Celsius Made His Thermometer Upside Down

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  • Опубликовано: 1 дек 2024

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  • @vesq_tv
    @vesq_tv 3 года назад +1791

    Saying "no thats not right" to Michael from Vsauce seems like a death sentence but I think Derek is the only one that can manage that

    • @TheHearingDeaf2006
      @TheHearingDeaf2006 3 года назад +33

      Bill Nye, Neil Degrassi Tyson, Jimmy Neutron, Adam Savage, Mrs. Frizzle, Pickle Rick, and Michio Kaku could all get the same reaction I think.
      Hope you like what I did here. :D

    • @lewisgorrod3763
      @lewisgorrod3763 3 года назад +98

      Watch till the end when Michael pops his head up, says "but what IS temperature?" and destroys Derek's whole sense of reality

    • @vesq_tv
      @vesq_tv 3 года назад +5

      @@TheHearingDeaf2006 had me in the first half

    • @TheGodEmperorOfMankind_
      @TheGodEmperorOfMankind_ 3 года назад +16

      Or is it?

    • @jSyndeoMusic
      @jSyndeoMusic 2 года назад

      @@TheHearingDeaf2006 🤔

  • @d0718
    @d0718 8 лет назад +5107

    I thought Michael knew everything. You ruined it :(

    • @AlbertPi897
      @AlbertPi897 8 лет назад +195

      i just hope that now he doesn't turn into a super evil criminal. or a rapper.

    •  8 лет назад +178

      If he raps about science, then I'm cool with that.

    • @nutmaster652
      @nutmaster652 8 лет назад +11

      +Arturo Torres Sánchez nice hypothesis.

    • @anatoleh1
      @anatoleh1 8 лет назад +2

      He does

    • @anatoleh1
      @anatoleh1 8 лет назад +40

      He knows everything; he even knows that he isn't omniscient

  • @NibblyBitz
    @NibblyBitz 3 года назад +303

    0:20 I love how happy Michael is to be taught something he never knew. He has a great curiosity to himself.

    • @spooktoberboi
      @spooktoberboi Год назад +12

      michael was not taught. he was only held captive and forced to act dumb

    • @thepwrtank18
      @thepwrtank18 Год назад

      @@spooktoberboi proof

  • @stonerbland256
    @stonerbland256 3 года назад +101

    "no Michael, I'm not" might be the best line ever delivered on RUclips

    • @GrzegorzusLudi
      @GrzegorzusLudi 3 года назад +12

      It's a strange feeling when I see that Michael doesn't know everything. o_o Same feeling when I heard the pope saying "I don't know".

  • @Kaixo
    @Kaixo 8 лет назад +251

    0:25 There goes Michael's persona XD

    • @philippwilkendorf
      @philippwilkendorf 8 лет назад +4

      xddddd

    • @pramitbanerjee
      @pramitbanerjee 8 лет назад +3

      every time darek asks a question, i am somehow scared that the other person won't be able to answer it.
      Then i imagine myself in his place and i feel anxiety!

    •  8 лет назад +9

      RIP Vsauce 2010 - 2016

    • @IteKLF
      @IteKLF 8 лет назад

      Remember, he is not used to °C, but °F

    • @L3ON360Z
      @L3ON360Z 8 лет назад +6

      +Kjetil he should be by now considering he lives in the UK

  • @jman23bball13
    @jman23bball13 8 лет назад +4071

    So technically Celsius did invent the scale, someone just flipped it

    • @Aronsson007
      @Aronsson007 8 лет назад +86

      yeah i was thinking the same

    • @LemonChieff
      @LemonChieff 8 лет назад +267

      That suck because I was about to file a patent for an upside down pencil :( what a shame.

    • @duck8675
      @duck8675 8 лет назад +4

      Lemon Chief That's jokes

    • @michaeljordan3302
      @michaeljordan3302 8 лет назад

      .

    • @daihuantran9928
      @daihuantran9928 8 лет назад

      Alcatraz Aronsson me too

  • @rossthebesiegebuilder3563
    @rossthebesiegebuilder3563 8 лет назад +1615

    Next you'll tell me the stop sign _wasn't_ invented by William F. Stop.

  • @ankurage
    @ankurage 3 года назад +776

    "There is no objectively good reason for preferring an ascending scale over a descending one"
    *Cries in thermodynamics*

    • @electromancer2645
      @electromancer2645 3 года назад +62

      Cries in music theory

    • @swampdonkey1567
      @swampdonkey1567 3 года назад +15

      Probably is a psychological things tha TV make a majority of humans prefer ascending scales.

    • @joakiller111
      @joakiller111 3 года назад +52

      @@swampdonkey1567 No there are certain equation in thermodinamics that only work with certain scales and do not work with inverted scales (from before TV was invented)

    • @TheOnlyTominator
      @TheOnlyTominator 3 года назад +35

      I cringed at that one also. While getting rid of negatives is mathematically convenient (and I could see how some might object to negative temperatures as being counterintuitive) I would argue that using HIGHER temperatures for HOTTER things does seem to make more sense. I don't think it's just a learned bias that tells me it's wrong to think that the temperature inside a freezer is higher than the temperature inside an oven.

    • @NEONHYPERTURTLE
      @NEONHYPERTURTLE 3 года назад +16

      @Civilized Unicorn untrue, as a true American, i only work with Fahrenheit, and a -3000% thermal efficiency on an otto cycle seems perfectly fine to me.

  • @besmart
    @besmart 8 лет назад +3155

    Great, next thing you'll tell me that Degrassi High isn't named for Neil Degrassi Tyson

  • @joh1372
    @joh1372 8 лет назад +1606

    Vsauce AND veritasium uploaded? What is this sorcery?!

    • @WalterNoest
      @WalterNoest 8 лет назад +63

      I know right! Its like geek christmas!

    • @pavphone2616
      @pavphone2616 8 лет назад +13

      This is the most exciting day of my life.

    • @jamestrotman3238
      @jamestrotman3238 8 лет назад +9

      the magic of SCIENCE!!!

    • @dannysulyma6273
      @dannysulyma6273 8 лет назад +3

      Sadly Pay Phones now have very boring lives.

    • @enriquemoran1637
      @enriquemoran1637 8 лет назад +17

      Now we will all have to wait a very long time to see them again :(

  • @mattlm64
    @mattlm64 8 лет назад +2092

    Many people still use the term centigrade.

    • @dog-ez2nu
      @dog-ez2nu 8 лет назад +163

      I was gonna say that. I hear it all the time and my brain just doesn't process it different.

    • @BizzMRK
      @BizzMRK 8 лет назад +60

      to be fair, most people these days just reffer to it as "C", plain and simple. "5 degree C" for example.

    • @mattlm64
      @mattlm64 8 лет назад +235

      In places that use it most will just say degrees.

    •  8 лет назад +20

      And your frame of reference is? It's clearly not actual studies, but "anecdotal evidence", meaning, what you hear. Which means we'd have to know *where* you hear this all the time.

    • @mattlm64
      @mattlm64 8 лет назад +114

      It's reasonably common to hear people say centigrade in the UK. I'm sure no one will bother to do a study on it as that would be a complete waste of time.

  • @OsthatoCat
    @OsthatoCat 4 года назад +2228

    "In Sweden it does not often go above the boiling point of water"
    Gee, really?

    • @Milesco
      @Milesco 4 года назад +93

      I guess they didn't have fire back then.

