But.... It's the stuff around that nothing that makes it colorful, or at least the interfaces between them and nothing. A thin slice of nothing between air is not colorful.
Yea, it's kind of a philosophical sentence. a lot of them seem absurd up until the moment you can relate. Then your like, "oh my gosh, this whole time" I like to find meaning in words instead of discarding them like trash. Especially when it's something you know makes sense and you can make a meaning of it.
It's because it is absurd. You aren't seeing the 'color of the layer of nothing'. You're seeing the same principle he just explained happening between the two inside edges of the glass plates.
Don't care,plus I make better content I was just joking 👑 king,you are worth more than your looks and sometimes it's okay to be ugly❤never give up Was joking again you are good looking Nah I don't think so,that's a joke as well😂 Don't take my comment seriously it's a joke😂
"A thin slice of nothing is colorful" strangely poetic because it means even though our life is mundane, at the very core it is very beautiful and as stated colorful.
this principal is also used in manufacturing optics / lenses. the bands are called fringes and their size, space from eachother and concentricity can be used to measure surface quality, radius or flatness of a surface. i got pretty used to looking at these patterns daily when i worked in CNC optics. pretty cool stuff. for anyone more curious, the measuring process we used was laser interferometry. :D
@@CharlemagnePetrieAt that it's just the light interfering with itself as it bounces back and forth between the glass. The "nothing" is simply the "really thin"
Using this phenomenon, thin films (100s of nanometer thin) can be measured by eye. Accuracy might be somewhat lacking but it's a neat trick when eyeballing silicone oxide growth
This will come in so handy all the times I'm growing silicone oxide in my day to day. I'm so tired of feeling like the silicone oxide is going nowhere (much like me, an avid silicone oxide cultivator).
True, I installed a new ALD machine to grow aluminum oxide films and the color of the reaction chamber changed over time. But this is not very practical for films with only a few nanometer thickness, these are transparent
@@thatonespooder1513bro I started questioning myself that too 😂 honestly it took me 20 seconds staring at the wall 😂 but as a person who loves literature, I appreciate every word especially some sentences that doesn't even make any sense 😂 it's just that you gotta find the meaning of it for yourself, depending on how you see it
it's not beautiful or poetic, or even interesting(because it's nonsensical, and there is little novelty in nonsense beside the fact that it IS nonsensical). it's pathetically unintelligent to rave over such a simple sentence. i can think of rather significant things which you probably don't consider poetic in the slightest. but hey, we cannot all be intelligent. it's ok.
Whilst poetic, wouldn't the surfaces of the glass being close together be doing the reflecting (the inner glass surfaces act like the outer surfaces of the bubble?) here and not the air/vacuum?
There is no difference, the first surface reflects some light and refracts the rest, which then reflects off of the inner surface. The phenomenon is called thin film interference.
Yes, but the medium between the two pieces of glass is necessary for this effect, whether this medium is a vacuum or air or something else. Need the different speed of light on the medium between the two glass surfaces to refract the light ray that reaches the second surface. So when it reflects back to your eyes it is slightly different than the reflection of light from the first glass surface. Creating this interference pattern.
With the bubble, you have 1 kind of surface with 2 faces. With the air and the glass, you technically have 2 kinds of surface and 4 faces: two glass surfaces contacting the air, and two air surfaces contacting the glass. This makes it confusing because it’s unclear which of the two surfaces in the 2nd case is doing the reflecting. I would think it’s the glass doing the reflection, so then of course the air and the vacuum result in a similar effect - but only because neither of them obscure the reflective effect caused by the two glass surfaces. Am I missing something ?
