The Universe's Background Noise with Neil deGrasse Tyson

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  • Опубликовано: 10 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 722

  • @StarTalk
    @StarTalk  Год назад +79

    What would you use a wormhole for?

    • @Yoder661
      @Yoder661 Год назад +17

      TO GET EINSTEIN AND NEWTON TOGETHER

    • @pronnay1
      @pronnay1 Год назад +15

      travel back in time and buy BITCOIN

    • @TheJasonBorn
      @TheJasonBorn Год назад +6

      instantaneous transport, long range communication, spaghettifying every known food.

    • @TheJasonBorn
      @TheJasonBorn Год назад

      @@pronnay1, travel back in time and sell off BITCOIN

    • @TheJasonBorn
      @TheJasonBorn Год назад +9

      @@Yoder661, bring Einstein, Newton, and Davinci together and expose them to where things are now and see what that does.

  • @MrDjsmooth87
    @MrDjsmooth87 Год назад +39

    👏🏾🤣Hands down Star Talk's BEST episode yet. Chuck really deserves a raise for raising his game .

  • @balogungaa2301
    @balogungaa2301 Год назад +127

    Not only did I learn a lot, I did it whilst having fun. If school was like this, I'd probably be a scientist right now. Thanks Neil and Chuck.

    • @Pluralofvinylisvinyls
      @Pluralofvinylisvinyls Год назад

      Whilst

    • @mikotagayuna8494
      @mikotagayuna8494 Год назад +2

      @@Pluralofvinylisvinyls Why? It's an appropriate word to use for this statement.

    • @PazLeBon
      @PazLeBon Год назад

      @@mikotagayuna8494 Whilst using poor grammar. Go figure

  • @Daylend1337
    @Daylend1337 Год назад +90

    Chuck is on fire in this one! Love what you guys do. You're a great pair!

    • @Kayla_Atreides
      @Kayla_Atreides Год назад +1

      ikr

    • @MegaJodance
      @MegaJodance Год назад +1

      Chuck is always on fire 💯

    • @catserver8577
      @catserver8577 Год назад +1

      He really was, lol. Looking forward to the album hahahaha.

    • @abstract5249
      @abstract5249 10 месяцев назад

      They didn't even have a guest expert this time. Just Neil and Chuck having a long form conversation. Love it! (I love guests too but this is a nice change of pace).

    • @McCarthyJohn100
      @McCarthyJohn100 Месяц назад

      Chuck can always give Niel the giggles when discussing a simple topic.

  • @danoconnell1833
    @danoconnell1833 Год назад +73

    "Black and white noise belong together." Chuck, you had me crying.

    • @markybob_bassplaya1462
      @markybob_bassplaya1462 Год назад +2

      Ebony and Ivory.........

    • @dustinplatt1481
      @dustinplatt1481 Год назад

      :this is not... a black and white world... to be alive the colors must be swirled... and I believe in the beauty of grey..."

    • @Alkatross
      @Alkatross Год назад +3

      Shhhhhh!

    • @EattheApple666
      @EattheApple666 Год назад +1

      @@markybob_bassplaya1462 .....noise go together in perfect harmony.

  • @StaticBlaster
    @StaticBlaster Год назад +60

    Neil would be an excellent choice for a narrator or a movie trailer voice actor. His vocal tone and dynamics are just right to generate excitement.

    • @wavemaker54
      @wavemaker54 Год назад

      He’s been there already and done that.

    • @wavemaker54
      @wavemaker54 Год назад +2

      If Fox viewers heads are exploding, you guys should do a show every morning and evening. Please!!!!

  • @imdiyu
    @imdiyu Год назад +204

    The bit about white noise and black noise belong together - was so effin hilarious 😂😂😂😂

    • @Cazza1206
      @Cazza1206 Год назад +2

    • @TheSouthernSiren
      @TheSouthernSiren Год назад +18

      🤣Chuck pretending to be the cat was entirely too hilarious.🐈 "Who are you in my house and how did you even get a key in here?"

