Neat trick. It's like placing your hand on the wall and removing it but the opposite. The sun heats the wall behind and the shadow allows it to cool enough to be measured by the thermal imager.
The person didn’t die. The video is a demonstration of thermal radiation. It’s just a person standing in front of a wall on a sunny day, and a camera that detects thermal radiation.
Sad thing and scary thing about it is that in Hiroshima any object that was in the way of the blast was imprinted onto its background, including ladders, windowpanes, water main valves and bicycles not only people 😨
The shadow remaining is more accurately how it looked before the radiation hit, it’s called Radiation heat transfer and we (everyone) encounters it everyday. It mainly applies to the existing conversion of radiation to heat and the shadow is essentially dust and dirt not being blown or burned away. The warmth we feel from the Sun into the Earth is an example of Radiation heat transfer. This video likely depicts the Radiation from the sun in a very hot place, you’d have this happen more easily visible in places like Death Valley though you’d see this pretty much anywhere that gets higher than 35+ degrees Celsius (95+ Fahrenheit). Ergo this isn’t deadly it’s just hot, and 99.9% of radiation isn’t Ionizing which is the deadly variety
It’s not actually a shadow. Where the “shadow” is, is what the wall looked like before. The rest of the wall got bleached by the radiation. The same thing happened with the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The shadows of people and objects like cars and bicycles where left behind after the blasts. Absolutely terrifying when you think about it.
Bruh it's not radiation omfg... This is literally heat, thermal radiation, this video was filmed with a thermal camera, and the “Shadow” is just a spot that is cooler than the rest.
@@greengringolr Source: Simple phyisics and the video is literally called thermal radiation shadow... And who tf has a face that black? Also yeah, you would be correct about the atomic bombs, but that has nothing to do with this.
You guys do realise this is not an example of vaporisation shadows "like Hiroshima". this is an example of infrared temperature imaging, as the man stands still the heat created by the sunlight is unable to reach the area that we see as a shadow. When the man walks away after a while, there is a significant difference in temperature between the area that was in the shadow and the area that wasn't. the previously shadowed part would be indistinguishable from the rest of the wall to the naked eye, but the infrared thermal camera would still perceive the "shadow" due to the difference in temperature, the shadow would in this case just be the colder spot on the wall.
So would the shadow eventually fade away? Because of the area heating back up, or, theoretically speaking, there are shadows everywhere that we just can't see with the naked eye? Which these shadows would most likely be distorted due to all the movement of course. Now THAT would be cool to see as well.
@@BronzeApostle yes eventually as the surface reaches a temperature equilibrium with it's surrounding the shadow will fade. It is essentially just a way of visualising temperature, the hotter a surface the more infrared light is given off and the brighter it appears on an infrared camera. Theoretically, yes there are invisible shadows everywhere, as we only really see an incredibly narrow field of the radiation spectrum which we call visible light. However all sources of radiation are a form of "light" it is simply invisible, therefore shadows can be produced by any type of invisible therefore with the correct equipment shadows would be visible everywhere.
@@snow..243 no problem mate, I personally find it insane how little people question that statement; they are just perfectly willing to believe a guy knowingly exposed himself to enough radiation to cause death just for a cool 10 second clip. It's scary how gullible and unwilling to do even the slightest amount of research most people are; especially in a day and age where doing research is the easiest it has ever been in the history of human kind and takes little more than a minute. I appreciate someone taking the time to reflect on how ridiculous the "death thing" is and trying to understand what is actually happening by looking for more coherent explanations like you did, so cheers.
I think no body knows about this video, actually this video is captured on a infrared camera, which captures pictures by sensing infrared radiation, which is not cancerous at all. I don't know why is everyone talking about hiroshima and nagasaki
I'm assuming they talked about those because those had similar shadows all around from the blast. it's similar, just not the same so it reminds people of that i suppose.
These ominous shadows appeared on objects after the atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The people whose shadows were cast were vaporized. Only their shadows gave any clue they were once standing there.
Their was radiation everywhere and if they were instantly vaporized how the fuck is it gonna be long enough for that radiation to make a shadow. Spreading false facts.
