Vsauce Michael does only promotions for his sub based thingie and is not even interesting anymore and when he posts a video, its always about something dumb or for children...
I think it has something to do with the molecules’ speed. When something’s as cold as liquid nitrogen, the particles are going to be moving very very slowly, which might contribute to the way things glow because the molecules are so slow that they aren’t sending out the light energy as quick
"I cast Cryo Light!!!" that sounds like an awesome ability in a DnD class, where you freeze something so much that it starts glowing fluorescent lights. thanks for the video it might actually inspire something interesting!
I didn't know this was a real thing! In one of my fantasy worlds, ice magic produces a well-studied effect called "cryoluminescence". Rather than phosphorescence though, it is caused by black-body radiation. Ice magic cools matter by causing it to radiate heat at an accelerated rate, making it glow red or white-hot. This makes ice magic extremely versatile, and it is occasionally used to provide heat and light as well as cooling. This idea is public domain, so feel free to use it in your own works.
@@areadenial2343 That's a great idea! Magic is way more interesting when it's designed to minimally break the laws of physics-yours could even work in a science-fiction universe.
The video is really proof that we have a Creator.❤️ Everything you saw in the video (the UV light, the table, the hand) are made of things called “atoms”! And these are amazing than you think: Atoms are so small, millions could fit on the period at the end of this comment! -> . Everything around you, from your hand to the whole universe, are made of 100+ different types of atoms! And guess what? The screen you’re using to read this RUclips comment is also made from 100+ different types of atoms - that’s around trillions of trillions (more than you can imagine) of atoms! We really live in a detailed world.🌌 A world that did not exist by accident, but invented!
This collab has got to happen: action lab, veritasium, and vsauce Edit: yknow what everybody wants everybody in apparently so this is the new best collab: Action lab, veritasium, vsauce, Nile red, Steve mould, Mark Rober, 3 Blue 1 Brown, kurzgesagt, melodysheep, numberphile, asapSCIENCE, the backyard scientist, mrgreenguy, JaDropping science, physics girl, Bill Nye, sciencephile, slomo guys, the green Brothers, styropyro, organic chemistry tutor, Steven he, nardwar, smarter everyday, practical engineering, integza, electroBOOM, plasma channel, ididathing, applied science, Cody's lab, SciFun, linguist, T Folse nuclear, into the microcosmos, TKOR, crash course, Allen pan, thats all for now lmk who else to add. This collab would be amazing, and to make it even better it has to be IRL Remember to check back to see if I added your request, if it is during the us day time I'll get to it soon, but at night it will take more time Edit: 2 months later I completely forgot I made this lol, truly do hope there is a collab with all the science yters tho
Well, Veritasium & Vsauce are kinda teaching channels. They inform you of scientific stuff, but they don't do much experiments themselves. Action Lab & NileRed does experiments but only on the proven scientific facts and formulas. Steve Mould & Mark Rober does both established experiments as well as new conceptual ideas. Do, mixing all these people might not be a good idea, lol.. 😅 Or, is it? 🤨
The video is really proof that we have a Creator.❤️ Everything you saw in the video (the UV light, the table, the hand) are made of things called “atoms”! And these are amazing than you think: Atoms are so small, millions could fit on the period at the end of this comment! -> . Everything around you, from your hand to the whole universe, are made of 100+ different types of atoms! And guess what? The screen you’re using to read this RUclips comment is also made from 100+ different types of atoms - that’s around trillions of trillions (more than you can imagine) of atoms! We really live in a detailed world.🌌 A world that did not exist by accident, but invented!
@@Our-Creator-Loves-UsI believe in god, but 1. this video does not prove god's existence 2. you should want people to be faithful, and faith is believing in god WITHOUT being able to prove his existence
The video is really proof that we have a Creator.❤️ Everything you saw in the video (the UV light, the table, the hand) are made of things called “atoms”! And these are amazing than you think: Atoms are so small, millions could fit on the period at the end of this comment! -> . Everything around you, from your hand to the whole universe, are made of 100+ different types of atoms! And guess what? The screen you’re using to read this RUclips comment is also made from 100+ different types of atoms - that’s around trillions of trillions (more than you can imagine) of atoms! We really live in a detailed world.🌌 A world that did not exist by accident, but invented!
