I love how us humans can create technological marvels that are so advanced they can travel faster than sound, but we still haven't learned that blowing eachother up is bad
The reason why we keep blowing eachother up is because of the memes, the memes that we got from our ancestors passed down to us, we just find more advance and effective ways of murdering each other
@@akiyahwilliams9521 u just watched a video on how multiple people broke the sound barrier and ur saying its impossible. or maybe u didnt watch the video and just live to be an ignorant
We had a jet fly close or over the land here a few years ago around 10 pm. It apperently needed to intercept a non responding airplane. The booms (indeed heard 2 in a row) were loud enough to wake me up that day I went to bed early! It was pretty cool.
A couple years ago there was a massive bang at 4am it got on the news, made car alarms go off. The official story was that two Typhoon Fighter jets where scrambled and some how both broke the sound barrier and made a sonic boom at the same time. Sounds like a cover story to Me.
The people from the Flat Earth Institute in charge of holding up the sun accidentally dropped it for a sec while they were hoisting it up for sunrise, that's what they're coving up obviously
That says more about your attention span and priorities than your school or this dude. It may not seem like it but your school is providing you with keys to the kingdom, but you have to get good grades and make a plan.
i get A+s all the time, am many grade levels of knowledge above what grade im in, and i can say that the infographics show taught me more than school ever will@@BariumCobaltNitrog3n
Brings back memories of when the shuttle used to come home, I live in Central Florida and there were times at night when it was really humid the boom would be so intense that it would set off car alarms and make the sliding glass door rattle in the track
They initially tested tolerance for sonic booms over populated areas in and around Oklahoma City, OK in the USA. Called Operation Bongo II, 1,253 sonic booms were generated over a period of six months starting in February 1964.
Half the fun of living in the area where Concorde was developed was that you saw them from time to time, while they modify the flight paths to avoid the sonic boom occuring over populated areas, as a result of the distance it covered you heard it regularly & generally that would be the indication one was in the area.
Here in Florida whenever the space shuttle took off or landed the sonic boom would interrupt us in school and over the intercom they’d tell us “it’s not a shooting just the space shuttle” lol.
From 3:27 to 4:09 was amazing and insightful explanation. There's a shrimp that uses this same principle to catch prey. Basically shoots air bubbles at the victim and kills it. The prey dies from the air bubbles becoming super heated from external pressure (the ocean lol)
They have enough force to cause serious injuries on humans if in the right area, seen one where the mantis shrimp snaps on a guys foot and he just starts gushing blood within seconds
There were quite a few inaccuracies in this video but I'm just glad people care enough about supersonic flight to watch it than I am the fact that half the information is wrong in some way or another
my old house was nearish an airport. During Fleet Week (I"m in CA), the blue angels (and other fighter planes, I think) would do practice runs and had to get a long runup, so we'd have booms in my neighborhood. SO glad I moved.
I lived in southwestern Oklahoma the first five years of my life. Training jets would fly over that area in the early 1960's from the Air Force base in Wichita Falls, Texas. I'll bet my brothers and I heard at least one hundred sonic booms in those days. It was a common occurrence. I've heard the double sonic booms from the space shuttle too. Pretty cool. It's kind of a shame that people today may never hear one.
I remember i rode on the USS Nimitz late 2017 (they were doing a tiger cruise and my sister worked the reactor). I heard they were doing an airshow, so i went up onto the flight deck and the moment i stepped out one of the planes produced a sonic boom. easily the loudest thing i have ever heard.
When I was in middle school I lived right next to the largest military base in Canada and every day two fighter jets would fly overhead, youd see em and a second later youd hear it... so cool
My cousin is a retired naval pilot. I asked him one time about what it’s like breaking the sound barrier. He said “when I did it, I was flying, I looked down, saw that I said Mach 1, annnnnnd…. that was it” 😂 nothing special at all according to him
@@nexpro6118 yep but sometimes we make it more complex, like using what we know about our bullets velocity to determine target distance by how long it takes for the sound of the hit to get back to us.
