This has been the best explanation I've had without needing a serious physics understanding. The visuals are also so intuitive and really clarify how sound is translated. For so long I've wondered about how we classify sounds in music. I'm glad I started digging into oled screen speakers and came across the video.
Dude, for all of my life I've wanted to understand how sound ACTUALLY works. Thank you so much for this. You have no idea how pivotal these visualizations and explinations were to me!
Brothers...the glories of this world is great, but do not forget the eternal, everlasting glory of kingdom of the righteous king, Yahweh. Righteous God, in your grace, may these lost children return to you. Amin!!
Bro, always I ask everyone I know how do we hear sound now when I watch this video I understand any think I was thinking 🤔🤔 about I know just when I watch this video and I love the way you explain without you until now I wasn't to know how do we hear I thank you so so so so much for this video it means a lot for me thanks again for your help, today 🎉❤❤❤❤ is so good 🤍🖤 day for me ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤.
Bro, always I ask everyone I know how do we hear sound now when I watch this video I understand any think I was thinking 🤔🤔 about I know just when I watch this video and I love the way you explain without you until now I wasn't to know how do we hear I thank you so so so so much for this video it means a lot for me thanks again for your help, today 🎉❤❤❤❤ is so good 🤍🖤 day for me ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤. Ma
I just wanted to let you know this is poetry in motion I thank the creator of this video bringing life to the minds of life the world needs your gift !we thank you !!
It's a beautiful tutorial on how sound works. I watched it a couple of times to get the phenomenon of sound . You did a terrific job of illustrating with your video graphics. Keep them coming!
I just can't imagine how dismal life would be without the ability to hear. Music has always been one of life's greatest pleasures for me. I listen to it everyday.
This video is amazing, have you thought of starting educational videos like these? Or you're only focus on how specific tech products work? I really think your way of explaining things is gold. Please do the modern version of branch but with more general physics videos like this one🙏🏻🙏🏻
I really liked this video. I loved the simplicity of explanation and the amazing animation along with all the points you mentioned to keep in mind. The idea to create branch diagram resonates deeply with my way of learning things. Thanks for sharing this in youtube and kudos to the team/person who made this video!!
I enjoyed your explanation, my visits to symphonies will be enhanced. I can actually hear the different instrumentals in the sounds. I've had musical appreciation training in college. I'm happy I took that course.
Beautiful and clear. The ear graphic is very nice. Explanation of the sound waves is amazing and the water and symphony very good! Love that "hello" voice too!
Great video! This is example of what an educational channel should look like - teaching clear concepts explained in a different way of thinking! Congrats!
So so so helpful! I will say, the background music is too loud at times, and was hard for me to focus on the words being said. Besides that, this way of teaching sound is SO good!!! Thank you!
How can you make this much graphics and rendering just for youtube channel or this videos are made for something else outdated. If this graphics only made for youtube you are spending so much time in this video so congratulations
Thanks for doing this! Every other explanation always was simplistic visually especially for more varied/dynamic sounds. Yours made the most sense to me.
It still seamed a bit hard to put it all into context untill rite at the end. The record needal following what looks like a scratch of a sound wave on the vinal, and in turn, moving the speaker diaphragm. Great video.
Surely your channel will reach a high position... I have seen many physics channels like crash but there not given this like a great understanding explanation... Congratulations
How the audio file or the speaker differentiate each sound, sound of violin or drums...How it is encoded as a data file? Is there any other parameter other than frequency and amplitude to denote this?.
A few questions: - Sounds are defined but frequency and amplitude. If I understand correctly, does that mean the frequency is determined by the rate at which particles pressure increases and decreases.? - In terms of wave superposition, surely it depends on the phasing of it? I know it doesn't but why. For example, say I have two notes, one at 440hz and the other at 220hz. If I played both at the exact same time I guess the frequency would still be 220hz? Another way of asking is, if note 1 repeats every A seconds and note 2 repeats every B seconds where B
Wait so do radio stations on say AM 770 come at you quicker than say on AM 660 meaning that you hear stations on lower channels quicker? and this could be offset to sound normal by the initial microphones recording slower and vice versa?
I'v always been looking for explanation of how things work like this video, finally i found this channel today. Your videos are awesome and they are what i was looking for.
Great video only thing that I needed more clarity on was what exactly a diaphragm is and how it works, not comprehending it yet. Will keep researching though
WHAT is physically vibrating/oscillating that creates the acoustic energy (transported by waves), it's the electron particle between the air molecules?
