Sciencium
Sciencium
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Could Netflix Fix Science?
Researchers spend much of their time writing grant applications, which adds up to a lot of wasted resources. Is there a better way to fund science?
Special thanks to Profs. Kevin Gross and Carl T. Bergstrom.
Their paper "Contest models highlight inherent inefficiencies of scientific funding competitions"
arxiv.org/abs/1804.03732
Переглядів: 171 343

Відео

A Billion Years of Moon Impacts Illuminates Earth's History
Переглядів 123 тис.5 років тому
A study just published reveals the moon experienced a dramatic increase in cratering rates about 300 million years ago. This corroborates evidence of a similar increase in Earth impacts. The paper is: The Earth and Moon impact flux increased at the end of the Paleozoic Sara Mazrouei, Rebecca R. Ghent, William F. Bottke, Alex H. Parker, Thomas M. Gernon science.sciencemag.org/content/363/6424/25...
6-Letter DNA!
Переглядів 438 тис.7 років тому
Scientists have created living bacteria with two extra letters of genetic code, nicknamed X, and Y for short. Help me make Sciencium: ve42.co/JoinUs For more info: ve42.co/SAsynthEcoli Animated by Kyle Norby Life has been evolving on earth for about 3.7 billion years. In spite of its diversity, all living things have one thing in common - DNA, a fundamental code containing just four chemical le...
The Secret to the Stickiness of Frog Spit
Переглядів 438 тис.7 років тому
MAKE SCIENCIUM WITH ME: ve42.co/JoinUs Supported by Google Making & Science: ua-cam.com/users/makingscience Submit video topic suggestions: ve42.co/GotIdeas A frog’s tongue can get prey into its mouth in less time than it takes for you to blink - just seven hundredths of a second. The bug is whipped through the air with a peak acceleration of around 12Gs, way more than astronauts experience whe...
Why is the Sun Slowing Down?
Переглядів 803 тис.7 років тому
The outer layer of the sun is slowing down, something we've known for decades but haven't been able to figure out until now. Supported by Google Making & Science: ua-cam.com/users/makingscience References: A Poynting-Robertson-like drag at the Sun’s surface Ian Cunnyngham, Marcelo Emilio, Jeff Kuhn, Isabelle Scholl, Rock Bush arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/1612/1612.00873.pdf en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Does Hot Water Freeze Faster Than Cold Water?
Переглядів 4,6 млн7 років тому
Observations over millenia and numerous experiments claim that warmer water freezes faster than cold water under identical conditions. Supported by Google Making & Science #ScienceGoals ua-cam.com/users/makingscience References: Mpemba Effect: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mpemba_effect Questioning the Mpemba Effect: www.nature.com/articles/srep37665 Royal Society of Chemistry competition: www.rsc.org/...

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @apex_prey
    @apex_prey 2 дні тому

    Water remembering its previous states indeed sounds insane... until you remember and realize that photons know when they are and aren't being observed.

  • @martinsapsitis4292
    @martinsapsitis4292 12 днів тому

    Fab doco, tops!

  • @martinsapsitis4292
    @martinsapsitis4292 12 днів тому

    Lay them on! We love your interests and explanations and thinking. Cheers

  • @evgenyzak2035
    @evgenyzak2035 17 днів тому

    If you have different composition and contents of the ice-cream you can actually freeze hot faster than cold.

  • @Ransomclickware
    @Ransomclickware Місяць тому

    These videos are gem because they introduce a new information tell complete details about the information and then at last tell you that the information is irrelevent or unimportant trully gem of a video.

  • @barabbasrosebud9282
    @barabbasrosebud9282 Місяць тому

    PATHETIC!!! The Mpemba effect so is easy to explain that even a PhD should be able to explain it. The key is the __ ________ __ _____. Duh! 🥴 Which is why _________ _______ ____ _______.

  • @douglashanson7489
    @douglashanson7489 Місяць тому

    It would be _Sooo Cool(!),_ if water molecules (or _any_ molecules {or any element}) had a memory of their previous temperature(s). The applications would be endless! (even though I'm not educated enough to think of any applications, but I'm pretty confident there'd be a whole bunch).

  • @ShubhamGupta-qb8ee
    @ShubhamGupta-qb8ee 2 місяці тому

    U have another channel besides vertasium...i just did not know about this...i thought someone might have copied ur video😅😂

  • @Voyager150
    @Voyager150 2 місяці тому

    I wonder what will happened if we reverse the experiment.

  • @Partyfreaker
    @Partyfreaker 2 місяці тому

    Maybe some freezers will work harder because they detect heat 😂

  • @trumanhw
    @trumanhw 4 місяці тому

    The last sentence that he didn't say but shut off? _Because thermodynamics it's already hard enough._

  • @GWNorth-db8vn
    @GWNorth-db8vn 4 місяці тому

    Generations of Canadian kids have thrown boiling water in the air to watch it turn into a spray of snow. I've never tried it with cold water, though.

