I LOVE the creativity in these experiments! The activity is already engaging but personalizing the experience by encouraging students to add their own characters will pique the interest of even the least science-minded students. Brilliant!
Congratulations, it was a nice experiment and it could have been even better; For example, if the red LED lamp (1:40) here had blinked every millisecond or two during movement, we would have seen the speed/time line.
@@YeanyScience Even though I am 52 years old, such experiments always continue to interest and inspire me. I wish you success in your work. Kind regards.
Delightful how you point out parameters that could be optimized, it encourages viewers to do actual experiments themselves -- real science! at home or in the classroom! I loved a lot of my science teachers, but I think your students must have been some of the luckiest to have such a creative mind illustrating how science is anywhere we want to look.
Lovely… and if you release the small pendulum so that it wraps around the vertical posts, it will wrap around each in turn, lowering the large weight a bit each time…
(1:40) I was very curious about how you captured this spiral-shaped photo. Did you use a professional camera, or can it be done with 1 webcam and software?
@@YeanyScience Thank you for the information. I took many photos like this with old generation film cameras. However, since I do not have a new generation digital camera, I did not have the opportunity to try this method. :)
To add some real drama to this use a bowling ball. It will be a version of the classic science experiment for conservation of energy/gravity where the professor stands back against a wall with the suspended bowling ball up against his chin and lets the bowling ball swing and return only to stop mm from his chin. Only with this experiment the hope is the counterweight will stop the falling bowling ball before striking the person laying under the bowling ball. Maybe I'll substitute myself with an egg or pumpkin pie instead. Thanks for sharing.
I wish more of my teachers were this fun. Even in science classes we didn't get to do many things experimentally, only reading and tests. Except the physics teacher who had us make hovercrafts from shop-vacs, plywood, and trash bags... and ride down the hall on them.
I accidentally discover this phenomenon while fishing about 28 years ago. A stray cast sent my bait over the top of a tree that was out in the James river. As soon as the bait hit the water, a cat fish grabbed it. Now the line went up over the tree, down into the water with a fish on the hook. I reeled it up and let down a few times before I decided to try to flick the fish over the top of the tree. Unfortunately, the line snapped when I flicked it. As the fish started falling back towards the water, the line wrapped itself around the tree several times, leaving the fish hanging in the air above the river. A small crowd had by then assembled to watch, and I was trespassing in a fancy gated community, so I thought it was probably time to leave. Sorry to the poor fish.
When I was a child, I used this method for entertainment purposes and to do more dangerous things. I don't want to set a bad example by writing here how it happened. :/
i wonder if uou let the small weight go at different angles and different air drag ratios, or if the string was replaced with floss or thread, and if the pvc bar was metal, or polished metal, also what if you introduce a spring on to one of the weights
Now I want to know what would happen if there is a rolling cylinder as the pole. Virtually no friction but angular momentum. The pole would be connected to a controlled mass flywheel. The flywheel would act as if the pole can't rotate at all, but thwn it would start rolling. But when exactly would it start rolling? At what moment? Would it be possible to trim the flywheel angular momentum so that the flywheel initially starts rolling, then stops, and then resumes unrolling the string? Would it be suitable for a safety mechanism for workers on heights as a controlled deceleration on very passive systems?
@@YeanyScience to be honest, I didn't do anything yet, all merit goes to you for inspiring me. Most of your videos cover topics I already know about, and most of them put a new twist on me about the possibilities of what I already knew. This video wasn't one of those, but you already triggered me into thinking what would be a possible twist on the matter Thanks for all your work and sharing of these years!
I've worked on the next video for that but then put it away for a while as I got sidetracked and other projects. Anxious to get back to it last time I used it we had the egg exit velocity up over 500 miles an hour.
