Person 1: "The Earth is flat!" Person 2: "It's a sphere. It's been proven by science. Repeatedly." Person 3: "That's right. And it's hollow too!" Person 2: "Ugh..."
@@noiJadisCailleach Person 5: Technically, the Earth is not a sphere but what we call an oblate spheroid. The centripetal forces caused Earth's own rotation cause a slight bulge at the equator and local variations in crust density as well as perturbations in the surface causing more or less mass to be in an area cause further disruptions to a true sphere shape not to mention tidal bulges caused by both the moon and the sun......
Does shell thickness affect this? If shell thickness is almost equal to the radius, it is still hollow? If it can’t be hollow, can it be porous? If so, what is the maximum porosity? Does size help? Can it be hollow if it is small enough?
The thickness, as well as the hardness, strength, resilience, density, mass, distribution of the material and what is filling the hollow affect it, the same goes for if it were porous. Making a hollow ball of talcum powder is more difficult than an iron one. Size matters in a radius sense, but the small hole in something massive still has a high chance of collapsing. I only imagine a hollow planet if the shell had the above characteristics in the most improved form possible (pure diamond maybe???) or the interior was filled with something extremely dense that prevented collapse (like molten rock).
I know your comment is largely in jest, but he didn't really "prove" or "disprove" much of anything. What he did was give scientific reasons why he believes he's right. He just reasonably disproved very specific theories where he's assuming he has all the data on how it works. I'm not trying to argue in favor of hollow earth here, but people are becoming dangerously blind these days when the term "science" is being thrown around. If someone they perceive as an authority figure tell them something and that it's proven with science, people tend to stop any and all critical thinking and just accept it, and this is a really good example of that. I mean, heck, we're STILL teaching our kids the pyramids were the burial grounds for pharaohs in school for some reason. It's just crazy what people tend to accept just because they're told something by authority figures.
@@bipolarminddroppings I knew about Bill Haley and The Comets. Which probably why it rang a bell when "Edmond Halley of Halley's Comet" was mentioned. It's possible to have bands with similar yet different names, such as "The Who" and "The Guess Who" I don't think any copyright infringement would have happened.
I've always assumed that the hollow earth theory meant huge cave systems yet undiscovered. I didnt realize people thought it was hollow to the core. How big could an undiscovered cave system be?
@@maxanimator9547 think of the outer shell as being capstones brought together and they are prevented from collapsing any further toward the center…except the occasional sink hole (until all the earth is consumed or something else happens external to our planetary system)
Dyson was one of the greatest minds ever, the amount of things he contributed to doesn't get anywhere near the amount of recognition it should, big loss to humanity 😥
He designed the Dysonspere that the Enterprise D encountered with the SS Genolen with Montgomery Scott onboard in transporter stasis. Star Trek TNG:S06E04 “Relics”
Why doesn't it surprise me that Kyle forgot to carry the decimals 6 times. He's usually so professional, but he said it and I thought " Ha, classic Kyle."
@@xenomorphisisdilage472 Unknown at this time, and most likely we will never know as normally, even in other jobs, you don't talk about why you left the job to the general public. It shows that you are able to keep your mouth shut if Kyle does manage to get a special offering from somewhere to do something cool or is offered another job with a group of people he wants to work with. Same logic as an interview, when someone in that interview ask you a question about " Why you left your previous job. " You never start talking down to your previous job, no matter how much you hated it, because it shows something about your character then anything else.
I've been waiting for him to talk about hollow earth because of Kong and Godzilla. He finally does but doesn't mention either. Oh well still a good vid.
4:10 I am surprised no one ever asked or mentioned, where does night come from? How does the sun rise and set happen if we lived inside a shell, with the sun/core being in the middle there? Is there a smaller half shell with holes rotating around the sun in a perfect sphere? If the sun is in the middle and is equal distance from everything then how does ice happen? Thank god for the law of gravity, or someone would have to try answering them.
Not a flat earther but spent one to many nights down the rabbit hole. From my understanding they think the sun and moon are much smaller and closer to us. They still rotate but more on a 2D path. Kind of like a airplane flying around a city in a big circle.
@@opmus i think he meant the hollow earth model, not flat earth. I mean, both are clearly false but trying to explain day and night cycles, as well as seasons in a hollow earth might be even harder than on a flat earth model...
