Does Water Swirl the Other Way in the Southern Hemisphere?

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  • Опубликовано: 28 дек 2024

Комментарии • 4,1 тыс.

  • @smartereveryday
    @smartereveryday 7 лет назад +3692

    One of the most awesome projects I've ever had the opportunity to be a part of. Derek made it happen!

    • @gnouveli
      @gnouveli 7 лет назад +31

      hi Destin, i'm indonesian. i tested right at equator, it just doesn't swirl at all, has no direction. why ;(

    • @cptKerala
      @cptKerala 7 лет назад +6

      Gnouveli Post a video of it

    • @chrisbowe4238
      @chrisbowe4238 7 лет назад +24

      SmarterEveryDay you both talked about how storms rotate based on their hemisphere. what would happen if this storm crossed over? or does this just not happen

    • @joshgarvin5980
      @joshgarvin5980 7 лет назад +13

      Chris Bowe that's a good question and I'd actually like to know the answer, maybe one of these guys will make a video about it. It's so nice to see someone actually asking a question for the sake of curiosity in the RUclips comments for once! Props!

    • @karanshah346
      @karanshah346 7 лет назад +10

      SmarterEveryDay how will the water swirl on equator?

  • @gnochhuos645
    @gnochhuos645 7 лет назад +4838

    How does water swirl at the equator?

    • @ahmadalkhateeb1180
      @ahmadalkhateeb1180 7 лет назад +407

      thats a really good question.

    • @ArchaicMuse
      @ArchaicMuse 7 лет назад +1105

      One way or the other based on even finer differences in water temperature, container geometry and initial conditions.

    • @ahmadalkhateeb1180
      @ahmadalkhateeb1180 7 лет назад +427

      ArchaicMuse so in a perfect world is it possible for water to not swirl?

    • @GeneralKnife
      @GeneralKnife 7 лет назад +547

      ahmad al khateeb in a perfect world the water would go down the drain and it would look like a cone of water. This is what I think would happen.

    • @ChintamaniHelekar
      @ChintamaniHelekar 7 лет назад +392

      in perfect world,water would have laminar flow,no swirls at all.

  • @WoodByWright
    @WoodByWright 7 лет назад +383

    still one of my all time favorite colabs!

  • @anepicotter4595
    @anepicotter4595 3 года назад +124

    The structure of these videos so they work best when played simultaneously is actually awesome! I never watched either of them but watching this is just so cool how you take turns speaking and the video is set up so that there's always something to be looking at- it's just so immersive I feel like I don't have even a second of idle thoughts before something else happens but it's also not like it's an overwhelming onslaught of information. It's just so we'll made to keep the attention of the viewer

  • @unvergebeneid
    @unvergebeneid 7 лет назад +985

    At the time I hadn't noticed that Destin, living in an imperial country, used metric units and Derek, living in a metric country, used imperial units.

    • @jimmygrey6848
      @jimmygrey6848 7 лет назад +36

      It's worth noting that both systems are commonly used in either countries. especially within the science and engineering fields.

    • @threestepssideways1202
      @threestepssideways1202 7 лет назад +31

      +Black Fedora The two countries where the experiments were undertaken and therefore relevant to the experiment and Jimmy Greys comment - namely Australia and the U.S.A.

    • @ltericdavis2237
      @ltericdavis2237 7 лет назад +12

      From what I've seen, the Anglophone countries tend to be somewhat mixed in their usage of imperial vs metric. In America, while using imperial mainly, most still know the metric system and it has some common occurrences, such as using liters often. People in the UK, while being mostly metric, have occasional thing that are referred in imperial.

    • @threestepssideways1202
      @threestepssideways1202 7 лет назад +17

      The UK is a very mixed bag indeed. A person's height, weight, waist size, etc will always be quoted in feet, inches, stones or pounds (regarding weight, it is near universal to quote stones and pounds rather than just pounds) - conversely in medical practice all of these must be recorded metrically. Many people also know their weight in kilograms, but it's rare indeed for them to express it that way.
      Groceries and indeed most consumer products will be expressed metrically, with the exception of beer which are almost exclusively sold as pints or half pints, milk is labelled both metrically and imperially, British people will however always refer to it imperially.
      The situation is more complicated for motoring. Distances and speeds are still in miles and miles per hour respectively, most British people would also be able to refer to directional distance in yards or metres fairly accurately.Fuel is sold in litres, but fuel economy is miles per gallon. Engine size is in litres or cubic centimetres.
      In my experience I think it's fair to say most British people 'think' in imperial terms though are quite happy using metric measurements or expressing them if required to do so.

    • @unvergebeneid
      @unvergebeneid 7 лет назад +20

      Yeah, it's hard to deny that if the British didn't hate the French that much, we'd be universally using the metric system today. The British came around eventually but not before leaving themselves and the rest of the colonies in a dismal state regarding units.

  • @MysticDonBlair
    @MysticDonBlair 7 лет назад +832

    Birds fly upside down in the southern hemisphere.

    • @felpex1495
      @felpex1495 7 лет назад +2

      ruclips.net/video/Xc4xYacTu-E/видео.html

    • @pintificate
      @pintificate 7 лет назад +16

      That's right. And the crows fly backwards to keep the dust out of their eyes! I've seen them myself

    • @a.randomjack6661
      @a.randomjack6661 6 лет назад +1

      Been there, done that :)

    • @Chris_Cross
      @Chris_Cross 5 лет назад +48

      Don't be stupid. In the southern hemisphere, we don't have birds because they fall into space.

    • @bibasik7
      @bibasik7 5 лет назад +24

      Pfft, you believe in birds?

  • @kyknmk
    @kyknmk 7 лет назад +1237

    the way how the guy on the left is so close to the toilet when it flushes makes me extremely uncomfortable

    • @wabznasm9660
      @wabznasm9660 7 лет назад +62

      And then he wipes his lip

    • @JoseRamirez-yh2ll
      @JoseRamirez-yh2ll 7 лет назад +18

      steph k the way you haven't noticed that I exist makes me extremely uncomfortable 😍😘

    • @KarlPiper
      @KarlPiper 7 лет назад +3

      This needs to be top comment.

    • @dwaynepitt5694
      @dwaynepitt5694 7 лет назад +4

      Love clean toilets

    • @kirkanos771
      @kirkanos771 7 лет назад +8

      technically speaking, there is no such thing as clean toilets.

  • @vincentrobinette1507
    @vincentrobinette1507 5 лет назад +33

    I served a mission for my church in Brazil. One of the first things I tried, was fill a sink with water, let it sit over night, then pulled the drain plug with a string, rather than reaching in. It indeed swirled clockwise. I tried it several times with a sink behind the house, that is normally used for washing cloths. It too drained clockwise. The toilets were no indicator, since the offset jets determined the direction of the vortex when flushed. I was in Minas Gerais, which is far enough south, to make it pretty reliable as long as the water had time to completely stagnate. I even placed a board over the outside sink, to make sure no wind could disturb the water. If you drained the sink immediately after use, any turbulence in the water would override the effect, and it would swirl in either direction, It didn't take much, to influence it.