@@rastaastablasta1383 It amazes me how people can't do the smallest amount of research before showing everyone their ignorance, because they think they "know things," when clearly they do not. For your viewing pleasure: th-cam.com/video/Rj1gNrQ4HRA/w-d-xo.html
So I don't know if anyone else remembers this as a kid. I am 38 years old and when I was really young, I am talking about 5-8 years old, I remember being in class at school and there was a demonstration in science class where the students got to participate in an experiment with a similar outcome to this video, in regards to leaving a shadow. We had a projector like mechanism that was rolled into the classroom on wheels similar to what the teachers would use and a large roll down screen in front of the chalk board and we would put our hand on the device and make shapes and it would leave behind our shadow on the screen. It was like an x-ray machine.
This is my video, taken with a FLIR GF320. That camera operates in the mid-wave IR band, specifically between 3.2 and 3.4 micrometer wavelength and is designed to detect Hydrocarbons (Methane, Ethane, Butane, Propane, etc). The video was taken to demonstrate the effects of thermal radiation. The was was in steady state (emitting the same thermal radiation as it was absorbing) until Tom, a former colleague, cast his shadow. The area in shadow waas now not absorbing as much radiation as it was emitting, therefore it cooled. Everything creates a thermal shadow of it creates a visual shadow. Lots of misinterpretation out there by commenters.
For people who dont get it, it is not a black and white camera but a thermal one this "experiment" was to test the camera's quality, the man was places in front of a heat gun and the shadow just remained as a cooler area because the heat was blocked by his body. No one was hurt and he didnt die.
This is actually thermal imagery test, no radiation involved. The shadow is cold left behind the light source that provides heat, therefore appearing dark to the thermal sensor.
My Dad was in the USAF and he visited Hiroshima many years after the war, when he witnessed these shadows. RIP all those who perished and all those left in such horror to suffer. 🙏
But it is not really his shadow that stays. A shadow is the the absence of light . It is just a difference in temperature on the wall that this camera can see. You cant see this effect with your bare eyes, can you?
Wasn't it rather simply that the colors in the video have been inverted? Fun stuff ;)! So probably this ist actually a fluorescent wall..would explain the weird darkness of shown Person and the fact that the shadows in his face are lighter
To be honest, I think the 'light' part in the shadows on his face are actually highlights from the sun. It's not uncommon when doing experiments around thermal shadows to pain an object either white or black to affect the emissivity and absorptivity of the object. Soot, for example, is highly absorptive and is considered very close to a 'black body' in properties. Since they're experimenting with thermal radiation, having the subject absorb the light and heat will create a much stronger shadow behind it. Basically, he won't have to stand there exposed to thermal radiation for a long time to create the same effect. If you want to know what happens to human bodies and their shadows when exposed to intense thermal radiation strong enough to leave behind an immediate and long-lasting shadow, you need look no further than the atomic bomb. Of course, no one wants to expose themselves to that fate for the sake of a cool science video, so this will have to do. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_Shadow_Etched_in_Stone
It’s not a fluorescent wall at all? It’s a regular wall that has been heated up by the sun, the shadow cools down the area enough to show up on the thermal camera.
Good guess! It's actually just filmed with an infrared camera. His body is blocking the sun from heating the wall which allows it to cool where his shadow lies. Tye camera is able to pick up that small difference in temperature so his "shadow" sticks to the wall. If the video were longer you'd see it return to normal in about 30 seconds
Two shadows in the first photograph, one of which is the genuine shadow and the other is the thermal shadow. Heat is transmitted at the speed of light via radiation. Casting a visible light shadow also casts a thermal shadow, which disturbs the process. The human is plainly apparent in the video blocking the sun's heat from being absorbed by the wall. The combination of this, a cooling breeze, and a clear sky aid in the cooling of the wall.
Disclaimer: this is not radiation heat at all. This is just thermal imaging, the camera recording this is capable of recording thermal negatives, the shadow is a cooler region and it will fade out in a few minutes as it gains temperature. The person is not exposed to radiation
Fpr the people talking about radiation, hiroshima and all thatt stuff. This is not technically the same, the description talks about sun heat and they are using thermal camera
I'm no physics expert, but knowing how shadows are formed, it's probably something similar to tanning, like, the area that was covered by the man/ the shadow formed in the area retains the actual colour of the wall and the colour of the area around it changes ? I'm most likely wrong and I'd love to receive the actual explanation to this phenomenon or I can't sleep... So here I leave my comment.
not all radiation is bad - this guy is just outside in the sun, when he casts a shadow less heat energy (transmitted via infrared radiation) is transmitted to the blocked segment of the wall so it decreases in temperature, as seen by the thermal camera also 2 more weirdly common misconceptions about this video: he’s not wearing a radiation suit black is just the colour things not too hot go in a thermal camera , and he did not die 10 days later he literally took a video out in the sun
Bruh, this is legit just a showcase of how if you block line of sight between an object and a source of heat (the sun in this case), you create a sort of thermal shadow. Drama baiting at its finest, it’s seriously just a thermal camera.
