Forces in an Arch

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  • Опубликовано: 22 июл 2020

Комментарии • 200

  • @20x20
    @20x20 Год назад +1092

    "I don't know if it'll take this" meanwhile having a pre-made piece of plastic perfectly fitting the thrust lines

    • @jonatan01i
      @jonatan01i Год назад +100

      maybe it would sometimes collapse when he tried it

    • @dgphi
      @dgphi Год назад +69

      That orange thing might have been a drawing tool called a flexible curve, and they might have edited out the tedious footage of the teacher bending it to the right shape.

    • @erikdeeNOSPELLSNO
      @erikdeeNOSPELLSNO Год назад +12

      I stand with you- once one has done a thing a number of times- it is unlikely that one WOULDN'T know what would happen! Murphy is always there, however...

    • @erikdeeNOSPELLSNO
      @erikdeeNOSPELLSNO Год назад +1

      @@creamwobbly Who is the bullshitter?

    • @AdamBechtol
      @AdamBechtol Год назад

      lol

  • @AdamBechtol
    @AdamBechtol Год назад +26

    Arches are so neat.
    Though the term Voussoir may be just as neat.
    Fun hearing them say it over and over lol.

  • @dreieinhalbeck
    @dreieinhalbeck Год назад +503

    physics has always been my arch enemy, but your videos help me understand much

    • @--bountyhunter--
      @--bountyhunter-- Год назад +17

      HAH!! I see what you did there magic man

    • @shoty_x1693
      @shoty_x1693 Год назад +1

      I was about to be forced into learning arches but I know damn well that I'll probably regret that later. So I replied no

    • @SP-ny1fk
      @SP-ny1fk Год назад +3

      Learning is all about building bridges

    • @thekadend
      @thekadend Год назад +8

      Could you say these videos helped you bridge the gap in your understanding?

    • @seppwurzel8212
      @seppwurzel8212 Год назад

      Probably you had bad teachers, because physics is a VERY interesting topic.

  • @ApocDevTeam
    @ApocDevTeam Год назад +10

    Whenever I notice in the thumbnail that the documentary looks old, you know it's going to be good.

  • @75blackviking
    @75blackviking Год назад +130

    That is amazing. I had no idea arches were that resilient to movement.

  • @martinsutoob
    @martinsutoob Год назад +141

    A few years ago I was idly thinking about arch bridges and the fact that the Earth's surface beneath the bridge also has a curvature - granted not much, but it's there. So the longer the bridge the more the Earth curves beneath it. Take this thought to its logical conclusion and you have a bridge that goes right round the Earth and needs no supports. It becomes a giant hoop that just holds station. But an observer might look up at it and say "why doesn't it fall down?". Answer: because for that to happen, on the other side of the planet, It would have to fall up!

    • @nomdutilisateur
      @nomdutilisateur Год назад +10

      You have a second like. I love it

    • @Renteks-
      @Renteks- Год назад +28

      Vsauce covered this in his video "Which way is down?". Ironically, this bridge would appear extremely uneven and undulating, due to having to match the forces of gravity as well.

    • @javelin1423
      @javelin1423 Год назад +5

      so, like a ring? a ring across the surface of the earth that acts as a bridge

    • @martinsutoob
      @martinsutoob Год назад +19

      @@Renteks- I watched the video now. When you say "extremely uneven" I think this is a huge exaggeration.. Vsauce mentions a figure of "almost 100m", but he doesn't point out that this would be stretched over many hundreds of miles and probably not detectable to the human eye. Apart from that there would be other problems with gravitational perturbations from neighbouring astronomical bodies - i.e. the Moon, the Sun, Jupiter, etc - and hence for these and for other other engineering reasons the only shape to build such a hoop would be circular. But this is all just an academic thought exercise anyway, because according to my estimates there is no building material even remotely close to being able to withstand the colossal circumferential compressive stresses that such a structure would develop. No, not even remotely. Some other engineering trickery would have to be employed. Would be a totally cool thing though.

    • @javiermurillo3561
      @javiermurillo3561 Год назад +1

      Man this is brilliant.

