Transparent Aluminum - Star Trek Technology is now Real

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  • Опубликовано: 23 фев 2018
  • ALON - Transparent Aluminum - is a ceramic composed of Aluminium, Oxygen and Nitrogen. Transparent Aluminum, was once pure science fiction, a technical term used in a Star Trek Movie from the 80’s.
    In the movie Star Trek 4 The Voyage Home, Captain Kirk and his team, go back in time to acquire 2 whales from the past and transport them back to the future. Scotty needed some materials to make a holding tank for whales on his ship, but had no money to pay for the materials.
    So Scotty uses his knowledge of 23 third century technology and the manufacturers computer and programs in, how to make the Transparent Aluminum Molecule.
    Transparent Aluminum or Aluminum Oxynitride, also known as ALON, is much stronger than Standard Glass and over time will become cheaper to make, but until then will most likely be used for NASA & the Military.
    Thanks for watching
    ____________________________________________________________________
    CREDIT LINKS
    ► Surmetcorp RUclips Channel = / surmetcorp
    ► Surmetcorp Original Video = • Surmet's ALON® Transpa...
    ► Ministry of Defence Singapore RUclips Channel = / @mindefsg
    ► Ministry of Defence Singapore Original Video = • Engineering Our Defenc...
    ► Gottschild GmbH RUclips Channel = / gottschild
    ► Gottschild GmbH Original Video = • Acrylic glass sanding ...
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Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @WonderWorldYTC
    @WonderWorldYTC  6 лет назад +1047

    ★★★ *FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT THE VIDEO / FACT UPDATES* ★★★
    *Q1) Why did they need to have Transparent Aluminum?... Why didn't they just make the tanks out of Aluminum?* - Before I answer this, just know, it's an OBVIOUS answer if you stop and think about it. They did not need Transparent Aluminum, and they did not use Transparent Aluminum, they used the chemical formula of Transparent Aluminum as payment for the material they did need for the Whale tanks on the ship, and the reason they used Acrylic / Plexiglass and not Aluminium or Steel, is because it would not be very visual on screen if they had a big metal box, they needed to be able to show the whales in the tank.
    *Q2) It is spelt Aluminium & pronounced (Alu-Mini-um)* - I am well aware of this, I am from Australia and spell it and pronounce it that way, But I pronounce it (Aloo-min-um) in my videos as most of my viewers are American (27%) and they complain more if I pronounce it Alu-Mini-um.
    *My Viewer Locations From My Analytics - USA 27%, Canada 3.1% vs England 6.4%, Australia 2%* - English & Australians will complain about the pronunciation as well, but not as much as Americans.
    *Aluminum* and *Aluminium* are two names for element 13 on the periodic table. Although Americans and Canadians spell and pronounce the name aluminum, while the British (and most of the rest of the world) use the spelling and pronunciation of aluminium. LINK = www.thoughtco.com/aluminum-or-aluminium-3980635
    ►PLUS it was pronounced *ALOO-MIN-UM* in the Star Trek Movie with Scotty when he made the Transparent Aluminum Molecule - LINK = ruclips.net/video/LkqiDu1BQXY/видео.html
    ► *That being said, I have read all the comment advice and for now on I will say it the Australian way Alu-Mini-um.*
    ►► Another area I have to constantly think about is (cm's vs inches) and (klms vs miles) I am constantly having to re-write scripts so the majority will understand what I am talking about.
    *Q3) How do they fit new windows on the space station in space* - I would assume they would either shut the door to the module, vent the air and have an astronaut do a space walk to replace them, or NASA would send up a new module and swap them over.
    *Q4) why are they using a Macintosh Pro in the 23rd century?* - They're not, the Star trek crew went back in time to 1986, from slingshoting around the sun in a bird of prey.
    *Q5) You say "Light years ahead" A light year is a measure of distance/length, not of time!* - A light year is both a measure of "distance & time", but it's also can be used when describing a new technology, such as "ideas that are light-years ahead of the their time / This new technology puts the company light-years ahead of its competitors."
    ► LINK 1 - www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/light-years%20ahead,
    ► LINK 2 - www.usingenglish.com/reference/idioms/light+years+ahead.html

    • @AaronCook83
      @AaronCook83 6 лет назад +16

      spelt

    • @rhetta9826
      @rhetta9826 6 лет назад +91

      Wonder World To hell with my fellow (uneducated, unworldly, bigoted) Americans. Pronounce it like you do, and let them get educated and appreciate that other English-speakers pronounce things differently than we here in America do - and conversely we different than others.
      So please, let's hear "alu mini um"...

    • @GFlCh
      @GFlCh 6 лет назад +39

      I say, don't sweat it. Ya know, "Don't sweat the small stuff".
      Said as Aluminum, or Aluminium, it doesn't matter. Anyone who is familiar with one of the spellings (pronunciations), will certainly be able to figure it out if the other version is used, and ought to do so without uttering a word about it. Of course they should be free to speak about it if they want, but they shouldn't want to because it's unimportant.

    • @ColdieHU
      @ColdieHU 6 лет назад +58

      Don't please the uneducated. People need to learn, they are already kept dumb by most media.

    • @davidarcher8501
      @davidarcher8501 6 лет назад

      Wonder World i

  • @agentk3984
    @agentk3984 4 года назад +913

    20 years ago when i was in elementary school i saw my dad watching a star trek episode every now and then. I remember him explaining the windows in the enterprise as being as strong as steel, but transparent like glass although he never knew they were transparent aluminum (Not a real trekie). I asked him once "Is it possible to make steel that you can see through?" he replied "I don't know, maybe you should learn as much as you can and someday, you could.". If only he were alive today...

    • @kornpops1261
      @kornpops1261 3 года назад +15

      The real question is. Did you go to school and invent this? Or would he call you a failure?

    • @danieldorn2927
      @danieldorn2927 3 года назад +64

      @@kornpops1261 He doesnt sound like the father figure who calls his own blood a failure
      If a father calls his son a failure, it simply means that the father himself is a failure

    • @nathanlewis5682
      @nathanlewis5682 3 года назад +6

      @@danieldorn2927 But if the father tries his best to teach his child to learn on his own but the child is just simply a dumbass then I don't think the father is a failure.

    • @timrosencrans7955
      @timrosencrans7955 3 года назад +2

      Yes but somehow glass tables shattered into 1 million pieces at the slightest touch.

    • @jasonji1900
      @jasonji1900 3 года назад +2

      @@redactedrider7606 exactly! NOT Aluminum, and not new.

  • @andys4971
    @andys4971 4 года назад +2052

    15$ per square inch, that isn’t prohibitively expensive for glasses, I want a pair

    • @ofto5872
      @ofto5872 4 года назад +301

      or phone screens. i dont think those numbers are right otherwise it would be everywhere

    • @mrpotat680
      @mrpotat680 4 года назад +187

      He said it wrong. It is not only square inch but cube inch. As the tests required for bullet resistance were 1.25 inches wide makeing one inch worth 225 dollars per inch cube.

    • @BillyBob-qu1fs
      @BillyBob-qu1fs 4 года назад +252

      @@mrpotat680 That's still reasonable to make glasses out of. At least until the manufactures add the 999% markup like they do with the wire and glass or current frames.

    • @mrpotat680
      @mrpotat680 4 года назад +63

      @@BillyBob-qu1fs Yeah it will be supply and demand. Since people need glasses they jack up prices; just like hospitals.

    • @BillyBob-qu1fs
      @BillyBob-qu1fs 4 года назад +79

      @@mrpotat680 Jacking up the price is a bit of an understatement. I bought my first car for less than my first pair of glasses. But you are right, we NEED them so they can essentially charge whatever they want.

  • @mtnbkr8480
    @mtnbkr8480 6 месяцев назад +32

    I always get a kick out of watching Scotty's two finger typing while never taking his eyes off the monitor. Really impressive for a 70 year old who grew up with voice input computer's and never seen a keyboard outside of a museum. 🖖

    • @duanephillips4082
      @duanephillips4082 5 месяцев назад +1

      Scotty is the pen-ultimate engineer and master of understanding controls seen and unseen. Sharp enough to inflate his estimates with Kirk so as not to overwhelm his underlings with their own unworthiness... AKA allowing time for *others* to have to time to learn.

    • @kellystone7501
      @kellystone7501 5 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@duanephillips4082penultimate means next to last.

