Another KZfaq #shorts from your favorite science dad, Dr. Joe Join us on Patreon! / itsokaytobesmart Instagram / drjoehanson / okaytobesmart
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@Russo-Delenda-Est3 ай бұрын
My favorite atomic phenomenon. Astronauts see flashes of blue light as cosmic rays pass through the water in their eyeballs.
@MOSMASTERING3 ай бұрын
Or cosmic rays hit a cone or rod in your eye and momentarily activate it.
@chriss52663 ай бұрын
@@MOSMASTERINGSince they respond to photons, and cosmic rays are actually high energy particles, would they actual be activated?
@mrjuanderfuI3 ай бұрын
No way. For real??
@stalkinghawk92443 ай бұрын
@@chriss5266Think so. In the end both could be electrical Signals hm
@chriss52663 ай бұрын
@@stalkinghawk9244 Maybe, but it's not really an apples to apples comparison, so seems unlikely. Even if we incorrectly assume each would interact w/ rods/cones in the same manner, visible light photons are in the 1-10 eV range for their energy, where as cosmic rays range from 1Gev to 10^8 TeV!
@laurendoe1683 ай бұрын
Visible "sonic booms"... maybe they could be called "optic booms" :D
@Sam-TheFullBull3 ай бұрын
you can usually see sonic booms so this is dumb asf. The boom is from exploding air not illuminating water
@shawn41163 ай бұрын
II've heard it called a "photonic boom"
@shawn41163 ай бұрын
II've heard it called a "photonic boom"
@shawn41163 ай бұрын
@@Sam-TheFullBull My guy do you not see the light?
@LermerM3 ай бұрын
optic flash
@thispersonrighthere90242 ай бұрын
to anyone still confused, the electrons are moving faster than the speed of light *in water,* not the speed of light in a vacuum.
@Jeremy.Bearemy2 ай бұрын
Thank you, i was so lost😂
@tryfergoodra5522 ай бұрын
i know that but im still confused here , like i dont know what to see or aprecciate 😅
@Penguin14002 ай бұрын
Cant get into one fortnite match without hearing right foot creek 🙏💀😭😭
@averagegamer-mx1of2 ай бұрын
@@tryfergoodra552pretty blue from big brain physics 😊
@theguitarist17032 ай бұрын
@@tryfergoodra552the speed at which things can travel varies based on what medium they travel through. Sound waves are a great example. Sound waves are effectively the vibration/displacement of matter that we pick up via our eardrums. They move outward from the source more or less exactly like a ripple in a pond. Because it travels through particles moving, the closer together the particles are the faster the displacement can travel. Hence, sound travels faster through solid objects than through water, air, etc. this is also why there is no sound in space, there is no matter to displace Light behaves quite differently, and takes knowledge of quantum physics/mechanics to truly understand, not something I’m gonna even bother trying in a yt comment section lol Regardless, I hope I helped a bit
@jcarm1852 ай бұрын
Not many people get to see this sort of phenomena in person. I did when I worked for a Nuclear Power Plant. It is still one of the coolest things I've ever seen.
@desbugfan8429Ай бұрын
Phenomenon. Phenomena is the plural.
@jcarm185Ай бұрын
@@desbugfan8429 Hmm, good point, but I'm pretty sure the plural use works here as this in a reoccurring event and is happening in each of the many rods in the pools.
@xgladarАй бұрын
cap . this is visible in small experimental testing reactors there is no way you would be able to look down into a reactor in a working nuclear energy plant
@jcarm185Ай бұрын
@@xgladar Didn't know about the small experiments, but that's neat. And I never said I looked down into a reactor. It was a cooling pool where "used rods" are kept. But they are still very much active and hot which is why I could see them through like 200 feet of water; so cool! Will never forget the sight.
@DrHeinzy13 күн бұрын
It's just a blue light, bro.
@CarlosRojas-hr6ms3 ай бұрын
So you’re telling me Sonic the hedgehog had the right idea
@ISawSomethingOnTheInternet3 ай бұрын
And color apparently
@jsonkody2 ай бұрын
@@ISawSomethingOnTheInternet yep .. same thing - rigth idea to use blue light
@tswan1372 ай бұрын
The blue blur, baybee
@boriswilsoncreations2 ай бұрын
It'a funny when you remember that Sonic can't swim
@johnswoboda98092 ай бұрын
Not only that but the Warp Nacelles in Start Trek with that same blue glow...
@4Gehe23 ай бұрын
I was taught it sinply with this phrase: Chernekov radiation happens when matter moves through a medium faster than light moves through the same medium. It is important to emphasise them point of a medium.