  • @chris-hu7tm
    @chris-hu7tm Год назад +24

    He didnt know it could take the 1kg weight at that position but you had a line ready for demonstration xD

    • @HartyBiker
      @HartyBiker Год назад +7

      I have a feeling that if the arch wasn't assembled correctly, it wouldn't take 1kg, so he was more making the comment that he wasn't sure he'd assembled it correctly.

  • @leetabix
    @leetabix Год назад +92

    "There's strength in arches" - Prof. Joe Wilkinson, 2016.

    • @LucasPreti
      @LucasPreti Год назад +16

      I opened this video with the single intent of making this joke

    • @corytoews5222
      @corytoews5222 Год назад +4

      "Professor"🤣

    • @splintmeow4723
      @splintmeow4723 10 месяцев назад +1

      I’m so happy I expected this comment on this video, and happily found you 🤣

  • @henzelmen
    @henzelmen Год назад +60

    The arch only works this way if the two lower blocks are rigidly connected to each other. In this example with a shelf. Do the same experiment without a shelf, with two separate blocks at the bottom, then the thrust force will push them apart and the arch will collapse. That is why we see in medieval arch architecture, steel cross-connections between the two ends.

    • @user4241
      @user4241 11 месяцев назад +2

      Not necessarily. If the arch has the shape of an inverted catenary, it won't collapse.

  • @ashurean
    @ashurean 11 месяцев назад +1

    Arches LOVE staying up
    it's like their favorite thing to do

  • @korietnam1967
    @korietnam1967 Год назад +2

    This gives 2009 weird side of RUclips at night kinda vibes

  • @seededsoul
    @seededsoul Год назад +110

    Wow amazing. Imagine a walking bridge built like this, and you can feel it move disconcertingly as you cross it! Only faith in engineering can steel your nerves 😅

    • @JiMwB
      @JiMwB 11 месяцев назад +3

      Hell yeah!
      wobbly arch bridge!

    • @Francois_Dupont
      @Francois_Dupont 2 месяца назад

      in china every bridge is like this.

  • @SupPartyPeople
    @SupPartyPeople Год назад +2

    Everything's in equilibrium until someone karate chops it

  • @anomalyp8584
    @anomalyp8584 Год назад +17

    Just when you think you know an arch...there is an old school video that takes it to a whole other level!

  • @jackmclane1826
    @jackmclane1826 Год назад

    There always also is a little shearing. The wobbly arch could not wobble without.

  • @PhilbyFavourites
    @PhilbyFavourites Год назад +5

    I am taken back to my physics classes 48 years ago.
    Make learning fun and you have a student for life 👍🏻👍🏻

  • @TheRussianRob
    @TheRussianRob 2 месяца назад +1

    need more of this video!!!!!! don't just wake up the ancient roman in me like that!!!!!

    • @Warpedsmac
      @Warpedsmac  2 месяца назад +1

      If you look on the web for "The Arch Never Sleeps"...it does exist in its entirety on a university website....Cheers from rainy Sydney Australia

    • @TheRussianRob
      @TheRussianRob 2 месяца назад

      @@Warpedsmac well thank you!!!

  • @afshinsalehi2136
    @afshinsalehi2136 Год назад +4

    This is how physics should be taught!

  • @Digitallyferal
    @Digitallyferal 10 месяцев назад

    Wow. Way better visual than anything i saw at Penn State. I would like to build some larger models. Maybe sandpaper on the surface or magnets to help initial assembly. I wonder if theres some Higher level mechanics like a Lagrangian of the centers of mass and friction at tangent points to help describe the “thrust curves” that develop

  • @Jono4174
    @Jono4174 Год назад +20

    I came here hoping to hear the word “voussoir”. I was not disappointed! (I worked at a Voussoir factory where no-one but a French software engineer called them voussoirs.)

    • @TheTimeCatcher
      @TheTimeCatcher Год назад +2

      So how did they call them?

    • @Jono4174
      @Jono4174 Год назад +2

      They called them “Segments” even though they were more like “annular sectors”

    • @bradleyomar6300
      @bradleyomar6300 11 месяцев назад +1

      I came to see what the word was because the auto-subtitler gave:
      boosts was
      vusual
      versois
      fusoir
      vessel
      vussoir
      vuswa
      vusua
      vussoir
      vusoir

  • @facitenonvictimarum174
    @facitenonvictimarum174 Год назад +21

    It's good to see a teacher who can do more than just use chalk on a blackboard.