  • @TheeZack
    @TheeZack 7 лет назад +441

    Hey can I copy your homework?
    Sure, just change it a little so no one notices.

    • @Chache17
      @Chache17 5 лет назад +4

      Just go to the other hemisphere and there, you have original results.

  • @CNCmachiningisfun
    @CNCmachiningisfun 7 лет назад +1778

    And with that, the flat earth 'theory' goes down the drain :) .

    • @ganondorfchampin
      @ganondorfchampin 7 лет назад +51

      Nuh uh, just because the earth is flat doesn't mean it doesn't spin! :P

    • @CNCmachiningisfun
      @CNCmachiningisfun 7 лет назад +182

      Nah, it's banana shaped, and dipped in herbs and spices for best taste ;) .

    • @zbeekerm
      @zbeekerm 7 лет назад +25

      Let's wash our hands of these puns

    • @zbeekerm
      @zbeekerm 7 лет назад +50

      We wouldn't want this thread to spin out of control

    • @carolynmmitchell2240
      @carolynmmitchell2240 7 лет назад +20

      devzer0 i think its pretty washed up now

  • @LionTheCheetahChaser
    @LionTheCheetahChaser 7 лет назад +25

    It's interesting to note that at the level of a tornado, which is considerably bigger than a bathtub but still pretty small on the scale of the Earth, about 95-98% are said to rotate cyclonically (counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere and clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere), but there is that small fraction of anti-cyclonic tornadoes.

    • @kdwaynec
      @kdwaynec Год назад +1

      Yes, I've heard of these "reverse" storms, but I never saw a percentage given. At a hurricane level, there has never been a "backwards" example in all of human history.

    • @burtan2000
      @burtan2000 Год назад

      @@kdwaynec Cyclones (hurricanes in the southern hemisphere) rotate clockwise. All the science websites say its due to Coriolis effect. This experiment wasn't needed.
      If all tropical cyclones/hurricanes rotate counterclockwise in northern hemisphere and all cyclones spin clockwise in southern hemisphere, i don't see why there'd be any doubt.

    • @robertmorphis5645
      @robertmorphis5645 Месяц назад

      @@burtan2000 0) Because it is an incredibly small effect for a pool that is 6 feet across.
      The physicist who originally did the experiment was somewhat surprised that it worked.
      Why do it?
      1) Because it is cool to do.
      2) Because replicating results is what science is about.

  • @albundy5228
    @albundy5228 5 лет назад +314

    Once again, we've learned something, thanks to the Simpsons.

    • @V_2077
      @V_2077 4 года назад +12

      but the Simpsons was wrong, Lisa tells Bart the toilet and sink are due to the effect but like this video says the effect is overcome by the design of the toilet/sink

    • @mikemondano3624
      @mikemondano3624 3 года назад

      Physics class. Remember?

    • @srishtipankajbhatia506
      @srishtipankajbhatia506 2 года назад

      @@V_2077 but later on they show that it's because of the design

  • @AbhilekhPandey
    @AbhilekhPandey 5 лет назад +606

    Lives in us: 1.5 M
    Lives in Austalia: 5 foot
    lul

    • @wolfy9979
      @wolfy9979 5 лет назад +27

      You do know that "lul" means "dick" in dutch? ;)

    • @jakelame7856
      @jakelame7856 5 лет назад +64

      Lul lul lul lul lul lul

    • @kewlbeans2463
      @kewlbeans2463 5 лет назад +2

      LUL

    • @nathansharp3193
      @nathansharp3193 5 лет назад +8

      Werewolf's Channel so I should never, ever, under any circumstance, write 'lulling my ass off'??? ...good to know. I'll never be *that* stupid!

    • @mcbutt6149
      @mcbutt6149 5 лет назад

      Werewolf's Channel lul

  • @thatjokerperson7062
    @thatjokerperson7062 5 лет назад +438

    legend has it flat earthers can make up a reason for this

    • @irobinhood5529
      @irobinhood5529 5 лет назад +51

      There is a screen inside your phone that manipulates and shows you fake stuff.

    • @benaskalinskas4154
      @benaskalinskas4154 5 лет назад +32

      they are paid actors, and they have installed pipes to pump water in to make it spin

    • @skyisthelimitreadyornotfor2
      @skyisthelimitreadyornotfor2 5 лет назад +7

      No it is based on how the basin, or in this case how his pool was setup. The shape will determine which direction the water flows. Nothing to do with where it was located. People are fooled so easily!

    • @zirkoni42
      @zirkoni42 5 лет назад +33

      @@skyisthelimitreadyornotfor2 Sigh, repeat the experiment yourself. Do it a 100 times, re-building the setup equipment each time so that you eliminate that "how the pool was setup" effect. Take a look at the results. I bet 99% of the time you'll get the same result.

    • @baka_geddy
      @baka_geddy 5 лет назад +12

      @@zirkoni42 r/wooosh

  • @Jack-do5tq
    @Jack-do5tq 5 лет назад +482

    1:50 why did the American say meter and the Australian say feet 😂😂😂

    • @mission101
      @mission101 5 лет назад +23

      Jack 64 I’m pretty sure they are both American. The way Veritasium said Australia sounds very similar to how I hear a lot of Americans say it and he also said near the beginning “in the other hemisphere” and “when I was in Sydney Australia” which would be the sort of thing someone from the northern hemisphere would say

    • @kierstanfaulks
      @kierstanfaulks 5 лет назад +40

      @@mission101 veritasium is Canadian and he moved to Australia
      Edit:to clarify, he was born in Australia but lived here for a very short time before moving to Canada with his family until he was old enough to move out when he finally came back to Australia.

    • @elladay7913
      @elladay7913 5 лет назад +1

      @@kierstanfaulks then why does he say australia wrong like every other non australian says it

    • @KristinNirvana
      @KristinNirvana 5 лет назад

      @@elladay7913 What is the right way to say it?

    • @elladay7913
      @elladay7913 5 лет назад +1

      @@KristinNirvana youre meant to say- oh-stray-lia people from the US say oooh-straai-lia

  • @realallthings4700
    @realallthings4700 3 года назад +154

    Southern hemisphere : we do clockwise motion
    Northern hemisphere : we do anti-clockwise motion
    Equator : I miss the part where that's my problem

    • @cones914
      @cones914 3 года назад +11

      On the equator you don't get water. Except for all of the oceans, lakes and really everything.

    • @mrtookyourgirl69
      @mrtookyourgirl69 3 года назад +3

      @@cones914 Underrated comment xD

    • @godbridger4545
      @godbridger4545 3 года назад

      *Sad Equator Noise*

    • @SD-ld5lz
      @SD-ld5lz 3 года назад

      In other videos, result is opposite

    • @scienceofuniverse7317
      @scienceofuniverse7317 4 месяца назад

      😂😂😂

  • @BurazSC2
    @BurazSC2 7 лет назад +103

    the world need more videos like this...scientists in the bath and on the toilet.