@@josepedro335Probably because it comes across as super "uhm actually" and kind of annoying, like when someone says black is their favorite color and someone else points out black isn't a color. Everyone understood what he meant. There's no need for meaningless corrections
@@AverageSeaMonster In this case I think it's different because it can be misleading. It makes people think that nothing as a color, while nothing is nothing, it can't have a color
@@josepedro335 It's not really different though. It takes two seconds of thought for someone to understand that him saying the slice of nothing is colorful isn't accurate. I promise you, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure this out. This video doesn't need people pointing out what is pretty obvious
@@AverageSeaMonster When a video is made with an educational tone, people will often believe anything. You'd be surprised at how often an "uhm actually" is completely necessary
Once you learn of thin film interference you’ll notice it in a lot of unexpected places. Like blued steal. Or when a crow or raven flies by and the sun hits it just right and its black plumage turns iridescent blue. Well most birds really. And lots of insects use this physical property to give them color without pigment. Like butterflies.
Many of the animal examples you provided are actually interference, but not thin film interference. They are usually more akin to the way opalescence works.
@@sophiophileis it true about what mentioned in the beginning of this short that a colorful bubble is because air trapped between two layers of water? Isn't it because the thin film interference between the oil layer of the soap and water? Please answer
@@mudkip_btwis it true about what mentioned in the beginning of this short that a colorful bubble is because air trapped between two layers of water? Isn't it because the thin film interference between the oil layer of the soap and water? Please answer
I'm not usually a fan of Shorts, but am always glad to check out ones from the action lab. The titles are straight to the point, and in the limited time he has he always shows some cool, self contained phenomenon or tidbit. Hell yeah! :D
These are called moire lines and are a pain when you have old camera film youre trying to scan - if the film is up against glass then you get these unsightly bands in the scan.
not exactly, while a moire pattern looks similar it actually refers to two misaligned grids. you'll see this if you take a photo of a screen where the grid of pixels will be misaligned with the camera sensors' grid
Newton Rings get removed by using Anti-Newton Glass, which are lightly etched on one side to deform the surface enough to prevent this but with minimal effect on image quality.
So i made precision optics for 14 years, and if you have a piece of glass that is a known flatness or curve, you can use this (or at least a similar ) method to find the the flatness of another piece of glass in relation to the first
So i already add a reply to this, idk where it went. But it was just a family business, we made them for all sorts of thing. They're in more than you would expect
What’s important here is not really what’s between the slices of glass. We see colors because of the interference between light rays that are reflected by interfaces which are separated by distances around the order of the wavelength. In any interface that separates regions of different index of refraction, you will get what’s called Fresnel reflection.
depends what you mean @@sogga_fan i meant that those bits of info are often interesting, and varied in a way that feels rewarding to curious folk, i'm not comparing full vsauce episodes to his shorts, that would be unfair. it's a different format and intention - but the drive to share lesser known facts and shed light into things we don't normally pay attention to is clearly there
@@oowazhe doesn’t do enough research and gets things wrong all the time, also he does pointless things that confuse people just to get a clickbait title(like putting this in a vacuum) Also he has no testosterone and I can’t stand him
Same effect happens with double glazed units called Brewsters Fringe generally when the unit is composed of the same thickness glass can also happen when there's a Argon leak. Pretty cool. Great video!
“A thin slice of nothing is colorful”. This quote can be used for so many philosophical terms or phrases lol, like how even if u have nothing in life and feel empty and drained you still have something. In some way it brings a whole new meaning to “enjoy the little things in life” as even the small and often pointless things can bring joy and or can be seen as beautiful.
THERE ARE "THINGS YOU CAN'T SEE", JOUSUKE... THEY'RE SOMETHING THAT DOES NOT "EXIST" IN THIS WORLD... BUT THE FACT THAT THEY DON'T "EXIST" MEANS THAT THEY CAN GO BEYOND REASON! THEY'RE "DIFFERENT FROM THE VISIBLE SOAP BUBBLES AT YOUR FINGERTIPS".
"Air and vacuum have a similar refractive index..." I know what you mean, but it is really to hear you refering to low to almost 0 density area as being made of some material called vacuum. It is basically rate the speed of light travels through a region of sapce taken up by/surrounded by matter, and since the air barely changes that "speed", it works about thd same.
