This is a really complete video for educational purposes. I am a MSc in physics and this cleared up certain stuff I was worried about. I would say it's a little dense in information but it is worth it. Great job.
@RazzhaКүн бұрын
Bruh.
@jean-paullange6148Күн бұрын
Great video. I wish more science educators started their explanations with first principles.
@Hailfire082 күн бұрын
I'd seen and used symplectic integrators before but didn't really understand them - your shearing description makes so much sense!
@brendanberg95232 күн бұрын
Best KSP tutorial I have seen so far
@stati5tik2 күн бұрын
tbh, that was pretty much yapping. Ofc all of these quantum mechanical properties average out once you are dealing with the motion of fluids since the observation of fluid involve molecule-molecule interactions which can be treated as a continuum which itself can be discretized (as particles (lagrangian) or cells (eulerian)). The quantum mechanical introduction didnt give any more insight to fluid simulation than simulation of rigid bodies for example which consist of billions of billions of electrons too.
@nederlandas3 күн бұрын
It's been a long time since I felt this stupid. The video format suggests this should be accessible, but my brain is not braining.
@tune4903 күн бұрын
Can you make a mod for KSP 2 :D This was an awesome video!
@The_Man423 күн бұрын
Very interesting however it took me 2 tries to watch the video because his voice is so soothing I fell asleep
@MarcusHelius3 күн бұрын
Couldn't understand most of the math language, I have limited knowledge of orbital mechanics, but this was one of the most satisfying videos to watch.
@RayJin-dq1td4 күн бұрын
For human missions,stick with Hohmann transfer, its only a good idea to use the other orbits when you have plenty of time.
@denysvisser4 күн бұрын
This is the 3rd time watching this. I am nowhere close to understanding but I want to so bad. I will watch a series just explaining this video 3b1b style. PS I want to buy mech with these visuals.
@faisalarisandipratama67304 күн бұрын
In the beginning, this video shows a popular misconception about the Heisenberg uncertainty principle. . The video is actually explaining the Observer effect. There is uncertainty in any measurement, because any attempt to measure a system will cause disturbance in the system. The example is just like in the video, measuring electron position is actually changing the actual position of the electron. The other example is putting the thermometer inside a bottle of water is not actually measuring the temperature of the water, but the temperature of the water + thermometer material itself. . On the other side, The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle is the fundamental limitation to know certain physical property, like position and momentum, simultaneously. This uncertainty principle is not uncertainty caused by disturbance by the measurement tool, but it is the fundamental property of quantum particles.
@thesunman1085 күн бұрын
uhh.. where am i
@faisalarisandipratama67305 күн бұрын
Wow, it's like wonderful summary of Orbital Mechanics and Astrodynamics with beautiful visualization. 😮 . Great work 👍🏻 . I feel bored and helpless waiting from some youtube video with more than surface level of knowledge of anything. At first, I thought this video is like "Oh, another video about Hohmann Orbit transfer." Now this is something. Hohmann Transfer is only one concept shown in the video. This video explain almost all other alternatives. Beautiful visualization but deep concept. . This is the kind of video I need nowadays to remove my boredom 🔥
@PedroHenriquePS000005 күн бұрын
I think the pace and velocity of the video is perfect...
@ababame6 күн бұрын
you should be a little easier on camera movements
@faresabbasi26136 күн бұрын
Waiting for upcoming videos :)
@zizoubermuda24346 күн бұрын
now do it in ksp
@altonwells6 күн бұрын
seriously the most incredible educational visualizations i've ever seen. This is the future of education.
@sidekickstreams7 күн бұрын
Wow these animations are incredible. You can follow the math so well with them. Honestly, if you just slowed the playback speed to 0.5x, this is one of the best astro videos on youtube.
@atheoristspointofview70597 күн бұрын
This is beautifully done
@cola987658 күн бұрын
I finally understood the ballistic moon capture. If I ever return to KSP with Principia this will be fun.
@asdfASdf-qv8jx8 күн бұрын
just wanted to safe some fuel in ksp. now i get why i play a game and other people get money for that. incredible work buddy. keep it up 🤯
@rh99098 күн бұрын
Thank you algorithm god. What an art this is.
@WillRegister9 күн бұрын
its like resolution of a pixel... the electrical field of the atom, the elctrons is like the blurring of the pixel at high resolution... you can zoom in really far but its like not supposed to be viewed in such ways. or rather, it doesn't look as right. kinda fuzzy.
