Nuclear Physicist Unboxes and Reviews a Real Life Periodic Table and MORE!
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- Опубликовано: 4 май 2023
- Nuclear Physicist Reviews and Unboxes a Real Life Periodic Table and MORE!
engineeredlabs.com - Use code YFNP10 for 10% Off
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Periodic Table: engineeredlabs.com/collection...
Uranium Cube: engineeredlabs.com/products/u...
Plutonium Cube: engineeredlabs.com/products/p...
Thorium Cube: engineeredlabs.com/products/t...
Radon Cube: engineeredlabs.com/products/c...
Gold Cube: engineeredlabs.com/products/g...
Geiger Detector: engineeredlabs.com/products/n...
Black Light Flash Light: engineeredlabs.com/collection...
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In this video, I'll take you on a journey as we unbox and review this amazing physical periodic table and some more goodies! As a nuclear physicist, I can tell you that this is not your typical periodic table!
I'll show you all the awesome features of the Heritage Periodic Table, including its high-quality materials and attention to detail. We'll even take a closer look at some of the most interesting elements and their fun facts.
Whether you're a student, teacher, or a science nerd, you won't want to miss this unboxing and review of the Heritage Periodic Table.
#HeritagePeriodicTable #unboxing #review #science #engineeredlabs - Наука
Which item was your favourite? Don’t forget to use the code “YFNP10” to get 10% off when purchasing on their website!
Also, let me know what other scientific goodies out there you'd like to see me review next 👩🏽🔬☢
I really liked the period table of the elements. Here in Hawai'i, we don't have nuclear power, but I wonder if a radiation detector would register anything if one were near the active volcanoes we have here. Your channel is truly unique, and I really like it! Aloha!
@@jimcabezola3051 that’s a cool question. Maybe she needs to do a Road trip.
The element of ASMR in the given video 😊
... Uranium was interesting, I didn't know that the ore glows like that.
@@jimcabezola3051... stumbled upon the video while had intention to look up how Hawaiian sounds like. Trying to stay more consistent with the next one.
@@midnightwind8067 Perhaps a little trip to the areas close to her...say...Mount Etna or Vesuvius or places like that would be fun to visit with that radiation detector. I'm a 30-minute flight from the island of Hawai'i. I imagine that the park service people there could actually TELL me if THEY need to use such things. Back in 2018, as I'm sure you saw, we had a rather destructive eruption that wiped out a number of homes and businesses. No one was frightened of radiation; they were rather more concerned about their livelihoods. Maybe different volcanoes in different parts of the world emit different mixtures of substances and elements to one another. Anyway...that's my hare-brained impression I made upon seeing this lovely video of Elina's.
One of my high school teachers had a periodic table like that. There were many more elements that were missing from his table because it was one he was making himself. It was still pretty cool.
Did you get to see the collection growing over the years?
@@InvisiblerApple Like it auto-updates? That would be so cool!
@@GlenHunt no I think he meant if the high school teacher had collected some of the missing elements time to time.
I accidentally consumed frozen Dihydrogen Monoxide a few weeks ago and it hasn't come out yet..... I'M SCARED!
I love science and the way you present it !!!!!! Great videos.
🤣💦💧
😂
You need to contact a poison control center immediately 😛
@@fredashay I contacted a Waffle House...only number I could find. Thats almost the same thing right ??
You have not wee'ed yet
My grandparents were chemists, and I think they would love these. Unfortunately, they're no longer around, but this video had me grinning just thinking about them.
That periodic table is really cool. I work at ORNL and recently visited the old X-10 graphite reactor used during the Manhattan project to produce Plutonium and they had a bigger version of that periodic table but I think they were missing a few samples that seem to be present in yours.
I suspect Elina will be inspiring many young people to become scientists or otherwise become involved in science. I enjoyed this video very much.
Youre right, im 12
The periodic tables are cool but they are expensive and I know that they arent the only people that sell them, it would be interesting to see how the other ones compare and if cheaper options actually contain the correct elements.
I love when people talk about subjects that they're passionate about. I'm here because I'm a science nerd. I love all your videos.
You should be able to light up the tiny vials of gases with a Tesla coil, at which point you'll see the different colors they glow when energized. I imagine one could construct a very nice demo with a pocket spectrometer and some kind of apparatus to hold everything together.
Watching the joy and excitement on your face is just delightful. Like a kid on Christmas morning.
Elina probably knows this, but polycarbonate is a pretty good radiation shield for its weight. The raw uranium would almost certainly have a higher count if it were outside the cube.
Perfect for Neutrons and of course Beta/Alpha but gamma doesn't even notice plastic.
@@Felto123 I said "pretty good" not "ideal."
Love how you had the blacklight sitting over the uranium sample at the end. These were indeed very cool.