How does vacuum refract? I would have thought since there was nothing for the light to bounce off of, it would not refract. Would the light be bouncing off of the second layer of glass, instead?
@@lolwtnick4362 light is all you can see. That's what eyes do, they detect light. You can't reflect what you can't see. That wouldn't make sense. Reflecting light outside of the visible spectrum not withstanding
Refraction happens at the interface of two mediums. That medium can be a vacuum. The reflection isn’t just happening on the glass it’s happening due to the interface between the glass and the rarified air (vacuum).
@@ActionLabShorts That makes sense. I guess it’s confusing because generally we assume that things that are plainly visible are surrounded by air or something of similar refractive index and thus omit it from communications even though it is relevant. This creates a situation where “thin film of x substance” is a relatively complete communication while “thin slice of air” is missing the context of glass surrounding it. If you were to refer to a standard optical prism as “a triangular prism consisting of not-air” then you might get comments saying “but you didn’t mention the glass..”
I like how he draws parallels. I get bubbles are colorful, but I never knew why, nor did I know that a piece of tape on glass was colorful for the same reason!
@24kanthony what's the point of this comment? Are you hoping to change both my thought process and the conclusion I draw from it? Because if so, you failed miserably. That means I can only assume you did this to exert some form of power over someone random, and that you perceive to be wrong or insignificant, because you are so insecure and beat down emotionally and spiritually on your own day to day life. Do better homie. Comments like these make it look as tho you have an ugly soul. Maybe you do, but I hope not
@@24kanthonybased on what. Since you said that you must be very knowledgeable about science yet you provide no proofs of anything while using biases to put out false assumptions
@@24kanthonyPerfectly true ! These videos are only apparently scientific, in reality they are made for "fun". Today's man must be "entertained" in all ways, including by force !
In the lab, we were supposed to put a thin glass plate on a cell counting chamber (thick piece of glass) for the microscope by rubbing it on the glass surface of the chamber. If we saw the colored rings on the sides of the chamber, the plate would stick on it and now we could add our cell suspension onto the chamber, it would be pulled into the chamber by capillary force, because there is a small gap between chamber and glass plate.
A thin slice of nothing is colourful
- a wise man
2023
This is so deep.
My new favorite quote 🎉
Atreyu... SAY MY NAME!
My ass hurts
-Sun tzu
But.... It's the stuff around that nothing that makes it colorful, or at least the interfaces between them and nothing.
A thin slice of nothing between air is not colorful.
"A thin slice of nothing is colorful" sounds like one of those sentences designed to be absurd.
Sounds like a reverse trick question: what colour is nothing?
Yea, it's kind of a philosophical sentence. a lot of them seem absurd up until the moment you can relate. Then your like, "oh my gosh, this whole time" I like to find meaning in words instead of discarding them like trash. Especially when it's something you know makes sense and you can make a meaning of it.
It's because it is absurd. You aren't seeing the 'color of the layer of nothing'. You're seeing the same principle he just explained happening between the two inside edges of the glass plates.
Nothing doesn't exist
@@Mark-zj7hnHow can something exist without the pretext of nonexistence?
This guy is literally putting everything in the vacuum chamber. The bond between him and the vacuum chamber is unbreakable.😂😂😂
some may say it's airtight
@@Caio-og4ig mf I was about to say they better put that relationship in there to test its reaction but damn you never mind 😭💀
Talk smack about the chamber..
YOU GET IN THE CHAMBER
lmao
Don't care,plus I make better content
I was just joking 👑 king,you are worth more than your looks and sometimes it's okay to be ugly❤never give up
Was joking again you are good looking
Nah I don't think so,that's a joke as well😂
Don't take my comment seriously it's a joke😂
You may even say the bond is vacuum-sealed
"A thin slice of nothing is colorful" strangely poetic because it means even though our life is mundane, at the very core it is very beautiful and as stated colorful.
wonderfully said
Not everybody's life Is mundane
only if there is light
Nah Bro they talking about wave optics
Literature teachers be like:
Bro just explained my screen protector that I’m watching this through
Yep
Nope. Screen protectors aren't that thin. It is coated in something that is that thin.