You should turn off the auto-exposure mode in your camera and manually lock the exposure to the correct exposure for the florescent light level. Yeah, it'll be overexposed while the black light is on, but it will be possible to observe the smooth exponental decay curve of the florescence after the black light is turned off. In this video the brightness is wildly fluctuating as your camera tries to adjust to the changing light conditions.
The video is really proof that we have a Creator.❤️ Everything you saw in the video (the UV light, the table, the hand) are made of things called “atoms”! And these are amazing than you think: Atoms are so small, millions could fit on the period at the end of this comment! -> . Everything around you, from your hand to the whole universe, are made of 100+ different types of atoms! And guess what? The screen you’re using to read this RUclips comment is also made from 100+ different types of atoms - that’s around trillions of trillions (more than you can imagine) of atoms! We really live in a detailed world.🌌 A world that did not exist by accident, but invented!
He’s turning the light on and off, the “wildly fluctuating” light is the camera having to adjust like our eyes do. Everything goes dark then the iris opens up to let more light in. The exposure is fine, this is just what it looks like. My lights do it sometimes and in person, that is what is looks like.
@@Our-Creator-Loves-Usgo away, stop trying to convert people. If the existence of a creator was so obvious everyone would worship them. Even if they do exist they deserve no praise as they also created all the evil in the world. They would deserve respect, like a wild animal, but not worship. A ruler that requires praise is known as a dictator, because negative opinion weakens their power? Why would god require praise, why do they need the same as a dictator? A king of kings is obvious by the fact of existing. An all loving god would be happy regardless, so who do you actually worship via a religion? Yourself. Your relationship with god. It's mental masturbation.
If we consider a material that exhibits phosphorescence at cryogenic temperatures, one might study how these temperature conditions affect the quantum states of the electrons involved in phosphorescence. This could provide insights into how these electrons interact and overlap, potentially offering a model to observe phenomena like superposition or entanglement in a controlled environment.
If you took a glow in the dark toy, froze it in liquid nitrogen, charged it under a black light, and then shut the light off, would the toy glow brighter/longer?
We used to do that with our glow in the dark toys as children, we were told the light surviived stronger after a few hour in the daylight, and yes we got brighter light from them
The video is really proof that we have a Creator.❤️ Everything you saw in the video (the UV light, the table, the hand) are made of things called “atoms”! And these are amazing than you think: Atoms are so small, millions could fit on the period at the end of this comment! -> . Everything around you, from your hand to the whole universe, are made of 100+ different types of atoms! And guess what? The screen you’re using to read this RUclips comment is also made from 100+ different types of atoms - that’s around trillions of trillions (more than you can imagine) of atoms! We really live in a detailed world.🌌 A world that did not exist by accident, but invented!
I was never interested in watching Midsommar because I wasn't a fan of Hereditary, but I was still always curious about it and I watched as many analysis videos as I could because I liked learning about all the detail that's gone into it. I have to admit, the length of this video alone was enough to motivate me to subscribe, and even as someone who hasn't seen this movie I'm elated to see how much research someone has put into explaining it.
Your content has been getting better over the years! I'm glad to see less clickbate and more real science. I had no idea this effect existed! I'd love to have a little more explanation of why, though. Keep up the good work!
Because phosphorescence depends on vibrational relaxation *before* a radiative transition that releases energy by creating a photon. Vibration depends on temperature.
Wearing a glove would probably result in damage to your hand. The heat from your hand would instantly evaporate the nitrogen but the glove would instantly stiffen, potentially resulting in your hand being trapped
Very rarely do I find something new like this because I love discovering things like these❤ . It's been a while since my heart skipped a beat to new knowledge
I feel like that ending should come with a "Don't try this at home. This was just a hypothetical." I don't trust the viewing public enough to understand what danger is. lol
From Liquid nitrogen I remembered recently a girl had eaten liquid nitrogen icecream, she got hole in stomach, had to undergo surgery, its very dangerous
That is an interesting thing to consider! There’s a lot of stuff like that we probably can’t just go and test out, but it’s an interesting thing to think about.