Thanks for sharing. Not only do I have a periodic table I’ve always wanted, but I have my own museum collections as well. I’ll enjoy holding my periodic table while I watch my course on the periodic table. Keep up the great work.
Bloody brilliant! Always love watching your videos, and thanks for the cameo 😁
I loved the periodic table and as a bonus you get days worth of bubble wrap to pop. Excellent.
The detector tube in the Geiger Detector you got is on the right side of the unit when you have the screen facing you
The screen peeling was so SATISFYING
Yeeees
No! You're supposed to leave it there for ~30 years ... THEN peel it off. Now, that's satisfying!
That is really cool. I’ve wanted one of those for a long time. Thanks for sharing!
I had seen the stuff from that site before, very cool variety of items! A neat collection that you got there too, thanks for sharing with us! Cool glow on the uranium samples, had never seen that on video before, only from pictures :)
I did end up buying the periodic table, as it's a lovely presentation. I've been collecting elements for quite a while, I have two samples of uranium I particularly enjoy. One is a little tiny sheet of metallic uranium, the other is a "neon" tube made of uranium glass. When energized, the mercury/argon discharge inside it produces UV, which causes the uranium glass to fluoresce beautifully. However, the element I'm happiest with may be fluorine. It's in gaseous form, in a specially treated long thin glass tube (so the fluorine won't attack the glass). If you (carefully!) look into the tube end-on, you can see the distinctive yellowish-green color of the fluorine gas.
The rocks here in the Pacific North-West produce a lot of radon gas. To the point that, if you have a basement, you need to have radon detectors, because it the basement is not property ventilated it can build up and become dangerous.
Cornwall has the same problem, from the granite that is everywhere...open the doors and windows for five minutes every day.
I've heard the same about several places in Canada. Germany also has this problem in some regions. The basement foundation needs to be sealed, in addition to ventilation and detectors.
Had to buy one of those periodic tables. Very cool. Can't wait till it arrives. Thank You.
This is so cool! I've been saving up to buy all the large cubes and display it on a wall, even though I'm not a physicist nor chemist.
I got one of those periodic tables for Christmas last year :D
It's so cool!
Picked one of these tables up, thanks for reviewing it! Would be cool to collect the giant cubes and frame over a lifetime to display!
This was great and you seem like such an amazing person
Your channel is very interesting. Thank you for that and thank you for the engineeredlabs code. I love their products. I want them all !
5:17 I know! For the uranium cube!
I got a periodic table like that for christmas! Although mine doesn't have Radon or Radium like yours does. I really love it.
That is a nice little collection.
OMG I so need this Periodic Table!!!! Chemistry is my love, my job and my favorite scientist of all time is Dimitri Mendelejew... 🙂 ;-)
This was almost an asmr vid! Might wanna think about doing one while explaining nuclear related subject matter.
It looks amazing
The periodic table is super cool.
We had geiger counters on the submarine, we used analog ones as they do not require batteries. 🙂 We also had dosimeters we wore on our belts, we got a report when we came back in port that told how much radiation we had been exposed to. During one patrol mine was the highest of anyone who was not an officer or nuclear technician..so the XO wondered why that was and I told him I'm interested in physics so often go back to the engineering compartment....he just said to be careful, time, distance, shielding. 🙂
The glowing uranium is very cool!
the best gift for a nuclear physicist.
I think I've seen this once before but didn't thought this was real. Damn they look great!
I like this kind of review. The periodic table is super cool. I hope schools will use this someday, as well as cool simulation software.
Back in the 1990s, school used to be very dry. Aside from a few invested and passionate teachers, it was books and decades old VHS tapes on ancient TVs. At least here in Germany.
@rogerwilco99 I remember seeing antenna outlets in classrooms. I don't know if it was the same over here.
I sometimes wonder if schools or the education system have ever had solid funding in the past.
Some older school buildings look like that was the case many decades ago. The primary building in my high school shared similarities with a campus or an office building. There even was AC. But I can't remember it running, due to the cost of electricity. Everything, the sports hall, the chemical and physics labs, looked like they used to be modern and very nice. At least at some point in history.
I am SO, when I was in school -- at least high school {grades 9-12} in the USA -- ALL our VIDEOS were on FILM PROJECTORS...😊
{I graduated from high school in 1979.}
i love your videos so fun , so entertaining and i learn more and more thank you. and i really like the periodic table i bought one just like that one but its got paper instead of the actual real bials
WAs waiting for your videos for a long time
I totally want the giant periodic table with 118 samples! It's only €12.112,95 !!
Could you explain how equipment works that can measure alpha, beta, and gamma radiation? Learning how X rays are measured would also be cool.
The sign makes me think of fallout shelters lol
Hi, Elina. It is very interesting watching you explaining such complex issues. I was wondering if you would consider reacting to the Oppemheimer movie trailer. I am looking forward to it.