  • @scottcped
    @scottcped 3 года назад +355

    Scotty: “Computer”.
    Company engineer: “you need to use this”
    Scotty picks up mouse and speaks into it: “Hello, Computer”

    • @Roland5679
      @Roland5679 3 года назад +31

      That movie just gets better with age :)

    • @lazarusgray1188
      @lazarusgray1188 3 года назад +35

      A Keyboard. How quaint.

    • @Enrico_Palazzo_opera_singer
      @Enrico_Palazzo_opera_singer 3 года назад +12

      Doc gave Scotty the mouse in the scene...without a word...the company dude said: "Just use the keyboard!"

    • @squidproquo2241
      @squidproquo2241 3 года назад +3

      It was the doctor who gave the mouse to Scatty not the company man. Company man said "Just use the keyboard.""

    • @arrow2589
      @arrow2589 2 года назад +6

      @@Roland5679 the "Why aren't you masked" line from the 80s doctor to kirk and bones in the operating room with Pavel had me going through covid mask flashback lol

  • @gemstarstation
    @gemstarstation 5 лет назад +1634

    Excuse me I'm looking for the nuclear wessels

    • @willmorrison1022
      @willmorrison1022 5 лет назад +44

      Well, how do we know HE didn't invent it?

    • @lloydtucker5647
      @lloydtucker5647 5 лет назад +43

      Yeah and he said this to a cop in San Francisco, during the Cold War and he had a Russian accent. 🤣😂😃

    • @ranmakun69
      @ranmakun69 5 лет назад +12

      Nuclear Weasels - The new teenage mutant stick!

    • @CaptainNemo1701
      @CaptainNemo1701 5 лет назад +18

      When you watch that bit in the movie, the woman with long hair was an extra & wasn't meant to say anything but she does, much to the surprise of Walter Koenig & Nichelle Nichols.

    • @amanofmanyparts9120
      @amanofmanyparts9120 5 лет назад +4

      @@CaptainNemo1701 On film words mean money!

  • @brianfeuerman1732
    @brianfeuerman1732 4 года назад +853

    “Hello computer!”
    “Just use the keyboard.”
    “Ah, a keyboard. How quaint!”

    • @tihzho
      @tihzho 4 года назад +36

      And somehow the computer is lightning fast just by bashing the keyboard.

    • @brianfeuerman1732
      @brianfeuerman1732 4 года назад +19

      tihzho Well, just remember back then files weren’t very big, so they opened basically immediately.
      Edit, let me rephrase that: Files opened the same speed as a larger file would today.

    • @tihzho
      @tihzho 4 года назад +10

      @@brianfeuerman1732 Ehhh not really, the HDD if one was present, which it was not for a Macintosh Plus was painfully slow. Often time you're running off the floppy disk, as in the case of the Macintosh Plus was then a new ​3.5 inch double-sided 800 KB floppy drive. Bottom line it WAS slow, not to mention what about the software Scotty? You can't just punch a bunch of keys in a computer. What would have been better is Scotty opening up a command line and typing in lines of code, then running it.
      My first computer was an IBM AT and it DID have a HDD and loading a program and loading a file was very slow.

    • @PoxyBear
      @PoxyBear 4 года назад +3

      "Keyboard? How quaint."

    • @kyleklintok7730
      @kyleklintok7730 4 года назад +7

      @@PoxyBear
      "How do we know he didn't invent the stoof?" ...McCoy grins...

  • @Belenus3080
    @Belenus3080 3 года назад +219

    If it’s expensive, you know the military wants it.

    • @rinislaboratories1315
      @rinislaboratories1315 3 года назад +5

      Well yes but actually no, it's more compact and stronger, so they want it; but it's expensive, so they likely would only use it in limited numbers. The cost to retrofit all the vehicles with this would be astronomically expensive. The military has a budget, just a really large one, get some things are still too expensive for even them

    • @sbaxter4207
      @sbaxter4207 3 года назад +3

      To protect the elite families and enslave the masses further.

    • @rinislaboratories1315
      @rinislaboratories1315 3 года назад +16

      @@sbaxter4207 whatever you say wacko

    • @joepromedio
      @joepromedio 3 года назад +2

      @Marina Simmons Why is your comment the exact same word for word comment as "Agent K" from 11 months ago?

    • @brokcen2748
      @brokcen2748 3 года назад +2

      @@joepromedio probably just a copy and paste

  • @Heimdall_pd
    @Heimdall_pd 3 года назад +58

    ALON is often associated with the fictitious material "transparent aluminum". This was first mentioned in the science fiction film Star Trek IV: Back to the Present by chief engineer Montgomery Scott and is used as window material in Starfleet spaceships. The patent for the ceramic material was filed in 1985 and the film was produced in 1986. The story of the journey through time also takes place in 1986.

    • @EdKolis
      @EdKolis 6 месяцев назад +1

      Wow, I didn't know it was really invented around the same time! I wonder if the producers of the movie knew about it? I wonder if the company considered using them for saying it was stolen from the future lol... But the movie's subtitle was The Voyage Home, not Back to the Present.

    • @foogod4237
      @foogod4237 6 месяцев назад +5

      So what you're saying is Scotty sold them a formula that had already been patented by somebody else and was thus worthless to them. That actually explains perfectly why it didn't alter the timeline in any significant way. Very sneaky!

    • @TheEudaemonicPlague
      @TheEudaemonicPlague 6 месяцев назад +4

      Aluminium oxynitride having improved optical characteristics and method of manufacture TM Hartnett, RL Gentilman U.S. Patent 4,481,300, 1984
      Process for producing polycrystalline cubic aluminium oxynitride JW McCauley U.S. Patent 4,241,000, 1980

    • @0011peace
      @0011peace 5 месяцев назад

      @@EdKolis yes they did star trek ws imnown for using near teh for future tech. Many othe r items that were fancifuyl i durring r toss we see today were already in the works even the idea of warp in mtheory wa possible since relivity wa formulated. The few that weren't were beacuse they sp ome looked and asked hw di we make this

  • @mqbitsko25
    @mqbitsko25 5 лет назад +484

    "Scottie, you're violating the Prime Directive!"
    "How do you know he didn't invent the thing?"
    "Oh....yeah. Right."

    • @its1110
      @its1110 5 лет назад +42

      I always thought it would be better (but not as snappy) if Scotty had said "I know it's history, Captain. This is the fellow who invented it... this year."
      Plus... that would have fitted literary SciFi tropes better.

    • @Kratax
      @Kratax 5 лет назад +17

      @@its1110 Well after the introduction Scotty actually could have remembered it from history, as timeline changed.

    • @its1110
      @its1110 5 лет назад +13

      @@Kratax
      Yep! That's the classic literary SF trope. Intentional Paradox. You have to do it 'cause you've already done it.

    • @Kratax
      @Kratax 5 лет назад +10

      @@its1110 I think more like if you do it, then you have had done it. I mean, he didn't have done it until he did it, and then he had already done it. If he wouldn't do it, then he wouldn't have already been done it nor had to do.

    • @its1110
      @its1110 5 лет назад +5

      @@Kratax
      Well... he already would have done it if was going to do it. But would he remember having done it if he not been born yet so as to be able to do it? What if his having done it would have prevented his birth?
      Meanwhile, in an alternate universe... ... ...
      :)

  • @Digital_Ninja279
    @Digital_Ninja279 5 лет назад +606

    ::Picks up mouse:: "Hello Computer."

    • @leinadreign3510
      @leinadreign3510 5 лет назад +11

      priceless ^^

    • @AT2Productions
      @AT2Productions 5 лет назад +40

      “Just use the keyboard.”
      “The keyboard? How quaint.”

    • @Wildstar40
      @Wildstar40 5 лет назад +4

      That was the funniest part of this scene !

    • @kentonkirkpatrick5225
      @kentonkirkpatrick5225 5 лет назад +12

      So how did Scotty know how to type if he's never done it?

    • @Wildstar40
      @Wildstar40 5 лет назад +12

      @@kentonkirkpatrick5225
      Clearly Scotty knew how to type he just had not done it in a long time.

  • @seattlebeard
    @seattlebeard 3 года назад +63

    I'm sure they will use this product in the flying cars they promised we would all have back in the 1950s. Any day now.....

    • @richardmitchell5201
      @richardmitchell5201 3 года назад +13

      Flying cars are a really bad idea imagine a bunch of flying vehicles above your head in your neighborhood and how badly people drive, drunk driving, all that kind of thing yeah bad idea 💡!!!