Similar. The thermal radiation (heat) from the sun is heating up the white areas , the shadow the man casts blocks the sun's energy from that particular spot. The thermal camera used picks up the heat on the wall as white, and the absence of heat as the "shadow". Like the spray of paint analogy the man is blocking the "spray" of energy from the sun.
The guy didn’t die. They have a youtube and still upload videos. It’s called Infrared Training Centre. Stop using your headcanon to make it seem scarier 😂
It's Thermal Radiation Comes from Sun 😅 and That's why this man wear Black totally to absorb 99% light from sun and that leads a shadow mark on wall 😂 Dumb people thought it's a Nuclear Radiation 😆
So! This is pretty wrong. This is not radiaton the way people are thinking it is and this man did not pass away. This is an example of a thermal shadow. The camera is an old sort of infrared/heat camera so when he holds his arm up and allows the sun to heat the wall everywhere except for his shadow, the shadowed area remains cold and thus shows up darker on the camera. While sunlight is technically a form of radiation- this has nothing to do with radiation in the form of nuclear radiation like people are thinking.
@@NightRiderxzthe man in the video isn’t slotin. Some guy in the comments section used to work with the infrared training center and apparently knew this guy, but that’s beside the point because nobody died
These cameras have adjustable "temperature" scales on them. The guy operating the camera set it to look at things hotter than 100° or so. As a result the guy looks cold (skin temps at about 93°f) and the wall which is heated by the sun looks hot. 😊
@@charlottearenaHe did not. He's standing in the sun, in front of a wall. He is being filmed with a bloody thermal camera. Read the description of the video. This is not Louis Slotin. This is a modern video, filmed with a modern camera. Lousi Slotin died in 1946 and was neither testing or killed by fucking sunlight.
Neat trick. It's like placing your hand on the wall and removing it but the opposite. The sun heats the wall behind and the shadow allows it to cool enough to be measured by the thermal imager.
So it’s not Radiation
@@user-yx3mf7mg8y It is very deadly radiation, but he got a suit on so he's fine.
@@fsh8025 in one video it claims man had died after 10 days
@@user-yx3mf7mg8y All light is radiation.
Mans literally died a few days later
there was so many of these shadows in hiroshima.
those are different
Shut up you don't know anything
Yeah so sad
@@danieloshea3326 u shut up nerd
@Regan Chapman yes I bully dem 'erds
The person didn’t die. The video is a demonstration of thermal radiation. It’s just a person standing in front of a wall on a sunny day, and a camera that detects thermal radiation.
He died days later
Oh makes sense
@@thegerman662 Proof? Source?
@@the.true.A some random TH-cam shorts video
@@neurozenith73 most of em are fake lol
Sad thing and scary thing about it is that in Hiroshima any object that was in the way of the blast was imprinted onto its background, including ladders, windowpanes, water main valves and bicycles not only people 😨
So it was just like copy and paste :v
I wish someone. Nukes america. About time they get a taste of nagasaki and hiroshima.
@@myrealnameismichael 💀
Yeah that’s kinda sad seeing these shadows. Like a picture was taken.
Where did you get this information? Please tell me.
The shadow remaining is more accurately how it looked before the radiation hit, it’s called Radiation heat transfer and we (everyone) encounters it everyday. It mainly applies to the existing conversion of radiation to heat and the shadow is essentially dust and dirt not being blown or burned away. The warmth we feel from the Sun into the Earth is an example of Radiation heat transfer. This video likely depicts the Radiation from the sun in a very hot place, you’d have this happen more easily visible in places like Death Valley though you’d see this pretty much anywhere that gets higher than 35+ degrees Celsius (95+ Fahrenheit). Ergo this isn’t deadly it’s just hot, and 99.9% of radiation isn’t Ionizing which is the deadly variety
It was filmed in new Hampshire iirc
The man in the video died. That's all I've got to say.
@@RyanStonedonCanadianGaming yes, Louis Slotin died because of the demon core accident not this video.