Very cool! I want a periodic table too!
I'm glad to see that the detector did not reveal that you are radioactive... 😅 And your uranium sample looks like a buttery popcorn kernel 🤪 Enjoy your new toys, they are really cool.
I want one of those element tables with the samples!! 😮
Great video.
Great videos, I always like to watch,
One question about the back light and the radioactive elements, if I may,
I do maps and explore caves, and it’s not uncommon for me to carry a backlight flashlight with me ( a few animal shine different with it)
But also there are rock formations that get the fluorescent light,
And some ones get fluorescent even with normal flashlight,
I always look that as a biological luminescent, as simple as it is, never look into the mineral radiation,
Does this phenomenon happen only in radioactive minerals?
Could you also measure the sample in the lab and see if you get similar results than with the meter which was shipped to you?
Great fun Elina! I hope your wrist is ok!
Intuitively, I love to hear the words "engineering" and "science," especially to be fascinating when they refer to 'Atoms and Electrons' in the form of arrangement in the Periodic Table. And @ these 'minutes' makes me interesting. here it is
1. @1:18 -Tag I want too
2. 3:06 - LoL
3. 6:04 - Screenshot
4. 6:27 - Sensible
5. 9:33 - 1,2,3... green
6. 9:44 - yes
7. 13:17- dangerous one, but it seems cool
8. 15:13-lot of smile and insight information
Last but not least @1:44 - that's yours.
It's still fun to scare people by putting my Geiger counter in the middle of my uranium glass collection and it starts to beep a warning when it gets over 100 counts per minute. :)
I checked out the engeneeredlabs webside. But sadly they dont realy have the stuff i would love to have in my collection. But i found the Trinitite, which is used to be Plutonium. But hey its Trinitite, i guess that still would make an awesome adition to my collection ❤
I know from the greek-godess type of hair that you are from Greece :D. Really cool stuff you have there. Thank you for making this channel and educating us about anything nuclear. (btw, I hope you are from Greece, otherwise I'll look like a clown haha)
Her eyes and her accent. ❤❤❤
You should have bought Tritium, that glows as well, Hydrogen is amazing
It looks like the Mercury is actually an old style tilt switch and they had to use Granite for Radon because it only has a half live of ~4 days, I also found an old Chernobyl simulator game for download online!
I'm glad my Geiger counter shows about the same level of background radiation. It's currently reading 0.17 micro Sieverts. Occasionally it detects a spike and the alarm goes off. I don't know what causes spikes, though. On average, the spikes are usually about 0.30 micro Sieverts, but I recently had a spike that was over 1.0 micro Sieverts.
Maybe it's cosmic radiation
Think i`ll put the radio active sign on my front door and a CDC one just to watch the various delivery people`s reactions on my security cam lol You should read out various text books on physics with that accent and voice tone,so many would learn so much 🙂
I really liked the periodic table the best. If I could afford it, I wouldn't mind having the BIG table!
You have the RUclips winning combination!
Very pretty.
Very intelligent.
Very creative.
Very interesting.
Great accent.
Near perfect English pronunciation and grammar.
Very relatable.
All you need is better promotion and more smart people in the world!
By the way, what happened to your left wrist? I didn't read all the comments, you may have already answered this...
usually I just comment to boost engagement, but HOLY SHIT, THIS IS COOOOOOOLL
The typical element cubes I have seen are solid cubes of the material with the information engraved in it, elements like aluminium, iron and tungsten but obviously that isnt possible for a lot of elements both due to cost and radioactivity or toxicity.
The mercury looks like some sort of electrical component, probably something like a tilt sensor.
I have one of these! Got it as a gift while away from home. Later when I flew back home I found my bag had been searched by security. That’s how I know it’s legit!
The Heisey glass co in Ohio used sand that had uranium in it I Think. It glows under a black light. Collectors carry a black light when shopping at flea markets etc. I don’t think it was dangerous. Simply a result of the local sand they used.
Can you please measure an old watch with fluorescence back-light and your plastered walls to see if you can measure some milli sieverts. Grtz I like your videos
That beem sounded like it came from my kitchen so I thought my lunch was ready.
Hi Elina, Johnny Harris dropped a video on nuclear energy like 5 hours ago. Maybe that's what you'd like to react to. He's got a huge following base.
Since you are in the energy industry i was wondering if i could get your thoughts or even a show on electromagnetic energy. Nikola Tesla used this back in 1902 to power his farm so it has been around for a very long time but no one ever mentions it in the energy business.
Elina has a warm, soothing cuddly effect on my psyche.