  • @leviteau
    @leviteau 3 года назад +4

    Don't know how I didn't see this 4 years ago, but thanks RUclips recommend, you were actually helpful for once

  • @Handicast390
    @Handicast390 5 лет назад +343

    This is fake. The water would of flown onto the sky in australia.

    • @pandadoodler1737
      @pandadoodler1737 5 лет назад +1

      Electrified Heart lol

    • @amzwl1671
      @amzwl1671 5 лет назад

      Nathan Weatherly that’s not a woosh.........

    • @nurphurecarnium
      @nurphurecarnium 5 лет назад

      @@nw3473 he just don't know the reference

    • @agerven
      @agerven 4 года назад

      Words fail me on this.

    • @Shmixyy
      @Shmixyy 4 года назад +3

      He had us in the first half

  • @LiborTinka
    @LiborTinka 5 лет назад +30

    You might get more consistent results with a very long pendulum (Foucalt's pendulum), but that would be more expensive to constructs. There is one in my city and it is built into a tower so it is shielded from weather. The pendulum swing is steadily altered by the Coriolis force, which can be observed by a pattern drawn by a stream of sand coming from the pendulum weigh.

    • @jaimeduncan6167
      @jaimeduncan6167 2 года назад +2

      More important that is not the question. The question is about liquids. This remembers me when students do all the calculations properly on a math exam and then forget that the question was about the diameter and not the radius of the circle

    • @crownnothin
      @crownnothin 2 года назад

      False. If you see a crane when it's not working the ball on the end of the line does not move and its way bigger than a display in your city.

    • @pusingfismat7099
      @pusingfismat7099 2 года назад +6

      @@crownnothin, wrong case. Pendulum swing precession applies to those already swinging. Coriolis effect won't affect still object.

    • @KingBobXVI
      @KingBobXVI Год назад +3

      @@crownnothin - "False. If you see a crane when it's not working the ball on the end of the line does not move and its way bigger than a display in your city."
      Cranes that aren't working don't leave an unburdened line all the way down, lol - they keep it hoisted to the top so it doesn't like, break things, or itself, when not in use.
      The other problem is as they mentioned above, if you hang a line outside it'll have things like wind pushing it around. An openly swinging crane line isn't going to show the Coriolis effect because it'll be swinging in the wind (hence, they don't leave them hanging when not in use), which is why the Focault's pendulums are built in towers so they can be shielded form the weather.

    • @AaronOfMpls
      @AaronOfMpls Год назад +1

      @@KingBobXVI > which is why the Focault's pendulums are built in towers so they can be shielded form the weather.
      Yah, my high school had one in the atrium of the "science silo" -- a round wing that contained most of the science lab classrooms. (There was a fad of building science classrooms like this in the 1950s and '60s.)

  • @TheKingofRandom
    @TheKingofRandom 7 лет назад +179

    Still awesome!

  • @gendaattila5000
    @gendaattila5000 5 лет назад +55

    I think the geometry of the drain can also create vorticity, as in case of the wings of an airplane, the no-slip boundary condition on the surface of the wings is a source of vorticity even in previously irrotational velocity fields (see for example the Kutta condition). What I mean is if you have a drain formed as a Kaplan turbine for instance, even if the turbine is standing, the flow will begin to rotate automatically and that is not becouse of the Coriolis force.

    • @himanshuverma860
      @himanshuverma860 4 года назад +5

      This seems too small of a distance do you have any Coriolis effect visible

    • @blakeivey479
      @blakeivey479 4 года назад +1

      Ding ding ding!!!! We have the winner!

    • @MiltonRoe
      @MiltonRoe 3 года назад +7

      I just watched this and the first thing that popped into my head was any irregularities in the drain, the bottom of the pool that water is flowing over, or even the direction the ball valve opens could start the motion in one direction.

    • @grillmaster95
      @grillmaster95 3 года назад +5

      Further exemplified that the rotation happens at the drain itself. Simple scale analysis shows that Coriolis would not be affecting the water at this distance.

    • @Jesse_359
      @Jesse_359 3 года назад +4

      ​@@grillmaster95 You would only see the Coriolis effect at/near the drain as the reduction in radius is needed to markedly increase the otherwise very small difference in angular velocity of the water going around the outer edge. Coriolis effect on this scale is tiny, but when you have a radius reduction on the order of 50:1, the magnifying effect it can have on angular velocity is rather extreme.

  • @Blackmark52
    @Blackmark52 7 лет назад +34

    I don't dispute the explanation of the coriolis effect, but I have to question whether the speed difference over a couple meters is significant. (Distance from pole to equator 10M km, speed at equator 460 m/s, therefore each meter represents an average change in speed of .00005 m/s per meter.) This experiment could easily just be a fluke. Before jumping with joy, I think multiple better controlled tests would be needed.

    • @aeislugh
      @aeislugh 7 лет назад +6

      this is why they said that the effect is so minor that in general, it gets lost in other factors that influence the way the water drains. the moment you throw in any disturbance to the water before the water starts to drain will alter how it drains WAY more than the rotation of the earth.

    • @Blackmark52
      @Blackmark52 7 лет назад +5

      +Ursinos I am aware of that. I have discussed this in another thread, and there I even stated : "The paradox of my criticism is that if everything were perfect I would expect the result that they got. I just don't believe that they proved it." And there's the rub. The effect is so small that I'm not convinced that this experiment can eliminate other factors that influence the way the water reacts. Even convection currents due to where the sun is shining could be a larger effect.
      But my position may be weakening. In that other thread someone posted this reddit thread : www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/38gekk/iama_guy_who_makes_science_videos_on_youtube/cruudik

    • @konstantingeist3587
      @konstantingeist3587 7 лет назад +9

      They repeated it 3 times time though, and still same results. So this happened: 1) the results line up with their location 2) same results 3 times. What's the chance to have it by accident? Should have tried with different pool setups/at different times (day/night) though to be 100% sure.

    • @dust7962
      @dust7962 7 лет назад

      KonstantinGeist Need more data!

    • @lemoniscate
      @lemoniscate 7 лет назад +4

      CONSTRUCT ADDITION PYLONS

  • @TranquilSeaOfMath
    @TranquilSeaOfMath Год назад +3

    Fantastic demonstration. Thank you for the effort you both put in to make this video available.

  • @ryanbarr4910
    @ryanbarr4910 2 года назад +3

    I once cut the base off a 5 gallon drum, wrapped copper wire around the neck and hooked it to a car battery. When I switched it to positive it increased the up the spin rotation and when I hooked it up to negative it just went straight down. I don’t remember how well I controlled the experiment to not have any motion in the water prior to pulling the plug. However, the effect that the positive and negative electric current had was repeatable.

  • @yanemailg
    @yanemailg 7 лет назад +153

    Have your done the experiment a hundred times, and then swap pools, and then a hundred times again?

    • @jasondoe2596
      @jasondoe2596 7 лет назад +37

      Yan G yeap, that would be the very minimum to ensure there are no other effects at play (or even slight variation of the pool shape). Even then I'd bet the results would be close to 50-50. After all it's a chaotic system and the scale is *far* too small for the Coriolis effect to actually matter (at larger scales we already know it does).
      Oh, and waiting for 24 hours for any initial rotation to settle is ridiculous. I have no problems with the video other than it implies this is proper methodology.