They are if your screen protector is nano liquid
@@inifin8they're referring to the air gap between the screen protector and the actual screen
@@inifin8the air in between the phone and the screen protector makes colors when you put it on 🙃
"Thin Slice of Nothing" sounds like an album title
Pink Floyd album, no less lol
Sounds simolar to slice of heaven
@@thefuzzmanwas just about to say the same thing!
@@thefuzzman Totally accurate.
1st song: Colorful
this principal is also used in manufacturing optics / lenses. the bands are called fringes and their size, space from eachother and concentricity can be used to measure surface quality, radius or flatness of a surface. i got pretty used to looking at these patterns daily when i worked in CNC optics. pretty cool stuff.
for anyone more curious, the measuring process we used was laser interferometry. :D
Principle.
I was looking for someone to comment about lenses, scopes and optics!
What's the name of his school 😂😂
A Thin Slice Of Nothing could be a sick album from an alternative metal band
"Brooo have you *seen* this??"
"Haha- dude that's _nothing_ "
nothing compared to this sick as hell RAILGUN!!!!!
Why does this sound like an asdfmovie gag?
@@skylarthecat213hmm I bet it doesn't work nehehehehe
@skylarthecat213 also is it supposed to be that colour?
@@thatonedude-tf3vj *EXPLODES!!!!!!*
A Thin Slice of Nothing sounds like an incredible art film
fr
yeah
or a sick midwest emo band!
true lol@@azuretone8575
no it sounds like a Squidward artwork
Alternative title: thin slice of my father
Your father exists. You wouldn’t exist without him. Be happy he’s still there. Even if you can’t see him.
A thin slice of nothing would be a sick name for a band
Debut album “Is Colorful”
im in a band and now u just gave me an idea for a name lol
@@malizedits I was gonna suggest it to my mates, but you can have it :)
@@endodouble6691 thanks
Bro sliced air
😆
He didn’t, someone else did. He bought the nothing off of amazon
Greatest thing since sliced bread
@@CharlemagnePetrieok
@@CharlemagnePetrieAt that it's just the light interfering with itself as it bounces back and forth between the glass.
The "nothing" is simply the "really thin"
"A thin slice of nothing is colorful" sounds poetic
why do people repost comments
@233j, because they havent touched grass
@@233jthey just feel like
@@233jWhen given a limited amount of content to react to, it's pretty common to quote the same crap
@@233jYou probably freak when you see a sentence in quotation marks, followed by an opinion
My hourly pay in a nutshell
I had to check to make sure "A Thin Slice of Nothing" wasn't a Pink Floyd album
A thin slice of nothing. That's what I got for my birthday
That's...depressing
...b...but was it colorful?...
for your zeroeth birthday
There's still Christmas for more nothing
I got an IOU for Christmas. I'm going to pretend that it's better than nothing.
"A thin slice of nothing is colorful" yep I want that on a shirt
Wait a minute how about space?
@@user-zc9jq6qw1nspace just looks like nothing
"a thin" @@user-zc9jq6qw1n
Why did you make this so terrifying
A thin slice of nothing sounds like an art piece
Waiter : so what will you be having for dessert?
Me : oh you know just a thin slice of nothing
😂😂😂 this!
😂
I think were on the same diet plan
Fancy restaurant that only serves cubes and foam
"It's only a waffer theen!" - John Cleese, The Meaning of Life
A thin slice of nothing sounds like what Panera bread is serving up.
And then they make up for it by giving u a drink with soo much caffeine it can kill a man 👀
@@DommyMommyTGirl 😂
A 90% sugar slice of bread called an artisnal sandwich with a price tag of $66 coming right up
It'll be $11.99
Remember when mickey mouse were broke and he served a thin slice of nothing to his homies.