Very good visualization! I am late to the game with my question but I ask it anyways. So here is the scenario for the question: If i think of a motor rotating with 40 Hz, the sound that I hear is 40 Hz. If I speed up the motor to 60 Hz, the sound is 60 Hz. So far so good. I know that low frequency sounds have a longer wavelength than high frequency sounds. Long wavelengths also travel further and are not easily absorbed. How come, the same motor can produce wave lengths that travel through my walls (40 Hz) and by speeding up that same motor outputs sounds that I can block. To a layperson this looks like the slower the motor rotates the more powerful the soundwave was but that doesn't make any sense. What element am I missing?
It still confuses me when I think about multiple sounds at the same time. Like sure, you can combine the individual instrument graphs into one single graph and play that, but how does that play more than 1 sound simultaneously. Like if all you were given was the combined graph, you couldn't possibly figure out which graphs were combined to create it, because there's an infinite number of possible combinations. Just like, I cant give you the equation "x + y = 10" there are infinite possibilities of both x and y combinations. How does one membrane on a speaker produce multiple sounds simultaneously? Like the sound of my voice, with the air conditioning in the background, music playing, the hum of the fridge, a baby crying, and the wind blowing. How can a speaker vibrating following a needle that follows a single path on a record, create multiple sounds that my ear can decipher. It seems different than say, the combination of colors. Like if you show me the primary colors red, green and blue, all mixed together to create white, I will see white. I will have no idea that you combined those three colors to create it. But if there are 6 sounds happening simultaneously, they don't combine into 1 sound. I can listen to or focus on any one of the 6 sounds.
I think you're comparing something that has a physical impact on the surrounding world versus something that is self-contained: imagine if your colors, every time they were painted, had a specific word that was put into the title of the painting.. Then, I could see a painting and, while it might be a garbled mess of colors, each color has a definite word I can see and pick out in the title of the painting. Sound is like this because each type of physical interaction creates sound in a definite and constant way, (by the particular pattern of how it moves the surrounding air particles), so even if a recording is a garbled mess you can still pick out the definite sounds like you said.
Great video! I have a question though... Does the record player read a single sound wave that reflects the mix of all of the combined instruments? If so, how on earth is a single sound wave produced from such a range of contrasting waves? (as can be observed visually between the compound wave at the top of the screen and the single wave at the bottom of the screen at 7:44)
on a DAW. these sound waves like on the video its uses a fast fourier transform visualization FFT, the software use math to calculate the new wave of the product of all instruments on a song. on vinil records are the same principle, the needle was had a small magnet, and these movement produce a very low current on a small coil. like on a microphone. i remenber a time when i was young that a lower the volume from the disc player and a listen close to the needle and i listen the song from the disc. amazing
THIS IS AMAZING. I can't wait to show this to my music technology students. You explain this so clearly, but don't assume the audience is stupid -- perfect for my elementary and high schoolers. Thank you!!!
Were those instrument waves correct to the actual instruments listed? I feel like the waves on the lower pitched instruments would be wider than the higher pitched instruments, as lower pitched instruments have a slower pressure wave cycle.
If you mapped the grooves for certain sounds technically you could use an ai to produce an entire song on vinyl without music ever happening, yet music could be produced. You could also probably create sounds that don't exist by overlaying certain sounds to play and then meet in the air to become a different sound that a single speaker could normally never produce.
Well, that's technically what's happening, when you make vinyl records. These are stamped in a form in a press, with a plate with the opposite of what the vinyl should look like. No sound is being transmitted. Btw., a vinyl record player doesn't work, like described in the video. The grooves are 3 dimensional, so the needle both moves up and down (primarily), and to the side (stereo imaging). The grooves much looks like the Grand Canyons. In places, the canyon is wide and deep, in other places, narrow and shallow. Or a mix in between.
hello i arrived here after posing myself a question; is there truly 5 senses? since sound is the pressure of air particles, is it more accurate to describe it as touch (feel)? this video has helped educate me to continue thoerising. it was well paced, the parts that you posed questions and revisited ("lets rewind here") were very appropriate, and i think the graphics presented your points extremely effectively. thank you
This might be the greatest explanation of anything i have ever seen
Helan lofl right !!! my mind is fucked with beauty on all levels after watching listioning and hearing
robert loera OOOOOOOHHHH bad word bad word bad word
Tumahimik kayo please
Can u guys shut up
@@C1schecter101 u idiot go to hell u bitch
This has been the best explanation I've had without needing a serious physics understanding. The visuals are also so intuitive and really clarify how sound is translated. For so long I've wondered about how we classify sounds in music. I'm glad I started digging into oled screen speakers and came across the video.