    • @philtripe
      @philtripe 7 лет назад +15

      clear science right before your eyes and still arguing a moot point...read the description please!

    • @jasondoe2596
      @jasondoe2596 7 лет назад +17

      phil tripe, I have higher standards for what constitutes "science".

    • @Iluvme-c5d
      @Iluvme-c5d 6 лет назад +4

      @@jasondoe2596 no one needs your science.earth is spinning for a fact.so if you do this perfectly you will get the same result for 1000 times

    • @molly.dog8brooke792
      @molly.dog8brooke792 5 лет назад +5

      Yan G
      They did do the experiment multiple times 😀

  • @commander-fox-q7573
    @commander-fox-q7573 3 года назад +6

    “Wish me luck Destin”
    “Good luck Derek”
    That was so perfectly done lol

  • @coyotezee
    @coyotezee 5 месяцев назад +1

    LiacosEM demonstrated this can work with just a cylindrical container with a hole in the center provided you let the water settle first and remove the drain plug from below. The cylinder was only about 10 cm diameter.

  • @agerven
    @agerven 5 лет назад +4

    Great, and thank you! Every physicist knows this, but there are so many counter experiments with additional forces involved. It's the Coriolis effect, or Fouceaults pendulum if you like.
    Wonderful video, and clear victory for physics. Added it to my favorites and physics lists.

  • @Filip_Wessman
    @Filip_Wessman 7 лет назад +6

    It is about size. The bigger the pool, the bigger the Corriolis effect. If the pool gets to slow, other factors like micro currents, friction, air draft, the shape of the container etc will determine the rotational direction.

  • @manzanoalcivarful
    @manzanoalcivarful 3 года назад +1

    Coriolis effect does exist but only noticeable in larger scales such as wind patterns. In the case of this experiment, there were still many factors such as the sizes of the drain, valve direction, small creases on the bottom of the kiddy pool that may diver the water heading towards the drain in one direction in a molecular level. Furthermore, a proper experiment would've included multiple attempts in similar conditions. One guy did it outdoors, the other did it indoors, and each person used only 1 pool and only did it once.

    • @nohaxjustxmod-sfs3984
      @nohaxjustxmod-sfs3984 3 года назад

      True, an experiment is an experiment if it is repeatable and the answer is decided based on data that is consistent throughout the runs

  • @wiktoriaheinz9244
    @wiktoriaheinz9244 5 лет назад +3

    Too cool! Coririolis rock! The Earth rocks! You guys rock! Well done. I FINALLY got hub to understand this principle (I’m a MSc in applied mechanics/combustion engine engineer/ and he is an archeologist). A million THANKS 🙏 to both of! This version (showing both besides each other) was very pedagogical.

  • @violajames
    @violajames 7 лет назад +17

    I literally posted both of the old videos yesterday, when someone posted to fb a video where people walked across the equator and supposedly proved the coriolis effect, but they were pouring the water in the complementing directions. People were saying, "Mind Blown!" and other ridiculous exclamations, and I just sat there wondering how I could tactfully tell them it was a trick. Thank you for combining the videos!

    • @SamiJumppanen
      @SamiJumppanen 7 лет назад

      Viola James good :) Yes, so often people miss the key factors. Could include myself as well, in some topics I don't understand so well. I'm also happy this video was released. I had been wondering if it is true or not. This confirms it pretty well. I mean, to me it looks valid. It may not be scientific as a test (two) arrangement, but it is at least a good effort and well explained.

    • @albirtarsha5370
      @albirtarsha5370 6 лет назад

      The effect would be even less near the equator because the ratio of distances to the axis is closer to one.

  • @zornsllama
    @zornsllama 7 лет назад +68

    This idea is so weird to me, because every toilet I've used doesn't swirl in any particular reason. The water just kinda goes everywhere.

    • @Filip_Wessman
      @Filip_Wessman 7 лет назад

      It is because it is the size of the pool that makes it. A toilet is simply to small. You need at least large lakes to get it big enough.

    • @chrisg3030
      @chrisg3030 7 лет назад

      I agree with Eleanor. I think Veritasium headlined toilets mainly cos it's kinda smutty, even though the vid itself is excellent in my opinion. I agree with Filip that size is important. Not just the size of the body of water but also that of the drain hole, take a look at Google images of reservoir drain holes, where the surrounding water doesn't appear to swirl as it goes straight down the sides. I suggest elsewhere it's the interference caused by a narrow hole that results in swirl in one direction or another.

    • @Filip_Wessman
      @Filip_Wessman 7 лет назад +2

      I have physically experimented with it. A pool a few meters across could be made to swirl in different direction by manipulating it a bit. But if in sizes of several kilometers across, the earths rotation would most surely be the dominant factor.

    • @chrisg3030
      @chrisg3030 7 лет назад +1

      The experimenters in the vid took a lot of trouble not to manipulate the water themselves, by leaving it to settle overnight, and draining it with valves located outside the pools. But I guess you're saying the pools themselves are still far too small to convincingly show up the earth's rotation effect. What do you think of my point about drain hole size as a factor in swirl, leaving aside the question of direction for the moment?

    • @Filip_Wessman
      @Filip_Wessman 7 лет назад

      I don't know but I believe the drain hole is an important key to the rotation in small pools. But someone should run the numbers on this, cause I really wanna know.

  • @jogon1255
    @jogon1255 3 года назад

    You guys are better advertisers/marketers than anything else.

  • @beppedicento
    @beppedicento 3 года назад +6

    Very good video, well done guys! I’m just wondering why you didn’t add the dye before opening the drain, maybe wait the same time you deemed the water had no spin then add the dye, wait a few hours to ensure no motion and then open the drain?
    But the video is great! I really enjoyed watching and I feel richer now 😊👍

    • @nadnerb2k
      @nadnerb2k 2 года назад

      If you add the dye before opening the drain, it dissipates and you can't see it, and/or you introduce motion to the water before the effect can start.
      Adding it after it starts, allows the water to build its own momentum first. A few drops of dye isn't going to change the direction of kilograms of water that's already moving.

  • @josephbishop3231
    @josephbishop3231 3 года назад +5

    It's more fun to find Coriolis effect in long range precision shooting

  • @me5ng3
    @me5ng3 7 лет назад +281

    What if a tornado travels from the northern hemisphere to the southern hemisphere? Does it collapse?

    • @jacobwhitworth2216
      @jacobwhitworth2216 7 лет назад +128

      It's impossible as the coriolis force dictates that the path of hurricane would move towards the poles away from the equator

    • @jaystarr6571
      @jaystarr6571 7 лет назад +4

      Interesting...

    • @Cosmic_Solace
      @Cosmic_Solace 7 лет назад

      I don't think that happens, we always see tornadoes or hurricanes making landfall in coastal areas away from the equator.