صل على النبي ، واستغفر اللهصل على النبي ، واستغفر الله😊
Using this phenomenon, thin films (100s of nanometer thin) can be measured by eye. Accuracy might be somewhat lacking but it's a neat trick when eyeballing silicone oxide growth
This will come in so handy all the times I'm growing silicone oxide in my day to day. I'm so tired of feeling like the silicone oxide is going nowhere (much like me, an avid silicone oxide cultivator).
@billywerber9117 that is so specific I love it, and wish you all the best with your silicone oxide farming
Yeah they use this phenomenon in optical flats using single wavelength light
True, I installed a new ALD machine to grow aluminum oxide films and the color of the reaction chamber changed over time. But this is not very practical for films with only a few nanometer thickness, these are transparent
@@Satori_kunWhy do you do this? How did you get started?
Why is "a thin slice of nothing is colorful" such poetry
Edit: uM aCtuaLLY iTs nOt pOeTiC beCauSe [science reason] aNd aLsO [art theory reason]
Kind of spooky! Maybe it's more about the glass pieces????
Could make it a metaphor for… something…?
@@rion7088 "Even you have a personality"
It's oddly comforting tbh
Because on the deepest levels of existence you are nothing, a very colorful nothing.
At least that's the part of me that went: 😌😏
I read the title and immediately thought it was Vsauce
Sometimes I think about mid-evil presents and if wizards were just time travelers
every yt short i see of him is changing my perspective on life
Same ikr
Bro kills the shorts game in science communication for sure. One of my favorite users of this format hands down
"A thin slice of nothing", sounds like my life in a nutshell
.... Except for the colorful part
Damn... hope you're doing alright man.
sorry but can we just compare the first and second reply💀
Careful, æther is a deadly thing to mess around with
he really got a slice of
"A thin slice of nothing is colorful" - most beautiful thing I've heard on TH-cam all year.
@@thatonespooder1513bro I started questioning myself that too 😂 honestly it took me 20 seconds staring at the wall 😂 but as a person who loves literature, I appreciate every word especially some sentences that doesn't even make any sense 😂 it's just that you gotta find the meaning of it for yourself, depending on how you see it
Bro you commented this on January. Of course it’s the most beautiful thing you heard all year.
that's such a mindfck
it's not beautiful or poetic, or even interesting(because it's nonsensical, and there is little novelty in nonsense beside the fact that it IS nonsensical). it's pathetically unintelligent to rave over such a simple sentence. i can think of rather significant things which you probably don't consider poetic in the slightest. but hey, we cannot all be intelligent. it's ok.
@@3valen9I like cats.....
Whilst poetic, wouldn't the surfaces of the glass being close together be doing the reflecting (the inner glass surfaces act like the outer surfaces of the bubble?) here and not the air/vacuum?
Exactly 👍 Like the outer vs inner parameter of the soap bubble
There is no difference, the first surface reflects some light and refracts the rest, which then reflects off of the inner surface. The phenomenon is called thin film interference.
Yes in fact we are constantly surrounded by innumerable thin slices of nothing through which light often penetrates without similar effect.
Yes, but the medium between the two pieces of glass is necessary for this effect, whether this medium is a vacuum or air or something else. Need the different speed of light on the medium between the two glass surfaces to refract the light ray that reaches the second surface. So when it reflects back to your eyes it is slightly different than the reflection of light from the first glass surface. Creating this interference pattern.
With the bubble, you have 1 kind of surface with 2 faces.
With the air and the glass, you technically have 2 kinds of surface and 4 faces: two glass surfaces contacting the air, and two air surfaces contacting the glass.
This makes it confusing because it’s unclear which of the two surfaces in the 2nd case is doing the reflecting.
I would think it’s the glass doing the reflection, so then of course the air and the vacuum result in a similar effect - but only because neither of them obscure the reflective effect caused by the two glass surfaces.
Am I missing something ?
Bro finna go beyond
"nothing is colorful"
vs
"nothing is colorful"
the slice isn't colorful, the container the slice is in is
Yes! I thought of that, but I was surprised when I didnt see anyone else talking about it!