@aydinsha2 ай бұрын
Yes and neither are going "faster than the speed of light" which is a constant.
@Vi-Six2 ай бұрын
@@aydinsha Well, it is going faster than the speed of light *in water.* The speed of light is a constant, but varies depending on the medium, much like the speed of sound. Nothing is faster than the speed of light *in a vacuum.*
@TheNinthGenerarion2 ай бұрын
@@aydinshathe speed of light in any specified medium is a constant for that medium, with vacuum as a universal speed limit.
@MrJoosebawkz2 ай бұрын
@@aydinshathe speed of light _in a vacuum*_
@RoseKR2 ай бұрын
@@Vi-Six Quick correction: "The speed of light is a constant, but varies" this is a contradiction. It is either constant or it isn't. In this case, the speed of light c is a constant but the *group* velocity of light in different media can be vary. Personally I don't like mixing up the term "speed of light" with the speed of group velocity since it fundamentally suggests c is changing when it isn't. It certainly does APPEAR that light is changing speed but it isn't, only group velocity. If you define speed of light as group velocity then it's technically not wrong but just misleading in my opinion.
@Memer_Deepayon2 ай бұрын
I remember someone commenting "Forbidden Jacuzzi" on the real video of the reactor 💀💀💀
@jimmypancake6935Ай бұрын
I remember filling my shorts with fecal 🤣
@verdigo13 күн бұрын
And if I remember correctly, someone else said that it's entirely safe to swim around in one of those during operation, as long as you don't dive too deep. The water absorbs all the radiation.
@SXMDUB2 ай бұрын
That’s why Sonic leaves behind a blue glow when he runs super fast
@justingreen24322 ай бұрын
The Universe: Nothing is faster than light. Water: Hold my hydrogen.
@MrGameSeason2 ай бұрын
Underrated
@zombiefreak77182 ай бұрын
This made me laugh so hard. Take my up vote.
@Logan-cw9yr2 ай бұрын
O
@TheNexusChan2 ай бұрын
Definitely underrated.
@ithebasicplayer2 ай бұрын
Im reading the comments and this, this made me LAUGH OUT LOUD!
@aworm3 ай бұрын
Forbidden swimming pool
@Iamadarshrajan3 ай бұрын
😂😂
@Howabouthere3 ай бұрын
Frfr
@bluelemonade4153 ай бұрын
It’s actually perfectly safe to swim in due to how good water is at stopping radiation…. Just don’t go down very far lol
@nindoninshu3 ай бұрын
@@bluelemonade415can the water in our body stop radiation enough to not need lead protection
@elijahaitaok86243 ай бұрын
@@bluelemonade415the radiation won't kill you, the armed security guards will
@leverett70692 ай бұрын
So ironman pretty much nailed the color accuracy
@RareSolstice2 ай бұрын
This video deserves MILLIONS of likes. What they are doing and what you are seeing is absolutely incredible. 👏
@aalbanian3 ай бұрын
New plan for FTL travel! fill space with water
@thewaterdude3 ай бұрын
Fill space with water Become an electron
@gifgoldblum79402 ай бұрын
Fill space with water Become an electron ??? Profit
@SakhotGamer2 ай бұрын
aka "don't solve the problem, pretend it's not there"
@jamesjohnson33022 ай бұрын
😂
@isekaiexpress94502 ай бұрын
Make the space around the ship think you shouldn't abid to laws of physics. Avoid space cops.
@ndc5544p3 ай бұрын
when matter goes faster than light *in another medium*
@thecrazything953 ай бұрын
When matter goes faster than light being absorbed and readmitted over and over through a medium
@Bretaxy3 ай бұрын
Its not going faster than the speed of light.
@cherrydragon31202 ай бұрын
@@Bretaxy nothing can. Unless light is slowed down
POV: A friend (with light mode) shows me what's on their phone:
@bobbisue3132 ай бұрын
Lame
@yor_2012 ай бұрын
Damn, this is cooler than I thought.
@conleyscorner67122 ай бұрын
If you didn’t know the reactor in the video is called the foxtrot 9 nuclear reactor and the type of uranium used is a mix of u-235 and u-238 or possibly plutonium-238
@abdillahakbar54202 ай бұрын
Nice info even i don't understand what on the video 👍
@sobhas942 ай бұрын
Damn that is some really cool knowledge!
@A-Small-0wl1852 ай бұрын
How did you know that hm? 🤨@@sobhas94
@thatsamightyfinebasement2 ай бұрын
That's so cool!....... Now take off your trousers
@harveyreece55852 ай бұрын
So you also don’t know. Cool.