The diacceleration looks pretty abruptly. What accelerations and jurks those the heavier weight witness?🤔 PS:Again, why do you have to use food. Why not using magnets instead.. It would be more interesting and less wasteful. Imagine a big copper weight rushing down and a big plate magnet braking the fall before the light weight has a change to completely wipp around. 🤔 What happeneds to the little weight when the tension from the string is abruptly gone before it can complete its journey
> this video is a reposting of a previous video that accidentally included copyrighted music. It has been removed from this version So lame... are they hunting down every little video? Even the one where the music if fully secondary?
Yes, if there is enough to recognize the song even if it's 5-10 seconds. I made the mistake of using music that offered to be royalty free, unaware that they were charging an upfront fee, my fault for not reading it more carefully. Fortunately I have most of the original clips so I can redo them and then repost. 9 more to go
The spiral LED photos are pretty.
Hi Destin!
hello
Hi it's me destin. Welcome to smarter everyday. @smartereveryday
Agreed. I think it is a long exposure photo, but he could have edited it in post somehow to mimic a long exposure photo.
cool
I can just hear that conversation, "Mr Yeaney, do you have any idea who tied a pumpkin to the goal post?"
"Gravity"
No it’s the philosopher’s stone
This is pure gold man. Already did the 'put the egg into a bottle' with my kids and will try this one
I LOVE the creativity in these experiments! The activity is already engaging but personalizing the experience by encouraging students to add their own characters will pique the interest of even the least science-minded students. Brilliant!
There are no students who are not "science-minded." There are only students with bad teachers (and schools).
Congratulations, it was a nice experiment and it could have been even better;
For example, if the red LED lamp (1:40) here had blinked every millisecond or two during movement, we would have seen the speed/time line.
good point, I've looked at going on a much larger scale with this demonstration, and that might be something to include and the results
@@YeanyScience Even though I am 52 years old, such experiments always continue to interest and inspire me.
I wish you success in your work.
Kind regards.
The scale up of the experiment was funny 😆, from a toy pumpkin to a real one.
We all need a Bruce Yeany action man in our lives.
That poor pumpkin still being held hostage by that wrench. One day I hope to see it freed.
Delightful how you point out parameters that could be optimized, it encourages viewers to do actual experiments themselves -- real science! at home or in the classroom!
I loved a lot of my science teachers, but I think your students must have been some of the luckiest to have such a creative mind illustrating how science is anywhere we want to look.
Lovely… and if you release the small pendulum so that it wraps around the vertical posts, it will wrap around each in turn, lowering the large weight a bit each time…
An excellent demonstration. Thank you for posting.
(1:40) I was very curious about how you captured this spiral-shaped photo. Did you use a professional camera, or can it be done with 1 webcam and software?
done with a point and shoot camera, set the shutter speed to be open for 3 seconds, and then set the delay for 10 seconds so I could get into position
@@YeanyScience Thank you for the information. I took many photos like this with old generation film cameras. However, since I do not have a new generation digital camera, I did not have the opportunity to try this method. :)
Amazing experiments! And great explanation. Thanks Bruce.
To add some real drama to this use a bowling ball. It will be a version of the classic science experiment for conservation of energy/gravity where the professor stands back against a wall with the suspended bowling ball up against his chin and lets the bowling ball swing and return only to stop mm from his chin. Only with this experiment the hope is the counterweight will stop the falling bowling ball before striking the person laying under the bowling ball. Maybe I'll substitute myself with an egg or pumpkin pie instead. Thanks for sharing.
thank for the free lesson Bruce!
I wish more of my teachers were this fun. Even in science classes we didn't get to do many things experimentally, only reading and tests.
Except the physics teacher who had us make hovercrafts from shop-vacs, plywood, and trash bags... and ride down the hall on them.
Amazing experiments! And👌 a wonderful explanation. Thanks, Bruce
Wonder if this can help as a backup safety harness for people working on high structures.
