Explosive Science - with Chris Bishop

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  • @TheRoyalInstitution
    @TheRoyalInstitution  6 років тому +316

    Thank you to our Dutch friend for a brand new set of subtitles! We appreciate your efforts in helping make out content more accessible for a wider audience. Dank je!

    • @DhrPeniskoker
      @DhrPeniskoker 6 років тому +15

      The Royal Institution Thanks! You are welcome. Graag gedaan :-)

    • @DonaldSleightholme
      @DonaldSleightholme 6 років тому +3

      The Royal Institution fire is a electromagnetic wave 😔

    • @DonaldSleightholme
      @DonaldSleightholme 6 років тому +4

      if fire could break atomic bonds then wouldn’t water be flammable without needing to put electrical current through it? 🤔

    • @DonaldSleightholme
      @DonaldSleightholme 6 років тому

      what if the shock tube was cooled with liquid nitrogen? 🤔

    • @arnaud7671
      @arnaud7671 6 років тому +4

      Is it possible to volunteer to translate your videos in my native language ?

  • @ebhendricks
    @ebhendricks 5 років тому +269

    The most interesting thing about this children's lecture is that it is age-restricted by youtube
    edit: wow crazy that a comment from 2 years ago has started generating replies - when I commented this it was age restricted - seems to be removed now, but still funny that years ago it was restricted while still being post for kiids

    • @robbiekipping1124
      @robbiekipping1124 4 роки тому +22

      You would think they want our children ignorant

    • @MrVenona
      @MrVenona 4 роки тому +16

      @@robbiekipping1124 Yes - it is easier to indoctrinate the ignorant.

    • @janphilipphofmann6006
      @janphilipphofmann6006 3 роки тому

      Tjrfjlm

    • @schmekky
      @schmekky 2 роки тому

      No you're just slow.

    • @ExiliaN42
      @ExiliaN42 2 роки тому +2

      @@MrVenona It's more plausible that the UA-cam algorithm is just broken.
      iNdOcTrInAtIoN 🥴

  • @akthad
    @akthad 10 років тому +205

    Thank you very much for putting this on UA-cam. Its great to see chemistry being taught in such an interesting way. This is the way to keep kids interested and wondering about the world around us.

    • @zhynx9016
      @zhynx9016 5 років тому +4

      And to reduce the number of fingers in the world.

    • @raymondmyers461
      @raymondmyers461 3 роки тому +1

      Best video on youtube.

    • @RadicalCaveman
      @RadicalCaveman 2 роки тому

      Keeps adults interested, too

  • @loldozer
    @loldozer 7 років тому +76

    He captured the imagination of his audience in the lecture theatre and right here at UA-cam. A quality lecture, never a dull moment, keeps you sharp even if its been 30 years since your education. This is how you turn young minds to science.

    • @agnidas5816
      @agnidas5816 2 роки тому

      he doesn't even give the definitions of terms ...

    • @SofaKingShit
      @SofaKingShit 2 роки тому +1

      @Agni Das A lecture also somewhat lacking due to the unfortunate omission of any rendering of a significant nuclear explosion.

  • @zzord
    @zzord 6 років тому +199

    We need more teachers like him to make kids interested and amazed by science. Great lecture!

    • @ashabhatt887
      @ashabhatt887 3 роки тому

      true

    • @noirekuroraigami2270
      @noirekuroraigami2270 3 роки тому

      @@NerdyNEET what country is that??

    • @smorrow
      @smorrow 2 роки тому +1

      I think Sudbury, and unschooling (and everyday experience of kids younger than school age, if you think that's different from unschooling) prove you don't need to "make" kids do _anything._

    • @sirgalah561
      @sirgalah561 2 роки тому +1

      My science teacher was boring.. She gave us nothing but dictation.. No experiments at all.. Ive learned more about chemistry watching this one video than her three years as my science teacher in high school..

    • @5Andysalive
      @5Andysalive 2 роки тому

      the problem is, in school you can't just make impressive presentations you also have to deliver the theory. So teachers have a toughrer job.