    • @spaceactivistarchive4180
      @spaceactivistarchive4180 3 года назад

      Once the price comes down they should start using it for front windows in regular cars.

    • @JohnMSawyer
      @JohnMSawyer 3 года назад

      seattlebeard: What makes you think I don't have a flying car right now?

    • @Baughbe
      @Baughbe 3 года назад

      We have flying cars... they are called Helicopters

    • @johnnyboythepilot4098
      @johnnyboythepilot4098 3 года назад +1

      The idea of flying cars IMHO are kind of stupid, at least in the traditional sense everyone sees the concept as. In reality, the closest you could get to a flying car is an eVTOL/manned multicopter, or a roadable airplane, the later of which there are a few companies testing designs and 2 companies, Terrefugia and PAL-V, are about to hit the market with their vehicles. PAL-V has started selling, and Terrafugia recently got a special LSA certificate from the FAA for their design. PAL-V is basically a folding gyrocopter mixed with a 3-wheeler, and Terrafugia is more of a roadable fixed-wing airplane. Both designs will require you to get training for a license, both will be much more expensive than a typical car, and both will also require a lot more extensive maintenance. Personally flying a vehicle/plane is a lot more involved than many realize. Before every flight, I always do a preflight that usually lasts anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour. And before that, I'm thinking about the weather and whether or not I should go because some days (especially in the PNW) the weather is just crap and isn't wise to take-off in. You can't just hop into vehicle that can fly like you can with a car. If something breaks, you can't pull over. And I'm 100% positive the regs will never let anyone take-off from a road with their PAL-V or Terrefugia. If you want to use that aspect of the vehicle, your going to have to drive to a dedicated airport or airstrip to take-off and land from, just like a regular airplane. So really neither of those designs are flying cars but more like roadable airplanes, which is still nice, but it doesn't follow the traditional flying car concept everyone knows and expects.

  • @deanevangelista6359
    @deanevangelista6359 6 месяцев назад +3

    What a breakthrough! When transparent aluminum foil is made, I’ll never wonder what’s in my freezer!

  • @stephenparallox
    @stephenparallox 3 года назад +72

    Honestly, the Transparent Aluminum scene was one of my most favorite in that movie.

    • @Babuiski
      @Babuiski 11 месяцев назад +3

      IMO it was the single most "Star Trek" moment in any of the Star Trek movies.
      As a child watching that movie, I was awed. The very concept of a transparent metal had never occurred to me.
      And it is that awe that inspired so many engineers, scientists, and researchers to make real what they saw in Star Trek.

    • @daniell8331
      @daniell8331 5 месяцев назад

      Helloh computar!

  • @misterturkturkle
    @misterturkturkle 5 лет назад +2323

    Sci fi movie: makes up something
    Scientists at the time: pfff thats not a real thing
    Child sci fi nerds: i will go to college and _make_ it real

    • @dotgreenery
      @dotgreenery 5 лет назад +90

      @Mister Turk Turkle
      It already existed and patented before the startreck movie came out.a lot of Futuristic things exist right now that you won’t see for another 20 years if you are alive.

    • @misterturkturkle
      @misterturkturkle 5 лет назад +41

      @@dotgreenery yes thats why i said sci fi and not star trek. A lot of the "trek tech" was from nerds trying to make stuff from buck rogers etc real

    • @Rumeel12708
      @Rumeel12708 4 года назад +21

      Lets make lightsabers!!!!!

    • @misterturkturkle
      @misterturkturkle 4 года назад +39

      @@Rumeel12708 too many concealable weapons in the world already, as cool as lightsabres would be.
      How about hard light holographics or personal shielding instead?

    • @SCComega
      @SCComega 4 года назад +12

      @@misterturkturkle Too implausible. Why not something more practical and plausible, like warp drives or personal QE comm devices?

  • @smitentertainment
    @smitentertainment 3 года назад +23

    As a chemical engineer, I would never get away with calling this 'transparent aluminum' when it's an oxide (as expected).

    • @garethrobinson2275
      @garethrobinson2275 3 года назад +6

      Sure but publicity and sales.

    • @googiegress7459
      @googiegress7459 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@garethrobinson2275 WON'T SOMEBODY THINK OF THE MARKETING

    • @EdKolis
      @EdKolis 6 месяцев назад

      Transparent... rusty aluminum? 😁

    • @WotchTheWerldBern
      @WotchTheWerldBern 6 месяцев назад +3

      I wonder what is ALON's electrical conductivity

    • @ricinro
      @ricinro 5 месяцев назад

      I assumed the star trek stuff was amorphous metal.

  • @kiwi9065
    @kiwi9065 3 года назад +29

    Imagine these in videogames : " oh hey , a glass wall , lets make it a door"
    "Did my hammer just Shattered on impact?"

  • @thebushwolf710
    @thebushwolf710 5 лет назад +313

    Transparent Aluminum?
    "That's the ticket laddie"

    • @GeneralG1810
      @GeneralG1810 4 года назад +1

      NOT NOW GRACIE!

    • @TheGoodDoctor1701
      @TheGoodDoctor1701 4 года назад +4

      @@GeneralG1810 Madeline*

    • @kyleklintok7730
      @kyleklintok7730 4 года назад

      "How do we know he didn't invent the stoof?" ...McCoy grins...

    • @scottcasas1862
      @scottcasas1862 3 года назад

      Or should I just hit delete...

    • @nukedukem6
      @nukedukem6 3 года назад

      @juggliar yes but the british changed it in the early days so technically we are saying it right

  • @WonderWorldYTC
    @WonderWorldYTC  6 лет назад +767

    There was barely any footage available for this topic, regardless of that fact I still made the video, as who doesn't want to know that Transparent Aluminum from Star Trek now exists.

    • @CybershamanX
      @CybershamanX 6 лет назад +10

      To be clear, in the bullet test, the conventional glass isn't 6 inches thick; it's 3.7 inches. Interesting video overall, though! Thanks for posting! :)

    • @WonderWorldYTC
      @WonderWorldYTC  6 лет назад +11

      yes I noticed that afterwards but I got that info somewhere and it did not line up with the video.

    • @CybershamanX
      @CybershamanX 6 лет назад +8

      No problem, buddy! Just throwing that up to clarify! You know, because people usually check messages for information. Right? heheheh ;) :P Peace! :)

    • @johnwang9914
      @johnwang9914 6 лет назад +21

      +Wonder World You do realize that naturally occurring transparent aluminum oxides are called corundums. Depending on impurities, they may be called rubies, sapphires and numerous other gem stones. Transparent aluminum is definitely not a product of science fiction except for the uninformed. What is new are methods of synthesizing such ceramcs, specifically synthetic sapphire for watches and mobile devices.

    • @GeekBoy03
      @GeekBoy03 6 лет назад +5

      this is going on fail blog. transparent aluminum has been around sine the 90s

  • @theblackcatvieweraccount5402
    @theblackcatvieweraccount5402 3 года назад +21

    So, what you're telling me is that Scotty really did visit the 1980s, and we are missing two humpback whales by the names of George and Gracie?

    • @johancegrell5514
      @johancegrell5514 3 года назад +1

      missing and missing....they will be back...

    • @JanetDax
      @JanetDax 3 года назад +1

      Forget what I said about it just being a TV show. It's all real
      I KNEW IT!

    • @danmortenson5274
      @danmortenson5274 3 года назад +1

      Nothing to see here, move along...

  • @gammaechofoundationproductions
    @gammaechofoundationproductions 3 года назад +4

    Hey, thanks for this! This video is very educational, informative, and entertaining! I look forward to seeing more of your videos! You just earned a new subscriber! :)

  • @charlesmiller6281
    @charlesmiller6281 6 лет назад +252

    So you're saying Scotty really did travel back in time and give us this technology. Cool.

    • @acklan3
      @acklan3 6 лет назад +40

      Remember in the movie he said it would that decades to work out the details. 40 years later, and.... LOL

    • @KcityMikeThomas
      @KcityMikeThomas 6 лет назад +5

      Okay, this is weird; but, I'm still not believing in time travel.

    • @1974UTuber
      @1974UTuber 6 лет назад +17

      Mike Thomas You say that now....
      But wait till you come back from the future to inform yoirself that time travel is real

    • @Prich319
      @Prich319 6 лет назад +6

      yes, and now that guy is rich beyond the dreams of avarice.

    • @jerrylong381
      @jerrylong381 6 лет назад +4

      Mike Thomas
      Look at it like this. If traveling into the past ever becomes possible, then by definition, time travel is possible now.

