Can You Bounce A Bubble Off a Laser?

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  • Опубликовано: 26 авг 2020
  • Get a whole year of CuriosityStream for just $14.99 by going to curiositystream.com/stevemould and using the promo code stevemould at checkout.
    Check out Seb's video here: • Laser bubble bounce, w...
    Check out Igor's video here: • 🌑 УНИКАЛЬНЫЙ ЭКСПЕРИМЕ...
    You can buy my "We're all outside an aeroplane now and it's not that cold" t-shirt from here: mathsgear.co.uk/products/its-...
    You can watch the origin of that joke here: • Stand-up comedy routin...
    This video was the result of me not wanting to trust my intuition about the above video from Igor. My first thought was that it was fake but I wanted to know for sure!
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Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @SteveMould
    @SteveMould  3 года назад +268

    "We're all outside an aeroplane now and it's not that cold": mathsgear.co.uk/products/its-not-that-cold-t-shirt
    ruclips.net/video/C91gKuxutTU/видео.html
    The sponsor is CuriosityStream: Get a whole year for just $14.99 by going to curiositystream.com/stevemould and using the promo code stevemould at checkout.

    • @r0f3do
      @r0f3do 3 года назад

      Pinned 7hrs ago...how curious.

    • @the_hanged_clown
      @the_hanged_clown 3 года назад +2

      I don't get it

    • @maxmyzer9172
      @maxmyzer9172 3 года назад +1

      get styropyro, he has a i think 200+ watt laser

    • @tfoot99
      @tfoot99 3 года назад

      Am I crazy or are the speeding up while going through?

    • @the_hanged_clown
      @the_hanged_clown 3 года назад +2

      @Sandcastle • I'm talking about the aeroplane quote numbnuts

  • @girlsinredtrenchcoat1169
    @girlsinredtrenchcoat1169 3 года назад +2091

    Tom Scott: "Will this burn me?"
    Laser expert: "yes definitely"
    Tom Scott: *puts his hand in front of it*
    Good to hear Tom Scott has at least a little of the chaotic stupid instinct

    • @ronwesilen4536
      @ronwesilen4536 3 года назад +138

      Didnt you see when he tried to erase his fingerprints?

    • @yeetusfetus8687
      @yeetusfetus8687 3 года назад +9

      @Cryonic Family ?? What

    • @potatoonastick2239
      @potatoonastick2239 3 года назад +61

      I mean, Tom also made a video with Micheal Reeves and William Osman. Kinds speaks to the chaotic energy level lmao

    • @ronwesilen4536
      @ronwesilen4536 3 года назад +3

      @Cryonic Family im sure that information is somehow related to what i wrote, but i dont see the relation

    • @neelotpaldutta2347
      @neelotpaldutta2347 3 года назад +2

      @@ronwesilen4536 They are spamming that in random message chains. Just ignore them.

  • @cheeseisgreat24
    @cheeseisgreat24 3 года назад +2899

    My favorite is when someone says in a video "Don't try this at home!" but it's using multi-thousand dollar pieces of equipment. :-P

    • @Ministevo1
      @Ministevo1 3 года назад +161

      They're trying to stop Styropyro

    • @jojojorisjhjosef
      @jojojorisjhjosef 3 года назад +88

      They said that too before they turned on the large hadron collider, just in case.

    • @randomusernamed7307
      @randomusernamed7307 3 года назад +12

      Like the hydraulic press channel

    • @andrewesther4705
      @andrewesther4705 3 года назад +11

      I built a 5W 445nm laser for about $500 and some elbow grease. Doesn’t really take that much to make stupid high power lasers these days now that diodes are so cheap.

    • @cheeseisgreat24
      @cheeseisgreat24 3 года назад +9

      @@andrewesther4705 Ah yes, because everyone has both the $500 to blow and the know how to tinker their way into powerful lasers. :-P

  • @slep1654
    @slep1654 3 года назад +1058

    The bait with the bubbles bouncing off in the beginning can’t believe y’all lied to me.

    • @Rin-qj7zt
      @Rin-qj7zt 3 года назад +39

      I am so disappoint

    • @94D33M
      @94D33M 3 года назад +27

      Was waiting for it the whole video, but as further as the video got, only understood it wasnt going to happen

    • @imnot-
      @imnot- 3 года назад +1

      Thank you

    • @zoot_the_axolotl8095
      @zoot_the_axolotl8095 2 года назад +1

      Omfg tysm for this comment

  • @fly1ngsh33p7
    @fly1ngsh33p7 3 года назад +502

    Some people: "This is my boyfried"
    Other: "This is my girlfriend"
    Steve: "This is my laser-friend"

    • @panzerofthelake506
      @panzerofthelake506 3 года назад +14

      Gay lazer man

    • @JoeySchmidt74
      @JoeySchmidt74 3 года назад +7

      @@panzerofthelake506 gay laser or gay man?