    • @starcluster2593
      @starcluster2593 4 года назад +33

      @@Milesco No DuMbA** fIrE wAs CrEaTeD a LoNg TiMe AgO

    • @thegovenor4629
      @thegovenor4629 4 года назад +246

      @@Milesco thats right fire was invented in ancient greece in 1255 and first brought to sweden in 1817 after napoleons defeat.

    • @somedude6833
      @somedude6833 4 года назад +13

      Except when you’re making tea.

    • @davidbanan.
      @davidbanan. 4 года назад +4

      Not True any moar hahahahhahahahahhahahhahahaha

  • @giovanifm1984
    @giovanifm1984 8 лет назад +348

    Here in Brazil some people still say "centigrade" talking about temperatures. Even weather forecast in some media channels say centigrade instead of celsius.

    • @TheJohnboyhunter
      @TheJohnboyhunter 8 лет назад +38

      giovanifm1984 We do here in the UK too.

    • @xRimpe
      @xRimpe 8 лет назад +34

      Same in Spain.

    • @uiomancannot7931
      @uiomancannot7931 8 лет назад +17

      A whole bunch used Degrees Centigrade and Celsius interchangeably,

    • @GumSkyloard
      @GumSkyloard 7 лет назад +15

      Same in Portugal.

    • @JohnSmith-km3pe
      @JohnSmith-km3pe 6 лет назад +13

      Even here in India.

  • @physicsgirl
    @physicsgirl 8 лет назад +433

    You finally posted it! NOICE!

    • @whatshisnamegain1
      @whatshisnamegain1 8 лет назад +4

      Well, your collab you've just posted with It's Okay To Be Smart is pretty NOICE, too, if I may say so.

    • @sohailahmed1351
      @sohailahmed1351 8 лет назад

      strange it's 23 hrs here in India

    • @philippwilkendorf
      @philippwilkendorf 8 лет назад

      haaa its you

    • @brit1066
      @brit1066 8 лет назад

      What the hell is NOICE?

    • @whatshisnamegain1
      @whatshisnamegain1 8 лет назад

      +Keith Grove
      It's an alternate/exaggerated version of saying "nice".

  • @Blackmist64
    @Blackmist64 8 лет назад +262

    Title: "he didn't invent it"
    Second half of video: "he did, tho"

    • @TasX
      @TasX 8 лет назад +31

      But he didn't. It was the collection of scientists that did

    • @fsxelw
      @fsxelw 8 лет назад +3

      *he did too

    • @Blackmist64
      @Blackmist64 8 лет назад +11

      *****
      No. I said "tho" as in "though". It's an ironic abbreviation, and intentional.

    • @fsxelw
      @fsxelw 8 лет назад +3

      I know, I corrected it to "too" as in he wasnt the only one that invented it :p

    • @Stijning
      @Stijning 8 лет назад

      Title: "He didn't invent it"
      Second half of the video: "He kinda did but some jackass got it wrong"

  • @JeffSyam
    @JeffSyam 3 года назад +37

    3:01 Who would have guessed, we thank Carolus Linnaeus not only for taxonomy but also for the modern Celcius scale.

  • @Firstnamelastname46463
    @Firstnamelastname46463 7 лет назад +1602

    Ahhh yes. It is 50 degrees community of scientists.... Perfect.

    • @UnshakableResolve
      @UnshakableResolve 3 года назад +72

      Except 50 degrees community of scientists is not pleasant

    • @Evercreeper
      @Evercreeper 3 года назад +8

      @@UnshakableResolve except necroreplying to a 3 year old comment is not pleasant

    • @emenesu
      @emenesu 3 года назад +24

      @@Evercreeper It is. Also anything above 26 is not pleasant.

    • @sharoncastillo2411
      @sharoncastillo2411 3 года назад +1

      @@Evercreeper Wait its 3 years old???

    • @Evercreeper
      @Evercreeper 3 года назад +1

      @@sharoncastillo2411 look at the original comment “3 years ago”

  • @JustinLynnandstuff
    @JustinLynnandstuff 8 лет назад +783

    Guys it's 17 degrees Carl

  • @killabyt3
    @killabyt3 8 лет назад +627

    so did Fahrenheit create Fahrenheit

    • @bryanc2917
      @bryanc2917 8 лет назад +2

      Probably yes

    • @rjfaber1991
      @rjfaber1991 8 лет назад +570

      Many, myself included, wish he hadn't...

    • @juustomimmi2697
      @juustomimmi2697 8 лет назад +4

      +Robert Faber Why?

    • @rjfaber1991
      @rjfaber1991 8 лет назад +425

      Juustomimmi Because then the US might be using the same unit for temperature as the civilised world.

    • @zetsumeinaito
      @zetsumeinaito 8 лет назад +113

      reasons why I don't like Fahrenheit.
      I can never remember the boiling point of water in Fahrenheit. But I know it in Celsius. Why's freezing at 32F? the hell is 0 suppose to be? If it was to prevent negative numbers, it failed cause we get to -18F at the coldest where I live in.

  • @ignispurgatorius5297
    @ignispurgatorius5297 3 года назад +448

    An inverse scale would make some calculations awkward I imagine. Having higher energy states directly proportional to the temperature makes sense, having to inverse that and offset it constantly seems kinda annoying tbh.

    • @Xqvvzts
      @Xqvvzts 3 года назад +17

      Which is why we changed it :D

    • @CorgiCorner
      @CorgiCorner 3 года назад +7

      Not if you can account for the fact that water can boil and freeze simultaneously. If you set the boiling point at 0 than that is your starting point. Boiling is only an action and is no indicator of temperature. If anything the thermometer is more efficient as a barometer than anything else

    • @redbeardreturns3550
      @redbeardreturns3550 3 года назад +13

      @@CorgiCorner yup, water can boil with zero heat.
      Water in a vaccum as an example.

    • @scout360pyroz
      @scout360pyroz 3 года назад +7

      Back then thermal energy was considered a wierd and unlikely hypothesis. CRYO energy was the big thing every scientist was working to prove was real.

    • @cle4tle
      @cle4tle 3 года назад +4

      @@scout360pyroz cold isn't energy though, rather a lack of energy

  • @funny_monke6
    @funny_monke6 8 лет назад +205

    At a comfortable 21°Carl right now.

  • @PracticalEngineeringChannel
    @PracticalEngineeringChannel 8 лет назад +112

    Very interesting video about the history of temperature scales

  • @Nauseum
    @Nauseum 8 лет назад +233

    0-100 was an inside job

    • @bomberharris9322
      @bomberharris9322 8 лет назад +44

      Steel fuel can't melt jet memes

    • @austingenovachek2803
      @austingenovachek2803 8 лет назад +28

      100 degrees cant melt steel beams

    • @doctapeppur1900
      @doctapeppur1900 8 лет назад +22

      "You can tell how bad a person you are by how long after 9/11 you waited to masturbate. For me, it was between the first and second tower falling down." - Anders Celsius

    • @phlaxyr
      @phlaxyr 8 лет назад +1

      +TeeCakes but chemtrails can.

    • @simpletn
      @simpletn 8 лет назад +1

      +Doctapeppur mine... I was born 9 months exactly after 9/11 lol

  • @JKiler1
    @JKiler1 3 года назад +16

    There absolutely is a good reason for having ascending numbers for increasing temperature - most calculations involving temperature require ABSOLUTE temperature. It's bad enough trying to convert from absolute scale to relative scale now when it just involves adding a constant. Imagine if you also had to negate the scale.