  • @RicTic66
    @RicTic66 9 років тому +60

    The RI Christmas lectures, very happy memories... As English kids we didnt know how lucky we were as regards educational tv in the Christmas holidays, what better gift could our country give us than knowledge... These have run for nearly 200 years, obviously not on tv though :)

    • @LeutnantJoker
      @LeutnantJoker 2 роки тому +3

      Very late response but yes indeed. These are amazing and a wonderful tradition.

    • @Aengus42
      @Aengus42 2 роки тому +4

      @@LeutnantJoker Add me to the list of British kids enthralled at the xmas lectures every year. After the chemistry sets and electronics kits from under the tree the Royal Institution xmas Lectures were what made my xmas.
      Thank you RI 😃🎄🔬⚛️

  • @CKOD
    @CKOD 9 років тому +466

    "And as you'll observe, we've surrounded the entire room in explosive more powerful than TNT" but imagine in it a Bane voice.

    • @gabrielgonzalez1993
      @gabrielgonzalez1993 7 років тому +4

      hahahah exactly

    • @psychopyro1012
      @psychopyro1012 6 років тому +30

      One of you have the detonator...

    • @00BillyTorontoBill
      @00BillyTorontoBill 6 років тому +13

      good one... I thought he should ve said 'Allahu Ackbar'

    • @dusterdude238
      @dusterdude238 5 років тому +6

      and follow that up with thank you for coming.... and it was nice to know you. . . . .

    • @fmas1978
      @fmas1978 4 роки тому +5

      @@00BillyTorontoBill yeah, I didn't want to type that myself, not to end up on the same watchlist as some :P

  • @alanweiman1521
    @alanweiman1521 2 роки тому +17

    Watched this demonstration so many times. I can't imagine children not being obsessed with science after veiwing this. Explinations were very simple and clear.

  • @pascalhumphrey
    @pascalhumphrey 8 років тому +156

    i like how he explained everything. made is sound simple and easy. wish i had teacher like him.

    • @experi-mentalproductions5358
      @experi-mentalproductions5358 3 роки тому

      @L Train45 Good point...

    • @kayleighohler9999
      @kayleighohler9999 2 роки тому +1

      yep and with a teacher like him its easy. i had one and am top in my field now, sorry you get a bad hand of cards but we can always try again in the next life

  • @DaytakTV
    @DaytakTV 10 років тому +205

    Better than any lecture I have had in school so far!!! Great work thanks for sharing!

  • @samiraperi467
    @samiraperi467 6 років тому +150

    You had me at "explosive".

    • @pyrace
      @pyrace Місяць тому

      Yep, I'm picking up what you're putting down 😏

  • @vibe3d
    @vibe3d 9 років тому +35

    I never knew light can be used to detonate stuff. Well, you learn something new every day.

    • @TheWireEDM
      @TheWireEDM 8 років тому

      +Steve Johnson Which has nothing to do with light as being the initiator.

    • @franzmeier4472
      @franzmeier4472 7 років тому +7

      I think that that experiment was a bit misleading actually, since it wasn't a demonstration of just "using enough energy" to go past the activation energy. If it's enough energy you need, why not simply increase the intensity of the red light? If you took a red light bulb with a high enough wattage (the brightness would increase, but the colour is the same) it should go off as well, shouldn't it? It's more energy after all. A concentrated beam of read light should do the trick as well (so just a red laser pointer for example).
      But it wouldn't. What's the deciding factor is the wavelenght. The shorter the wavelenght, the higher the energy of the photons. The higher the intensity of the light (bulb with higher wattage, or more concentrated beam of light), the higher the overall energy of the macroscopic beam.
      The detonation that's dependent on a short enough wavelenght and conversely photons with high enough energy, is an example of quantum physics. It doesn't matter how strong the intensity of the light is, the energy of the macroscopic beam. What matters is the the energy of the microscopic light particles, the photons.

    • @dash8brj
      @dash8brj 5 років тому +1

      @@franzmeier4472 I wonder if a high powered red or green laser would set off the chlorine and hydrogen mixture - they used a slide projector. Lasers pack more photons into the same beam profile. I've used mine (stupidly) to set off flash powder at a reasonable distance from the laser.

    • @DrCrispycross
      @DrCrispycross 5 років тому +2

      It’s all about the energy per photon. If you don’t have enough, then no number of lower-energy photons can produce the same effect. Unless, of course, you have such an intense beam that a given molecule in the target can get hit by two photons at precisely the same time so their energies can add together.. Some high-powered lasers can do that with very short pulses but your laser pointer almost certainly can’t. Sorry.