  • @occamraiser
    @occamraiser 4 місяці тому

    I have seen this theory being empirically tested and it wasn't proven.....so....hmmm.....why would one believe this video.

  • @vetlesraas2614
    @vetlesraas2614 4 місяці тому

    the hot container will aslo create a bigger airflow on the outside, cooling it down, since hot air raises and cold air replaces it.

  • @affankhan6031
    @affankhan6031 5 місяців тому

    You saying that the photons takes some of the sun's momentum?

  • @teefedtips
    @teefedtips 5 місяців тому

    When you heat up water, you give the water molecules more energy. They start moving around faster and faster. So, when you cool down hot water and cold water to the same temperature to make ice, the hot water already has some molecules moving really fast. When you put both hot water and cold water in the freezer, the hot water has more of these fast-moving molecules. This means that hot water starts to freeze faster than cold water because it's already got some molecules that are moving towards becoming ice. It's kind of like having a head start in a race. The hot water has a bit of a head start because some of its molecules are already moving fast, so it can turn into ice faster than cold water. Isn't that cool? Even though it might seem weird, it's just how the tiny particles in water behave!

    • @Mechanical_Orion
      @Mechanical_Orion 2 місяці тому

      This is just stupid You do realise that in freezing the water particles are racing to be locked into place right? Stop moving How the hell would hot water have a head start

  • @user-id5hv1kr4o
    @user-id5hv1kr4o 6 місяців тому

    Please make a video on what things are needed for a water to freeze , because i tested a simple experiment during winter when the outside temperature was around -7 degree Celsius , but i didn't see the water changed to ice Why ? There should be something that plays role like temperature

  • @TheRealTommyBear33
    @TheRealTommyBear33 6 місяців тому

    I guess the real issues is how or why do we see this effect be real in the real world but we do not see it being real in a controlled scientific environment. As someone who works in plumbing industry we see hot water lines freeze before cold water lines all the time even sometimes only the hot line freezes? and apparently humans have been observing these things for hundreds of years yet they are called false? seems improbably that something observed which is the definition of science then is proved to be fasle by the same definition of science?

  • @maxcole2527
    @maxcole2527 6 місяців тому

    I know this probably sounds dumb but I keep on thinking that it may be possible that the rate of change may have momentum or in other words because the hot water, with far more thermal energy, begins cooling at a faster rate as it has more energy to give, and it continues to cool at this greater rate compared to the cooler water with less thermal energy that started cooling slower as the difference in temperature was lesser than the hot water and the freezer.

  • @graystonegardens1642
    @graystonegardens1642 6 місяців тому

    I dont care what anyone says. Hot water has further to go to get to freezing. Plain and simple. That's all there is to it. END OF DISCUSSION....PERIOD

  • @infodiary101
    @infodiary101 7 місяців тому

    May i knkw where you have got this knowledge from ?? Means ,from which book,if you please!🙏

  • @infodiary101
    @infodiary101 7 місяців тому

    Good afternoon sir , 😊🌞

  • @infodiary101
    @infodiary101 7 місяців тому

    Hello😊

  • @AbdussalamHijazi
    @AbdussalamHijazi 8 місяців тому

    A happy ending.

  • @whendarknessfalls6969
    @whendarknessfalls6969 8 місяців тому

    The moon, nor the earth, or Sol has been here for a billion years. Sooo no

  • @rwait1287
    @rwait1287 8 місяців тому

    중간에 온도가 더 높은쪽의 비커는 냉동고에 넣었을 경우 주변 얼음결정을 녹여 액체화 시켜 비커와 온도가 높은 비커와 냉동고의 열 전도 효율을 높인다고 한 부분에서 착안한 아이디어로, 온도가 높은 물은 증발이 이루어 지고 있으니 기화한 물이 차가운 온도로 인해 공기중에서 결정화되어 다시 비커에 떨어집니다 그렇게 되면 온도가 매우 낮은 물 결정이 비커로 떨어짐으로 인해 더욱 빠르게 온도가 내려갈 수 있겠죠 이는 냉동고 속이 낮은 온도로 인해 건조할 것으로 생각되었으며 물은 0도에 가까울수록 활동이 적어지는 성질을 상정한 생각입니다 이렇게 작성하니 다른 여러 가설들이 복합적으로 이루어져 이러한 현상이 일어나는 것 같기도 하네요😅

  • @brunolopes7311
    @brunolopes7311 8 місяців тому

    yeah I learn something with this video: that Mpemba effect doesnt exist but it happens everywhere anyway.... -.-'

  • @hansenhollla6705
    @hansenhollla6705 10 місяців тому

    My brain hurts. This makes no sense

  • @markiesparky
    @markiesparky 10 місяців тому

    Well I didn't expect that ending. And there I was thinking that the faster moving hot water molecules pull the freezing air around it quicker than the slow moving cold water ones.