    • @iqbalindaryono8984
      @iqbalindaryono8984 10 месяцев назад

      Given the resources a lot of teachers would do the same

  • @mvpfocus
    @mvpfocus Год назад +2

    This video looks decades older than its upload date.

  • @jcopp2031
    @jcopp2031 11 месяцев назад +1

    Awesome video. Thank you.

  • @ErnestMC
    @ErnestMC Год назад +7

    I miss the good old times, when structures worked with compression only, no rebar, no oxidation, perfection.

  • @ShadyzOfficial
    @ShadyzOfficial 11 месяцев назад

    Never heard of Equilibrium before until I saw Oppenheimer. Now I hear it everywhere.

  • @nathanjohansen7169
    @nathanjohansen7169 Год назад +5

    That wiggly arch was awesome.

  • @Warpedsmac
    @Warpedsmac  3 года назад +31

    If some of the slats are loose between the voussoir and the abutment this would indicate the surfaces are in fact slightly UN-PARALLEL, because clearly it would not be able to be removed ...the lecturer actually confirms some of the slats were loose.

    • @junkbucket50
      @junkbucket50 Год назад +3

      A very interesting video, where is it from originally?

    • @Warpedsmac
      @Warpedsmac  Год назад +6

      @@junkbucket50 if you search: The Arch Never Sleeps

    • @SynchronizorVideos
      @SynchronizorVideos Год назад

      Or that the slats were slightly different thicknesses, or slightly out-of-square themselves.

  • @NuisanceMan
    @NuisanceMan Год назад +1

    I wouldn't want to drive over a bridge made of vousoirs.

  • @Perspari
    @Perspari Год назад +6

    Brilliant video

  • @zakari_rai
    @zakari_rai Год назад +8

    Arch jenga seems kinda fun, would be difficult to set up though!

  • @MadNumForce
    @MadNumForce 10 месяцев назад +4

    I always wondered how the French word "voussoir" translated in English. I got my answer: it doesn't. Though in French, when it's part of an arc, the proper word is claveau (same etymology as clef, key). Voussoir is normally refering to an element of a vault.

    • @sporehux8344
      @sporehux8344 10 месяцев назад

      my new favorite word, i never knew existed.

  • @SwiftNuts
    @SwiftNuts 10 месяцев назад

    It really is jigglin' tho

  • @Untilitpases
    @Untilitpases 10 месяцев назад

    Similar principle to the spine. Nature & humanity finding similar solutions.

  • @HailAnts
    @HailAnts 11 месяцев назад

    _"The arch Mr Computer.."_

  • @CheapoPremio
    @CheapoPremio 11 месяцев назад

    The only thing I was able to pick up was that one part is called a Vousuoouuoouuoaaar.

  • @user-gq2wv3br8k
    @user-gq2wv3br8k Год назад

    Should it be some special changed shape of the surface of the bricks, or I can cut the arbitrary circularity curved surface?

  • @GentleBreeze-72
    @GentleBreeze-72 10 месяцев назад

    That Jumpscare at the end killed me. i didnt expect it.
    Interesting video though

  • @i.p.0179
    @i.p.0179 Год назад +2

    Very interesting, Is there a complete version of the video?

  • @user-pk6id3gk5r
    @user-pk6id3gk5r 3 месяца назад

    thanks a lot for item question!

  • @blackhawk9256
    @blackhawk9256 Год назад +6

    Very illustrative video. Thank you for sharing!

  • @Alex-nv5sw
    @Alex-nv5sw 11 месяцев назад

    I grinned when I heard a choir at the end of this vid as if I discovered a knowledge hahaha.

  • @kokekeen3096
    @kokekeen3096 10 месяцев назад

    The critical point is that the summation of the vectors should make up a 0 vector.

  • @vinayseth5899
    @vinayseth5899 11 месяцев назад

    All here for the voorswaw, say "Aye"!

  • @rabenfedersonnenhut
    @rabenfedersonnenhut Год назад +10

    A wise man once said: "There's strength in arches".

  • @sinamirmahmoud7606
    @sinamirmahmoud7606 11 месяцев назад

    😍😍😍😍 civil engineering

  • @BXBZ88
    @BXBZ88 11 месяцев назад

    Ecqalibrium... New words everyday.