    • @dale116dot7
      @dale116dot7 3 роки тому +2

      Light (and x-rays) is used to transfer energy from the primary fission weapon to the secondary fusion stage. That ends up being a very large explosion.

  • @michaelbeardmore3653
    @michaelbeardmore3653 6 років тому +6

    after 55yrs of watching these this man is bye FAR the best most entertaining and informative speaker iv ever seen, BRILLIANT SERIES,.

  • @warywolfen
    @warywolfen 11 років тому +3

    There is a "grey" area. Some "low" explosives have deflagration velocities that are similar to the detonation velocity of a high explosive. In the U.S, the BATFE classifies flash powder as a "high" explosive, regarding regulations for storage, because of its properties, even though it is technically a low explosive. Fuel/air explosives also act like high explosives, even though they are fuel/oxidizer mixtures.

  • @josephbrennan4622
    @josephbrennan4622 6 років тому +14

    That was Brilliant i'm 68 and still love the sciences.

  • @JoyoSnooze
    @JoyoSnooze 8 років тому +13

    One of my favourite videos on UA-cam. Wonderfully presented and wonderfully informative.
    And you know, it also serves to remind me just how fortunate I am, throughout all of history, to be alive and aware in a reality where we can explore these incredible components of the universe, and teach the next generation about them.
    Thank you Prof. Bishop, Chris Braxton, and the Royal Institution!

  • @rabidchipmunkgaming
    @rabidchipmunkgaming 8 років тому +141

    Explosive Science, Brought to you by Ear Defenders

  • @MrJFuk
    @MrJFuk 6 років тому +7

    Those kids will go away with a wonderful new love of science. Thank you Chris Bishop, we need more teachers like you.

  • @jordanhubbard
    @jordanhubbard 8 років тому +249

    That was just great. A very well presented lecture using a well-chosen set of examples, e.g. not just "a series of things that went bang" but a lot of different *kinds* of bangs, each illustrating a slightly different set of physical principles and really getting the audience to think about the material. I know that I was left with a series of questions, such as "I've never even heard of Silane. Why *is* it pyrophoric, anyway?" so of course I had to go look that up and now I have even *more* questions, which of course is the goal of all good science, right? :) As a former (very young) chemistry student myself, I'd love it if we taught this kind of material in American schools again.

    • @frederickwbickford2986
      @frederickwbickford2986 5 років тому

      +qrrrrrrr Deere a dad was d's ddqdqqqq see qqqqqqqqqqq

    • @Wilfoe
      @Wilfoe 2 роки тому +5

      Never stop asking questions :)

    • @gnarthdarkanen7464
      @gnarthdarkanen7464 2 роки тому +4

      ALL the way back to high school chemistry class... where I stashed an electrolosis device for a weekend and then shouted "HYDROGEN TEST" as I struck a cigarette lighter to the thing... We were taught "question everything"... AND I still love it! Hope you're having fun questioning everything, too. ;o)

    • @annemarietobias
      @annemarietobias 2 роки тому +12

      I worked in the semiconductor industry in the 80s, and Silane was used to deposit pure silicon on existing silicon substrate, and by introducing impurities you can make P or N type materials to create printed transistors on a silicon wafer. Silicon is very stable, and wants to just be silicon... making Silane extremely unstable, and the simple presence of oxygen is enough to cause combustion, and a smoke of fine sand will be produced by that reaction. An even more frightening compound is Arsane, where the central atom is Arsenic. The white smoke of that spontaneous combustion is every bit as lethal as it sounds. This is another dangerous gas that was used at the time in doping silicon for semiconductors. We had to helium vacuum check the plumbing used to carry dangerous gases including these and phosphine (a gas that is toxic at levels of 5-10 PPM.) Needless to say, gas leaks from these substances are to be avoided at all costs.

    • @arthurhunt642
      @arthurhunt642 2 роки тому +3

      Your experiences are interesting for sure. My knowledge of electronics only goes as far as reckoning speakers, silk screening and etching circuit boards, and vacuum tubes. So I'm hopelessly lost in the dark ages of the 1940' to 1960's.