@@RampageRush Holodecks are able to make interactive holograms, including simulating matter being moved around. A.R.I.A. definitely has the processing power to give Kyle and The Facility a true working holodeck. But what nefarious things is Kyle planning on doing now that he has escaped his prison in the [redacted]
The anti-gravity issue with the shell applies on a stationary shell. If the shell is rotating, you will get centripetal force creating a gravity on the inner surface of the shell around its equator, which would dissipate as you head to the poles. In such a scenario you would then want tunnels to the outer side of the shell for living on the outside near the poles to have gravity towards the shell.
8:13 If the shell's gravity cancelled out the gravity under our feet, then yes, we would float. But if the shell was spinning, then wouldn't the laws of centripetal force make an artificial gravity, meaning that you could walk on the ground?
That would only work at certain points tho, wouldn't it? Like, if the hollow earth spins around its own axis and you stand at one of the poles you wouldn't be effected by the centripetal force, right? Likewise, the artificial gravity would grow stronger the closer you get to the center. I am far from being well versed in physics so correct me if i'm wrong here.
@@howielowis458 Yes, I think that you're right. I'm not sure if this is correct, but there is something called the Coriolis Effect, which is basically what you were talking about. A quick Google search says that it's how rotation affects things in different ways, so it changes the wind, the ocean currents etc.
I mean just saying but the weightlessness thing would've been true if we were living inside the inner part of the shell, not the outer part. Because we live on the outer part we would have the same gravitational pull it doesn't matter if it is hollow or solid. I'm not saying we live in a shell, but this definitely needs correction at 8:08 because we live in the outer part with our head pointing outwards whereas in video he is inside the shell with his head pointing towards the core not like the real life.
@@zrlg3241 because if you dig deeper than that you fall through dummy! Obviously every scientist, astronaut, world leader, pilot, anyone who has ridden on a boat, and everyone who ever looked at the horizon is in cahoots lieing to you because... Reasons?... yes reasons!
I'm surprised that Kyle didn't use the most basic of observable things: the path of the sun and the moon in the sky, and the horizon. In a hollow planet, it would be like standing in a giant bowl, and instead of sky at the edge we would see the world sloping up. But even forgetting about all that, another thing we know for sure is that the sun rises in the east and sets in the west. In the hollow earth model, with mankind living inside the shell, the sub would have to be at the center of the earth, and nobody would ever see it set. The moon would have to orbit the sun, and there would be no lunar phases.
What about hollow planets without stars in them, such as an Earth with more concentric spheroids inside of it, like in Jules Verne's Journey to the Centre of the Earth?
Kyle: "So, if you excuse me, by my calculation, I have about a hundred million more kilograms of ROCK to spoon. So, on your way, on you way." Great video as always. Thank you.
I suspect it is a play on Jarvis (Just A Rather Very Intelligent System), but less omnipresent more like a digital assistant A Really Intelligent Assistant A.R.I.A.
@AmplifiedSilence For public facing science education, you only need to be smart enough. For all of Bill's intelligence and training, you don't see him at "max power" on TV.
Love the video. The one bit I do quibble about is the idea that people inside the hollow world would be weightless. Distance is a big factor in gravity, so assuming that the gravitational pull of the opposite side of the sphere would cancel out the gravity of the part you are standing on is incorrect, I think.
Maybe if the main planetary mass were rotating fast enough to not crush inward via. Centrifugal force? Though that might be more than lightspeed... Or maybe if the material were compressed evenly enough to support itself, like a brick archway, but a lot more dense, and three-dimensional? Would that be possible, before we get to nuclear fusion levels of matter compression?
What If there was like a giant cavity inside of earth. I dont believe the whole earth is hollow but I do feel like there could be a cavity big enough to hold a whole ecosystem. There are just to many stories of civilizations that dwell within the earth to completely rule something like that out. Fantastic video though 10 out of 10 would watch it again
When i think of hollow earth I think of the Godzilla hollow earth, like large caves and caverns connecting the different land masses. So not literally hollow it just has tunnels and caves interconnecting the planets land masses and oceans.
Love your videos, question though. Are you still gonna be giving out the title of super nerd. Not that I’m quick enough to ever get it, but I like thinking that I have the chance
5:30 You're failing to account for the primary source of gravity would be halfway through the mantle, in addition to our rather large moon, aiding in the support of the Earth's sell. So unlike a solid planet, the hollow planet's pressure would be as its greatest halfway through the mantle, and not in the center. A sattilite can orbit the Earth at 20000 miles away and experience zero gravity. If the mantle is 500-1500 miles deep like in Leonhard Euler's model, then that least a potential 5000-7000 miles of space inside the Earth, meaning *gravity varies greatly.* In other words, the dyson sphere equation assumes there is a large mass in the center, whilst in the Hollow Earth, the core is theorized to be ablut 500 miles in diameter, though Im sure that number would change based upon the calculations.
