Also, wouldn't the middle zone in a tidally-locked planet be bracketed by high winds and storms caused by the hot/cold interactions as the two temperature extremes collide? It might be more habitable than either extreme but I wouldn't envision it as a nice warm paradise you can live comfortably...
@@azmanabdula Mass Effect 2 had a mission where you had to infiltrate a ship travelling the twilight band and it was certainly a beautiful storm to see :)
Probably not? Two reasons, one their is a lack of wind/matter exchange, storms are generally caused by hot air rising and cold air falling, two, their would be a massive and GRADUAL belt of heat loss, think about the sun set, it's day, then red, then blue, and you still have a little light before total darkness, these phases would be belts each with their own temperature grade from the faintest bit of sunlight hitting them.
I've heard these planets referred to as Eyeball Earths. Since, looking down at the subsolar point, there would be a desert pupil, surrounded by a temperate iris.
14:39 A tidally locked earth would still spin, and experience the Coriolis effect. Tidally locked doesn't mean "no spin" it means a rate of spin that matches the orbit of a parent body so that one face is always towards said parent body...it still spins, just not from the perspective of the body it orbits.
Thank you!! They're not astrophysicist, so its ultimately whatever, but yeah no spin would result in relative rotation for us. Otherwise the inside would become the outside during opposite times of the year.
Wait.. you mean it will still rotate in it's place while revolving around the parent body? or did you mean it will just revolve around the parent body but not rotate in it's place?
@@mariadulceamor it rotates in its place while orbiting the parent body, but the parent body also rotates at a similar to same rate as its orbiting body.
I've watched like 30 of your videos so far and I thought I had a pretty good grasp on the sort of things I would see from video to video. However, the part where you breathed through your nose was something I truly never thought I would see.
I just watched a movie recap where they got stuck in a time loop for 35 years and the sun never set. Curious to see how that would have actual,y worked out for them
If the people's physical bodies also reset, then physically nothing. Psychologically, donno. But, it stuff like that is impacted by your brain chemistry, but you'd get annoyed/frustrated.
3:07 Axial precession is NOT the reason for the apparent position of the sun in the sky at differing latitudes. Axial precession is a very slow (26,000 year cycle) movement of the earth's axis in respect to the celestial background. It affects climate and star positions in the night sky. What you are after is axial tilt in relation to where the earth is in its orbit. When it is this way */* and the sun is here O, you have the solstice in June (summer northern hemisphere, winter southern hemisphere). When it is this way \ and the sun is here O, you have the solstice in December (winter northern hemisphere, summer southern hemisphere). When its tilt is at right angles (perpendicular) to the sun's position, like this *|* and the sun is here O, you have an equinox, either March (spring in north, autumn in south) or September (autumn in north, spring in south).
On the topic of corrections, I think he actually got Longyearbyen mostly correct according to the native speakers on Forvo, but counterintuitively, the "e" in "syncope" is pronounced-it's three syllables.
I got a similar question for you. There's this game called Observation where a space station is warped to the orbit of Saturn, what would happen if a human space station went so far from earth with people in it?
It would be great. If we could do that, imagine what Earth would be like! A wonderful place ... and the moon too. Actually, just feeding the algorithm.
@@xsforreal I mean the game frames it as entering from an area not cluttered with the asteroids from the rings. It's mostly a detective thriller with a twist, I'd like to know just what would be the response if that happens from us on earth and from the crew, what should or even could be done.
Precession isn't what causes the seasons. It happens very, very slowly, on the order of many thousands of years. Seasons are caused *because* the precession is so much slower than our orbit around the sun. In any given year the tilt of the Earth can be treated as fixed for most purposes. If the tilt is fixed and the earth moves around the sun, then during different points in Earth's orbit, different parts of the globe tilt toward or away from the sun resulting in more or less sunlight for those areas. That's what causes seasons. It's not clear if you're intentionally implying this in the video but it could be interpreted that way due to the way in which it is presented, so I wanted to give you a heads-up.
Thanks, came here to say this. Precession takes 26,000 years for a full turn, and simply means that the stars we see in each season are different than they were many thousands of years ago (so star signs, decided 2,300 years ago, are wrong - sorry, astrologers!)
