This Mysterious Globe Perpetually Spins With No Batteries
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 7 มิ.ย. 2023
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See the inventor talk about the Mova globe: • Mova Globe origins and...
Also, this video was not sponsored by Mova, but they contacted me and offered a discount code for their globes: www.movaglobes.com/?ref=mK76y...
Use Code "ACTIONLAB" for 5% off - วิทยาศาสตร์และเทคโนโลยี
When I saw the thumbnail that said it spins forever I said "No it doesn't, mine stopped a while ago" Halfway through the video when he talks about friction I thought that's probably the problem as mine has a large air bubble on top. however, as soon as he mentioned how it uses the Earth's magnetic field. I looked and noticed I had a magnetic desk toy from the Vsauce Curiosity box sitting in front of it. As soon as I took that away It started moving again.
had the same thought, as mine has stopped. No magnets nearby, but the air bubble has grown since purchase.
Seriously, you put a magnet near such a sensible instrument, that runs on microcurrents, and didn´t think of any incoming-trouble while you did that ??????? Didn´t you know, for example, that your car´s modern spark-plugs are made so, that the mere vicinity to a cellphone cannot disturb their function anymore ??? (which was the case with older spark-plugs, till the first cellphone-owning-drivers started having engine-ignition-break-downs... )
@@klausbrinck2137 calm down merdy boi, we love science, but we don't love unnecessary drama
@@klausbrinck2137 I feel bad for people who was to deal with you on a daily basis.
@@klausbrinck2137 you don't have to be the way your are right now, you know?
Problem solving and engineering at its very best, in a product you can have on your desk. Electromagnets, photoelectric effect, thin-film lubrication, neutral buoyancy. All combined, you get what looks like pure magic.
Now if they can only solve the air bubble problem (see above comments).
@@catkeys6911 they're engineers not magicians!!
(/s)
@@somecsguy9824 The air bubbles appear by magic, then?
@@catkeys6911 They get removed by magic.. into the phantom zone
I understand the photoelectric effect to be high energy light bombarding -- and ionizing electrons in sparks off of -- materials (including recently rubbed metal surfaces, e.g.). Is there something I'm missing? Maybe you mean photovoltaics?
What nostalgia. In 1983 I made a similar mag-torque perpetual motion machine back at Lawrence Tech. The circuit board was open to view, no batteries, no solar cells. The board balanced on a needle point, long arms extended the coils and lowered the center of gravity to below the point of support to balance it.
Took a while before someone figured out that those long arms were a dipole antenna and it was running on power it picked up from WXYZ, a large radio station with a transmitter and antenna tower across the street from the university.
ha ha, would love to see that!
@@TheActionLab That would be interesting to diy !! It could be an interesting idea for you to make it. Would love to see the video !!
@@HemantKumar-xn8mnget out of here flat not moving earther
@@joewashington9374Flat earthers couldn’t annihilate anyone in a debate. I assume you are joking but still, you do sound very silly.
@@joewashington9374f you are not joking, you really should consider reevaluating your life choices rather than being a fool on the internet. If this is in fact the case I would love to see an explanation of the seasons, or how the Earth somehow remains unaffected by any sort of gravitational effect of other planets. How can it be that for one part of the yeah it is summer in the south and winter in the north(of the world, above the equator). Or if it doesn’t move at all(no spin) how it can be nighttime on one side of the planet and not the other. But the main question, if the Earth is flat, where is the edge? If I sailed far enough could I fall off? Where is the cut off? Please do remember your size relative to the Earth, and don’t try to use that as an argument I don’t want to see any “Why don’t we feel the Earth moving” or “why can’t I see the curvature” as you are obviously a tiny spec relative to the size of the planet and are also spinning/moving along with the planet so feel no motion relative to the Earth.
Wow! I always wondered how it works and the explanation is so simple and yet so brilliant! Thanks for sharing this clever design!
I had seen these around and I couldn't really comprehend how they worked, you're amazing at explaining things!
Yea I thought these were just scam adverts but at least now I know they're actually real. It's easy to be cynical with the amount of scams about these days though.
Love this guy!
but the globes are expensive :(
Solar. What explanation is needed?
I had one from over a decade ago and they do stop. It was fun to dissect for magnets, but the oil is something else!
I have one of these and I wasn't aware of the "two fluids" trick. Well done.
Yeah, he answered every question I had about it.
Where did you get your globe?
This is incredible, thanks for explaining so well!
I love how you've started breaking down and dissecting these new/popular trends and toys.
If anyone is wondering what they cost:
4.5" - $198
6" - $298
8.5" - $500
@Kelly Harbeson I just looked at their website and that's what the prices were listed as.