  • @aphenclips8623
    @aphenclips8623 5 лет назад +528

    Some kid watching Star Trek 4 in 1980's: ALUM is so cool.
    Dad: It's not real, this is science fiction
    Kid: Hold my juice cup.

    • @LoganRogue1
      @LoganRogue1 5 лет назад +7

      😄😄

    • @duderobi
      @duderobi 5 лет назад +18

      It was real. The filmmakers didn't made it up the patent dates back to 1985 and the movie is from 1986.

    • @gbizzotto
      @gbizzotto 4 года назад +8

      This is actually how science work: their job is to make science fiction real. That's what they seek.

    • @shadibeidas1
      @shadibeidas1 4 года назад +5

      @@LoganRogue1 Please keep in mind that availability of information wasn't nearly what it is now.
      In addition, scriptwriting and filming for the movie predated the patent. :-)

    • @LoganRogue1
      @LoganRogue1 4 года назад +1

      @@shadibeidas1 I know, I love the film. Vader's comment was funny that's all.

  • @yurivin2450
    @yurivin2450 2 года назад +1

    Wow!!!!
    Thank you for so interesting information!!
    Liked and subscribed!!

  • @duanephillips4082
    @duanephillips4082 5 месяцев назад +2

    Very cool. Most science fiction eventually comes to pass, which basically says, "if you can dream it, it can happen". Giant respectful nod to Ray Bradbury and the "Martian Chronicles", including the "... singing metal book..." that nearly everyone nowadays carries around these days... where one merely need "wave [the] hand over" to navigate.

  • @glenwaldrop8166
    @glenwaldrop8166 5 лет назад +95

    I worked at a parts store while I was starting my business.
    We had a guy come in wanting a transparent aluminum driver's side window for his car, argued about it and almost wouldn't leave.
    This was 2003.

    • @kiranfernandes2261
      @kiranfernandes2261 4 года назад +31

      Dude was probably a time traveller from 2175

    • @BillyBob-qu1fs
      @BillyBob-qu1fs 4 года назад +43

      You clerks are always hiding the good stuff. I just wanted a phased plasma rifle in the 40 watt range but was told "Hey, just what you see, pal." Jackasses

    • @I_like_turtles_67
      @I_like_turtles_67 4 года назад +2

      @@BillyBob-qu1fs Classic :)

    • @Mike-gt1cs
      @Mike-gt1cs 3 года назад +8

      @@BillyBob-qu1fs But you got the Uzi 9 millimeter, the .45 longslide with laser sighting, and the 12 gauge autoloader, right?
      So, that's something, then

    • @commenter7893
      @commenter7893 3 года назад +2

      You can call to let him know you might get him his window but are not sure yet.

  • @FO_Biggles
    @FO_Biggles 4 года назад +58

    So it's true, then. They _did_ come back in time!

  • @DavidJones-tp7td
    @DavidJones-tp7td 3 года назад +10

    Thank you. Your video was not only entertaining but informative. It provided enough information to express the basic concept and be useful as a launch point for more research. For me personally, the most important bit of information is how science fiction and science fact are connected - each inspires the other. The ALON product/technology is very interesting in its own right as well, and has the potential to be a game changer for future needs.
    On another note: I noticed your "disclaimer" concerning Aluminum vs Aluminium. My question is why are there two ways of spelling/pronouncing the same word? Just curious.

  • @sagittariusa291
    @sagittariusa291 3 года назад

    I seriously just subed, bec of your Rocket Intro IT ROCKS!

  • @nor4277
    @nor4277 4 года назад +88

    I love seeing Star Trek ideas turning into real things ,more star trek please.

    • @ThatBoomerDude56
      @ThatBoomerDude56 3 года назад +1

      Yeah. Except it didn't happen that way. Transparent aluminum was invented BEFORE Star Trek IV.

    • @freethebirds3578
      @freethebirds3578 3 года назад +1

      But it has to be Gene Roddenberry's version, not the new crap they are putting out.

    • @michaelparanormal
      @michaelparanormal 3 года назад +3

      @@ThatBoomerDude56 least the communicator was created first on Star Trek as a mobile phone!!!!!

    • @ZilogBob
      @ZilogBob 3 года назад +4

      I've heard that the original 3.5" Sony floppy disks were modelled on the "memory modules" in the Enterprise's computer.

    • @ns88ster
      @ns88ster 3 года назад +2

      @@michaelparanormal Walkie Talkies have been around for a long time. Since 1937 at least.

  • @tacticalblade970
    @tacticalblade970 4 года назад +267

    1980’s : I bet there will be a flying car in the future!
    2019 : transparent aluminum
    1980’s : close enough

    • @T1Oracle
      @T1Oracle 4 года назад +3

      We've had patents for this stuff since the 80's, check Wikipedia. I saw those Alon bullet videos a few years ago, not sure when they were filmed though but it was before 2019.

    • @alexandriamaguire8224
      @alexandriamaguire8224 4 года назад +4

      Yeah! We we're supposed to have flying cars in 2015.... Are we in an alternate timeline that changed that?!

    • @albratgaming2348
      @albratgaming2348 3 года назад +2

      @@alexandriamaguire8224 Everything that Doc and Marty did in the past changed the Future. Even old Biff changed the past. When Marty did the reset... It does not tell what else changed from 1955 to 1985, which could have changed the future and therefore we never got JAWS 3D ... I mean flying cars !!

    • @andreassjoberg3145
      @andreassjoberg3145 3 года назад

      Also, Elon musk dumped a car into space...so, free-falling car? Close enough for orbital works!

    • @2MeterLP
      @2MeterLP 3 года назад +3

      With drone technology we could make flying cars right now. But its too dangerous. Look at how many people crash each year with normal cars. With flying cars, even a slow crash can be lethal.

  • @CompTechMike
    @CompTechMike 2 года назад +1

    Not sure why the downvotes. This is a great video. Informative and not too long. Bonus thumbs up for the Star Trek references. 😁👍👍

  • @pmaraj
    @pmaraj 3 года назад +2

    cant wait to see the view from alon window on starship

  • @paparoysworkshop
    @paparoysworkshop 5 лет назад +636

    Of course we now have transparent aluminum. Scotty did give the formula. Nothing to see here... move along.

    • @dannydadog1987
      @dannydadog1987 5 лет назад +1

      Exept aluminium is an element, not a molecule. Sapphire on other hand has really be known, befor that element. Misleading dumb

    • @paparoysworkshop
      @paparoysworkshop 5 лет назад +14

      @@dannydadog1987 You do know I was being sarcastic... right?

    • @JovanKo314
      @JovanKo314 5 лет назад +17

      @@dannydadog1987 I mean diamond is just an element: carbon. The configuration of the elements in the molecule do make a big difference. I don't see anything wrong with Scotty's formula if the molecule was a specific configuration of just aluminum atoms.

    • @Nghtly777
      @Nghtly777 5 лет назад +5

      Danny Dadog r/woosh

    • @ayishaks6510
      @ayishaks6510 5 лет назад +7

      Danny Dadog While it is true that aluminium is an element, it is also true that ‘transparent aluminium’ is not.

  • @jimsteele9261
    @jimsteele9261 5 лет назад +823

    So all my glass windows are now "transparent silicon"?

    • @VincentGonzalezVeg
      @VincentGonzalezVeg 5 лет назад +16

      if you like looking out of windows the silicone should be?

    • @florinvadan7876
      @florinvadan7876 5 лет назад +9

      Silice Oxid 98% float ....

    • @alfamale9525
      @alfamale9525 5 лет назад +45

      YUP........
      Or you could go back to thin, scraped, oiled deerskin like my Texas Forefathers.

    • @roxyshow123
      @roxyshow123 5 лет назад +49

      @@alfamale9525 Yea but that was when all cars were made out of wood.
      I would also like to add that the four to six horse power wasn't under the hood. It was right out there where you could see it.

    • @Revan8787
      @Revan8787 5 лет назад +5

      I thought exactly the same XD

  • @nytaxista
    @nytaxista 3 года назад

    Thank you, Scotty!

  • @DMDvideo10
    @DMDvideo10 3 года назад

    We owe a gratitude to Scotty!