Speaking as someone who spent a decent amount of my childhood looking directly at the sun, I can safely say: PLEASE for the love of your eyes DO NOT do that
@@CCreator-_ everyone has at some point, it’s fine if you don’t repeatedly have staring contests with it (it won’t blink, and if you don’t blink, the lights go out anyway)
Gah I am sorry for nit-picking 🤣 But the Earth itself is also very gooey/plastic. Even solid rock is flexible on large scales. So while the oceans WOULD migrate toward the poles initially, the Earth itself would also re-settle into a much more spherical shape under the force of gravity. So the oceans would migrate North/South because they respond faster to changing forces. But as the Earth compacted itself under gravity in the absence of rotation, the oceans would then flow back toward the equator again. Whether or not the coastlines would look mostly the same I have no idea. Though I suspect the associated seismic/volcanic events would be pretty severe so they could uh "rearrange" things a bit.
There's a planet on the first Mass Effect that is tidally locked and you have the option to land on the twilight zone. This twilight zone is a constant sunset with temperatures about 86 F (30 C), so this is why I was interested to watch this video. Now I want to do a trip to Svalbard in the summer. Heck, even Tromso would be nice.
Midnight sun freaks me out so it's astonishing to know it's real in places. I have recurring nightmares about the sun never going down or suddenly rising in the middle of the night.
The axial procession is actually one every 28000 years. What makes the seasons change is the fact that the axis always points in almost the same direction relative to the solar system.
On Earth the air heated at the equator rises moves towards the respective poles, descends, and flows southward towards the equator. On a tidally locked planet that still had an atmosphere, the air might rise on the hot side, travel to the opposing cold side, descend, and flow back towards the hot side. The winds might be strong, and possibly enlargen the temperate zone, or move it towards the hot side. If there was warm water vapor, rain might develop where the two fronts collided. Given the situation on the sunny side of life rapidly evaporated any water, the resulting desert might not supply moisture like a warm ocean would. Could a tidally locked planet have an ocean? Would it be on the cold side near the twilight zone? My limited knowledge doesn't include if jetstreams would develop, and how they would affect the planet.
It's actually theorized that a tidally locked planet could have a habitable temperature on both the sun side and the dark side due to the exchange of temperatures. The hot air from the sun side warming the dark side, while the cold air from the dark side cooling the sun side.
Thing is depending on the distance of this center temprate zone I'd think the constant Flux of hot and cold would cause this zone to be in a constant state of rain, wind, and tornadoes due to the hot/cold air runoff of their respective zones.
@heavy g 40 Days Of Nights is a vampire film set in a town in Alaska(I think) where sun doesn't come up for,yep you guessed it,40days!!would be very interesting to see what they could come up with for the sun never setting.
3:05 The axial procession happens over the course of 26000 years. Earth's axis is practically fixed, and that's why we can use polaris to navigate around. Midnight sun happens because the sun's position changes relative to the earth's axis as earth orbits around the sun.
Depends on the intensity, obviously. All these "sun never set" areas are cold AF cuz the intensity is super low. Although I'm sure in these areas, the opposite is also true and there are times of the year where the sun rarely ever rises.
As a Norwegian, I am very surprised at how well you pronounced the location names. "Longyear" in Longyearbyen is literally just the english words "Long year", and "byen" means city/ town. A lot of people pronounce the "ye" in "byen" as a diphthong with a single syllable, but you are supposed to pronounce it as two consecutive syllables.
While the Earth's tilt may change, it doesn't have to change to give us seasons. The very fact that it IS tilted gives us changing seasons. Imagine the earth's top tilted towards the sun during summer in the north then move the earth to the opposite side of the sun while keeping the Earth's tilt the same. The top will be tilted away from the sun and the north will have winter. It wobbles some, but that only changes when the seasons come. Things that spin also keep the orientation of their spin until something changes it.
It's definitely getting hotter as the years goes on. I've lived in Phoenix Arizona my entire life summer of 2021 we reached a 124゚F the inside of my car was over 200゚F talk about being branded by your own seatbelt.
We forgot about the internal friction of the layers of the Earth that would generate massive Earthquakes, Tsunamis (if there was any water left), and Volcanoes causing another disastrous event for those who think they are safe on high ground. The friction might create new and more fault lines and cracks forming new volcanoes and rifting canyons.
6:50 here, in Delhi India it's almost around or above 45°C during summers 😭💀, it just got quite nicer this week cuz somehow some clouds appeared lately. It's so painful sometimes, and we have to go to work daily in this.