That’s genuinely fascinating the fact that those light frequencies can be held by the temperature alone, and it has that big of an effect, honestly I wouldn’t think that light could be tampered with this way
Its because its not the light thats being tampered with. Its the electrons. Basically, the photons are absorbed by electrons which excites them into higher energy states. They naturally want to go back to lower energy states and when they do that, the energy they lose doesnt just disappear, it gets re-emitted as light. Electrons can get stuck in sort of "energy wells" though, and they need a certain amount of energy to get out of these. A cold material has less intrinsic energy than a hot material, and so its less probable that an electron will have the required energy to escape the well at lower temperatures. When i say "less probably" i basically mean it happens at a slower rate.
We _still do_ have the ability to see UV-A light, but the corneas of our eyes filter it out -- which is a good thing because of our long lifespan. If UV light was actually reaching our retinas, we would go blind after a few decades. (Animals who see UV have much shorter lifespans than humans, so going blind after twenty years isn't much of a problem for them. )
to add to treks, if it's an LED bulb it's because there might be a capacitor in place to filter a rectifier that has to discharge after you shut the light off
Cold/Hard things hold on to vibrations for longer and more uniformly than a hot/flowing medium. Light can be really intuitive if you understand how it's all part of the same spectrum, even when interacting with objects at different scales.
This was first reported decades ago, when someone in a lab saw it occur with latex rubber gloves, rubber tubing, etc. I remembered the report, but never got around to trying it myself. Huh, not just rubber? I wonder if many polymers do this, even with no fluorescent dyes involved?
cold is when particles are so slow that they move towards stillness particles of light being cooled down means that they're slowed, so they're slower when they initially bounce off a cold object
There’s something creative about this guy he can build something we don’t kno but doesn’t wanna be seen by the government we already kno what happens after that
I think that's heat from the UV being trapped for a bit cause the cap is really cold, and the fluorescence helps with the glow kinda turning it into one of those glow in the dark stars
Slowly turning into Vsauce with that last part
He will say “Where are my fingers?” If he tests it out.
noooooooooooo
Lol
The intrusive thoughts were crazy with this one 🗣🥶
ActionLab, NileRed, Vsauce, and Styro should do a team up. Like the Avengers but chaotic.
Don't test that last part.
Do test that last part.
Do test that last
Test the last part
That last test, do it
You can test parts of you that you can take out. Eg: blood, nails, hair, etc etc…
Action Labs be like:
-> Try an experiment
-> Try the same experiment but involve liquid nitrogen somehow
don’t forget the vacuum chamber. man LOVES his vacuum chamber
@@theobamaprism yes yes xD, not for forget that
@@theobamaprism ...liquid nitrogen in a vacuum chamber? 🤔
It’s awesome, he tries stuff we or anyone else would even do
@@theobamaprism its epensive, he has to use for something
I love Cryogenically Induced Phosphorescence
We call it CIP in the bizz
Me too
Same here
As soon as I heard it I knew it was a terrific band name
One of my favorite types of Phosphorescence tbh
This guy is like the calmer, nicer, less chaotic version of Vsauce
Love them both
VSauce meets NileRed
@@TheCapitalWanderer I just find the way nilered talks kinda annoying. Like he groups every sentence in 3 sections and uses the same tone every time.
@@schm147nah i like it it’s satisfying it tickles my brain
Seems more like a calmer nilered to me,
I mean nilered is already pretty calm,
but like, this guy doesn't try to make it funny,
you know what I mean?
Vsauce Michael does only promotions for his sub based thingie and is not even interesting anymore and when he posts a video, its always about something dumb or for children...
So why do things glow in the dark?
"Yes"
He did explain it, basically they absorb high frequency energy and emit a lower frequency energy which we are able to see
Did I write the comment wrong? I probably meant "in the cold" idr tbh. What is cryogenically induced phosphorescence 💀
I think it has something to do with the molecules’ speed. When something’s as cold as liquid nitrogen, the particles are going to be moving very very slowly, which might contribute to the way things glow because the molecules are so slow that they aren’t sending out the light energy as quick
Your name fascinates me. Is it: Bake dat been or Baked at been. If it is the latter, who, or what, is been?
@@bakedatbeenIt basically means it was super cold and emitted a light without any heat.
"I cast Cryo Light!!!"
that sounds like an awesome ability in a DnD class, where you freeze something so much that it starts glowing fluorescent lights.
thanks for the video it might actually inspire something interesting!