    • @panzerofthelake506
      @panzerofthelake506 3 года назад +16

      @@JoeySchmidt74 yes

    • @designator7402
      @designator7402 3 года назад +9

      I'm going to refer to any future partners as laser-friends.

    • @JoeySchmidt74
      @JoeySchmidt74 3 года назад +3

      @@panzerofthelake506 Pretty sure he has a wife, so bi at the very most to be fair.

  • @xxportalxx.
    @xxportalxx. 3 года назад +103

    My initial reaction was actually laser tweezers, a physics concept where you can suspend a small sphere of a particular snell ratio using a laser, the refraction causes it to impart momentum

    • @MCSteve_
      @MCSteve_ 3 года назад +14

      Yeah sure, but that is at a very small scale. Though Light technically produces a force: light sails exist (for space) but it has to have very low mass and high surface area, even then the acceleration is still very low.

    • @xxportalxx.
      @xxportalxx. 3 года назад +9

      @@MCSteve_ actually those two affects have different physical causes to my understanding

    • @MCSteve_
      @MCSteve_ 3 года назад +6

      @@xxportalxx. Yeah you are correct, I should have made that more obvious.

    • @xxportalxx.
      @xxportalxx. 3 года назад +4

      @@MCSteve_ eh it's all just pedantics after all

    • @ripdeyu
      @ripdeyu Год назад +4

      This is such a civil discussion for a youtube comment section

  • @stuckurface
    @stuckurface 3 года назад +220

    Definitely just a fishing wire tied to the pointer which is hidden by the beam.

    • @SpydersByte
      @SpydersByte 3 года назад +14

      yup, that's what I figured as well... time to go check though!

    • @itsnotallrainbowsandunicor1505
      @itsnotallrainbowsandunicor1505 3 года назад +5

      Yes you are right, ruclips.net/video/tjAZbo0jb8Q/видео.html

    • @Helperbot-2000
      @Helperbot-2000 3 года назад +2

      @Cryonic Family go to another video and bother someone else, and stop liking your own comment

    • @WhiskyMystery
      @WhiskyMystery 3 года назад +22

      String theory

    • @st0rmforce
      @st0rmforce 3 года назад +10

      reel or fake?

  • @Quokkat7
    @Quokkat7 3 года назад +300

    Tom Scott: "Will this burn me?"
    Laser expert: "yes definitely"
    Tom Scott: puts his hand in front of it
    A true scientist

    • @bloodvue
      @bloodvue 3 года назад +4

      Trust bet verify

    • @hemiacetal1331
      @hemiacetal1331 3 года назад

      He's not a scientist.

    • @novameowww
      @novameowww 3 года назад +5

      @@hemiacetal1331 He was testing a hypothesis, that absolutely makes him a scientist. I guess

  • @Da5idc
    @Da5idc 3 года назад +15

    I'm imagining a laser show through a cloud of bubbles - how absolutely awesome would that be!

  • @TusharGoyal1997
    @TusharGoyal1997 3 года назад +242

    I love the chemistry between these two. We need more videos of them together!

    • @rstriker21
      @rstriker21 3 года назад +6

      Are you talking about the lasers and bubbles lol

    • @GGGG_3333
      @GGGG_3333 3 года назад +4

      I think it's more like physics 🤣

    • @jjhack3r
      @jjhack3r 3 года назад +1

      Lol he hearted the comment so he must be gay...

    • @trickytreyperfected1482
      @trickytreyperfected1482 3 года назад

      @@jjhack3r chemistry doesn't necessarily mean romantics. Two friends have great chemistry. Two actors can have great on-screen chemistry.

  • @subhasish-m
    @subhasish-m 3 года назад +241

    Tricked us at the beginning with the footage...I was waiting for the sudden revelation. Great piece of experimental science to match your more theoretical stuff, I loved the video. Continues to be one of the still most underrated content creators on RUclips.

    • @seanleith5312
      @seanleith5312 3 года назад +1

      I notice some people pronounce "t" in "often". It is so weird to me.

    • @biggayhomofag
      @biggayhomofag 3 года назад +1

      Underrated? He has almost a million subs, and his videos get even more views. That’s not what underrated means.

    • @ZuppaD.Cipolle
      @ZuppaD.Cipolle 3 года назад

      @@biggayhomofag it can mean that, underrated just means "rated under it's actual value", something with an incredibly high value can be regarded as incredible and still be underrated, you can have 10 million subs and be considered underrated

    • @marklindsey1995
      @marklindsey1995 2 года назад

      You need to see the companion video to understand the footage.

  • @ProjectPhysX
    @ProjectPhysX 3 года назад +43

    Do not try this at home. These cheap "5mW" (actually ~50mW) laser pointers from eBay can permanently blind you when they reflect off a bubble.