@@josepedro335Probably because it comes across as super "uhm actually" and kind of annoying, like when someone says black is their favorite color and someone else points out black isn't a color. Everyone understood what he meant. There's no need for meaningless corrections
@@AverageSeaMonster In this case I think it's different because it can be misleading. It makes people think that nothing as a color, while nothing is nothing, it can't have a color
@@josepedro335 It's not really different though. It takes two seconds of thought for someone to understand that him saying the slice of nothing is colorful isn't accurate. I promise you, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure this out. This video doesn't need people pointing out what is pretty obvious
@@AverageSeaMonster When a video is made with an educational tone, people will often believe anything. You'd be surprised at how often an "uhm actually" is completely necessary
Once you learn of thin film interference you’ll notice it in a lot of unexpected places. Like blued steal. Or when a crow or raven flies by and the sun hits it just right and its black plumage turns iridescent blue. Well most birds really. And lots of insects use this physical property to give them color without pigment. Like butterflies.
Many of the animal examples you provided are actually interference, but not thin film interference. They are usually more akin to the way opalescence works.
Butterfly wings have photonic crystals, which have strongly color-dependent reflectivity, not thin film interference
@@sophiophileis it true about what mentioned in the beginning of this short that a colorful bubble is because air trapped between two layers of water? Isn't it because the thin film interference between the oil layer of the soap and water? Please answer
@@mudkip_btwis it true about what mentioned in the beginning of this short that a colorful bubble is because air trapped between two layers of water? Isn't it because the thin film interference between the oil layer of the soap and water? Please answer
@@mudkip_btwcan you explain about photonic crystals and how they are able to produce a single wavelength of light without a pigment ?
I'm not usually a fan of Shorts, but am always glad to check out ones from the action lab. The titles are straight to the point, and in the limited time he has he always shows some cool, self contained phenomenon or tidbit. Hell yeah! :D
bro just explained my childhood😭
These are called moire lines and are a pain when you have old camera film youre trying to scan - if the film is up against glass then you get these unsightly bands in the scan.
Both irritating and beautiful
not exactly, while a moire pattern looks similar it actually refers to two misaligned grids. you'll see this if you take a photo of a screen where the grid of pixels will be misaligned with the camera sensors' grid
@@cbeomjun ah, everyone I know who talks about the film effect calls it the moire lines. Good to know!
Newton Rings get removed by using Anti-Newton Glass, which are lightly etched on one side to deform the surface enough to prevent this but with minimal effect on image quality.
So i made precision optics for 14 years, and if you have a piece of glass that is a known flatness or curve, you can use this (or at least a similar ) method to find the the flatness of another piece of glass in relation to the first
@@BobMunden-fw5yv it's a family business
@@BobMunden-fw5yv Either he worked for some experimental physicists, probably astronomers (telescopes), or he's not allowed to tell us.
Squid games
So i already add a reply to this, idk where it went. But it was just a family business, we made them for all sorts of thing. They're in more than you would expect
_"A thin slice of nothing is colorful."_
If only I was thin...😊
i love learning about things i can’t comprehend
That’s just the AT field
Must been an Angel...
Hold up, let's wait for the Blood Type analysis.
@@Dexuz It's back, Blood Type Blue, we're in for trouble
dont ruin it
thanks, I always thought those colors were due to petrol based products either in the bubbles or the pieces of pvc etc.. the more you know
loll so did i for the longest time
So gasoline in a puddle of water looks colorful because it's a very thin layer of something?
Yes, it's the same function. Google tells me the oils and water wind up in thin layers.@@shadesilverwing0
@@shadesilverwing0 Yup! It doesn't mix with the water, so you get a very thin layer of gasoline or oil on top of the water.