  • @dejaeprouve
    @dejaeprouve 10 месяцев назад

    Children play with blocks, adults with mathematical formulas.

  • @vect0rwolf
    @vect0rwolf Год назад

    Now I want to play jenga for stonemasons

  • @SoSo-li6dn
    @SoSo-li6dn Год назад +2

    Polybridge training

  • @TomiBorchert
    @TomiBorchert 10 месяцев назад

    very important to know when you laying bricks to make a pizza oven.

  • @yoursleepparalysisdemon1828
    @yoursleepparalysisdemon1828 Год назад

    just like jenga

  • @-maxipoo-
    @-maxipoo- 10 месяцев назад +1

    In 8 years, this will randomly get 17M views

  • @Francois_Dupont
    @Francois_Dupont 2 месяца назад

    complete documentary?

  • @cheesebusiness
    @cheesebusiness Год назад

    I diеd from the instant transition from science to religion at the end 😅

  • @Jetpans
    @Jetpans 10 месяцев назад

    I feel like I should be able to figure this out, but I can't.
    Would it work if the arch parts (in the second one) had frictionless sides?

  • @nicolasramirez3944
    @nicolasramirez3944 Год назад +10

    This seems to continue to talk about medieval vaulted structures, what's the original film?

    • @Warpedsmac
      @Warpedsmac  Год назад +13

      "The Arch Never Sleeps" www.open.edu/openlearn/science-maths-technology/mathematics-statistics/the-arch-never-sleeps?trackno=5

    • @nicolasramirez3944
      @nicolasramirez3944 Год назад +6

      @@Warpedsmac Thanks!!!!

    • @Warpedsmac
      @Warpedsmac  Год назад +7

      @@nicolasramirez3944 Always happy to share resources with other Engineering teachers. Cheers from sunny Australia!

  • @MACHINEBUILDER
    @MACHINEBUILDER Год назад +9

    I'm currently on a youtube binge / rabbit hole, but this was very informative and interesting. I've always had an intuitive sense of forces in structures, but seeing the force vectors and the thrust line over a whole arch is very interesting, and kind of makes me want to program a physical simulation to represent different weights and thrust vectors over arches.

    • @ArtKM
      @ArtKM 11 месяцев назад

      most informative youtube bing ever. nice.

  • @forethoughtx2846
    @forethoughtx2846 Год назад

    Does thrust require a change in mass to not equal zero ?

  • @m0e679
    @m0e679 Год назад

    I just got here from watching Anime. Now i understand about the devil fruit...

  • @sweeterstuff
    @sweeterstuff Год назад +1

    youtube is weird like this, video came out 2 years ago, most comments are from this week

  • @joeeeee256
    @joeeeee256 Год назад

    nobody mentioning how he just faded into the ether

  • @marlbankian
    @marlbankian Год назад +3

    Interesting

  • @tripslord9029
    @tripslord9029 Год назад

    Anyone else surprised when one of the students gave a good answer?

  • @tonymok7752
    @tonymok7752 11 месяцев назад

    Friction is also there

  • @lauracarroll3276
    @lauracarroll3276 Год назад

  • @rigelmalyk
    @rigelmalyk 11 месяцев назад

    3:53 the holy triangle

  • @JClover2
    @JClover2 Месяц назад

    Basically Jenga

  • @dangeary2134
    @dangeary2134 Год назад +7

    Hmmm…
    If the voussoir contact faces were slightly concave, and the material slightly compressible, would that make an arch more stable?

    • @GundamReviver
      @GundamReviver Год назад +3

      Interesting thought, I figure that would mainly force the material to be under constant pressure in thr tops and bottoms, eventually thst would weather away until the forces are more spread out again.

    • @dangeary2134
      @dangeary2134 Год назад +2

      @@GundamReviver my logic was to induce a prestress into the material, and make it more stable.
      The idea being just the opposite of the convex faces.
      This would enhance resistance to not only the linear stress, but to lateral and torsion stresses.
      No swing, no twist, no bounce.
      Seems to make sense.

    • @dangeary2134
      @dangeary2134 Год назад

      @@GundamReviver you are a college student, up at this hour, aren’t you??