Literally just how I flavored my alchemist’s (artificer) fairy lights lol
I choose you Cryo light!
I didn't know this was a real thing! In one of my fantasy worlds, ice magic produces a well-studied effect called "cryoluminescence". Rather than phosphorescence though, it is caused by black-body radiation. Ice magic cools matter by causing it to radiate heat at an accelerated rate, making it glow red or white-hot. This makes ice magic extremely versatile, and it is occasionally used to provide heat and light as well as cooling. This idea is public domain, so feel free to use it in your own works.
@@areadenial2343 I love that idea
@@areadenial2343 That's a great idea! Magic is way more interesting when it's designed to minimally break the laws of physics-yours could even work in a science-fiction universe.
With the video loop i thought for a second that he'd actually tested it 😅
💀
The video is really proof that we have a Creator.❤️
Everything you saw in the video (the UV light, the table, the hand) are made of things called “atoms”! And these are amazing than you think:
Atoms are so small, millions could fit on the period at the end of this comment! -> .
Everything around you, from your hand to the whole universe, are made of 100+ different types of atoms!
And guess what? The screen you’re using to read this RUclips comment is also made from 100+ different types of atoms - that’s around trillions of trillions (more than you can imagine) of atoms!
We really live in a detailed world.🌌
A world that did not exist by accident, but invented!
@@Our-Creator-Loves-UsDid you just say that UV light is made of atoms?
😂
@Dudeman000 photons are not atoms, they are one of several kinds of subatomic particle
This collab has got to happen: action lab, veritasium, and vsauce
Edit: yknow what everybody wants everybody in apparently so this is the new best collab:
Action lab, veritasium, vsauce, Nile red, Steve mould, Mark Rober, 3 Blue 1 Brown, kurzgesagt, melodysheep, numberphile, asapSCIENCE, the backyard scientist, mrgreenguy, JaDropping science, physics girl, Bill Nye, sciencephile, slomo guys, the green Brothers, styropyro, organic chemistry tutor, Steven he, nardwar, smarter everyday, practical engineering, integza, electroBOOM, plasma channel, ididathing, applied science, Cody's lab, SciFun, linguist, T Folse nuclear, into the microcosmos, TKOR, crash course, Allen pan, thats all for now lmk who else to add.
This collab would be amazing, and to make it even better it has to be IRL
Remember to check back to see if I added your request, if it is during the us day time I'll get to it soon, but at night it will take more time
Edit: 2 months later I completely forgot I made this lol, truly do hope there is a collab with all the science yters tho
don't forget nilered
Veritasium is government propaganda
Count Steve Mould in
Okay okay, I added them
Well, Veritasium & Vsauce are kinda teaching channels. They inform you of scientific stuff, but they don't do much experiments themselves.
Action Lab & NileRed does experiments but only on the proven scientific facts and formulas.
Steve Mould & Mark Rober does both established experiments as well as new conceptual ideas.
Do, mixing all these people might not be a good idea, lol.. 😅
Or, is it? 🤨
The first part of the video has a far more nefarious implication once you let the video play all the way through. lol Well done again sir.
The video is really proof that we have a Creator.❤️
Everything you saw in the video (the UV light, the table, the hand) are made of things called “atoms”! And these are amazing than you think:
Atoms are so small, millions could fit on the period at the end of this comment! -> .
Everything around you, from your hand to the whole universe, are made of 100+ different types of atoms!
And guess what? The screen you’re using to read this RUclips comment is also made from 100+ different types of atoms - that’s around trillions of trillions (more than you can imagine) of atoms!
We really live in a detailed world.🌌
A world that did not exist by accident, but invented!
@@Our-Creator-Loves-UsI believe in god, but
1. this video does not prove god's existence
2. you should want people to be faithful, and faith is believing in god WITHOUT being able to prove his existence
I know what atoms are.. but.. those arent.. what?
@@Our-Creator-Loves-Us Just because you struggle to comprehend the reality around you doesn't mean your fairy tails are real.
You are one of my favorite science communicators. Thanks for all the awesome content!