    • @seraphina985
      @seraphina985 7 лет назад +20

      Actually making this happen would be a problem as the larger scale rotation of the wind would be pushing the tornado away from the equator. But lets just assume for a moment you could then no the tornado still wont collapse it's not the vortex rotation that's driving it it's the atmospheric inversion (The fact that warm air high pressure air is trapped bellow cold low pressure air). So long as the inversion remains the tornado would keep going though it's vortex should begin to slow and even eventually stop and start going the other direction if it lasts long enough which is pretty unlikely it has some pretty significant momentum and they just don't last that long.

    • @muemelification
      @muemelification 7 лет назад +11

      Brian actually, tornados are too small to predict their rotational direction. On this small a scale you need really calm initial conditions to see an effect of coriolis (like they are in this video - they let it sit for quite some time and then don't even dare to simply pull the plug) you don't have such conditions in the free atmosphere.
      It's different with the much bigger hurricanes. They rotate ALWAYS in the direction dictated by coriolis and can't exist near the equator (between ~5 degrees north and south) due to the lack of coriolis force. So yes, a hurricane would break down but no, a tornado wouldn't.

  • @not2tees
    @not2tees 6 лет назад

    You guys have the BEST video on this question. I "seemed" to observe that the water drains from my Canadian tub in one direction one day and another another day, so I needed the science.

  • @MrRullakebu
    @MrRullakebu 3 года назад +12

    cool, but I hope they ran the test at least 5 times to make sure it wasn't just coincidence. (I'm not totally sure the pool was big enough)

    • @fruz1378
      @fruz1378 3 года назад

      My thoughts ! in science a proof is something reproductible, so ...
      That would be a bit of a waste of water, but I expected it to be done at least twice

    • @omarahmad3878
      @omarahmad3878 3 года назад +4

      @@fruz1378 Read the description. They did repeat 3 to 4 times.

    • @fruz1378
      @fruz1378 3 года назад

      @@omarahmad3878 good catch, it does not show up until one clocks on th "show more" button.

    • @MrCouxela
      @MrCouxela 3 года назад

      With Coriolis is not a matter of length alone. Velocity is inportant too. I was surprised as well by the small dimensions of the pool but the water is flowing very slowly. I'd like to know the Rossby number which will give you the importance of Coriolis forces over inertial ones...

  • @tbone7179
    @tbone7179 5 лет назад +16

    This video and experiment are great! But, as with most scientifically focused videos, too many of the comments leave me questioning the future of humanity.

  • @yanwong523
    @yanwong523 4 года назад +3

    I can imagine the neighbours looking out their windows to find a grown man screaming out science stuff beside a colourful kiddie pool.

  • @jackdavinci
    @jackdavinci Год назад +1

    I do remember as a kid deliberately reversing the direction in the tub drain, and it would always reset itself

  • @dayshiryu
    @dayshiryu 7 лет назад +10

    What Direction does water drain from the equator?

    • @XtreeM_FaiL
      @XtreeM_FaiL 7 лет назад +35

      Down.

    • @cedricrobertson2893
      @cedricrobertson2893 7 лет назад +3

      dayshiryu it depends how many milimeters you are more un nort or the south

    • @treufuss-yt
      @treufuss-yt 7 лет назад +3

      Hm, ideally it wouldn't turn at all. Just moving straight from the outside to the inside.

    • @chrisallen9509
      @chrisallen9509 7 лет назад

      i think there would be no swirl at all based on what he said, and the water just flow directly into the hole

    • @FloridatedH2O
      @FloridatedH2O 7 лет назад

      If you go back to their example with the pool at the poles, you should be able to figure out what would happen if the pool was moved further and further from the equator. When the pool is at the equator, the water on either side of the drain would be moving at exactly the same speed as the drain, so as the water moves closer to the drain it wouldn't go ahead or behind, thus no rotation. The pool would just drain straight.

  • @robinwallace6259
    @robinwallace6259 4 года назад +3

    That's a very interesting video and one that has left a few questions in my mind. If the water were to emerge INTO the pool from the hole in the bottom, do you think it would begin to turn counterclockwise in one hemisphere and clockwise in the other? I'm asking because weather events are made up of either an ascending air mass or subsiding air mass. When the air mass is subsiding it moves along the surface towards the lower pressure area away from the center. When the air mass is ascending it moves along the surface towards the low pressure in the center. Therefore I'm wondering if the water were to move away from the center of the pool would it rotate the other way?

    • @Jesse_359
      @Jesse_359 3 года назад +1

      Probably not. Two problems. First, Your in-flowing water would start out so turbulent that it would completely overwhelm any Coriolis effect - it obviously hasn't been sitting still for any time at all.
      Second, pumping water in from the center you'd get an angular momentum DAMPING effect as the radius of the pool increased, as opposed to the angular momentum exaggerating effect that you get when you reduce a radius.
      The Coriolis effect is already incredibly minute at these scales, so you need the reduction in radius in your experiment to make it visible at all - going the other way would make it impossible to detect.

    • @robinwallace6259
      @robinwallace6259 3 года назад +1

      @@Jesse_359 Hi Jesse. Thanks for your reply.

  • @Chipatola_Chipolata
    @Chipatola_Chipolata 5 лет назад +6

    This level of commitment is the definition of loving science

  • @2noracj
    @2noracj Год назад +2

    As a physicist, I'm still dubious about these results. Of course the Coriolis effect is real, but let's do a little math to quantify how much impact it should have in this experiment: Huntsville, AL is at a latitude of about 34.7°, so that means that an east-west circle around the globe at that latitude has a circumference of around 40075*cos(34.7) km, or around 32947km. If we assume that kiddie pool has a radius of about 1m, that means that the northernmost point in the pool is about a 40 millionth of the way around the globe from the center, or about 0.000009 degrees. We can calculate the difference in distance around the globe at that slightly different latitude: 2*pi*(6371*cos(34.7 deg)-6371*cos(34.7000009 deg)), which says that the water at the far north edge of the pool will travel about 350um less than the water in the center (and the water at the south end will travel that much further). So if it takes the pool, say, one hour to drain, that's a total difference of about 15um of travel between the water in the center of the pool and that at the outer edges. 15um! That's 1/5 the diameter of a human hair. And that's over the course of an hour. I really doubt that's enough of an effect to set the drainage direction in motion.

    • @kdwaynec
      @kdwaynec Год назад

      This was an interesting experiment, but I'd really like to see it repeated 50 or 100 times, perhaps with even longer times between fill and drain. I'd guess the 'success' rate would be in the 80-90% range, perhaps more.

  • @danielfarrugia945
    @danielfarrugia945 7 лет назад +920

    Cue the flat earthers!

    • @Sortaray
      @Sortaray 7 лет назад +18

      nah, make sense on a flat model as well. The rotaition could be the Sun, travelling over the equator. Everything on the left would gain a small pull on their right side. Just like a passing ship, causing turbulence on each side, with opposite water-spin-direction. The effect might be proven, but is the spin too? Maybe we can try it with technology of our century... just wondering.

    • @94nolo
      @94nolo 7 лет назад +67

      Sortaray flat Earthers surely can't believe in the mass to gravity correlation, right? Because what the hell is under the flat earth? Infinite mass?? 😂

    • @Sortaray
      @Sortaray 7 лет назад +1

      how could i forget the anwser to this question... and why do you want to know in the first place?! Im not a believe-expert like u, i guess.