So remember, if you ever think you are nothing you are always still full of wonder
I bet that thin slice of nothing has more taste than our cheese
What’s important here is not really what’s between the slices of glass. We see colors because of the interference between light rays that are reflected by interfaces which are separated by distances around the order of the wavelength. In any interface that separates regions of different index of refraction, you will get what’s called Fresnel reflection.
Thank you, his explanation made no sense
"Some colours get removed so you get colours"
Wise words
Even nothing is beautifully colored. Value yourself, you are worth everything.
Gay
@@UponTheShadows Yes, and married.
@@UponTheShadowsgotta be a pretty sad person to project your closeted homosexuality on an innocent and inspiring comment like that lil bro 💀
@@Bone_Incidents congrats bro
@willham1427 Technically nothing can be proven to be real so yeah.
"a thin slice of nothing" completely sums up sharing food with siblings
“A thin slice of soap”
bro trapped nothing💀
Bro made nothing visible 💀
why skull emoji ??
@@anshswaroop6849💀💀💀
@@anshswaroop6849
gen z and a's "laughing so hard i am dying" emoji.
@@UH-60_Blackhawk I thought it was for dark jokes and sarcasm
I thought maybe we would see a slight shift in the bands as you pumped out the air.
Honestly I was seeing that
I would argue the vacuum wasn’t able to totally remove the air from between the two pieces of glass
My sister: I'm a colorful person!
Me: you're nothing. *showing video*
My sister: ⚰️ *burrying my coffin*
A thin slice of air
- my phone’s screen protector
"near" perfection is infinitely flawed
“Ayo get me a cheese with NUTIN!”
“Thin slice of nothing”
Reminds me of fancy restaurants
He's essentially explaining the thin film coating method for lens design that is used in most advanced modern optics.
This channel has some of the most insightful tidbits of info, rivaling vsauce even, great stuff
sorry but nowhere near as good as vsauce
depends what you mean @@sogga_fan i meant that those bits of info are often interesting, and varied in a way that feels rewarding to curious folk, i'm not comparing full vsauce episodes to his shorts, that would be unfair. it's a different format and intention - but the drive to share lesser known facts and shed light into things we don't normally pay attention to is clearly there
@@oowazhe doesn’t do enough research and gets things wrong all the time, also he does pointless things that confuse people just to get a clickbait title(like putting this in a vacuum)
Also he has no testosterone and I can’t stand him
“A thin slice of air”
3 slices in between the cheeese and ham please
You’re so close to 700K subscribers!!!!
That last bit is just cursed I'm calling the police
Please explain
@@hoshimaruhajime7933 I'd guess it's just weird to think about "nothing" being colorful
“A thin slice of nothing” sounds like a fire song
A rhin slice of nothing is something id like to see weaponized. Throwing nothing, hyah!
Same effect happens with double glazed units called Brewsters Fringe generally when the unit is composed of the same thickness glass can also happen when there's a Argon leak. Pretty cool.
Great video!
Ah yes, I should definitely be watching this instead of doing the work I’ve been putting off all week 🤣
oh shit it's the bodybuilding guy
Lol
Respect to Mr peacekeeper. He really sounds like a sincere guy 🤝
sounds like patrick screaming. when you hear it you cant unhear it
His best friend is the vacuum chamber at this point 😂
“A thin slice of nothing is colorful”. This quote can be used for so many philosophical terms or phrases lol, like how even if u have nothing in life and feel empty and drained you still have something. In some way it brings a whole new meaning to “enjoy the little things in life” as even the small and often pointless things can bring joy and or can be seen as beautiful.
Or if your a skinny blac-
my brain is not braining
"Thin slice of nothing" would make a good album
It's like a catchy song that your sick of hearing and it gets stuck in your head. 😭
Also, light waves are electromagnetic waves so they are visible in a vacuum.
That is, in fact, what makes it colourful in the first place.
THERE ARE "THINGS YOU CAN'T SEE", JOUSUKE...
THEY'RE SOMETHING THAT DOES NOT "EXIST" IN THIS WORLD...