@RagoonX2 ай бұрын
I've seen this in person. And I can say, without a doubt, that it is the most unique and special thing you can ever see with your eyes. There is quite literally nothing else on this planet that looks this way and it's impossible to mimic this effect with other means. It's super cool, the video unfortunately doesn't truly show what it looks like but it is truly amazing.
@Thetruthiscosmic2 ай бұрын
That sounds so cool! Did you work at a nuclear reactor? I wish I could see it with my own eyes too but I doubt they'll ever allow tours at nuclear reactors. I think they should though! The more the public learns about and understand nuclear power, the closer we get to a future where we harness that power and thrive. It is the safest, cleanest, and most effective source of energy we have yet invented.
@stasi02382 ай бұрын
@@Thetruthiscosmicif I recall correctly the reactor in video is some experimental one that is exposed in water so scientists can check how things work. I guess you would have to be quite influential like a science youtuber for them to allow you to check it out, or be a scientist and work there, or be their janitor lol
@RagoonX2 ай бұрын
@@stasi0238 @Thetruthiscosmic As far as I'm aware it is possible to do tours at very *specific* reactors. The really small research ones specifically, but even so it's still extremely rare. I was doing research on radioactive decay and energy production. This is where the importance of things like Half-lifes come into play. Seeing the Cherenkov radiation was so special though. Definitely a dream come true and for sure on of my top 5 favorite memories I've ever had.
@Penguin14002 ай бұрын
Cant get into one fortnite match without hearing right foot creek 🙏💀😭😭
@RivianAlchemist2 ай бұрын
@@Thetruthiscosmicfacts
@imconnecticutairsoft2 ай бұрын
Them: “Nothing can go faster than the speed of light” Also them:
@Roxve2 ай бұрын
that's in water that's still not faster than light in vacuum which is it's true speed
@au301415 күн бұрын
Every household should have one of these
@redwillow18532 ай бұрын
Well that explains why Godzilla's breath weapon is blue. Fun Fact: They actually made a reference to this phenomenon in 1962's King Kong vs Godzilla. When a group of scientists go to investigate mysterious activities around a group of icebergs and stumble across an area where this same blue light is emitting from around one of the icebergs.
@Penguin14002 ай бұрын
Cant get into one fortnite match without hearing right foot creek 🙏💀😭😭
@DeletedDevilDeletedAngel2 ай бұрын
@@Penguin1400I can?
@Bangaudaala2 ай бұрын
Nah, thats the Avatar
@vmax45752 ай бұрын
I worked thirty seven years at a nuclear power plant and opening up the reactor for an outage was always cool to see. Also when fuel handlers moved the fuel rods. That neon blue glow is both beautiful and deadly.
@adizzle1722 ай бұрын
Yeah i was a fuel handler for 5 years before transferring, definitely cool to see but the glow made it so hard to line the bundles up with the top rack especially right after shut down and using the cameras was never fun 😅
@nalinikampa49512 ай бұрын
That must've been so cool😮😮😮
@j.staline87642 ай бұрын
Do you get superpowers if you swim in or drink the water ?
@NoSpeechForTheDumb2 ай бұрын
@@j.staline8764you get the superpower of infinitely growing new body cells.
@lijhay28892 ай бұрын
@@j.staline8764you can phase through walls…. yeah…
@gracieulmer4936Ай бұрын
That blue is captivating I can’t possibly imagine seeing it in person
@NewMessage3 ай бұрын
Perfect household accessory. You get a night light, AND three extra eyes to read in bed with!
@cherrydragon31203 ай бұрын
😂😂 if ur lucky maybe even a third arm to scratch ur back
@tardigrademicro3 ай бұрын
Instructions unclear, I now have every type of cancer imaginable
@dav13422 ай бұрын
And I think you could use the heat in winter and make enough electricity not for only your house, but also for the rest of the town, at least 😀
@The_Movie_Thieves2 ай бұрын
@@dav1342 Oh god I've seen such a disaster on kyle hill's channel. 2 guys carried a cylinder like thing on their back for hours which was very hot and later they started vomiting and i don't remember the number but like 300-3000 or maybe 30000 cylinders were removed from the forest.
@dav13422 ай бұрын
@@The_Movie_Thieves That's interesting. I tried to find that video, but I can't find it. Could you tell me the name of the video please? 🙂 Thank you!