I wrote into my sci-fi universe a Dyson sphere that had several "micro suns" orbiting it, they were encased Neutron Stars that complimented that sphere's weaknesses. The thing is, I thought the Dyson sphere was original to me. I imagined it as a kid then a teen in the 80s and what the star empire would have to do to make it stable.
The hollow earth doesn’t say WE live on the interior, but that the crust is 800-1000 mi thick, and the glowing core (the “inner sun”) is floating in the center of the hollow space in the middle. Geophysics doesn’t account for the centrifugal forces pulling outward during the Earth’s formation, only the gravity pulling inward. I’d like to see the ratio of the centrifugal forces due to the spinning earth compared to the gravitational forces of its mass.
You should check out Isaac Arthur's channel. There's a lot of crossover between the topics they discuss. Isaac has a video that covers how it would be possible to build an artificial shellworld, like what Edmund Halle thought the Earth was. He has an entire playlist on building megastructures like Dyson spheres, shellworlds, and rungworlds.
you missed one possibility, a dyson sphere may not be entirely possible, but a dyson swarm? instead of the crust simply existing, its orbiting the sun, likewise this could be done for earth, just have a smaller mass core and thus less gravitational influence and then have the crust orbitting said core so each point of the shell is technically always falling
The closest thing to a "hollow" planet is gonna be an ocean world, or a world that once had a liquid ocean, before somehow having it "drained". This would probably lieave a big ice scaffold.
first off hollow earth is dumb but in your math in the beginning, you plugged in the numbers for our Sun aka Sol. The math from that paper asks for the size of the INNER hypothetical sun. You cant plug in Sol's numbers for the inner suns properties because the outer sun exceeds the size of the earth and would make your math wrong. maybe im mistaken if so please someone correct me :D
I watched this last night as I was drifting off, and I actually fell asleep with a smile on my face ^.^ Thank you for such wonderful content and good vibes!
When you say hollow shell I think less of a bowling ball like deal and more of a layered shell. If you consider each layer of the atmosphere a shell, the crust, the mantle and finally the planet core; then I would argue that yes we are in a layered shell. The idea of us floating around would require the same gravity and pressure to be applied from each direction, which would then, I think, would require each layer to be similar. But if instead of thinking we are in ' the center of a hollow object ' and instead between layers, I believe the argument of living both on a hollow planet, and in one that is actually layered both work out.
I love how you have this bigass room you go in to represent a greenscreen background but you only ever stand in the door frame because you want to show off that you can mask part of the gate over you
5:53 "If humans are right about any of these numbers..." Isn't the idea of Hollow Earth that conventional science is wrong about these? Like, our calculations for its size are kinda linked to how far they are away from us, no? Would it not work better to use something like the mass of the earth's core (as if that were the sun)? I'm not a phsyicist, this is a genuine question
More than anything I'm so happy that Kyle is getting this much support.
Me too! It's been incredible so far
@@kylehill Air feels fresher when you breath it a free man!
@@Maximum_Bacon not recently tho...all you get outside is corona...
@@Syde_Saffar It's droplet transmission, not airborne. Your more likely to come into contact with it inside a building than outside.
is the moon hollow?
Person 1: "The Earth is flat!"
Person 2: "It's a sphere. It's been proven by science. Repeatedly."
Person 3: "That's right. And it's hollow too!"
Person 2: "Ugh..."
Person 4: Define a sphere!
Person 2: * heavy sigh *
@@noiJadisCailleach Person 5: Technically, the Earth is not a sphere but what we call an oblate spheroid. The centripetal forces caused Earth's own rotation cause a slight bulge at the equator and local variations in crust density as well as perturbations in the surface causing more or less mass to be in an area cause further disruptions to a true sphere shape not to mention tidal bulges caused by both the moon and the sun......
Is it bad that I actually prefer person 5's response?
I thought it was a Rubiks cube
@Dude Bro is that 3 angels or a 3 sided Angel ?
The episode's just started, but I don't care: every bit of the vid is really well made! The animation, SFX, music; just: fantastic job!
Even the part where he said "slapped"?
@@mattauss7029 that's... That's the... Joke... Oh, hi hungry. Im dad.
256th like. Imma hex hack.
@@WaltRBuck nice.
Sheithann
Agreed
Does shell thickness affect this? If shell thickness is almost equal to the radius, it is still hollow?
