The Bizarre Behavior of Rotating Bodies

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  • čas přidán 18. 09. 2019
  • Spinning objects have strange instabilities known as The Dzhanibekov Effect or Tennis Racket Theorem - this video offers an intuitive explanation.
    Part of this video was sponsored by LastPass, click here to find out more: ve42.co/LP
    References:
    Prof. Terry Tao's Math Overflow Explanation: ve42.co/Tao
    The Twisting Tennis Racket
    Ashbaugh, M.S., Chicone, C.C. & Cushman, R.H. J Dyn Diff Equat (1991) 3: 67. doi.org/10.1007/BF01049489
    Janibekov’s effect and the laws of mechanics
    Petrov, A.G. & Volodin, S.E. Dokl. Phys. (2013) 58: 349. doi.org/10.1134/S102833581308...
    Tumbling Asteroids
    Prave et al. doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2004...
    The Exact Computation of the Free Rigid Body Motion and Its Use in Splitting Methods
    SIAM J. Sci. Comput., 30(4), 2084-2112
    E. Celledoni, F. Fassò, N. Säfström, and A. Zanna
    doi.org/10.1137/070704393
    Animations by Ivy Tello and Isaac Frame
    Special thanks to people who discussed this video with me:
    Astronaut Don Pettit
    Henry Reich of MinutePhysics
    Grant Sanderson of 3blue1brown
    Vert Dider (Russian CZcams channel)
    Below is a further discussion by Henry Reich that I think helps summarize why axes 1 and 3 are generally stable while axis 2 is not:
    In general, you might imagine that because the object can rotate in a bunch of different directions, the components of energy and momentum could be free to change while keeping the total momentum constant.
    However, in the case of axis 1, the kinetic energy is the highest possible for a given angular momentum, and in the case of axis 3, the kinetic energy is the lowest possible for a given angular momentum (which can be easily shown from conservation of energy and momentum equations, and is also fairly intuitive from the fact that kinetic energy is proportional to velocity squared, while momentum is proportional to velocity - so in the case of axis 1, the smaller masses will have to be spinning faster for a given momentum, and will thus have more energy, and vice versa for axis 3 where all the masses are spinning: the energy will be lowest). In fact, this is a strict inequality - if the energy is highest possible, there are no other possible combinations of momenta other than L2=L3=0, and vice versa for if the energy is the lowest possible.
    Because of this, in the case of axis 1 the energy is so high that there simply aren't any other possible combinations of angular momentum components L1, L2 and L3 - the object would have to lose energy in order to spin differently. And in the case of axis 3, the energy is so low that there likewise is no way for the object to be rotating other than purely around axis 3 - it would have to gain energy. However, there's no such constraint for axis 2, since the energy is somewhere in between the min and max possible. This, together with the centrifugal effects, means that the components of momentum DO change.

Komentáře • 19K

  • @joedaly6887
    @joedaly6887 Před 3 lety +1041

    As a carpenter for over fifty years I've recognized this behavior with flipping of a hammer because I early on decided to teach myself to juggle hammers. I tried to prevent the twist-flip with absolutely no success. It became clear there was more stability in working with the flip instead of against it. This explanation is such a relief! I thought it was a personal curse. Now I realize hammers are the perfect object to demonstrate this motion because they, unlike tennis rackets, have no symmetry about any axis!

    • @johnpossum556
      @johnpossum556 Před 3 lety +32

      You just got defective hammers.🤣

    • @joedaly6887
      @joedaly6887 Před 3 lety +46

      @@johnpossum556 additional evidence: rip claw configuration in hammers produce more consistent axial twisting.

    • @pmcgee003
      @pmcgee003 Před 3 lety +5

      Once again ball pein better than claw hammer. 😀 😉

    • @alsteiner7602
      @alsteiner7602 Před 3 lety +5

      @@joedaly6887 that has been my experience flipping a straight claw for years--it never rotated about the intermediate axis. Very east to flip

    • @jamespppyacek342
      @jamespppyacek342 Před 3 lety +9

      Yeah. Same here. Carpenter. Hammer. Flipping.

  • @davidking2846
    @davidking2846 Před 4 lety +416

    I've been flipping tennis rackets for years and never been able to get my head around this effect. Incredible.

    • @fxm5715
      @fxm5715 Před 4 lety +20

      I always figured I was just giving it some spin around the long axis unintentionally, because I didn't have enough dexterity to do otherwise. Now I know better.

    • @naverilllang
      @naverilllang Před 4 lety +3

      I always assumed it had to due with imbalanced rotation compounded by air resistance. Which I guess was half right.

    • @timbeaton5045
      @timbeaton5045 Před 4 lety +1

      Was this a Head, tennis racquet by any chance? 😎

    • @po_thiago
      @po_thiago Před 4 lety +5

      I've also been flipping tennis rackets for years, but never been able to get my head away from its path on its way down... ;(

    • @larryrich327
      @larryrich327 Před 4 lety +1

      David King I always thought it was my skill that caused the flip I didn't know it was doing it on its own 😕

  • @tonyfourpaws4511
    @tonyfourpaws4511 Před rokem +302

    I got in trouble at work today because I was tossing various objects and watching the flip. I tried to explain it to the boss but he wasn't having it. He fired me. Now I have more time to watch your videos!