    • @jamessmith-cr6ph
      @jamessmith-cr6ph Год назад +9

      Reminds me of that key and peele skit with black ice and white snow

    • @jeffreylafountain2643
      @jeffreylafountain2643 Год назад +6

      Mixing colored light makes white light, yet mixing colored paints ends up browns then darker greys into black

    • @robbin.bankss
      @robbin.bankss Год назад +4

      ​@@jeffreylafountain2643 that's a very interesting point, and it's because the pigment of a substance uses a subtractive color model i.e. red paint absorbs all light hues EXCEPT red light, making it appear red. a blue frisbee absorbs all light hues EXCEPT blue, making it appear blue.
      the color you see from ANY object is from that shade of light being reflected, rather than absorbed.

  • @ziggy4465
    @ziggy4465 7 месяцев назад +3

    I love how Chuck just goes right to the heart of the matter on everything. Need more people like that in this world. I will forever have a picture of white noise shhing black noise and black noise yelling back. The comic relief is essential here, allows nearly everyone to enjoy the subject matter (you know, because the cat is still wondering why we’re all interrupting its day 😁).

  • @bishopscatacomb9217
    @bishopscatacomb9217 Год назад +16

    I cannot say enough how much I appreciate you guys and this you tube show. I learn so much so easily with your style. Mr. Nice is a great example of a smart everyman kind of guy, who asks very good questions and often forms theories that are on point. Dr. Tyson’s responses and method of relaying deep subject matter in small bits is so humble and frankly honest feeling I can’t help but listen. I love your dynamic because you both bring a synergy to topics and a real human connection. There is no ego involved your both just honestly teaching for the masses. Thank you!

  • @CreeperKiller420
    @CreeperKiller420 Год назад +18

    This is such a great duo for this podcast. Great combination of science focus and humor sprinkled in.

  • @arielatomhc
    @arielatomhc Год назад +19

    The Cat impression was hilarious. "How did you get keys to my house"😂

  • @SA-101
    @SA-101 Год назад +4

    I so appreciate the silliness with the science.

  • @Mrphilipjcook
    @Mrphilipjcook Год назад +8

    Neil and Chuck cracking each other up after all this time is so cute! Thanks guys for making science so accessable 😊

  • @mchugh929
    @mchugh929 Год назад +4

    I just can’t imagine a world without Neil deGrasse Tyson and Chuck Nice!! Hats off to you both 🙇🙇🙇

  • @Phoca_Vitulina
    @Phoca_Vitulina Год назад +8

    These episodes are so fun! I love both the guest ones and these ones since you do learn a lot in a fun relaxed way!
    Also petitioning for dei noise instead of white noise

  • @n3k0lein
    @n3k0lein Год назад +1

    This is why you're the only podcast i watch consistently

  • @chriscarmona7725
    @chriscarmona7725 Год назад +4

    I really appreciate you guys doing the occasional just Chuck & Niel episodes, and holy smokes is the humor on-point. Thank you both.

  • @GregScottBailey
    @GregScottBailey Год назад +1

    I think I've said this before, but I'll say it again; I usually get rubbed the wrong way when comedians make jokes at the expense of discussions on science. Usually it's always just about them and how funny they can be, instead of staying on topic with what is being discussed.
    Chuck, don't ever change man. You and Neil together on these make science fun and wonderful to listen to. Thank you both for yet another fun watch/listen.

  • @michaelccopelandsr7120
    @michaelccopelandsr7120 Год назад +19

    Neil and Chuck for 2024!

    • @venkatsrkyt
      @venkatsrkyt Год назад +1

      deGrasse-Nice

    • @viekent
      @viekent Год назад

      I disagree. Neil is coming for our jobs with all this teleportation talk. 😂

  • @MeelaudBoozary
    @MeelaudBoozary Год назад +8

    Oh my god, Chuck is so damn funny.
    Neil and Chuck are the most perfect duo of all time.

  • @DeanPavlicek-rd1pc
    @DeanPavlicek-rd1pc 4 месяца назад +1

    I love the sense of humor that goes back and forth in their dialogue

  • @TRVPHAUS
    @TRVPHAUS Год назад +7

    my favorite part is when neil goes, *"UAU-HAH-EHEH"*
    0:20

  • @SergiuGothic
    @SergiuGothic Год назад +3

    Thank you Mr Tyson for making us all smarter 🫡

  • @TWX1138
    @TWX1138 Год назад +17

    In _Star Trek: The Next Generation_ there was a defunct culture called the Iconians that used wormholes instead of transporters. The long-dead Iconians still had functional means of crossing the universe with wormholes rather than using ships.