  • @rupe53
    @rupe53 3 года назад +6

    Back in the day, Star Trek had people on staff called "science editors" and their job was to make sure certain things in the script were not too far fetched when it came to the plausibility factor. IOW, our science of the time had some of the puzzle pieces but we had no practical way to implement them. Eventually we got the hand held cell phone from their communicator and now the transparent aluminum. I'm sure there are other examples that just don't come to my mind at the moment.

    • @gobymoby
      @gobymoby 6 месяцев назад

      Various computer tablets would be an excellent example. Shown on ST before they were a reality.

    • @rupe53
      @rupe53 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@gobymoby in that era a handheld computer has not been thought of yet, but I do recall several handheld devices to scan things for material composition, etc. What Dr McCoy used in sickbay is a prime example of a body scanner, which were actually salt & pepper shakers borrowed from the lunchroom. (yes, a low budget item)

  • @scibear9944
    @scibear9944 3 года назад +504

    "Transparent aluminum" has existed since the dawn of time in the form of sapphire and ruby, which are crystalline forms of aluminum oxide, which has a Mohs hardness of 9 (diamond is 10). Synthetic sapphire has also been produced since the 60's. In fact, some UPC scanners at stores use clear sapphire as the "glass" on top since sapphire is so tough.
    This is simply a new method of production.
    Also, I'm sure that some writer at Paramount was aware of this when they wrote the idea into the movie, so this is not an example of sci fi inspiring real science.

    • @Myopicvisions
      @Myopicvisions 3 года назад +18

      As envisioned in the movie, it has existed since 1974

    • @TheBloodyScott
      @TheBloodyScott 3 года назад +32

      Heck, most people have some in their pockets right now. The lens cover on your cellphone is typically synthetic sapphire, at least for flagship phones.

    • @Calisota
      @Calisota 3 года назад +2

      the ZTE Axon 9 Pro uses saphhire as glas instead of Gorilla 4 - for better color quality at the expense of not being able to flex as good

    • @TheUserid82
      @TheUserid82 3 года назад +9

      A few years older then the 1960's as the process for making ruby was first done back in 1902 and sapphire in 1911

    • @eyefreely9682
      @eyefreely9682 3 года назад +3

      Very good point... Thank You!

  • @Boris_Chang
    @Boris_Chang 3 года назад

    Well-done video: informative, to the point, music was not obnoxious-keep it up.

  • @underachiever2092
    @underachiever2092 6 месяцев назад +1

    Cool. That engineer finally figured out Scotty’s formula

  • @bhec7715
    @bhec7715 5 лет назад +592

    1.2k Romulans disliked this video.

    • @realamerican8079
      @realamerican8079 4 года назад +2

      bhec7715 ROFLMAO

    • @timmelton856
      @timmelton856 4 года назад

      Lol

    • @sublimetrance
      @sublimetrance 4 года назад +6

      Great now we have pesky Romulians engaging in "voting interference"

    • @rudybigboote3883
      @rudybigboote3883 4 года назад +1

      1.4K as of 11-19

    • @Kevin-bt4wb
      @Kevin-bt4wb 4 года назад +6

      Actually, it was the Klingons they were fighting with in Star Trek 4.

  • @twocvbloke
    @twocvbloke 6 лет назад +804

    Well, Nichols of Plexicorp said "It would take years to figure out the dynamics of this matrix", and it did, and now it's real... :)

    • @Stormprobe
      @Stormprobe 6 лет назад +67

      Now waiting for the starship Enterprise to be built.

    • @twocvbloke
      @twocvbloke 6 лет назад +8

      Oh that'll be a long way off, long after we're all wormfood I'm sure... :P

    • @IznbranahlGoose
      @IznbranahlGoose 6 лет назад +82

      I've heard a lot of people claim that Plexicorp produced transparent aluminum for the whale tank however the line about 'years to figure out the dynamics' .. and the earlier line about having '6" plexiglass on hand' suggests Scotty merely traded the transparent aluminum knowledge for the primitive plexiglass the company had on hand (much faster than retooling a factory to make a completely foreign material).

    • @Paerigos
      @Paerigos 6 лет назад +7

      yes... you can even see it on the bird of prey - its definitely not 1 inch material...

    • @dgracey01
      @dgracey01 6 лет назад +5

      Agreed. Not to mention the video said it takes several days of high pressure, high temperature cooking to go from powder to transparent solid.

  • @thewizzard3150
    @thewizzard3150 3 года назад +1

    An excellent video; very well explained .

  • @friedeseimitdiroxmox4669
    @friedeseimitdiroxmox4669 3 года назад

    Great, so hope to get my aluminium glasses soon.

  • @stephenbachman132
    @stephenbachman132 5 лет назад +84

    So if some whales go missing we will know who desgined the glass.
    Scotty 2019. Time Traveler. Humanitys hero. Champion.

    • @charlesball6519
      @charlesball6519 3 года назад

      Actually, ALON has been around since the 80's. It's just that it was really expensive compared to now.

  • @Reevin
    @Reevin 3 года назад +486

    "Gone are the days of scratched or cracked glass"? Apple is immediately not interested.

    • @DPortain
      @DPortain 3 года назад +19

      Fun fact: the display of the Apple Watch is the first consumer device to be made out of transparent aluminum. They call it sapphire though, because it's technically the same thing.

    • @4DCResinSmoker
      @4DCResinSmoker 3 года назад +18

      Fuck Apple

    • @richardm3023
      @richardm3023 3 года назад +11

      @@4DCResinSmoker Hey! That's what I used to call my ex-wife!

    • @8ijoe
      @8ijoe 3 года назад +5

      @@DPortainit's not really sapphire though, since it's not at 9 on the mohs hardness scale: ruclips.net/video/9EBgaxFfDA0/видео.html

    • @andikaarmada3279
      @andikaarmada3279 3 года назад +5

      I can imagine the scream of fear fron Tim Cook who will try hard to remove this product out of existence.
      No broken item, no sales.

  • @carpemkarzi
    @carpemkarzi 3 года назад

    That’s so cool. Thanks

  • @leanbanclog
    @leanbanclog 3 года назад +113

    Phones are designed to age quickly, broken screens are a major influence to upgrading. Why would they use something as good as this

    • @johnsnitzer9287
      @johnsnitzer9287 3 года назад +5

      Lower conduction and crack propagation tendencies. Sapphire was also considered for it being very hard and ultra clear but it also has lower conduction that glass and when the screen would crack, it would have vertical lines through the screen. This would mean the whole screen would be cracked instead of just a small area of it. Phones do use sapphire for the camera lenses though.

    • @megapro125
      @megapro125 3 года назад +3

      @@johnsnitzer9287 the material shown in this video basically IS saphire (Al2O3). Just artificially created.

    • @Alexander-tu3iv
      @Alexander-tu3iv 3 года назад +7

      Nokia is 100% going to use this, if not they need to fire their pr team. Being tough as hell is literally part of their brand image.

    • @gastonbell108
      @gastonbell108 3 года назад +6

      Apple and Samsung have already spent millions on lobbying against Right to Repair for their devices. They're not even denying it; they build their phones to survive the warranty period and not a minute sooner.
      My old roommate was a manager at a Verizon store. Ever wonder why the cases are 30-50% more expensive than Amazon? New buyers of warrantied phones get those cases for free or at massive discount: it's in the company's interest to avoid having to repair the thing. Anybody not buying a new warrantied phone pays full (unreasonable) price, because they're genuinely hoping you WON'T buy it and then you'll drop your phone and break it.

    • @ShamblerDK
      @ShamblerDK 3 года назад +2

      Tell me about it. My Z5 Premium is the last phone model to be sold with Dragontrail glass, which is vastly superior to any Gorilla glass. Manufacturers says it's too expensive to make the phones with that glass. Well, of course it is, when it's nigh unbreakable.

  • @WhittyPics
    @WhittyPics 5 лет назад +188

    Roddenbury was a visionary. Kirk had flip phones in the 1960s

    • @Losttoanyreason
      @Losttoanyreason 5 лет назад +5

      Flip satellite/cell phones. LOL

    • @ginnyjollykidd
      @ginnyjollykidd 5 лет назад +4

      And smart phones now do that and more. Except to reach the ISS, you still have to have NASA Ground Control to patch you in.
      And maybe that's why you had to have Kirk's flip communicator. Bulky and single - purposed, but a lot better than the NASA patch - in.

    • @ginnyjollykidd
      @ginnyjollykidd 5 лет назад +2

      Life imitates SFF.

