If Steve has an inventory full of shulker boxes filled to the brim with stacks of stone, he would be carrying over 220 million pounds. For comparison, that’s over 220 times the weight of the International Space Station. So, yeah, safe to say he wouldn’t be flying around anytime soon
you cant use the scale height for those kind of pressures since at a point the air would go super critical and the compression takes exponentially more force. The ideal gas law only works for a narrow range of conditions. it would be better (though still inaccurate by around an order of magnitude) to take the density of solid air and multiply that by the height and gravity to find the pressure. Otherwise I was entertained by the video. :)
Oh wow, Cody's Lab! Hey thanks man for the input! And really? I wouldn't have thought of that, only because through my research and learning how to calculate all this stuff, this was the best I could come up with. But thank you, again, so much for the input! I love the feedback and also, being proved wrong, believe it or not, because then we all learn something :)
Totem stelle What are you trying to say? Because you loose your point near the end. Pressure isn't rising on the surface, it's stable. I know what you mean about water boiling at different temperatures at different pressures. Are you talking about the boiling point of water at the equator verses the poles? (And gradually in between)
Lol and this explains why this vid poped up as recommended I guess, cody was here. Haven't done all that much with minecraft for a while but the title tickled my fancy. Even with the issues and errors what you do show indicates minecraft's world is a scarry place where the laws of physics just kinda go out the window.
"The player will disintegrate the moment they enter the nether" Did you forget this is the guy who can punch a tree with his bare hands who fights on par with silverfish who can shatter entire cubic meters of stone, and that's before he gets the upgrades from ores? Steve is no human.
A random nerd on the on the internet wastes hours of his life calculating the physical implications of a popular videogame existing as a spherical planet, AKA something which will have no legitimate use in the future of mankind. I love it :)
Well... thanks man. I actually learned a lot from this video, like what the "scale height of an atmosphere" is, and it was for a project, but overall I did find it very interesting to explore and see what I find :) And I'm glad you loved it :)
So not only can steve lift infinite mass, (just cannot be achieved), he can survive a pressure that is impossible and a temperature that rivels that of the cores of the most massive stars
Steve can regenerate after death on point of origin and on fixed locations hold insane amount of gold blocks ( heaviest items in-game) withstand the pressures of a planet the mass of a star and survive temperatures that can evaporate water. Steve is GOD
What about the player's mass? Assuming the average mass of a human adult is 62kg, his weight on this planet would be: 62kg x 5849/m2 = 382638kg We can also use this to calculate the power he needs to jump 1m high. To jump, he needs a force of: 382638kg x 5849/m2 = 2238049662 N 2238049662 NEWTONS 2.610.000.000.000.000.000.000.000 N (Im assuming) is needed to destroy Earth So to destroy Earth, he would (theoretically) need to jump 2.610.000.000.000.000.000.000.000 : 2238049662 = 1.166194e+15 times Not enough to destroy it, but in 2016, 100000000 people have bought minecraft. Assuming they're all online and they're willing to jump together at the same time, the force they cause and how many times it is needed to jump would be... 2238049662 x 100000000 = 2.2380497e+17 One jump and the Earth is boom.
Now factor in Steve's inventory. Remember, he can carry quite a bit of gold. I would guess that one steve with a full inventory of shulker boxes filled with gold would be enough to destroy the planet.
@@hangelo9434 no? literally the first result on google says 1/20thof a second. i also know this from experience with repeating command blocks, it is definitely 1/20th of a second
Yeah. It's not clear from this video, but I did this for an end-of-the-year school project. That was a last-second thing I added.... on no sleep... during school... on the day it was due.... right before I had to hand it in LOL
@@MrBLARG85 no worries though I'd be a bit weird if the laws of speed changed like the speed of lights is around 320ms and the sound would be around what? 2million ms? I'd be weird hearing an explosion in the distance then around 1 minute later you see the explosion like looking back at time 😁
Also he can carry 43.000.000 kilograms which is an inventory full of gold blocks, while wearing full armor, with both hands busy, and still be able to jump. Also, carrying that much weight, he can ride horses without any problem (props on the horses) and little wooden boats without sinking them. It also shouldn't be possible for him to swim with or without full weight, as the massive gravity creates more pressure on the water, but surely he has enough strenght to endure it. The worst part is potions, as it implies there are chemicals capable of making him stronger, or less heavy, or swim faster... Steve is a fkn BEAST
Haha I really enjoyed watching this! The Mathematics was quite advanced and I have to admit I couldn't follow everything, but it was quite amazing to see the end results of the calculations! Keep it up and I hope to see more!
Johnson May Without knowing for sure, I doubt the author of this vid is a physics student, as the math used is on a lower level than someone who studies physics purely. There wasn't even any calculus in this video, mostly filling in formulas.
LegendMeadow You're right, I'm not a physics student, and I hadn't taken a Calculus class yet as of this video. Remember, I posted this when I was a Junior in high-school lol. Anyway, now that I’ve taken Calculus, I can say that I didn’t really need to take the derivative or integral of anything. As those deal with (for what applies to physics) acceleration, velocity, volume, and so on. What I’m saying is: I wasn’t calculating multiple celestial bodies and their effects on each other. So I didn’t need it :) Side-note: The equations I looked up were already in their final form, and all I did was use Algebra to rewrite the equations. So, some of these formulas could have been a derivative or something without me knowing it :)
Me: Places a dirt. Dirt: doesn’t fall. Me: watches this video. As you can see, this guy worries about how water evaporates in the nether when dirt floats in the god damn air.
@@dieselgeezer18 Sand falls at the same rate in the nether as it does in the overworld, further mucking up the math. It's still kinda fun to run pointless equations like a mad lib.
That just means that air density equals to the density of dirt. Also, when author calculated gravitational acceleration, he didn't take Archimed's force into account. I guess air is very dense in minecraft exactly because of immense gravitation.
Reading out a ton of digits is nigh-meaningless. Please use significant digits, or truncate at a sensible point. Also, use the appropriate units, e.g. 16.4 meters instead of 0.0164 km.
obvious_humor Yeah, but I did this for a school project and my teacher wanted us to show our work accurately. If I had more time to fix my calculation mistakes, and if this wasn't rushed for a school project, THAT would definitely be a change. Thanks for your input! I love hearing constructive criticism :)
Yeah I agree; showing your work was enough to show that your calculations could be checked, and reading all of those digits out added no new information that could already be gleaned from the visuals.
You calculated the temperature of the nether for which 1cubic meter water gets evaporated in 1µs, given that Minecraft is a spherical planet, accounting for it's mass, atm pressure, acceleration due to gravity, radius, and the shift in said acceleration, caused by the centrifugal force, due to said radius; gasp.....GASP;......, for a school project? Excuse me but you doing intership in NASA or smth? Oh yeah, and also, significant figures.
MrBLARG85 Except having your answer have more digits than the data you put IS inaccurate. Your answer can not be more precise than what you start with. If you start with 18 m/s^2, your final answer HAS to be 5800, not 5831.139442 Having that many in your answer is essentially lying about the accuracy of your starting information, and after many repeated calculations you’ll actually end up with the wrong answer entirely so you could get in a lot of trouble for not rounding properly in professional fields. You don’t want to be the one to crash a million dollar satellite.