  • @meinbherpieg4723
    @meinbherpieg4723 Рік тому +4

    I'm ten years late to this party but thank you RI. This was amazing, entertaining, and insightful.

  • @dh32
    @dh32 8 років тому +194

    Every time he says "ear defenders" you HAVE to take a drink.

    • @manfredschulze5776
      @manfredschulze5776 5 років тому

      @@josephastier7421:-$O:-)O:-)(+O:-):-$

    • @yosefmacgruber1920
      @yosefmacgruber1920 5 років тому +6

      I do not drink, and I have no desire to become that tipsy.

    • @joker-qg1pb
      @joker-qg1pb 5 років тому +3

      @@yosefmacgruber1920 what about water you don't know what he was talking about

    • @yosefmacgruber1920
      @yosefmacgruber1920 5 років тому +3

      @@joker-qg1pb
      Why would you take a drink of water every time? Who even does that?

    • @Statist0815
      @Statist0815 4 роки тому

      Great idea !

  • @warywolfen
    @warywolfen 11 років тому +2

    Here's a story that comes from "Hatcher's Notebook," by Maj. Gen. Julian Hatcher (he was head of the technical dept. of Springfield Arsenal). In the good ol' days, chemical plants used to dump their waste in local rivers. A plant that made NG did that with their spent nitrating acid. But the waste contained some NG in suspension. It separated out in the river and accumulated on the bottom. One day, a fisherman in a row boat struck the river bed with his steel oar--BOOM! He was blown to bits!

  • @tibs7095
    @tibs7095 6 років тому +5

    This is the kind of stuff I would've loved to go to as a kid.

  • @simontopley4771
    @simontopley4771 2 місяці тому

    I'm sixty this year, i still love these lectures, recall the Christmas lectures as a child, thanks to all those involved, I still learn loads.

  • @peterfenwick2540
    @peterfenwick2540 6 років тому +4

    Of course I knew all of this but it was presented in a way that was entertaining that made me feel like a student again. We desperately need more of this for kids, its wonderfully educational!

  • @MalikEnglmaier
    @MalikEnglmaier 4 місяці тому

    Dear, highly esteemed Professor Bishop.
    I have watched your broadcasts with great interest.
    I have seen your broadcasts on UA-cam and find them very instructive and very friendly, especially for the young viewers who participate in them.
    It is so understanding and kind how you try to introduce children to chemistry.
    When I was a child, we lived in Munich. I liked to go to the Deutsches Museum with great enthusiasm and specifically visit the physics and chemistry departments.
    I was fascinated by the many great experiments, which have also shaped me for life.
    I wish we had more such broadcasts in Germany like yours.
    There used to be more of such broadcasts.
    I would like to take this opportunity to thank you very warmly and am glad that I had the chance to watch these broadcasts.
    Many heartfelt thanks.
    Dr. Malik Englmaier (Radiologist)

  • @judith8161
    @judith8161 2 роки тому +7

    This is the most beautiful chemistry lecture I've ever seen, and it's not like my chem teachers at school didn't try.

  • @NotoriousPyro
    @NotoriousPyro 2 роки тому +1

    This guy is one of the best science teachers I've ever seen, he's one of the teachers you could really really listen to in school, and even as an adult.
    Really brilliant.

  • @Williambeene
    @Williambeene 9 років тому +13

    Very good teacher. I enjoyed watching the demonstration.

  • @MrLibbyloulou
    @MrLibbyloulou 4 роки тому +2

    How i wish this was around when i was a kid......still watching now and nearly 60.....Brilliant, at least i can direct the grand kids here....

  • @Alexegrus
    @Alexegrus 8 років тому +8

    Amazing and so interesting... wish our teachers at the school were so creative to connect theories with practical experiments

  • @AERSKALFA_
    @AERSKALFA_ 2 роки тому +1

    This video lecture is so good that you stayed up with it for more than one hour and still feels like it’s been just 15 minutes.

  • @rohithk.m.3573
    @rohithk.m.3573 4 роки тому +11

    A wonderful demo on how interesting chemistry can be! Outstanding work by the Professor and Ri.