    • @HyperVectra
      @HyperVectra Před 11 měsíci +69

      You must not have explained it well. Sometimes people need to experience it themselves to truly understand the concept. If you cut his brake lines, his car should spin around the maximum angle of inertia.

    • @HyperVectra
      @HyperVectra Před 10 měsíci +5

      @@nramrez Oh.. could you tell me then please?

    • @thedevilinthecircuit1414
      @thedevilinthecircuit1414 Před 6 měsíci +7

      Time to convert some of that inertia to getting a job 🙂

    • @SvenSamray
      @SvenSamray Před 6 dny

      Happens when you tossing dead bodies around like a mad man.

  • @youtubeboi855
    @youtubeboi855 Před rokem +172

    I have a feeling that when Feynman replied "No" to the question, it was because he considered even this "intuitive" explanation, not that intuitive for most non-physicists/engineers.

    • @jaydenwilson9522
      @jaydenwilson9522 Před 7 měsíci +2

      what question??
      im curious and havent read much feynman

    • @conormurphy341
      @conormurphy341 Před 7 měsíci

      @@jaydenwilson95225:51

    • @yommish
      @yommish Před 7 měsíci +3

      @@jaydenwilson9522 it’s in the video

    • @jaydenwilson9522
      @jaydenwilson9522 Před 7 měsíci +12

      Its own Axis disrupts its harmonious dance...
      Which temporarily causes imbalance, but even then...
      It still seeks to return to a balanced state.
      And it always will return to that state...
      No matter how dysfunctional.
      - Jayden Wilsons "intuitive" explanation of the intermediate axis theorem.... guess I'm smarter? @@yommish

    • @yommish
      @yommish Před 7 měsíci +5

      @@jaydenwilson9522 wow, I guess you are smarter than Feynman

  • @alvirahesc7436
    @alvirahesc7436 Před 3 lety +2811

    "Babe, come over, im home alone"
    "No, babe, Im solvin a centuries old math problem."

    • @ragnarok7976
      @ragnarok7976 Před 3 lety +144

      The problem: Where does she want to go for dinner.

    • @illogicalparadox
      @illogicalparadox Před 3 lety +26

      What a chad, keheheh.

    • @davidh1206
      @davidh1206 Před 3 lety +27

      You’re dating the wrong person if this isn’t an acceptable alternative to dinner

    • @TheNebulon
      @TheNebulon Před 2 lety +60

      He bumps her on the secondary axis to get her to turn around

    • @NickRanger
      @NickRanger Před 2 lety +8

      @@TheNebulon it's the 3rd axis we all want

  • @rv6amark
    @rv6amark Před 3 lety +472

    I was a dynamicist in the aerospace industry for 43 years, and THAT is the BEST plain text explanation of this behavior I have ever seen! Fantastic!

    • @gregsmith1719
      @gregsmith1719 Před 3 lety +4

      Wow! You have sold me! I'll watch it again!

    • @xccghvbno1063
      @xccghvbno1063 Před 3 lety +1

      Then you're probably the person to ask what are the odds that the plates shifting around could in fact change the Earth's moment of inertia to where it could possibly effect the crust in a dramatic way? Just curious not every day one has a chance to ask a question to an expert who's possibly even thought about the same But actually with the educational background to get through the weeds of the problem and Come up with a Realistic hypothesis even if it is just A rough mental outline

    • @danielhope2924
      @danielhope2924 Před 3 lety +1

      Was I watching this correctly to assume that if the frozen poles had enough elevated weight and then melted lowering that weights and even some of the water dissipating towards the equator, this could shift the moment of inertia ?

    • @xccghvbno1063
      @xccghvbno1063 Před 3 lety

      @@danielhope2924 very good point. Time For me to go research exactly how much ice is estimated to be Frozen.Thanks for the input

    • @3.k
      @3.k Před 3 lety +4

      @@danielhope2924 The poles are where the least mass is, on the spinning axis. So if their mass would be distributet all over spinning system, the spin should become even more stable, because the mass around the equator would become even more significant.

  • @Koutentogiwrghs
    @Koutentogiwrghs Před rokem +187

    A colleague pointed me to this great video! I was fascinated to find that it also contained two additional facts about the great condensed matter physicists of the past century.
    1) If you claim that any physical concept is not in the Landau-Lifshitz books, most probably you have not looked for it as carefully as you should.
    2) It is really tough to beat Feynman's physical intuition on anything, even if he thought about it for less than half a minute.

    • @KiltedWeirdo
      @KiltedWeirdo Před 4 měsíci +2

      wow. the circle from the plane has collatz 3x+1 effect (its 4 squares is missing its internal circle). the tenis racket is a offset of mass in /2 settings. nice! I wonder. does this apply in quantum and subatomic environments?