    • @GundamReviver
      @GundamReviver Год назад +2

      @@dangeary2134 nah, but did start out with a degree in engineering stuff 😂 I figure you are correct in that it would have increased regidity since indeed it would be pre stressed, but thst added hardness would Probabaly mean the "points" pushing against each other would get immense force on them and break and crumble quicker. Also it's like nearly afternoon here, haha, welcome to the internet: it's always daytime somewhere.

  • @automan1591
    @automan1591 11 месяцев назад

    What determines the direction of the arrows though?

  • @user-pi7tz3mp7p
    @user-pi7tz3mp7p Год назад

    Никогда у вас не получиться изготовить в идеале точки соприкосновения, то ,что несут они разные (переходящие) нагрузки_это Да, но приходится вернуться в начало этого предложения

  • @snarflatful
    @snarflatful 10 месяцев назад

    No mention of a keystone?

  • @RobbyBalboa-cj4ig
    @RobbyBalboa-cj4ig 10 месяцев назад

    Why the fuck am I watching this at 2am, I have to get up for work in 4 hours..

    • @massimookissed1023
      @massimookissed1023 10 месяцев назад

      At least when you get to work, *_one_* of you will know how arches stay up.

  • @sakudoo
    @sakudoo Год назад +2

    I am not sure if at 2:40 the picture is complete: Aren't there frictional forces at both contact points too? - Intuitively, I would guess the whole arc would not be stable if the surface (of the contact points) would be (ideally) slippery.

    • @theiigotriangularround4880
      @theiigotriangularround4880 11 месяцев назад +1

      I guess it would cause there is a vertical component of normal reaction too on both sides

    • @joshdaly2343
      @joshdaly2343 9 месяцев назад

      I think there are no major frictional forces in this static system. A friction force perpendicular to the thrust line would result in rotation of the block, we can see this when he adds a weight and all the blocks rotate to a new stable position.

    • @sakudoo
      @sakudoo 9 месяцев назад

      @@joshdaly2343 Try to build the arch using slippery soap blocks. I am pretty sure it will not hold.
      Generally, the two planes defined by two contact points on a block are not parallel, hence the two forces will create an outward (or may be rarely an inward) force expelling the block. Yes, this is countered by the gravity of one block, but I am pretty sure that there are also fricitional forces at each of contact points.

    • @joshdaly2343
      @joshdaly2343 9 месяцев назад

      @@sakudoo if the soap blocks had the same shape and density as the wooden blocks in the example, then arranged in the same shape they would still hold the arch. It would be very hard to do not (mainly) because the lack of friction, but the fact that there's only one "thrust" line for a particular arrangement of blocks. That's why the arch changes shape when a weight is added so it reaches its unique thrust line whete there's no friction.

  • @joydasgupta9445
    @joydasgupta9445 2 месяца назад

    Full link of video

  • @akarshsahay4381
    @akarshsahay4381 Год назад +1

    2:30 shouldn’t there also be friction ? Or do the long blue arrows represent the sum of normal and friction?

    • @eragon78
      @eragon78 Год назад +4

      There are two types of friction. Normal friction requires movement to be occurring which isnt happening in this situation,
      and then Static friction which resists initial movement between the blocks slipping. Static friction would just resist any slipping and equally cancel it out. While it does technically exist in the model, it doesnt actually have any notable effect and so it can be pretty much ignored for the sake of simplicity.
      It only really matters if the slipping force is enough to overcome the static friction.

  • @mayanksingh0044
    @mayanksingh0044 Год назад

    thx

  • @bry120
    @bry120 11 месяцев назад

    My gf forms a perfect ark

  • @emrebey2244
    @emrebey2244 Год назад

    Is there any civil engineering faculty or science fac.?

  • @absalondebarvac3715
    @absalondebarvac3715 Год назад +1

    I don't know if it's been asked before, but what is this from?

  • @BHARGAV_GAJJAR
    @BHARGAV_GAJJAR 10 месяцев назад

    Does anyone know which university this is ?