    • @94nolo
      @94nolo 7 лет назад +34

      Sortaray are you talking to me? I want to know because my brain functions on logic.

    • @MilwaukeeAtheists
      @MilwaukeeAtheists 7 лет назад +38

      we tried doing things with modern technology. but flat earthers are convinced those are conspiracies or everything we get from them is fake

  • @ashbridgeprojects6916
    @ashbridgeprojects6916 7 лет назад +13

    I appreciate the effort you have gone to to undertake this experiment, however, for this to be scientific, it must be repeatable. One single result doesn't prove the existence of the Coriolis effect on this scale. It could have simply been a coincidence. There are factors which could affect the direction of drain rotation more than the Coriolis effect in day-to-day life. It's like the butterfly effect, tiny influences in the initial conditions can change the results dramatically. The wind direction, convection caused by sunlight etc. Possible improvements: Covering the pools with perspex and a cut a hole in the top to let the air in. Put the pool under a gazebo to shade from all sources of light. I would be interested to see a follow-up video of the experiment repeated several times.

    • @Josefina-E-1403
      @Josefina-E-1403 6 лет назад +2

      read the description "For the record Destin and I repeated the experiment 3-4 times each in each hemisphere and got the same results every time."

  • @vendetta1429
    @vendetta1429 5 лет назад +5

    If you try to flush water inbetween the hemispheres it starts floating and attacking people

  • @fyx812
    @fyx812 3 года назад +2

    Excellent demonstration, and I like the graphics of the poles, explaining how this phenomenon occurs, Good Job, you guys, keep up the good work....

  • @cegpatto
    @cegpatto 3 года назад +3

    It would be interesting to include a discussion of the great air masses (and some currents) flow in the North Atlantic (clockwise) and South Atlantic (counterclockwise), the opposite of what is shown here.

  • @KyleLi
    @KyleLi 7 лет назад +40

    So the swirl of water would be the most intense at the poles/rotational axis of the earth?

    • @my3dviews
      @my3dviews 7 лет назад +16

      Yes, that is right. It's why a Foucault pendulum rotates the most at the poles, and not at all at the equator.

    • @SiegePerilousEsauMaltomite
      @SiegePerilousEsauMaltomite 6 лет назад +3

      seasong There would be 100% speed difference as it would be going the same speed in the opposite direction
      Edit: angular velocity or whatever, not technically speed

    • @bauhiniafolia9673
      @bauhiniafolia9673 6 лет назад

      it seems that, we're asking the same question yet conclude a different hypothesis

    • @Sableagle
      @Sableagle 6 лет назад

      This effect is caused by the difference in linear velocity around the axis between two positions with the same angular velocity.
      That difference is caused by them being at different radii from the axis.
      Distance from axis on the surface of a rotating sphere is proportional to the sine of the angle from the pole.
      The greatest difference in linear velocity will occur where the greatest difference in the sine of the angle is.
      The angular size of the pool being constant, this will be where the gradient of the sine graph, dsin(x)/dx, is at its greatest.
      dsin(x)/dx = cos(x).
      cos(x) is at a maximum where x = 0.
      This effect will be strongest at the poles.
      Further, cos(90°) = 0, so at the equator there'll be no effect at all.

  • @blacknoon5950
    @blacknoon5950 5 лет назад +50

    Hurricane - north
    Cyclone - south
    Typhoon - equator

    • @candyneige6609
      @candyneige6609 5 лет назад +9

      No, it's this :
      Hurricane - atlantic ocean
      Cyclone - indian and south pacific oceans
      Typhoon - north pacific ocean

    • @blacknoon5950
      @blacknoon5950 5 лет назад

      @@candyneige6609 in the USA and some parts of the northern hemisphere the storm is called Hurricane and in the middle which is the Equator its called a Typhoon in the southern hemisphere however its called cyclone like in Australia

    • @randomguy263
      @randomguy263 5 лет назад +2

      @@candyneige6609
      Hurricane - Atlantic and northeast Pacific ocean
      Typhoon - northwest Pacific ocean
      Cyclone - Indian and south pacific ocean

    • @gissanchi7020
      @gissanchi7020 5 лет назад +12

      Hotel - Trivago

    • @HaloWolf102
      @HaloWolf102 5 лет назад +1

      @@gissanchi7020 You won this comment section

  • @Mormodes
    @Mormodes 3 года назад

    I can't name a better duo for science videos. Also, 5 minute video = good. Just need something over lunch and the length here is perfect.

  • @gear3.146
    @gear3.146 7 лет назад +10

    The Coriolis effect is in my top 20 favorite effects.

  • @mikemondano3624
    @mikemondano3624 3 года назад +4

    "The Coriolis Effect is real." Yes, we already knew it was real. Cannon-balls and all.

    • @jonasferrao
      @jonasferrao 3 года назад

      u clearly havent met r'tarded flat earthers they believe nothing

  • @Marta-ri8xz
    @Marta-ri8xz 4 года назад +5

    Fun fact : Due to the coriolis effect, the hair on men's is swirled in different direction. You can look at their occiput and see the direction will vary depending on which hemisfere you are or on which hemisphere they've been living

  • @Mikannika
    @Mikannika 5 лет назад +2

    A long time agi I worked in a laboratory that studied airflow in buildings. We had a symmetrical air room there where we could measure air speed through the entire room which was blown evenly from one side in that room. We noticed this effect as well. We had not enough data to prove anything, but interesting it was.

  • @ObiTrev
    @ObiTrev 5 лет назад +6

    1:04 I'm freaking out about how casual he is being so close to a toilet and touching it.

    • @Ras548
      @Ras548 5 лет назад

      Do you sit on the toilet or do you stand? In developed countries the toilet is mostly the cleanest place in the house due to constant desinf. And the water is dringing water mostly.

    • @precursors
      @precursors 3 года назад

      @@Ras548 "dringing" water? eeewwww

  • @fireborn2676
    @fireborn2676 3 года назад +7

    them : we did it, we've eliminated all variable.
    Dye and Wind : cough cough, am i a joke to you ?

    • @Kevin-pv3kg
      @Kevin-pv3kg 3 года назад +1

      Dye is not a variable in rotation. Wind, possibly. Depends on if it was windy. But these are pretty smart guys. I'm sure they took wind speed into consideration

  • @Mucho-Taco
    @Mucho-Taco 5 лет назад +3

    Long story short, you could've just looked at hurricanes from both hemispheres to see the if there was a difference👍👍

    • @peckdec
      @peckdec 3 года назад

      Uhm no, because atmosphere is an incredibly complex and chaotic system with a million variables. You can’t make such generalizations from that.

  • @pablodibildox441
    @pablodibildox441 7 лет назад +4

    veritasium, I have a question that none of my teachers have been able to answer.
    We know that photons are the particles responsible for the electromagnetic interactions and that they have no mass.
    So what is it exactly that we feel when we hold two magnets with the same pole near to each other? What's exactly happening between these magnets?
    I would love it if you made a video about it!
    -thank you

    • @TheMrCarnification
      @TheMrCarnification 7 лет назад +3

      I believe the answer lies in exchange in momentum due to exchange in virtual particles, try to find out more about virtual particles, I don't remember much myself so I can't give you a detailed information.