@@J_L_A both, and I shoot both suppressed but it’s more fun with rifle to do this because we shoot much longer distances and it takes the bullet time to travel. So you shoot, then hear impact later
My Spanish speaking friends are very knowledgeable on this. I hear them say “mari cone” all the time. Now I know this is the phenomena knows as sonic boom
Your school plays you videos from 1980? I was BORN in 1980, and when I was in high school, we'd still make fun of some videos from 1980. 😂 I mean, don't get me wrong: there's obviously plenty of stuff from 1980 that's worth watching, but this channel is better than a lot of it.
Fifty years ago there weren't all the limitations to supersonic flight on cities, like today. Living near an airbase, it was normal that few times a week, some jet had to scramble and everybody was startled from the sonic boom. Nowadays the fighters go first over water, and then accelerate. Times have changed. Anyway, once you know the cause of the noise it is much less frightening, certainly less than a neighbour on Saturday night playing rock metal at max volume. The only thing about sonic booms, is that at 3pm they cause a brusque and unrecoverable interruption of the siesta. Thank you for the informative video...
I grew up there in the 70's. There were always sonic booms going off, one was so big it felt like a bomb went off near our house. I was even there in 1982 when the space shuttle landed at White Sands. That was a nice double sonic boom.
Living between Edwards Air Force Base and China Naval Base in southern California, you hear sonic booms almost daily. You hear them so much that they don't faze you anymore. Infact, I actually miss feeling and hearing sonic booms.
Isn't the speed difference between light and sound primarily the reason I see it before I hear it and not necessarily just because a sonic boom is occurring?
Not really. You can hear aproaching subsonic planes very well despite that difference. But you will hear its sound coming from a position, it was a few seconds ago. A supersonic plane "overtakes" his own sound. So you will hear it, after it passed your position.
Yes. You will see an object prior to hearing it. If you can attend a baseball game, sit high in the stands and watch the batter hit the ball. You will see the bat swing and hear the sound of the ball being hit a moment later.
now i know what that little effect on rockets when they take off is. i always thought it was some sort of white stuff thats just used to keep the rocket together until it doesnt have to stay together anymore, but as it turns out, it's actually breaking the sound barrier SECONDS into lift off! thats crazy
I was hoping this video would answer a question I have. Or maybe I missed it? Is there a constant sonic boom (I’ll call it a sonic wave) following something traveling faster than sound?
I've noticed a few mistakes but its to complicated to explain so I'll only correct one thing. You don't need to imagine the air as a fluid because the air is a fluid (it just have low viscosity)
I was going to say that air is a gas not a fluid, but I thought I'd look it up first in case I made myself look foolish. I'm glad I did, because you are 100% correct. Well played, Sir.
If you are an engineer and studied fluid dynamics, and you use Euler and Navier - Stocks equations for a living, that part of the video can sound boring, I guess. But I enjoy the storytelling and the animations of Infographics above all else...
So, the boom doesn't occur just at the exact moment at which the plane breaks the sound barrier - but is a cone which moves along with the aircraft all the time that the aircraft exceeds the speed of sound? In other words, it is a continuous sound which an observer only hears once because they are standing (still) on the ground. Is this correct?
Yall do realize that the pictures of the "sonic Boom" isnt actually a sonic boom. Thats just water vapor in the air building up and stacking on top of each other.
yeah I understood the video and it was great, the way you explain things makes it very easy. But my doubt is what is lbs/sqft is it kg/m^2 the only thing that needs improvement is if you could use metric system because it is the SI
Having a vapor cloud around the aircraft has nothing to do with going the speed of sound, airliners sometimes have vapor trails when they are going very slow.
Used to hear those booms when faf used old fighters like draken and mig 21. well very few in last 20 years. easy to spot because 2stage noise and roar of aircraft afterwads.
When I was a kid I sent a letter to Beakman's World "remember that show". I asked what happens when a sonic boom occurs. I got a reply letter, but my question never got aired.
This is for anyone that would know, I was just talking about this the other day, is a sonic boom a continuous audio or once the boom occurs dose it stop? For instance, if mach 1 is reached right under me, will someone else hear it once the plane fly's 20 miles away at the same mach speed under them? Thnx.