Missed a chance to reference Brandon Sanderson's Book series "white sands" A fantasy novel about a tidily locked world and it's human inhabitants. (Magic and guns of course)
I actually live in California. abt 50-100 miles away from death valley when if you think about it, that's actually quite close. in 2021, the temperature where i live was 128°F (53°C). and my bday is in the summer (june).. a lot of people almost or just straight up died of heatstroke. i couldn't imagine what that's like having constant sun. it would be absolutely terrible.
14:33 : the ball follows the longitude line witch is a strait line on a sphere, so the animation is showing it moving northward unaffected by the corriolis force ;)
i’m confused, why couldn’t someone just live really deep underground, no cold, no heat, and you could avoid the winds, oceans, water, ozone, and you could prepare yourself for the “being thrown 1000mph” somehow
at 3:00 you say the axial precession is causing the opposing months. the way i have always understood it is that the tilt doesnt change a significant amount during one year. if it is on one side of the sun the top of the earth would tilt towards the sun (northern hemisphere summer) and if it is on the other it would tilt away (northern hemisphere winter). it is similar to spinning in a circle while holding a compass. the compass always points north but at one moment it is pointing towards you and another it is pointing away. axial precession (in my understanding) is a very slow and relatively small (though not unmeasurable) change in the exact angle of the tilt: the most commonly cited effect is the change of the north star, as the rotational axis points in a slightly different direction. in the compass analogy, imagine the needle wobbling a bit but still staying around north. it would still face north ish and its a small enough change that it doesnt affect the overall result of it facing towards you and then away from you. please excuse my overuse of parentheses and underuse of capital letters and apostrophes, and please correct me if any of this is incorrect on my part. thanks for reading, and have a great day!
Yes. Axial precession is why the temple of osiris / ramses has an alter than the light of one particular star used to shine on, when the temple was built. 5,000 years ago. It doesn't anymore. But in about 20,000 years it will again.
Something important to note is that Earth's perfect rotation is helped made possible due to Luna (the moon). The presence of Luna's gravity is also, of course, what causes waves in the ocean. So the quickest way for Earth's rotation to be significantly altered would be if something happened to the moon.
I believe there was an episode of Futurama that showed what would happen if a planet stopped rotating, one side would get hot and the other side would be in an ice age and the only good place to be would be safe is the twilight zone in-between.
6:07 just be careful...if your pallet is at risk of burning, so are the insides of your nostrils and they’re more sensitive. So be sure to legit apply sunscreen up there 👆 just like you’re picking! Also, the insides of your ears can get it in those environments too. Then there’s proper lip protection as some petroleum based lip balm can actually intensify the burn and you’ll end up with big blisters in/on your lips. I spent some time on the glacier at Mt Hood over a few summers...reflected sunlight, especially at elevation is far worse than you think if you’ve never experienced it. I ended up with some light corneal burning just by taking too long switching goggle lenses (maybe 4-5 squinted minutes without eye protection was enough to ruin the next 2 days outright).
what if you were to stand directly on a pole of the Earth when the Earth stopped rotating. Would you still experience inertia, or would a sort or phenomenon happen?
“imagine how much work I could get done if the sun never set..” that’s my thinking in a nutshell (ive been drawing very under detailed werewolves for the past whole night (ITS FRACKING 2 AM RN)
@@lazyhomebody1356 oh no a slight grammatical error must mean my entire statement is invalid. You got the point, right? You were smart enough for that, right?
The Earth would only rotate in 0.0006944444 RPM. Also, no, Earth's rotation is indeed caculated in MPS or KPH (Sometimes using Miles as well). The Equator's velocity is roughly 460 Meters Per Second. Nobody caculates celestial bodies rotating using RPM because it does not tell us anything about the actual velocity the surface on the planet is experiencing, rotation speed is (almost) always in Meters Per Second and is counted at the planet's equator at surface level.
@@razi_man Well, clearly you don't know what you're talking about. You use RPMs. Rotational Velocity at the equator is mentioned sometimes, but that doesn't tell us nearly as much as the RPMs. Go take a science class or 10.
So when in the Navy we got to stop by Hommer AK and it was summer where it never got dark. We asked how they live like this and they said. We work 12-14hours workdays during the summer, have darken curtains, and some tend to mow their lawns at 2am. BUT when it's DARK all the time in the Winter their working hours get dropped to 6hrs days. In Hommer evenings looked like 5pm, but over near Anchorage even at Midnight it looked like 12 Noon.
