This tests your understanding of light | Optics puzzles 1

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
  • The barber pole effect of shining polarized light into sugar water.
    Next video: • How wiggling charges g...
    Steve Mould's video on the topic: • Why Sugar Always Twist...
    Help fund future projects: / 3blue1brown
    An equally valuable form of support is to simply share the videos.
    Thanks to Quinn Brodsky for setting up the demo and to the MIT Physics Instructional Resources Lab for their help and materials, especially Josh Wolfe and Caleb Bonyun.
    Thanks to these viewers for their contributions to translations
    German: Josh, jns-v
    Hebrew: Omer Tuchfeld
    Hungarian: MrExpert
    Indonesian: akhyarr
    Italian: Gabboronco
    Korean: @tebaioioo, Juhyung
    Persian: ah.202
    Russian: fedor, ilevinson
    Spanish: Marcelo Lynch
    ------------------
    These animations are largely made using a custom Python library, manim. See the FAQ comments here:
    3b1b.co/faq#manim
    github.com/3b1...
    github.com/Man...
    All code for specific videos is visible here:
    github.com/3b1...
    The music is by Vincent Rubinetti.
    www.vincentrub...
    vincerubinetti...
    open.spotify.c...
    ------------------
    3blue1brown is a channel about animating math, in all senses of the word animate. If you're reading the bottom of a video description, I'm guessing you're more interested than the average viewer in lessons here. It would mean a lot to me if you chose to stay up to date on new ones, either by subscribing here on RUclips or otherwise following on whichever platform below you check most regularly.
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Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @SteveMould
    @SteveMould Год назад +2889

    Can't wait for the final video! As always, your animations add so much clarity.

    • @berkekus7053
      @berkekus7053 Год назад +15

      Comment under steve mould for sale

    • @GooogleGoglee
      @GooogleGoglee Год назад +6

    • @didodido883
      @didodido883 Год назад

      They do.

    • @d.mort.
      @d.mort. Год назад +7

      Hey Steve, Dave here.
      I think a wonderful follow up to this video would be about why the polarizers in this video are in the wrong direction and the reasons behind the common misconception. I am an electrical engineer with a passion for light, I would be happy to collaborate!

    • @gregorywitcher5618
      @gregorywitcher5618 Год назад +1

      *helically twisted* clarity, my favorite.

  • @Epiminide
    @Epiminide Год назад +517

    Fun fact: Measuring the angle between the two filters can provide an estimation of the amount of sugar in the solution. This trick is applied to precisely evaluate the amount of sugar in wine grapes and must.
    These animations are awesome!

    • @seth094978
      @seth094978 Год назад +5

      Is that the brix percentage?

    • @Epiminide
      @Epiminide Год назад

      @@seth094978 I think Brix measurement is based on refraction properties rather than polarization. But I am far from being an expert in this field.. Let's wait if someone can clarify this point..

    • @rafael_l0321
      @rafael_l0321 Год назад +27

      @@seth094978 He is refering to a polarimeter, which uses a specific light frequency (to avoid the phenomenon shown in the video). As far as I know, °Brix (degrees, not %) is usually measured with a refractometer, but you can convert the concentration measured with a polarimeter to °Brix

    • @ricgreen1
      @ricgreen1 Год назад +4

      Could we use this technique create a non invasive glucose monitor for diabetics?

    • @amruthchangappa
      @amruthchangappa Год назад +14

      @@ricgreen1 I don't think so, you would still need a blood sample for the polarimeter, and blood has many other substances in it that would prevent this from working.

  • @cdenn016
    @cdenn016 Год назад +195

    I've studied light/matter interactions for 20 years, published papers and such, and had never seen this before. I was pleasantly surprised! I wouldn't have thought you'd see light via the side. How great
    The more you learn the more you realize you know next to NOTHING

    • @glenfoxh
      @glenfoxh Год назад +4

      Gene Simmons from Kiss said next to the same thing about women. The more you think you know about women, the less you really know. And that is one guy, who has likely been with a lot of different women in his life.

    • @91722854
      @91722854 Год назад

      do you mind sharing what your research is in and your link on google scholar? I do research in optics

    • @paveltroev8221
      @paveltroev8221 9 месяцев назад

      the lamp is set off the axis

    • @Eric-xh9ee
      @Eric-xh9ee 9 месяцев назад

      I did research in optics. This should be obvious to you if this was your profession.