Yessir
The video is really proof that we have a Creator.❤️
Everything you saw in the video (the UV light, the table, the hand) are made of things called “atoms”! And these are amazing than you think:
Atoms are so small, millions could fit on the period at the end of this comment! -> .
Everything around you, from your hand to the whole universe, are made of 100+ different types of atoms!
And guess what? The screen you’re using to read this RUclips comment is also made from 100+ different types of atoms - that’s around trillions of trillions (more than you can imagine) of atoms!
We really live in a detailed world.🌌
A world that did not exist by accident, but invented!
You should turn off the auto-exposure mode in your camera and manually lock the exposure to the correct exposure for the florescent light level. Yeah, it'll be overexposed while the black light is on, but it will be possible to observe the smooth exponental decay curve of the florescence after the black light is turned off.
In this video the brightness is wildly fluctuating as your camera tries to adjust to the changing light conditions.
The video is really proof that we have a Creator.❤️
Everything you saw in the video (the UV light, the table, the hand) are made of things called “atoms”! And these are amazing than you think:
Atoms are so small, millions could fit on the period at the end of this comment! -> .
Everything around you, from your hand to the whole universe, are made of 100+ different types of atoms!
And guess what? The screen you’re using to read this RUclips comment is also made from 100+ different types of atoms - that’s around trillions of trillions (more than you can imagine) of atoms!
We really live in a detailed world.🌌
A world that did not exist by accident, but invented!
@@Our-Creator-Loves-Us huh
He’s turning the light on and off, the “wildly fluctuating” light is the camera having to adjust like our eyes do. Everything goes dark then the iris opens up to let more light in. The exposure is fine, this is just what it looks like. My lights do it sometimes and in person, that is what is looks like.
@@Our-Creator-Loves-Usgo away, stop trying to convert people.
If the existence of a creator was so obvious everyone would worship them. Even if they do exist they deserve no praise as they also created all the evil in the world. They would deserve respect, like a wild animal, but not worship. A ruler that requires praise is known as a dictator, because negative opinion weakens their power? Why would god require praise, why do they need the same as a dictator? A king of kings is obvious by the fact of existing. An all loving god would be happy regardless, so who do you actually worship via a religion? Yourself. Your relationship with god. It's mental masturbation.
Don't leave us hanging, man. Time for a cold bath.
If we consider a material that exhibits phosphorescence at cryogenic temperatures, one might study how these temperature conditions affect the quantum states of the electrons involved in phosphorescence. This could provide insights into how these electrons interact and overlap, potentially offering a model to observe phenomena like superposition or entanglement in a controlled environment.
Cool!
Whoa! Nice insight into this experiment.
Doesn't the distinction between fluorescence and phosphorescence already come from our understanding of quantum mechanics?
You really are becoming powerful day by day
If you took a glow in the dark toy, froze it in liquid nitrogen, charged it under a black light, and then shut the light off, would the toy glow brighter/longer?
I think so
it wont
This needs it's own short
❤
We used to do that with our glow in the dark toys as children, we were told the light surviived stronger after a few hour in the daylight, and yes we got brighter light from them
Cool video, I always wondered why fluorescent
Markers acted that way under certain lighting conditions. Thanks for sharing
WTF this makes me want to buy a black light and liquid nitrogen
Well, only one way to find out
*way
@@Lone-Leewhats crazy is I read it as "one way" and didn't see the mistake. My brain just ignored the second one and autocorrected it into way.
@@Lone-Lee oh sorry, my bad
@@UwU-ok2jr yeah me too i couldn't notice it XD
never shake that guy's hand
The video is really proof that we have a Creator.❤️
Everything you saw in the video (the UV light, the table, the hand) are made of things called “atoms”! And these are amazing than you think:
Atoms are so small, millions could fit on the period at the end of this comment! -> .
Everything around you, from your hand to the whole universe, are made of 100+ different types of atoms!
And guess what? The screen you’re using to read this RUclips comment is also made from 100+ different types of atoms - that’s around trillions of trillions (more than you can imagine) of atoms!
We really live in a detailed world.🌌
A world that did not exist by accident, but invented!
@@Our-Creator-Loves-Us I know you're a bot, but there are only 96 naturally occurring elements, not 100+.