    • @foogod4237
      @foogod4237 Год назад +1

      The claim was that there's no _objective_ reason. "Convenience" is not an objective reason. That is purely _subjective preference_ on our part (and is highly dependent on _what you are actually doing_ with the numbers (there are many everyday applications which do _not_ require absolute temperature at all, and even theoretically some applications where an inverted scale might actually make calculations easier instead)).

    • @JKiler1
      @JKiler1 Год назад +1

      @@foogod4237 that's funny - you pointed out that he said objective reasons, then brought up several subjective reasons to support your statement.
      When making serious engineering and scientific calculations in thermodynamics and fluid dynamics, there are long established formulae that depend on an ascending scale, and rearranging them for a descending scale would be ridiculously obtuse - they would make little sense without a great deal of puzzling study. Look at the first and second laws of thermodynamics sometime, and tell me they were laid out subjectively on an ascending temperature scale.

  • @Nilguiri
    @Nilguiri 8 лет назад +2245

    So robust that we take it for granted... everywhere on the planet except the US.

    • @triplediff
      @triplediff 8 лет назад +82

      And Burma and Liberia

    • @AWSAM335
      @AWSAM335 8 лет назад +239

      +Ian Robertson the three superpowers of the world hahaha

    • @Nilguiri
      @Nilguiri 8 лет назад +19

      Haha, I rest my case!

    • @swng314
      @swng314 8 лет назад +19

      Too bad it's not a natural temperature scale like Planck temperature.
      I mean, what kind of absurd scale is defined by a number as arbitrary as 273.16? It's just there because we're too stubborn to let go of our historical affinity for "1/100 the temperature difference between water freezing and boiling".
      Celcius is outdated, let's move on.

    • @ovonisamja8024
      @ovonisamja8024 8 лет назад +51

      You mean Fahrenheit.

  • @adammaclean4730
    @adammaclean4730 8 лет назад +127

    In the uk Celsius is still often called centigrade

    • @Funkles
      @Funkles 8 лет назад +6

      Same here in Aus

    • @AdorianGP
      @AdorianGP 8 лет назад +2

      Same in Spain, I still call them centigrade even if that's not accurate according to the video

    • @soyderiverdeliverybeaver8941
      @soyderiverdeliverybeaver8941 8 лет назад

      same in southamerica, its centigrade, i dont know who is stupid aenough to confuse ''5 centigrados'' with ''5 grados'' in geometry...

    • @fabiofdez
      @fabiofdez 7 лет назад

      In the US I've heard it, too

    • @gh8447
      @gh8447 6 лет назад

      Which makes sense seeing as a 'cent(i)' is a one hundredth.

  • @AndreyShipilovCom
    @AndreyShipilovCom 8 лет назад +188

    Yet still makes more sense than Fahrenheits.

    • @johnlesley2746
      @johnlesley2746 8 лет назад +7

      Nope.

    • @divisionzero715
      @divisionzero715 8 лет назад +1

      It is natural to make sense. After all it is using constants as a basis.

    • @CaptainFalcon92
      @CaptainFalcon92 8 лет назад +50

      @john lesley : Oh yes it does. Check Fahrenheit low and high references points and you will know why this scale is retarded.
      Fahrenheit low point is based on some random cold day in 1708, and the high point is based on horse blood temperature. How could it go more random and unscientific than that ?

    • @Merthalophor
      @Merthalophor 8 лет назад +1

      yeah, constants are a nice thing when it comes to definitions of units...

    • @chuang4254
      @chuang4254 8 лет назад +11

      Fahrenheit used a couple of standards, and though they aren't as intuitive as the freezing and boiling of water, he did have some reasonings. 0 degrees F was set as the frigorific mixture of water/ice/ammonium chloride at 1:1:1 ratio. 32 was ice and water, and 96 degrees was human body temperature. Awkward, but not as ridiculous as you say.

  • @rajanrao
    @rajanrao 5 лет назад +45

    0:44 vsauce music intensifies.

  • @toomoii
    @toomoii 8 лет назад +689

    Meanwhile in America - not a single SI-unit was given that day.
    Fahrenheit, miles, ounce, "110V electricity". Its a wonder they actually use "seconds" and "hours"

    • @johnlesley2746
      @johnlesley2746 8 лет назад +16

      We don't need the retarded SI units and what country doesn't use seconds and hours?

    • @edwardrobinson2853
      @edwardrobinson2853 8 лет назад +131

      they're not retarded :( they make sense and are based off things that are logical.

    • @johnlesley2746
      @johnlesley2746 8 лет назад +10

      Fish Styx No they don't. Imperial and US units are based on things that can be easily visualized. Metric isn't.

    • @danilooliveira6580
      @danilooliveira6580 8 лет назад +191

      easily visualized but never consistent. that is why imperial is based on SI now.

    • @whatshisnamegain1
      @whatshisnamegain1 8 лет назад +24

      They only use seconds, minutes and hours because it isn't metric ;p (well seconds are usually used metrically when downscaled but you know what I mean).

  • @eken81
    @eken81 8 лет назад +171

    Cool. I knew about Celsius and Linaeus. Not about Daniel Ekström. A quick Googling tells me that I am likely not related to him.

    • @allenholloway5109
      @allenholloway5109 8 лет назад +4

      I actually saw his name on a thermometer in Europe while I was in Germany. (the company name, not the temperature scale)

    • @BlueSun_
      @BlueSun_ 7 лет назад +8

      Spoiler warning: You are related to every human being, it's just a matter of degree in proximity.
      And if you share a last name that would probably bring you closer.

    • @KAFaye-nk5tl
      @KAFaye-nk5tl 7 лет назад +1

      Magnus Ekström uh, you could be a very distant relative. and... we are all related so the fact that you share the same last name... makes you more likely to be more closely related.

    • @KuraIthys
      @KuraIthys 6 лет назад +2

      Well, given how names propagate, (at least, in most cultures), if there IS a relation it's on the father's side.
      You can ignore all women in this, since they don't pass their names on to their children.
      For instance, I recently learnt that my grandmother's name was probably McClean originally, which hints at a cultural connection I hadn't expected at all.
      And that's only 2 generations.
      If you trace family names back you'll often find a common ancestor somewhere, but it's hard to say how many generations back it would be. I've personally only really been able to trace one side of my family, and I hit a dead end about 5 generations back in terms of information.
      There simply isn't anything to go on past that point.
      Plus, you get an ever increasing tree of ancestors, and that 5 generations is a single line, when it follows that across 5 generations you have at least 32 ancestors.
      When I can only uncover 1 of 32 family lines to 5 generations, and can't trace it back any further, it shows how complex it can get trying to decide who you are and are not related to. XD
      (I can't even manage to trace anything past 3 of my grandparents, so... Yeah...)

    • @Carewolf
      @Carewolf 6 лет назад

      Look up Rømer and Reumer who made the scale that Celcius based his scales on, except for the dumb idea of turning it upside down. Rømer started with 7.5Rø for freezing and 60Rø for boiling. Reumer improved that by setting 0Re to freezing and 80Re to boiling. The centigrade scale was a small modifaction to the Reumer scale by making it 100 based, aka. centigrade.

  • @overkillsnake
    @overkillsnake 8 лет назад +1362

    We should color code every tenth degree. Lol yeah it's blue degrees outside today. Next week looks like it's going to be in the mid-pinks.