  • @quinnphys
    @quinnphys Год назад +518

    Hey folks, Quinn here. Lots of people have been asking how they can make this demo themselves, so here’s how I built it:
    Materials:
    ⁃ Table sugar (sucrose)
    ⁃ Water
    ⁃ A glass tube that you can fill and seal, although it would be cool to experiment with different materials for the tube, since different material = different index of refraction. More on this in part 3 of the video. The tube should be long enough so that you can actually see the effect from the sides - our tube is 1 meter long, but you’d probably be able to see the effect with a ~0.5m tube. You also might want to make sure the tube is easy to open so you can clean it. See “Things to consider” for more. For the mini-demo, I just used a drinking glass! [FYI, the tube in this demo was custom-made for the MIT Physics Department. I’m not sure exactly where it came from or what type of glass it is exactly…]
    ⁃ A source of white, unpolarized light. We used a Dedo lamp, and if you make the demo as big as we did, you need a pretty powerful light source. For the mini-demo, I used my phone’s flashlight!
    ⁃ Two linear polarizing filters. You can get ‘em online pretty easily!
    Directions:
    ⁃ For our demo, we made a sugar solution of 300g of sugar per 400g of water. So, you should measure the volume of your tube and scale this ratio accordingly.
    ⁃ Boil the water and mix in the sugar until it’s dissolved.
    ⁃ Let the solution cool, then fill the tube with solution. Close up the tube.
    ⁃ Place the light source so it’s shining down the length of the tube, then place a filter between the light and the tube.
    ⁃ Place the other filter at the end of the tube.
    ⁃ Voila! You can rotate the first filter to see the whole spiral move up and down the tube, or you can rotate the last filter to see the color coming out of the end of the tube (and through the last filter) change.
    Things to consider:
    ⁃ You really want the tube to be clean before you start, since the solution can get moldy. If you look up close, you’ll actually see little floating things in the solution - those are some bacterial friends :)
    ⁃ We try to replace the sugar solution frequently so that the demo is clearer.
    ⁃ The shorter the tube is, the more concentrated you want the sugar solution to be in order to see a similar effect.
    ⁃ The amount of rotation of the polarization angle is proportional to the concentration of the solution (this is called the specific rotation!)
    ⁃ The light might get hot the longer you keep it on, so be careful! As always, observe sensible safety procedures.
    ⁃ You could do this with different sugars! Glucose would also rotate light to the right, but slightly less than sucrose. Fructose rotates light to the left!
    If you recreate this/do something else cool with it, I’d love to see!

    • @Pranshu_Agrawal
      @Pranshu_Agrawal Год назад +4

      Only 47 Likes and no replies? Thanks for this and for taking the time to build this!

    • @kredibled
      @kredibled Год назад +2

      It’s likely borosilicate glass, most scientific glass is. You’re likely able to find a local glass blower who could make the fillable tube but the caps might require some thought. Could just superglue a small glass plate to the ends 🤔

    • @Arc125
      @Arc125 Год назад

      Ordered filters to try this at home!

    • @R23874
      @R23874 Год назад +1

      Quinn, thank you so much for what you've built here. I greatly enjoyed this video, and it has rekindled my interest in studying optics.

    • @Crushnaut
      @Crushnaut Год назад +4

      Is LED light on your phone actually white light? When you split it, do you end up with the three specific wavelengths of light corresponding to wavelengths from each LED making up the white light? Either way, I think that would be a cool follow up to this. Use different light sources and see the effect. If you did use three wavelengths (rgb), how sharp would the drop from one colour to the next be? Would you get twisted lines around the tube for each colour or would there be areas dominated by each colour with gradient transitions?

  • @PowerhouseCell
    @PowerhouseCell Год назад +773

    Love to see Grant branching out. He's truly made an impact on all online education, not just math! ❤

    • @hanknew9685
      @hanknew9685 Год назад +15

      Omg yes this is getting into chemistry and enantiomers! Super excited to hear the math behind this

    • @TheNameOfJesus
      @TheNameOfJesus Год назад +11

      The universe is made with complex math, so his expertise will be amazing if he breaks into physics and similar subjects.

    • @theodorekim2148
      @theodorekim2148 Год назад +3

      @PowerhouseCell Wait you're the guy who makes biology videos with Manim! Love your channel!

    • @arvinderbali
      @arvinderbali Год назад

      Basically, maths is behind all, so u understand math, u understand all.

    • @TheNameOfJesus
      @TheNameOfJesus Год назад

      @@arvinderbali Maybe, but "maths" has been proven by Godel to be "incomplete" and therefore it seems unlikely that the universe is "incomplete." So there must be more to the universe than "maths."

  • @Nighthawkinlight
    @Nighthawkinlight Год назад +190

    What a beautiful demo setup!

    • @pierrefrebet5630
      @pierrefrebet5630 11 месяцев назад +1

      Hello @Nighthawkinlight ! Love your channel !

  • @ManuelBTC21
    @ManuelBTC21 Год назад +143

    A landmark in science communication. Thank you and congratulations.

    • @z0nx
      @z0nx Год назад

      Just some lads making videos.......................................................................................................................... !

  • @itishappy
    @itishappy Год назад +248

    I'm an optical engineer. I have solid intuitions about light. I still said "what?!" out-loud involuntarily when the lights dropped the first time.
    What an amazing video!