Thanks to Manscaped for sponsoring this episode! ☕️
Get 20% OFF + Free Shipping with code BREWSOLVES at mnscpd.com/BrewSolves #manscapedpartner
nice bull wurtz reference
you're a genius
sheesh
I thought the internet would be more dangerous
I don't understand how manscaped works you should include an instructional anime while you do the sponser read 😂🤣
Also, wouldn't the middle zone in a tidally-locked planet be bracketed by high winds and storms caused by the hot/cold interactions as the two temperature extremes collide? It might be more habitable than either extreme but I wouldn't envision it as a nice warm paradise you can live comfortably...
Idk
One thing is for sure
The storms would be magnificent
@@azmanabdula
Mass Effect 2 had a mission where you had to infiltrate a ship travelling the twilight band and it was certainly a beautiful storm to see :)
Probably not? Two reasons, one their is a lack of wind/matter exchange, storms are generally caused by hot air rising and cold air falling, two, their would be a massive and GRADUAL belt of heat loss, think about the sun set, it's day, then red, then blue, and you still have a little light before total darkness, these phases would be belts each with their own temperature grade from the faintest bit of sunlight hitting them.
I've heard these planets referred to as Eyeball Earths. Since, looking down at the subsolar point, there would be a desert pupil, surrounded by a temperate iris.
Therapist: Brew With a Nose can’t hurt you, its not real
Brew With a Nose: 6:11
thats cursed
@@iconnotfound4880 quite cursed
Cursed Brew.
Brewed cursed coffee
I'm ✨ traumatized ✨
14:39 A tidally locked earth would still spin, and experience the Coriolis effect. Tidally locked doesn't mean "no spin" it means a rate of spin that matches the orbit of a parent body so that one face is always towards said parent body...it still spins, just not from the perspective of the body it orbits.
Thank you!! They're not astrophysicist, so its ultimately whatever, but yeah no spin would result in relative rotation for us. Otherwise the inside would become the outside during opposite times of the year.
Like the moon to the earth
Literally came here to say this.
Wait.. you mean it will still rotate in it's place while revolving around the parent body? or did you mean it will just revolve around the parent body but not rotate in it's place?
@@mariadulceamor it rotates in its place while orbiting the parent body, but the parent body also rotates at a similar to same rate as its orbiting body.
I've watched like 30 of your videos so far and I thought I had a pretty good grasp on the sort of things I would see from video to video. However, the part where you breathed through your nose was something I truly never thought I would see.
I just watched a movie recap where they got stuck in a time loop for 35 years and the sun never set. Curious to see how that would have actual,y worked out for them
What movie is it i am curious lol
Can you give us the name of the movie? Thank you
@@SmashMan108 The Incident (from 2014) It’s a Spanish language film.
El incidente
If the people's physical bodies also reset, then physically nothing. Psychologically, donno. But, it stuff like that is impacted by your brain chemistry, but you'd get annoyed/frustrated.
3:07 Axial precession is NOT the reason for the apparent position of the sun in the sky at differing latitudes. Axial precession is a very slow (26,000 year cycle) movement of the earth's axis in respect to the celestial background. It affects climate and star positions in the night sky.
What you are after is axial tilt in relation to where the earth is in its orbit.
When it is this way */* and the sun is here O, you have the solstice in June (summer northern hemisphere, winter southern hemisphere). When it is this way \ and the sun is here O, you have the solstice in December (winter northern hemisphere, summer southern hemisphere). When its tilt is at right angles (perpendicular) to the sun's position, like this *|* and the sun is here O, you have an equinox, either March (spring in north, autumn in south) or September (autumn in north, spring in south).
Excellent.
just listened to Neil DeGrasse Tyson talk about this exact topic!
On the topic of corrections, I think he actually got Longyearbyen mostly correct according to the native speakers on Forvo, but counterintuitively, the "e" in "syncope" is pronounced-it's three syllables.
Nerd
@@MartyMcFly533 I'll take that as a compliment.
Imagine the work I could get done if the sun NEVER RISES
We could safely say it would be cool.
@@MichaelSHartman Yes EXTREMELY cool
Yeah so cool until any water n moisture freeze solid..
prostitutes be like
Imagine the work world governments would force us to do if the sun never sets.