    • @aluisious
      @aluisious 7 лет назад +3

      You learned a more valuable lesson than why the magnets feel force. You learned that teachers don't know much, which is why they became teachers, and not something better.

    • @Grejegando
      @Grejegando 7 лет назад

      I suggest that you watch this video:
      ruclips.net/video/jq8WOUFeCcg/видео.html

    • @jamesdinius7769
      @jamesdinius7769 7 лет назад +1

      This is a really tricky concept that takes a lot of knowledge of advanced physics to understand. As a college sophomore I know just enough to see how complicated it is. A gross oversimplification is that it is due to relativity and quantum mechanics.

  • @sk8r4life._.81
    @sk8r4life._.81 7 лет назад +11

    what about our spiral galaxy

    • @_Killkor
      @_Killkor 7 лет назад +6

      The rotation, in which the galaxy (if it's a spiral galaxy) swirls is completely random, or it can be influenced from the existence of dark matter, which is confirmed to surround every galaxy, including our own Milky way, or the rotation, in which the central supermassive black hole spins.
      Rotating galaxies take shape of a spiral, because the closer are the objects (stars, nebulae) to the galactic center, the faster their rotation is around it. So the whole body of the galaxy starts to bend into a spiral.
      However, then it gets weird here. The dark matter, which is surrounding our galaxy - it firmly holds it all together. The stars which are orbiting the galaxy center further than others are orbiting it faster. The rotation curve, which should be decreasing with the distance from the galactiv center actually stays constant throughout the entire radius of our galaxy. Dark Matter, whatever it is, is weird.

    • @Dr.Fluffles
      @Dr.Fluffles 7 лет назад +2

      Pretty sure it has to do with the rotation of the central Supermassive Blackhole. If I'm remembering right.

    • @sk8r4life._.81
      @sk8r4life._.81 7 лет назад

      Ferarn McÆternitum oh ya

    • @sbellaharris
      @sbellaharris 7 лет назад +1

      I gave it a blow during the beginning of its formation, randomly. So it is how it is today. you're welcome.

    • @183Decibels
      @183Decibels 7 лет назад +1

      Fact check yourself on the bending in to a spiral. The winding problem says you are wrong.

  • @davidmurphy1005
    @davidmurphy1005 7 лет назад +4

    The effect is real and is called the "Coriolis Effect" after Gaspard-Gustave de Coriolis (1792 - 1843). The magnitude of the effect increases the further north or south of the equator one goes.

  • @misteraon
    @misteraon 3 года назад +1

    I’ve actually seen this effect demonstrated by the equator in Ecuador. Same basin on legs with drain into a bucket underneath. They added flower pedals to see the motion. They did it about 20ft north of the equator and then picked up the basin and repeated the same experiment 20ft south of the equator. They effect is still apparent even that close to the equator.

    • @andersmusikka
      @andersmusikka 3 года назад

      Are you sure they weren't cheating somehow? I think the effect is effectively zero near the equator, as all parts of the pool are at very nearly the same distance from the earth's axis.

    • @misteraon
      @misteraon 3 года назад

      @@andersmusikka one might think. I know I would. I saw it with my own eyes. They used the same basin so the same constants on both sides. It was more of an educational demo as opposed to a magic trick.

  • @coryd6970
    @coryd6970 3 года назад +8

    Wondering if, when you repeated this experiment, you completely rebuilt and re-leveled the base of your pools or even used completely different ones each time. As from what I understand of the coriolis effect, your pools are far too small and would drain far too quickly to be significantly affected by it. I think what you got was fairly lucky and not a repeatable result. Would love to see someone actually do the math on it.

  • @raedwulf61
    @raedwulf61 5 лет назад +3

    Do it a thousand times, not just once.

    • @mrcookedbacon324
      @mrcookedbacon324 5 лет назад

      Pretty basic demonstration. Not much need to go to those lengths.

    • @raedwulf61
      @raedwulf61 5 лет назад

      @@mrcookedbacon324 I flip a coin. It comes up heads. Therefore, it always comes up heads.

    • @mrcookedbacon324
      @mrcookedbacon324 5 лет назад

      I get the logic, I'm not five. It's just that they already have the science behind it proven, their experiment supported it and although it was only one, more ( while statistically better ) are also unnecessary. They already proved their point. I'm just saying they don't need to waste more of their time to prove something online to a single guy in a comment section.

    • @raedwulf61
      @raedwulf61 5 лет назад

      @@mrcookedbacon324 Good science shows results through repetitive experiment. One instance only demonstrates it works one time. Demonstrable repetition is not a waste of time.

    • @sbdonlon
      @sbdonlon 5 лет назад

      @@raedwulf61 go try this exact experiment yourself dummy. i better afer the 10th time you will give up and realise just how stupid you really are

  • @gr3g0r1j4
    @gr3g0r1j4 3 года назад +14

    Hey, let's be somewhat sceptical about this, you have done this only once on each hemisphere, so there's still 25% chance that the effect is completely random xD

    • @stixstudios3380
      @stixstudios3380 3 года назад +4

      Yep. It should be done at least 5 times each. Not that I'm doubting the result, it does make sense, but any scientific experiment should be repeated to ensure that the result is not just random.

    • @deanmuhl7417
      @deanmuhl7417 2 года назад

      It should be done hundreds of times. On the 67th attempt the water swirls the opposite direction then it is falsified. This video proves nothing.

  • @jaimeduncan6167
    @jaimeduncan6167 2 года назад

    Great , was searching for the other video to show to a friend. This is even better to kickstart the conversation

  • @ongbonga9025
    @ongbonga9025 5 лет назад +3

    But did you consider angle of attack, perspective, and relative density disequilibrium?
    Didn't think so.

  • @mrburton9096
    @mrburton9096 7 лет назад +4

    Are the videos of the pools your only attempts? I would not state that a myth is confirmed with only one attempt on each emysphere

    • @ShawnHufford
      @ShawnHufford 7 лет назад

      Mr Burton read the description :)

    • @mrburton9096
      @mrburton9096 7 лет назад +1

      Oh I missed it. They should state it in the video XD

  • @joseluizm.garcia998
    @joseluizm.garcia998 5 лет назад +4

    LIked the way they have presented it without unecessary B.S.

  • @duqueirocano
    @duqueirocano Год назад +1

    I’m watching this video for the first time 6 years later and im tripping on the editing 🤯🤯

  • @cole9083
    @cole9083 5 лет назад +3

    The drain is what matters, if you have 2 drains connected, which ever way the drain goes (to the right, it will swirl clockwise) and vise versa.

    • @JGirDesu
      @JGirDesu 5 лет назад

      umm... what?... that doesn't make sense... the direction of the drain is relative to which side of it you are on... so this is a joke?