    • @Serizon_
      @Serizon_ Год назад +2

      it truly is an amazing video

    • @userJohnSmith
      @userJohnSmith Год назад +12

      Right there with you (optical and opto-mechanical) the angle is weird. You just don't anticipate the "rotation" to be so slow...

    • @KeithSmith42
      @KeithSmith42 Год назад

      Any chance this will replace separate RGB diodes someday?

    • @userJohnSmith
      @userJohnSmith Год назад +5

      @@KeithSmith42 Diodes replaced this actually. It's how LCD screens work.

    • @KeithSmith42
      @KeithSmith42 Год назад

      @@userJohnSmith So before RGB pixels were single tubes that used a filter to output the desired wavelength? I thought diodes replaced electron gun-based CRT screens

  • @tachoblade2071
    @tachoblade2071 Год назад +172

    This is like being at the center of the research table of grant, listening to the ideas and just absolutely loving your time learning. This is exactly what college/higher education needs to be, collaborative on a world level. Ofcourse, i am only a viewer and not a collaborator, but it just feels insanely amazing to be able to listen to this information

    • @TheArizus
      @TheArizus Год назад +3

      I 100% agree. As someone who's experienced maths olympiad camps my favourite part is the collaboration.

    • @imad8903
      @imad8903 10 месяцев назад

      me too @@TheArizus

  • @ricardopinho630
    @ricardopinho630 Год назад +40

    every video of this guy is a phd paper

  • @neiljudell1437
    @neiljudell1437 Год назад +83

    I first saw this in 1973, in Walter Lewin's class on vibrations & waves at MIT. Damn, he was a great lecturer.

    • @krissp8712
      @krissp8712 Год назад +8

      True, and yet as great as he was, Lewin still turned out to be misusing his role like a creep in the end.

    • @أحمدالدسوقي-ت9س
      @أحمدالدسوقي-ت9س Год назад

      Lewin is the best❤❤

  • @3blue1brown
    @3blue1brown  Год назад +641

    Part 2 is available now: ruclips.net/video/aXRTczANuIs/видео.htmlsi=m6DgY1ogMrwTRrUP
    Some viewers have asked about how to make this demo for themselves, and Quinn kindly wrote up the description below.
    Materials:
    ⁃ Table sugar (sucrose)
    ⁃ Water
    ⁃ A glass tube that you can fill and seal, although it would be cool to experiment with different materials for the tube, since different material = different index of refraction. More on this in part 3 of the video. The tube should be long enough so that you can actually see the effect from the sides - our tube is 1 meter long, but you’d probably be able to see the effect with a ~0.5m tube. You also might want to make sure the tube is easy to open so you can clean it. See “Things to consider” for more. For the mini-demo, I just used a drinking glass! [FYI, the tube in this demo was custom-made for the MIT Physics Department. I’m not sure exactly where it came from or what type of glass it is exactly…]
    ⁃ A source of white, unpolarized light. We used a Dedo lamp, and if you make the demo as big as we did, you need a pretty powerful light source. For the mini-demo, I used my phone’s flashlight!
    ⁃ Two linear polarizing filters. You can get ‘em online pretty easily!
    Directions:
    ⁃ For our demo, we made a sugar solution of 300g of sugar per 400g of water. So, you should measure the volume of your tube and scale this ratio accordingly.
    ⁃ Boil the water and mix in the sugar until it’s dissolved.
    ⁃ Let the solution cool, then fill the tube with solution. Close up the tube.
    ⁃ Place the light source so it’s shining down the length of the tube, then place a filter between the light and the tube.
    ⁃ Place the other filter at the end of the tube.
    ⁃ Voila! You can rotate the first filter to see the whole spiral move up and down the tube, or you can rotate the last filter to see the color coming out of the end of the tube change.
    Things to consider:
    ⁃ You really want the tube to be clean before you start, since the solution can get moldy. If you look up close, you’ll actually see little floating things in the solution - those are some bacterial friends :)
    ⁃ We try to replace the sugar solution frequently so that the demo is clearer.
    ⁃ The shorter the tube is, the more concentrated you want the sugar solution to be in order to see a similar effect.
    ⁃ The amount of rotation of the polarization angle is proportional to the concentration of the solution (this is called the specific rotation!)
    ⁃ The light might get hot the longer you keep it on, so be careful! As always, observe sensible safety procedures.
    ⁃ You could do this with different sugars! Glucose would also rotate light to the right, but slightly less than sucrose. Fructose rotates light to the left!

    • @GooogleGoglee
      @GooogleGoglee Год назад +2

    • @richardsmith3021
      @richardsmith3021 Год назад +13

      You should pin this.