@daniellewis33303 ай бұрын
Fun Fact: the difference between *the speed of light in a vacuum* and *the speed of light inside a material* (i.e. *not* in a vacuum) Is the basis for the Index of Refraction of that material. How much light slows down in a material describes how much it bends the light. Bonus Fun Fact: the "negative index of refraction" metamaterials do *not* make light go faster than light in a vacuum, nor is their index of refeaction actually negative, its just between 0 and 1. It's just a naming convention. These materials bend light opposite the angle that a non-metamaterial does, they do not "speed up" the light, that wouldn't make any sense.
@ghostlyfieldclub29303 ай бұрын
So, through anything other than a vacuum, some particles with mass can travel faster than photons?
@daniellewis33303 ай бұрын
@ghostlyfieldclub2930 yes. It is fascinating, and it comes from wave/particle duality. I'll try to summarize, but you can absolutely read more about it, even the Wikipedia article is really helpful. Okay, so the lower mass something is, the more like a wave it becomes. Photons behave the most like waves. Particles with mass, like electrons, also behave like waves, but to an ever-so-slightly-less degree. Waves propagate through a medium at what's called the *phase velocity*. Photons are strictly limited to that, but charged particles can move past the atoms of a dielectric material (a material that can be polarized), and excite that polarization faster than the phase velocity. When atoms are excited, they relax by releasing photons. But since the excitation is faster than the phase velocity, the resulting photons that are released lag behind the exciting charged particle, creating something similar to a 'sonic boom' of light, which is the blue that we see. Photons are limited to the phase velocity, so they can't create the same asymmetric excitation that the charged particles can. So in this very specific instance, where light behaves almost too much like a wave, charged particles can go faster than photons. In a vacuum, the limitation is back to being accelerating mass, and photons win by having no mass. Side note: things like this are also why some materials are shiny, but that's from something called the 'plasma frequency', and it's a whole other story.
@ghostlyfieldclub29303 ай бұрын
@@daniellewis3330 I love the explanation, thank you very much!
@daniellewis33303 ай бұрын
@ghostlyfieldclub2930 glad to help 😊
@user-Aaron-3 ай бұрын
@@daniellewis3330Which Wikipedia article specifically? Cherenkov radiation, or something else?
@caracatoacacepe13 күн бұрын
Missed opportunity to end the video with "That's pretty *rad* "
@Cinderella22714 күн бұрын
It’s more than just pretty cool. It’s phenomenal!
@757gamerguy22 ай бұрын
You’re safe near that reactor than you are in a coal mine
@4wheelliving1322 ай бұрын
I worked in and out of nukes for almost 40 years and the nukes today are a lot different than the old ones. They give you 2500 millirems per quarter of radiation that you can get, and years ago you would sometimes get close. The new plants, you don't get much more than if you worked outside
@averagegamer-mx1of2 ай бұрын
@@4wheelliving132 some places it can even be less because how controlled everything is
@sahaquiel46402 ай бұрын
Hell, in a reactor complex you'd probably get less radiation exposure than you would taking a walk down the street.
@zetijetiАй бұрын
Coal mines are not known for their safety, I would feel more comfortable in front of a speeding vehicle than a coalmine
@yahdood60152 ай бұрын
Instead of a sonic boom, we have… the Luminal Boom edit: Luminal Bloom. Why didn’t I think of that! Y’all are geniuses
@mishXY2 ай бұрын
Photonic boom
@TheFinalIllusion2 ай бұрын
Bloom
@AngiraBlu2 ай бұрын
@@mishXYCorrect.
@zacharybennett32492 ай бұрын
Luminal Bloom
@Robnoxious772 ай бұрын
sounds like a cool band name: “Luminal Boom”
@fethisimsek85602 ай бұрын
Wow I didnt think there would be a day where matpat come to us in a diffirent body 😢
@ashershalqoir9762 ай бұрын
This is like saying “if i cant be as fast as you then ill make you as slow as me” to light
@ekpalent2 ай бұрын
-1hp -1 hp -1hp
@tmar89592 ай бұрын
HOORAY!
@_Revengist2 ай бұрын
Yeah... If you can see the blue glow, you're getting a lifetime supply of gamma radiation
@elprimerplayer2772 ай бұрын
Naaaa that's bullshit one of the safest places to work is a nuclear power plant search about WANO the other day I was working with a french guy from WANO an amazing guy
@KrustableАй бұрын
Yay radiation!! Ouch. Radiation..
@Jebu911Ай бұрын
@@elprimerplayer277saying its the safest place to work is a big f**cking stretch. Sure its safe but not the safest by far.
@krismanwaring4023 ай бұрын
Another reason why blue is such a cool color
@Aeoxmusic2 ай бұрын
You should see this in UV :)
@neoteny72 ай бұрын
I did what you see there.