  • @mosesnjau1619
    @mosesnjau1619 4 роки тому +1

    Teaching what you learnt and read and love. ..what crazy profession. ...am envious

  • @Danny-dl7mn
    @Danny-dl7mn 8 років тому +3

    What a classic video 10/10 would watch again.

  • @franktuckwell196
    @franktuckwell196 Рік тому

    Much safer than what we did as kids, when we took the bombshell from the fireworks called arial bombshells, put a piece of jetex 1 1/2 second fuse on it, put it under a metal dustbin lid, lit it and took cover. It sent the metal dustbin lid about thirty feet into the air. You cannot buy the fuse or the fireworks any more. We did this in about 1964, but i hasten to add that every year at our secondary modern school, (bulldozed in 2,000), copious warnings were given out about Not Doing what we did. Every year there were accidents where kids blew themselves up and maimed themselves badly in their sheds. These lectures are by far and wide the safest way to appreciate what the professor is talking about.

  • @kevinkraft5480
    @kevinkraft5480 8 років тому +31

    Best video on youtube.

  • @GlennsFastReviews
    @GlennsFastReviews 2 місяці тому

    My parents used to take me to Black Bag science demonstrations at the local museum - we loved it! Takes me back - thank you!

  • @Fokos123
    @Fokos123 11 років тому +9

    If lectures like this happened when I was a student, maybe I could actually get interested in science. Well done!

    •  3 роки тому

      have u still have interest in science as before?

  • @foreverpinkf.7603
    @foreverpinkf.7603 2 роки тому +1

    That's the way chemistry and physics should be taught. I love this channel and how Mr. Bishop keeps the heritage of Mr. Szydlo alive.
    I know, I know, way to expensive for the modern system of education.

  • @762gunr
    @762gunr 9 років тому +11

    Wonderfully done. Thank you for posting this.

  • @MassDynamic
    @MassDynamic 2 роки тому

    this is one of those reasons you should be glad that the internet exists. if class lectures were of this quality in general, you'd have a very well-education population.

  • @dexterrius
    @dexterrius 9 років тому +7

    very solid video, very rare on youtube, all my admiration. i just wish professor Bishop had more such public educative videos, keep on going!

  • @taylorhelm7146
    @taylorhelm7146 2 роки тому +1

    Also have to appreciate your safety protocols while performing this bit of education.

  • @dash8brj
    @dash8brj 5 років тому +4

    I loved when he was doing the round the theatre demo of the shock tubing when he said "I hope your happy, your surrounded by 800m of tubing that contains an explosive 70 times more powerful than TNT" haha :)

  • @bobfeeney9294
    @bobfeeney9294 2 роки тому

    Back in graduate school, I was part of a team of chemistry grad students giving presentations on "chemical magic", and we did the range of reactions from color changes to to combustion to synthesis to phase changes to explosive reactions. These were presented to college students in chemistry, engineering and physics classes, so we included a nice amount of very technical detail during the demos. Naturally, the explosive demos effectively reduced very intelligent science students to children in awe - these demos, when well done, are always fun to watch...

  • @TiborRoussou
    @TiborRoussou 8 років тому +19

    I really enjoyed the scope of this lecture. I will be visiting the Royal Institution to see what other informative lectures I can find! Thanks for sharing :)

  • @SMOBY44
    @SMOBY44 6 років тому +2

    Thank you for getting the kids involved in this! They are our future, teach them well.

  • @warywolfen
    @warywolfen 11 років тому +4

    Once, when I was working as a substitute teacher, I mentioned to the class that I had a degree in chemical engineering. One of the students asked me if I could make him a bomb. I replied that "I could," but "I won't!" By the way, there are many other substances, like organophosphorus compounds, that one can make...;)

  • @StephenLowe
    @StephenLowe 2 роки тому

    Always loved the Ri lectures ever since I was a kid. Now I’m in my 60s so these educational lectures have exciting my love of science for years.

  • @1A.....
    @1A..... 2 роки тому +5

    Thanks professor you made chemistry very interesting 💯
    Your presentation was awesome thanks

  • @Dunbardoddy
    @Dunbardoddy 2 роки тому

    My dad was a "Dynamite Doc" (JMC Thompson) working in R&D for ICI Nobel division in the 1950s, 60s and retired in 1972. I fondly remember helping him to make fireworks for bonfire night every November... The chemistry practical demonstrations at the local secondary school (Adrossan Academy) could be a challenge for the chemistry teachers of the top sets since more than half the class were the sons and daughters of high explosive chemists...