    • @d.mort.
      @d.mort. Год назад +20

      Hey there, I have a fundamental correction to the visuals in this video. The polarizing filters are oriented incorrectly. When the polarizer is vertical, it will transmit horizontal and reflect vertical. It’s a common misconception, if you would like to hear more I would be happy to share! (I am an electrical engineer with a passion for light haha)
      PS these are some amazing quality videos!

    • @MatthiasBussonnier
      @MatthiasBussonnier Год назад

      +1 to this, it's hard to test with visible light polarizers, but you can find educational material that does it with ~10cm wavelength. The idea is that the electrons can move in the direction of the line filter can move sufficiently along this direction that the dissipate the energy of the light polarized in the same direction right ?

    • @GooogleGoglee
      @GooogleGoglee Год назад

      @@MatthiasBussonnier but please, fix your English first, I am not understanding what you are asking exactly

  • @lesconrads
    @lesconrads Год назад +17

    The visualisations is on another level. I am incredibly impressed by how you can create these moving 3D animations to show super complicated concepts.

  • @shayantanmukherjee243
    @shayantanmukherjee243 Год назад +2

    Sometimes, I wish I could just stay with Grant. I could do all his household chores, any work he would ask for and in return I would just learn from him, ponder about various questions in the universe, that's it and I'm just a happy man in this lifetime.....

  • @rex-up9ln
    @rex-up9ln Год назад +25

    Im a chemist. the dependence of angle of polarization by a chiral molecule on frequency of light is a very useful phenomenon which gives rise to cotton effect. Different molecules and even parts of a molecule have a different signature and thus the plot of angular dispersion vs. freq can help identify a molecule and functional or structural motifs. See Circular Dichorism spectroscopy

    • @ENCHANTMEN_
      @ENCHANTMEN_ Год назад +1

      How does the chirality cause the twisting even though the molecules might be in any orientation? My intuition would be ones facing the opposite direction cause it to twist the opposite way, but clearly that's not the case here

    • @tomc.5704
      @tomc.5704 Год назад

      @@ENCHANTMEN_ I'd love to know too -- I don't have the intuition for this at all.
      I'm trying to use my hands to represent chirality / circular polarization, with my thumbs representing the direction of travel and the curl of my fingers as the twist. It seems to make sense -- if you had an equal number of left hand and right hand chiral sugars (represented as both right and left hands with the thumbs pointing in the same direction) then the twist would cancel out.
      But it's also really easy to get the direction of twist to cancel out with one hand. Just turn your thumb to point the other direction.
      So what's different about pointing your hand in the opposite direction, and light hitting the sugar molecule from a different angle (ie the opposite side)?

    • @MarkFord-k4z
      @MarkFord-k4z Год назад

      @@ENCHANTMEN_ The light does not just interact with a single molecule, so you can consider an average of all the molecules that the light interacts with being equivalent to averaging one molecule over all orientations.
      A chiral molecule averaged over all orientations cannot be superimposed a similar average for the other enantiomer - essentially the average is still chiral.
      Plane polarised light can be equivalently described as a balanced sum of right and left helically polarised light.
      The sample will interact differently with right and left helically (circularly) polarised light, which leads to the twist in the polarisation plane.

  • @aryasaktiflister_aw
    @aryasaktiflister_aw Год назад +4

    I came to this video as someone who only vaguely remembers some HS optical physics so I didn't expect to be too intrigued. Instead, that animation and explanation moved mo to the verge of tears. So beautiful and curiosity-enabling

  • @2Sor2Fig
    @2Sor2Fig Год назад +8

    I remember learning about chirality in Chemistry 201. Most of the time I'm mostly along for the ride, but today it did feel intuitive. Learning from you has completely changed my view of mathematics, and I thank you for that.

  • @sainadh7
    @sainadh7 Год назад +2

    Beautiful experiment. As someone who worked in spectroscopy with chiral molecules, I must say this is a must demonstration in graduate classrooms. The experiment has refravtive index, polarisations, optical rotation due to chiral molecules, all playing their role simultaneously.

  • @matheusrossetto5091
    @matheusrossetto5091 Год назад +4

    I saw this video as one of the great documents some immense scientist from the 19th century left as his legacy. What youre doing is just incredible, a friend of mine and I literally chose our graduation courses (Mathematics for him, Mech. Eng. for me), greatly thanks to your influence during our high school. Thank you for your ridiculously amazing work!

  • @ntq1ty
    @ntq1ty 6 месяцев назад +1

    I love how attentive and interested the cat is that's watching the home experiment at 6:45 😻

  • @bandana_girl6507
    @bandana_girl6507 Год назад +8

    Having played around with a lot of polarizing filters and looked through a ton of information about how it works with scattering, I have built up an intuition, and I am really excited to see how you make it easier to understand.

  • @rjkirkland8659
    @rjkirkland8659 Год назад +2

    This is better than Christmas...I love these very tangible, available examples of the complexity in the world and how it leads to fascinating experiences.