You know, a couple of years ago I thought if I walked far enough I would meet the spot I were on before, testing it by building something made out of stone and then my "journey" began. I flied all the way, giving up after like 15 minutes 😂 I wish I would've used those minutes for something useful....
True; fantasy realms are analogous, not equal to terrestrial ones. You could theoretically have a beam 60 million blocks long, being perfectly straight along the entire length. Engineering something like that is impossible irl.
I’m honestly a lot more impressed with the math in this video than I expected. Like, you went ALL out. Makes me wanna check the rest of your videos lol.
The End, in the Outer atmosphere that acts like a ring... planet minecraft has rings like Saturn or Jupiter? (Or other gas Giants in our solar system and beyond)
HarHarGamer That was my best way of explaining how all the dimensions are connected. Since the End kind of looks like a bunch of floating rocks in space (like a bunch of asteroids), I figured that was a good explanation to show people why it shouldn't be included in the calculations.
For the calculation of the energy required for 1m^3 water to evaporate, you only calculated the energy required for the water to reach 100°C but you didn't took into account the energy required fot the water to properly evaporate. For that you need the specific latent heat of the water at atmospheric pressure which is : 2,2e6 J/kg And because 1m^3 of water is 1000kg, the energy required for 1m^3 of water to evaporate at atmospheric pressure is (when the water is already at boilling temp) 2.2e9 J
Wow. When it started off, I thought I was pretty clever, I knew some of the equations, but as it went in i was like WTF are there actual equations?!? Nonetheless this was very interesting. Hard luck on your errors. Compiling it 4 times must've taken forever!
How? Minecraft is clearly orbiting a star. Unless the Minecraft planet is really a dead star orbiting with another live star in a binary star system. But if that’s the case, the Minecraft world would be so hot that nothing would survive due to being so close to the partner star.
@@ares_bluesteel I mean, There is a video call "Dead sun theory" on youtube, which says that the world IS, indeed a dead, cold star, a black dwarf, and the "sun" is actually a planet that was nuked so hard by it's creators, that it's glowing to this day. The original creators of the Minecraft world were afraid that their civilisation will die with their sun cooling down, so they accumulated energy, and, when the time came, they transported all the dirt, stone and life onto the dead sun, and then nuked the planet, which is now the sun. This theory also explains bedrock, and partially explains the Endermen, with MatPat's theory
not a single part of this video was calculus. the equations used were certainly derived using calculus, but no active calculus was used. just basic algebra
Yeah, he did. Some time ago actually, but I the only proof I have is that my video was uploaded like 1-5 months before his (or something). Also, did you mean that channel uploaded a recent video? (Because I was referring to one I had seen some time ago now.)
How about some alternative explanations to make the physics make more sense. The Minecraft world is in a Lagrange point between a binary star system, or a three way star system, or four, or however many it needs to make any sense. This means that there is actually a forty minute day cycle, in which a star is visible in the sky twice. Or 60 minutes and three times, and so on until the rotation is not insane. Also, you take a portal to the Nether, so the idea of the Nether being another planet entirely is not that crazy.
lobsterbark Binary systems rarely get planets as it is night near impossible for a planet to get a stable orbit around those stars Trillior systems barely keep themselves together and anything more than that is unbelievable impossible to get going in a stable manor
The binary star system (or more) wouldn't work, because it would cause too much of an unstable orbit, and the days would be inconsistent. But thank you for the thought though :)
A lagrange point is something completly different from an orbit. With a symmetrical Binary system, it should theoretically be possible, I'm not really sure about any more that that though it might also work.
Hey there, awesome video and kudos to the in-depth mathematical analysis on the in-game physics! I just have a few things I'd like to point out that I haven't really seen many people talk about in the comments section. Modeling the Nether as a lower layer of the planet is compelling because the math goes in line with what we see in-game. However, there are geometric problems with that type of model if it were the reality. The inverse-square law is used for energy intensity over space, but I think it shows a parallel that is relevant to this discussion. The main problem is that the lower you go, assuming all blocks in Minecraft are equally distributed in a cubic grid pattern, the size of these blocks would become squished the lower you go. The length and width of a block would have to distort dramatically the closer it gets to the center point. If the nether were in fact beneath the overworld, the player would appear 8 times larger than in the overworld relative to a block. Another issue with the planet being spherical is that an equal measurement of squares on its surface is that it is geometrically impossible. The Mercator Projection map of the Earth distorts drastically at the poles since if you even assign a quadrilateral to each part of the planet, it breaks down when you get to the poles where all the longitudinal lines intersect. It would be like a square piece of candy wrapping around a lollipop, most of the surface is fine, but the part closer to the stick starts to bunch up. Unless there are some strange magical distortion effects applied to the player's perspective to accommodate for these inconsistencies, I don't think the nether literally underneath the overworld. However, I don't think this means we should toss the idea that the Nether is somehow "below" the overworld and that the Overworld is finite. Which is why I'd like to propose that the game actually takes place on a 4-dimensional torus shape. What do I mean by that? Well if you go in one direction in the game for long enough and each the 64-bit integer limit, the world generation should essentially repeat and loop on itself. (Perhaps not literally in this case since it's more of a parallel world than the world that you started off with. As well as this is still impossible to achieve in-game due to hardware limitations, however. This interesting thought came to me when I inputted "9,223,372,036,854,775,807" into the program Amidst and I noticed that the terrain was an exact match with the area the near spawn. I am a bit skeptical about these results since it can't be proven to be true in the game, but let's just say that's how large the world really is for now.) In some 2D games, when the player walks off the edge of the map, they appear right at the other side. And the only way for quadrilaterals to be parallel to each other on a 2d surface is if the world were projected onto a torus. Now, I am aware that this does run into the same issue I point out earlier with the spherical model since the length and width of a square distorts on a torus itself. And again, while you could just adjust the player's perception without changing the geometry, it also runs into the same problem where blocks get more squished the lower you go. I believe this issue would be fixed if the overworld takes place on the 3D "surface" of a 4D torus. And since the Nether is geometrically linked to the overworld, that would make the Nether not literally beneath the overworld in this model, but rather "deeper" in a 4-dimensional sense. This would be more in line with parallel worlds like the Upside Down and actually fits in the developers' canon since they too claim that the Nether isn't underneath the overworld but is a separate "dimension" (more accurately: universe). Though I have to admit that I'm not so knowledgable with the consequences of the game taking place on the surface on a 4D shape, at it's quite difficult to wrap one's head around intangible mathematical concepts such as higher dimensions of space. So if anyone's read this far and would like to poke holes at my model, by all means, I encourage you. A problem I found with measuring gravity in Minecraft is that entities don't fall at a consistent rate to each other that would make sense for their mass. But at least it's useful for figuring out terminal velocity for falling block entities. Again, you have done a lot of excellent work on this topic, and this is in no way intended to undermine your findings, these are just a few things I wanted to point out. :)
((3.6*10^15)/(4*3.14))^(1/2)= 16925687.51 , not the answer in the video √((3.6*10^15)/(4π)) gives the same answer in normal calculators radius of a planet is only about 17 000 km, about 2.5 times more than Earth
Daniil Laskin Thank you so much! I had forgotten the division sign " / " when plugging that into the online calculator. Making 3.6*10^15 MULTIPLY by 4pi instead of being divided by it. (This project was rushed for a deadline for school, so I wasn't able to check everything thoroughly.) Thank you for pointing that out!
yeah the radius should be slightly bigger than a quarter of the length of the original square. So i knew something was wrong when the radius was so much bigger.