If it can’t be hollow, can it be porous? If so, what is the maximum porosity?
Does size help? Can it be hollow if it is small enough?
Can you operate a hadron collider within a cold hollow core?
The thickness, as well as the hardness, strength, resilience, density, mass, distribution of the material and what is filling the hollow affect it, the same goes for if it were porous. Making a hollow ball of talcum powder is more difficult than an iron one. Size matters in a radius sense, but the small hole in something massive still has a high chance of collapsing. I only imagine a hollow planet if the shell had the above characteristics in the most improved form possible (pure diamond maybe???) or the interior was filled with something extremely dense that prevented collapse (like molten rock).
It can be hollow if a mass like a neutron star was central and accounted for space between it and the accretion shell
Sure, you disproved this theory. But what about the "Earth-Velociraptor" theory?
It’s impossible to disprove because it’s true
We dont talk about that
wait what?
I think I like the Earth-Chan theory better
I know your comment is largely in jest, but he didn't really "prove" or "disprove" much of anything. What he did was give scientific reasons why he believes he's right. He just reasonably disproved very specific theories where he's assuming he has all the data on how it works.
I'm not trying to argue in favor of hollow earth here, but people are becoming dangerously blind these days when the term "science" is being thrown around. If someone they perceive as an authority figure tell them something and that it's proven with science, people tend to stop any and all critical thinking and just accept it, and this is a really good example of that. I mean, heck, we're STILL teaching our kids the pyramids were the burial grounds for pharaohs in school for some reason. It's just crazy what people tend to accept just because they're told something by authority figures.
"...Edmond Halley of Halley's Comet..." Sounds like he's a member of a band. lol
That would be an awesome name for a band.
This idea was already stolen by Bill Haley and the Comets: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Haley_%26_His_Comets
kids these days... dont even know about Bill Haley and the Comets.
@@bipolarminddroppings I knew about Bill Haley and The Comets. Which probably why it rang a bell when "Edmond Halley of Halley's Comet" was mentioned. It's possible to have bands with similar yet different names, such as "The Who" and "The Guess Who" I don't think any copyright infringement would have happened.
Edmond Halley of halleys comet sounds like a muse cover band.
Because Science: (Uploads)
Kyle Hill: (Uploads)
I'm going with Kyle first
U again
I stopped watching because science entirely just not the same anymore.
Ikr
Are u a god
Those BS videos are more hollow now than hollow Earth theory.
1:16 oil floats on water
wait for it to rain
cover yourself in oil
float
You science well
Since atoms never truly ever touch, you are always floating. Just beware of clowns...
Human bodies already float in water even without being oiled up soooo yeaaa...
@@idunusegoogleplus I think he meant float in mid air due to rain.
yep us fatgirls float bb
I've always assumed that the hollow earth theory meant huge cave systems yet undiscovered. I didnt realize people thought it was hollow to the core. How big could an undiscovered cave system be?
I’d cite mammoth cave system.
There is a spherical space between the core neutron star and the inner surface
@@informedconsumer5293is there ? how come ?
@@maxanimator9547 think of the outer shell as being capstones brought together and they are prevented from collapsing any further toward the center…except the occasional sink hole (until all the earth is consumed or something else happens external to our planetary system)
Dyson was one of the greatest minds ever, the amount of things he contributed to doesn't get anywhere near the amount of recognition it should, big loss to humanity 😥
I especially like his vacuum cleaners 😁
i mean it was bound to happen. Sooner or later. Out with the old, in with the new is kinda important cause even brilliant minds eventually stagnate
@@anthonycoffey9412 be respectful man
He designed the Dysonspere that the Enterprise D encountered with the SS Genolen with Montgomery Scott onboard in transporter stasis. Star Trek TNG:S06E04 “Relics”
I hope humans never get the chance to abuse stars
I love how he says Jupiter as, "Jupe Jupe."
Jupuh jupe
*don't you?*
Big Jupe Jupe is a good boy
Jupa Jupe
Pretty sure Jupey Jupe is the proper Latin name
Why doesn't it surprise me that Kyle forgot to carry the decimals 6 times. He's usually so professional, but he said it and I thought " Ha, classic Kyle."
I'm going to call Jupiter Jup-a-Jup from now on
agreee.
I thought I gone coo coo when I first heard it.
@@Yuuni_Shiroza lol
Get ready for family members to roll their eyes at you!
jup a jup brain
"Planets are huge and roughly spherical.
.."
...SPHERICAL!!!