@justsomeguy93252 ай бұрын
Crips ftw!
@Blowin.Smoke801Ай бұрын
Bro said it’s a light bulb for invisible realms im good 😂
@smik25182 ай бұрын
Exactly what I wanted to see : Johnny Knoxwille talking about laws of physics
@calebturtle15882 ай бұрын
More proof the camera man never dies.
@MajestyEdits2 ай бұрын
Bruh
@zahnatom2 ай бұрын
chance of dying there is extremely low. hell, even jumping in has a lower chance of dying than driving your car
@narrowwing2 ай бұрын
Lol Water is actually an incredible shield against radiation, but yeah media often skews anything regarding radiation so that information is not well known
@Mecryte2 ай бұрын
@@zahnatom You would die jumping into that. Not to radiation though. To the armed guard keeping watch to prevent that from happening.
@binder9462 ай бұрын
Radiation is just a hoax look it up please
@poisonpotato13 ай бұрын
"The blue glow is not from the radiation" Later on "Its from radiation "
@BlackKnightsCommander2 ай бұрын
To be fair, it's kinda more of a "a sonic boom isn't from the jet hitting you, but from a shockwave being made from it moving too goddamn fast." It's just that light and Electromagnetic radiation are made from the same thing so it's clumsier to explain.
@kiraPh1234k2 ай бұрын
@@BlackKnightsCommander more concisely, light IS electromagnetic radiation.
@accelerator16662 ай бұрын
Sounds like y'all are nerds and op made a correct analysis
@martinhorner6422 ай бұрын
@@accelerator1666 Op is correct, if you are willing to call the wake in the water a "boat".
@JoeyFaller2 ай бұрын
Yeah, he meant radioactivity, not radiation
@graciandhercats2 ай бұрын
I was staring at the title, 100% ready to dispute it Thank goodness it was clarified
@RaccoonNation2 ай бұрын
That laugh in the beginning in everything 😂
@kyleferreira37422 ай бұрын
It's important to make the distinction that the particles accelerated by the reacter aren't breaking the theoretical speed limit of the universe, i.e., the speed of light in a vacuum. The speed of light in water is ~.75c (c is the universal constant for speed of light in a vacuum). So, particles can travel faster than the speed of light in that medium without violating the Theory of Relativity.
@jeffwei2 ай бұрын
The video does….
@hooviedoovie52202 ай бұрын
Reactor* And the particles aren't "accelerated" by the reactor, they are spontaneously emitted by atoms attempting to reach stability.
@MurphAzoty2 ай бұрын
Exactly
@monodragon2 ай бұрын
also, it's important to mention that the light itself isn't slowed down, it's just hitting a lot of atoms, so it bounces around and curves more. C stays constant
@Hejirah2 ай бұрын
so it's slower :) @@monodragon
@arthurneddysmith3 ай бұрын
That blue light is almost as bright as when someone turns on your bedroom light when you're mid-stroke.
@Lobotomyyyyy2 ай бұрын
Just felt the demon core right there
@averagegamer-mx1of2 ай бұрын
Pretty sure it was the same thing
@nickmattio33972 ай бұрын
“Great Cthulhu your window to this world is ready!”-H.P. Lovecraft
@joshgilbert32392 ай бұрын
Steve-o came a long way
@yogidemis85132 ай бұрын
Steve-O if he never did drugs and got his life together by a early age!!
@fatitankeris63272 ай бұрын
By Einstein's ToSR and ToGR, light has a constant speed, always equal to c. However, many wave interference effects take place in a reradiating medium, such that the velocity of light's PHASE becomes lower. In other words, a phase shift at each reradiator (atom) layer, that at larger scale looks like slower light with shorter wavelength. Highschool physics most often just set it as a given that light slows down, but without explaining the mechanics behind it.
@TheCrownWearer2 ай бұрын
Dang when I first saw that I specifically said to myself “isn’t that what happens when something gets hot”
@strick9red2 ай бұрын
Brilliant, love this short thanks for the knowledge.
@csdn44832 ай бұрын
This brings back memories as a nuclear engineering student at Arizona. For various classes/experiments we'd need to pulse the reactor and you'd get to see the chernekov radiation. For those lucky few that happened to be walking by the reactor lab when we did this, they might look up at one of the mirror above the reactor pool when they see a bunch of students around the reactor and catch the show too.
@hotflame_yt81043 ай бұрын
Its kinda cool to watch those electrons leaving behind the energy which glows blue😮😮😮
@miketyson8848Ай бұрын
My small man couldn’t fathom what he was saying. 😂science is truly amazing 👍🏾❤️
@melaniestarkey7868Ай бұрын
Hence why you find so many UAPs in the water.