The Nether is not smaller than the overworld, not one bit, since while the proportions are working this way when you place a Nether portal you can easily step over the 1/8 boundary in the Nether.
Qexilber Kinda makes sense, but what if you go beyond 1/8 of the Overworld limit in the Nether, then place a Nether Portal? Do you teleport to the Far Lands or Something?
Clorox Beach maybe on the journey the portal is filled with Clorox Bleach so you never get to see what's next. Or you just go to the End. Or you fall into the void. Or if you go far enough you go to... You'll never think it exists... _ANOTHER PLANET!!!_
@Squiddy FancySon ... I legit hate people who say "Not funny" Idek why lmao it sounds so childish I suppose. Alright most informative reply in the world bye
Awesome video! The difficulty with these types of calculations is working with such extreme values causes a lot of advanced physics to become very relevant. For instance, a planet with twice the mass of our sun would cause fusion in its core (guess that's why the nether is so hot lol) and would no longer be a planet but a brown dwarf. Also, that mass would produce such strong gravity that the radius given would be impossible, even with bedrock being taken into account, as gravity would force added mass to increase it's density rather than size.
You have no idea how cool this is. I GREATLY appreciate all the effort you put into this. You a very smart man and should be super proud of this video. Great job 👍
school is a place were you learn a percentage that low? c'mon this gotta be a joke dont mean to get wooooshed by internet users i just had to point that out
PsychicVictini No need! Someone already did it! Their video is called: "Is a round Minecraft world possible?" Link: ruclips.net/video/ztAg643gJBA/видео.html
Props to you dude, an instant hit of a video with over 173k views when the rest of your videos are just under 1k. I hope this brings success to your channel. Live long and prosper🖖
9:00 This isn't technically correct. The thermodynamic definition for termperature T is \frac{1}{T} = \frac{\partial S}{\partial U} where S is the entropy, U is the energy, and \paritals are \partial derivatives. This allows for a \frac{1}{T} which is negative if the slope of entropy w.r.t energy is negative. However, zero temperature still does not exist, as that would have the slope diverge to infinity. Don't let the concept of negative temperature fool you though, a negative temperature would feel quite hot. Why? Objects in thermal contact interact to make their entropy equals. A negative temperature object, would cause any positive valued object (even as small as +0.00000001) to diverge to the negative end over the domain of entropy, which is diverging to the positive infinite temperature over the range for the positive valued entropy object. The negative valued entropy object would similarly both diverge to negative infinity. Source: B.S in Physics
Here's some math for how much weight Steve can hold: 37 Slots in inventory. 36 can have Shulker boxes filled with stacks of 64 gold blocks. The last slot can have an Ender chest that has 27 slots which can be filled with Shulker boxes which can hold additional stacks of gold blocks. Each gold block consists of 9 gold ingots (bars). In total he can hold 979776 gold ingots (bars). In the real world 1 gold bar weighs about 25 lbs (11.33 kg). That equates to 24,494,400 lbs (11,110,472.948 kg). ----------------------------------Edit: After more digging (pun intended), it turns out my original comment didn't account for the size of a gold block. So, in MC a gold block is 1 cubic meter in size. If applied to the real world, a gold block that size would weigh about 42,509.53 lbs (19,282.2 kg). Here's the new calculation: Raw number of item slots: Inventory (36) + Hand (1) + Ender Chest (27) = 64 Each item slot filled with Shulker boxes (27 per) = 1,728 Number of gold blocks: 1,728 slots * 64 per stack = 110,592 Weight of one gold block ≈ 42,509.53 lbs (19282.2 kg) Grand total: ≈ 4,701,213,941.76 lbs (2,132,434,773.72 kg)
The Nether is the same size as the overworld. It's just not allowed to spawn portals outside of the boundary. 3:45 I'm not sure what you're doing there, but the centrifugal force you'd experience on a planet that spins at 1 rotation every 20 minutes is exactly the same as the centrifugal force you'd experience on a merry-go-round with the same rate of rotation. You'd be going slower on the merry-go-round, but you'd also be taking a more sharply curved path, and that balances out the slower speed. So the centrifugal force would be the same.
Minecraft worlds in not truly infinite, but it's not true to say that it's finite either. It get's generated all the time so it's theretically infinite. The only limitation is how high numbers your computer can process. The actual barrier put by the devs is there only so players won't reach the area where simulation starts to get buggy, but world still generates.
Well the in-game barrier wasn't there for most of the game history, and the limit of how far can world generate depends on processor architecture so in future when we get 128-bit, 256-bit etc computers it will be larger. So it's theoretically infinite
xGOKOPx Yeah, it is theoretically infinite if we had the stable computing power. We can still calculate a 128bit or 256bit number on even a 32 bit machine (but it takes 4 and 8 times longer respectively). As of now, and the making of this video, (and not counting previous versions of Minecraft with the "phantom blocks" after the world limit) Minecraft has a physical limit at 30 million blocks in each direction except up and down. I'm not disagreeing with you on the theoretical part, but I had to stick with the fact of the physical limitation of the world size for the calculations. Thank you for bringing it up though :)
Wow nice video! There was one thing that bothered me though: you pretty randomly made the time it takes for water to evaporate in the nether 0.001s while you could've more logically made it one tick or a 1/20 of a second!
Well thanks! But why I chose that time was because you never see the block of water when you place it down. "It's gone before your screen can update." So I based it on FPS, not game-ticks, because nobody's computer or monitor can run Minecraft at 1000 frames per second, let alone the human eye can't detect an abrupt change to-and-from that fast. Anything happening in that amount of time is registered as "instant" to our human bodies. So that is why I choose a 1000th of a second and not a 20th. Hope that clarified and widened your view on this :)
Absolute great video. Quick question: why did you choose 1/1000th of a second to define "instantaneously" but use 60 fps at 2:30? Since we experience the game the same way, this factors should be liked, right? This makes the "instantaneouly" be slightly under 16,6 ms and noone would see a difference, because it all happened in less than a frame.
I get questions like that a lot. • Why "Instantly" was defined the way it was, was due to the fact that it does *not* take 1 "game tick" (1/20th of a second) for water to evaporate, otherwise we would see it. This is because we would be *able to* place the block, and on the next game update, it would disappear/evaporate. In the way the game works, no block is placed *ever;* you are denied block placement. So, in the real world, the water steams away as fast as java can execute the event, which is different every time, and slower or faster depending on your computer, leading to unstable data to base a claim on. • I went with a 1000th of a second because it was "reasonably" fast enough to where no person could perceive a change (in the real world), and not as "unreasonably" fast as the java code could execute. After all without accurate instruments, this is the best I could do. • For the 60fps timings to measure gravity, that was just because that's how fast I could record footage on my computer. Simple as that. • So if I went with "16,6ms" (0.016s), yes that would be 1 frame of 60 in a second, but it would be perceivable. If I did 240fps (0.004s -> 4ms), it would be near impossible to tell there was a flash of blue. So, I went with *1ms* (a 1000th of a second) for simplicity and to minimize perception, without going overboard. Thanks for the questions : ) I read these comments from time to time, and appreciate all the criticism. Have a wonderful day : )
Aliens:"so,how much you humans are advanced" Humans:"we know the mass, temperature, velocity, gravity, pressure of a minecraft world and the nether with math and physics" *Aliens left the server*
4:08 Wait speed of sound... How did you calculate that? Did you measure the Elytra wing size and made a drag assumption or how did you use the chicken terminal velocity for this?