  • @nshelekhov
    @nshelekhov Год назад +2

    I use Arch btw

  • @potaterjim
    @potaterjim 11 месяцев назад

    I hated these videos in high school and crave them now

    • @Warpedsmac
      @Warpedsmac  11 месяцев назад

      Nice to hear Potater...as I was once one of those high school teachers showing 'em!! Cheers from sunny Australia

  • @AndrewNajash
    @AndrewNajash Год назад

    Watch a few clips of NL playing poly bridge and I get this recommended

    • @Warpedsmac
      @Warpedsmac  Год назад

      It's an interesting video...if you like architecture and arches....Cheers from Australia.

  • @Zzzooooppp
    @Zzzooooppp Год назад +3

    Is there no friction at work parallel to the surface in the arch with strangely shaped blocks?

    • @xy4489
      @xy4489 Год назад +2

      Had same question. I think you could add the friction forces to the three forces they drew, and add more terms to the equilibrium equation. But, those terms will cancel out. The component of gravity perpendicular to the surface equals the normal force they have drawn, and the component of gravity parallel to the surface equals the friction force, neither of which they drew. At both left and right points. So, my guess is that friction is indeed there and critical to the arch. I didn't look it up though, so this might be bogus.

    • @xiaojiang2610
      @xiaojiang2610 11 месяцев назад +2

      There is. The video is misleading. Any undergrad student should point out that normal force is perpendicular to the contact surface in case 1 where cardboards were used for top bricks. Thus friction force introduced by normal force is used to counter gravity. I was so surprised no one pointed it out.

    • @joshdaly2343
      @joshdaly2343 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@xiaojiang2610how can a normal force, which is perpendicular to the surface, introduce a friction force, which is parallel to the surface? The whole point of arches is that they act in pure compression, hence there is no need for friction force.
      For the second arch in the video, if there were friction forces, the blocks would rotate (as they do briefly when he adds a weight and they come to equilibrium in a new shape with zero friction forces)

  • @nemofunf9862
    @nemofunf9862 Год назад +1

    I use Arch btw.

  • @user-cy9qi8kj2g
    @user-cy9qi8kj2g Год назад +1

    I use arch btw

  • @deadingu
    @deadingu 10 месяцев назад

    forsen

  • @idothings6685
    @idothings6685 Год назад

    I mean this isn't really surprising at all... you could just have a smaller arch... smaller meaning thinner...

  • @ferdimro2755
    @ferdimro2755 10 месяцев назад

    How we Build an arch under ground? -anwseer fast pleas

    • @massimookissed1023
      @massimookissed1023 10 месяцев назад

      Either cut an arch-shaped passage,
      or build an arch in a bigger excavated space, and back-fill with concrete.

  • @catsdontboot8735
    @catsdontboot8735 11 месяцев назад

    I use arch linux btw

  • @duncannelson2033
    @duncannelson2033 Год назад

    Must have a good line of thrust

  • @baonkang5990
    @baonkang5990 11 месяцев назад

    Thrust..

  • @Shiroikage98
    @Shiroikage98 10 месяцев назад

    i use arch btw

  • @EJP286CRSKW
    @EJP286CRSKW Год назад +3

    I thought the forces in an evenly loaded arch followed a catenary (cosh(x)) curve. Isn't that mathematics?

    • @eddarby469
      @eddarby469 Год назад +11

      That is the answer for an infinitely flexible member like a cable. But the stiffness necessary to keep an arch from buckling will allow shear and bending forces to develop. This alters the mathematical solution.

  • @panda4247
    @panda4247 11 месяцев назад

    why are they calling the stones with some french word?

    • @panda4247
      @panda4247 11 месяцев назад

      @@gregoryford2532 but why?
      don't tell me the English people did not have arches until the French came.
      The word "keystone" is English, so why having a weird French word for the other stones in the arch?

  • @ceiling_cat
    @ceiling_cat 11 месяцев назад +1

    It's nice to see that Half-life anouncer still has a job

  • @OmnipotentPotato
    @OmnipotentPotato 11 месяцев назад

    So there *is* actually strength in arches?
    Joe Wilkinson was right

  • @Arithryka
    @Arithryka 2 дня назад

    1:33

  • @mutryTwein
    @mutryTwein Год назад

    نسال دكتور وليد ارناؤط

    • @Warpedsmac
      @Warpedsmac  Год назад

      And what did the doctor have to say?

  • @router6299
    @router6299 Год назад

    Btw