    • @aapjew18
      @aapjew18 7 лет назад +119

      That is honestly not a bad idea. I could see that work really intuitively.

    • @austinhunter1586
      @austinhunter1586 7 лет назад +81

      I mean, is it hard to say "ninety-two"?

    • @sjakierulez
      @sjakierulez 7 лет назад +89

      92, that's either really hot or really cold

    • @Dakkian.Imperial
      @Dakkian.Imperial 7 лет назад +167

      Sucks to be colourblind and not know the temperature XD

    • @DSFII
      @DSFII 7 лет назад +8

      Dakky Arthur lol xD

  • @dbhlnn
    @dbhlnn 4 года назад +469

    "there is no objectively good reason for prefering an ascending scale over a descending one for measuring degrees of something, like hot or cold"
    hot = more energy = higher number
    cold = less energy = lower numbers
    sounds pretty reasonable to me

    • @billyrussell7789
      @billyrussell7789 4 года назад +41

      as well as hot=more volume=takes up more space in a mercury bulb thermometer. you would think that just pure convince would have been enough back then?

    • @dbhlnn
      @dbhlnn 4 года назад +27

      @@billyrussell7789 yes but that's not universally true. water is more dense than ice while certainly having more energy and a higher temperature

    • @billyrussell7789
      @billyrussell7789 4 года назад +11

      Nnay so far water is the only material we know that does that though, and for the temperature measuring systems used then it would have meant higher energy =less density

    • @controlequebrado4455
      @controlequebrado4455 4 года назад +20

      Also beacause we don't want nor need another counterintuitive convention like *shudders* charge convention

    • @MyUnquenchableThirst
      @MyUnquenchableThirst 4 года назад +5

      but it could have just been similar to gauges of metal wire where the larger the gauge, the smaller the wire. it's just something that is set and as long as it's consistent and can convey information effectively then it'd be ok.

  • @1manprty
    @1manprty 8 лет назад +788

    But did miles per hour invent miles per hour

    • @captainheat2314
      @captainheat2314 8 лет назад +107

      nah KM/h did

    • @TheMrvidfreak
      @TheMrvidfreak 8 лет назад +28

      Cheeky Kalium molemasses per hour

    • @ThePavoReality
      @ThePavoReality 8 лет назад +71

      Myles Perrour

    • @Clouder66
      @Clouder66 8 лет назад +6

      no that was actually Marx Avogadro, sorry.

    •  8 лет назад +23

      No, Miles Prower (aka Tails) did.

  • @SamBskate
    @SamBskate 8 лет назад +582

    Wait...did i just see michael not knowing something?!?!? That's impossible!!

    • @Lizardlizard02
      @Lizardlizard02 8 лет назад +45

      OH MY GOSH, ITS A SIGN OF THE APOCALYPSE!!!!!

    • @Th3Zomb1e
      @Th3Zomb1e 8 лет назад +77

      STAGED
      MICHAEL KNOWS EVERYTHING
      BLARHGHGHAGHHG
      wow

    • @JoachimVampire
      @JoachimVampire 7 лет назад +62

      obviously he is roleplaying. probably Michael taught that to him :P

    • @fgvcosmic6752
      @fgvcosmic6752 7 лет назад +7

      Acting?

    • @beepIL
      @beepIL 7 лет назад +11

      You do know there are lots of things Michael doesn't know, right?
      He is a curious person, and that is what makes the difference, he go out and finds out the answers to things he doesn't know.
      a lot of his video materials may be things he had no idea until he decided they are going to make a video about it.

  • @eyekosaeder5387
    @eyekosaeder5387 6 лет назад +482

    6:13 He said “degree Kelvin”. 😱😱😱 Inconceivable!

    • @megadeathx
      @megadeathx 4 года назад +58

      It wasn't until somewhere in the 80s that scientists made a point of why degree was inappropriate for Kelvin. I've gotten into several reddit arguments with (alleged) grad students who've claimed their PhD toting professors used "degrees Kelvin" not more than a few years ago.

    • @archiebellega956
      @archiebellega956 4 года назад +33

      @@Sohodollie Uniformity. Using your logic everything is a degree, one degree meter, one degree kg, one degree ampere and so on. When people define the metric system they want the uniformity, so either all were called degree, or no one is called degree.
      There's also argument about absolute 0, as celcius' 0 is an arbitrary 0, where 0 kelvin ( also on meter, kg, second, mol, cd, ampere) is basically the lowest value it can get, aka absolute zero ( though physicist and mathematician already theorized about negative temperature and negative mass)

    • @sidharthm2957
      @sidharthm2957 4 года назад +3

      bruh he was correct idot

    • @alvarorodriguez1592
      @alvarorodriguez1592 3 года назад +17

      @@Sohodollie look it up. You’ll be convinced it makes sense. The key is if you set zero at an arbitrary value. Zero meters, gram , kelvin, are not arbitrary. They mean nil, nada.
      When measuring degrees, zero means “at this arbitrary line”.

    • @aymanenouhail5241
      @aymanenouhail5241 3 года назад +8

      @@alvarorodriguez1592 I fully get it, but isn't angle degrees an exception to this? 0 degrees is precisely 0, null, 0 radians etc... it is not arbitrary.

  • @twofishes8846
    @twofishes8846 3 года назад +3

    Which always brings me to the question ⁉️ " Are we the only living species determined to measure everything? " Growing up I hated school. Education was full of hypocrisies. When questioning why, I was reprimanded for not excepting what is just is. Later during my indoctrination I learned that in order to measure something you needed to start from a fixed point. I also learned there is no fixed point in the Universe. Everything is moving. Therefore my empirical theory is, modern day huminoids are foundationally fixated within the boundaries of an abstract world. And that trap has provided our species with infinite survival skills. Perhaps our solar system is the birth place of consciousness for the entire Universe. Our innate curiosity is the vehicle for escaping earthly boundaries. I love your show! Keep up the good work! Good teachers are a rare quality sir! ( Found you thru Destin's "Smarter Every Day" )

  • @gyes99
    @gyes99 6 лет назад +448

    What you call a "german chemistry textbook" is actually a translation from swedisch. The author is Jöns Jakob Berzelius, a swedish scientist.

    • @voornaam3191
      @voornaam3191 2 года назад +4

      And "Swedisch" is a German word for Swedish. You love the C, don't you? And why do you drop the capital S? Do they do that in Sverige? Or is this the general sloppiness of the entire wold?

    • @weppwebb2885
      @weppwebb2885 2 года назад +20

      @@voornaam3191 whoa chill

    • @seethrough_treeshrew
      @seethrough_treeshrew 2 года назад +4

      But Ze Germans Always Make Ze Virst Letter In Kapital In All Ze Wörds 🤔

    • @philippa3731
      @philippa3731 2 года назад +14

      @@voornaam3191 if you want to be pedantic, Schwedisch is the actual german word.

    • @HarionDafar
      @HarionDafar 2 года назад +2

      There was absolutely no reason for a German to copy a Swedish chemistry book since "Chemistry" and "Germany" were the same thing in those days.

  • @TheEliadventure
    @TheEliadventure 8 лет назад +2511

    Universal, unless you're American.

    • @doommagic
      @doommagic 8 лет назад +77

      Or from Belize. Or the Bahamas. Or the Cayman Islands.

    • @doommagic
      @doommagic 8 лет назад +63

      ***** At least the US has an excuse with how much it would cost and the huge populace. I don't know why the others haven't converted to metric.