  • @TheArizus
    @TheArizus Год назад +12

    A day with a 3blue1brown video is always great but a day with 2 uploads is exceptional!

  • @ltmcolen
    @ltmcolen Год назад

    You have a gift and I am so grateful to watch this without paying you any money.

  • @claaaaams
    @claaaaams Год назад +10

    This is such a great video with the way it's setting up other discussions. Thank you for making physics accessible!!!

  • @abraxas2658
    @abraxas2658 Год назад +1

    The way you mentioned the answers without explicitly stating the methods really jogged my brain in an exciting way. Being able to think about twisting polarized light and angles of refraction together really gave me an AHA moment that saying "polarized light twisted at a sufficient angle from a surface would experience total internal reflection" just wouldn't have provided

  • @davekwcc
    @davekwcc Год назад +4

    You have such a gift at explaining complicated subjects in interesting and engaging ways. Thanks for another excellent video!

  • @primenumberbuster404
    @primenumberbuster404 Год назад +2

    Steve Mould and Grant Sanderson has the best therapy voice of all time. ;)

  • @Taxodium-d2j
    @Taxodium-d2j Год назад +27

    Grant is trying something new, adding a bit of physics experiments to the recipe! Glad to see that the channel is looking towards a bit of variety. Not that the usual maths animations were bad, they were exceptional as ever, but this is great to exploit the viz towards more intertwined maths and physics, I love it. Keep it up, Grant!

  • @PhysicswithElliot
    @PhysicswithElliot Год назад +1

    My jaw dropped when the spiral rainbow appeared. So freakin cool!

  • @iainmackenzieUK
    @iainmackenzieUK Год назад +25

    I am a British Physics teacher working in China. I really appreciate the questions you ask and how you ask them/ explore ways of answering. gets to the core of what we are trying to encourage in our students.
    Great work

    • @Ninjaeule97
      @Ninjaeule97 Год назад

      What made you move to China and work there?

    • @李某-c6h
      @李某-c6h Год назад

      I just learned about optical isomerism in A-level chemistry, and I'm not sure if it's related to this video.

    • @iainmackenzieUK
      @iainmackenzieUK Год назад +1

      @@Ninjaeule97 The question really is "why would I ever move back?" :)
      Lovely students, interesting culture, many varied daily challenges, the money is pretty good.

    • @iainmackenzieUK
      @iainmackenzieUK Год назад

      @@李某-c6h from what I recall of my chem I think it is very much linked...

    • @Ninjaeule97
      @Ninjaeule97 Год назад

      @@iainmackenzieUK Glad that you enjoy your life there. I just haven't heared of many westerns move to Asia and choose China instead of one of the more democratic (and wealthier) countries in that region. So I had to ask.

  • @TesserId
    @TesserId Год назад +2

    Ooooooooh, the colors. No, seriously; it's really beautiful.

  • @gradientO
    @gradientO Год назад +34

    3b1b physics videos are a delight to see

  • @avoirdupois1
    @avoirdupois1 Год назад +1

    What a fabulous demo. I would have loved to see this kind of display when I was taking college physics. The coordination between the rotation angle of the polarization, the brightness of the output color, all coordinated. Brilliant. This reminded me strongly of Feyneman's book, QED. Thanks Grant!

  • @Roanmonster
    @Roanmonster Год назад +4

    I am very much using this video in my classes, and my heart jumped a little when I saw you could do the demo yourself! We are adding optics back into our curriculum (highschool physics) and this will be so interesting to see

    • @dubscheckum8246
      @dubscheckum8246 11 месяцев назад

      This is way beyond any highschool or AP course

  • @Inspirator_AG112
    @Inspirator_AG112 Год назад +2

    This is the first physics video I have seen from this channel.

  • @TeaDrinkingGuy
    @TeaDrinkingGuy Год назад +3

    I have never seen this phenomenon before, which is a surprise because I love Steve’s videos. What a beautiful phenomenon that’s quite easy to replicate! Seeing this in science class as a kid would have seemed like magic.

  • @pamaramb
    @pamaramb Год назад +1

    I insist. This guy deserves the Nobel Prize in Education. And given that it doesn't exist, he also deserves it to be created.

  • @worldhaseverything
    @worldhaseverything Год назад +4

    Thanks for lighting me to this new knowledge.

  • @kruksog
    @kruksog Год назад

    I love this gathering of a couple of my very favorite RUclipsrs.

  • @HomieSeal
    @HomieSeal Год назад +4

    Oh nice, glad to see a new 3B1B video!

  • @lotofAlexa1221
    @lotofAlexa1221 Год назад +209

    Quantum physics lets go

    • @geekjokes8458
      @geekjokes8458 Год назад +12

      well, ultimately it should be explained by quantum mechanics but i think classical EM would be able to solve this
      or maybe it's necessary for the 3rd question, idk

    • @dilation1057
      @dilation1057 Год назад +5

      I don’t think quantum mechanics is REALLY required at a deep level most concepts such as chirality, refraction and polarisation can generally can be solved using the wave theory of light but for the third question i really doubt only optics can help. Overall speaking this problem really does some need of quantum mechanics.