😊
Do you think we will have more nuclear power reactors here in Sweden in the future? Or is this it? Maybe small scale ones
Engineered Labs has a T-shirt I'm sure Elina would love. It says "Never Trust An Atom - They Make Up Everything"
I think for science nerds, doing science is more satisfying than buying a periodic table. Extracting elements from household items is quite cool, and theres a lot one can learn by doing small science projects with a real goal. (only for reasonable safe elements). But for example one can extract pure potassium chloride from diet salt (which is a mix of NaCl, KCl and "dirt"). The way NaCl and KCl can be separated is by observing that the solubility in water of the 2 salts behaves very different over the temperature range of liquid water. A bit of filtering and some recristalization and alot of patience and one ends with really nerdy, quite pure and large KCl crystals. And Potassium also is cool and nerdy because of that natural unstable isotope.
What is the upper range of that Geiger counter?
I'm jealous. Those are so cool.
Very nice ☺👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
guys subscribe! we need her to reach and inspire more people to pursue science, we need it more than any infectious politics that is corroding and dividing humans into groups and tribes. science is one place we could unify, there will be disagreement but commonly settled after a few experiment. and science is totally okay not finding the answer. still it's more fascinating
I wonder which provides more radiation shielding: An _Acrylic Cube_ or a _Borg Cube?_
*_"We are the Borg. You will be IRRADIATED."_*
🤭🤭🤭
Radon decays from a clear gas into lead, right? Would a sample of radon generate enough lead that you could see it building up on the inside of the container?
Eventually it decays into stable lead, though it will take over 200 years for a container filled with Radon 222, the most stable isotope of Radon to decay completely to stable lead. Along the way, it decays to Lead 210, which has a half life of 22 years.
Looking to get a Uranium Cube....
Is it totally safe ?
I'd love to have one in my living room , but without specialist equipment I have no way of ascertaining the CPS/exposure levels
I Love "Everything" that came out of that package Yep, Everything. That should make an Excellent addition for my Unaccredited Study of GeoChemistry.
What kind of Glass Like Material are the Elements enclosed in? Is it Plexiglass? I assume all that is probably valued at more than I can afford.
I Love your Sweet Voice BTW. I am NOT Flirting! Just stating Facts. LOL
Elina, You are such a nerd. 🥰
Slava Ukraini.
It just occurred to me... you should be a guest character on the Simpsons!!!
Thanks 🙏
Heroyam Slava!🇺🇦
Is It possible to build a radiation detector from firealarm in case of emergency?
Hej Elina !
Köpte en exakt samma mätare som du åller i händerna . Jag skulle uppskatta om du kunde gjöra en hel video om hur mätaren fungerar och hut man ställer in den.
Its Elina, the prettiest and cutest nuclear physicist in the whole of the milky-way 🌹😉✌🏽
Id love to see a camparison video!
Comparison of what? 👩🏽🔬☢️
@@YourFriendlyNuclearPhysicist at 17:19 you mentioned that you could maybe compare the Uranium pellets from your lab to the Uranium sample you received.
I would also be interested to see some kind of video where you take measurements of the Uranium sample with a optical spectrometer or something.
We are all so used to the yellow and black radioactive trefoil symbol that its odd to find out that when it was first used in the mid 40s it was magenta with a blue background.
Wonder why they chose that colour scheme at first?
Probably went black and yellow when the symbol became internationalised with other hazard symbols.
Going through the comments and this made me look into it, I had never seen the old color scheme before! And apparently it was because those colors were uncommon in the environment they were going to be used in.
So it is actually completely safe to put a cube with U or Pu sample on the shelf in your living room?
Also, were there any problems with the customs office when you imported this fantastic package?
Thanks for the video: it is one of the bust unboxing that I have ever seen.
Uranium is very safe, even the enriched U235 isn't that bad as long as you don't have too much. As for Plutonium, as long as it remains in its box, it's not that bad. It's one of those elements that's more of an issue if it gets inside of you, either inhaled or swallowed.
Plutonium does exist naturally in Uranium ores known as pitchblende, and the radiation from pitchblende is very weak. Enclosed in the acrylic, there is no danger to people or the environment.
Holy hell, the prices... Great stuff though!
"... there's nothing to worry about"
[blood starts dripping from her nose]
Which elements is were rare in element cycle
A visible piece of technetium would be the most impressive thing for me. I expect there isn’t one… but I haven’t been watching closely.
One day i will be able to afford such cool nick nacks...
for now i will be happy with my 20 dollar shirt with a nerdy saying on it from them lol
Thanks for reminder these guys exist!
I'd love to see you play "Fallout4" and comment on the scientific accuracy.
I tried to order from the site but the shipment to Europe was almost $22
I am a bit sad that Francium is also missing, haha.
Heeey just thought of a question! But also hello, nice channel (really activ). Sry for the joke ! So my question is : I would be interested in a geiger counter for the fun, but i dont want to spend to much money... Is it woerth it to buy a cheap one ? Any company or model to suggest ?
Other girls dreaming about boys. Elina -Oh Uranium, I want to hug you. This is so exiting.