    • @nicholask7566
      @nicholask7566 7 лет назад +76

      Doommagic I'm American and they taught us the metric system in 4th grade and ever since 6th grade, it is all we use.

    • @LastBastion
      @LastBastion 6 лет назад +4

      Or that asian country

    • @blinkingwhiteguy2244
      @blinkingwhiteguy2244 5 лет назад +24

      Fahrenheit 🤦‍♀️

  • @OlaJustin
    @OlaJustin 8 лет назад +39

    As I live in Uppsala, it's a share I havent seen that collection. Something I'll have to change!

    • @OlaJustin
      @OlaJustin 8 лет назад +20

      Share=shame... I wounder when you'll be able to edit on mobile...

    • @pablo4740
      @pablo4740 8 лет назад +2

      +Ola Justin you can if you view your comment in Google Plus.
      I Do.

    • @JohnDoe-np6lb
      @JohnDoe-np6lb 8 лет назад

      yeah but no one uses google +

    • @pablo4740
      @pablo4740 8 лет назад +1

      ANONYMOUS AUSTRALIA look at my previous comment.

    • @JohnDoe-np6lb
      @JohnDoe-np6lb 8 лет назад +1

      Pablo Schoots you are no one tho :l

  • @sarqf212
    @sarqf212 2 года назад +7

    C stands for Correct, whereas F stands for F***ed up

  • @AeroQC
    @AeroQC 8 лет назад +196

    Now if only the US would convert over to Celsius, it's freaking annoying.

    • @rjfaber1991
      @rjfaber1991 8 лет назад +59

      That would be a start. It's still going to be annoying if they keep using other units of measurement like feet and gallons that have long since been dropped by the rest of the world, but changing the temperature scale would be a good start...

    • @kingkasper4950
      @kingkasper4950 8 лет назад +44

      That and the metric system and we'll be in good shape!

    • @dynelol
      @dynelol 8 лет назад +5

      It's about like DVORAK vs QWERTY. DVORAK may be a lot better, but who wants to readjust to something if they don't have to?

    • @kingkasper4950
      @kingkasper4950 8 лет назад +8

      IMO:Computers are widespread and everywhere but a large portion of the population still "hunt and peck" I'm 99% positive once everyone is proficient with them DVORAK will win out like the Gregorian Calendar over the Julian. When one option is clearly better it tends to win out in the end. Now how log it'll take us to get there and if we'll destroy ourselves before that I have no clue and is an entire other story hahaha

    • @austingenovachek2803
      @austingenovachek2803 8 лет назад +10

      they definetly should but I guess it would cost a lot of money to change all the road signs

  • @brycewalburn3926
    @brycewalburn3926 8 лет назад +103

    2:05 - "There is no objectively good reason...."
    I think I might disagree. Numbers describe quantities, right? While the concepts of hot and cold aren't intrinsically numerical, the amount of kinetic energy something has is numerical. So, I think the fact that heat goes up as kinetic energy goes up is a good reason to assign higher numbers to hotter temperatures. Thoughts?

    • @fabricioguido8202
      @fabricioguido8202 8 лет назад +7

      Accurate, although he might be refering to practical, not theoretical, reasons. You don't use in everyday life the idea that more heat indicates more molecular kinetic energy.

    • @felixhultman184
      @felixhultman184 8 лет назад +6

      Yeah I reacted to that as well, thought to myself "what about absolute zero"?
      If higher numbers are used for colder temperatures, then no matter what scale you use there'll be a finite and rather small "highest number", while the negatives go on basically forever.
      Unless you're some kind of logarithmic wizard i guess.

    • @brycewalburn3926
      @brycewalburn3926 8 лет назад +12

      Your comment just shows how ingrained the ascending scale is in our minds. If the scale were descending, you wouldn't say "twice as hot" to describe something that's hotter.

    • @TheCavemonk
      @TheCavemonk 8 лет назад +3

      "...for measuring degrees of something"
      That's the point. Celsius probably didn't know that heat was a quantity, so the statement stands.

    • @AttilaAsztalos
      @AttilaAsztalos 8 лет назад +1

      So that would make poor ironworkers toil in minus several hundred degrees...? It's just a poor choice, people always thought a lot more in terms of "how hot" things were and a lot less about "how cold", so more hot meaning a higher number would still come more naturally IMHO.

  • @dr.abyscharles
    @dr.abyscharles 3 года назад +94

    "wont it be weird if water freezes at 100 degrees and boils at 0 degrees." and then Christopher Nolan gets the idea for Tenet

  • @AbhinitPradhan
    @AbhinitPradhan Месяц назад +1

    Never thought I'd be this surprised to learn about some thermometer scale lore but damn here i am.

  • @rigleighfeild
    @rigleighfeild 3 года назад +25

    2:13 except that we can add more energy to a system endlessly and can only remove a certain amount of energy before we run out, they call it absolute zero.

  • @Luis0n7i
    @Luis0n7i 8 лет назад +19

    Actually, in Spanish (or at least in Mexico City Spanish) it's pretty common to use Celsius and Centigrade interchangeably [Cero grados Celsius / Cero grados centígrados], although the most common way of talking about temperature is just to say "degrees" [grados].

    • @giovanifm1984
      @giovanifm1984 8 лет назад +4

      Same in Brazil. We speak portuguese and celsius / centigrades are interchangeables words.

    • @PandamoniumShorts
      @PandamoniumShorts 8 лет назад

      Same here in Canada.

    • @NICH12
      @NICH12 8 лет назад +8

      same here in Mars.

    • @asambatyon
      @asambatyon 6 лет назад

      In Colombia I don't remember ever using Celsius, it was always Centigrade.

  • @ratamacue0320
    @ratamacue0320 8 лет назад +22

    I was curious why "centigrade" had fallen out of favor. I didn't know it was official.

  • @reginaldwelkin
    @reginaldwelkin 3 года назад +2

    I remember reading an old book that stated the Celsius and Centigrade scale were the same but went in different directions. After mentioning it to someone, they argued that I didn't know what I was talking about. Sadly, a search of the internet didn't show this at the time and I no longer had access to that book. People really take a lot for granted. They have no idea how many measurement scales have been created and lost to time. Thanks for the video!

  • @TGamingFull
    @TGamingFull 8 лет назад +25

    It's very funny to listen to you trying to pronounce Swedish names like Ekström

    • @veritasium
      @veritasium  8 лет назад +7

      haha, yeah I have no idea how ö is meant to be pronounced so I just ignore it and go with o.

    • @TGamingFull
      @TGamingFull 8 лет назад +1

      Ö is pronounced like an english "a" for example "a" carrot but you just slow it down, drag it out for a bit.

    • @EebstertheGreat
      @EebstertheGreat 8 лет назад

      I think you may pronounce "carrot" differently from most Americans, because that vowel sound doesn't even seem close to the sound in Ekström. To me, the ö in Ekström sounds kind of like the o in the French word _pomme_.

    • @primeirrational
      @primeirrational 8 лет назад +5

      +Veritasium the swedish ö is the same sound as the i in "bird"

    • @primeirrational
      @primeirrational 8 лет назад +2

      +Orenar or the i in girl

  • @kcwidman
    @kcwidman 8 лет назад +6

    I love the Vsauce "dive out of camera" move there at the end.