I got a similar question for you. There's this game called Observation where a space station is warped to the orbit of Saturn, what would happen if a human space station went so far from earth with people in it?
What
It would be great. If we could do that, imagine what Earth would be like! A wonderful place ... and the moon too.
Actually, just feeding the algorithm.
@@veramae4098 it's actually a horror game, it's a bad thing being taken so far from earth.
Death, if I had to make a wild guess. Wouldn't even make it to Saturn probably
@@xsforreal I mean the game frames it as entering from an area not cluttered with the asteroids from the rings. It's mostly a detective thriller with a twist, I'd like to know just what would be the response if that happens from us on earth and from the crew, what should or even could be done.
06:10
okay, brewdemort, calm down now…
When he breathed through his nose, I was like: 👁️👄👁️
No you are like
👁️👃👁️
👄
It really caught me off guard
I THINK WE ALL WERE LIKENTHAT
Precession isn't what causes the seasons. It happens very, very slowly, on the order of many thousands of years. Seasons are caused *because* the precession is so much slower than our orbit around the sun. In any given year the tilt of the Earth can be treated as fixed for most purposes. If the tilt is fixed and the earth moves around the sun, then during different points in Earth's orbit, different parts of the globe tilt toward or away from the sun resulting in more or less sunlight for those areas. That's what causes seasons.
It's not clear if you're intentionally implying this in the video but it could be interpreted that way due to the way in which it is presented, so I wanted to give you a heads-up.
I agree. It's not very well explained.
Thanks, came here to say this. Precession takes 26,000 years for a full turn, and simply means that the stars we see in each season are different than they were many thousands of years ago (so star signs, decided 2,300 years ago, are wrong - sorry, astrologers!)
@@atomcraft4067 "It's not very well explained."
The way it was explained was completely wrong.
Me: Hey, can we go on land?
Bill: NO.
Me: Why?
Brew: The sun is a deadly laser.
Bill: Oh, okay.
Me: 🎶 Not anymore, there's a blanket! 🎶
..?
@@nazrulislamjalilbegum6423 it’s a reference
@@nazrulislamjalilbegum6423 watch history of the world. ... I guess by Bill wurtz
@@someone-vg9pq nah I'm to lazy
And the blanket burns.. 😹🔥
the british empire: *laughs with tea*
I love it when you talking about theoretical possibilities! :0 They are always so cool! Like potential sci fi thrills!
never thought Chile would be mentioned in one of ur videos, so, i have to say, GREETINGS FROM CHILE dear brew, loooove your videos!
Gives new meaning to the lyrics "Can you feel the sunshine.".
*being burned alive*
Speaking as someone who spent a decent amount of my childhood looking directly at the sun, I can safely say: PLEASE for the love of your eyes DO NOT do that
🧐🧐🧐🧐 what the heck is your problem
@@divine_mortalitymight bw your problem aswell if you stare at the sun
@@divine_mortality Their eyes were probably damaged by looking at the sun.
@@wrg_101i already stared at the sun too--
@@CCreator-_ everyone has at some point, it’s fine if you don’t repeatedly have staring contests with it (it won’t blink, and if you don’t blink, the lights go out anyway)
Gah I am sorry for nit-picking 🤣 But the Earth itself is also very gooey/plastic. Even solid rock is flexible on large scales. So while the oceans WOULD migrate toward the poles initially, the Earth itself would also re-settle into a much more spherical shape under the force of gravity. So the oceans would migrate North/South because they respond faster to changing forces. But as the Earth compacted itself under gravity in the absence of rotation, the oceans would then flow back toward the equator again. Whether or not the coastlines would look mostly the same I have no idea. Though I suspect the associated seismic/volcanic events would be pretty severe so they could uh "rearrange" things a bit.
Like a giant earth-wide tsunami huh?
"What if the Sun never set?"
British Empire: “First time?”
There's a planet on the first Mass Effect that is tidally locked and you have the option to land on the twilight zone. This twilight zone is a constant sunset with temperatures about 86 F (30 C), so this is why I was interested to watch this video.
Now I want to do a trip to Svalbard in the summer. Heck, even Tromso would be nice.
I recently read a book "The City in the Middle of the Night" with a similar premise RE: living on a world that's tidally locked.
Midnight sun freaks me out so it's astonishing to know it's real in places. I have recurring nightmares about the sun never going down or suddenly rising in the middle of the night.