    • @iddomargalit-friedman3897
      @iddomargalit-friedman3897 Год назад +2

      I think classical EM is probably enough here

    • @shrill8239
      @shrill8239 Год назад

      ​​@@geekjokes8458I am thinking it much more related to the optical properties of the material in consideration.... idk too?😅

    • @stevenfallinge7149
      @stevenfallinge7149 Год назад +1

      Not everything is quantum magic/woo/mystery or blah blah blah.* Too many people think "quantum" and start thinking like it's magic instead of actual science.
      *(of course, technically everything is quantum, a detail many also miss)

  • @ZbyszekJot
    @ZbyszekJot Год назад

    Man, you deserve a Nobel just fot those animations!

  • @logenninefinger3420
    @logenninefinger3420 Год назад +5

    Very nice topic! When Math meets Physics, things get interesting :)

  • @kegandellinger7670
    @kegandellinger7670 2 месяца назад

    This is amazing work. Stuff like this allows people to truly understand the physics. Very cool.

  • @julianwalford
    @julianwalford Год назад +2

    Wow! I’ve loved your videos for quite some time, @3blue1brown, but I’ve never felt so excited as just now seeing this teaser. I did a PhD and postdoc in optics 20 years ago, in areas very close what you’ve shown here. This is the clearest and most beautiful video I’ve seen on this topic and I am already learning something I didn’t know before. Thank you so much for everything that you for maths and physics education around the globe!

  • @fluiditynz
    @fluiditynz Год назад

    That's pretty cool. took me just past half way, I paused for some seconds and the rest of it was confirmations but explained so much better than I could.

  • @taiconan8857
    @taiconan8857 Год назад +7

    QUINN BRODSKY DESERVES MAJOR PROPS!
    *What* an idea and solid execution of said demo! We likely wouldn't have had this video *without* her perspective. Thank you for returning to this in *force* 3B1B! And including Steve Mould was just icing on the cake~ 💎

  • @AlphaPhoenixChannel
    @AlphaPhoenixChannel Год назад +1

    yup - i'm hooked. I was torn between some kind of stress-in-the-glass-polarization, something having to do with polarization dependent reflection, and a vague un-thought-out concept of polarized scattering like the dark band 90 degrees from the sun... sounds like it's the third and i should think harder! can't wait to see the rest. In retrospect those first two don't work at all because the polarized twisting light is only traveling axially... until it scatters... hmmm...

  • @160p2GHz
    @160p2GHz Год назад +4

    As a polarimetrist-- this is so great! I'm so exited for these videos. You and Steve Mould are my favourite STEM communicators (and not just because you have both covered polarization multiple times). So exited for this series (And thanks to Quinn for coming up with this!)

  • @marcelofalcaodeoliveira4022
    @marcelofalcaodeoliveira4022 Год назад +1

    Impressive experiment! So simple and so deep in knowledge! Mind blowing! Congratulations for the videos!

  • @Erosis
    @Erosis Год назад +4

    Holy mother of god this is great! Optics was one of my weakest subjects in physics. It felt like a lot of it was just "this is how it is." I'm so excited to follow this series. I feel embarrassed, though, that as someone with a degree in chemistry that I didn't even consider the chirality of the sugar. I've used polarimeters in lab! Duh!

  • @kyoto9916
    @kyoto9916 Год назад

    This concept is pretty simple and just another beautiful display of the properties of the universe unfolding through our ideas for setups.

  • @PhilBoswell
    @PhilBoswell Год назад +3

    Subtitle nitpick at 6:04: s/weekly/weakly/
    Very much looking forward to the next video 👍

  • @Kitastroboy
    @Kitastroboy Год назад +1

    These animations and narration are sublime.

  • @ManishaPatel-sl8dp
    @ManishaPatel-sl8dp Год назад +4

    This is a phenomenon occurring due to optical activity of sugar. Known as optical isomerism. If a compound is optically active , it will bend light to a certain degree. I don’t know why this wasn’t mentioned in the video.

  • @philipbutler
    @philipbutler Год назад

    how you ambushed him with the question was perfect👌🏽

  • @gallium-gonzollium
    @gallium-gonzollium Год назад +7

    My feeling for question 3 could be due to the tube acting like a prism, scattering different light at slightly different directions, magnified by the lens effect of the cylindrical tube.

  • @Kazner0h
    @Kazner0h Год назад

    Educational youtube is so enriching. I'm so grateful for this content.

  • @AnExPor
    @AnExPor Год назад +5

    Yahhhh! Don't always like a cliffhanger but in this case, it means more 3B1B videos. Can't wait!