@WillRegister9 күн бұрын
great name for your channel haha
@hoseja10 күн бұрын
In the end the interplanetary transfer network is, again, a trade-off between time and energy. Possibly great for probes, infeasible for humans who benefit much more from development of better engines to get us closer to the coveted brachistochrone. However, I learned so much about what the network actually is!
@Revenant32610 күн бұрын
ksp and principia brought me here lol
@maurimat10 күн бұрын
So its s new way to use probability waves to predict a path or to pinpoint a spaceship along the space path?
@GauchemanOnFirst11 күн бұрын
Just watched this whole thing and idk if i learned anythjng at all. Could you explain what you mean? How do we know you're not just making all this up? Proof please
@GauchemanOnFirst11 күн бұрын
An astrophysicist commented below saying he was lost too so now I know it's NOT just me 😅
@Agrac1610 күн бұрын
Guess what he is doing in this video, is it A. Explaining orbital mechanics(astrodynamics) which include hohmann transfer, or B. Reacting to skidibi toilet episode 69. Which one? Many of the orbital path he explain in this video are often used by nasa's interplanetary space probe, this is also works when going around all planets in solar system, like doing gravity slingshot or hohmann transfer orbits. Or maybe you just not understand any of these? Or maybe you also not understand this 'orbital mechanic' things?
@greencoder159411 күн бұрын
The video's stunning: resembling a beautiful shotgun loaded with information, sniping my mind upon each glance with controlled whispers of the siren said to be truth.
@LaboriousCretin12 күн бұрын
10:09 Someone needs to test a tunable metamaterial for slits and the orbital energy levels for band manipulation or defraction gradient. Ether way it tells a story. Very nice video otherwise. I love seeing things visualised. Keep up the good work.
@dimadima529813 күн бұрын
Hello Braintruffle . Can you please suggest what you consider as the best fluid mechanics books (videos ) for a mathematician and a hydraulic engineer , and I need also books on the subject of Numerical Analysis ... thanks in advance
@dimadima529813 күн бұрын
Hello Braintruffle . Can you please suggest what you consider as the best fluid mechanics books (videos ) for a mathematician and a hydraulic engineer , and I need also books on the subject of Numerical Analysis ... thanks in advance
@dimadima529813 күн бұрын
Hello Braintruffle . Can you please suggest what you consider as the best fluid mechanics books (videos ) for a mathematician and a hydraulic engineer , and I need also books on the subject of Numerical Analysis ... thanks in advance
@dimadima529813 күн бұрын
Hello Braintruffle . Can you please suggest what you consider as the best fluid mechanics books (videos ) for a mathematician and a hydraulic engineer , and I need also books on the subject of Numerical Analysis ... thanks in advance
@dimadima529813 күн бұрын
Hello Braintruffle . Can you please suggest what you consider as the best fluid mechanics books (videos ) for a mathematician and a hydraulic engineer , and I need also books on the subject of Numerical Analysis ... thanks in advance
@ghettomining14 күн бұрын
Iv come back to re watch this 3 times now. Trying to decode it to code it. If you have a video of how you made these even if it’s 5 hours long I’d watch it.
@akj334414 күн бұрын
I am so glad others also find this video a difficult to grasp. I struggled to keep up. This video is incredible and so well made. Wish it was a bit slower for people like me.
@ke2ke78215 күн бұрын
I am not kidding when I say that this is the greatest physics video I have ever seen wtf
@daskool542016 күн бұрын
Are u for real
@userunfriendly930416 күн бұрын
eyeball it
@denischen819617 күн бұрын
Can you use a similar technique to dramatically speed up ray tracing for 3D rendering?
@NotLegato17 күн бұрын
incredibly insightful in such a short time.
@slevinshafel939517 күн бұрын
Can make JArvis- IA to make all this and take order from human? and if necesary active manual flight. damn really awsome video info. i need to learn more about it because only i understund 20% but i like it look like i can get it if i put time. Good Job thank you.
@ashwanishahrawat460717 күн бұрын
I'm at 1:30, and I already know i just made a new friend today, and we will be together for a very long time. brilliant Visuals and explaining complex stuff in a voice that I will need to keep calm.
@aleksszukovskis207418 күн бұрын
quality video, i needed to watch it over some 5 times, but its great. still, you should divide video into chapters with pauses.
@realbrickbread18 күн бұрын
To be honest, this is pretty hard to follow as someone who has no idea about this stuff