Roughly, yeah
SPHERICAL!!!
More precisely: oblate spheroids - at least the ones that rotate around their own axes.
No they're Flat and Hollow, because science.
More more precisely - oblate balls
It’s already proven to be exist. It’s the birth place of Titans like Kong and Godzila.
Boy get your pop culture references out of here
@@brianisme6498 Never! The Monsterverse geeks shall take over!
Yes
And Hitler is there too 😱😱😱
What about Middle Earth?
I honestly stopped watching Because Science and I am only following Kyle Hill, unsubbed to them and subbed to the Leader of the Facility, Kyle Hill
Count me too.
Ditto
ARGGHHH, I STILL CAN'T TELL WHETHER HE QUIT INDIGNANTLY OR GOT FIRED BY MORONS BUT WAS GLAD ABOUT IT.
Why did he leave?
@@xenomorphisisdilage472 Unknown at this time, and most likely we will never know as normally, even in other jobs, you don't talk about why you left the job to the general public. It shows that you are able to keep your mouth shut if Kyle does manage to get a special offering from somewhere to do something cool or is offered another job with a group of people he wants to work with.
Same logic as an interview, when someone in that interview ask you a question about " Why you left your previous job. " You never start talking down to your previous job, no matter how much you hated it, because it shows something about your character then anything else.
I'm having some Kong: Skull island vibes there
And Godzilla 2
Chaos147 ex
Same here
I've been waiting for him to talk about hollow earth because of Kong and Godzilla. He finally does but doesn't mention either. Oh well still a good vid.
TheMetalgod777
Indeed
This video got put in my recommendations after watching Kong v Godzilla.
Saaame
Your phone is definitely secretly recording audio ..where ever u r..it their way of marketing now
That should be proof that you are being spied on by TH-cam and Google.
With the release of Godzilla vs Kong, could you do an update to this video addressing the version of Hollow Earth theory used in those movies
4:10 I am surprised no one ever asked or mentioned, where does night come from? How does the sun rise and set happen if we lived inside a shell, with the sun/core being in the middle there? Is there a smaller half shell with holes rotating around the sun in a perfect sphere? If the sun is in the middle and is equal distance from everything then how does ice happen? Thank god for the law of gravity, or someone would have to try answering them.
Not a flat earther but spent one to many nights down the rabbit hole.
From my understanding they think the sun and moon are much smaller and closer to us. They still rotate but more on a 2D path. Kind of like a airplane flying around a city in a big circle.
@@opmus i think he meant the hollow earth model, not flat earth. I mean, both are clearly false but trying to explain day and night cycles, as well as seasons in a hollow earth might be even harder than on a flat earth model...
And where do the rockets go when we launch them?
"Is every planet solid" well I'll stop you right there. A large number are gas
Some are water
But the water and gas planets have a "solid" core.
He means are they empty in inside, like most people.
Ummm yea.... solid gas duh
Fun fact: the preasure on most gas giants are so great near the core that the gas is compresed into a solid state, or liquid depending on the preasure
"Face-timing in public without headphones"
Living in China at the moment, that's an unfortunate daily truth
Kyle: We at the laboratory dont need to get out of the lab so we dont get coronavirus
Kyle's next video starts outside.... XD
How do you know he is outside? He has a holographic chamber 😱
@@AndyErgo oh yea , but he was digging so cant be effects... Interesting
@@RampageRush Holodecks are able to make interactive holograms, including simulating matter being moved around. A.R.I.A. definitely has the processing power to give Kyle and The Facility a true working holodeck. But what nefarious things is Kyle planning on doing now that he has escaped his prison in the [redacted]
@@tassadar7945 I understand, what will be of our society if kyle has be freed and now he's able to go out into the world
Probably recorded before the shit hit the fan
The anti-gravity issue with the shell applies on a stationary shell.
If the shell is rotating, you will get centripetal force creating a gravity on the inner surface of the shell around its equator, which would dissipate as you head to the poles.
In such a scenario you would then want tunnels to the outer side of the shell for living on the outside near the poles to have gravity towards the shell.
8:13
If the shell's gravity cancelled out the gravity under our feet, then yes, we would float. But if the shell was spinning, then wouldn't the laws of centripetal force make an artificial gravity, meaning that you could walk on the ground?
I think he is talking about without spinning
My god man, good question. Toms twister at six flags ,spins and we get plastered to the wall like clothes in the washer on spin cycle.