The reason Steve isn’t flying off the planet is because he’s carrying all of that cobblestone
That One Guy And golden apples
But do you normally have an inventory full always on hand
@@thoseoneguy9554 yup
If Steve has an inventory full of shulker boxes filled to the brim with stacks of stone, he would be carrying over 220 million pounds. For comparison, that’s over 220 times the weight of the International Space Station. So, yeah, safe to say he wouldn’t be flying around anytime soon
@@carterknox3096 what about an inventory full of ahulker boxes filled with stacks of enchanted golden apples?
*looks for logical inconsistencies in a game with floating trees*
Lmao
No this is why the trees float
Magic Zerda i am lorax. i speak for the trees. the trees say *its floating time*
They are Orbiting the Planet at Geostationary Orbit.
I'm like number six hundred and sixty six
you cant use the scale height for those kind of pressures since at a point the air would go super critical and the compression takes exponentially more force. The ideal gas law only works for a narrow range of conditions. it would be better (though still inaccurate by around an order of magnitude) to take the density of solid air and multiply that by the height and gravity to find the pressure. Otherwise I was entertained by the video. :)
LOL CODY WHY ARE YOU WATCHING MINECRAFT?? I love your videos btw
I love you man
Oh wow, Cody's Lab! Hey thanks man for the input! And really? I wouldn't have thought of that, only because through my research and learning how to calculate all this stuff, this was the best I could come up with.
But thank you, again, so much for the input!
I love the feedback and also, being proved wrong, believe it or not, because then we all learn something :)
Totem stelle What are you trying to say? Because you loose your point near the end. Pressure isn't rising on the surface, it's stable. I know what you mean about water boiling at different temperatures at different pressures. Are you talking about the boiling point of water at the equator verses the poles? (And gradually in between)
Lol and this explains why this vid poped up as recommended I guess, cody was here. Haven't done all that much with minecraft for a while but the title tickled my fancy. Even with the issues and errors what you do show indicates minecraft's world is a scarry place where the laws of physics just kinda go out the window.
"The player will disintegrate the moment they enter the nether"
Did you forget this is the guy who can punch a tree with his bare hands who fights on par with silverfish who can shatter entire cubic meters of stone, and that's before he gets the upgrades from ores? Steve is no human.
Don't forget those stacks of gold blocks within shulker boxes.
@@NotSoProishNoob nah, that's just hammerspace.
He can move in a full set of golden armor while holding a gold block in his two hands though.
But... Butt inventory.
@@NotSoProishNoob Yeah I doubt Villagers are that strong since they have inventory too, lol.
@@NotSoProishNoob u mean, there is an inventory inside steve arse?
Me: *gets mathematics degree*
“uhhhhhh what now?”
hmmm what if minecraft was a sphere
Paul Martin No. He’s not a doctor. Let him continue doing pointless videos on unnecessary subjects lol
A random nerd on the on the internet wastes hours of his life calculating the physical implications of a popular videogame existing as a spherical planet, AKA something which will have no legitimate use in the future of mankind.
I love it :)
Well... thanks man. I actually learned a lot from this video, like what the "scale height of an atmosphere" is, and it was for a project, but overall I did find it very interesting to explore and see what I find :)
And I'm glad you loved it :)
"...no legitimate use in the future of mankind."
*Perhaps*
Bold of you to assume we won’t find something in Area 51 that will let us go to Minecraft.
Isaac White what if the world of minecraft exists, now we will be able to tell if it does since we have the numbers
Same
Suck on this, MatPat, look at who can do some REAL MATHS
LDS_ Link Mat is still one of the best
Ayyy you mat pat is a genius
I was mostly just joking, sorry don't take it the wrong way. I love MatPat.
LDS_ Link don't we all
Look at all his Nintendo vids. He's a genius
Minecraft is a dwarf star?
Damn, the dead sun theory really does add up doesn't it
Damn, and here I thought I was the first one who thought of this.
Nat Figgers I believe they’re referring to this ruclips.net/video/flGjWc8KF-M/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/flGjWc8KF-M/видео.html
BROOOOOO I just came from there. I made a kinda big connection in the comments of that video 😎
OOOOHOHOHOHOH
-Kid: When am I going to use this math in real life.
-Teacher: Points to this video’s URL.
Looks at the tittle: "Oh, another funny Minecraft theory".
Watching the video: *YEAH, THIS IS BIG BRAIN TIME*
So not only can steve lift infinite mass, (just cannot be achieved), he can survive a pressure that is impossible and a temperature that rivels that of the cores of the most massive stars
Ben's Gaming Channel AKA: "Square Super Man"
I wonder, what's the temperature of fire or lava is
I wonder, what's the temperature of fire or lava is
But maybe matter is lighter
Steve can regenerate after death on point of origin and on fixed locations hold insane amount of gold blocks ( heaviest items in-game) withstand the pressures of a planet the mass of a star and survive temperatures that can evaporate water. Steve is GOD
I was gonna make a joke about the shape of the minecraft earth, but it kinda fell flat
Ricardo Kong ya it did
Haha good jokee
You spun me round my head
I was gonna make a joke about the elements but I only do it periodically.
stop im gonna get cancer
What about the player's mass?
Assuming the average mass of a human adult is 62kg, his weight on this planet would be:
62kg x 5849/m2 = 382638kg
We can also use this to calculate the power he needs to jump 1m high.
To jump, he needs a force of:
382638kg x 5849/m2 = 2238049662 N
2238049662 NEWTONS
2.610.000.000.000.000.000.000.000 N (Im assuming) is needed to destroy Earth
So to destroy Earth, he would (theoretically) need to jump
2.610.000.000.000.000.000.000.000 : 2238049662 = 1.166194e+15 times
Not enough to destroy it, but in 2016, 100000000 people have bought minecraft.
Assuming they're all online and they're willing to jump together at the same time, the force they cause and how many times it is needed to jump would be...
2238049662 x 100000000 = 2.2380497e+17
One jump and the Earth is boom.
Jesus Christ, forget nukes. Have a bunch of Steves jump on a location and BOOM hahaha
Stop blowing up my mind please
Someone needs to make a mod about this
Steve, Destroyer of Worlds.
Now factor in Steve's inventory. Remember, he can carry quite a bit of gold. I would guess that one steve with a full inventory of shulker boxes filled with gold would be enough to destroy the planet.
4:00 Speed of sound is about 340 m/s what are you talking about?
No, its like, 80mph. Did you learn anything from Back To The Future? Smh.
@@t2hk_ XD hope ur not serious
Dude its 2m/min
@@akylatriz the speed of sound?? U crazy
@@theminecraft4202 yes
School : Alright this is Minecraft easy stuff
Exam : Basically this video
10:03 i feel like "instantly" should've been defined as being one tick, or about 1/60 of a second
1 tick is 1/20 of a second
That’s hot
@@bayblademaster697 Then the temperature would be infinite.
@@EnigmaGameMaster that's why it can't be 0s, because you can't divide by 0
@@MrOrzech1 Yep.