  • @bjarnivalur6330
    @bjarnivalur6330 3 года назад +23

    I'm imagining a scenario where while you were focusing on the bubbles in the laser, the laser scorched a hole into the wall.

  • @johnchessant3012
    @johnchessant3012 3 года назад +372

    "We're all outside an aeroplane now and it's not that cold"

    • @SteveMould
      @SteveMould  3 года назад +41

      ruclips.net/video/C91gKuxutTU/видео.html
      mathsgear.co.uk/products/its-not-that-cold-t-shirt

    • @anantakabir8390
      @anantakabir8390 3 года назад +11

      you must be Canadian to be affected by this. Sorry John, you ain't true Canadian

    • @merseyviking
      @merseyviking 3 года назад +7

      But it is still 3 times colder than inside.

    • @brapamaldi7666
      @brapamaldi7666 3 года назад +1

      cheers mate, had no idea what his shirt said.

    • @black_platypus
      @black_platypus 3 года назад +15

      For anyone new wondering: It's from a stand-up routine of his where he talks about "bad science", and in that case a book about "facts"; one of them was "The temperature outside of an airplane is six times colder than in a freezer"

  • @marv8481
    @marv8481 3 года назад +9

    “I got a 30watt laser...”
    Styropyro “psfffttt, hold my photons!”

  • @JackLe1127
    @JackLe1127 3 года назад +26

    I like how they changed the subreddit name to blackmagicflippery.

  • @PowerhouseCell
    @PowerhouseCell 3 года назад +280

    *Title: "Can you bounce a bubble off a laser?"*
    *Me: watches first 3 seconds*
    *"Yep, it can. No need to watch further"*

    • @HarNgue02
      @HarNgue02 3 года назад +9

      Hey you watch Steve Mould too? Do all the cool science RUclipsrs watch each other?!

    • @milolegends42
      @milolegends42 3 года назад +18

      For those who actually believed the starting clip: it's fake

    • @RoelfvanderMerwe
      @RoelfvanderMerwe 3 года назад +2

      You obviously didnt watch until the end

    • @AwesomeSauce7176
      @AwesomeSauce7176 3 года назад +4

      Wow, you're so efficient you got the wrong answer. I want to see you insist this works and then attempt it at a party one day.

    • @theodorekim2148
      @theodorekim2148 3 года назад +14

      Lmao at all these replies from ppl who can't take a joke 🤣

  • @RT710.
    @RT710. 3 года назад +114

    I need a laser friend

  • @michaelrooney656
    @michaelrooney656 2 года назад +4

    The high power laser internal reflections in the bubbles reminded me a lot of how double/triple rainbows work. Might be worth revisiting this from that direction because you can actually see the angles at which light is able to make its way back out of the bubble. That was pretty rad.

  • @EdmundBasconMusic
    @EdmundBasconMusic 3 года назад +9

    The way his laptop is set on the floor in the first bit brings me incredible amounts of anxiety.

  • @lighterpath5998
    @lighterpath5998 3 года назад +6

    Looks like a creatively well-lit string, or string-like materials, are held taunt between two spots and then maneuvered to create an effect.

    • @nasonguy
      @nasonguy 3 года назад

      That is my guess. Like a really low test fishing line tied to the laser and a spot on the wall then held taught.

  • @Asdayasman
    @Asdayasman 3 года назад +10

    9:35 look at this still frame and tell me that isn't PEAK Dad energy.

  • @bilboswaggings
    @bilboswaggings 3 года назад +8

    people at home remember to get yourself some laser protection glasses if you are going to try this 0:54

  • @torin1006
    @torin1006 3 года назад +19

    In this video's title "Can You Bounce A Bubble Off a Laser?" why is the first A capital, but not the second?

    • @grakpan1233
      @grakpan1233 3 года назад

      You will get the answer in Seb's revelation video!

  • @Krantz_
    @Krantz_ 3 года назад +143

    So if you brought a bubble blowing kit as a spy you could easily detect all the hidden lasers
    Edit: Ack! I didn't actually watch the full video before commenting I thought it would work! Say goodbye to my spy days, I'd die in 20 seconds

    • @jeremydavis3631
      @jeremydavis3631 3 года назад +14

      You'll still detect them. It'll just be the blinding reflected laser light that tips you off rather than the bouncing bubbles. ;)

    • @yeetusfetus8687
      @yeetusfetus8687 3 года назад +2

      @Cryonic Family ?? Why are you commenting this repeatedly

    • @gavincarstens6497
      @gavincarstens6497 3 года назад

      @@yeetusfetus8687 i had this same thought.. it confused me to heck

    • @mailliw94
      @mailliw94 3 года назад

      technically still not wrong because they would make reflections and refractions

    • @NickC_222
      @NickC_222 3 года назад +1

      You would've technically been right if you had said hairspray or baby powder!