That would only work at certain points tho, wouldn't it? Like, if the hollow earth spins around its own axis and you stand at one of the poles you wouldn't be effected by the centripetal force, right? Likewise, the artificial gravity would grow stronger the closer you get to the center.
I am far from being well versed in physics so correct me if i'm wrong here.
@@howielowis458 Yes, I think that you're right. I'm not sure if this is correct, but there is something called the Coriolis Effect, which is basically what you were talking about. A quick Google search says that it's how rotation affects things in different ways, so it changes the wind, the ocean currents etc.
I mean just saying but the weightlessness thing would've been true if we were living inside the inner part of the shell, not the outer part. Because we live on the outer part we would have the same gravitational pull it doesn't matter if it is hollow or solid. I'm not saying we live in a shell, but this definitely needs correction at 8:08 because we live in the outer part with our head pointing outwards whereas in video he is inside the shell with his head pointing towards the core not like the real life.
So, we’ve dug less than 0.2% of the radius of the earth.
Yes
Anyone mind explaining why is it so hard to dig deeper than that?
ZergRushLG temperature interferes with our current explosives iirc.
@@zrlg3241 because if you dig deeper than that you fall through dummy! Obviously every scientist, astronaut, world leader, pilot, anyone who has ridden on a boat, and everyone who ever looked at the horizon is in cahoots lieing to you because... Reasons?... yes reasons!
@AmplifiedSilence Is the difference in heat so big in only 12km?
One of my favorite things with the cup o science is how you explain what's going on and throw in the sciencey definitions as kind of a side note.
I'm surprised that Kyle didn't use the most basic of observable things: the path of the sun and the moon in the sky, and the horizon. In a hollow planet, it would be like standing in a giant bowl, and instead of sky at the edge we would see the world sloping up. But even forgetting about all that, another thing we know for sure is that the sun rises in the east and sets in the west. In the hollow earth model, with mankind living inside the shell, the sub would have to be at the center of the earth, and nobody would ever see it set. The moon would have to orbit the sun, and there would be no lunar phases.
A.R.I.A.'s "Heyooo" was the most adorable thing I've seen her do ^w^
Yay cute superintelligence!
What about hollow planets without stars in them, such as an Earth with more concentric spheroids inside of it, like in Jules Verne's Journey to the Centre of the Earth?
Just leaving a comment to boost the algorithm.
Maybe a reply would help?
Eh
I'll just put this here
Great idea! Just did the same
+
Count mine in
According to TH-cam's auto captions, your patreon is now /scishow and not /KyleHill
Kyle: "So, if you excuse me, by my calculation, I have about a hundred million more kilograms of ROCK to spoon. So, on your way, on you way."
Great video as always. Thank you.
Saw title, immediately thought of Star Trek TOS "For the World is hollow and I have touched the sky."
1:11 i was looking in my mirror fixing my hair scared the heck outta me
Cup o science...if I were to do that my wife would just yell at me.
This is the first time I've ever seen my name in a youtube video. Becoming a Patron was so worth it.
Appreciate the support brother!
Hey kyle, will you be doing a footnotes esque show with the facility in the future? Cuz I loved that sister show
Yeah, I missed that too much
While Digging, Kyle finally found the 9 realms and s rainbow bridge.
i feel like this was recommended to me bc i watched the godzilla vs kong trailer
Every time I hear A.R.I.A I hear the command zone. Did...did you super villain steal there announcer. Sweet
Plot Twist: A.R.I.A is actually Kyle's girlfriend.
This show really has that old school Bill Nye vibe to it and I love it for that. But also because Kyle is my favorite science boy.
A.R.I.A. Actively Restraint Intelligent Alien
I suspect it is a play on Jarvis (Just A Rather Very Intelligent System), but less omnipresent more like a digital assistant
A
Really
Intelligent
Assistant
A.R.I.A.
Travis Smith hmm A Really Interesting Acronym
@@phenomiclord261 Maybe.....
Unfortunately it’s darker than that, poor ARIA is not exactly.... free-will positive.
Artificial
Researching
Indentured
Assistant
Godzilla vs Kong is a pretty good looking example of it haha
On the topic of liquid rock. If you moved anything at a small enough level you can actually treat it like a liquid
Wow, the opening to this episode gave me huge Bill Nye vibes. I love it
Bill Nye the Gender Spectrum guy?
Bill Nye the not so sciency guy?
I feel Kyle is going to be the next Bill Nye my dude’s, change my freakin mind.
Was thinking the same thing.
@AmplifiedSilence For public facing science education, you only need to be smart enough.
For all of Bill's intelligence and training, you don't see him at "max power" on TV.