Bit on the expensive side, an missed opportunity to offer a premium flat earth variant 🤣
Was about to look but this comment section is full of people complaining about air bubbles around the 2yr mark, that's a lot of money to waste on a 2yr item
Feb 2024 prices are the same but most are out of stock
I have window seal dollar store seasonal decorations that move with solar panels and cost a few dollars, this thing is a very over priced concept imo
The problem with the Mova globes is they tend to get a bubble of air in them, and the spinning stops. Mine happened after about two years. You can research this issue, and some people came up with a solution to add more fluid and got theirs working again. It needs a small hole drilled in the top, add fluid with a syringe, and then somehow glue the hole closed. But pretty expensive for an item that may only last a couple years.
It happened to mine too
"Forever" or 2 years, whichever comes first. At that price, the warranty should be for 5 years. They do offer a 40% paid replacement discount.
@@gubigm I'm going to attempt to fix mine. I feel sure it will do it again, but maybe I can get it working for a couple more years. I wish I knew how many globes get this problem. Is it a low percentage, or every single one of them eventually does this? Does the fluid somehow slowly seep out thru the plastic? My bubble is pretty large now. It's about the top half an inch in the 4.5" globe.
Thanks for the heads-up. Was considering purchasing one.
Serious question.... how do the bubbles form...? I'm gonna guess that it's residual air pockets in the components not being thoroughly vacuumed out during the filling and sealing process....so the tiny micro bubbles jus get bigger an bigger till.....BAM, ya end up with a big ass air pocket in 2yrs...?
Amazing! Thanks for doing these episodes. 👍
we have a bunch of these around my office at work. They stop working after a while, usually the air bubble at the top increases.
It always looks odd to me when you see a really thick liquid that's less dense than another liquid that's much less viscous, even though I know there isn't necessarily a link.
It actually makes a lot of sense. Think about water and olive oil. Water is more dense than oil, that's because water molecules are much smaller than triglycerides, so you can pack more of them in the same space (Type of intermolecular bond also plays a role). Olive oil is more viscous than water, that's because the longer molecules of the fatty acids entangle with each other forcing you to apply greater force in order to move them.
Hope that helps :)
@@denzelcrocker992 Actually I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you're referring to as Linux, is in fact, GNU/Linux, or as I've recently taken to calling it, GNU plus Linux. Linux is not an operating system unto itself, but rather another free component of a fully functioning GNU system made useful by the GNU corelibs, shell utilities and vital system components comprising a full OS as defined by POSIX. Many computer users run a modified version of the GNU system every day, without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the version of GNU which is widely used today is often called “Linux,” and many of its users are not aware that it is basically the GNU system, developed by the GNU Project. There really is a Linux, and these people are using it, but it is just a part of the system they use.
Linux is the kernel: the program in the system that allocates the machine's resources to the other programs that you run. The kernel is an essential part of an operating system, but useless by itself; it can only function in the context of a complete operating system. Linux is normally used in combination with the GNU operating system: the whole system is basically GNU with Linux added, or GNU/Linux. All the so-called “Linux” distributions are really distributions of GNU/Linux.
@@denzelcrocker992 Your comment helped me understand. Thank you.
@@user-kk5qe9fj2l where did Linux/GNU come from? was his comment about operating systems before he editted it?
@@Diabhork I'm confused as well, if he did edit it that is honestly hilarious lol
This globe has been puzzling me since the day I first saw it, what an absolute brilliant application of simple science!! I knew there was some kind of magnet involved but this demonstration was "enlightening" 😁
I bought one of these 6 years ago and it is really cool, it sits on a shelf in my dining room and always spins when the sun comes up❤
I can't remember what they are called but the solar cells used in tiny small current devices like calculators have a quirk where they are super efficient at low light low power settings but basically have a hard limit where more light doesn't increase the output voltage much at all. I forget the details but I think their internal resistance basically increases with more light. At a guess I'd think it would be something like that limiting the power.
I didn't know that. It could be really useful for my plans! :3
The Action Lab's USP isn't expensive equipment, or dangerous chemicals, or anything fancy. But it's something insanely important on TH-cam, and it's his ability to generate ideas and seek inspiration from the things around him. Video after video this channel blows my mind with these explanations of things I've never paid a single thought to.
Ok buddy. 👍
@@JasonMitchellofcompsci whys bro so passive aggressive 💀
Today I lernt USP
Amazing invention!
It makes me think back to my late grandfather. As a toddler he would take me into his shed and watch the wonder on my face as he took a battery, a torch light bulb and some wire and lit up the bulb, or when he built kites for me. He would have loved this globe.