Okay ?? Same ?? I thought i was the only one that got worked up abt this/had bad dreams abt this specific thing janfkksjf
@@cyberwoof1401 Do you also prefer shorter days? I do as it being light out well into the evening (till around 9PM here in summer) makes me uneasy.
Wait, other people dream this? I just had one last night where the sun rise at 2 am, but it wasn't like the normal sunlight, but I'm not sure how.
this actually happens in alaska at a certain time of year, i forget what time though
Probably the summer solstice, since that is the longest day of the year
Don’t talk about things you don’t understand.
Yeah
@@nickd3157 but ngl your right
Seeing the animation of you "breathing through your nose" will keep me up at night... Thanks alot
The axial procession is actually one every 28000 years. What makes the seasons change is the fact that the axis always points in almost the same direction relative to the solar system.
On Earth the air heated at the equator rises moves towards the respective poles, descends, and flows southward towards the equator. On a tidally locked planet that still had an atmosphere, the air might rise on the hot side, travel to the opposing cold side, descend, and flow back towards the hot side. The winds might be strong, and possibly enlargen the temperate zone, or move it towards the hot side. If there was warm water vapor, rain might develop where the two fronts collided. Given the situation on the sunny side of life rapidly evaporated any water, the resulting desert might not supply moisture like a warm ocean would. Could a tidally locked planet have an ocean? Would it be on the cold side near the twilight zone?
My limited knowledge doesn't include if jetstreams would develop, and how they would affect the planet.
It's actually theorized that a tidally locked planet could have a habitable temperature on both the sun side and the dark side due to the exchange of temperatures. The hot air from the sun side warming the dark side, while the cold air from the dark side cooling the sun side.
I can’t even believe how many new things I’ve just learned about earth and our solar system in under 20 minutes
Don't believe much on the web.
4:30/4:31 HOLY COW THEY DID IT! THEY REFERENCED THE DEADLY LAZER
Thing is depending on the distance of this center temprate zone I'd think the constant Flux of hot and cold would cause this zone to be in a constant state of rain, wind, and tornadoes due to the hot/cold air runoff of their respective zones.
Wow the sun *never* setting? That would be a great horror movie premise!
@heavy g 40 Days Of Nights is a vampire film set in a town in Alaska(I think) where sun doesn't come up for,yep you guessed it,40days!!would be very interesting to see what they could come up with for the sun never setting.
I DON’T WANNA GO TO WORKKKK! NOOOOO-
4:32 Not anymore there's a blanket
I did not need to see that image at 6:10 my sleep paralysis demon looks cudly by comparison
3:05 The axial procession happens over the course of 26000 years. Earth's axis is practically fixed, and that's why we can use polaris to navigate around. Midnight sun happens because the sun's position changes relative to the earth's axis as earth orbits around the sun.
The sun is a deadly laser? Life, uh, finds a way? The references in this make me so happy
“here comes the sun, do do so do doooo 🎶
The sun can't come if it never went
I like how the word at 6:34 would form the Acronym "SAD"
probably a backronym
Thank you for the deadly laser call back 🎉
Yes
Yup we needed it
“Not anymore there’s a blanket!”
6:10 Welp, that's my sleep paralysis demon for tonight, thanks Brew.
This makes me appreciate nightime more
for some reason i legit thought this was a brew x dead by daylight crossover
I miss the Chill and Grill Bromance moments that used to dot these episodes. Can you bring that back? Please?
your quality, animations and jokes are getting better with each upload
Interestingly enough, even after the earth stopped rotating, it would actually resume to rotate slowly because the moon is still revolving around it.
Thats was a very intersting subject Brew , thank you very much 😀
6:10 Cursed image
Depends on the intensity, obviously. All these "sun never set" areas are cold AF cuz the intensity is super low. Although I'm sure in these areas, the opposite is also true and there are times of the year where the sun rarely ever rises.
As a norwegian, i have to say that the way u pronounce svalbard is almost spot on. As close as it gets for english speaking people id say
Movies helped... I forget the name of the movie right now though.
These videos should rather be titled, "You can't overthink than me 101"
6:20 I love that there are sims reference in there 😂
Thanks for shouting out Iqaluit, Nunavut! :D My hometown ^^ Keep up the very entertaining & informative content!
Death by sunlight? More like "dead by daylight", huh
Love the old school windows animation btw Brew!
As a Norwegian, I am very surprised at how well you pronounced the location names.