Dude, for all of my life I've wanted to understand how sound ACTUALLY works. Thank you so much for this. You have no idea how pivotal these visualizations and explinations were to me!
Brothers...the glories of this world is great, but do not forget the eternal, everlasting glory of kingdom of the righteous king, Yahweh. Righteous God, in your grace, may these lost children return to you. Amin!!
Bro, always I ask everyone I know how do we hear sound now when I watch this video I understand any think
I was thinking 🤔🤔 about I know just when I watch this video and I love the way you explain without you
until now I wasn't to know how do we hear I thank you so so so so much for this video it means a lot for me
thanks again for your help, today 🎉❤❤❤❤ is so good 🤍🖤 day for me ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤.
Bro, always I ask everyone I know how do we hear sound now when I watch this video I understand any think
I was thinking 🤔🤔 about I know just when I watch this video and I love the way you explain without you
until now I wasn't to know how do we hear I thank you so so so so much for this video it means a lot for me
thanks again for your help, today 🎉❤❤❤❤ is so good 🤍🖤 day for me ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤. Ma
I wish my teacher would have taught me like this. Take my money man but never stop making videos. You are a gem.
Your channel will go beyond limits
True
it didn't say that sound has the speed of sound, or that not all air particles travel at the same speed(the speed of sound), but most of them do
yep
and it did 🎉
Wow! No one could explain it so simply and yet so comprehensively.
I just wanted to let you know this is poetry in motion I thank the creator of this video bringing life to the minds of life the world needs your gift !we thank you !!
It's a beautiful tutorial on how sound works. I watched it a couple of times to get the phenomenon of sound . You did a terrific job of illustrating with your video graphics. Keep them coming!
I just can't imagine how dismal life would be without the ability to hear. Music has always been one of life's greatest pleasures for me. I listen to it everyday.
This video is amazing, have you thought of starting educational videos like these? Or you're only focus on how specific tech products work? I really think your way of explaining things is gold. Please do the modern version of branch but with more general physics videos like this one🙏🏻🙏🏻
I really liked this video. I loved the simplicity of explanation and the amazing animation along with all the points you mentioned to keep in mind. The idea to create branch diagram resonates deeply with my way of learning things. Thanks for sharing this in youtube and kudos to the team/person who made this video!!
I have never watched a tutorial video like this. Thank you so much Sir.
I enjoyed your explanation, my visits to symphonies will be enhanced. I can actually hear the different instrumentals in the sounds. I've had musical appreciation training in college. I'm happy I took that course.
Amazing and simple explanation. I wish I could go back to school right now!!!!! Thank you so much.
Beautiful and clear. The ear graphic is very nice. Explanation of the sound waves is amazing and the water and symphony very good! Love that "hello" voice too!
I wish this methodology was used in schools. Great job man !!! Appreciate your efforts on this
This is probably the best RUclips channel ever in history!
This illustration is a piece of art!!!!!!! Brilliantly done :)
This channel is a hidden gem
Great video! This is example of what an educational channel should look like - teaching clear concepts explained in a different way of thinking! Congrats!
So so so helpful! I will say, the background music is too loud at times, and was hard for me to focus on the words being said. Besides that, this way of teaching sound is SO good!!! Thank you!
The best educative channel I've ever seen, not every1 can give such simple explanation while visualizing it 3D, thank you so much.
i dont get why you dont have more views. you have the best explanations i have ever seen
Nice! So simple and yet informational!
I give you my personal award for best explanation. Thank you!!!!!!
How can you make this much graphics and rendering just for youtube channel or this videos are made for something else outdated. If this graphics only made for youtube you are spending so much time in this video so congratulations
TAMIL MUSIC-MIX this is what i wondering too. This video can sell to national geographic
This channel is such a blessing to the world ❤
I hope this channel will last for life time. Keep growing!
DAMN!! I NEVER LEARNED SOMETHING LIKE THIS...THIS MAN DESERVES A NOBLE PRIZE...
Thank you!
@tututuims ieijebdo What Physics?
Absolutely!
@@BranchEducation You truly do. This is a priceless video. 🙌
This guy could easily beat anyone in Khan Academy's Breakthrough prize. Pretty good material.
subscribed as this is concise, brilliant and informative
You deserved more like, your animation is very costly 🙏🏼 thx for all this knowledge
Due time!! Thanks for watching!