It’s not actually a shadow. Where the “shadow” is, is what the wall looked like before. The rest of the wall got bleached by the radiation. The same thing happened with the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The shadows of people and objects like cars and bicycles where left behind after the blasts. Absolutely terrifying when you think about it.
Bruh it's not radiation omfg...
This is literally heat, thermal radiation, this video was filmed with a thermal camera, and the “Shadow” is just a spot that is cooler than the rest.
@@GOTTHEDAWGINME source trust me bro…
Either way what I said about the Atomic bombs being dropped is correct so…
@@greengringolr Source: Simple phyisics and the video is literally called thermal radiation shadow... And who tf has a face that black?
Also yeah, you would be correct about the atomic bombs, but that has nothing to do with this.
@@GOTTHEDAWGINME aaah I misunderstood never mind bro
@@greengringolr It's ok
You guys do realise this is not an example of vaporisation shadows "like Hiroshima". this is an example of infrared temperature imaging, as the man stands still the heat created by the sunlight is unable to reach the area that we see as a shadow. When the man walks away after a while, there is a significant difference in temperature between the area that was in the shadow and the area that wasn't. the previously shadowed part would be indistinguishable from the rest of the wall to the naked eye, but the infrared thermal camera would still perceive the "shadow" due to the difference in temperature, the shadow would in this case just be the colder spot on the wall.
This
So would the shadow eventually fade away? Because of the area heating back up, or, theoretically speaking, there are shadows everywhere that we just can't see with the naked eye? Which these shadows would most likely be distorted due to all the movement of course.
Now THAT would be cool to see as well.
@@BronzeApostle yes eventually as the surface reaches a temperature equilibrium with it's surrounding the shadow will fade. It is essentially just a way of visualising temperature, the hotter a surface the more infrared light is given off and the brighter it appears on an infrared camera. Theoretically, yes there are invisible shadows everywhere, as we only really see an incredibly narrow field of the radiation spectrum which we call visible light. However all sources of radiation are a form of "light" it is simply invisible, therefore shadows can be produced by any type of invisible therefore with the correct equipment shadows would be visible everywhere.
thanks buddy! I will use your comment under posts on the Internet that say that the person in the video has died.❤
@@snow..243 no problem mate, I personally find it insane how little people question that statement; they are just perfectly willing to believe a guy knowingly exposed himself to enough radiation to cause death just for a cool 10 second clip. It's scary how gullible and unwilling to do even the slightest amount of research most people are; especially in a day and age where doing research is the easiest it has ever been in the history of human kind and takes little more than a minute. I appreciate someone taking the time to reflect on how ridiculous the "death thing" is and trying to understand what is actually happening by looking for more coherent explanations like you did, so cheers.
I think no body knows about this video, actually this video is captured on a infrared camera, which captures pictures by sensing infrared radiation, which is not cancerous at all. I don't know why is everyone talking about hiroshima and nagasaki
FR ITS SO CONFUSING like why is everyone saying he died 10 days later he literally went outside
I'm assuming they talked about those because those had similar shadows all around from the blast. it's similar, just not the same so it reminds people of that i suppose.
It’s a thermal camera. The dark “shadow” is just the cooler area that was blocked by the guys body while the rest was heated.
These ominous shadows appeared on objects after the atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The people whose shadows were cast were vaporized. Only their shadows gave any clue they were once standing there.
Bs
Their was radiation everywhere and if they were instantly vaporized how the fuck is it gonna be long enough for that radiation to make a shadow. Spreading false facts.
@@rastaastablasta1383
It amazes me how people can't do the smallest amount of research before showing everyone their ignorance, because they think they "know things," when clearly they do not. For your viewing pleasure:
th-cam.com/video/Rj1gNrQ4HRA/w-d-xo.html
@@rastaastablasta1383 lol Mr tappout is a chicken
Yeah it’s sad. As if they had a picture taken at their death as they pretty much died instantly.
So I don't know if anyone else remembers this as a kid. I am 38 years old and when I was really young, I am talking about 5-8 years old, I remember being in class at school and there was a demonstration in science class where the students got to participate in an experiment with a similar outcome to this video, in regards to leaving a shadow. We had a projector like mechanism that was rolled into the classroom on wheels similar to what the teachers would use and a large roll down screen in front of the chalk board and we would put our hand on the device and make shapes and it would leave behind our shadow on the screen. It was like an x-ray machine.