I love how us humans can create technological marvels that are so advanced they can travel faster than sound, but we still haven't learned that blowing eachother up is bad
They know it’s bad, they just don’t care
The reason why we keep blowing eachother up is because of the memes, the memes that we got from our ancestors passed down to us, we just find more advance and effective ways of murdering each other
Lol
Blowing eachother up made us want to make these impressive things
That's part of the fun
Trust me I know
Breaking the sound barrier would actually be pretty cool to see particularly in person like I kinda wanna see that type of stuff in my life…
like 5 years ago i saw a bunch of F-35s flying near my apartment but no sonic boom
Here in a small town i live in (near a base) some guy actually did, the whole town heard it dont know what plane it was though…
It's impossible
@@akiyahwilliams9521 u just watched a video on how multiple people broke the sound barrier and ur saying its impossible.
or maybe u didnt watch the video and just live to be an ignorant
See it I wanna be in one. I don’t wanna fly it but I wanna be in one atleast once
I once heard a super loud boom from the sky. It was most likely a sound barrier breaking even thought I never saw a plane.
Doubt it. Fighters aren't allowed to fly supersonic over land. At least in the U.S.
@@4lifeifly how do you know he doesn’t live by the water 🤔
@@4lifeifly What if they don't live in the US? Not everyone likes in the US.
We had a jet fly close or over the land here a few years ago around 10 pm. It apperently needed to intercept a non responding airplane. The booms (indeed heard 2 in a row) were loud enough to wake me up that day I went to bed early! It was pretty cool.
@@drechillin2154 exactly
A couple years ago there was a massive bang at 4am it got on the news, made car alarms go off. The official story was that two Typhoon Fighter jets where scrambled and some how both broke the sound barrier and made a sonic boom at the same time. Sounds like a cover story to Me.
Ya it was actually superman
The people from the Flat Earth Institute in charge of holding up the sun accidentally dropped it for a sec while they were hoisting it up for sunrise, that's what they're coving up obviously
@@ethanos5442 You think so?
@@skyscall Flat like a pancake?
@ETHANOS544
It was Thor . He accidentally threw his Hammer a bit too fast.
I’ve learned more from this dude than my social studies, English and science teacher combined.
True
Social studies is understandable, but you should probably pay more attention in school
That says more about your attention span and priorities than your school or this dude. It may not seem like it but your school is providing you with keys to the kingdom, but you have to get good grades and make a plan.
i get A+s all the time, am many grade levels of knowledge above what grade im in, and i can say that the infographics show taught me more than school ever will@@BariumCobaltNitrog3n
Being an aerospace engineer this was like basic lecture on gas dynamics
🥱🥱🥱🥱🥱
Didn't ask
@@senorstabbing no one cares if u asked or not
@@MiyusTab Well I didn’t ask if anyone cared either
@@senorstabbing no one needs to ask this is the internet
Brings back memories of when the shuttle used to come home, I live in Central Florida and there were times at night when it was really humid the boom would be so intense that it would set off car alarms and make the sliding glass door rattle in the track
Shuttles were under the speed of sound once they passed the barrier of entering atmosphere again lol
I remember the same living in Lakeland
@@russellmiller9222 I used to live next to the Carpenters church right off i4
Same from Ocala. Would wake me up in the morning as a kid. Lol
@@nexpro6118then what caused the boom?
Growing up in a rural area I got used to the double boom that rattled everything in the house. I kind of miss that now.
Who else was moving their hand up and down? 😂
waving at night in my room in my bed 🤣
@@SAELIOSMUSIC Ayo
@@SAELIOSMUSIC same
😂😂😂😂 ...🙋🏽♂️
me
They initially tested tolerance for sonic booms over populated areas in and around Oklahoma City, OK in the USA. Called Operation Bongo II, 1,253 sonic booms were generated over a period of six months starting in February 1964.
Anyone else here because of the boom we felt in the DMV TODAY?
Yup! 😂😂
Yeppp
Half the fun of living in the area where Concorde was developed was that you saw them from time to time, while they modify the flight paths to avoid the sonic boom occuring over populated areas, as a result of the distance it covered you heard it regularly & generally that would be the indication one was in the area.