  • @jthoward
    @jthoward 3 года назад +120

    *Technically* kelvin added accuracy not precision, precision is a measure of how many digits you are accurate to

    • @theninjabay
      @theninjabay 2 года назад +12

      It depends on the context: they have the above-mentioned meaning when they're being used together, otherwise they're synonyms.
      Precisely! :D

  • @timchallenge
    @timchallenge 3 года назад +8

    I love these science history videos, learning about the history of science is every bit as interesting to me as the science itself.

  • @kayleighlehrman9566
    @kayleighlehrman9566 7 лет назад +16

    objectively good reason to favor larger numbers for higher temperatures: temperature is a measure of kinetic energy

  • @paulduncan9239
    @paulduncan9239 8 лет назад +55

    did kelvin create kelvin

    • @willsunnn
      @willsunnn 8 лет назад +9

      Lord kelvin is the one who calculated absolute 0

    • @veritasium
      @veritasium  8 лет назад +62

      Actually his name was William Thomson and in 1892 he became the first Baron Kelvin

    • @jaojao1768
      @jaojao1768 7 лет назад

      Paul Duncan yes, if you mean Lord Kevin

    • @MC3DGoldSeto
      @MC3DGoldSeto 7 лет назад +2

      Did math create math

    • @Firstnamelastname46463
      @Firstnamelastname46463 7 лет назад +1

      CageSomebody. Yes. Yes he did.

  • @ZarlanTheGreen
    @ZarlanTheGreen 8 лет назад +86

    So... Celsius invented the scale. He created the gradation and the points that would determine the 0 and 100 ....and some other guy just flipped it. A very minor adjustment.
    Modern Linnaean taxonomy, is significantly different from what Carl Linnaeus originally wrote. The same can be said of Newtonian physics.
    The Celsius scale was just flipped and that's pretty much it.

    • @alecbramlett
      @alecbramlett 8 лет назад +5

      ZarlanTheGreen he said some other guy invented the scale.

    • @ZarlanTheGreen
      @ZarlanTheGreen 8 лет назад +1

      +Kiimosabe Where? Using what argument?

    • @ZarlanTheGreen
      @ZarlanTheGreen 8 лет назад +3

      Lucasif The Odd Wow, how very explanatory! You should consider a career as a teacher (preferably for younger ages) or as a host of a science show that is all about making science more accessible!

    • @SA-rb5xq
      @SA-rb5xq 7 лет назад +1

      Yeah. Celsius published first.

    • @Carewolf
      @Carewolf 6 лет назад

      No, Celsius work was based on Reumer, Lineus and Rømer scale, and his contribution is smaller than that of his instrument maker that turned it back around the way the predecessor scales from France and Denmark was.

  • @Cosmic-pulls
    @Cosmic-pulls 3 года назад +5

    Love all your work man! what a throwback, this video was just recommended to me and thought why not watch this again. all your work holds up. keep doing you.

  • @jasonjasonjasonjasonjason
    @jasonjasonjasonjasonjason 8 лет назад +75

    it was 25 degrees Carl outside today

  • @HamsterFurtif
    @HamsterFurtif 8 лет назад +71

    3:33 Jean-Pierre, not Jeane Pierre.
    Nice video though.

    • @veritasium
      @veritasium  8 лет назад +79

      sorry! I should have double checked. I thought maybe they did things differently in old French...

    • @gandalfthegrey2171
      @gandalfthegrey2171 8 лет назад +10

      +Veritasium Very honourable reaction to being proven wrong! Not many people are like that these days.

    • @creativesuit1930
      @creativesuit1930 8 лет назад +5

      +Gandalf The Grey proven wrong sounds like a bit of an overstatement... He made an honest mistake which was pointed out. I do agree that his reaction was very respectful however.

  • @michael1234252
    @michael1234252 8 лет назад +316

    Now do a video on the Kelvin scale if you haven't yet

    • @millsathn
      @millsathn 8 лет назад +15

      michael1234252 that's just the Celsius scale minus 273.15. Not much to say about it I think.

    • @michael1234252
      @michael1234252 8 лет назад +33

      ok. But I kinda want to know how Lord Kelvin came up with it and why it's named after him.

    • @ChelseaJeanBentley
      @ChelseaJeanBentley 8 лет назад +26

      + as a once frustrated chemistry student I'd like to know too!

    • @kell_11101
      @kell_11101 8 лет назад +16

      It's so weird hearing/reading my name in these videos

    • @RiotonzukRotMG
      @RiotonzukRotMG 8 лет назад +11

      millsathn No, it's celsius scale+273.15

  • @The_Voluptuary
    @The_Voluptuary 5 лет назад +16

    This news hit Michael so hard that now, years later, all he does is use Vsauce to sell his toys.

  • @noah_lot2842
    @noah_lot2842 8 лет назад +6

    "What temperature is it?"
    "That would be 10 degrees Carl, Ma'am."

  • @richsackett3423
    @richsackett3423 3 года назад +18

    "Centigrade" is what I've always been taught and said.

  • @TheWanderingChemist
    @TheWanderingChemist 8 лет назад +7

    About the point you made that there's no good way to choose an ascending scale over a descending temperature scale: I think from the pont of basic thermodynamics it makes sense to choose an ascending one since it relates a higher temperature with a higher kinetic energy of particles.
    Anyway, great vid!

    • @MrOdrzut
      @MrOdrzut 8 лет назад +3

      On the other hand if the scale was inverted it would measure entropy :)

  • @majsstenen
    @majsstenen 3 года назад +68

    FYI: That "German" book was written by a Swedish chemist, Jöns Jacob Berzelius, so I'd say it was a Swedish book.

    • @grommel5693
      @grommel5693 3 года назад +2

      no

    • @heil_quandale7044
      @heil_quandale7044 3 года назад +2

      No

    • @jacobramirez4894
      @jacobramirez4894 3 года назад +2

      No

    • @Isac_C7
      @Isac_C7 3 года назад +2

      I'm pretty sure by german he meant the original book was in the German language

    • @majsstenen
      @majsstenen 3 года назад +7

      @@Isac_C7 I think it's just at thing he said somewhere along the video, for a book which clearly displays German without much more thought to it. It's an easy thing to miss.
      If it was what he meant I would argue it is very misleading. German was one of the main languages used for science at the time, not much different than how all science is published in English today. So with that logic almost all scientific litterature would be French, English and German. And I would say the correct way to phrase that is "this book written/published in German" rather than "this German book".

  • @v-xup6
    @v-xup6 8 лет назад +42

    and then there's Fahrenheit which is based on nothing?

    • @hajarfarrell7934
      @hajarfarrell7934 8 лет назад

      dunno

    • @veritasium
      @veritasium  8 лет назад +42

      just wait for the sequel

    • @tiffity
      @tiffity 8 лет назад +7

      +Veritasium in 1 year

    • @havardmj
      @havardmj 8 лет назад +3

      who cares about useless fahrenheits

    • @13Xerro
      @13Xerro 8 лет назад

      +Veritasium Celsius 2: The Fahrenheit origins story - I look forward to it!

  • @edman2740
    @edman2740 4 года назад +3

    You made it, you're one of the best RUclips channel there is ! And thank you for everything!

  • @jollyjokress3852
    @jollyjokress3852 3 года назад +7

    0:40 I like how you use Bach as background music. Bach = true genius.

    • @anandtewani7591
      @anandtewani7591 3 года назад

      Could you share the music name pls ?