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican 3 года назад +166

    The Sun is a deadly lazer
    *NoT aNyMoRe, ThErE's A bLaNkET*

    • @liltonyabc
      @liltonyabc 3 года назад +2

      No it's not

    • @turtlecat0262
      @turtlecat0262 3 года назад +11

      @liltonyabc It’s from the video “The History of the Entire World, I Guess” by Bill Wurst on RUclips

    • @isithatennakoon4284
      @isithatennakoon4284 3 года назад +8

      Now the animals can go on land

    • @user-jw1tc4eo5e
      @user-jw1tc4eo5e 3 года назад +4

      and they died in a tornado

    • @oriontigley5089
      @oriontigley5089 3 года назад +2

      @@liltonyabc *woosh*

  • @mrjoe332
    @mrjoe332 3 года назад +3

    Gotta say the most amazing thing was hearing the guy talking about the actual death ray he is planning to use to make a light show

  • @nunnoffyubehznass2150
    @nunnoffyubehznass2150 3 года назад

    I just stumbled upon your channel yesterday, it is incredible, it is a gem, I'm out of adjectives, I just love it. Keep it up!

  • @goldendragon3147
    @goldendragon3147 3 года назад +11

    You know, I thought about how solar sails on certain spacecraft work and thought it might be doing something like that and so I sort of disappointed myself when it didn't work haha! Great video though! 👍

    • @AdityaMahat
      @AdityaMahat 2 года назад +2

      Dang, I was thinking of exactly the same thing.

  • @olfmombach260
    @olfmombach260 3 года назад +11

    Damn, you really got me there in the beginning

  • @SyntaxTerr0r
    @SyntaxTerr0r 3 года назад +1

    Next vid: Steve and his laser friend on LSD testings soap bubbles.
    "Whoa, look at the colours!"
    😮

  • @robertgalligan6024
    @robertgalligan6024 3 года назад

    Your so great at making videos. I love all the fun topics and explanations you provide. I'm in school for the course electromechanical technician. I share your videos all the time.

  • @spot1401
    @spot1401 3 года назад +3

    Part of the contract is always: No air quotes around "laser" ;)

  • @jemand771
    @jemand771 3 года назад +6

    i sometimes work with lasers professionally at my second job and the highest i've ever encountered was 10w and it's crazy seeing ones even above that. but to be honest, when i first saw the video at the beginning i really thought it could be real

    • @sac3528
      @sac3528 3 года назад

      You can now buy a single chip with 100w *output* for 300 bucks.

    • @Neokretai
      @Neokretai 3 года назад

      rating lasers in Watts is always a bit misleading. I work with pulse laser systems that are technically 1 W, but because they are nanosecond pulses it corresponds to 100 Megawatts during the actual irradiation. And that's still pretty low by laser standards, the really cutting edge high powered lasers are now operating on the Petawatt scale.

    • @jemand771
      @jemand771 3 года назад

      @@Neokretai i was talking about "consumer grade" lasershows and stuff, not industrial lasers. those are usually not pulsed but turned on continuously ^^

  • @prateek754
    @prateek754 3 года назад

    I absolutely love these kind of videos.

  • @Ladyoftheroundtable
    @Ladyoftheroundtable 3 года назад +2

    before the test, my theory is that the surface is being evaporated and that would be the force to lift it back up

  • @MartinThmpsn
    @MartinThmpsn 3 года назад +3

    6:35 "Don't try this at home". Exactly my thoughts. I have persistent floaties in my vision from unprotected laser exposure in a lab at college years ago. That was a controlled environment where the laser path was protected and controlled, but my lab partner briefly fired laser while my protective glasses were off, and the black curtain that was intended to absorb the laser was down, and I caught some specula reflections off the wall. Watching these laser beams all around the room uncontrolled makes me panic a little bit.

    • @ThreeWhiteSoldiers
      @ThreeWhiteSoldiers Год назад

      have you tried any treatment for your floaties? i have one too, and rather noticable because it has dark color. i think it was also because i looked into laser keychain directly for long period when i was younger :(

  • @DrYmath
    @DrYmath 3 года назад +5

    I wish I had a laser friend.

  • @meangreanbean
    @meangreanbean 3 года назад

    The bit with you two at the end was wonderful

  • @bfg1637
    @bfg1637 3 года назад

    I hope you two are the best of friends. I loved your discourses, really enjoyed this video

  • @angst_
    @angst_ 3 года назад +11

    And here I am with a 150w CO2 laser I bought from china just chillin' in the other room like it's nbd. It's a 7ft water cooled glass tube.

  • @bluerizlagirl
    @bluerizlagirl 3 года назад +2

    It's Mulder ("I Want To Believe") versus Scully in Steve's brain!