Here in Florida whenever the space shuttle took off or landed the sonic boom would interrupt us in school and over the intercom they’d tell us “it’s not a shooting just the space shuttle” lol.
From 3:27 to 4:09 was amazing and insightful explanation. There's a shrimp that uses this same principle to catch prey. Basically shoots air bubbles at the victim and kills it. The prey dies from the air bubbles becoming super heated from external pressure (the ocean lol)
the pistol shrimp. weird right?
They have enough force to cause serious injuries on humans if in the right area, seen one where the mantis shrimp snaps on a guys foot and he just starts gushing blood within seconds
mantis shrimp or something isnt it ?
@@austintaylor7117 no its the pistol shrimp
I like to think that this video just made millions of people around the world start flapping their arms like a crazy person.
I live 5 miles from an AFB in south texas. I hear this every day, love it
I live by Vandenberg AFB and hear the booms from the space launches often. Those are some loud window rattlers. 20 miles away
It’s a Space Force Base, not an Air Force Base
Producer: How many "BOOM" animations are you going to put in the video?
Edited: Yes
I remember in the late 60's early 70's we used to hear them all the time in Southern New Mexico.
1:35 ladies, if he’s not naming an aircraft after you and breaking the sound barrier with it, he’s not worth it 💅💅
Having been stationed on a Nimitz class aircraft carrier I could tell you seeing/ feeling sonic boom is amazing.
There were quite a few inaccuracies in this video but I'm just glad people care enough about supersonic flight to watch it than I am the fact that half the information is wrong in some way or another
my old house was nearish an airport. During Fleet Week (I"m in CA), the blue angels (and other fighter planes, I think) would do practice runs and had to get a long runup, so we'd have booms in my neighborhood. SO glad I moved.
I lived in southwestern Oklahoma the first five years of my life. Training jets would fly over that area in the early 1960's from the Air Force base in Wichita Falls, Texas. I'll bet my brothers and I heard at least one hundred sonic booms in those days. It was a common occurrence. I've heard the double sonic booms from the space shuttle too. Pretty cool. It's kind of a shame that people today may never hear one.
This was truly an interesting video I enjoyed watching. Thank you 😊
I remember i rode on the USS Nimitz late 2017 (they were doing a tiger cruise and my sister worked the reactor). I heard they were doing an airshow, so i went up onto the flight deck and the moment i stepped out one of the planes produced a sonic boom. easily the loudest thing i have ever heard.
the class teacher kind of a baddie
Frickin comedian
When I was in middle school I lived right next to the largest military base in Canada and every day two fighter jets would fly overhead, youd see em and a second later youd hear it... so cool
My cousin is a retired naval pilot. I asked him one time about what it’s like breaking the sound barrier. He said “when I did it, I was flying, I looked down, saw that I said Mach 1, annnnnnd…. that was it” 😂 nothing special at all according to him
@@ZaddyGohan relativity is crazy
I do a lot of shooting, sometimes with suppressors. It’s interesting trying out different loads to see how it affects the sound
Uuummm....like using sub sonic rounds to not have the sound of the bullet making the sonic boom....lol
@@nexpro6118 yep but sometimes we make it more complex, like using what we know about our bullets velocity to determine target distance by how long it takes for the sound of the hit to get back to us.
@@AdamDguitars buddy of mine in Scottsdale Arizona shot a .22 with suppressor using sub sonic rounds in his backyard.....sounded like a BB Gun ha.
Pistol or rifle?
@@J_L_A both, and I shoot both suppressed but it’s more fun with rifle to do this because we shoot much longer distances and it takes the bullet time to travel. So you shoot, then hear impact later
He keeps moving forward, until all his enemies are destroyed
My Spanish speaking friends are very knowledgeable on this. I hear them say “mari cone” all the time. Now I know this is the phenomena knows as sonic boom
Lol. Don't drop the soap
@@johnd5740 bro ☠️
Hoto Cholos?