  • @adamwhitaker7435
    @adamwhitaker7435 Год назад

    Like the twist in dna or a gyroscope tracing the turn of the planet axis. Beautiful.

  • @DrDeuteron
    @DrDeuteron Год назад +3

    0:18 Your linear polarizing filter has a little arrow (vector: direction, Y_(1, m )) showing the filter's alignment. It should be a double headed arrow b/c linear polarization is a tensor alignment (no direction, Y_(2, +/-2))

  • @JTCF
    @JTCF 11 месяцев назад +1

    We were told about refraction that changes the direction of light depending on its frequency... Now we're getting to twist! This is going to be so cool!

  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam Год назад +4

    Didnt expect to see Blue's upload right on the start of September, cant wait to see another next month or in 2 months..

    • @RubixB0y
      @RubixB0y Год назад +1

      Comes across kinda passive-aggressive when there hasn't even been enough time to watch the video before posting that comment.
      I appreciate every video whenever it comes out because he puts quality first.

  • @aSpyIntheHaus
    @aSpyIntheHaus Год назад

    Holy Moley! This has Dunning Krueger'd me (You don't know, what you didn't know but we're confident that what you knew was sufficient until you learn something new) in such a wonderful way.

  • @cactuskiller3558
    @cactuskiller3558 Год назад +4

    Like for "Essence of topology"

  • @joelluth6384
    @joelluth6384 Год назад +1

    As always, your visualizations are beautiful in their elegance and simplicity, and really help to explain the concepts. Well done.

  • @d.lawrencemiller5755
    @d.lawrencemiller5755 Год назад +11

    I was guessing that the curvature of the pipe has something to do with the diagonal stripes. I was wondering if it would look different in a square tube. Looking forward to understanding the rest of this video series so I can make a hypothesis about what a square tube full of syrup would look like

  • @eldarr0uge482
    @eldarr0uge482 11 месяцев назад +1

    I've studied that at uni, went through all the calculations and stuff and conducted the experiment (as a matter of fact it was my optics lab exam) so I knew exactly what was going to happen but I got to say, the visuals and animations are breathtaking !

    • @tommyjs1992
      @tommyjs1992 8 месяцев назад

      can i ask what type of light can someone make this with? im trying to replicate this and im missing this piece of information. Would a very brigth led light work?

  • @d.mort.
    @d.mort. Год назад +35

    I can’t find my old correction so I am reposting it here:
    Hey there, I have a fundamental correction to the visuals in this video. The polarizing filters are oriented incorrectly. When the polarizer is vertical, it will transmit horizontal and reflect vertical. It’s a common misconception, if you would like to hear more I would be happy to share! (I am an electrical engineer with a passion for light haha)
    PS these are some amazing quality videos!
    Edit 1 for clarification:
    An experiment I performed in undergrad involved a square with equally spaced vertical wires. We placed it between a transmitter and receiver (transmitting vertically polarized EM waves, maybe 3GHz but I don’t recall). When the wires aligned with the direction of polarization, the receiver signal dropped drastically and vice versa.

    • @TheGreatAtario
      @TheGreatAtario Год назад +4

      Isn't this just labeling the same thing with a different word?

    • @ghislainbugnicourt3709
      @ghislainbugnicourt3709 Год назад +3

      That's interesting ! A quick convincing argument is that when the electrical field oscillates along the stripes it induces currents so the light is reflected like on a metal.
      If a polarizer has an arrow, what's the convention then ? Should it show the orientation of stripes or the polarization you obtain ?

    • @d.mort.
      @d.mort. Год назад +2

      The arrow is a good indicator. I would say a vertical arrow to denote the direction it allows to pass through, but the lines should be perpendicular to that arrow.
      An experiment I did in undergrad involved a square with equally spaced vertical wires. We placed it between a transmitter and receiver (transmitting vertically polarized EM waves, maybe 3GHz but I don’t recall). When the wires aligned with the direction of polarization, the receiver signal dropped drastically and vice versa.

    • @The_Canonical_Ensemble
      @The_Canonical_Ensemble Год назад +3

      Who said that the vertical lines on the polarizers represented the orientation of the wires?

    • @ghislainbugnicourt3709
      @ghislainbugnicourt3709 Год назад +1

      @@The_Canonical_Ensemble Well, that's how we perceived it at least.
      If I see a drawing of, say, a fence with vertical lines I'm not gonna guess that the physical planks they represent are horizontal.

  • @CYI3ERPUNK
    @CYI3ERPUNK Год назад +1

    beautiful and fascinating ; well done ; looking forward to the rest of this indeed

  • @pythonboi5816
    @pythonboi5816 9 месяцев назад +3

    Guys look a multi colored LED

  • @zach4505
    @zach4505 10 месяцев назад

    So humble. Grant refers to the beautifully illustrated and insightful animations as mere cartoons

  • @stevepittman3770
    @stevepittman3770 Год назад +12

    1:48 Ok, now I want a floor lamp filled with sugar water with a slowly rotating polarizing filter. Also I wonder what this would look like if you mirrored the far end so none of the light escapes out the top - would the light twist back to the original orientation and cancel out the apparent spiral of colors?

