted but I don’t think you know what it means because it makes zero sense to be used in this situation
@@Phantom-bh5ru
Well, I opted for a much politer word to be truthful.
I wanted to use the words wrong or intentionally ignorant. But those terms do not really apply here as much as not seeing the bigger picture does.
And that bigger picture is, physical laws are just that. Laws. There is no altering them to fit a hypothesis.
It's called English. And in English, many words have ulterior meanings.
Short sighted can mean one is not seeing all of the information, hence why it was used here and not some other more insulting word(s).
His "correction" was incorrect from the start due to not considering all of the information. I.E. Short Sighted. Or "wrong" if you will.
For the l♥️ve of physics...you are the super hero...
Couldnt the universe be alive ,sentient working at a diferent scale of time.
i'm sure you could stretch the definition of life to say Yes, but it would be life not as you or I know it.
No.
This was so good.
“ A priest a rabbi and a mosquito went into a bar....”
Thanks guys
Spider-Man doesn't actually use the same method to go up walls as spiders, at least in the comics. Raimi trilogy is a different story.
At this point Spiderman is as diverse as Batman
@@kylekyle1805 Definitely
Even in the 90s we had pre-relaunch, post-relaunch, Ben Reilly, and 2099
Man! I actually thought you had changed your camera equipment for this one because the B drops are pretty neat. Until I saw the iPhone in driver’s mirror
I'm amazed how you guys can turn trivial, ordinary things into interesting and informative topics.
you guys are the two most amazing guys on the universe!
Neil, I really love hearing from you👊😂...wish you could interact with us little bit more often on the comments...But I Know you're busy "Astrophysicing"😂😂😂 it's okay!!!❤️
It's not so much that he is busy, which he is. It's more the fact that he has no involvement in the social media accounts. Paid "admins" from different countries operate those accounts.
Basically, we are not necessarily talking to the man himself. lol
Don’t miss the incredible Geminid’s meteor shower the earth is passing through right now. The best dates are December 13th & 14th.
I live in the Midwest on the High Plains and when my friends & I go out in the country to watch meteor showers or just star gazing, it’s beautiful because it is pitch black, no city lights and the view is phenomenal. It’s handy to have a pickup or borrow one like I do and bring tons of blankets & quilts to stay warm and just lie in the bed of the truck and “ Keep looking up!”
😊
Where science collides with comedy
So molecules are atoms grouped together. I always wonder if maybe atoms are also made of something even smaller. I mean after all we can split them, so it must be made of something right? We just dont have the equipment to measure anything smaller.
Yes, atoms can be broken down into smaller parts. This is the quantum realm.
The word you are searching for is Quarks. I'll copy and paste because my answer would not be as easy to understand.
**A quark is a type of elementary particle and a fundamental constituent of matter. Quarks combine to form composite particles called hadrons, the most stable of which are protons and neutrons, the components of atomic nuclei. All commonly observable matter is composed of up quarks, down quarks and electrons.**
But what about dragons?!? Sorry wrong channel 😅
Dont get him started on dragons
I see. You bring the mensage of king Shad here
🤣🤣🤣
Chuck you are needed for a normal human perspective and normal human questions. Also to make the show much more fun.
What’s the Calculation for “Darkness” or nothing because it’s technically nothing something is always something D=L+IS just gonna leave that there...
without light from suns then its darkness. light is energy thats in something
Darkness is merely the absence of light. Matter can exist without light.
While there is no calculation for the absence of light, light itself does have a calculation supporting it.
If you are talking about before there was matter and energy, you might as well use a big 0 because all physical laws break down at the initial point of expansion. (big bang)
Light is energy like the energy in atoms
Hmm you can measure how much a body radiates or reflects light. They say black-body even if its a bright star because it doesnt reflect.
But if you want to measure how black an object is thats positive amounts of absorption and not a nothing its absorbing all the light.