Thank you for the video.
Thanks for explaining the basic working. I was intrigued about it.
We humans have such a potential for solving problems and creating life enhancing devices but we are so limited by ignorance in many areas. We so need family love and the best of education, and never lose sight of that. Another amazing video.
Absolutely love that Earth and Moon globe that you have... I've been wanting that set for a long time!
I don't think they're at the same scale. Distance is also too small .
@@johndododoe1411 I still want them though. :-)
I love it when someone finds a way to create something that taps into natural energy source that exists all around us, in a very efficient way. Obviously it cant put out more energy than comes in, but finding efficient ways to interact with our surroundings is so cool. Like that light bulb 💡 with the black & reflective spinning thing inside the bulb. Or, the bird that continues to dip into water due to it containing a liquid with a low boiling point heat transfer loop. Stuff like that is just really facinating to me because it takes creative ways to interact with natural forces that exist around us.
That's what oil already does. It's stored sunlight
That's a cool way to put it
There's a really cool clock called the Atmos which is entirely powered by tiny temperature differences in the room and it runs non stop without being wound up
Totally agree! It's super cool.
The bulb with the black and reflective spinning thing is called a Crookes radiometer. 🙂
Would be interesting if they manage to simulate clouds and weather patterns. Maybe something with similar density and a propensity to precipitate?
I was wondering from the day i saw these viral on internet thank you for just simplifying whole science. That was awesome ❤️
Every one of your videos teaches me something new or unexpected, without fail. I appreciate your originality, always great content! 🤘
I've had my 6" globe for about 5 years with no issues. These are definitely not cheap objects, but they're a very unique decoration with a high build quality. People are always very intrigued by it whenever they come over. I think they are worth it and even bought one as a gift for my brother.
Even old analog clocks, or the quartz movement variety, a single AA battery with about 4WHr capacity can last a couple years meaning the average power to drive the movement is about 100nW -- less than a single microwatt.
Lol I love this channel. Awesome to be active in another field (sociology) but still being able to keep up with science through your videos, thank you!
I prefer the cube version of the MOVA. I saw one at a travel agency years ago & looked it up. I didn't want to spend that much then but I did buy one recently. It is very cool watching it float & spin in the middle of the cube's fluid. I do not see a fluid line change in mine. Also the MOVA logo at the top of my cube seems magnetic. I tested it with one of those magnetic field sheets. I assumed this was part of the spinning engineering.
I can’t believe the globe company didn’t sponsor this. Send this man a check!
There is a referral link in the description. So rest assured that he will make some money from this ad.
@@Joe-sg9llWhere did you buy them from? A shady google search link leading to a manufactured e-waste website? Or from the link in the description?
what a beutiful trinket. And thank you for attaching a link for their shop, and them for giving you a discount code!
Wow, James, very interesting video, thanks for showing us that cutaway!
I once put a small neodymium magnet that had a low friction side on an office table. It would align itself with earth's magnetic north with enough force that you could feel it by pushing your finger against one end. It was amazing to feel the magnetic field of the earth when that little magnet pushed back.
The magnet might have been aligning itself with steel screws and/or beams under the desktop. To be sure you have to look carefully underneath to make sure you are using the desktop far from the steel framework underneath.
@@qazmatronyou just ruined this man’s whole life😂😂
Great globe! Thanks for bringing it to us and explaining how it works. Science cool. Love the Action Lab!
Ever since I first saw one of those I wondered how it worked
Thank you for explaining it
Nice one, thanks for sharing!!!
Probably already stated, but your LED light source does not provide a meaningful level of photons in the light spectrum to power the PV cells in the globe. Cheap PV cells are fed mostly from NIR wavelengths.
Cheap PVs are mostly CdTe solar cells which works really fine on room light. Infact modern room lights (mostly LEDs) don't radiate NIR at all, it's spectrum spans mainly from blue to red which has way higher energy than that of NIR. His high power light source is no different from any room lights except it's incrediblly powerfull.
I've wanted one of their globes for like 2 years. Really impressive stuff.
So many breaks though
how much would one cost? the website doesnt even mention price.. probably a rolls royce?
@@fidelcatsro6948 160 starting I think? I haven't looked in like 8 months or so.
For a 6 or an 8" globe.
Holy 💩 german amazon says 450$
@@daimonien you're cute
I had seen these globes in YT shorts and thought it must have been engineered very well,thanks for explaining ❣️
Great info! Now I know how they do it!❤
Hey! Thank you for making this.
I had always been fascinated by Mova globes but never understood how it worked.
As soon as I saw the video's notification, I knew that I would finally understand this perfectly.