@soapvar2 ай бұрын
To all the people saying light moves slower in water: it does not. because of the medium, the light simply has to take a more "crooked" path, making it take longer. light speed is constant regardless of medium. EDIT: Since I keep getting comments correcting me, and can't find my other comment down in the replies, here's some additional information: I'm obviously simplifying in my original comment, but it's essentially the same end result. Basically what happens is, when light goes through a medium, the reason it takes longer (longer path), isn't because it tries to "avoid" particles or molecules as it may seem in my original comment, but rather, it's disturbed because the light keeps getting absorbed and re-emitted by the atoms in the medium, making the path way longer. When a particle moves faster than light can to complete this process (distance becomes easier to clear for the particle than light), then a shockwave occours in the electromagnetic field due to it's inability to re-adjust in time, causing the emission of blue light in this case
@siddu_marihal2 ай бұрын
Yes you are right 👍
@anthronox49922 ай бұрын
Yup
@Dan_Animation2 ай бұрын
..meaning it's slower. If it takes longer in water, it's slower in it.
@edwardkuusela2352 ай бұрын
@@Dan_Animationlight takes more time to go to observer than matter because of the ways both elements go through water.
@Dan_Animation2 ай бұрын
@@edwardkuusela235 Ah, got it. Thanks
@Donate_Please3 ай бұрын
No. Cherenkov radiation is not created by objects moving faster than light speed. It's created by the electric field moving through a medium at a certain velocity of propagation. If the electric field moves through the medium faster than the medium can emit light, a charge is built up and released in the form of Cherenkov radiation. It has more to do with how fast an atom produces the photoelectric effect and not really anything to do with the speed of light.
@Nidvard3 ай бұрын
For someone trying to sound smart you should know there is nothing of an "electric field"... There are electromagnetic fields, and visible light is just a narrow band within the electromagnetic field
@Donate_Please3 ай бұрын
@@Nidvard Thanks for your feedback. However, you're mistaken. The electric field and magnetic field combine to form the electromagnetic field.
@Donate_Please3 ай бұрын
@@Nidvard The behavior of the electromagnetic field can be resolved into four different parts of the variation in space and time: electrostatic fields, static magnetic fields, varying electric fields, and varying magnetic fields. The first two are produced by charges and currents, which are then combined into the electromagnetic field tensor in the presence of both a distribution of velocities of charges and currents. The behavior of electric and magnetic fields, both as separate entities and as a collective whole, are governed by Maxwell’s equations. This behavior of the electric field as defined by Maxwell's equations is what I was referring to. The electric field becomes out of phase with the emitted light wave and builds a charge that creates Cherenkov radiation. The electric field moves at a fraction of the speed of light as denoted by the velocity of propagation. Also, I didn't say anything about the visible light spectrum. Or the magnetic field as I'm referring specifically to the electric field and its charge. I hope that makes sense. Let me know if you have any more questions.
@MrTeen-ul7yc3 ай бұрын
@@Nidvardplease learn some physics before calling people out. Look up some lectures on electricity and magnetism. Please learn something.
@WillyWonka.-3 ай бұрын
@@Nidvardyou are embarrassing
@Jester23612 ай бұрын
I would have to tell myself not to jump in in my head the little voices don’t always win but they try lol
@MinhNguyen-ov5bi2 ай бұрын
i was thinking bro broke physics at the start
@chato123772 ай бұрын
I've seen this in person and it is incredible!
@HarrisForte-bo2rh2 ай бұрын
So Godzilla’s just really fast
@Penguin14002 ай бұрын
Cant get into one fortnite match without hearing right foot creek 🙏💀😭😭
@bluefoxgalaxy60572 ай бұрын
Technically, his atomic breath is
@momo234612 ай бұрын
@@Penguin1400💀💀😂
@Mr.dred9924 күн бұрын
Radioactive decay law
@MEET_THE_MATRIX4 күн бұрын
Light lose his last race with electron🗿
@The.RandomTube3 ай бұрын
It's basically Sonic booms, but for light!
@DankTheGank52 ай бұрын
I get a sense of fear once it turns on, like IDK how any of it works or much of what it is but I know I don't wanna be in that water.
@MartinLeong252 ай бұрын
water is a good insulator on radiation, youre fine
@skyrailmaxima2 ай бұрын
As long as you were at the top and dont dive to touch a rod youd be fine
@AHHHHHHHH212 ай бұрын
being inside the water on the top is perfectly safe, just don't dive
@isaaccuddeback20642 ай бұрын
This guy is just Steve-O from a different universe.