@@polyblank73 and some of them are radioactive
@@polyblank73 noted
Last part sounds like something Nile Red would do
You could always do a hunk of pork or something _(Probably with the skin still on.)_
I was never interested in watching Midsommar because I wasn't a fan of Hereditary, but I was still always curious about it and I watched as many analysis videos as I could because I liked learning about all the detail that's gone into it. I have to admit, the length of this video alone was enough to motivate me to subscribe, and even as someone who hasn't seen this movie I'm elated to see how much research someone has put into explaining it.
I think you commented under the wrong short 😂
This may be unrelated, but the making of Midsommar is an enough reason to watch it for the art, not so much the story.
Me waiting for the part where you talk about where florescent light was used in Midsommar:
My guy commented on a video after clicking on a short and It posted in the wrong place lol
What's the video title though, sounds like a good watch
This has to be some copy pasta trend or you just commented on the wrong short lol
That’s how items look in video games when you can pick em up
honestly unreal!
Your content has been getting better over the years! I'm glad to see less clickbate and more real science. I had no idea this effect existed! I'd love to have a little more explanation of why, though. Keep up the good work!
Liquid nitrogen:
Makes magnets float
Makes objects glow
What else can it do?
I think it cools the thing so much, the light it emits gets a lil slower, just enough to be noticeable
Temperature doesnt affect the speed of light.
because everything moves slower when cold.
explain uranus
@@callanc3925 uranus is very big
Because phosphorescence depends on vibrational relaxation *before* a radiative transition that releases energy by creating a photon.
Vibration depends on temperature.
My dear you already glow! And you show the most interesting videos!
don't forget to wear a glove when you freeze your hand in liquid nitrogen
Its actually safer to do without a glove because your skin doesn’t absorb liquids as quickly as a glove does
Wearing a glove would probably result in damage to your hand. The heat from your hand would instantly evaporate the nitrogen but the glove would instantly stiffen, potentially resulting in your hand being trapped
Very rarely do I find something new like this because I love discovering things like these❤ . It's been a while since my heart skipped a beat to new knowledge
Dude just voiced his intrusive thoughts.
Nice. You do your research. Glad you are on RUclips.
Holy crap bro sacrificed his arm for the video
Such calming voice 😌 gentleman
You make learning fun! Thank you!! 🤗🤗❤❤
"But see what happens when we cool it down"(*fnaf music box in the back*)
Thanks, I was wondering what song it was
I can’t wait to show my son your videos when he’s older ☺️
Well, Dr. Frankenstein, get a corps and bring it back to light.
You should totally test that last part.
so this is where vsauce's sanity has been going
I was waiting for you showing the effect on yourself! ...I think I can expect that degree of dedication from a successful RUclips educator.
I feel like that ending should come with a "Don't try this at home. This was just a hypothetical." I don't trust the viewing public enough to understand what danger is. lol
The 2008 Dodge Viper ACR has always been one of my dream cars. I love how analogue the car really is, because Dodge was too cheap to make it fancy.
Heat it up, it Will also hold lights. Infrared light that is
This is why glow sticks last longer when you put them in the fridge
Title: “Why do things glow when they’re cold?”
Video: “Things glow when they’re cold. Isn’t that neat?”
tbf, to understand the reasoning youd need to already understand some pretty high level physics
I love his laugh each time he sees something amazing in his tests - you can tell he just loves what he’s doing. That’s so inspiring and cool
Cool
Now wash your hands
Why?
@@Acistrabecause bro seems to have put the highlighter in liquid nitrogen with bare hands
The pulse effect is awesome and gives a hidden peek into how the universe behaves
... can someone shine light at walt disney??
this is so funny, I hope more people can catch what you mean
This CHANGED my life! 🙌
Ahh, yes, my favorite radioactive rod
you mean hulk's ****?
Love your videos. I’ve learned so much from you.
Light was like chill bro
For a terrifying second, I thought he was going to test that last part.😂😂
"Hey guys, today I cut off a slab of my own flesh to see if I can make it glow when it's cold"
From Liquid nitrogen I remembered recently a girl had eaten liquid nitrogen icecream, she got hole in stomach, had to undergo surgery, its very dangerous
Now do room-T vis. fluorescence.
Cryogenically induced phosphorescence! Thank you!