Every living thing on Minecraft is a god to survive there.
Lapis Blaze maybe that’s why everything is flat
Sheep literally do nothing but eat grass
@@Shadow-bt9fd It must be difficult given the gravity. xd
I never knew the power of a minecraft sheep.
Mason K
Water sheep
imo "instantaneously" should be 1/20 of a second because that's how long a tick is, and the calculation speed of minecraft
Ed not everything is calculated in ticks
HueHanaejistla! Inc. block updates are, and so are fluids
game ticks are 1/60 of a second, which is the rate that block updates follow. a redstone tick is 1/20 of a second which is what ofc, redstone follows.
@@kaziro no. i was wrong game ticks and redstone ticks are both 1/20 of a second
@@hangelo9434 no? literally the first result on google says 1/20thof a second. i also know this from experience with repeating command blocks, it is definitely 1/20th of a second
“I dropped a block of sand in game”
*shows white wool*
I think it's actually concrete powder
Falling sand entity
Welp it’s time for me to open up Universe Sandbox 2
same XD
You made an error on 3:59 the speed of sound is around 320ms so you probably meant to say 93% the speed of light
Yeah. It's not clear from this video, but I did this for an end-of-the-year school project. That was a last-second thing I added.... on no sleep... during school... on the day it was due.... right before I had to hand it in LOL
@@MrBLARG85 no worries though I'd be a bit weird if the laws of speed changed like the speed of lights is around 320ms and the sound would be around what? 2million ms? I'd be weird hearing an explosion in the distance then around 1 minute later you see the explosion like looking back at time 😁
The speed of light is around 300,000,000 m/s
@@Datmexican thanks for correcting me I forgot, I appreciate it.
@@MrBLARG85 This was a school project? That's so freaking cool.
Steve is pretty tought dude, beeing able to survive in nether and jump 1 meter high in basically black hole gravity levels.
Also he can carry 43.000.000 kilograms which is an inventory full of gold blocks, while wearing full armor, with both hands busy, and still be able to jump. Also, carrying that much weight, he can ride horses without any problem (props on the horses) and little wooden boats without sinking them. It also shouldn't be possible for him to swim with or without full weight, as the massive gravity creates more pressure on the water, but surely he has enough strenght to endure it. The worst part is potions, as it implies there are chemicals capable of making him stronger, or less heavy, or swim faster... Steve is a fkn BEAST
How about an inventory filled with shulker boxes filled with gold blocks?
realflow100 that’s when it starts to slow him down. That is the limit.
@@realflow100 shulker boxes filled with shulker boxes filled with shulker boxes...
Not possible. illegal action minecraft wont let you do that.
Haha I really enjoyed watching this! The Mathematics was quite advanced and I have to admit I couldn't follow everything, but it was quite amazing to see the end results of the calculations!
Keep it up and I hope to see more!
Yeah most people couldn't follow along haha. The person who could was my Physics teacher to whom I presented to. But Thankso Buddo !
MrBLARG85 Are you a physics student?
Archelaus If you thought this was hard, you should check out Jeija's video on the same subject!
Johnson May Without knowing for sure, I doubt the author of this vid is a physics student, as the math used is on a lower level than someone who studies physics purely. There wasn't even any calculus in this video, mostly filling in formulas.
LegendMeadow
You're right, I'm not a physics student, and I hadn't taken a Calculus class yet as of this video. Remember, I posted this when I was a Junior in high-school lol.
Anyway, now that I’ve taken Calculus, I can say that I didn’t really need to take the derivative or integral of anything. As those deal with (for what applies to physics) acceleration, velocity, volume, and so on.
What I’m saying is: I wasn’t calculating multiple celestial bodies and their effects on each other. So I didn’t need it :)
Side-note: The equations I looked up were already in their final form, and all I did was use Algebra to rewrite the equations. So, some of these formulas could have been a derivative or something without me knowing it :)
Me: Places a dirt. Dirt: doesn’t fall. Me: watches this video. As you can see, this guy worries about how water evaporates in the nether when dirt floats in the god damn air.
but sand falls
@@dieselgeezer18 Sand falls at the same rate in the nether as it does in the overworld, further mucking up the math. It's still kinda fun to run pointless equations like a mad lib.
@@5467nick you dont need to have the nether spin at the same rate than the rest of the planet
That just means that air density equals to the density of dirt. Also, when author calculated gravitational acceleration, he didn't take Archimed's force into account. I guess air is very dense in minecraft exactly because of immense gravitation.
I love how all of us are just pretending to know what he is talking about.
Reading out a ton of digits is nigh-meaningless. Please use significant digits, or truncate at a sensible point. Also, use the appropriate units, e.g. 16.4 meters instead of 0.0164 km.
obvious_humor Yeah, but I did this for a school project and my teacher wanted us to show our work accurately. If I had more time to fix my calculation mistakes, and if this wasn't rushed for a school project, THAT would definitely be a change. Thanks for your input! I love hearing constructive criticism :)
Yeah I agree; showing your work was enough to show that your calculations could be checked, and reading all of those digits out added no new information that could already be gleaned from the visuals.
You calculated the temperature of the nether for which 1cubic meter water gets evaporated in 1µs, given that Minecraft is a spherical planet, accounting for it's mass, atm pressure, acceleration due to gravity, radius, and the shift in said acceleration, caused by the centrifugal force, due to said radius; gasp.....GASP;......, for a school project? Excuse me but you doing intership in NASA or smth? Oh yeah, and also, significant figures.
MrBLARG85
Except having your answer have more digits than the data you put IS inaccurate. Your answer can not be more precise than what you start with. If you start with 18 m/s^2, your final answer HAS to be 5800, not 5831.139442
Having that many in your answer is essentially lying about the accuracy of your starting information, and after many repeated calculations you’ll actually end up with the wrong answer entirely so you could get in a lot of trouble for not rounding properly in professional fields. You don’t want to be the one to crash a million dollar satellite.
@@ObjectsInMotion correct me if I'm wrong. Don't you want to carry the extra digits until the final calculation, then round?
You know, a couple of years ago I thought if I walked far enough I would meet the spot I were on before, testing it by building something made out of stone and then my "journey" began. I flied all the way, giving up after like 15 minutes 😂
I wish I would've used those minutes for something useful....
ErrorCraft Hahaha me too bud
Why not really implement this in minecraft, instead of the world border?
* I flew
Oh wow
I remember trying to teleport myself really high thinking I could get to the moon.
i think its safe to conclude minecraft doesnt make any sense when translated to irl.
True; fantasy realms are analogous, not equal to terrestrial ones. You could theoretically have a beam 60 million blocks long, being perfectly straight along the entire length. Engineering something like that is impossible irl.
And RUclips is only recommending this to people in 2019?
I’m honestly a lot more impressed with the math in this video than I expected. Like, you went ALL out. Makes me wanna check the rest of your videos lol.
1:46 We could use the easy solution.
BUT WE'RE GOING THE HARD WAY.
The End, in the Outer atmosphere that acts like a ring... planet minecraft has rings like Saturn or Jupiter? (Or other gas Giants in our solar system and beyond)
HarHarGamer That was my best way of explaining how all the dimensions are connected. Since the End kind of looks like a bunch of floating rocks in space (like a bunch of asteroids), I figured that was a good explanation to show people why it shouldn't be included in the calculations.