@AmplifiedSilence He really doesn't though...
@AmplifiedSilence Bill has a lot of honorary diplomas but he's only educated to be an engineer
Didn't they do a show together or was it someone else...
Wait. That's not how to make a hand sanitizer
u p you clicked on the wrong vid. The other one is still on because science.
r/
Which that video is going to do more harm than good. I couldnt imagine kyle making a video that irresponsible
Zac C Actually, I watched the video, and it matched what a registered nurse told me to do for Uber. They did their homework.
Just use vodka. Vodka killed 50-60% of bacteria, while antibacterial and normal soap killed only 20-30% of bacteria.
Love the video. The one bit I do quibble about is the idea that people inside the hollow world would be weightless. Distance is a big factor in gravity, so assuming that the gravitational pull of the opposite side of the sphere would cancel out the gravity of the part you are standing on is incorrect, I think.
“If you’ll excuse me...” totally channelling your inner Nye and I love it ❤️
Hey Kyle, I'm just curious. Are you going to do a "footnotes" like thing so you can answer our comments like you used to.
You should definitely do the flat Earth theory next seeing how it's making a comeback
I will fight you on this, all dwarf planets are planets. They have planet in the name. Viva La Pluto!
Maybe if the main planetary mass were rotating fast enough to not crush inward via. Centrifugal force? Though that might be more than lightspeed...
Or maybe if the material were compressed evenly enough to support itself, like a brick archway, but a lot more dense, and three-dimensional? Would that be possible, before we get to nuclear fusion levels of matter compression?
What If there was like a giant cavity inside of earth. I dont believe the whole earth is hollow but I do feel like there could be a cavity big enough to hold a whole ecosystem. There are just to many stories of civilizations that dwell within the earth to completely rule something like that out. Fantastic video though 10 out of 10 would watch it again
Can we officially change Jupiters name to Jupa-Jup?
Fr8monkey I second it.
I third it
Start the petition
Yeah. It is either that or Jupa-Juice. I could go either way between those two names
NO!
Maybe we are living in an ocean of home made hand sanitizer
Oh, this is where you were... thanks, TH-cam algorithm, for recommending me this.
I wouldn’t have realised you had moved channels without it...
When i think of hollow earth I think of the Godzilla hollow earth, like large caves and caverns connecting the different land masses. So not literally hollow it just has tunnels and caves interconnecting the planets land masses and oceans.
I'm glad TH-cam put Kyle in my algorithm. I wondered where his videos went.
Short answer: no, because gravity.
Love your videos, question though. Are you still gonna be giving out the title of super nerd. Not that I’m quick enough to ever get it, but I like thinking that I have the chance
That music slapped, but it didn't Slapp bAss. That's why.
OMG
Slap like *NOW*
And that's ILLEGAL
*ANGERY* noises
The Earth is indeed hollow and a giant monke lives at the center...
Obviously the cosmic rays interact with the molten, radioactive core to create gravity inversion fields, doy.
definitely suited for a certain hollow knight
"300 years later"
I'm so glad Kyle has chosen to use his superpower for good instead of evil.
This guy made an entire video to tell 1 joke. Well done sir.
5:30 You're failing to account for the primary source of gravity would be halfway through the mantle, in addition to our rather large moon, aiding in the support of the Earth's sell.
So unlike a solid planet, the hollow planet's pressure would be as its greatest halfway through the mantle, and not in the center.
A sattilite can orbit the Earth at 20000 miles away and experience zero gravity.
If the mantle is 500-1500 miles deep like in Leonhard Euler's model, then that least a potential 5000-7000 miles of space inside the Earth, meaning *gravity varies greatly.*
In other words, the dyson sphere equation assumes there is a large mass in the center, whilst in the Hollow Earth, the core is theorized to be ablut 500 miles in diameter, though Im sure that number would change based upon the calculations.
Try putting zero for the mass of the sun on that equation and see what you get.
I immediately thought of the collapsing planet on the game Outer Wilds. I always wondered what Kyle thoughts would be on the game.
Man I'm loving this show
Keep it up kyle! Love the content.
I wrote into my sci-fi universe a Dyson sphere that had several "micro suns" orbiting it, they were encased Neutron Stars that complimented that sphere's weaknesses.
The thing is, I thought the Dyson sphere was original to me. I imagined it as a kid then a teen in the 80s and what the star empire would have to do to make it stable.