@jgbalvesАй бұрын
Electrons like "hah, gotcha :D"
@user-xq2we4ke5t2 ай бұрын
I was taught in class that the phase velocity is going faster than light, not the group velocity which correspond to the speed of light ''c'' that you refer to.
@everettflores7382 ай бұрын
This deserves its own full episode.
@doublesynchrohelix86132 ай бұрын
Quantum entanglement comes on the scene... "What do ya'll think about spooky actions at a distance, eh?"
@andrewmcleod93122 ай бұрын
Amazing !! Thank you !!
@cristhecris_2 ай бұрын
Bro defeated every science video that says nothing can move faster than light
@doublesynchrohelix86132 ай бұрын
Cherenkov di... your bro here simply made a vid on a well known phenomenon and misrepresented it. One more thing, it's been known that quantum entanglement blows all this out of the "water" since Einstein was working on his big equation.
@InvisageStudios2 ай бұрын
Light travels slower in water which is why this happens in fission bath tubs.
@meydintorki2 ай бұрын
The light particles are slowed down in the pool. The radiation in the pool moves faster than the photons in the pool. The radiation is not travelling at light speed, not even close. It's just bad wording.
@averagegamer-mx1of2 ай бұрын
@@doublesynchrohelix8613he didn't misrepresent it
@garrettspires44812 ай бұрын
*Planet eating monster from another realm* "What is that light? Ima go check it out"
@guthrie_12 ай бұрын
I don’t think I would be standing that close
@defenestrat32 ай бұрын
The blue glow is so unreal that it looks like a animation and not real life
@PingSharp3 ай бұрын
It kinda looks like a kurzgesagt animation
@Unmannedair3 ай бұрын
This is basically the same mechanism that allows us to track particles in nuclear accelerators
@The_Vaporizer2 ай бұрын
When the scientist mishandled the Demon core and it flashed blue, he knew he was already dead.
@SessmaruKusanagiGaming2 ай бұрын
I genuinely thought the first 2 seconds were the beginning of some cool anime opening, then it was educational. THEN it got super cool at the end. It SHREDS light. Dude that is so metal. I want that superpower.
@justifano70463 ай бұрын
So if we can fill the galaxy with water... We can travel faster than light... Sounds easy enough
@drewprice92843 ай бұрын
besides the difficulty of filling the galaxy with water, it still wouldn’t make us move faster. cherenkov radiation occurs when light is moving slower than it should be, so for example the light in this video is moving at 0.7c, and the other particles are moving at 0.8c. that still is less than c, it’s just that the miscellaneous particles are moving faster than the other photons in the solution.
@justifano70463 ай бұрын
@@drewprice9284 ahhh I see. It's like the speed of sound being different at different elevations, I gotcha.
@Morpheux13 ай бұрын
You would need to be a particle smaller than a photon, then you could go faster than light in water.
@UnGodly_Overlord2 ай бұрын
We have the ocean. Load the rockets up with explosive outburst water tanks.
@limalicious3 ай бұрын
Is it blue for the same reason that blue shift light is blue? Like blue shift/red shift to figure out if stars are moving towards or away from us?
@jaredf62053 ай бұрын
No, it’s unrelated to that. It’s just electron emissions from the electrons gaining energy and then falling back to a stable lower energy. When this happens a photon is released, it just happens to be blue because of the material and the speed of the particle.
@awareqwx2 ай бұрын
Blue-shifted light can actually be any color. The reason we call it that is because blue light is higher-frequency. If visible light from something coming towards us is higher-frequency than it should be due to its motion then it has been shifted closer to being blue, or blue-shifted, and visible light that is lower-frequency than it should be has been shifted closer to red, or red-shifted. You could just as easily call it violet-shifting and have it be arguably more accurate. In other words, if an object should only be glowing in the infrared but it's moving quickly towards us and it appears to be red as a result, the light was still blue-shifted. Likewise, if a violet object is moving away from us and appears blue as a result, the light was still red-shifted.
@Northern12252 ай бұрын
All I think is Godzilla when I see that
@eh7229Ай бұрын
So radioactive it's hitting me through my screen as blue light
@Holy_crow3 ай бұрын
Amazing as always
@Roberttttttttt2 ай бұрын
Still not faster than the speed of light, just faster than the speed of that light.
@globalgirl33Ай бұрын
What is the difference in light?