    • @GarrettFrechette
      @GarrettFrechette Год назад

      Haters gonna hate

    • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
      @lawrencedoliveiro9104 Год назад

      Note that we are already experimenting with quantum teleportation in labs right now. It just seems implausible to me that, a few centuries from now, we will still need spaceships.

    • @illuddivinus3309
      @illuddivinus3309 Год назад

      @@lawrencedoliveiro9104AI will eventually teleport itself around the universes- mankind will be long gone by then.

    • @RickEvans-zr5uc
      @RickEvans-zr5uc Год назад +1

      It's a big step up to even just one molecule from one sub-atomic particle. We are going to have to shoot down a bunch more flying saucers.

    • @michael-4k4000
      @michael-4k4000 11 месяцев назад

      Hope Chuck gets married soon!

  • @lanatrzczka
    @lanatrzczka Год назад +39

    Chuck's jokes usually make me smile, they're decent, but "black noise" was truly hilarious! That one could go into a stand-up routine.

  • @sadiqmohamed681
    @sadiqmohamed681 Год назад +4

    On wormholes for transportation. US science fiction author Larry Niven came up with two devices in the 1970s. Transporter Booths were like a telephone kiosk. You got in type in a code for your destination, and when you stepped out your were there. They had some limitations with distances, and they could be locked to only go between two places. That allowed for aircraft and spaceships. |he also had a Hyperdrive! They other sort of transporter was called Stepping Disks. These were linked together so if you stepped onto one you would step off another at some fixed distance. "Seven League Boots" if you can remember them!
    A great episode. I studied physics a long time ago, and spent the intervening years working with electronics, so I know most of this already, but I love the way Neil explains things, and these two together are hilarious.

  • @lizz-ards1032
    @lizz-ards1032 Год назад +7

    Man I love star talk especially at night ⭐❤❤❤⭐⭐⭐❤❤❤

    • @Sammasambuddha
      @Sammasambuddha Год назад

      Sun Talk starts at 8am.
      Moon Talk at midnight.

  • @shawnlayne2736
    @shawnlayne2736 Год назад +3

    When white noise is edited (EQ'd) so that all frequencies have equal loudness (Fletcher-Munsen curve) it is called Pink Noise.

  • @Mohlatlego_Makgato
    @Mohlatlego_Makgato Год назад +14

    Chuck is simply hilarious, the white noise joke killed me😂

  • @noty7618
    @noty7618 Год назад +2

    Your such an amazing teacher by asking leading questions it makes me learn in such an amazing way thank you

  • @stephengillenwaters1950
    @stephengillenwaters1950 Год назад +1

    Brought back memories on this one. Heard this once decades ago in school from a substitute earth science teacher...lol...and never heard of it again. Great content as always!!!

  • @occheermommy
    @occheermommy Год назад +1

    Chucks demonstration of black noise was amazing!

  • @etiennerenevey2698
    @etiennerenevey2698 2 месяца назад +2

    I have to say overall what Neil said about white noise is correct. But i think he mistakenly said higher frequencies have more energy that’s not correct. Lower frequencies have more energy. First because a movement of the membrane of a speaker in ex. is far more to the depth of each side (plus and minus polarity) so it creates more pressure and therefore more energy. That’s for some part of this equation why you hear lows in a free field farther away than highs.
    But our human ear has a so called response on a fletcher-munson curve that shows by data and tests that we can hear 1khz under 0dB SPL and lows must be around 40dB SPL on 50hz to be perceived equally loud. That’s why in fact the main transport frequency of voice in telephones is around 2.5khz.
    That’s also because of the basilar Membrane in the cochlea of the human hearing system that is built to process the frequencies from the beginning right behind the mechanics to the deeper inner-ear from high to low..so higher frequencies will arrive earlier in the Cochlea than lower frequencies those gonna be processed deeper down on the end of the basilar membrane. Pretty equal to the travel time and distance travel of frequencies in nature produced by sound sources like Loudspeakers. Just this one time neil…All the other 1000times you were always right. Genius Guy! And you’re one of a kind Chuck! Thanks guys. Cheers from Switzerland 🇨🇭