    • @cole9083
      @cole9083 5 лет назад

      JGirDesu he had 2 sinks on each side, each one went a different way, yet the drain went down the middle then in between them, connecting them.
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  • @thethrashyone
    @thethrashyone 7 лет назад +5

    Wouldn't the Coriolis effect be negligible on such a tiny body of water? I'm no math wiz, but I imagine the differences in velocity between the sides of the pools nearest to/furthest from the poles would be so tiny as to be nigh incalculable. Seems like a factor as small as the pools' designs and how level they're sitting would do a lot more to influence the outcome than the Coriolis effect. We'd need to see this experiment done numerous more times with less imperfect conditions in order to confirm this definitively.

    • @fortuna19
      @fortuna19 7 лет назад +1

      TheThrashyOne but you can see how slow the water moves initially. It only gains momentum as it drains.

    • @Sableagle
      @Sableagle 6 лет назад

      Just worked out above: linear velocity differences of 0.1219 mm/s and 0.1246 mm/s.

  • @Zukias
    @Zukias 5 лет назад +4

    wouldn't putting the dye in, have affected the experiment though?

    • @vmdp8790
      @vmdp8790 5 лет назад

      狂猫
      U mad cat

  • @andrewmitchell5807
    @andrewmitchell5807 5 лет назад +1

    Best youtube collab ever made

  • @stephenwitwick3926
    @stephenwitwick3926 3 года назад +3

    Flat earthers right now: 🤯

    • @Itsflat5097
      @Itsflat5097 5 месяцев назад

      Flat Earthers right now ... What if it's a stationary Earth with local sun and it's the path of the local sun and moon influencing the water swirl? 🫢🤔 Your experiment started with an earth rotation assumption. Just saying. 🤷‍♂️

  • @reecec626
    @reecec626 5 лет назад +4

    That's great, BUT
    ...at my place in Australia, I can literally force the water to drain anti-clockwise, but it always, *always*, slows, stops and reverses direction to its natural clockwise direction.

    • @vincentrobinette1507
      @vincentrobinette1507 5 лет назад

      What's your latitude? Are you sure there is no asymmetry in your sink? It's my experience, that with a symmetrical basin, with no influence, it will do what you said. I've never seen a case, where once a direction is established, it doesn't continue to swirl in the same direction.

  • @unbearablepun8608
    @unbearablepun8608 7 лет назад +4

    What if you're exactly on the equator

    • @pintificate
      @pintificate 7 лет назад

      The water will go straight down the plughole from all sides.

    • @jackofalltrades7858
      @jackofalltrades7858 7 лет назад +4

      The water hovers in the air and then explodes

    • @vincentrobinette1507
      @vincentrobinette1507 5 лет назад

      If the water swirls at all, it will be random. It will almost always still swirl, from some other influence. It doesn't take much at all, to start a vortex.

  • @agustinizaguirre9460
    @agustinizaguirre9460 2 года назад +1

    Finally!!! I understood why hurricanes/ciclons spin the way they do. Thanks!!

  • @fredrikmyrland3831
    @fredrikmyrland3831 5 лет назад +3

    Further to my previous comment, I need to advise the planet pole illustrations are not clear or satisfactory to convey actual "mechanism"... ask other engineers next time. (?)

  • @mycommentpwnz
    @mycommentpwnz 3 года назад +5

    Little known fact: If you drain a tub EXACTLY on the equator, down to the millimeter, the water won't swirl as it exits the receptacle.
    It will rush-out like a circular waterfall.
    Though, in this case, when I say fact, I mean totally lying.

  • @comment.highlighted
    @comment.highlighted 5 лет назад +10

    1 time test and it’s “Confirmed” 🤔 Edit: At least setup 3-4 pools and pull the valve on all pools at once.

    • @sbdonlon
      @sbdonlon 5 лет назад

      they did this more than one time buddy
      how bout you repeat the test hmm.

    • @comment.highlighted
      @comment.highlighted 5 лет назад +1

      @Morthos “how bout you repeat the test hmm.” Really? Are you in grade school? First of all, you do not know for sure that they did it multiple times. Where are those facts? If they did, why didn’t they show the multiple results for confirmation? 🧐

  • @forgedude
    @forgedude Год назад

    I am one of the few people who, at the time, could sync both videos on different screens and watch them side by side, lol. I remember showing this to a few people in my friend's net cafe.

  • @qwertyuoip1234
    @qwertyuoip1234 5 лет назад +4

    Interesting that Destin, the American, said “1.5 meter pool”
    and Derek, the Canadian/Australian/American said “5 foot pool”

  • @kevklatman
    @kevklatman 7 лет назад +5

    My dairy queen ice creem swirled the same way in US and australia though.

    • @lottagall_1423
      @lottagall_1423 6 лет назад

      www.popularmechanics.com/science/a15852/does-water-drain-backwards-southern-hemisphere/

  • @antimatter7968
    @antimatter7968 3 года назад

    One of the best videos of this channel.

  • @kierstanfaulks
    @kierstanfaulks 5 лет назад +3

    Australian says 5ft, American says 1.5 m
    ummm

  • @MrJacobThrall
    @MrJacobThrall 3 года назад +2

    Hmmm. Is the coriolis effect actually great enough to influence that size body of water? And is one experiment sufficient for that conclusion? Just the one? One with flexible-sided vessels which could conceivably result in water flowing down inclined-planes to create some sort of vorticity? On a substrate of...what gradient? With a drainage system whose bends and twists may or may not be capable of exerting a rotational influence?
    I think this needs to be rather more rigorous before it gets to make any claims.

    • @the_crypter
      @the_crypter 3 года назад

      I mean, they did mention they ran it multiple times in the description......

  • @codyhastings8240
    @codyhastings8240 5 лет назад

    Just watched this for the first time. I really liked the Synchronized format of using 2 videos. Super cool!!

  • @SamTheFable
    @SamTheFable 3 года назад

    This deserves a follow up video in which you position the pool so that the drain is either perfectly at the equator or at either pole so that the outer side of the pool is as close to either/the other pole as possible to see if the angular momentum cancels out or not.

  • @gracielacaminozapata6419
    @gracielacaminozapata6419 3 года назад

    A fun way to prove the Coriolis force! the visual explanation that follows makes it all intuitive. Thanks for posting

  • @hhairball9
    @hhairball9 9 месяцев назад

    That was great! This was the best way to explain it to the kids in my family! Thanks, guys!

  • @AliZafarshah
    @AliZafarshah 3 года назад

    Both these channels are true assets of the internet! Keep going brothers!

  • @cubesquared2291
    @cubesquared2291 3 года назад

    Dude this was awesome!! Never seen videos synchronised before. Fantastic!

  • @mnada72
    @mnada72 6 лет назад

    Very smart innovation, I admit I didn't try to play both videos when I first saw them but it turned out that i have missed something. when played together it added a whole new insight. Thanks

  • @bigtony77
    @bigtony77 3 года назад

    the fact that this video is necessary is an indictment of the education system

  • @jankowalski1501
    @jankowalski1501 Год назад +1

    can someone explain me 4:20 visualisation? Why earth is spinning in different direction dependng on the N/S pool?