  • @opsoc777
    @opsoc777 3 года назад +2

    5:30 Seeing this, I'm going to need bubble machines for my rave

  • @etimau
    @etimau 3 года назад +1

    Love this one, great duo! Thanks!
    Love it more now I see you as the Detectorists guys 😊

    • @danaclass
      @danaclass 10 месяцев назад

      Hidden gem of a show!

  • @pulesjet
    @pulesjet 3 года назад +8

    You had some rather serious secondary emissions going on there.

    • @dennisdavis6943
      @dennisdavis6943 3 года назад +1

      When I saw the rainbow colors reflected onto the floor I was confused, "lasers are monochromatic, wtf is going in here!?". I think the laser they were using has multiple laser sources inside and combines them into a single beam. So probably not secondary emissions, rather, 3 primary emissions.

    • @pulesjet
      @pulesjet 3 года назад

      @@dennisdavis6943 The bubble is Refracting the Light. Shifting the Wave Length.

    • @pulesjet
      @pulesjet 3 года назад

      I was thinking they proved light has mass.

    • @dennisdavis6943
      @dennisdavis6943 3 года назад

      @@pulesjet yeah, I should have said "refracted onto the floor". But still, lasers are (mostly) monochromatic, so refraction won't create a rainbow like full spectrum white light would
      Refraction does not shift the wavelength

    • @pulesjet
      @pulesjet 3 года назад

      @@dennisdavis6943 Sure it can. The refraction bending the wave would generate shifted light
      The multi colors are because of the varying thickness of the bubble cell. I don't think it would be vary prominent using Red light. The shift being none linear ..

  • @MarcosProjects
    @MarcosProjects 3 года назад +6

    Haha, I love that the answer to the WTF diffraction pattern thing was just a disco ball! ruclips.net/video/tjAZbo0jb8Q/видео.html

    • @jskullheisenberg5227
      @jskullheisenberg5227 3 года назад

      It was?

    • @MarcosProjects
      @MarcosProjects 3 года назад

      @@jskullheisenberg5227 Yeah, they reveal it in Seb's video ruclips.net/video/tjAZbo0jb8Q/видео.html

  • @ElSWVisitor
    @ElSWVisitor 3 года назад +1

    You blew my mind more than usual with this one! 😲😲😲

  • @Junaid_Ellam
    @Junaid_Ellam 3 года назад

    Great video, you just answered the question in the first 10 seconds love it

  • @Cerzus
    @Cerzus 3 года назад +7

    9:09 You know you have to explain those now, Steve :p

    • @benjaminq3226
      @benjaminq3226 3 года назад

      they had a glitter ball just above where the bubble was.

    • @richbob9155
      @richbob9155 Год назад

      @@benjaminq3226 A glitter ball? What? Can you explain what you mean?

    • @richbob9155
      @richbob9155 Год назад

      It seems maybe the reflected light is bouncing off something but considering the reflective light is a total blur of colours I don't understand how that happened?

    • @gallium-gonzollium
      @gallium-gonzollium Год назад +1

      Those are caused by constructive and destructive interference.

  • @adilnadaf9182
    @adilnadaf9182 3 года назад +3

    If I may, You should Colab with styropyro for anything related to laser or electricity in general.

  • @TonkarzOfSolSystem
    @TonkarzOfSolSystem 3 года назад

    I appreciate that you started with the money shot.

  • @danielpetka446
    @danielpetka446 3 года назад +1

    Laser dude: imma use dis worlds most powerful 30W laser
    *angry styropyro noises*

  • @neutronenstern.
    @neutronenstern. 3 года назад +8

    my intuition was that it could work for some reasons, if the laser was strong enough:
    1. The photons of the beam could transfer an impact on the bubble if absorbed or reflected
    2. The light could heat the bubble up which would cause it to go up again because of bojency
    3. The laser could heat the bubbles downside up, causing it to vaporize and this vaporized water might be able to push the bubble up, also.
    Now to calculate how strong the laser had to be to move the bubble with its impact:
    P=m*V=5*10^-6Kg*0.01m/s=5*10^-8Ns
    The impact should be transferred in 0.01seconds
    P=h/l=6.626*10^-34Js/500*10^-9m=1.3*10^-27Ns
    If one percent of the light hitting the bubble is reflected or absorbed, transferring its full impact to the bubble, then the impact of the 0.01 seconds long photostorm should have an impact of 5*10^-6Ns
    5*10^-6Ns/1.3*10^-27Ns=3.8*10^21 (Photons)
    These Photons would have an Energy of
    E=N*h*c/l=3.8*10^21*6.626*10^-34Js*3*10^8m/s/500*10^-9m=1511J
    So the laser would have to have a power of P=E/t=1511J/0.01s=151100W
    This is the power, the laser would need to push a 5*10^-6 Kg bubble with a speed of 1cm/s

    • @CaelanStewartThePhpGuy
      @CaelanStewartThePhpGuy 3 года назад +1

      It seems at that energy the water would vaporise explosively and cause a small pressure wave which breaks the surface tension and pops the bubble.
      If you had a near 100% reflective surface, or reflective enough that at the duration of the pulse and the given energy level it won't vaporise the material, it would work.
      It works for the same reason why solar sails work, doesn't it.