School should use this channel instead of that old stuff from 1980. Like there is so much educational stuff on here
Your school plays you videos from 1980? I was BORN in 1980, and when I was in high school, we'd still make fun of some videos from 1980. 😂
I mean, don't get me wrong: there's obviously plenty of stuff from 1980 that's worth watching, but this channel is better than a lot of it.
@@bsadewitz that’s the school system for you
I think the b58 hustler had the loudest of all sonic booms. It was like flying an 💥 explosion
Fifty years ago there weren't all the limitations to supersonic flight on cities, like today.
Living near an airbase, it was normal that few times a week, some jet had to scramble and everybody was startled from the sonic boom.
Nowadays the fighters go first over water, and then accelerate. Times have changed.
Anyway, once you know the cause of the noise it is much less frightening, certainly less than a neighbour on Saturday night playing rock metal at max volume.
The only thing about sonic booms, is that at 3pm they cause a brusque and unrecoverable interruption of the siesta.
Thank you for the informative video...
waving my hand back and forth ✋
I remember hearing booms from F-22 Raptors engaging in combat maneuvers above the valley where I lived in New Mexico.
I live by the HAFB we hear sonic booms daily. They consistently set off car alarms in my area.
I grew up there in the 70's. There were always sonic booms going off, one was so big it felt like a bomb went off near our house. I was even there in 1982 when the space shuttle landed at White Sands. That was a nice double sonic boom.
Who else is astonished to know that a plane dropped another plane out of it's belly? :o
ive always wondered about this thnx for making a vid about it!
imagine waving your hand at 761 mph💀💀💀
baki logic💀
“The X-1 was loaded into a B-29-“
(Shows a B-52 with a Mig-21 magically appearing from the bomb bay).
Other than that, a very informational video.
Living between Edwards Air Force Base and China Naval Base in southern California, you hear sonic booms almost daily. You hear them so much that they don't faze you anymore.
Infact, I actually miss feeling and hearing sonic booms.
we have a daily sonic boom here in lebanon
i love watching these videos on jets
Isn't the speed difference between light and sound primarily the reason I see it before I hear it and not necessarily just because a sonic boom is occurring?
Not really. You can hear aproaching subsonic planes very well despite that difference. But you will hear its sound coming from a position, it was a few seconds ago. A supersonic plane "overtakes" his own sound. So you will hear it, after it passed your position.
Yes. You will see an object prior to hearing it. If you can attend a baseball game, sit high in the stands and watch the batter hit the ball. You will see the bat swing and hear the sound of the ball being hit a moment later.
no the sound waves lag behind the aircraft so you see the plane and a few seconds later the sound wave reaches you
So you're saying that if a human moves his hands faster than the speed of sound can make them fly? Kids be trying this fr (I did)
Appreciate you info man.
The channel explains science better than my science teacher
now i know what that little effect on rockets when they take off is. i always thought it was some sort of white stuff thats just used to keep the rocket together until it doesnt have to stay together anymore, but as it turns out, it's actually breaking the sound barrier SECONDS into lift off! thats crazy
Lol I been shakin my hand and laughin the whole time I love these videos😂👌
Wow ! I always wondered how and whatta what that really was. Holy Moly !! I had no idea. You sure explained it well. Thanks 👍
I was hoping this video would answer a question I have. Or maybe I missed it?
Is there a constant sonic boom (I’ll call it a sonic wave) following something traveling faster than sound?
I've noticed a few mistakes but its to complicated to explain so I'll only correct one thing.
You don't need to imagine the air as a fluid because the air is a fluid (it just have low viscosity)
I was going to say that air is a gas not a fluid, but I thought I'd look it up first in case I made myself look foolish.
I'm glad I did, because you are 100% correct.
Well played, Sir.
He never said it didn’t, he was describing it in simple terms, that’s why he used the word imagine.
If you are an engineer and studied fluid dynamics, and you use Euler and Navier - Stocks equations for a living, that part of the video can sound boring, I guess. But I enjoy the storytelling and the animations of Infographics above all else...
I’m pretty sure he was explaining in simpler terms
I love how the doctor asked a question from a deaf person
I wonder how many people started to flap their arms to feel the air pressure 🤔
As someone from a town with an air force base, yea. It's kinda like "boom BOOM".