I like to imagine that the End is in between the overworld and the nether, hovering over the core of the world.
@@boxcarz That end theory is pretty good, it'd explain that what you see in the skybox is just the void gasses
When Eisntien play Minecraft (4:06)
Dessy Hahaha thanks man
np :D
This video is why although I love physics and it was my best subject in school, I could not be a physicist. Heartbreaking.
For the calculation of the energy required for 1m^3 water to evaporate, you only calculated the energy required for the water to reach 100°C but you didn't took into account the energy required fot the water to properly evaporate.
For that you need the specific latent heat of the water at atmospheric pressure which is : 2,2e6 J/kg
And because 1m^3 of water is 1000kg, the energy required for 1m^3 of water to evaporate at atmospheric pressure is (when the water is already at boilling temp) 2.2e9 J
MrRedseth Oh you're right! You're talking about "activation energy," right?
Because if so, that would make the temperature of the Nether even hotter!
Wow. When it started off, I thought I was pretty clever, I knew some of the equations, but as it went in i was like WTF are there actual equations?!? Nonetheless this was very interesting. Hard luck on your errors. Compiling it 4 times must've taken forever!
Oh yeah, it was a pain! And one of them I caught JUST before I uploaded it (it was the mass of the Nether. I had *10^29 when it was *10^28)
Oh wow xD I never would of noticed it.
It was all definitely worth it.
There’s a theory that the Minecraft “planet” is actually a dead star that’s terraformed, and this totally makes sense
Ok buddy
Thanks dad
How? Minecraft is clearly orbiting a star. Unless the Minecraft planet is really a dead star orbiting with another live star in a binary star system. But if that’s the case, the Minecraft world would be so hot that nothing would survive due to being so close to the partner star.
@@ares_bluesteel Did you even watch the video? Nothing should be able to survive on it already.
@@ares_bluesteel I mean, There is a video call "Dead sun theory" on youtube, which says that the world IS, indeed a dead, cold star, a black dwarf, and the "sun" is actually a planet that was nuked so hard by it's creators, that it's glowing to this day. The original creators of the Minecraft world were afraid that their civilisation will die with their sun cooling down, so they accumulated energy, and, when the time came, they transported all the dirt, stone and life onto the dead sun, and then nuked the planet, which is now the sun. This theory also explains bedrock, and partially explains the Endermen, with MatPat's theory
Wow, such a cool video!
My physics teacher should see this :D
Show it to them! Please! Show them Minecraft is educational! Haha XD
Don’t. Centrifugal force doesn’t exist
L M oh yeah, and gravity doesn’t exist
Raymond Shotwell I was making a comparison based on his logic
So this is what calculus would’ve been helpful for...interesting
Mostly physics but yeah
Yeah, none of this is calculus
@@Iceberge101 physics is largely derived from calculus. Pun mostly intended
not a single part of this video was calculus. the equations used were certainly derived using calculus, but no active calculus was used. just basic algebra
what interests me the most is the fact that you can actually calculate these numbers and get (mostly) understandable results.
This is the only use of math and physics we "learn" at school
I'm impressed with your work.
You are a really smart person.
"only use" seems like just a *tiny* bit of an exaggeration don't you think?
The Real Jezzy C What other uses are there?
yoshi_drinks_tea you serious?
Pfollvosten Yeah, I’m serious. I don’t remember anything what I “memorized” not learned at school.
I*
Well I just wasted 12:44 minutes of my life.
10/10 would do again
ki kus wut
ki kus your stupid
ki kus I think you might want to re read the comment again
Interesting. I did not know all those equations but I could follow along the general idea. I hope this was for a grade and you aced it :)
Thanks man! Believe it or not but this was a blast to make, and I started with the question: "How hot is the Nether?"
Imagine you had to memorize all that to play Minecraft
hey so um game theory just stole your idea
you should check that out
I mean, they could both have the same idea.
@@willgorman7750 chances are out-numbered
Yeah, he did. Some time ago actually, but I the only proof I have is that my video was uploaded like 1-5 months before his (or something).
Also, did you mean that channel uploaded a recent video? (Because I was referring to one I had seen some time ago now.)
How about some alternative explanations to make the physics make more sense. The Minecraft world is in a Lagrange point between a binary star system, or a three way star system, or four, or however many it needs to make any sense. This means that there is actually a forty minute day cycle, in which a star is visible in the sky twice. Or 60 minutes and three times, and so on until the rotation is not insane.
Also, you take a portal to the Nether, so the idea of the Nether being another planet entirely is not that crazy.
lobsterbark
Binary systems rarely get planets as it is night near impossible for a planet to get a stable orbit around those stars
Trillior systems barely keep themselves together and anything more than that is unbelievable impossible to get going in a stable manor
Hanro50 Sounds like the proposed Minecraft planet.
The binary star system (or more) wouldn't work, because it would cause too much of an unstable orbit, and the days would be inconsistent. But thank you for the thought though :)
A lagrange point is something completly different from an orbit. With a symmetrical Binary system, it should theoretically be possible, I'm not really sure about any more that that though it might also work.
All the Minecraft theorists when they discover Minecraft: Educational edition exists:
*TIME TO DO SOME MATHS*
*Actually, quantum mechanics forbids this.*
How
Hey there, awesome video and kudos to the in-depth mathematical analysis on the in-game physics! I just have a few things I'd like to point out that I haven't really seen many people talk about in the comments section.
Modeling the Nether as a lower layer of the planet is compelling because the math goes in line with what we see in-game. However, there are geometric problems with that type of model if it were the reality. The inverse-square law is used for energy intensity over space, but I think it shows a parallel that is relevant to this discussion. The main problem is that the lower you go, assuming all blocks in Minecraft are equally distributed in a cubic grid pattern, the size of these blocks would become squished the lower you go. The length and width of a block would have to distort dramatically the closer it gets to the center point. If the nether were in fact beneath the overworld, the player would appear 8 times larger than in the overworld relative to a block.
Another issue with the planet being spherical is that an equal measurement of squares on its surface is that it is geometrically impossible. The Mercator Projection map of the Earth distorts drastically at the poles since if you even assign a quadrilateral to each part of the planet, it breaks down when you get to the poles where all the longitudinal lines intersect. It would be like a square piece of candy wrapping around a lollipop, most of the surface is fine, but the part closer to the stick starts to bunch up.
Unless there are some strange magical distortion effects applied to the player's perspective to accommodate for these inconsistencies, I don't think the nether literally underneath the overworld.
However, I don't think this means we should toss the idea that the Nether is somehow "below" the overworld and that the Overworld is finite. Which is why I'd like to propose that the game actually takes place on a 4-dimensional torus shape. What do I mean by that? Well if you go in one direction in the game for long enough and each the 64-bit integer limit, the world generation should essentially repeat and loop on itself. (Perhaps not literally in this case since it's more of a parallel world than the world that you started off with. As well as this is still impossible to achieve in-game due to hardware limitations, however. This interesting thought came to me when I inputted "9,223,372,036,854,775,807" into the program Amidst and I noticed that the terrain was an exact match with the area the near spawn. I am a bit skeptical about these results since it can't be proven to be true in the game, but let's just say that's how large the world really is for now.)