I accidentally discover this phenomenon while fishing about 28 years ago. A stray cast sent my bait over the top of a tree that was out in the James river. As soon as the bait hit the water, a cat fish grabbed it. Now the line went up over the tree, down into the water with a fish on the hook. I reeled it up and let down a few times before I decided to try to flick the fish over the top of the tree. Unfortunately, the line snapped when I flicked it. As the fish started falling back towards the water, the line wrapped itself around the tree several times, leaving the fish hanging in the air above the river. A small crowd had by then assembled to watch, and I was trespassing in a fancy gated community, so I thought it was probably time to leave. Sorry to the poor fish.
When I was a child, I used this method for entertainment purposes and to do more dangerous things. I don't want to set a bad example by writing here how it happened. :/
2:23 your topology is just hanging by the threads😂
Your the science teacher I wish I had
i wonder if uou let the small weight go at different angles and different air drag ratios, or if the string was replaced with floss or thread, and if the pvc bar was metal, or polished metal, also what if you introduce a spring on to one of the weights
Now I want to know what would happen if there is a rolling cylinder as the pole. Virtually no friction but angular momentum. The pole would be connected to a controlled mass flywheel. The flywheel would act as if the pole can't rotate at all, but thwn it would start rolling. But when exactly would it start rolling? At what moment? Would it be possible to trim the flywheel angular momentum so that the flywheel initially starts rolling, then stops, and then resumes unrolling the string?
Would it be suitable for a safety mechanism for workers on heights as a controlled deceleration on very passive systems?
good question, sounds like you have worked it out but I will give it a try
@@YeanyScience to be honest, I didn't do anything yet, all merit goes to you for inspiring me.
Most of your videos cover topics I already know about, and most of them put a new twist on me about the possibilities of what I already knew.
This video wasn't one of those, but you already triggered me into thinking what would be a possible twist on the matter
Thanks for all your work and sharing of these years!
Was that Steve Spangler you saved starting at 3:15?
good eye, yes it was
this doesn't shoot eggs?
I've worked on the next video for that but then put it away for a while as I got sidetracked and other projects. Anxious to get back to it last time I used it we had the egg exit velocity up over 500 miles an hour.
does the elasticity of the "string" also have any effect?
A good thing to test!
Also the string's friction (e.g. waxed string) and stiffness.
A Norwegian science communicator: Andreas Wahl, did this experiment on TV a few years ago with himself as the heavy weight.
Can this be used to lower yourself from the third floor of a building that is on fire?
Is it me or did the washers at the very end go down, swing a little to the left, and then come up just slightly?
I see it also, since it is a closeup shot I can't tell what happened, my guess would be the the string got caught up in the looping weight
So cool
That large wrench was a bit close to your face! Perhaps get a student to do it next time😀
The diacceleration looks pretty abruptly. What accelerations and jurks those the heavier weight witness?🤔 PS:Again, why do you have to use food. Why not using magnets instead.. It would be more interesting and less wasteful. Imagine a big copper weight rushing down and a big plate magnet braking the fall before the light weight has a change to completely wipp around. 🤔 What happeneds to the little weight when the tension from the string is abruptly gone before it can complete its journey
Your videos are great, but consider getting a mic for some of the shots. 😀
I've tried, my camera is a Sony RX10, great camera but is very poor at accepting a mic
🌷🌟🌷🌟🌷🌟
Привет от русских коллег! Мы пришли от канала GetAClass
Similarities to a trebuchet
At first I thought it will be a governor
Funny!
The small weight rolls up like a scroll
> this video is a reposting of a previous video that accidentally included copyrighted music. It has been removed from this version
So lame... are they hunting down every little video? Even the one where the music if fully secondary?
Yes, if there is enough to recognize the song even if it's 5-10 seconds. I made the mistake of using music that offered to be royalty free, unaware that they were charging an upfront fee, my fault for not reading it more carefully. Fortunately I have most of the original clips so I can redo them and then repost. 9 more to go
Second
Man invented religions when we couldn't explain phenomena, they say.😅
Not brave enough to try it with a real person?
Action figures makes me feel better