  • @vincenthaddad
    @vincenthaddad Год назад +1

    Awesome episode! Lord Nice our Cosmic Comedian was on FIRE!❤‍🔥❤❤❤‍🔥

  • @nimrodlevy
    @nimrodlevy Год назад +5

    I loooovvvveeeee long explainers! That was so much fun!!!! Thank you thank you thank you!!! Btw, what about plastic plates? What about its heat resistant? Isn't it potential energy? Which ceramic is better than plastic it is molecular bond also, nevermind... Thank you!

  • @Nitelifebuzz
    @Nitelifebuzz Год назад +19

    We need a cutting room blooper reel with Chuck making Neil laugh uncontrollably. At least 10 minutes of clips.

  • @kerrygrella9608
    @kerrygrella9608 Год назад +2

    Thank you, Neil! I am adding this to my lesson on potential and kinetic energy for my freshman. I’m going to play the first 13 minutes of this video because it’s hilarious 😂

  • @samauri_nemisis856
    @samauri_nemisis856 Год назад +5

    I absolutely love you and everything you do. Keep up the awesome work!

  • @justz3973
    @justz3973 Год назад +1

    I love you guys! You were the perfect silliness today!

  • @IWishUWereTacos
    @IWishUWereTacos Год назад

    I might have to rewind certain sections multiple times to understand, i love that feeling when it clicks.

  • @EricSchultz-zs8hz
    @EricSchultz-zs8hz Год назад +3

    A good follow up to "Why Things Break" could be an explanation of how the impact is absorbed when dropping a plate on a mattress.

  • @jonatanciltea
    @jonatanciltea Год назад

    I could listen to Mr. deGrasse all day long, the format of the show is awesome, keep it up :D !!

  • @SeasonedCrouton
    @SeasonedCrouton Год назад +5

    I love you guys. You two always have me cracking up. 🤣 Thank you for brightening my evening! (Black Noise would be TOUGH btw 🖤)

  • @AwakeInAnacortes
    @AwakeInAnacortes Год назад +2

    The white noise segment made me laugh till I cried. Thank you guys!

  • @ThyDeliverer
    @ThyDeliverer Год назад +4

    I gotta say, your wormhole explanation has branched off from the original episode and found its way to multiple other videos including this one. As an observer of this paradox, I believe your editor has successfully created digital wormholes all over the internet. The Deja Vu is strong with this one guys. Wormholes are only good for worms! I'm not a Worm. Gotta change that idea to Humanholes ;) Never the less the idea of wormholes is impossible.

  • @Jack.Waters
    @Jack.Waters 9 месяцев назад

    Query: I have noticed that one can lightly tap glass and it will eventually almost explode with energy. Or you can hit it very hard once. But it doesn't seem to have the same level of energy expended. Does glass store energy? Molecules align in some way to then repel each other?

  • @MagicToenail
    @MagicToenail Год назад

    This man can somehow make everything incredibly interesting with the way he talks and explains

  • @aaaashleyyyyy
    @aaaashleyyyyy 2 месяца назад +1

    As someone with synesthesia, I can say that (for me at least), white noise does not look white to me, it's more of a dark grey / indigo color, but hard to describe since it's not just a color but it has moving shape and form too. Anyway, different people with synesthesia will see different visualizations, so I can only speak to my own experience.

  • @CoajaCristiandance
    @CoajaCristiandance 10 месяцев назад +2

    science + humor = perfection.

  • @MamaGemini68
    @MamaGemini68 8 месяцев назад

    😂😂😂😂 I just started watching Star Talk about two weeks ago because I saw you two on TikTok. As much as I love science, science fiction & lore, this episode was educationally hilarious 🤣🤣🤣 Thank you both. 🥰🥰

  • @dahnyahollier-day4217
    @dahnyahollier-day4217 Год назад

    Glad this came up in my feed, lost it during the identity correction. Best two science involvement presenters ever. One day, definitely wanna see a Carl Sagan's Cosmos type series hosted by these two

  • @danielmadar9938
    @danielmadar9938 Год назад +3

    You are killing me 😂😂😂
    But you missed a joke: Why did Schrödinger poison his cat? Because the cat broke all his plates...