I miss those things
i think they have one of theirs in ripley’s believe it or not
This is my video, taken with a FLIR GF320. That camera operates in the mid-wave IR band, specifically between 3.2 and 3.4 micrometer wavelength and is designed to detect Hydrocarbons (Methane, Ethane, Butane, Propane, etc). The video was taken to demonstrate the effects of thermal radiation. The was was in steady state (emitting the same thermal radiation as it was absorbing) until Tom, a former colleague, cast his shadow. The area in shadow waas now not absorbing as much radiation as it was emitting, therefore it cooled. Everything creates a thermal shadow of it creates a visual shadow.
Lots of misinterpretation out there by commenters.
For people who dont get it, it is not a black and white camera but a thermal one this "experiment" was to test the camera's quality, the man was places in front of a heat gun and the shadow just remained as a cooler area because the heat was blocked by his body. No one was hurt and he didnt die.
too many people get hoax information about this guy
ikr?? lmfao
0:52 "I've got the power!"
This is actually thermal imagery test, no radiation involved. The shadow is cold left behind the light source that provides heat, therefore appearing dark to the thermal sensor.
Hello everyone, this is YOUR daily dose of internet.
Whats the name of the gentlemen in the video?
My Dad was in the USAF and he visited Hiroshima many years after the war, when he witnessed these shadows. RIP all those who perished and all those left in such horror to suffer. 🙏
Yeah fvck your dad.He the reason they are shadows in Hiroshima.
@@HAL-lz7jj Wtf chill man it's not like he ordered the military to drop the nukes
This is thermal radiation
Not nuclear
They we're all brainwashed, and the nukes prevented more blood shed.
@@Inferdesu same concept
But it is not really his shadow that stays. A shadow is the the absence of light . It is just a difference in temperature on the wall that this camera can see. You cant see this effect with your bare eyes, can you?
His "shadow" is the absence of heat that the Thermal Camera is picking up. Can't be seen by the naked eye
"Hey what are we doing today? "
"Testing things out huh?. Why are you all wearing masks tho"
Oh damn he stayed there for too long. I thought this was fake but now I'm having second thoughts
Shadow doesn't show thumb which kinda irritated me.
They should give this guy a few days off, he's looking a little brown from too much sun.
Radiation exposure
"lets use a object"
"nah tom said he wants to volunteer"
Wasn't it rather simply that the colors in the video have been inverted? Fun stuff ;)!
So probably this ist actually a fluorescent wall..would explain the weird darkness of shown Person and the fact that the shadows in his face are lighter
To be honest, I think the 'light' part in the shadows on his face are actually highlights from the sun. It's not uncommon when doing experiments around thermal shadows to pain an object either white or black to affect the emissivity and absorptivity of the object. Soot, for example, is highly absorptive and is considered very close to a 'black body' in properties. Since they're experimenting with thermal radiation, having the subject absorb the light and heat will create a much stronger shadow behind it. Basically, he won't have to stand there exposed to thermal radiation for a long time to create the same effect.
If you want to know what happens to human bodies and their shadows when exposed to intense thermal radiation strong enough to leave behind an immediate and long-lasting shadow, you need look no further than the atomic bomb. Of course, no one wants to expose themselves to that fate for the sake of a cool science video, so this will have to do. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_Shadow_Etched_in_Stone
It’s not a fluorescent wall at all? It’s a regular wall that has been heated up by the sun, the shadow cools down the area enough to show up on the thermal camera.
This is recorded by a UV camera which is why it looks weird. Guessing
@@ShortyMcDan I’m confused, because then why are there shadows from the atomic bombs
the man in this video literally died few days after this shot because of the radiation
his soul was left behind on the wall.
Nah just some tempture difference the wall is hot the shadow made it cold the only radiation in this vid is like the radiation from the sun
There’s an internet myth going around that this guys dead lmaooooo
Ikr people are stupid
I still see your shadows in my room
I know the science
Banksy got a few new tricks up his sleeve
Legend says that that the shadow is still standing
its just a thermal heat being portrayed from the guys body which is hot onto that thing that has a special fabric
Good guess! It's actually just filmed with an infrared camera. His body is blocking the sun from heating the wall which allows it to cool where his shadow lies. Tye camera is able to pick up that small difference in temperature so his "shadow" sticks to the wall. If the video were longer you'd see it return to normal in about 30 seconds
Two shadows in the first photograph, one of which is the genuine shadow and the other is the thermal shadow. Heat is transmitted at the speed of light via radiation. Casting a visible light shadow also casts a thermal shadow, which disturbs the process.