BUT THE FACT THAT THEY DON'T "EXIST"
MEANS THAT THEY CAN GO BEYOND REASON!
THEY'RE "DIFFERENT FROM THE VISIBLE SOAP BUBBLES AT YOUR FINGERTIPS".
I started cracking up once he, of course, mentioned “vacuum chamber” 😂
“It gets its energy by people dying near it”
Guys I think The Egg predicted Sculk-
"Air and vacuum have a similar refractive index..." I know what you mean, but it is really to hear you refering to low to almost 0 density area as being made of some material called vacuum. It is basically rate the speed of light travels through a region of sapce taken up by/surrounded by matter, and since the air barely changes that "speed", it works about thd same.
How does vacuum refract? I would have thought since there was nothing for the light to bounce off of, it would not refract. Would the light be bouncing off of the second layer of glass, instead?
well you have to figure out what light IS and ISNT. maybe it's reflecting what you can't see like off gravity.
@@lolwtnick4362 light is all you can see. That's what eyes do, they detect light. You can't reflect what you can't see. That wouldn't make sense. Reflecting light outside of the visible spectrum not withstanding
Yeah it’s the glass that is doing the reflecting. Cool concept, wonky explanation
Refraction happens at the interface of two mediums. That medium can be a vacuum. The reflection isn’t just happening on the glass it’s happening due to the interface between the glass and the rarified air (vacuum).
@@ActionLabShorts That makes sense. I guess it’s confusing because generally we assume that things that are plainly visible are surrounded by air or something of similar refractive index and thus omit it from communications even though it is relevant. This creates a situation where “thin film of x substance” is a relatively complete communication while “thin slice of air” is missing the context of glass surrounding it. If you were to refer to a standard optical prism as “a triangular prism consisting of not-air” then you might get comments saying “but you didn’t mention the glass..”
I’m baked rn and this looks fye
"I am nothing without you !"
"Oh so you're colorful"
“GO BEYOND”
It’s not nothing, it’s space
literally the patterns I see when I close my eyes
If Lovecraft were alive today he’d write a book about this
Thats happens with my phone case! I goes all around the phone and theres this piece of plastic or something covering the screen so it protects it.
dude ur videos r always the best, thanks for bein u n doin what u do man
Gappy be like
I like how he draws parallels. I get bubbles are colorful, but I never knew why, nor did I know that a piece of tape on glass was colorful for the same reason!
I spent half of the time watching this video questioning my education
Especially these comments yo
If I were a science teacher I would just tell kids to watch this channel all day
And your students would do poorly, because they watched click bait videos that give an improper explanation of what's happening.
@24kanthony what's the point of this comment? Are you hoping to change both my thought process and the conclusion I draw from it? Because if so, you failed miserably. That means I can only assume you did this to exert some form of power over someone random, and that you perceive to be wrong or insignificant, because you are so insecure and beat down emotionally and spiritually on your own day to day life. Do better homie. Comments like these make it look as tho you have an ugly soul. Maybe you do, but I hope not
@@24kanthonybased on what. Since you said that you must be very knowledgeable about science yet you provide no proofs of anything while using biases to put out false assumptions
@@24kanthonyPerfectly true ! These videos are only apparently scientific, in reality they are made for "fun". Today's man must be "entertained" in all ways, including by force !
@@kujojotarostandoceanman2641 What a bewildering, weak, and tiny response
Poetic, even.
A thin slice of nothing would be an awesome babys name
Is this dude a physicist chemist or biologist? I genuinely can’t tell
"How would you like your sandwich bread sir?"
"Thin slice of nothingness..."
In the lab, we were supposed to put a thin glass plate on a cell counting chamber (thick piece of glass) for the microscope by rubbing it on the glass surface of the chamber. If we saw the colored rings on the sides of the chamber, the plate would stick on it and now we could add our cell suspension onto the chamber, it would be pulled into the chamber by capillary force, because there is a small gap between chamber and glass plate.
"a thin slice of nothing" is oxymoronic. Cannot divide 0