    • @HocchanFan
      @HocchanFan 5 лет назад +1

      Watching the podrace on a handheld screen did NOT seem ludicrous at that time, even if you had absolutely no imagination.
      In 1999 when that came out, we had already seen computers go from big clunky desktops to laptops--laptops with LCD screens that would do color. There were already Nintendo Game Boys with color screens. None of that was great stuff, but it was clear to anyone with two brain cells to rub together that it was the future--and the VERY NEAR future at that.
      So yeah, that was not ludicrous or amazing. At all.

    • @ThreadBomb
      @ThreadBomb 5 лет назад +4

      Roddenberry didn't actually come up with this stuff. He just oversaw the people who did.

  • @richardbeckenbaugh1805
    @richardbeckenbaugh1805 3 года назад +60

    There is also a process with alpha particle beams that also makes pure aluminum clear. It also works for titanium. The beam is steered magnetically and realigns the molecules of aluminum or titanium so that they pass light at optical frequencies. Still have to polish it.

    • @melgross
      @melgross 6 месяцев назад +8

      Really? Have some evidence of that? No pure transparent metal exists except in nano thicknesses. Everything else is an oxide. In other words, not metal but a ceramic.

    • @garyfrancis6193
      @garyfrancis6193 6 месяцев назад +4

      That’s how I do it.

  • @sgtbrown4273
    @sgtbrown4273 5 месяцев назад +1

    We have actually had this for a while. The US army used it on their LRAS systems, but it was top secret until just recently. Thanks Scotty 😂

    • @n9go
      @n9go 5 месяцев назад

      Is ALON used in vehicles in the Army like the HMMWVs windows? I always assumed it was just very thick glass and I don't hang around the motorpool enough to bother looking at them any closer.

  • @GEOFERET
    @GEOFERET 6 месяцев назад +1

    I remember watching that movie when it was released, and wondering whether something like that would some day be possible. Well, here we are!

  • @bobweber2127
    @bobweber2127 5 лет назад +64

    So much of Star Trek is coming true! I'm a Trekkie and love it.

    • @johnwang9914
      @johnwang9914 5 лет назад +2

      Except for the "cashless" society. Then again, the time travel episode in Deep Space Nine had them going into a dystopic period of history where the unemployed were sent to ghetto neighborhoods so maybe it is all coming true.

    • @cactusmann5542
      @cactusmann5542 5 лет назад +2

      Though computers have surpassed trek's as well as other inventions in that field.... we are still not doing enough headway when it comes to energy and power production. Also, medicine.Fusion reactors are nearing equivalent exchange, but thats it. No antimatter mumbo jumbo, still no theoretical way to surpass light speed.

    • @johnwang9914
      @johnwang9914 5 лет назад

      @@cactusmann5542 Computers have gotten faster, smaller and have higher memory capacity but Star Trek showed computers doing things that we have only been able to crudely program as they are things we do not understand. Even the speech interaction with the ship's computer is generations ahead of what we now have with Siri, Alexis and Hey Google. Even our self learning programs perform inefficiently, what saves our self learning AI's is that they can go through countless billions of iterations and be exposed to enormous amount of data to perform their learning. The fact that it takes so many iterations and so much bulk data to train an AI shows that we have a poor understanding of the learning process. I would hardly call the computers of today comparable with the promises of Star Trek's computers. They could be on a hardware scale but certainly not in software.
      As to fusion. Fusion is over-rated and over marketed. The promise of fusion is to reproduce the stability and efficiency of energy production in our Sun's core. Well, the core of our Sun produces about 300 watts per cubic meter, about the energy production of a compost pile and that takes the gravity of at least 12 Jupiter masses to maintain the pressures needed. Yes, higher rates of energy production are possible as per the fusion bomb but with less stability. Fusion has always been just marketing to do more basic research. Now this research is well worth it but if it is safe nuclear energy that addresses the problem of nuclear waste then we could've had molten salt thorium breeder reactors for a fraction of the cost of fusion research.
      As to medicines and advancement in medicine. We are limited by corporate greed, by the pharmaceutical companies. You only have to look at Glybera, a genetic treatment where a single treatment completely cures a rare but debilitating disease, the research was initially at Canadian Universities funded by taxpayers, but the pharmaceuticals paid for the testing. However since a single shot is a complete cure and the disease is rare, they priced the drug at a million US a dose, only one patient was able to afford it so they discontinued the drug selling their stock of 30 doses at an euro a dose. There are still people out there with the condition but the drug is shelved and no competitors are allowed to produce it. Now Novartis is announcing the release of a genetic treatment at two million US a dose for similar reasons. Until we can get past the profit motive in our medical care, we can not ever reach the wonders promised by Star Trek.
      As to antimatter. I do not understand why people think it would be a marvelous energy source particularly for a spaceship. The concept of magnetic containment requires the antimatter to be charged and in truth production of antimatter other than charged subatomic particles has yet to be addressed. This means the entire concept of magnetic containment defeats any chance of storing antimatter in any densities other than a limited number of subatomic particles. Even if we manage to produce antimatter aluminium which would require stellar scale fusion in antimatter stars and then used magnetic eddy forces to contain the antimatter aluminium, a sudden acceleration to the storage containment as would be expected of spaceships could breach containment. The cost of producing antimatter can be addressed because cosmic rays are essentially near light speed subatomic particles si they produce antimatter when hitting molecules of air in our upper atmosphere and these particles get trapped albeit in low densities in the Van Allen belt due to Earth's magnetism so we could actually harvest narural antimatter without putting any energy into it's production. However the storage of antimatter is the problem even if we make advances in storage, antimatter of any usable amounts for energy production is just a bomb that could go off at any moment.
      As to faster than light travel. There are ideas such as the Alcubeire drive and wormholes but face it, FTL is a plot device. Star Trek would be a very different show if it took 10 to 1,000 years in suspended animation to reach the nearest star.

    • @cactusmann5542
      @cactusmann5542 5 лет назад +1

      @@johnwang9914 The ships AI interaction is one thing(doesnt stem from computing , processors or coding, rather than auditory data analysis), but as the numbers, pads and everything else computer related(there was even something about data's number of cycles), have surpassed the "standards" of star trek, the next generation, and those of that era.....
      As for the energy, somehow thats a weird way of putting it. But i do remember the suns rays do have an output of 1,7 kw per square meter. Not sure why would you use 'per cubic meter", but the data seems off.

  • @MiniLemmy
    @MiniLemmy 6 лет назад +236

    (Raise of eyebrow) Fascinating!!

  • @marcdb1412
    @marcdb1412 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you. Very interesting. Indeed.

  • @OceanbornAngel
    @OceanbornAngel 3 года назад +12

    What people tend to forget is that a lot of the technology in the early Star Trek series was actually based on real technology and technological theories. Would not shock me that they actually asked about Transparent aluminum while writing the script for Star Trek IV. The used to always want their technology in the shows, movies to have some grounding in real technological feasibility.

    • @dangeary2134
      @dangeary2134 Год назад

      All things being entwined…
      Sapphire is aluminum oxides, and other precious gems are contaminated with all manner of things that give them their distinctive colors.
      So, making aluminum “glass” really isn’t too far from that.
      The military has used sapphire lenses in the noses of smart and laser guided bombs for a long time.
      The sapphire won’t even get a scratch if it falls through a sandstorm!

    • @nicholaskehler9169
      @nicholaskehler9169 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@dangeary2134 corundum is second only to diamonds in terms of hardness among gemstones it is also inherently transparent and as you said Aluminum Oxide.
      Rubies/Sapphires quite literally are Transparent Aluminum.

    • @dangeary2134
      @dangeary2134 6 месяцев назад

      Exactly!
      The military has been using grown crystals of sapphire for the nose of smart bombs for years.
      They won’t abrade, even in a sandstorm!
      I would think it would be beyond prohibitively expensive to “grow” crystals large enough to be used as windows!

  • @JonnBenny
    @JonnBenny 5 лет назад +160

    Thanks again for all the great ideas Gene, RIP you magnificent bastard.

    • @JonnBenny
      @JonnBenny 5 лет назад +11

      @Steve I'm sure you're right, I was more paying an overarching homage to the idea of Star Trek and and the cool things that came about because of it.

    • @duckduckgoismuchbetter
      @duckduckgoismuchbetter 5 лет назад

      Transparent aluminum was invented in 1960 and was used by the US military for decades.

    • @ORagnar
      @ORagnar 5 лет назад +1

      @@duckduckgoismuchbetter "Transparent aluminum was invented in 1960 and was used by the US military for decades."
      Humans get very emotional over these things. A curious species.