    • @neutronenstern.
      @neutronenstern. 3 года назад +1

      @@CaelanStewartThePhpGuy yes what i didnt calculate with is, that the impact change of the bubble is double as high, if the light gets reflected, as it is, when the light gets absorbed. That is, because of in the case of a reflection the photon has got -P after the reflection , what ends in a delta P of 2P (P-(-)P=2P)

    • @Hallowed_Ground
      @Hallowed_Ground 3 года назад

      Except that none of this works or matters because the bubble is transparent.
      Now, if you put some dye in the water you were using, it might very well work indeed.

    • @neutronenstern.
      @neutronenstern. 3 года назад

      @@Hallowed_Ground not fully transparent. In the vid you could see, that it was also reflected in some way.Also you can see that a bubble is shimming red yellow ... . So because of intefferation (some light is reflected at the inside of the bubblelayer and some of it at the outside of the bubble layer and if the thickness is some (k+0.5)*k*Lamda it is destructive inteferrence. ) So this causes the photon to be absorbed. So there is indeed some kind of reflection and absorbption.

    • @CaelanStewartThePhpGuy
      @CaelanStewartThePhpGuy 3 года назад +1

      ​@@Hallowed_Ground It is not 100% transparent. That means that there is always some quantity reflected, and some absorbed. It's why you can see the bubble at all.

  • @TechnoSticks
    @TechnoSticks 3 года назад +8

    9:08 they almost broke the Matrix

  • @odinstemple1832
    @odinstemple1832 3 года назад

    Thank you for the footage, it is so pretty!

  • @mikea683
    @mikea683 3 года назад +2

    My first thought was "why isn't he wearing protective goggles?"

  • @deprivedoftrance
    @deprivedoftrance 3 года назад +3

    PLEASE do a video about the clicking sound that lasers make, I would love to see a video from you about the photoacoustic effect!
    It's super fascinating and I know you would do it justice.
    "The photoacoustic effect or optoacoustic effect is the formation of sound waves following light absorption in a material sample. In order to obtain this effect the light intensity must vary, either periodically (modulated light) or as a single flash (pulsed light)."

  • @LucasPreti
    @LucasPreti 3 года назад +46

    You can’t just put a “WTF” in the middle of the video and then not talk about it

    • @SteveMould
      @SteveMould  3 года назад +27

      Explained in Seb's video :)

    • @LucasPreti
      @LucasPreti 3 года назад

      Steve Mould God, I laughed so hard when he explained it. I love it when I find genuinely scientifically curious people. Sometimes it’s just a joke or a disco ball, but what’s the fun in that right?

  • @js267
    @js267 3 года назад

    5:30 the reflected colors on the floor are amazing

  • @Tizmox
    @Tizmox 3 года назад

    9:47 what if you would put some food colouring in the water for your bubble, and maybe absorbs a bit more light. My hypothesis is that heating one spot will cause the pressure to increase in that specific area. Whether it will bounce off the laser or even stick to it could be found out through experimenting. Crank up the amount of different colours of food colouring as you go. Hopefully this effect will be noticeable before the bubble pops. Great video man! Nice collaboration

  • @HelloKittyFanMan.
    @HelloKittyFanMan. 3 года назад +3

    "Don't try this at home!"
    -- Nope, just try it at Steve's house.

  • @murk1e
    @murk1e 3 года назад +9

    Just as a piece of logic in the intro: “If it pops it was never going to bounce”. Not necessarily true. There is an effect with molten metal where you can briefly dip finger (obvious hazards here.... if you try and it goes wrong... it’s on you). Modest temps don’t give a protective vapour layer and burn, higher temps can work. Not all effects are linear.
    However, in this case, my intuition matched yours, I’m just being pedantic.

    • @Okusar
      @Okusar 3 года назад

      The Leidenfrost effect, where a high thermal differential creates an insulating vapor barrier between hot and cold surfaces. You can also see the effect in action by placing drops of water onto the surface of a very hot griddle and watching them skitter about on a cushion of vapor. It's definitely a much safer demonstration, though not as badass as dipping your hand in molten metal.

  • @delecti
    @delecti 3 года назад

    One super neat detail is how the bubbles don't have any dust in them. The beam has a slight fuzzy look when going through the air outside the bubble, but the laser beam inside the bubble is perfectly coherent.