  • @picramide
    @picramide 11 років тому +5

    Absolutely brilliant lecture! I particularly loved the demo of shock tubing and the adroit use of an antique DuPont blasting machine by the brave young volunteers.
    Showing things as they really are defuses the ridiculous notions which swirl about us.

  • @rajendtt
    @rajendtt 10 місяців тому

    I am a professor in India, i did not get the opportunity to study in Royal Istt but enjoyed every moment here and learned how to teach.

  • @daltonrademacher3879
    @daltonrademacher3879 8 років тому +18

    Ive never heard of them as ear defenders but now they shall be known as nothing less

    • @dbeierl
      @dbeierl 7 років тому +2

      That's UK usage...

    • @MmeHyraelle
      @MmeHyraelle 6 років тому

      Do their car mufflers are "noise and exhaust defender" ?

    • @michaeldicker4839
      @michaeldicker4839 2 роки тому

      @@MmeHyraelle haha, no,vehicle exhaust mufflers in the UK are known as "silencers"

  • @TheAllBlackMan
    @TheAllBlackMan 10 років тому +2

    This channel proves it. Science is awesome.

  • @YamiTheDark
    @YamiTheDark 9 років тому +19

    Random UA-cam Streak once again, but this time landed here on one realy awesome video :-D

  • @michrain5872
    @michrain5872 6 років тому +2

    OMG this channel is pure gold. A true vein of precious knowledge.

  • @SheffieldRock
    @SheffieldRock 8 років тому +6

    Brilliant demo...no better way to recruit future scientists than this...

  • @stevenl7878
    @stevenl7878 Рік тому

    The best indoor explosives demonstration and lecture that I have ever seen!

  • @malkimilroy5751
    @malkimilroy5751 3 роки тому +3

    Thank you for the lectures it was amazing actually I do like chemistry

  • @lightingrings
    @lightingrings 11 років тому +1

    so underrated.... this channel needs more views

  • @TheSzamotulak
    @TheSzamotulak 12 років тому +3

    Just great: the speech is amazingly simple, the experiments are unbelievably effective. Enjoyed this hour a lot :]

  • @dlanska
    @dlanska 2 роки тому

    One of the best public demoinstrations of science I have ever watched. Extremely well-prepared and well-presented. Nicely involved audience members in a safe manner. You can tell how engaged the in-person audience was: nervous giggles, exclamations of surprise, lots of oo's and ah's.

  • @MegaFklm
    @MegaFklm 8 років тому +8

    Idk why I watch this, Im not so good in english...
    But I want to learn about science

    • @khairowensullivan7489
      @khairowensullivan7489 6 років тому

      You can learn English the same way you're watching this. Read books, watch more english videos with english subtitles. It's not a difficult language.

  • @K0ester
    @K0ester 8 місяців тому

    I saw this lecture many years ago, ive always loved science and chemistry. Really pushed me to learn on my own, ive built an amateur lab and have stocked it with all id need to synthesize energetic compounds to "play" around with them. Its been alot of fun. Always safe, sub gram amounts of these compounds. Its alot of fun

  • @dh32
    @dh32 8 років тому +3

    soundwave vs. shock, deflagration vs. det, engaging kids, lol! Very well done.

  • @Andy81ish
    @Andy81ish 2 роки тому

    Fantastic job. I've used some of that stuff as a sapper while I was at uni and still learned something from this lecture. I know how hard and costly that lecture was so you can't do it all the time, excellent to see it recorded on video so over 1.6 Million people could view it and learn something from it (at the time I wright this).

  • @RustyShackleford66
    @RustyShackleford66 2 роки тому +3

    Nice to see a class taught by a real expert with an enthusiasm for what he is teaching, rather than the clueless teaching assistants (aka mums who took the job because it fits in with the hours they need, and got the job because they are cheaper than time served qualified teachers) that have infested my childs school.

  • @uwemobil8847
    @uwemobil8847 2 роки тому

    I love UA-cam for preserving such videos.