The hollow earth doesn’t say WE live on the interior, but that the crust is 800-1000 mi thick, and the glowing core (the “inner sun”) is floating in the center of the hollow space in the middle. Geophysics doesn’t account for the centrifugal forces pulling outward during the Earth’s formation, only the gravity pulling inward. I’d like to see the ratio of the centrifugal forces due to the spinning earth compared to the gravitational forces of its mass.
Good to see Kyle!
“Intellectual lad Isaac Newton” 😜 not a smart boi anymore?
God I hope that Nerdist doesn't have a trademark on that. That would just be the icing on the cake of suck
My money is on that they do...
I like Lad better anyway, reflects on Newton's origin better :)
like Pluto isn't a planet
Ran Wolf dwarf planet!
Oh yeah my favorite science channel
You should check out Isaac Arthur's channel. There's a lot of crossover between the topics they discuss. Isaac has a video that covers how it would be possible to build an artificial shellworld, like what Edmund Halle thought the Earth was. He has an entire playlist on building megastructures like Dyson spheres, shellworlds, and rungworlds.
@@Talenel awesome thank you I'll check it out 😎👍
you missed one possibility, a dyson sphere may not be entirely possible, but a dyson swarm? instead of the crust simply existing, its orbiting the sun, likewise this could be done for earth, just have a smaller mass core and thus less gravitational influence and then have the crust orbitting said core so each point of the shell is technically always falling
Okay but now you've made me want to make a Skypunk Gravity-less fantasy setting inside a planet.
Really diggin your own channel Kyle! Love how your personality hasn't changed from Because Science. Keep on "rockin" haha.....anyone? No? Dang it
Who is here after seeing Godzilla vs Kong ??
Me!
2:12
At least not yet. I know you're working on that. 😉😉
The closest thing to a "hollow" planet is gonna be an ocean world, or a world that once had a liquid ocean, before somehow having it "drained". This would probably lieave a big ice scaffold.
Woah I'd only seen recent vids of Kyles and didn't realize how much he's transformed his body for the better
I missed him :(((( I’m glad I found this channel!
first off hollow earth is dumb but in your math in the beginning, you plugged in the numbers for our Sun aka Sol. The math from that paper asks for the size of the INNER hypothetical sun. You cant plug in Sol's numbers for the inner suns properties because the outer sun exceeds the size of the earth and would make your math wrong. maybe im mistaken if so please someone correct me :D
Thats exaxtly what he did lol
@@UltimatePowa thank you. I must have missed something. I will re watch this video and determine what made me say this, then I will readdress it😁✌️
Hey Kyle, love the show!
Are you gonna do footnotes like because science?
I watched this last night as I was drifting off, and I actually fell asleep with a smile on my face
^.^ Thank you for such wonderful content and good vibes!
It looks like ceres has a bit of protomolecule.
Missed opportunity to say _"let's get spherical"_ smh 😔
Edit: also, anyone else get a YT recommendation of a 3-yr old video of kH's anime waifu? 🤣
Ralph Arambe I think she voices ARIA
no, but i did get a video of him doing makeup tutorials w/gf
So I'm not the only one. Weird that it only started popping up once he left BS.
When you say hollow shell I think less of a bowling ball like deal and more of a layered shell.
If you consider each layer of the atmosphere a shell, the crust, the mantle and finally the planet core; then I would argue that yes we are in a layered shell. The idea of us floating around would require the same gravity and pressure to be applied from each direction, which would then, I think, would require each layer to be similar.
But if instead of thinking we are in ' the center of a hollow object ' and instead between layers, I believe the argument of living both on a hollow planet, and in one that is actually layered both work out.
"There's a lot of people beneath my feet"
Kyle shows us where he hid the bodies
Yes. It’s called the underdark and walking fungi and aboleths live there
I love how you have this bigass room you go in to represent a greenscreen background but you only ever stand in the door frame because you want to show off that you can mask part of the gate over you
5:53
"If humans are right about any of these numbers..."
Isn't the idea of Hollow Earth that conventional science is wrong about these? Like, our calculations for its size are kinda linked to how far they are away from us, no? Would it not work better to use something like the mass of the earth's core (as if that were the sun)?
I'm not a phsyicist, this is a genuine question
Yes, but when actually attempting to do so it falls apart. But yeah you got the right idea of the point of all this.
I was going to say, bold of Kyle to assume that hollow earthers believe in gravity.
I just watched his girlfriend video and got kinda scared by how different he was off camera...
who's his girlfriend ?
They're waiting for you Kyle, in the tesst chamberrr...
You asume people, who believe in hollow earth, believe in gravity.