@@jorgepeterbarton okay but like the universe is expanding what’s that space beyond the universe like right before it comes into our existence, what is that nothing that our universe consumed, what if 3D is what we see the line is 4D and outside is a 5D with laws of physics we can calculate yet? Because we can barely describe the line 🤯
How exactly does surface tension come to be? Like, what is it made of? The bonding force between water molecules on the outside surface of the bead?
It’s Jesus Lizard a basalisk, and it does have wide feet.
But would someone tell me why paleontologists think that a pterasaur ten times the size of any modern flying creature can not only fly but at very high speed. I would think that the power to weight ratio could not be one tenth of any modern bird.
🐌 Thank You!
Life is like a highway or a river There is always a choice
I like rivers but I choose highways because they are faster.
But you’re right. Life is like the choice between a highway and a river. Thanks for your poetic analogies. Very creative.
Don’t you take Spider-Man away from us. DON’T YOU DO IT!!!
THE JESUS LIZARD......and it's a great band too
yep. I work at a museum and we have a gecko in our animals area and there's a reason the gecko can attach itself to the side of the glass enclosure. I believe the force is called the Van Der Waals force.
I cant really see it well enough but is Neil degrees tysons cabinet behind him, is it the golden ratio?
Naw, it's brown ;)
@@Smo1k 🤩🤩🤩
This is so entertaining!
Jesus spiders lol we called them water skeeters.
He is mistaken a lizard with an insect. Is called green basilisk and it is also known as the Jesus Christ Lizard.ua-cam.com/video/leSN6WI1KwU/v-deo.html
Water Skeeters? We call them water striders. I have seen a lot of them in India. I came to know of surface tension and then looked at them afresh.
2 quick comments: 1, I’m a biologist and I love physics, especially Van der Waals forces keeping spiders on glass, and 2, they are Jesus lizards, the common basilisk, that can run on water without sinking.
Even if i know that neither of those 2 guys will answer, or even take the time to read this comment, i will still right it...
Massive heavy body animals with skinny legs:
Horses
Mooses
Camels
Girafes
...
Their mass is nowhere close to the mass of the animals mentioned in the video. Their mass is much less, therefore they can have smaller diameter legs.
And even if they do not see the comment, those running the social media accounts are paid or at least motivated to go through the comments looking for questions for future episodes.
I thought giraffe too, genuinely curious 🤔
@MartF - you are so write!
I believe Chuck was talking about Alex Honnold 6:30
Cape Town in the house 🔥🔥🔥
Botswana joining too
14:30 There's a youtube video that actually talks about how hypothetically, there could be life within stars that are made of subatomic particles that make up atoms, forming bonds that mimic helixes, they would live unimaginably quick because of their size and environment, the heat, pressure, generations flashing by within billionths of a second, of course this isn't your typical life and there would be no way for us to find evidence of it, also I'm not talking about a person being subatomic and living on a star, I would imagine something like a single celled organism, but of course on a drastically smaller scale, and much more hardy since they're swimming in billions of years worth of nuclear explosions.
There was also talk about using silicon instead of carbon for life, this one wasn't about smaller than molecule life though, we all know that silicon sits below carbon and they create the same four way bonds with other elements, it's a possibility that silicon could too but those life forms would need such extreme heat for their silicon to be as effective as carbon that our bodies would be vaporized while they just feel a cool breeze if we were on their home world, silicon is too brittle at colder temperatures that it can't easily make the bonds that carbon can at room temperature, but in a sea of molten rock, on a silicon based planet, it might make for some interestingly spicy sushi.
(I feel like I should say it now; Do not eat the lava fish.)
Your comment is super interesting!
Do you remember by any chance which video talks about life within stars that are made of subatomic particles that make up atoms?
@@pomme_paille
ua-cam.com/video/ThDYazipjSI/v-deo.html
@@Stratonetic thank you! 🙌🏿
"so now..." My favourite part!
Tyson, you're amazing as ever. Thankyou