The human is plainly apparent in the video blocking the sun's heat from being absorbed by the wall. The combination of this, a cooling breeze, and a clear sky aid in the cooling of the wall.
つぶろ民よ正直に手を上げなさい
ハイ
Disclaimer: this is not radiation heat at all. This is just thermal imaging, the camera recording this is capable of recording thermal negatives, the shadow is a cooler region and it will fade out in a few minutes as it gains temperature. The person is not exposed to radiation
I like how its just a sunny day and people are acting stupid, its a thermal camera hes not having millions of radiation shot at him, its just
It's not harmful it's just a thermal camera.
I couldn't breath toward the end...just certain that shadow was going to animate.
Fpr the people talking about radiation, hiroshima and all thatt stuff. This is not technically the same, the description talks about sun heat and they are using thermal camera
What are they wearing?
Did they make thermal cameras when this was made
Of course. It's only 12 years old.
It is giving me chills
Me too
In fact his shadow will stay for several
He cooled off a part of the wall with his shadow. Why does anyone think this is interesting?
People see radiation and think nuclear for some reason. Doesn't help that it went viral and people said he died from radiation poisoning lol
A bug flew by, RIP
That is horrifying…I am only left to wonder now about what the shadow is made out of to be imprinted there in permanence…
I'm no physics expert, but knowing how shadows are formed, it's probably something similar to tanning, like, the area that was covered by the man/ the shadow formed in the area retains the actual colour of the wall and the colour of the area around it changes ?
I'm most likely wrong and I'd love to receive the actual explanation to this phenomenon or I can't sleep... So here I leave my comment.
@@gotnoideaforaproperusernam8122 I was thinking that too
its just less light from the sun hitting it, so it gets cooler
not all radiation is bad - this guy is just outside in the sun, when he casts a shadow less heat energy (transmitted via infrared radiation) is transmitted to the blocked segment of the wall so it decreases in temperature, as seen by the thermal camera
also 2 more weirdly common misconceptions about this video: he’s not wearing a radiation suit black is just the colour things not too hot go in a thermal camera , and he did not die 10 days later he literally took a video out in the sun
SubhanAllah, it's mentioned in Quraan ❤
Does anyone know his name or are we just all making assumptions that he died a week later? lol.
He didn't die
LMAO why does everyone believe everything they see online. these comments are too funny
“Shouldnt we just use a mannequin”
“nah”
The shadow have be blocked from hiroshima.
This non-ionizing radiation called infrared with a wavelength of about 10 to the -3 power of meters
Litteraly A video almost every shorts youtuber uses
Is this considered cosplay?
"hey lets use a mannequin."
*"nah I got a better idea"*
Why would you use a mannequin for this experiment, what?
@@_thisnameistaken why wouldn't you use a mannequin.
@@hyperadam1804 what? this isnt dangerous in any way
@@_thisnameistaken yeah I know but why wouldn't you use a mannequin
@@hyperadam1804 I just really dont understand your point. you don’t need one and people are easier to work with
Turin Shroud?
Thermal Camera with grey scale?
Correct
Yes
Good info
cool shadow....
😄
orgins of this?
FLIR. It's and infrared camera
was I the only one waiting for the shadow to move?
He didn’t die from that
Bruh, this is legit just a showcase of how if you block line of sight between an object and a source of heat (the sun in this case), you create a sort of thermal shadow. Drama baiting at its finest, it’s seriously just a thermal camera.
The unlucky homeless guy: I wish I weren't a shadow
Here's a question. What happens if you remove the wall
Then there won't be a shadow
Duh
so its like people sprayed paint on the whole area but the place where the dude standing remain unchanged cuz he blocked the spray?
Similar. The thermal radiation (heat) from the sun is heating up the white areas , the shadow the man casts blocks the sun's energy from that particular spot. The thermal camera used picks up the heat on the wall as white, and the absence of heat as the "shadow". Like the spray of paint analogy the man is blocking the "spray" of energy from the sun.
@@Babywithagun2222 thank you that make a lot of sense
Anyone know the name of the man?
Another commenter said he worked for the infrared training center and his name was Tom. No way to fact check this though
The shadow:yo bro u forgot me, get back here
Is there any information on the person in the video!?