Im curious, what do you do with the mineral oil and other chemicals you use (in different video's) after the filming is done. I really enjoy your video's keep up the great work.
What’s “film?”
Thanks for covering that, I was wondering 🤔
Would have never thought of it without watching this video very informative and nicely explained
A Flat Earther’s trigger warning ⚠️ 😅
lol
3:48 I thought he was squaring up to punch the globe
that explains a lot of space science. i like this. thank you.
oh, that makes it a big compress. Ingenious!
It's almost like perpetual motion, except it's not a closed system. Very clever design!
To put it differently, there are no closed systems. If someone would have one, that would actually be extremly valuable, well, no because nothing would get in or out anyway so its actually totaly worthless. It would be the most valuable, worthless thing.
Skip to 5:00 to pass sponser.
Ive seen much excellent content out of Action Lab. This is a favorite
Loved your explanation and now you have earned a subscriber
Where to buy it
Very impressive and I believe I want one. They’re not as expensive as I thought they would be.
How much?
I remember when they were 1000$+
@@ishredder4006 Only a few hundred bucks.
I would buy one at the $400 price tag except that they don't last more than a couple of years before the fluid escapes. I'd want a five year warranty for a desk ornament at that price.
@@ishredder4006Just checked the website, it's 2-300 dollars depending on the globe (they do all the planets) and a little under 1400 if you buy the whole solar system set.
I'm not gonna be getting any, but that's really not a bad price at all.
great video ! I love the spinning globe and how it is engineered , brilliant minds !
I had mine near but not really that close to an Apple HomePod speaker and it stopped spinning. Not until about about 6 months though, so wasn’t obvious to diagnose. I rearranged the room and all was well again. Maybe moving things a fraction of an inch had made a difference at some point.
How to buy?
It looks really cool. It would be incredible having one that has a 24 hour cicle
@Kelly Harbeson yeah, I know, but it would look nice as a background, where after a few hours you would see a different part of the globe. The only problem would be that there would be some parts that you would never see because it would be night (although in those cases I don't know if the globe could still rotate without access to light)
@Kelly Harbeson like Mario's ghosts
@@ggandalff Like weeping angels
Capacitors are like batteries. So it will store and with other electronic components can control the amount of energy let go to move the object.
It's amazing that there are such smart and brilliant people who invent such things.
Hey great video I’ve seen these globes and wanted to know how they work so thank you! Also where did you buy these globes?
1:23 Did i hear the edges of a globe? 😮😮
Yes
A globe like that could cost a huge fortune. Still a pretty cool invention, I must say.
Yeah, you're looking at a 200 dollar price mark. That's an expensive paper weight.
@@Dalendrion
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2. A Globe 🌎🌍🌏🌐🗺️ Like That Could Cost A Huge Fortune 🔮 Still A Pretty 💎 Cool 😎🥶❄️🧊 Invention I Must Say?.
3. A Globe 🌎🌍🌏🌐🗺️ Like That Could Cost A Huge Fortune 🔮 Still A Pretty 💎 Cool 😎🥶❄️🧊 Invention I Must Say?.
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"could cost a huge fortune"
Do you mean it would be too expensive to buy one yourself? Me too, but I doubt it would be out of range for anyone that likes to buy art for their home.
@Kelly Harbeson
If You Were Wrongfully Convicted Of A Crime That You Didnt Do/Commit And Ended Up Spending 10 Years In Prison For That Wrongful Conviction Would You Be Justified In Murdering Innocent 😇 People To Get Back 🔙 At Society For That Wrongful Conviction?.
@Kelly Harbeson Yeah. I should have said, that's the minimum you're looking at.
The way these work is even cooler then I thought
They should make it spin 15 degrees per hour. So you can set a lamp next to it to represent the sun and you can see what the actual time is
*The hardest part about making a perpetual motion machine is where to hide the battery.*
In this case where to hide the solar panel.
@@barneylaurance1865 There are capacitors (which is a for of batter).
5:20 you created an earthquake
Thanks lab man for explaining
I wonder how they sealed it
The real question
@Kelly Harbeson Inner globe is the same thing..... two halves glued together.
A capacitor is, technically speaking... A really small battery.
Still, pretty neat. Getting it to float in the middle is the most amazing part to me, but the solar cells and magnets are nothing new in electronics. Smart, but it's been done a few times.
300$...
@@goku445 Yep, and a phone can be $3000... For something to make calls and access the internet.
@@Deja117 But does it rotated indefinitely? (Until a bubble forms after a year or two.)
@@goku445 Yes, until the manufacturer slows it down on purpose with an update. :D
@@Deja117 I don't support such companies of course.