I want and don't want the last part to happen
Your vids are just so awesome dude! Love em 👌🏽👌🏽👌🏽
Go for it 👍 we will meet you in the future with your titanium shield captain.
That is an interesting thing to consider! There’s a lot of stuff like that we probably can’t just go and test out, but it’s an interesting thing to think about.
Try carbonite, Solo!
That’s genuinely fascinating the fact that those light frequencies can be held by the temperature alone, and it has that big of an effect, honestly I wouldn’t think that light could be tampered with this way
Its because its not the light thats being tampered with. Its the electrons. Basically, the photons are absorbed by electrons which excites them into higher energy states. They naturally want to go back to lower energy states and when they do that, the energy they lose doesnt just disappear, it gets re-emitted as light.
Electrons can get stuck in sort of "energy wells" though, and they need a certain amount of energy to get out of these.
A cold material has less intrinsic energy than a hot material, and so its less probable that an electron will have the required energy to escape the well at lower temperatures. When i say "less probably" i basically mean it happens at a slower rate.
this is the first time I catch one of these shorts so early, amazing
After that last bit, I smell a follow-up video... probably the last video, but a spectacular one.
So wait, that's why my chest glows in the dark?
Bro, drink highlighter fluid and is cold blooded 😂
Bro is so shamelessly edgy
🥶🥶🥶
@@SealyMakesVideos absolutely putting razor companies out of business
@@E.Hunter.Esquire you know what that’s good for you :D
Would this work with a sodalite stone from the UP of Michigan?
👀
What a fascinating phenomenon...
This is known as Angel glow and it happens with wounds in the cold as well
To answer your question, test it on steak!! Great idea for another video!!
Sounds like a fun plot point for cryogenically frozen people in a sci fi
Don't do it
Why i love drawing with highlighters
Cold light
The scene with the arm in the beginning is having your intrusive thoughts win
did we used to have the gene to see UV light? like how we have patterns/stripes on our skin but they can only be seen in UV light
We _still do_ have the ability to see UV-A light, but the corneas of our eyes filter it out -- which is a good thing because of our long lifespan. If UV light was actually reaching our retinas, we would go blind after a few decades. (Animals who see UV have much shorter lifespans than humans, so going blind after twenty years isn't much of a problem for them. )
Who knew it is going to turn red from the start?
Wait is this why my bedroom light kinda glows sometimes when i turn it off for a second or two?
No, that’s just the filament (assuming it’s not an LED) cooling down
Or the phosphorescence of the phosphor
to add to treks, if it's an LED bulb it's because there might be a capacitor in place to filter a rectifier that has to discharge after you shut the light off
You never know, is your bedroom light at -200°C? 😂
Love your vids sir! 😊
Don't eat yellow glowing snow.
I actually really enjoyed this one
Try it. For science. We have to know.
That last question haunts me
Studying science in school❌
Studying science with The action lab✅
Wonderfull high energy light and information about it!
First
Cold/Hard things hold on to vibrations for longer and more uniformly than a hot/flowing medium.
Light can be really intuitive if you understand how it's all part of the same spectrum, even when interacting with objects at different scales.
This was first reported decades ago, when someone in a lab saw it occur with latex rubber gloves, rubber tubing, etc. I remembered the report, but never got around to trying it myself. Huh, not just rubber? I wonder if many polymers do this, even with no fluorescent dyes involved?
its also that marker dye is pH dependant and pH is temperature dependant ^^ its maybe just a temperature forced reduction ?
Did you see the rope and orange peel also have the same effect?
@@guadalupe8589 no ? its the molecule that is fluorescent that he puts on the rope from the pen.
Love that twist ending
cold is when particles are so slow that they move towards stillness
particles of light being cooled down means that they're slowed, so they're slower when they initially bounce off a cold object
Bro explain my childhood curiosity when I turn off the lights 😭💖
There’s something creative about this guy he can build something we don’t kno but doesn’t wanna be seen by the government we already kno what happens after that
I won't be expecting any new videos from this channel now 😂
I think that's heat from the UV being trapped for a bit cause the cap is really cold, and the fluorescence helps with the glow kinda turning it into one of those glow in the dark stars
Temperature is a measurement of how fast atoms are moving so it makes sense that things would move slower at that cold temp.