  • @kauske
    @kauske 3 года назад +1

    My first guess was 'maybe if the laser has just the right level of power, it could be ablating the bubble and causing just a tiny bit of thrust', in the same vane that you can use lasers to shove space debris around. Kind of disappointing that even with a stupid-powerful laser, nothing happened still. I can't help but remain curious if there _is_ a sweet spot where a bubble can be gently ablated and pushed around with a laser, but not instantly burst.

  • @TheJunky228
    @TheJunky228 3 года назад +3

    my first thought of that video that was sent to you was that that guy should 100% be wearing laser safety goggles. my second thought was that maaaaybe it was a high enough power to heat up the bubble and get it to rise or something to that effect...in which case wait, he should 110% be wearing laser safety goggles! or maaaaybe the composition of the bobble and the laser wavelength interacted just right?? probably faked

    • @reinei1
      @reinei1 3 года назад +1

      I haven't watched their explanation yet, but holy f I totally agree with you on the glasses. You can actually see green light refracting onto his face several times and that green laser looks way above 25mW, so serious eye threat territory!
      Here hoping to he faked the laser, otherwise this is some serious stupid handling of lasers O.o

  • @VikasSBhat
    @VikasSBhat 3 года назад +4

    The WTF pattern can’t be diffraction right? Because different colours show up at the same spot.

    • @xogdo5260
      @xogdo5260 3 года назад

      They explain it in Sebs video, it's not diffraction

  • @johnbarr7215
    @johnbarr7215 3 года назад

    9:03 "yeah it's just doing nothing" as a light show is dancing on the floor and the walls!! haha

  • @Kalingrato
    @Kalingrato 3 года назад +1

    Good to know! Our future battleships will have bubble generators to distort incoming lasers. Thank you for saving us from future alien invasions.
    This was pretty fun. Good work.

  • @Arcy190
    @Arcy190 3 года назад +5

    I'll be honest, the conclusion of this video made me mad at you, Steve Mould. I came in here, honestly curious at the question in the video title, but even at the end of it, I'm no closer to an answer. If this was supposed to be a riff on how 'bad science' is done, I failed to clue into it until reading the other comments. if it wasn't, then this is a cheep (in the worst meaning of the word) way to share views between your video and Seb's.
    Down voted for, if nothing else, a clickbait title.

  • @IanGrams
    @IanGrams 3 года назад

    Heck yeah, I met Seb at Smashing Conf. Really cool fella and had a sweet live-coding talk. I love to see two creators I enjoy collaborating.
    Also thanks Steve for all the fizzy brain feelings you've provided 😁

  • @SocratesAlexander
    @SocratesAlexander 11 месяцев назад

    5:37I was surprised that you didn't embark on another project even though you saw the fantastic reflections on the ground. I've always been fascinated by the surface of bubbles and those reflections on the ground could have given you a good opportunity to study them.

  • @funkdefied1
    @funkdefied1 3 года назад

    Thank you for answering the question at the start of the vid.

  • @Lampe2020
    @Lampe2020 Год назад +1

    I think you could get it to work: with colour in the bubble (maybe from coloured soap) and a laser in a color that gets absorbed by the pigments in the bubble.

  • @syrus3k
    @syrus3k 2 года назад

    I met seb in person years ago, a great man!

  • @johnbox5013
    @johnbox5013 3 года назад

    You put so much effort into your shows. No wonder your a success. Leaving brain teasers in, just the subtle stuff nothing too overt. No wonder i keep coming back for more. Thinking of how you bounced the bubble off the lazer was an interesting 2 minute brain twister. That was stimulating. ..
    Not giving the answers away is just as fun. Heres a clue though. If you look carefully you'll notice that in every one of the shots some of the bubbles were effected by the lazer. Catching hold of it and spinning around it. I bet you guys had to remake that solution a bunch just so that didn't happen lol.

  • @lumbric4271
    @lumbric4271 3 года назад

    I love that you don't put things like this away because they seem not logic. Most thing's we still don't know, so getting into it is not to blame even if it doesn't make sense. Knowing it's fake is education too and to proove it's fake, helps against people who will say:" did you know lasers can bounce a bubble" "I saw it". Also people will remind more, that not to trust everything only because it's a popular video... ! Great impressions and wonderfull color play. Greetings from germany

  • @HunterJE
    @HunterJE Год назад +1

    It's so funny to me how strong my instinct to look away from things that would IRL be vision hazards even though I know the brightest it can get is no brighter than the white pixels around the video (get this any time I watch a video with a welding arc visible, too)

  • @KX36
    @KX36 3 года назад

    this fella would make a good bond villain. really soft spoken.. but lasers!