In some 2D games, when the player walks off the edge of the map, they appear right at the other side. And the only way for quadrilaterals to be parallel to each other on a 2d surface is if the world were projected onto a torus. Now, I am aware that this does run into the same issue I point out earlier with the spherical model since the length and width of a square distorts on a torus itself. And again, while you could just adjust the player's perception without changing the geometry, it also runs into the same problem where blocks get more squished the lower you go.
I believe this issue would be fixed if the overworld takes place on the 3D "surface" of a 4D torus. And since the Nether is geometrically linked to the overworld, that would make the Nether not literally beneath the overworld in this model, but rather "deeper" in a 4-dimensional sense. This would be more in line with parallel worlds like the Upside Down and actually fits in the developers' canon since they too claim that the Nether isn't underneath the overworld but is a separate "dimension" (more accurately: universe).
Though I have to admit that I'm not so knowledgable with the consequences of the game taking place on the surface on a 4D shape, at it's quite difficult to wrap one's head around intangible mathematical concepts such as higher dimensions of space. So if anyone's read this far and would like to poke holes at my model, by all means, I encourage you.
A problem I found with measuring gravity in Minecraft is that entities don't fall at a consistent rate to each other that would make sense for their mass. But at least it's useful for figuring out terminal velocity for falling block entities.
Again, you have done a lot of excellent work on this topic, and this is in no way intended to undermine your findings, these are just a few things I wanted to point out. :)
So this is what those 2 years of algebra 2 and geometry in highschool was for
Dr_Face_Slapper Mostly Physics.
Aww man, I should have done my final project of my upper division physics course (I already got a degree in it) on this!
Yeah that would've been cool! Haha thanks man :)
((3.6*10^15)/(4*3.14))^(1/2)= 16925687.51 , not the answer in the video
√((3.6*10^15)/(4π)) gives the same answer in normal calculators
radius of a planet is only about 17 000 km, about 2.5 times more than Earth
Daniil Laskin Thank you so much! I had forgotten the division sign " / " when plugging that into the online calculator. Making 3.6*10^15 MULTIPLY by 4pi instead of being divided by it.
(This project was rushed for a deadline for school, so I wasn't able to check everything thoroughly.)
Thank you for pointing that out!
you are welcome! )
nice video to see science in use
yeah the radius should be slightly bigger than a quarter of the length of the original square.
So i knew something was wrong when the radius was so much bigger.
Earthbjorn Nahkaimurrao Does that mean that a lot of the equations are also off, since the basis of these equations is the radius of the planet?
you have to much time on your hands... but your actually really smart
Kaja Simp feed Thanks man :) and kind of. This was for a school project, but I did get carried away lol
@@MrBLARG85 wow amazing
What if we use 100% of our brain?
MrBLARG85:
Dude you should continue doing stuff like this for other aspects of the game, or other games. I'm a Physics student too and this is dope.
The Nether is not smaller than the overworld, not one bit, since while the proportions are working this way when you place a Nether portal you can easily step over the 1/8 boundary in the Nether.
Qexilber Kinda makes sense, but what if you go beyond 1/8 of the Overworld limit in the Nether, then place a Nether Portal? Do you teleport to the Far Lands or Something?
Clorox Beach maybe on the journey the portal is filled with Clorox Bleach so you never get to see what's next. Or you just go to the End. Or you fall into the void. Or if you go far enough you go to... You'll never think it exists... _ANOTHER PLANET!!!_
Minecraft is accurately flat just like the Earth. Petition to make profile pictures square and not round
This was a joke by the way
userstyles.org/styles/142180/square-avatars-on-youtube
@Squiddy FancySon ... I legit hate people who say "Not funny" Idek why lmao it sounds so childish I suppose. Alright most informative reply in the world bye
I had the same neutral face before i saw the "joke"
Minecraft would be so cool if it had a randomely generating universe where the planets are round and you could travel to them and build on them.
Have you heard of a game called Astroneer? It's basically what you are describing. It's really cool.
That could've been No Man's Sky
There should be a mod
@@dsingh2391 its call Galacticraft Mod
...interesting idea. I think someone made a mod where the Minecraft world is mapped to the surface of a torus
Wow the nether being 1/8 of the overworld makes so much sense when you think about it as a smaller sphere...
Awesome video! The difficulty with these types of calculations is working with such extreme values causes a lot of advanced physics to become very relevant. For instance, a planet with twice the mass of our sun would cause fusion in its core (guess that's why the nether is so hot lol) and would no longer be a planet but a brown dwarf. Also, that mass would produce such strong gravity that the radius given would be impossible, even with bedrock being taken into account, as gravity would force added mass to increase it's density rather than size.
Based on your calculations, I believe I can safely assume that if the Minecraft world were, in fact, a sphere, it would already be a black hole.
OrangeC7 I don't think it is a black hold because he said it classifies as an A4 White Dwarf Star or something, so it's a star... I think.
When you have just got your Physics degree, but can’t find a job, so you calculate spherical minecraft
Plot twist: Minecraft's metre is defined differently.
What if Minecraft was developed by Americans
Minecraft is just a game it's not mathematically real...
This video: *_"hold my stack of cobblestone"_*
Dad :-what you doing with your science study
Him:- minceraft as planet
You have no idea how cool this is. I GREATLY appreciate all the effort you put into this. You a very smart man and should be super proud of this video. Great job 👍
Cameron Gray Aw thanks man. That really means a lot, thank you.
Also, you sound like my mom HAHAhahah
You have a nice day now, thanks again :)👍
MrBLARG85 haha 😃
Me as I'm clicking the video: then it wouldn't be Minecraft lol
JustAnotherEllie LOL HAHAHAHAHA hahahahaha
Well if can be a sphere made out of cubes
This needs more views!
Adam's_Apple Aw thanks man, I put a lot of time into this :)
Where i learn:
School 5%
RUclips 95%
school is a place were you learn a percentage that low? c'mon this gotta be a joke
dont mean to get wooooshed by internet users i just had to point that out
This is what happens when physics majors find Minecraft
You learn that physics in 10th grade
Heisenberg in which world would h=(RT/g)*ln(P1/P2) be 10th grade?
1960: In 2019 we will have flying cars and teleportation!
2019:
the nether is also 60 million by 60 million, it is just multiplying in the nether
Only 5,000 views??? This is amazing though!
Could you make a video about making the Minecraft world look sphere as you're playing?
PsychicVictini No need! Someone already did it! Their video is called:
"Is a round Minecraft world possible?"
Link:
ruclips.net/video/ztAg643gJBA/видео.html
Props to you dude, an instant hit of a video with over 173k views when the rest of your videos are just under 1k. I hope this brings success to your channel. Live long and prosper🖖
Angus Anderson Thank you, I really appreciate that.
Live long and prosper. 🖖
MrBLARG85 NW
9:00
This isn't technically correct. The thermodynamic definition for termperature T is
\frac{1}{T} = \frac{\partial S}{\partial U}
where S is the entropy, U is the energy, and \paritals are \partial derivatives.
This allows for a \frac{1}{T} which is negative if the slope of entropy w.r.t energy is negative. However, zero temperature still does not exist, as that would have the slope diverge to infinity.
Don't let the concept of negative temperature fool you though, a negative temperature would feel quite hot. Why? Objects in thermal contact interact to make their entropy equals. A negative temperature object, would cause any positive valued object (even as small as +0.00000001) to diverge to the negative end over the domain of entropy, which is diverging to the positive infinite temperature over the range for the positive valued entropy object.