  • @NotaVampyre111
    @NotaVampyre111 5 лет назад +208

    I'm looking forward to the next big step, transparent aluminum foil!

    • @bobh.6108
      @bobh.6108 5 лет назад +7

      Ya, you may be holding your breath for a very, very long time on that one.

    • @phalanx3803
      @phalanx3803 5 лет назад +12

      that would be cool. let you wrap up food to cook an still see it not needing to partially unwrap it to see how well it is cooked

    • @baburik
      @baburik 5 лет назад +40

      Yes, I don't want aliens see my tinfoil hat!

    • @GlidingBoulder
      @GlidingBoulder 5 лет назад +2

      As a whiney snooty crybaby my way or the highway unintelligent bigot american who doesn't know the history of the naming of the element and wants to force the rest of the world, (British accent) Its bloody ALUMINIUM ya koont!
      All jokes aside, can it not be both?
      Also, the other conversations about the pronunciation are hilarious, and make me feel better about being American.

    • @NotaVampyre111
      @NotaVampyre111 5 лет назад +4

      @@GlidingBoulder Back in the day when they used to actually used to teach history, not rewrite it, I learned that early Americans deliberately changed the spelling and pronunciation of words to separate themselves from England. This is part of the reason why things are the way they are.

  • @SciHeartJourney
    @SciHeartJourney 3 года назад +7

    "No appointment!? I've traveled MILLIONS of miles to get here". 🤣
    All I've ever wanted is to work in the belly of a starship with Scotty.

  • @joestoobie3655
    @joestoobie3655 3 года назад +52

    When I first watched that movie, I always wondered why it had to be transparent to put the whale in it.

    • @Bagledog5000
      @Bagledog5000 3 года назад +5

      Whales dislike sensory deprivation.
      No I don't actually know if this is true or not, but at least the writers could have thrown us a bone eh?

    • @mediapc4747
      @mediapc4747 3 года назад +33

      Great observation, it would have saved a few $s on the fx budget too. I think it's partly down to quantum physics, the whale only exists while it is being observed.

    • @Bhatt_Hole
      @Bhatt_Hole 3 года назад

      @@mediapc4747 Underrated!

    • @mydogbrian4814
      @mydogbrian4814 3 года назад +6

      - Why did the whales need transparent aluminum in the storage tanks, you ask?
      - Becaus no sensible whale is going to travel several hundred light years bottled up in Tourists Class. Would you? Nuff said!

    • @catatonicbug7522
      @catatonicbug7522 3 года назад +14

      It didn't need to be transparent. They just needed the material to make a holding tank, but had no money to buy it. Offering the plexiglass manufacturer the formula was what he used to pay for the materials needed.

  • @douglaswayne8916
    @douglaswayne8916 5 лет назад +9

    I saw the Star Trek movie featuring transparent aluminum back in the 1980's but never thought this technology would be reality in my lifetime.
    Amazing!

    • @ThatBoomerDude56
      @ThatBoomerDude56 3 года назад

      The problem is that transparent aluminum was invented BEFORE Star Trek IV.
      Not many people knew about it. But Star Trek got it from the real world. Not the other way around.

  • @anticommunist5368
    @anticommunist5368 5 лет назад +114

    Thanks to Montgomery Scott Chief Engineer of USS ENTERPRISE NCC-1701 A

    • @McShave
      @McShave 5 лет назад +5

      I think you mean thanks to Montgomery Scott Chief Engineer of the H.M.S Bounty.

    • @putinscat1208
      @putinscat1208 4 года назад

      @@McShave He may be talking posthumously.

    • @thomasjonharrison6575
      @thomasjonharrison6575 4 года назад +1

      One in the same. Also refered to in DS9

    • @cholodelrosari0543
      @cholodelrosari0543 4 года назад +1

      Thank God, at least he was not charged by the temporal agents with temporal prime directive

    • @PF-gi9vv
      @PF-gi9vv 3 года назад +2

      I wish Scotty had gave us transporter technology instead, and then we wouldn’t have to listen to Greta Thunberg & the celebrities moan about saving the planet and not flying in planes BS.

  • @AutodidactEngineer
    @AutodidactEngineer 3 года назад +7

    *I want my phone screen to have this instead of scratches at level 6 with deeper grooves at level 7*

    • @ak_GI
      @ak_GI 3 года назад

      Jerry is that you ? 😂

    • @AutodidactEngineer
      @AutodidactEngineer 3 года назад

      @@ak_GI 🤫

    • @robertpaws
      @robertpaws 3 года назад

      My screen is deeper grooves at level 1

  • @hi-tych
    @hi-tych 3 года назад +1

    That show was ahead of its time. Thanks to that show, we have cellphones.

    • @Tryst46
      @Tryst46 3 года назад

      No doubt Scotty had something to do with that as well. He's been secretly breaking the Prime Directive for a long time now.

  • @TheMilitantHorse
    @TheMilitantHorse 6 лет назад +239

    Long live and prosper, Scotty. You are a hero.

    • @martybiff2324
      @martybiff2324 6 лет назад +25

      Its "Live long and prosper"

    • @frankstrawnation
      @frankstrawnation 6 лет назад +4

      Doesn't matter. Scotty is dead anyway.

    • @matthewhall7976
      @matthewhall7976 6 лет назад +2

      Discord or trixxie are awesome..that is all..lol

    • @ziiofswe
      @ziiofswe 6 лет назад +8

      frankstrawnation: Nah, he's just stuck in a transporter buffer somewhere.

    • @g.e.o.r.g.e...
      @g.e.o.r.g.e... 6 лет назад

      RIP Chekov

  • @ryandbrotherton9335
    @ryandbrotherton9335 6 месяцев назад

    That's totally awesome

  • @georgehenry8391
    @georgehenry8391 3 месяца назад

    Good video, entertaining and informative without rambling on about high school science or dogmatically preaching about questionable theories currently in vogue. I get frustrated with a lot of the sci and tech content on YT, but appreciated this presentation.

  • @adamsbeforeaftercreations7625
    @adamsbeforeaftercreations7625 4 года назад +51

    This would make aircraft windscreens way better to take care of. The plexiglass we use scratch’s sooooo easy

    • @TheKhopesh
      @TheKhopesh 3 года назад +3

      You'd probably want to stick with plexiglass, and just have a replaceable ALON laminant layer over it for scratch resistance.
      Keep in mind, this is essentially a very dense and heavy "pseudo-ceramic" material.
      And it's EXPENSIVE.
      A thin replaceable layer for the surface properties would be far preferable to a solid chunk of something that weighs more than compressed fired clay.

    • @madmagyver9981
      @madmagyver9981 3 года назад +1

      It's probably not plexiglass but tuffac, a bullet proof plastic. Most plastics are not good for impacts.

    • @jonny555ive
      @jonny555ive 3 года назад

      Why not just make the whole plane out of it?

  • @simonkawasaki4229
    @simonkawasaki4229 6 лет назад +75

    That’s the ticket, laddie.

  • @user-xk4vt9ye8j
    @user-xk4vt9ye8j 6 месяцев назад +1

    We have Scotty to thank for this invention.

  • @nathanbowerman8710
    @nathanbowerman8710 3 года назад +1

    It seems that Scotty really did give them the formula!

  • @jrpierce010
    @jrpierce010 6 лет назад +269

    They need to rename it scott’s glass

    • @feralteddy
      @feralteddy 5 лет назад +11

      It is...it is...It is green.

    • @spock7945
      @spock7945 5 лет назад +3

      sigh! Scotty was one of my favourite colleagues! #JamesDoohan

    • @LieshaCichol
      @LieshaCichol 5 лет назад +2

      Yup, considering Scotty's would probably earn wrath of certain tissue paper manufacturer :-p

    • @mercenarymike1397
      @mercenarymike1397 5 лет назад +1

      good idea

    • @gkv633
      @gkv633 5 лет назад +3

      Scotty's glass would be more apt.

  • @CRAZYHORSE19682003
    @CRAZYHORSE19682003 5 лет назад +26

    Thank you, Mr. Scott, for your contribution to the sciences.

  • @davidkugel
    @davidkugel 3 года назад +3

    Amazing. Star Trek IV is my favorite Star Trek movie. It seems that if a human can imagine something like transparent Al, then it is just a matter of time before some smart person figures out how to do it. I am hoping for Faster Than Light Travel in my lifetime. It could happen. Maybe a young Zephram Cochrane is alive today.