"Longyear" in Longyearbyen is literally just the english words "Long year", and "byen" means city/ town.
A lot of people pronounce the "ye" in "byen" as a diphthong with a single syllable, but you are supposed to pronounce it as two consecutive syllables.
16:13 thank you brew I needed to hear that
The satisfaction of being a geography student and understanding all of this :D
You got that right about Daylight Savings Time. It really sucks and needs to be abolished.
While the Earth's tilt may change, it doesn't have to change to give us seasons. The very fact that it IS tilted gives us changing seasons. Imagine the earth's top tilted towards the sun during summer in the north then move the earth to the opposite side of the sun while keeping the Earth's tilt the same. The top will be tilted away from the sun and the north will have winter. It wobbles some, but that only changes when the seasons come. Things that spin also keep the orientation of their spin until something changes it.
It's definitely getting hotter as the years goes on. I've lived in Phoenix Arizona my entire life summer of 2021 we reached a 124゚F the inside of my car was over 200゚F talk about being branded by your own seatbelt.
Now I know where SCP-001 “When Dawn Breaks” comes from now lol.
Day*
I really needed this level of anxiety before going to bed
We forgot about the internal friction of the layers of the Earth that would generate massive Earthquakes, Tsunamis (if there was any water left), and Volcanoes causing another disastrous event for those who think they are safe on high ground. The friction might create new and more fault lines and cracks forming new volcanoes and rifting canyons.
6:50 here, in Delhi India it's almost around or above 45°C during summers 😭💀, it just got quite nicer this week cuz somehow some clouds appeared lately.
It's so painful sometimes, and we have to go to work daily in this.
Missed a chance to reference Brandon Sanderson's Book series "white sands" A fantasy novel about a tidily locked world and it's human inhabitants. (Magic and guns of course)
Roger Zelazny’s “Shadow Jack”. Released in the 70’s, I think.
I pray that no one else will ever suffer the veiw of brew breathing ever again
Babe wake up, brew posted
WOW, This is AMAZING Explanatory Discussion on Tidally-Locked Question, Brew
"The sun never sets on Japan"
Damnit I thought I am the only one who thought of that
hmm
6:10 man, that is a creepy closeup!
Imagine trying to sleep with the sun up....
Sleeping mask
You can do it...if you have to!
i feel like i need to introduce you to night shift life
This video is trippy but informative I love it. Keep it up brew
I wouldn't want to be some place where the sun never sets "when day breaks"...*wink*
I actually live in California. abt 50-100 miles away from death valley when if you think about it, that's actually quite close. in 2021, the temperature where i live was 128°F (53°C). and my bday is in the summer (june).. a lot of people almost or just straight up died of heatstroke. i couldn't imagine what that's like having constant sun. it would be absolutely terrible.
I used to live in Svalbard! We get polar bears up there too.
I so appreciate the fantasia clip at 13:44 ❤❤
14:33 : the ball follows the longitude line witch is a strait line on a sphere, so the animation is showing it moving northward unaffected by the corriolis force ;)
i’m confused, why couldn’t someone just live really deep underground, no cold, no heat, and you could avoid the winds, oceans, water, ozone, and you could prepare yourself for the “being thrown 1000mph” somehow
You can'really prepare for that honestly
They'd have to strap in when the inertia comes lol
@@pathofthetrickster that’s what i was thinking
Try having a car accident at 50kph, tell me what could happen if the same happened at 1000 :)
at 3:00 you say the axial precession is causing the opposing months. the way i have always understood it is that the tilt doesnt change a significant amount during one year. if it is on one side of the sun the top of the earth would tilt towards the sun (northern hemisphere summer) and if it is on the other it would tilt away (northern hemisphere winter). it is similar to spinning in a circle while holding a compass. the compass always points north but at one moment it is pointing towards you and another it is pointing away. axial precession (in my understanding) is a very slow and relatively small (though not unmeasurable) change in the exact angle of the tilt: the most commonly cited effect is the change of the north star, as the rotational axis points in a slightly different direction. in the compass analogy, imagine the needle wobbling a bit but still staying around north. it would still face north ish and its a small enough change that it doesnt affect the overall result of it facing towards you and then away from you.
please excuse my overuse of parentheses and underuse of capital letters and apostrophes, and please correct me if any of this is incorrect on my part.
thanks for reading, and have a great day!