  • @CiCis_Mom
    @CiCis_Mom Год назад +1

    Ever read Primary Inversion by Catherine Asaro? Portions of this first of a three part series posit an explanation for how FTL engineering could work using imaginary numbers, stasis coils, and inversion engines. She's written 30 books based in this universe, but read Primary Inversion first if you want some of the speculative "hard" science. Some of her later works also deal with klein bottles.
    Her father was a nuclear chemist who was part of the team that discovered the iridium anomaly. She herself has a B.S. with highest honors in chemistry from UCLA, and both a master's in physics and a PhD in chemical physics from Harvard University. She manages to weave a fascinating tapestry of science possibility while also pulling in bioengineering, some of which goes wrong of course, telepathic abilities, mushy soul mate stuff, and ethical/political conundrums.

  • @PeachMangaPie
    @PeachMangaPie 6 месяцев назад

    I love chuck and the humor he adds to every discussion 😂

  • @jpdemer5
    @jpdemer5 Год назад +3

    This episode had me laughing out loud. Chuck was on fire!

  • @1947SteveC
    @1947SteveC Год назад +3

    I was sent to Ft. Monmouth, NJ to learn microwave repair as an Army E-4, in 1966. I assumed the static sound I heard was the combination of all past broadcasts and every frequency and harmonic possible. Now we know.

  • @ChrisDomino82
    @ChrisDomino82 Год назад +4

    I have an idea.for a craft that as long as it is within Earth's gravitational pull could use magnets to maneuver around as propulsion system. And idea that with out a doubt would create electricity for a home/any building, perpetually using magnets and an idea that could possibly replicate Earth's gravity on a small scale using magnets...really wish I could speak with you or Dr. Michio Kaku.... I've commented so many times on both of your videos and never get any responses

  • @VickyViolet
    @VickyViolet Год назад +1

    Chuck is amazing, the whole intro summarizes the channel. 😂

  • @TheStevewhelan
    @TheStevewhelan Год назад +1

    25:16 Chuck... You have to make that album!

  • @jaxmike7
    @jaxmike7 Год назад +3

    When talking about the roller coaster Neil stated that the highest kinetic energy is at the lowest point of the coaster. This isn't necessarily true though. Kinetic energy can be lost as heat due to friction so typically the fastest speed is at the bottom of the hill with the longest drop, not necessarily the lowest point on the entire coaster. Unless there's more energy put into the system later via a second lifting mechanism that's typically the first hill. This is probably me being pedantic, but it's just one of those technicalities i just can't resist pointing out.

    • @brad9284
      @brad9284 Год назад

      Ok dude debating with a world renowned physicist lmao.

    • @jaxmike7
      @jaxmike7 Год назад

      @@brad9284 Ever heard of the logical fallacy argument from authority?

    • @jaxmike7
      @jaxmike7 Год назад +1

      @@brad9284 Also, I wasn't even really disagreeing, just pointing out, like I admitted pedantically, cases where the blanket statement in the video had alternatives. The gist of the argument in the video is basically true, with edge case exceptions.

    • @danielconway7190
      @danielconway7190 2 месяца назад

      ​@brad9284 Jax is right. Physicists sometimes simplify things to make them easier to communicate, and in this case Neil didn't mention energy losses. If you get to neglect friction and air resistance, yes, the lowest point will have the highest kinetic energy. In the real world, not necessarily.

  • @wysteriaherr8306
    @wysteriaherr8306 Год назад

    I have no idea what they are talking about but thisans voice soothes me

  • @glenncurry3041
    @glenncurry3041 Год назад +3

    Cheer up Chuck. There is also "Pink Noise". One of the variations Neil was talking about. It is equal energy per octave instead of per frequency.

  • @vidyashankars
    @vidyashankars Год назад +1

    Neil makes learning fun. Chuck makes it hilarious!

  • @RainingUchiha
    @RainingUchiha Год назад +3

    In the words of the cat. "I wouldn't have had to knock this plate over if you didn't put it up here in my way."