@iceshard689115 күн бұрын
@@globalgirl33 medium in which it travels ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
@PranjalMaharana2 ай бұрын
The particle accelerator is looking cool tho☠️
@SavesomeBtchs25 күн бұрын
Can’t believe we went from rocks and sticks to this in the span of 5000 ish years
@piyushthakur10952 ай бұрын
Cherenkov radiation is electromagnetic radiation emitted when a charged particle (such as an electron) passes through a dielectric medium (such as distilled water) at a speed greater than the phase velocity (speed of propagation of a wavefront in a medium) of light in that medium. You've missed to say 'faster that speed of light in that medium' doing a huge blunder . Nothing can move faster than speed of light in vacuum.
@goosemchonk2 ай бұрын
Technically the electrons ARE moving faster than light in a medium. That's what causes Cherenkov radiation.
@Leviathan11322 ай бұрын
He did say that tho
@theBestElliephant2 ай бұрын
Trying to correct him by being overly pedantic is the real huge blunder here.
@Thetruthiscosmic2 ай бұрын
He did say it. Where's the blunder?
@GTRNights2 ай бұрын
Homie in such a hurry to sound smart he didn't even listen to the video and hear what the guy said. This dude got some insecurity issues.
@shootingshitaustralia40362 ай бұрын
That water be lookin like the 2am glacier water
@rafieazwan2 ай бұрын
Imagine there's something that is faster than the speed of light but we just can't see it because it's too fast
@TTV999zinna2 ай бұрын
The speed of darkness😌
@brothergrimm96562 ай бұрын
I'm pretty sure hoaxes and disinformation move faster than the speed of light... at least on the internet.
@neelgusain35282 ай бұрын
@@TTV999zinnaSpeed of darkness is the same as the speed of light
@neelgusain35282 ай бұрын
The expansion of universe is many times faster than light
@scratchymarcus2517Ай бұрын
A patch made by the admins to stop us from getting faster than light speed.
@jaegermann41702 ай бұрын
Why is it some of the coolest things are also the most terrifying
@ihsanrazan89783 ай бұрын
Is that a sonic-lightboom ? 😂
@AngiraBlu2 ай бұрын
Photonic boom, technically.
@DanFrederiksen3 ай бұрын
is the light blue or just what the water mostly lets through?
@valariemeltzer10593 ай бұрын
Watch the video again. It's matter traveling faster than the speed of light. It leaves an echo of blue light he explains it.
@DanFrederiksen3 ай бұрын
@@valariemeltzer1059 read my question again
@user-co6ww2cm9k3 ай бұрын
The glow is blue. Water may be blue but it is not this extreme on its own
@Pikachu_72352 ай бұрын
Bro flashbanged us
@Tuntor6892 ай бұрын
i used to joke “nothing’s faster than light but why haven’t we tried just slowing down light?” but it turns out we can.
@Duricas3 ай бұрын
So, warp speed for water?
@TitularHeroine3 ай бұрын
That's gonna be my new band name
@Duricas3 ай бұрын
@@TitularHeroine Can I have a share of the royalties?
@waleedabdullahkhan57063 ай бұрын
@@TitularHeroinegood luck bro
@Mounteverest_2 ай бұрын
@@TitularHeroinedam good luck
@GreenAppelPie3 ай бұрын
The speed of light is constant. It just takes a longer path through water
@peterpan64063 ай бұрын
that is just plain wrong
@sreea23652 ай бұрын
Light always takes a straight line path.
@peterpan64062 ай бұрын
@@sreea2365that is evem more wrong than the original answer
@sreea23652 ай бұрын
@@peterpan6406How so?
@peterpan64062 ай бұрын
@@sreea2365there is reflection, refraction and also gravitational influences. neither of those phenomena is a straight line. you might argue that reflected light is a straight line followed by another, different, straight line. you would be correct. then again a curve can be seen as infinitely many straight lines in succession, which is also correct. to get there you use differentiation. now you might argue there are no curved lines at all. you would be correct, in a certain sense. Still, circles exist, and if you say a circle is a straight line i will call you silly ;)
@condew61032 ай бұрын
I once toured the research reactor at Penn State, and they turned off the lights in the reactor room so we could see this first hand.
@memphis66942 ай бұрын
Great Explanation. My first response was, “well nothing moves faster then the speed of light.” So this was awesome short that shut me right on up lol.
@PhilDaBank3 ай бұрын
I don’t know what you’re describing but I know you said a lot of big words and they sound correct 🫡
@brandondriver993 ай бұрын
Well that was straight up misleading
@Ryber12 ай бұрын
“When matter travels faster than light, it emits light”
@Sqoou_TooАй бұрын
Producer: We need a graphic of an electron shedding photons.. Editor: I'm on it!