@@BranchEducation no no no!
Awesome! 🎧🎶😎
This is an amazing channel I must say.
Great Video!
Thanks for doing this! Every other explanation always was simplistic visually especially for more varied/dynamic sounds. Yours made the most sense to me.
Thanks a ton! Glad you enjoyed it.
Thanks branch education for this explanation
Really fascinating stuff right here
It still seamed a bit hard to put it all into context untill rite at the end. The record needal following what looks like a scratch of a sound wave on the vinal, and in turn, moving the speaker diaphragm.
Great video.
Might be the best explanation I’ve ever “heard”
That was just amazing! Really good explanation!
One word: AWESOME
Incredible quality...a very complex topic presented in a very easy to follow manner. Well done!
Surely your channel will reach a high position... I have seen many physics channels like crash but there not given this like a great understanding explanation... Congratulations
Thanks a ton! I hope it will get there.
Amazing. Simply amazing.
In this video, I found the answer to everything I needed! WOW
omg why your channel isnt famous !! love from morocco
This is the best explanation
your content is unique, you will get many subscribers...just stay consistent to be seen by youtube algorithm!
everything in those videos is perfect
How the audio file or the speaker differentiate each sound, sound of violin or drums...How it is encoded as a data file?
Is there any other parameter other than frequency and amplitude to denote this?.
Thanks i really needed that to learn
Very good explanation
i got enlightment from great channel like this
I am expecting more and more videos from u boss.
You are unbelievable
Thanks!! I'm really glad you like the videos.
loved it. Thank u my brother
What a great video!! thanks!
Mannnn you can literally explain anything to anyone❤ i wish i could appreciate you enough for you amazing work!
I am happy that i played this video ,❤
I love how you use particles to visualise particles makes it easier
Very good explanation. keep going..
Excellent production! Thanks for such a clear explanation with superb graphics. Well done.
A few questions:
- Sounds are defined but frequency and amplitude. If I understand correctly, does that mean the frequency is determined by the rate at which particles pressure increases and decreases.?
- In terms of wave superposition, surely it depends on the phasing of it? I know it doesn't but why. For example, say I have two notes, one at 440hz and the other at 220hz. If I played both at the exact same time I guess the frequency would still be 220hz? Another way of asking is, if note 1 repeats every A seconds and note 2 repeats every B seconds where B
Excellent graphics
thanks for this video
Great video explanation!
Very nice explanation 👍👍👍👍👌👌
You are incredible buddy
Superb video!
Wait so do radio stations on say AM 770 come at you quicker than say on AM 660 meaning that you hear stations on lower channels quicker? and this could be offset to sound normal by the initial microphones recording slower and vice versa?
Great video ! Thank you !!!!
The subtitles for the running faucet deserve an Oscar.
I'v always been looking for explanation of how things work like this video, finally i found this channel today. Your videos are awesome and they are what i was looking for.
Beautiful video.
thanks for the help!🙏
I appreciate your great work to educate the people in really wonderful way.
Great video only thing that I needed more clarity on was what exactly a diaphragm is and how it works, not comprehending it yet. Will keep researching though
Very well. How do those grooves in the recorder formed?
they get pressed in the hot vinyl by copper master disc.
@@BranchEducation okay okay. Thanks!
WHAT is physically vibrating/oscillating that creates the acoustic energy (transported by waves), it's the electron particle between the air molecules?
the air molecule itself is what's bouncing into other air molecules. Air- mostly nitrogen, some oxygen and then other elements.
Speechless
Brilliant video. beyond the words👍👍👍👍👍👍👍❤️
Very good visualization! I am late to the game with my question but I ask it anyways. So here is the scenario for the question: If i think of a motor rotating with 40 Hz, the sound that I hear is 40 Hz. If I speed up the motor to 60 Hz, the sound is 60 Hz. So far so good. I know that low frequency sounds have a longer wavelength than high frequency sounds. Long wavelengths also travel further and are not easily absorbed. How come, the same motor can produce wave lengths that travel through my walls (40 Hz) and by speeding up that same motor outputs sounds that I can block. To a layperson this looks like the slower the motor rotates the more powerful the soundwave was but that doesn't make any sense. What element am I missing?