  • @ShadowPotato-zb3zm
    @ShadowPotato-zb3zm Год назад

    I have an old TV and trust me I seen and heard that static and here I am a young generation also loves the white and black noise bit

  • @DB-rg2dk
    @DB-rg2dk Год назад +2

    I could listen to Chuck hating on cats ALL day long!

  • @kcolv9798
    @kcolv9798 Год назад +3

    I love it when Chuck makes himself cry 😂😂😂

  • @kylekane5727
    @kylekane5727 Год назад

    Can I just say I love Chuck so much!!

  • @johnnstamoezz5491
    @johnnstamoezz5491 Год назад

    They have such good back and forths.

  • @catserver8577
    @catserver8577 Год назад +2

    Cat: Hey, human! Pick up that broken plate! Edit: My husband walked in and saw what I was watching and said "Neil losing his mind?" I said "Yep, there's a cat involved.".

    • @freeculture
      @freeculture Год назад +1

      Well you know what happens when they involve cats, they end both dead and alive at the same time, until you observe it...

  • @brianupsher6675
    @brianupsher6675 Год назад +3

    Use the same dei noise logic for light and you got dei-light, which Newton exposed his prism to. Full circle, it went from daylight to dei-light

  • @SRGoldfish
    @SRGoldfish 10 месяцев назад

    U and chuck are perfect together.

  • @chuck1804
    @chuck1804 10 месяцев назад

    42:10 chuck is just so on point LOVE his sense of humor!

  • @isatousarr7044
    @isatousarr7044 Месяц назад +1

    The universe's background noise, often referred to as cosmic microwave background radiation, is a fascinating remnant of the Big Bang that provides a profound glimpse into the early universe. This faint, uniform glow permeates the cosmos and serves as a crucial piece of evidence for our understanding of cosmic evolution. Studying this background noise helps scientists probe the conditions of the early universe, the formation of galaxies, and the fundamental laws of physics. It’s remarkable to think that this ancient echo from the universe's infancy is still detectable today, connecting us to the very origins of the cosmos and continuing to reveal new insights about its history and structure.

  • @facespaz
    @facespaz Год назад

    Informational, funny, awe-inspiring... I love Star Talk!

  • @Rbksmn
    @Rbksmn Год назад +1

    Most of the terminology about sound (and music) is borrowed from other fields: it can be low, high, brilliant, clear and so on.

  • @alwaysU916
    @alwaysU916 Год назад +1

    It was the hiss of the tv static being partially identified as the cosmic microwave background for me 🤯 I could remember days staring at that those ‘rice grains’ 🇯🇲 . feeling like I was looking deep into the universe 😵‍💫 ..

  • @dizzzy12
    @dizzzy12 9 месяцев назад

    I love how lofty and deeply intelligent Neil comes across and yet still adds relatable/pop culture memes

  • @glennk.7348
    @glennk.7348 Год назад

    These guys educate and entertain and make be laugh! Priceless! 😅😊

  • @darkstar8827
    @darkstar8827 Год назад

    Speaking of a wormhole equiped home, my kitchen would be in France, and my garage would be at a race track, and my bedroom would be on the top floor of a building with a terrific view!

  • @theunknownunknowns256
    @theunknownunknowns256 Год назад +2

    White noise: Having a transistor radio is like having an extra sense. The signal from the station drops out if something else either close by or a stronger transmission over powers it.

  • @shaunhall6834
    @shaunhall6834 Год назад +2

    Love this channel!

  • @j72ashley
    @j72ashley Год назад +6

    The fact that the brain is harder to map than much of the Universe... that makes me think that replecators might be a bit off. And I agree with Neil on this one. If we can pass through the WH portal, then... just go right? If we can't, then we learn a way to do it. But the last thing I would want is a total deletion and reassembling.

  • @cloudzero2049
    @cloudzero2049 Год назад

    This whole conversation had me laughing so much. Thanks for another great video.

  • @mikeymasochiss6530
    @mikeymasochiss6530 Год назад

    You guys are the best!!!! Over hear laughing and learning!!!

  • @geoffreyrhine8210
    @geoffreyrhine8210 Год назад +5

    Don't blame the cat, entropy pushed that plate off the shelf.

  • @marcuscampbell4743
    @marcuscampbell4743 Год назад

    Yes, the black-and-white noise was so funny. I love this show!