    • @andrewharrison8436
      @andrewharrison8436 Год назад

      Yes please!
      As to your question - interesting - it would obviously make things brighter! I think each colour could be regarded as a bolt thread with a different pitch. Then the mirror would send each colour back down the same thread. It would then reassemble to one polarisation at the lamp end.

    • @timp2751
      @timp2751 Год назад +1

      The light will continue to twist in the same direction (relative to direction of travel) so more likely to end up with a pattern of sort of rhombusy nature as the returning light and outbound light contribute different imbalanced spectra to what eventually makes it out of the side of the tube at any point

  • @aritradhar1271
    @aritradhar1271 Год назад

    the visualizations add so much depth to the explanations, actually awesome stuff.

  • @bryanchaves5691
    @bryanchaves5691 Год назад +11

    Great content. Keep up the insane work 😊

    • @Dudleymiddleton
      @Dudleymiddleton Год назад

      What do you mean "Insane"? Do you actually know what that fucking word means? I am sick to the teeth of seeing and hearing it everywhere. Mental illness is a very serious subject and this is extremely offensive.

  • @joyboricua3721
    @joyboricua3721 Год назад

    It's beautiful
    It's like a physical model of complex integration.

  • @tricanico
    @tricanico Год назад +3

    classic 1000% likes to views ratio right now

  • @LochyP
    @LochyP Год назад

    Best video of yours I've ever watched. Fantastic

  • @aozorakei5288
    @aozorakei5288 Год назад +5

    First

  • @edvogel56
    @edvogel56 9 месяцев назад

    Faraday's Christmas Lectures come to mind. Wow. Thanks!

  • @cameronclarke4062
    @cameronclarke4062 Год назад +2

    I did a presentation on this last term form my final physics project. There was not a whole lot of information online so it was very fun to figure out! Great job explaining it. I also didn’t think to look at the side of the tube when preforming the experiment.

  • @beginner_writing
    @beginner_writing 7 месяцев назад

    하나하나는 알고 있었는데, 그게 합해져서 이런 효과가 일어난다는 건 상상하지 못했네요.
    무척 흥미롭습니다.

  • @eCitizen1
    @eCitizen1 11 месяцев назад

    This is an unexpectedly CRAZY effect.

  • @bbbenj
    @bbbenj Год назад

    Very intriguing! Eager to watch the next video.

  • @BradenDiaz-p8y
    @BradenDiaz-p8y Год назад

    Thanks it's amazing to see a live full visible light spectrum . A landmark in science communication. Thank you and congratulations..

  • @theangledsaxon6765
    @theangledsaxon6765 Год назад

    This is the clearest polarization demo I’ve ever seen

  • @CoverBydAn
    @CoverBydAn Год назад

    Love that steve just said no, he didnt think of the side view, rather than being defensive. And the 3b1b dude is really good looking! Probably because i already like him since he’s such a great communicator

  • @ayuminor
    @ayuminor Год назад

    Ohhhh now this is a collab I didn't have on my mind at all but am happy to find!

  • @skadoosh1729
    @skadoosh1729 Год назад +1

    That's it! 3b1b enters the physics department !!

  • @mr.grantelkade4073
    @mr.grantelkade4073 Год назад

    Yes! I waited so long for this exact explanation of light

  • @Rachel_PureBold
    @Rachel_PureBold 6 месяцев назад

    Thank you, fantastic video. This is really useful in the work I am doing on coloured light and primary colours.

  • @marvin.marciano
    @marvin.marciano Год назад

    This is just beautiful. Completely blew my mind.
    Greetings from Brazil.

  • @natigrinkrug
    @natigrinkrug Год назад +1

    The crossover we never knew we needed, but the one we deserve

  • @cyanophage4351
    @cyanophage4351 Год назад

    Now I want to make one of these and have it as a light in my house!!!! This is so pretty!

  • @benjaminhislop7081
    @benjaminhislop7081 Год назад +1

    Guy is such a good story teller

  • @TheVoidSinger
    @TheVoidSinger Год назад

    was just thinking about Steve's original video this last week, and wondering about different methods of tuning the output color. perfect timing

  • @Ciencillamente
    @Ciencillamente Год назад

    JUST AMAZING!!
    Congrats and thanks for this video!!
    I have some time wanting to create this experiment

  • @memetb5796
    @memetb5796 Год назад

    This video is amazing. I love your videos in general, but this is the most amazingest you've done, imo.

  • @Jefuslives
    @Jefuslives Год назад

    The color change when turning the exit polarizer blew my mind. But after the explanation, it makes perfect sense.