    • @stennordenmalm1735
      @stennordenmalm1735 3 года назад

      Anand, sure. Its the first movement of J S Bach Brandenburg Concert nr 4. It is composed for two alto recorders, strings and Basso Continue.
      Four years ago, two of my students played that piece at the Music school in Helsingborg. Beautiful music! Hi from Sweden

  • @YorranKlees
    @YorranKlees 3 года назад +6

    That video genuinely blew my mind :)
    When you realize you have been relying on a simple concept you sincerely believed you knew all about !

  • @LKAChannel
    @LKAChannel 8 лет назад +17

    You said "degree Kelvin" at around 6:13, that's blasphemy!

  • @realvanman1
    @realvanman1 3 года назад +23

    Fascinating history lesson! Where I live we have this really weird water that boils at 212 degrees and freezes at 32. ;)

    • @keithv4452
      @keithv4452 3 года назад +2

      Thats because no one really cares about water freezing or boiling temperatures. However, 0 degrees F is really cold, and 100 degrees F is really hot!

    • @DaetB
      @DaetB 2 года назад +2

      @@keithv4452 Yes, nobody, just every scientist, cook, engieneer, etc. But since USA has one of the lowest ammount of graduates on the first world would explain why they keep using F. and Effing every scientist, btw, 0 C its really cold and 100 C is really hot too, you wouldnt survive 100ºC and neither 0ºC (without equipement), you only find it convenient cause youre used to it, not because it makes sense.

    • @mgord9518
      @mgord9518 Год назад

      ​@@DaetBThere's literally no reason for cooks to prefer Celsius to Fahrenheit and scientists only use it because it plays well with using water in volumetric metric measurements.
      You aren't smarter because you use Celsius and in reality, it doesn't matter what temperature scale you use since doing science deals with a lot more than decimal round portions of pure water in exactly 1 atmospheric pressure.
      The metric system isn't a religion, stop treating it like one.

  • @antonnorman1458
    @antonnorman1458 4 года назад +6

    Just FYI, Berzelius was also Swedish. He is from the Swedish city Linköping which has a high school named after him (that also happens to be the school I go to)

  • @tm30shadowball37
    @tm30shadowball37 5 лет назад +10

    3:33 I thought he was going to say Polnareff

  • @KishoreShenoy1994
    @KishoreShenoy1994 8 лет назад +15

    You could avoid the negative problem by using Kelvin.

    • @pun-isher1501
      @pun-isher1501 8 лет назад +32

      It really is the scale for optimists.
      No negatives

    • @divisionzero715
      @divisionzero715 8 лет назад +2

      ba-dum-tss

    • @divisionzero715
      @divisionzero715 8 лет назад +3

      You're right, but it would feel kind of odd having water freeze at 273 and boil at 373. People just like round and simple numbers.

    • @RexGalilae
      @RexGalilae 8 лет назад +3

      At the time of Celsius, noone knew if there could be a thing as absolute zero until.....Kelvin :)

    • @bennylofgren3208
      @bennylofgren3208 8 лет назад +3

      Well, I've got to say that 3 is a pretty round number. 2 too, except for the pointy end at the bottom... 7 is a bit of a stiff though.

  • @SaandviNorskSpill
    @SaandviNorskSpill 8 лет назад +17

    they just inverted it, it is still the same scale... the same difference between each point.

  • @Robert_McGarry_Poems
    @Robert_McGarry_Poems 5 лет назад +4

    One of the best. Thank you, from a rarely used portion of my heart. Honest, well meaning, and nice to listen to.

  • @benspear
    @benspear Год назад +1

    So I just randomly came onto this video after watching some stuff on GPT-4 and though why not test it and gave it the prompt "Tell me the origins of the Celsius scale". The lengthy response included: "Celsius developed the scale by defining 0°C as the temperature at which water freezes and 100°C as the temperature at which water boils at standard atmospheric pressure." so I responded "I just watched a video that suggests your previous answer is not accurate" so it asked what the video claims or what I believe was inaccurate. So I tell it "The video is on the RUclips channel @veritasium and he said that Celsius's original scale set 0 degrees as the boiling point and 100 degrees as the freezing point of water which contradicts what you just told me." GPT-4 response: "Thank you for letting me know. You are correct that in his original scale, Anders Celsius set 0 degrees as the boiling point of water and 100 degrees as the freezing point of water. I apologize for any confusion my previous answer may have caused.
    The Celsius scale was later reversed after his death by Carl Linnaeus, another Swedish scientist who was a colleague of Celsius, to the scale we know today..."
    I just don't know what to make of ai but it is very gently blowing my mind.

  • @DeuteriumTech
    @DeuteriumTech 8 лет назад +45

    Wait, Michael got doesn't know something?

  • @AuroraIceFlame
    @AuroraIceFlame 5 лет назад +51

    As a primitive American, this video and your farenheit video inspired me to learn celcius. It was hard but I've learned how much more meaningful it is compared to farenheit.

    • @kalebnelson4569
      @kalebnelson4569 Год назад

      Lmao why is it hard? It’s simple math. You’re just a weeb. So much of a weeb you should be told 4 years later.

    • @diymicha2
      @diymicha2 Год назад

      who would measure something so important as temperature in that German nad$i measurement of farenheit?

  • @Grey_Warden_Invasion
    @Grey_Warden_Invasion 3 года назад +3

    Imagine how some things could be with that many different everyday measurements around.
    "You told me to heat this up to 100 degrees and it burned to a crisp. How on earth is this ever going to work?" "100 degrees as in the hottest day in Bologna?" "No 100 degrees like the average temperature of a geyser."

  • @historyZZ
    @historyZZ 3 года назад +1

    A youtuber that doesn’t ask for donations or subs. instant sub.

  • @iLuvNatureGal
    @iLuvNatureGal 8 лет назад +88

    I tell bad chemistry jokes because all the good ones Argon....

    • @divisionzero715
      @divisionzero715 8 лет назад +15

      Too many bad chemistry jokes... lets Barium!

    • @argon7624
      @argon7624 8 лет назад +10

      Damn, I keep hitting my neon my chair

    • @AxcelleratorT
      @AxcelleratorT 8 лет назад +3

      Why did the sugar molecule have no chirality?
      Because it was ambi-dextrose!

    • @salaciousone
      @salaciousone 8 лет назад +1

      I have to give you two isotopes of helium

    • @6to1
      @6to1 8 лет назад +9

      He He He

  • @matthewtheobald1231
    @matthewtheobald1231 8 лет назад +6

    Obviously this will never happen, but we should all be using the Kelvin scale. This is because it truly is based on something that is fixed, unlike the boiling point of water, which changes with varying atmospheric pressures. Kelvin is based on the hypothetical "absolute zero" temperature of the Universe where in an object has no thermal energy at all. Setting this at zero also means that there are no negative numbers on the Kelvin scale.

    • @2alexbonte
      @2alexbonte 7 лет назад

      Matthew Theobald true but i support celcius for every day use since its easier to say it's 16 degrees than it's 291.15 digrees

    • @tuberculosis8451
      @tuberculosis8451 6 лет назад

      Matthew Theobald kelvins Gay

    • @leneanderthalien
      @leneanderthalien 6 лет назад

      Kelvin scale is not verifiable and totaly useless in "normal life": the 100°C boiling point of water is defined at 1 atmophere= 1013,2 hectopascal.The centigrade or Celsius scale was first adopted in 1789 in France just after the french revolution...