  • @ryvyr
    @ryvyr Год назад

    Chuck and Neil make this increasingly chaotic world more tolerable :>

  • @peiying3263
    @peiying3263 Год назад

    When Neil was talking about rainbow colors from raindrops, I was thinking, "how come those two different shapes - raindrop and prism - can both allow us to see a rainbow?" So, I chatgpted the answer:
    Here's how a rainbow is formed:
    Refraction: When sunlight (which is composed of various colors or wavelengths) enters a water droplet, it slows down and bends as it goes from air into the denser medium of water. This bending of light is called refraction.
    Dispersion: As the light continues to travel through the droplet, it is dispersed or spread out because different colors of light are refracted by different amounts. This is due to the phenomenon of dispersion, where shorter wavelengths (blue and violet) are bent more than longer wavelengths (red and orange).
    Internal Reflection: After dispersion, the light undergoes internal reflection inside the water droplet. This means that some of the light reflects off the inner surface of the droplet and travels back through it.
    Refraction Again: As the internally reflected light exits the water droplet and re-enters the air, it undergoes another round of refraction. This bending of light occurs because it's transitioning from a denser medium (water) to a less dense one (air).
    Scattering and Observation: The dispersed and internally reflected light exits the water droplet at various angles, creating a circle of colors. We observe this circle of colors as a rainbow.
    So, a raindrop's spherical shape allows it to serve as a tiny prism, refracting, dispersing, and reflecting sunlight to create the rainbow spectrum of colors. The specific sequence of colors in a rainbow (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet) is a result of the dispersion and refraction properties of light. While prisms can also create rainbows in a similar manner, it's more commonly observed in nature through raindrops due to rainfall or other forms of water droplets in the atmosphere.

  • @SockMonkeyofcourse
    @SockMonkeyofcourse Год назад +1

    The gravitational potential energy was transferred to kenetic by gravitational effect holding it against the shelf, not in the fall to the floor. The fall to the floor was pure kenetic energy. Thoughts?

  • @axle.australian.patriot
    @axle.australian.patriot Год назад

    I used to love to sit and watch the background noise as a child and even into my adulthood. I looked for low entropy in the chaos, although somewhat naively lol
    But that's OK, because it trained me to read entropy in word search and eventually binary arrays at 20FPS :P

  • @StaticBlaster
    @StaticBlaster Год назад +1

    I enjoy the theme music of StarTalk. It compels me to nod my head up and down, and sway it from side to side. lol

  • @TheSouthernSiren
    @TheSouthernSiren Год назад +1

    Dream walking works the same way.❤

  • @Zurpanik
    @Zurpanik 10 месяцев назад

    Instead of "white noise", how about "uniform noise"? Any good? Haha love you both! Great video as always!

  • @klabauther
    @klabauther Год назад +2

    The plate breaks not when it falls but when it stops falling.

  • @dclamp123
    @dclamp123 Год назад

    Great stuff! Interesting, fun, and very informative as always. Science fiction writers have already had their field days with wormholes. For example, decades ago Larry Niven included transfer booths (like a phone booth but when you input the number you were physically transported to the corresponding destination) and later stepping discs ( a sort of open-air transfer booth) that people (and others!) used to get around. It's a great mental exercise to think of the ramifications this technology would carry.

  • @aldorr_music
    @aldorr_music Год назад

    Just watched Neil’s interview with Steve-O, can’t tell if he was excited to be there or just loved interrupting steveo. Hella good episode.

  • @robinbrowne5419
    @robinbrowne5419 Год назад

    You guys are so much FUN 💓
    Everything Neil says sounds reaaallllll deeeeep, and everything Chucky says sounds hiiiillllaaaaarious. Aaaaaaand I learn stuff too.
    Awesome 👍👍

  • @Bluelizardfarm
    @Bluelizardfarm Год назад +1

    Oh, god Chuck I have been laughing about the "white noise and back noise going together" for hours. Great one so funny. Thank you.

  • @johnnichols5619
    @johnnichols5619 Год назад

    Falling does not break things. Falling is just the vertical flight towards the center of a gravitational field. It is the sudden stop on it's flight, such as, hitting the floor which causes whatever is in flight to break the "togetherness" bonds.