It still confuses me when I think about multiple sounds at the same time. Like sure, you can combine the individual instrument graphs into one single graph and play that, but how does that play more than 1 sound simultaneously. Like if all you were given was the combined graph, you couldn't possibly figure out which graphs were combined to create it, because there's an infinite number of possible combinations. Just like, I cant give you the equation "x + y = 10" there are infinite possibilities of both x and y combinations. How does one membrane on a speaker produce multiple sounds simultaneously? Like the sound of my voice, with the air conditioning in the background, music playing, the hum of the fridge, a baby crying, and the wind blowing. How can a speaker vibrating following a needle that follows a single path on a record, create multiple sounds that my ear can decipher.
It seems different than say, the combination of colors. Like if you show me the primary colors red, green and blue, all mixed together to create white, I will see white. I will have no idea that you combined those three colors to create it. But if there are 6 sounds happening simultaneously, they don't combine into 1 sound. I can listen to or focus on any one of the 6 sounds.
I think you're comparing something that has a physical impact on the surrounding world versus something that is self-contained: imagine if your colors, every time they were painted, had a specific word that was put into the title of the painting.. Then, I could see a painting and, while it might be a garbled mess of colors, each color has a definite word I can see and pick out in the title of the painting. Sound is like this because each type of physical interaction creates sound in a definite and constant way, (by the particular pattern of how it moves the surrounding air particles), so even if a recording is a garbled mess you can still pick out the definite sounds like you said.
The animation of this video is top notch. I hope you paid your animator boucoup bucks
Wow nice explaination ever got ...
Animation is really appreciating
May i know which software r you using Sir...
Thanks alot sir for sharing this
I use Blender
@@BranchEducation high level Sir 👏👏
Sir from where I learn this ....
Can you suggest any online tutor.
Please.
Fantastic video!! Very well put together man great job.
Great video! I have a question though... Does the record player read a single sound wave that reflects the mix of all of the combined instruments? If so, how on earth is a single sound wave produced from such a range of contrasting waves? (as can be observed visually between the compound wave at the top of the screen and the single wave at the bottom of the screen at 7:44)
on a DAW. these sound waves like on the video its uses a fast fourier transform visualization FFT, the software use math to calculate the new wave of the product of all instruments on a song. on vinil records are the same principle, the needle was had a small magnet, and these movement produce a very low current on a small coil. like on a microphone. i remenber a time when i was young that a lower the volume from the disc player and a listen close to the needle and i listen the song from the disc. amazing
THIS IS AMAZING. I can't wait to show this to my music technology students. You explain this so clearly, but don't assume the audience is stupid -- perfect for my elementary and high schoolers. Thank you!!!
Thank you!! Well good thing my next video is an upgrade of this one, so stay tuned... 😄
Were those instrument waves correct to the actual instruments listed? I feel like the waves on the lower pitched instruments would be wider than the higher pitched instruments, as lower pitched instruments have a slower pressure wave cycle.
Criminally undersubbed.
This RUclips channel is exceptional
That's what I was looking for! How the sound propagates In all directions, I wanted to know what is it's form
Nice Information
If you mapped the grooves for certain sounds technically you could use an ai to produce an entire song on vinyl without music ever happening, yet music could be produced. You could also probably create sounds that don't exist by overlaying certain sounds to play and then meet in the air to become a different sound that a single speaker could normally never produce.
Well, that's technically what's happening, when you make vinyl records. These are stamped in a form in a press, with a plate with the opposite of what the vinyl should look like. No sound is being transmitted.
Btw., a vinyl record player doesn't work, like described in the video. The grooves are 3 dimensional, so the needle both moves up and down (primarily), and to the side (stereo imaging).
The grooves much looks like the Grand Canyons. In places, the canyon is wide and deep, in other places, narrow and shallow. Or a mix in between.
Very interesting. Somehow I find these concepts very evasive... can't seem to get a good grasp on it. Seems almost like magic.
Bro really really really thank you
.
.
.
🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Last-minute watching videos before a test
I do it every time..
Wait a minte...your profile pic is the damned picture of Felix that's literally everywhere.
@@danaejeraldo6826 are you a time traveller or something?
hello i arrived here after posing myself a question; is there truly 5 senses? since sound is the pressure of air particles, is it more accurate to describe it as touch (feel)?
this video has helped educate me to continue thoerising.
it was well paced, the parts that you posed questions and revisited ("lets rewind here") were very appropriate, and i think the graphics presented your points extremely effectively. thank you
Really glad you liked it!!
Great✌... Keep it up 👍
SO AMAZING!!!!!!!!!!!!
Very good video
Thanks!! Have you watched some of the other videos on our channel?