3:51 - Bro was flyin'.
Wow many many years before I was born on my birthday the sound barrier was broken. I do love planes
So, the boom doesn't occur just at the exact moment at which the plane breaks the sound barrier - but is a cone which moves along with the aircraft all the time that the aircraft exceeds the speed of sound? In other words, it is a continuous sound which an observer only hears once because they are standing (still) on the ground. Is this correct?
Yes, that's correct.
My man caught a mackerel in a lake in the opening scene
Yall do realize that the pictures of the "sonic Boom" isnt actually a sonic boom. Thats just water vapor in the air building up and stacking on top of each other.
ok; makes it easier to see the bow wave.
So it's so fast that it creates the sound and then leaves it behind. I've thought about it and it finally makes sense
this is very cool
You really educate me more than my school does
Sad but extremely true!
True
Some of the photos you showed (the cloud cones around the F/A-18) were condensation clouds from the pressure changes of sub-sonic aircraft.
I would sure love to move my hands at 761 mph
1:06 A WHOLE BUNCH OF TURBULENCE 🗣️🔥🙏💯👏🍆
I like how they used the likeness of a Mig 21 to represent the Bell X1.
The cracking of a whip is a mini sonic boom.
3:35 can't stop waveing my hand.
Air is a fluid - you don’t have to “imagine it”
So there are many sonic booms but you only hear one
idk why but i understand you more than my science teacher
Tom crusie has done this twice already
2:08 - to IMAGINE that air is a fluid? As far as I know all liquids and gasses ARE fluids.
use to live near a AFB, one day heard a loud boom and felt like the house was hit by a truck
As my wife would say (about me): "The only thing he'd break is wind." 😀
yeah I understood the video and it was great, the way you explain things makes it very easy.
But my doubt is
what is lbs/sqft
is it kg/m^2
the only thing that needs improvement is if you could use metric system because it is the SI
same thing as you snap you're fingers. Low pressure on the leading edge and air trying to make it up in the back.
Having a vapor cloud around the aircraft has nothing to do with going the speed of sound, airliners sometimes have vapor trails when they are going very slow.
Vapor trails are a different thing from vapor clouds. You have to go at least 80% of the speed of sound to have a vapor cloud.
You can tell the editor was really proud of the boom graphic haha
I cant wait for SpaceX's Starship and Superheavy Sonic Booms when landing. This will be absolutely insane
Used to hear those booms when faf used old fighters like draken and mig 21. well very few in last 20 years. easy to spot because 2stage noise and roar of aircraft afterwads.
I can’t be the only one who thinks “boom carpet” sounds like it has absolutely nothing to do with airplanes.
Got to love this metric friendly videos.
When I was a kid I sent a letter to Beakman's World "remember that show". I asked what happens when a sonic boom occurs. I got a reply letter, but my question never got aired.
A sonic boom is Guile's move from street fighter 😎😂
Thanks for this one guys, i wanted to know more about this but...
Well im lazy.
GAU-8 avenger is well-prepared for situation like this
This is quite relevant after the news recently of the “boom” heard throughout DC and Maryland
I love how the B-52 was mistaken for a b-29
Glamorous Glennis 🥺🥺🥺🥰🥰🥰
how realistic is the netflix show “the 100”?
All sounds great
Humans already broke the sound barrier with whips
great! now lets surpass the speed of light
Another problem was that that the plane were powered by propellers, and a propeller at that speed of rotation explode. Was needed a jet engine
I was raised around Edwards Air Force Base, then Murrroc Airr Force Base.
I've even meet Chuck Yeager.
This is for anyone that would know, I was just talking about this the other day, is a sonic boom a continuous audio or once the boom occurs dose it stop? For instance, if mach 1 is reached right under me, will someone else hear it once the plane fly's 20 miles away at the same mach speed under them? Thnx.
It’s continuous. As long as the aircraft is moving supersonically anyone in the path will hear the boom.
@@ethanstone9921 hey thanks a bunch Ethan, peace of mind. 👊