  • @SheffieldRock
    @SheffieldRock 8 років тому +4

    This is lovely, elegant but old stuff. It actually is possible to make, rather than burn, oxygen as ozone with a bang only -without heat, flames, smoke or light.

  • @resistpen6582
    @resistpen6582 2 роки тому

    When science is done and taught the right way. Man was this entertaining and educational!

  • @jsdennis90
    @jsdennis90 8 років тому +4

    Welcome to the watch list

  • @jamesbekurs4683
    @jamesbekurs4683 Рік тому

    These are the types of teachers who inspire children to enter into the STEM field. Bravo, sir.

  • @DanielsPolitics1
    @DanielsPolitics1 Рік тому

    If you are thinking he doesn’t mean it when he says it is dangerous: The RI, where he works, has their own lecture theatre. They have drawn huge electrical arks in it. They have explodes several balloons of flammable gas in it. They have shot huge jets of foaming bleach around it. This is not their lecture theatre. This is the lecture they decided they wanted to do in someone else’s building.

  • @tompayne695
    @tompayne695 2 роки тому

    We did some of this on a minor scale in 1960, can you imagine a science teacher blowing things up in a ninth-grade class today? His class was so good, I used a free period the next year to take it again. This time I sat at the back of the classroom to dodge the dust and such. We had such amazing instruments then. A teacher one never forgets.

  • @CoryRobinson-q4h
    @CoryRobinson-q4h Рік тому

    One of the best basic explosives theory presentations on the planet. Well done.

  • @garybouwman2157
    @garybouwman2157 2 роки тому +1

    Great fun. Viewing experiments such as these as a child are the reason I became a chemist.

    • @mikedakin2016
      @mikedakin2016 2 роки тому

      Gary Bouwman , I know what you mean Gary , its the reason I became a binman !🤣

  • @paulroberts5677
    @paulroberts5677 10 років тому +11

    Great, that was really wonderful. Lots of great support from the technicians too who, if they get the same as school science technicians, about £6.15 per hour. End slave labour in school science.

  • @stealthkillah122
    @stealthkillah122 11 місяців тому

    I wish i had people as enthusiastic as him growing up

  • @snowydaysalways5937
    @snowydaysalways5937 7 років тому +26

    i alread knew all this thanks to CodysLab

    • @Lasersplitter
      @Lasersplitter 6 років тому

      Yeah, there were really big overlaps. With the difference that Cody shows you how you could theoretically make this stuff yourself

    • @MrYoyojuan
      @MrYoyojuan 6 років тому +3

      It's sad that a lot of people say something like this, but rarely say school.

    • @tinfoilhat4408
      @tinfoilhat4408 6 років тому +2

      Schools prioritise obedience over education unfortunately.

  • @ptb101255
    @ptb101255 2 роки тому

    its the loving energy of the universe and the compassion for that love ! glad to hear your healing ! youll need to plan on coming to southeast Alaska to go surfing !

  • @Exascale
    @Exascale 9 років тому +101

    you would never see this in a US school. This is why our school system sucks, we dont get kids excited about science.

    • @ElTurbinado
      @ElTurbinado 9 років тому +11

      Exascale i saw a nice explosives lecture in my high school in pennsylvania. does that count as a us school? we were all pretty excited about science.

    • @RicTic66
      @RicTic66 9 років тому +5

      +ElTurbinado these have been available to English children, this is a kids lecture; every Christmas for nearly 200 years. There should be loads on youtube, enjoy :)

    • @ElTurbinado
      @ElTurbinado 9 років тому +3

      RicTic66 what?

    • @Mark-mw7xd
      @Mark-mw7xd 9 років тому +5

      +Exascale We also dont do anything like this in Hungary. When i was in secondory school we did only two test. boiling water, making caramel from sugar :/ The teacher hated the childrens....

    • @landon9560
      @landon9560 8 років тому +5

      +ElTurbinado It really just depends on your teacher, because at times we would hear that the other science teacher for our grade had done a cool experiment, and we would never do it. or our teacher would, and the other class never did. Some teachers really like to have a fun class, and have a hands on example, like for almost no reason what-so-ever, my bio teacher took us outside and put some potassium in water.