    • @CommunistHam
      @CommunistHam 5 лет назад

      +Alex Bonte 16 degrees Celsius is 289 Kelvin. The difference between 2 whole number units on the Kelvin scale is very similar to on the Celsius scale, meaning that for everyday life it would be similar to Celsius and fractional numbers would likely be rounded off as is done with the Celsius scale.

  • @per.kallberg
    @per.kallberg 5 лет назад +3

    I salute you pronunciation of the Swedish names and places. Excellent

  • @joshmellon390
    @joshmellon390 3 года назад +1

    I absolutely LOVE old instruments. Back then you had to do ALL of the work; all the way down to building a box for your new object.

  • @ianjohnson4886
    @ianjohnson4886 5 лет назад +8

    First off; These videos are extremely informative, you've got a nice, mild, sense of humor, and honestly, I don't think you could do a whole lot to improve these. They are as great as many.
    By the way, I did like the animation.
    Keep rocking the awesomeness.

  • @agentwashingtub9167
    @agentwashingtub9167 8 лет назад +42

    Me feals smrat now.

    • @wacka.
      @wacka. 8 лет назад +22

      you are am smrat now

    • @Czeckie
      @Czeckie 8 лет назад +2

      calm down, Charlie Gordon

    • @MCHungerGames321
      @MCHungerGames321 8 лет назад

      +Czeckie give me flowers my name is Algernon

  • @Lucas_Lucky
    @Lucas_Lucky 8 лет назад +188

    OMG YOU ARE IN SWEDEN! PLEASE MAKE A FAN MEET UP I NEED TO MEET YOU ;__;

    • @veritasium
      @veritasium  8 лет назад +198

      That was actually filmed in 2012! I've been sitting on this footage for a looooonning time

    • @VERBUGAOFFICIAL
      @VERBUGAOFFICIAL 8 лет назад +7

      +Veritasium dafuq? 😂😂 thats cheap man

    • @manugoswami8621
      @manugoswami8621 8 лет назад +2

      +Veritasium hahahahahahahaha peak

    • @Fucisko
      @Fucisko 8 лет назад +91

      +Veritasium You just crushed that guy's dream

    • @whiteboard1335
      @whiteboard1335 8 лет назад

      you, people, do really work hard

  • @trissdavis
    @trissdavis 2 года назад

    "Celsius never devised or used the scale that now bear his name...."
    "ARE YOU KIDDING ME!?!?!?"
    "No Michael, I am not."
    Hardly 30 seconds in and I am confronted with the most wholesome experience I have had today. Hail science!

  • @Mandorle21
    @Mandorle21 3 года назад +12

    Americans: Nah.

  • @billyzarp2071
    @billyzarp2071 5 лет назад +9

    6:57 "hey, Veritasium is here" xD

  • @GOOD_FARMER
    @GOOD_FARMER Год назад +3

    Water boils at nearly 100°Community at standard atmospheric pressure 🤔

  • @qs2668
    @qs2668 3 года назад +1

    7:18 gotta love those 2 comments, especially the second one

  • @henrylee8366
    @henrylee8366 5 лет назад +4

    "Or is it?'' That's soooooo Michael

  • @Novenae_CCG
    @Novenae_CCG 8 лет назад +12

    874,587th!
    Aren't we using Celsius' descending scale, for views?

    • @philippwilkendorf
      @philippwilkendorf 8 лет назад

      How many you think will he get OR wich number were you counting normally??

    • @Novenae_CCG
      @Novenae_CCG 8 лет назад

      I just went for an arbitrarily large number. The views on his videos range form a couple hundred thousands, to 10+million. I have no idea how many this one will get.

    • @Novenae_CCG
      @Novenae_CCG 8 лет назад

      hunter harris While I agree with the sentiment you're trying to make, and the argument you've given for it, I think this video will definitely get over 175k. It looks like all his videos get at least a couple 100k, thanks to a subscriber base of 3,5million people. This video _already got_ over 100k in uh, one day.

    • @Novenae_CCG
      @Novenae_CCG 8 лет назад

      hunter harris Indeed, that it does.

    • @philippwilkendorf
      @philippwilkendorf 8 лет назад

      well now it has 550 k

  • @bowieinc
    @bowieinc 2 года назад +3

    Just made me think, if water boils at different temps due to elevation, doesn’t that mean Celsius readings at sea level will be different than on a mountain even if they are in reality the same temp? For example 212 ° c at sea level would be 210 ° c at 1,000 feet about sea level.

    • @Andriren04
      @Andriren04 2 года назад +2

      As he said in the video the celsius scale is not defined by water’s different phases. It’s just the water that boils at different temperatures depending on the pressure. The scale does NOT change

  • @ricacarter9458
    @ricacarter9458 2 года назад +2

    We very much appreciate and enjoy your efforts to make Veritasium the best it can be, congratulations on your current and future success! Also, you and Michael collaborating is the best thing on RUclips ☺️

  • @dache.henrylee
    @dache.henrylee 4 года назад +4

    I was waiting for “HEY Vsauce”

  • @FDJUwe
    @FDJUwe 8 лет назад +18

    Its funny cause if you think about it, Fahrenheit was one of those dubious scales he talked about, but instead of butter it was salt+ice and the temperature of the human body instead of a random animal.
    And people think it's ok to use it. Lmfao

    • @johnlesley2746
      @johnlesley2746 8 лет назад +2

      Fahrenheit is more accurate than Celcius.

    • @divisionzero715
      @divisionzero715 8 лет назад +14

      Are you serious, mate? The Celsius scale is directly tied to the absolute scale for temperature, how can Fahrenheit possibly be more accurate?

    • @lereff1382
      @lereff1382 8 лет назад +5

      ...because the temperature of the human body is 100% constant?

    • @johnlesley2746
      @johnlesley2746 8 лет назад +2

      Stefan Dimov Celcius has 100 increments between boiling/freezing. Fahrenheit has 180. For Celcius to be as accurate you'd have to use decimals, like 13.8. No thanks, I'll stick with Fahrenheit.

    • @lereff1382
      @lereff1382 8 лет назад +7

      john lesley oh so that's what you mean. Well, if that's important to you, fine. I would argue that in Celsius scale there's little need for stupidly large numbers and there's no need for learning 2 different temperature scales, one for scientific use and for everyday use. Especially when the "scientific" one works just as well in normal life.

  • @RMoribayashi
    @RMoribayashi 8 лет назад +6

    The backing music from about 0:24 to 0:48 sure sounds like Wendy Carlos' realization of the Allegro from Brandenburg Concerto No.4 in G Major by J. S. Bach, originally on her 1969 album The Well-Tempered Synthesizer. Did you get permission? I don't think she likes RUclips very much.

    • @Aronsson007
      @Aronsson007 8 лет назад

      yeah i also want to know haha

    • @TheSquirrelbeast
      @TheSquirrelbeast 8 лет назад +1

      I think using music for less than 15 seconds in educational videos falls under fair use. Could be wrong though.

  • @rursus8354
    @rursus8354 5 лет назад +1

    4:17 This J. Jacob Berzelius of the German text book was a Swede, considered one of the four founders of modern chemistry. He just used to publish in German, English was not the universal lingua franca at that time. If he favoured a Swede, that might be just a way to fuss to a colleague professor.

    • @svergurd3873
      @svergurd3873 3 года назад

      Berzelius wrote his textbook in Swedish. It was translated to German by the great chemist Friedrich Wöhler-