Yes. Axial precession is why the temple of osiris / ramses has an alter than the light of one particular star used to shine on, when the temple was built. 5,000 years ago. It doesn't anymore.
But in about 20,000 years it will again.
"the ball would look like it curves to the east"
Ball curves west in the animation
Holy cow early, but also great vid! As always
Brew: *breathes in close up*
Me: Ee
Something important to note is that Earth's perfect rotation is helped made possible due to Luna (the moon).
The presence of Luna's gravity is also, of course, what causes waves in the ocean.
So the quickest way for Earth's rotation to be significantly altered would be if something happened to the moon.
I believe there was an episode of Futurama that showed what would happen if a planet stopped rotating, one side would get hot and the other side would be in an ice age and the only good place to be would be safe is the twilight zone in-between.
I disagree, because the temperature differences between the two sides would create insane storms in the 'habitable' twilight section.
6:07 just be careful...if your pallet is at risk of burning, so are the insides of your nostrils and they’re more sensitive. So be sure to legit apply sunscreen up there 👆 just like you’re picking! Also, the insides of your ears can get it in those environments too. Then there’s proper lip protection as some petroleum based lip balm can actually intensify the burn and you’ll end up with big blisters in/on your lips. I spent some time on the glacier at Mt Hood over a few summers...reflected sunlight, especially at elevation is far worse than you think if you’ve never experienced it. I ended up with some light corneal burning just by taking too long switching goggle lenses (maybe 4-5 squinted minutes without eye protection was enough to ruin the next 2 days outright).
Holy, the sun is a deadly lazer reference
everyone loves bill
Brew with a nose replay button ➩ 6:11
I learned about you from gamethory. You guys might want to do a collaboration together saying you both do stuff that are similar
Everything a youtuber gets a manscaped sponsorship, I always crosses my mind that said youtuber 'trimmed their flowers' with this
what if you were to stand directly on a pole of the Earth when the Earth stopped rotating. Would you still experience inertia, or would a sort or phenomenon happen?
You'd spin in place if the stop was abrupt.
“imagine how much work I could get done if the sun never set..” that’s my thinking in a nutshell (ive been drawing very under detailed werewolves for the past whole night (ITS FRACKING 2 AM RN)
Here's a video idea, what would happen if the earth's rotation *increased*? Say, by 5x? Or 20x?
Brew the close up was so funny. made my day lol
The earth rotates in RPM...not MPH. Its tangential velocity at the equator is approx 1000 MPH.
Edited because I accidentally used the wrong "its"
That knowledge would have been impressive if you hadn't mispelled "its"
@@lazyhomebody1356 oh no a slight grammatical error must mean my entire statement is invalid. You got the point, right? You were smart enough for that, right?
The Earth would only rotate in 0.0006944444 RPM.
Also, no, Earth's rotation is indeed caculated in MPS or KPH (Sometimes using Miles as well).
The Equator's velocity is roughly 460 Meters Per Second.
Nobody caculates celestial bodies rotating using RPM because it does not tell us anything about the actual velocity the surface on the planet is experiencing, rotation speed is (almost) always in Meters Per Second and is counted at the planet's equator at surface level.
@@razi_man Well, clearly you don't know what you're talking about. You use RPMs. Rotational Velocity at the equator is mentioned sometimes, but that doesn't tell us nearly as much as the RPMs. Go take a science class or 10.
Hey friend, thank you for your work
Me whos allergic to the heat:
*sweats nervously*
"just breathe through your nose, see, look how I do it" I haven't had a laugh like that in a while.
man, who knew if the world just suddenly stopped spinning, would be so deadly.
Drive into a large tree at 40 mph.
Drink Nitroglycerin
So when in the Navy we got to stop by Hommer AK and it was summer where it never got dark. We asked how they live like this and they said. We work 12-14hours workdays during the summer, have darken curtains, and some tend to mow their lawns at 2am. BUT when it's DARK all the time in the Winter their working hours get dropped to 6hrs days. In Hommer evenings looked like 5pm, but over near Anchorage even at Midnight it looked like 12 Noon.
build a 1/2 dyson sphere on the hot side.
infinite free energy + shade from the sun :D
I think the fast winds would make it a wee bit harder to build a Dyson sphere
@@thatapollo7773 hah yeah true, not to mention who... would be left to build one? :>
Not cutting to JohnTron HEAT SYNCOPE at 7:17 was lost comedy gold