I’ve got one of those globes in my desk and always wonder how it works thanks for the explanation
What a fascinating room addition. As soon as I press "send", I'm going shopping. Thank you. 😎👍🏼
Oh boy! I thought this was incredibly cool and wanted to buy one... I was NOT emotionally prepared for them to cost that much. Maybe I'll just stick with regular globes haha
High precision and tight tolerances are expensive. I would imagine the amount of mass is quite a small amount, probably on a similar scale to a radiometer.
Just went to the website. I now understand your comment.😲😃
@@jaye1967 tight tolerances?
And according to a few posters here they tend to go haywire after a couple years.
I knew just from the detail it would be expensive. Let alone how it works. I will live my life in ignorance of the price.
Would it be possible to build a buoyancy bearing that would never wear out using this technology?
A buoyancy nearing would not be practical. It needs too much heavy liquid; heavy liquids can be dangerous (mercury, lead salts in solution); the viscous drag could easily exceed the friction of a roller bearing. A magnetic bearing is a better start.
That’s a good video! I’ve wondered how these things worked. That light was a little unexpected.
I love mine, thanks for the inside look!
I bought 2 a few years ago. They're neat. These $200 mini globe art piece paper weights are still spinning.
200 dollars ? wow!
If they add some milk for clouds, I'm sold!
Bruh milk? It's gonna sink and everything gonna be clouded lmfao
@@youravghuman5231it would be cloudy, but it wouldn't say. There's no reason to believe it would sink. We couldn't find a fluid for the bottom portion that's the denser than the milk and the top portion that's similar density. And in fact, for the milk we could probably add a little bit of something to bind it to stay as a kind of cloud. Or even find some extremely light effectively solid flat things to float in there as clouds.
For the price of these things you would think they could do something craftmanship wise with the big obvious seam at the equator
I’ve had these for years thnx for the explanation
Wish he would find a less sketchy sponsor, but otherwise pretty interesting.
1:10 INDIA
What gutka???
3:02 : technically, this sentence is wrong: you can spin the motor without any anchorage: in this case, both the stator and the rotor will spin, but at opposite wises and with each speed inversely proportional to each mass.
So here, with an heavy mass on the shaft, the globe will spin even without any Hearth magnetic field.
ok, if it weren't for the tail rotor, the body of a helicopter would rotate in the opposite direction to how its propeller does.
Woah!! I want one! It looks so satisfying to watch spin.
I want this bro
1. I Want This Bro
2. I Want This Sis
This was very educational and entertaining thank you
I loooved this video! ♥Fascinating!
Please. I beg you. Do your research on your sponsors. Or look at your comments. Betterhelp is a horrendous therapy company.
Yes I am liking and replying to my own comment in a vain effort to trick the algorithm into boosting this
I’ve had a Jupiter globe of these for a few years now, still going strong!
well theres also the conservation of angular momentum you could use, if you had a motor spinning a weight the globe would tend to spin also, but that would probably take more power than ambient light could provide
Wearing a Brigham young shirt is insane to me. He was a slave owner and a predator
@@kellyharbeson18 Holy false equivalency. I'm not going to engage any further if this is really the level of discourse you intend to have but there's a big (big) difference between wearing a shirt with the name of someone with no redeeming qualities and who was a slave owner and predator compared with dynamiting one of the most influential people in recent history off a mountain. Pretty easy to choose a different shirt.
@@guinea_horn Good. Keep on not engaging.
Brigham Young, dude? Seriously? The channel shows your dedication to science and then you wear a shirt from Superstition U?
Really great video, thanks!
I gave one to my father a few Christmas’s ago and it’s the coolest thing.
Wow a proper video, great explanation
I saw these globes for the first time last month (Sept 2023) while on a cruise ship in the Mediterranean. I couldn't figure out how they worked. After seeing your video I'm more amazed at this globes as they spin in a cruise ship hallway that wasn't partially well lit.
u make the magnet rail convergent, then a piece of lead slides under the ball and yoyo spring winds it back in. the lead takes like a gram of force, so its only important its not a runnaway acceleration, maybe some baylene trout polymer. You'd work through different designs, then youd find, cylinders polarized at 45 and 30 degrees are the simplest closest magnet rails, so you pull the shell sleaves in and out, like a magnet pendulum.
the reson that the thing didnt go faster when he aplied more light is that u can push a certen amout on a compass and if u aplie more force the compass will rotate itself so thats why u cant go faster than an especific amount
To make it float in the center, just give it a flex property with justify content to center and align items to center.
Thanks for the video.
Wow, that is amazing