...what do you want to know?
Holy fuck read the description before commenting please
The guy didn’t die. They have a youtube and still upload videos. It’s called Infrared Training Centre. Stop using your headcanon to make it seem scarier 😂
Infrared training center is a company but you're correct. He didn't die.
Quran (25:45) Have you not seen how your Lord spreads the shade? If He will, He could have made it stationary; instead, We have made the sun its pilot
It's Thermal Radiation Comes from Sun 😅 and That's why this man wear Black totally to absorb 99% light from sun and that leads a shadow mark on wall 😂 Dumb people thought it's a Nuclear Radiation 😆
exactly ahsdhashdahsdh🤣
Rip for that guy who died after doing this i think his shadow died there itself
The only reason I don't believe you is because you used like 1000 emojis
@@Hotdoggeroni he is correct, but the man wasnt wearing black, he looked black because of the camera they used (dark=cool, white=hot)
@@Hotdoggeroni I wouldn't believe a person who thinks 3 is close to 1000.
So! This is pretty wrong. This is not radiaton the way people are thinking it is and this man did not pass away. This is an example of a thermal shadow. The camera is an old sort of infrared/heat camera so when he holds his arm up and allows the sun to heat the wall everywhere except for his shadow, the shadowed area remains cold and thus shows up darker on the camera.
While sunlight is technically a form of radiation- this has nothing to do with radiation in the form of nuclear radiation like people are thinking.
dude few days later after the video he died 💀
Search it up Louis slotin he died from radiation sickness in 1946
@@NightRiderxzthe man in the video isn’t slotin. Some guy in the comments section used to work with the infrared training center and apparently knew this guy, but that’s beside the point because nobody died
@@0173addkHe did not. He is standing in sunlight in front of a wall and being filmed with a thermal camera.
@@NightRiderxzThis video is not from 1946, that should be very, very, very obvious.
RIP
He's not dead
U can't see this through naked eyes
Infrared energy entered the chat
Class 10 hindi meh kyu ligtha hu chapter .?
Why does his skin look like that? is that the infared camera doing that?
It is indeed an infrared camera
These cameras have adjustable "temperature" scales on them. The guy operating the camera set it to look at things hotter than 100° or so. As a result the guy looks cold (skin temps at about 93°f) and the wall which is heated by the sun looks hot. 😊
This poor dude died days later 😮😮😮😮
He didn't die. All he did was go outside and stand in the sun.
The person died after few days
He's fine. He was just standing outside in the sun.
this is actually creepy
I wanna know how that works so I can do some researching in to it
wouldnt u do some researching to know how it works?
They just used a thermal camera
Well go research how it works 🤣
Thermal camera: gives different color/shades according to the temperature.
@@TS-cs2pe There are different types of thermal, FLIR doesnt show colors.
Rip to the guy that was doing this experiment he died within a few days after this
Holy fuck. Can I get the name?
@@InternalRevenueServices i forgot the persons name but i know someone made a video of him saying that he died a few days after filming this video 😢
@@franzbenzon5240 Is there proof?
@@InternalRevenueServices I don't think it's true that he died
Cause most of the TH-camrs are shits
@@franzbenzon5240 Is there proof?
Ill try this at home
If we got John cena here we could finally see what he looks like
That's what 4670kg of democracy do, but at a slightly stronger intensity...
what type of magic is that!!
“haha bro time to scare my friends”
few days later he died of radiation
Wdym no he didn't
@@fearmxrcyx2974he did
@@justshutit11he most definitely did not die.
Meanwhile in summertime rendering:....
looks like a bansky painting
The shadow looks like Hi*ler
hitler?
Where was this done
New Hampshire.
Just asking is this guy ok (did he get the big C)
He's fine. He was just standing outside in the sun.
Bruh, he just use an infrared camera
cool metaphor
RIP to the guy 🕊️
He didn't die
3 days later@@perdedor3571
@@charlottearenaHe did not. He's standing in the sun, in front of a wall. He is being filmed with a bloody thermal camera. Read the description of the video. This is not Louis Slotin. This is a modern video, filmed with a modern camera. Lousi Slotin died in 1946 and was neither testing or killed by fucking sunlight.
Why are you having a go at me for?? I am not only one who said he died@@yubomir
@@charlottearena I've said it to a bunch of people here, not just you.
He died 3 days after this cisco was taken
This is false