  • @Alexandria197
    @Alexandria197 2 роки тому

    The best lecture I have ever seen. I took college Chemistry many years ago and they never had these good of demonstrations.

  • @icwarhol1
    @icwarhol1 2 роки тому

    Thank you, most appreciated and well done ALL.

  • @googleiscensorship34
    @googleiscensorship34 10 років тому +20

    Why didn't he demonstrate a thermo-nuclear explosion?

  • @jimstamper7062
    @jimstamper7062 2 роки тому

    always glad to watch Phil Colins do science.....

  • @treatb09
    @treatb09 8 років тому +7

    ear defenders…

    • @CTimmerman
      @CTimmerman 6 років тому

      Defenders of the Ears! (Defenders!)
      ua-cam.com/video/5xLKzsynt5I/v-deo.html

  • @christianbuczko1481
    @christianbuczko1481 2 роки тому

    I went to a spectacular lecture at nottingham uni on explosives. And sat front row center. Several big explosions were seen, starting with that water in a glass tube demo. There was a demo of an old flint lock rifle firing a wax candle through 2inch of oak wood, then through a few thick house roof tiles, then through a house brick and only stopped by a thick steel armour plate which had a big dent in. To end the lecture all lights were turned off, and 2 flintlock pistols were fired into the air with only a wadding charge. I was showered in burning wadding after the finale.. it was awesome and quite dangerous sitting in the front row.

  • @connordow7366
    @connordow7366 9 років тому +5

    where is the c4 im watching this for the c4 good video tho

  • @mattski1979
    @mattski1979 2 роки тому +1

    Great teachers hook you from the jump. I fast forward skip ahead through 98% of UA-cam suggestions. You're the 2. Great teacher. Great video. Great sunny Wednesday afternoon. Thank you.

  • @charlesjmouse
    @charlesjmouse 2 роки тому +1

    Ah, the days when a popular science program would be about the science and it's wonders.
    How I miss you!

  • @HenrikM48l
    @HenrikM48l 10 років тому +11

    His voice sometimes sound like stewie griffin.

  • @luviskol
    @luviskol 2 роки тому

    The success of the demonstration is guaged by the amount of smoke in the atmosphere

  • @ferntheyoutuber9960
    @ferntheyoutuber9960 7 років тому +5

    Defend them ears.

  • @joshtibbetts6321
    @joshtibbetts6321 2 роки тому

    Mr. Bishop, you are a great Teacher, Sir!

  • @moshazad123
    @moshazad123 8 років тому +3

    what is combustion reacion of Ammonium Perchlorate and Polyvinyl chloride??

    • @aidensmith6277
      @aidensmith6277 8 років тому +2

      Mohd shahzad Uhh... a reaction?? Im clueless

    • @kurtbjorn
      @kurtbjorn 6 років тому

      Probably a decent deflagration... burning. Sounds like a solid rocket fuel if I'm not mistaken. Products of combustion? No idea, a handful of ammonia and chlorine ompounds.

  • @brucehutchinson9527
    @brucehutchinson9527 2 роки тому

    What a wonderful series of chemistry lectures. Would be so wonderful if they were available and used when I was in high school an undergraduate school late 1950s to the middle 1960s.

  • @KaaneDragonShinobi
    @KaaneDragonShinobi 8 років тому +49

    And here we see a general chemistry class at ISIS University

    • @KaaneDragonShinobi
      @KaaneDragonShinobi 8 років тому +1

      The Stoned Videogame Nerd
      Was just a joke about the explosions, but I appreciate the insight. I'm only up to Gen Chem II in college so I don't know all too much about it.

    • @NvrchFotia
      @NvrchFotia 8 років тому +4

      ISIS would blow themselves up.

    • @NvrchFotia
      @NvrchFotia 8 років тому

      The Stoned Videogame Nerd TNT has a better brisance, blast pressure, and detonation velocity that TATP. How is TATP better?

    • @RichardsWorld
      @RichardsWorld 8 років тому +3

      Did you notice there were only white people in the crowd?

    • @zachh8284
      @zachh8284 7 років тому

      Herr Doktor von Nuremberg lol

  • @mikefox9085
    @mikefox9085 2 роки тому

    Brilliant! I hope Dr. Bishop spends some of his very valuable time teaching teachers.