  • @hdylta
    @hdylta 5 месяцев назад +1

    Here we are 5 years later. I still think making windshields out of this would be amazing.

  • @edwardhendersen5643
    @edwardhendersen5643 4 года назад +344

    I'm thinking transparent aluminium rims on my car😀

    • @jerrykinnin7941
      @jerrykinnin7941 4 года назад +13

      Semi truck windows.

    • @afoxwithahat7846
      @afoxwithahat7846 4 года назад +3

      Amazing

    • @67Spectre
      @67Spectre 4 года назад +49

      A transparent engine block would be cool

    • @afoxwithahat7846
      @afoxwithahat7846 4 года назад +3

      @@67Spectre Not so... if more reliable yes, if not just a far from cheap thing, but in games would be nice

    • @67Spectre
      @67Spectre 4 года назад +12

      I just meant to be able to see the parts moving obviously you'd need iron sleeves, and there would be oil splashing everywhere, but would look good for a little while

  • @ColAngus
    @ColAngus 6 лет назад +272

    So that's what Wonder Woman's jet is made of.

    • @KRAFTWERK2K6
      @KRAFTWERK2K6 6 лет назад +42

      It's probably an aluminum alloy that uses 20% transparent aluminum and 80% invisible aluminum.

    • @macnudd
      @macnudd 6 лет назад +43

      I wish her clothes were made of it.

    • @CuongNguyen-le5ic
      @CuongNguyen-le5ic 6 лет назад +1

      ruclips.net/video/7YXxI-aeiaA/видео.html

    • @lasarith2
      @lasarith2 6 лет назад +2

      Col. Angus somehow I just can’t see that, that’s the material...

    • @KennyRider137
      @KennyRider137 6 лет назад +3

      +macnuth check out Lynda Carter's rock and roll fantasy TV special. She wears a see through body suit and dances to KISS.

  • @rogueseadog5835
    @rogueseadog5835 2 года назад

    This is the first amazing thing I’ve seen from science fiction that’s not just “kind-of plausible” but is actually real in all its properties and exactly like the movie.

    • @Body_Model
      @Body_Model 2 года назад

      Transparent aluminum was created over 13 years ago and it's still not used in products.

  • @JakobusVdL
    @JakobusVdL 3 года назад +4

    Thanks for coming back to share the formula Scotty and Kirk - lets hope transparent aluminium will last long, and make the manufacturers prosper!

  • @Reaper4367
    @Reaper4367 6 лет назад +26

    Cheers for sharing that mate. What an incredible product!

  • @larrymagee8758
    @larrymagee8758 5 лет назад +43

    As Mr Spock would say, " Fascinating."

  • @Leavon
    @Leavon 6 месяцев назад

    Amazing

  • @temesib
    @temesib 6 месяцев назад

    appreciate the brevity of this video

  • @norevenge11
    @norevenge11 5 лет назад +76

    “It will take years to figure out this matrix.”
    “Yes, but you’ll be rich beyond the dreams of avarice”

    • @WildfireEngineer
      @WildfireEngineer 4 года назад +4

      andrew blackwell but it did take years to figure it out aye? Lol

    • @hammer9856
      @hammer9856 3 года назад

      You living in it right now! Which pill did you take again, was it the red or the blue?

  • @tropicalwargaming688
    @tropicalwargaming688 5 лет назад +84

    Scientists be like: "I knew watching Star Trek will be useful one day"

    • @howardsmith9342
      @howardsmith9342 3 года назад +2

      They need to get busy on that warp drive. I want to go to Mars, but I don't want to take a year. An hour would be fine.

    • @Mgl1206
      @Mgl1206 3 года назад +1

      Howard Smith warp drives can be very dangerous. I’m looking more for Wormholes

    • @howardsmith9342
      @howardsmith9342 3 года назад +2

      @@Mgl1206 Unless you can create wormholes that will take you where you want to go, better stick with warp drives. You don't want to end up lost in the Delta Quadrant somewhere.

    • @tropicalwargaming688
      @tropicalwargaming688 3 года назад +1

      @@howardsmith9342 Encounter a race of aliens that will take your body parts

  • @barsaf9989
    @barsaf9989 3 года назад

    Can't wait to see this on some crazy super car in the near future.

  • @superjumpbros64
    @superjumpbros64 7 месяцев назад

    Cool

  • @zeroman614
    @zeroman614 6 лет назад +207

    Hello computer

    • @andrewwhite1793
      @andrewwhite1793 6 лет назад +3

      Steve Wohlford
      "hey Google, tell them about aluminium oxynitride"....😀

    • @Siege69m
      @Siege69m 6 лет назад +22

      Just use the keyboard.....

    • @UniformedDisorder
      @UniformedDisorder 6 лет назад +25

      Ach! A keyboard... how quaint.

    • @killosama72
      @killosama72 6 лет назад +11

      We could be altering the future!
      Why? How do we know he didn't invent the thing?

    • @bd8026
      @bd8026 6 лет назад +6

      Steve Wohlford
      COMPUTER!

  • @hudsonball4702
    @hudsonball4702 6 лет назад +124

    Pretty darn cool stuff. If only James Doohan was still alive to see his line become real.

    • @wkbassett
      @wkbassett 6 лет назад +6

      see what you did there and im impressed :P

    • @monkeymirror
      @monkeymirror 6 лет назад

      I'm pretty sure he wouldn't give two squirts a piss.

    • @atomicsquid9836
      @atomicsquid9836 6 лет назад

      He was. The stuff has been around since the 80s.

    • @GeekBoy03
      @GeekBoy03 6 лет назад +2

      he did. it's been around since the 90s and reported in an article from then in popular mechanics. i still have the artifice i clipped,

    • @ThisWhiteGuy
      @ThisWhiteGuy 6 лет назад +3

      Hudson Ball it's been real for decades. It's now public knowledge

  • @kaleoariola
    @kaleoariola 3 года назад +8

    This is awesome. I would love to see a whole vehicle made out of this!

  • @woodyrascel
    @woodyrascel 3 года назад

    colour me impressed!!!!

  • @Headlock123456789
    @Headlock123456789 6 лет назад +11

    That’s really cool! Thank you for sharing!

  • @DOHC2L
    @DOHC2L 6 лет назад +118

    That's the ticket Laddie...

  • @billrichards1965
    @billrichards1965 3 года назад

    Very interesting :)

  • @halomov1
    @halomov1 3 года назад +1

    Scotty would be proud.

  • @Sirvalorsax
    @Sirvalorsax 5 лет назад +225

    That settles it, James Doohan invented it. LOL!!!

    • @dennisrichards2540
      @dennisrichards2540 5 лет назад +11

      Should have called it Doohinium.

    • @JaybayJay
      @JaybayJay 5 лет назад +3

      Why not. He wrote the Klingon Language.

    • @slyseal2091
      @slyseal2091 5 лет назад +9

      @twopairsofaces You have no right to speak if the concept of irony eludes you.

    • @originaluddite
      @originaluddite 5 лет назад +4

      Love that scene. Love saying 'is it worth something to you laddy?'

    • @recoveringnewyorker2243
      @recoveringnewyorker2243 5 лет назад +3

      Dennis Richards How about “Scotinium”?

  • @whiteknightcat
    @whiteknightcat 5 лет назад +96

    The price of this will drop to pennies ... as soon as we can produce it in matter replicators.

    • @shizukaryujoukai2465
      @shizukaryujoukai2465 5 лет назад +1

      It's literally what your phone screen is made of

    • @whiteknightcat
      @whiteknightcat 5 лет назад +7

      @@shizukaryujoukai2465 Um ... no.

    • @thegodofalldragons
      @thegodofalldragons 5 лет назад +8

      But then we have to wait for replicators to become cheap.

    • @ritapoon9938
      @ritapoon9938 5 лет назад +9

      @@shizukaryujoukai2465 is that so Einstein? Throw your phone on the pavement without it being in a protective case and see how it works out for you.

    • @whiteknightcat
      @whiteknightcat 5 лет назад

      @@thegodofalldragons I was hoping you wouldn't catch on to that.

  • @seekfind9531
    @seekfind9531 3 года назад

    Yes. I want a new transparent aluminum phone screen! I volunteer myself!

  • @monsieurm6975
    @monsieurm6975 2 года назад

    Well, that’s really cool. And a nod to Star Trek IV, what a super Star Trek movie!