  •  3 года назад

    Lol 11:29 Steve got his legs checked. That was hilarious 😂

  • @SamChaneyProductions
    @SamChaneyProductions 3 года назад

    This video taught me that the visual effects lasers used for concerts are terrifyingly powerful. I have a 5.5W diode laser that I use for laser cutting and engraving and it burns through 3mm plywood in less than a second when at the focal point. Seb said he's going to do a project with a 30W laser which is up into the CO2 laser power range which are used for industrial laser cutting of thick wood and plastic.

  • @5pecular
    @5pecular 3 года назад

    Some very cool light effects playing with bubbles in lasers though

  • @kaitlyn__L
    @kaitlyn__L 3 года назад

    Steve describing learning like it's the hardest drug with the longest-tailed dragon to chase....
    (I kinda love it tbh)

  • @harleyspeedthrust4013
    @harleyspeedthrust4013 3 года назад +1

    Seb: don't try this at home
    Styropyro:

  • @batman3698
    @batman3698 2 года назад

    Gotta love the guy in the video just standing there without any eye protection as that laser scatters into a clusterf of small laserbeams in his face

  • @MattFowlerBTR
    @MattFowlerBTR 3 года назад

    My random wild (and entirely not-thought-through) hypothesis at the start of the video was some sort of leidenfrost-effect-ish thing, where the laser light would get absorbed-enough if it's just skimming the edge of the bubble to rapidly heat the liquid there - somehow enough to cause the tiny-steam leidenfrost thing but not cooking the bubble film enough to pop it.

  • @BrianAnim
    @BrianAnim 3 года назад

    My favorite videos are the ones that answer themselves in the first 5 seconds, thank you.

  • @chuckbuckets1
    @chuckbuckets1 3 года назад

    It would be cool to do back-of-the-envelope calculation to see how much momentum a laser has and compare that to the mass of a bubble.

  • @rammerstheman
    @rammerstheman 3 года назад

    Those strange spots looked a lot like a diffraction pattern. I believe you can diffract a laser pointer with the weave of some fabrics. Perhaps some particulate with the appropriate spacing popped into the beam.

  • @Thomzoy
    @Thomzoy 3 года назад +2

    Could some food coloring added to the soapy water change the bubble’s reaction to the laser beam ?
    Might be worth to try !

  • @5pecular
    @5pecular 3 года назад

    that bit at the beginning where it bounced and you said it was a haze fan is probably how the guy did it

  • @Lampe2020
    @Lampe2020 Год назад +1

    9:08 Yay, disco!

  • @Stoney3K
    @Stoney3K 3 года назад

    Great, now I want to run a pair of projectors, shoot some sheets with them, and cover them with a bubble machine. Would be an even cooler glitter than projecting onto a disco ball!

  • @RaindropsBleeding
    @RaindropsBleeding 3 года назад

    looks like a thread anchored to a point across the room and tied to the pointer. just keep the dot next to the anchor for the string and violla. bubble appears to bounce off laser

  • @thesloppyscientist4428
    @thesloppyscientist4428 3 года назад

    Bubble clearly changes trajectory upon interacting with the laser beam.
    Steve: clearly nothing happened.

  • @yeetyeet7070
    @yeetyeet7070 3 года назад +1

    The "WTF" video pause was probably the smaller bubble at the bottom getting hit aswell and double-scattering it

  • @jean-paulalvarez5946
    @jean-paulalvarez5946 3 года назад +1

    Would be cool to see styropyro try this with his insane lasers

  • @willowmoon7
    @willowmoon7 7 месяцев назад +1

    Lasers mentioned _Styropyro has joined the chat_

  • @louisng114
    @louisng114 3 года назад +2

    The suspicious thing about that video is that the laser always seems to be pointing at the same point.

  • @killianmaurin1979
    @killianmaurin1979 3 года назад +2

    I am not sure at all, this is why I'm asking here, but at 9:10, can this "wtf" points be caused by the multiple refraction of the laser. It is so powerful at first, I believe the light could still be strong enough to be seen after a few times "bouncing" inside the bubble, creating each time a dot on the wall with the light that passes through and that which doesn't continues to bounce until it creates this pattern

    • @XxteardamagexX
      @XxteardamagexX 3 года назад +1

      yeah it looks like some sort of 3d interference pattern

    • @CompactFlesh
      @CompactFlesh 3 года назад

      Xx teardamage xX which would be a diffraction effect... see the answer in Seb‘s video 😂

  • @MrFastFox666
    @MrFastFox666 3 года назад

    Here's one thing I discovered. If I shine a very bright flashlight (in my case, a Rovyvon Aurora A3) onto a piece of aluminum foil, I would hear a faint humming sound. I tried wrapping the aluminum foil around a piece of metal, then putting it over a flame to deposit a very thin layer of soot, essentially making poor man's VantaBlack. This made the humming significantly louder. The humming would only appear with the flashlight in the low or medium brightness settings, since at full brightness the LED is lit 100% of the time, but a lower brightness levels the led is illuminated using pulse width modulation