The negative valued entropy object would similarly both diverge to negative infinity.
Source: B.S in Physics
We just found this gem, and it turns out this guy no longer makes videos. Sad :(
Jorgenson ... Just you wait, pal....
@@MrBLARG85 :000000
Now explain how minecraftians would survive on this planet, while comparing them to humans
noobshrine Oh god HAhahah with one punch Steve would destroy every bone in your body
MrBLARG85
Woah, dude, I just thought something "One Punch Man vs. Steve". It would be legendary!
And for steve to carry that much on him with that gravity would require godlike strength
Xalzinor Maybe Steve is a demigod?
Respect, you've reached a new level of being bored😅 , although I have to say it's kinda very interesting😂
Sheldon has started to play minecraft now
Steve is a God and Minecraft is his playground. Physics has no place here
You are really smart. My dads mind will be blown.
Swimmerty11 Oh cool :) And thanks man, you go and show it to your dad haha :D
i'm speechless on the amount of depth he did. 10/10
he said depth when I read depth
Here's some math for how much weight Steve can hold:
37 Slots in inventory.
36 can have Shulker boxes filled with stacks of 64 gold blocks.
The last slot can have an Ender chest that has 27 slots which can be filled with Shulker boxes which can hold additional stacks of gold blocks.
Each gold block consists of 9 gold ingots (bars).
In total he can hold 979776 gold ingots (bars).
In the real world 1 gold bar weighs about 25 lbs (11.33 kg).
That equates to 24,494,400 lbs (11,110,472.948 kg).
----------------------------------Edit:
After more digging (pun intended), it turns out my original comment didn't account for the size of a gold block.
So, in MC a gold block is 1 cubic meter in size. If applied to the real world, a gold block that size would weigh about 42,509.53 lbs (19,282.2 kg).
Here's the new calculation:
Raw number of item slots:
Inventory (36) + Hand (1) + Ender Chest (27) = 64
Each item slot filled with Shulker boxes (27 per) = 1,728
Number of gold blocks:
1,728 slots * 64 per stack = 110,592
Weight of one gold block ≈ 42,509.53 lbs (19282.2 kg)
Grand total:
≈ 4,701,213,941.76 lbs (2,132,434,773.72 kg)
The Nether is the same size as the overworld. It's just not allowed to spawn portals outside of the boundary.
3:45 I'm not sure what you're doing there, but the centrifugal force you'd experience on a planet that spins at 1 rotation every 20 minutes is exactly the same as the centrifugal force you'd experience on a merry-go-round with the same rate of rotation. You'd be going slower on the merry-go-round, but you'd also be taking a more sharply curved path, and that balances out the slower speed. So the centrifugal force would be the same.
Minecraft worlds in not truly infinite, but it's not true to say that it's finite either. It get's generated all the time so it's theretically infinite. The only limitation is how high numbers your computer can process. The actual barrier put by the devs is there only so players won't reach the area where simulation starts to get buggy, but world still generates.
xGOKOPx Yeah exactly. So there is actually a physical limit to the world.
Well the in-game barrier wasn't there for most of the game history, and the limit of how far can world generate depends on processor architecture so in future when we get 128-bit, 256-bit etc computers it will be larger. So it's theoretically infinite
xGOKOPx Yeah, it is theoretically infinite if we had the stable computing power. We can still calculate a 128bit or 256bit number on even a 32 bit machine (but it takes 4 and 8 times longer respectively). As of now, and the making of this video, (and not counting previous versions of Minecraft with the "phantom blocks" after the world limit) Minecraft has a physical limit at 30 million blocks in each direction except up and down.
I'm not disagreeing with you on the theoretical part, but I had to stick with the fact of the physical limitation of the world size for the calculations.
Thank you for bringing it up though :)
ok
Wow I agree with you guys your arguments are valid on debating.
Wow nice video! There was one thing that bothered me though: you pretty randomly made the time it takes for water to evaporate in the nether 0.001s while you could've more logically made it one tick or a 1/20 of a second!
Well thanks! But why I chose that time was because you never see the block of water when you place it down. "It's gone before your screen can update." So I based it on FPS, not game-ticks, because nobody's computer or monitor can run Minecraft at 1000 frames per second, let alone the human eye can't detect an abrupt change to-and-from that fast. Anything happening in that amount of time is registered as "instant" to our human bodies. So that is why I choose a 1000th of a second and not a 20th. Hope that clarified and widened your view on this :)
I Have A Theory, God was created by steve
Not only am I impressed you took the time to do this, I am also impressed that this many people watched it hahaha. I love shit like this
Absolute great video.
Quick question: why did you choose 1/1000th of a second to define "instantaneously" but use 60 fps at 2:30?
Since we experience the game the same way, this factors should be liked, right? This makes the "instantaneouly" be slightly under 16,6 ms and noone would see a difference, because it all happened in less than a frame.
I get questions like that a lot.
• Why "Instantly" was defined the way it was, was due to the fact that it does *not* take 1 "game tick" (1/20th of a second) for water to evaporate, otherwise we would see it. This is because we would be *able to* place the block, and on the next game update, it would disappear/evaporate. In the way the game works, no block is placed *ever;* you are denied block placement. So, in the real world, the water steams away as fast as java can execute the event, which is different every time, and slower or faster depending on your computer, leading to unstable data to base a claim on.
• I went with a 1000th of a second because it was "reasonably" fast enough to where no person could perceive a change (in the real world), and not as "unreasonably" fast as the java code could execute. After all without accurate instruments, this is the best I could do.
• For the 60fps timings to measure gravity, that was just because that's how fast I could record footage on my computer. Simple as that.
• So if I went with "16,6ms" (0.016s), yes that would be 1 frame of 60 in a second, but it would be perceivable. If I did 240fps (0.004s -> 4ms), it would be near impossible to tell there was a flash of blue. So, I went with *1ms* (a 1000th of a second) for simplicity and to minimize perception, without going overboard.
Thanks for the questions : )
I read these comments from time to time, and appreciate all the criticism.
Have a wonderful day : )
"Assuming minecraft follows the basic physical laws of our universe."
My nomination for the Nobel prize 2019 is this dude
Aliens:"so,how much you humans are advanced"
Humans:"we know the mass, temperature, velocity, gravity, pressure of a minecraft world and the nether with math and physics"
*Aliens left the server*
I was about to comment about the giant spiders, but once he brought it up I thought, “This guy thought of everything!”
Here's a nether overhaul for ya: you immediately combust when stepping through the portal. Goodluck, have fun. See you in the swamps!
Girls: Minecraft is childish game
Boys: Hold my calculator
Litteratly everyone: "estimate"
MrBLARG85: "Guestimate"
[Blank] Hahahaha it’s an actual word! It just means “educated guess” rather than a blind assumption.
MrBLARG85, I know it just isn’t used often.
Edit: I WAS NOT EXPECTING A REPLY FROM YOU OF ALL PEOPLE, LOL 😂.
4:08
Wait speed of sound... How did you calculate that? Did you measure the Elytra wing size and made a drag assumption or how did you use the chicken terminal velocity for this?
This video is 1000x better than anything on the Game Theory channel, keep up the good work bro
If the boiling point is below absolute zero, doesn't that mean water can ONLY exist in vapor form (or plasma) at that pressure?