  • @happykillmore349
    @happykillmore349 10 місяців тому

    Notice how the researchers who all make fat 6 figure salaries never once mentioned making thirf funding go farther bry making their research cost less, or paying less profit markup for materials 😏

  • @jc4evur661
    @jc4evur661 10 місяців тому

    1:06 I didn't know freezers had been invented during Aristotle's time

  • @ronanmcw
    @ronanmcw 11 місяців тому

    How was aristotle going round freezing his water in ancient greece?

  • @arTE-VI
    @arTE-VI 11 місяців тому

    Fantastic video! Wow!

  • @thatoneguy3411
    @thatoneguy3411 11 місяців тому

    foreshadowing the gecko video 5 years before

  • @hi-ougidemonfang
    @hi-ougidemonfang Рік тому

    You know we didn’t used to have as well made filters , or even filters at all as we do now. Maybe the older world examples can be because of impurities that were removed during evaporation.

  • @cate01a
    @cate01a Рік тому

    damn straight. a physics/chem teacher said hot water freezes faster and I was so confused and I kept asking and explaining the theory of 0:14 but she affirmed hot water magically freezes faster for some magic reason and I'm just bloody stupid well good to know she was wrong: how water doesnt (in perfect theoretical condition) magically cool faster, BUT you didnt explain why the tiny change of the thermometer caused the hot water to freeze faster??? Do we still not know why that is?? That is such a strange effect and so strange that we don't have an answer for that yet we've sent a helicopter to mars

    • @cate01a
      @cate01a Рік тому

      maybe no this is already answered and the impenda is a myth, and you're doing your veritasium ways: clickbaity deceptive content and how hot water can freeze faster because of a minor minor change of the environment, is just the butterfly effect at the atomic scale

  • @INFP3355R
    @INFP3355R Рік тому

    Gordan ramsey

  • @MichaelLapore-lk9jz
    @MichaelLapore-lk9jz Рік тому

    Then how do you explain the fact of observation of hot water winning this damn race?

  • @dwsvlogs97
    @dwsvlogs97 Рік тому

    This channel is suffering from severe neglect and it's content is awesome.

  • @bigsister9354
    @bigsister9354 Рік тому

    Oh… I used to thought that hot water freezes faster because molecules moves faster and that helps them to form the crystal. But I’m know nothing about the physics, so…

  • @keysersoze9877
    @keysersoze9877 Рік тому

    The molecules are spread out in warm water thus you can throw warm water outside in low temperature and it frost. the molecules rapidly expand as being loose. Opposite reaction warm water molecules rapidly contract becoming dense. My Answer.

    • @keysersoze9877
      @keysersoze9877 Рік тому

      Thus water molecules react more to the extreme in either direction. This is just what I think when i process how it would work in my mind. Guess Im dumb or weird!

  • @lambtonold-schoolminibiker4552

    Sounds like the theory that hot water with many impurities will freeze faster, vs two glasses of pure water. Seems like two very different studies.

  • @f_pie
    @f_pie Рік тому

    Or have ChatGPT write your application lol

  • @AbdulAziz-cj4hg
    @AbdulAziz-cj4hg Рік тому

    Is there any mixture to make ice freeze faster and melt slower?

  • @kevinc1956
    @kevinc1956 Рік тому

    I note that it is difficult to categorize what videos are thematically appropriate to publish on either Sciencium or Verasium. Since it’s been four years since the most recent video on Sciencium, it appears Derek reached a similar conclusion…. unless there are some other factors at work as suggested by previous commenters. On top of that, there is now a second Veratasium channel. Sciencium is a good channel name though.

  • @1luhdon
    @1luhdon Рік тому

    What about billions

  • @DerGameGamer
    @DerGameGamer Рік тому

    Wait a second does All this even make sense? Because Mpemba put his water in the freezer right after boiling it and the others have let their water cool down before they have put it in the freezer. So to make a time line I make an example of 60min. min. 0: Mpemba Puts bis boiling water in the freezer. min. 1-17: His water is in the freezer already cooling down, the water of the others is cooling down outside the freezer before they put it in min. 18: the others put their water in the freezer and Mpemba's water already has coolen down. And then they cool down togethe. So you See the water of him Was in the freezer for a part of time "alone" so it had time to cool down way faster then the water of the other Students. I hope you understand what I want to say (sorry for my bad english I'm from germany)

  • @thatonecommunist
    @thatonecommunist Рік тому

    Why does this side channel exist? your main channel is already science so I don't really understand what the difference is? Not that I don't love the content though!

  • @LegendaryGames420
    @LegendaryGames420 Рік тому

    This explains why i gets so cold after a hot shower

  • @fatmoron7644
    @fatmoron7644 Рік тому

    This is one of those things where it makes sense but you cant explain why