  • @FormerlyKnownAsAndrew
    @FormerlyKnownAsAndrew Před rokem +31

    No Earth flip. We good.

  • @qfmarsh64
    @qfmarsh64 Před 2 lety +1635

    As a kid, I would frequently watch my dad flipping the TV remote control in his hand and studying the inevitable half-turn in its flight pattern. He concluded that his wrist was subtly imparting spin.
    If he were alive today, his mind would probably be blown watching this video.

    • @llll-lk2mm
      @llll-lk2mm Před 2 lety +23

      aww that's so cool

    • @dziltener
      @dziltener Před rokem +131

      "He concluded that his wrist was subtly imparting spin." Well, as we've learned in your video, your dad was right

    • @roasty247
      @roasty247 Před rokem +29

      Cannot tell you how many hours I have done this with a TV remote too, trying to get a straight flip. Futile all along.

    • @siggyretburns7523
      @siggyretburns7523 Před rokem +4

      This physics trick puzzled me years ago when I was flipping a claw hammer. No matter what I did or how I flipped it it would not just flip with the claw on the right and the hammerhead on the left. It would end up that way but half way through the flip, the claw and hammer would switch sides. From what I understood of physics at the time, I assumed it was because either the claw or the hammer weighed more than the other and gravity interrupted the momentum. But this video proves me wrong.
      One thing I dont understand is that if its perfectly balanced, it shouldn't happen. I still think that Earths rotation has something to do with it.

    • @dziltener
      @dziltener Před rokem +28

      @@siggyretburns7523 Yes that is correct, if it were perfectly balanced, it would not happen. But there is no such thing as "perfect" in practice.

  • @EtzEchad
    @EtzEchad Před 4 lety +470

    "The goal of this video is to prove Feynman wrong."
    You have high ambitions, young man!

    • @caparroz1923
      @caparroz1923 Před 4 lety +9

      As soon as I heard him say that I came to see this comment. Was not disappointed.
      High ambitions, indeed.

    • @raykent3211
      @raykent3211 Před 4 lety +11

      Very brave! Feynmann: so you're saying that loss of kinetic energy causes a change in rotational axis to that of maximum moment of inertia, when usually it just slows things down? Since when was inertia intuitive?
      My ref to surely you're joking.... great video, though.

    • @rubiks6
      @rubiks6 Před 4 lety +2

      I think he was quite successful. Raspberries to Feynman.

    • @DobromirManchev
      @DobromirManchev Před 4 lety +6

      @@raykent3211 Indeed, it all depends on what you call "intuitive". I think inertia is a step higher than what most people will find intuitive.

    • @rogerwhittle2078
      @rogerwhittle2078 Před 4 lety +5

      My first reaction was that it is quite rude to make such an attempt, if not actually heretical - Feynman being such a towering icon of scientific thinking. Then I thought 'Nah, Feynman would love it.'
      I was fairly comfortable with understanding this phenomenon, but I suddenly had a very nasty moment when the subject of the Earth doing the same was raised. It being a fluid filled object and everything - magnetic poles flipping as evidence. I'm glad he could assure us it would not. So, did he prove Feynman wrong? Because my brain still hurts.

  • @alexanderkurz3621
    @alexanderkurz3621 Před měsícem +3

    I love how you manage to pack so much into one video, physics, history, personal interest stories, tangents to pursue further ... this is how I would like to teach and I know how hard it is to do

  • @kevinc1956
    @kevinc1956 Před 10 měsíci +10

    Noticed this effect when idly flipping a hammer as a construction worker in the latter 1970s. Always wondered what the cause was, as with some practice I could flip the hammer so that it didn’t flip. Was never sure if it flipped because I imparted a spin. When I went to college in the 1980s and got an engineering degree, I don’t recall that this theorem ever came up in physics, math, or engineering classes. Thanks for the explanation!

  • @DanielRenardAnimation
    @DanielRenardAnimation Před 4 lety +5247

    *Russian Cosmonaut spins a wingnut in space:* _"TELL NO ONE OF THIS!"_

    • @rdreese84
      @rdreese84 Před 4 lety +164

      That's how the Russians do.

    • @axiolot5857
      @axiolot5857 Před 4 lety +97

      @@rdreese84 Aaaah those russians

    • @silverhawkroman
      @silverhawkroman Před 4 lety +82

      i seriously thought he was gonna use it somehow as a kinetic superweapon, but the earth turning upside down? You really think the US is gonna crap their pants if you can manage to turn the earth around? That's ridiculous

    • @clipsedrag13
      @clipsedrag13 Před 4 lety +29

      @@silverhawkroman oh no!!! Everything is exactly the same!

    • @NicoKupfer
      @NicoKupfer Před 4 lety +63

      @@silverhawkroman Komrad Androvsky, vee kannot tell ze Hamerikans!

  • @shawn576
    @shawn576 Před 2 lety +973

    I always assumed this happened because I was adding spin without realizing it. The theory of a rotating object trying to minimize its kinetic energy actually makes a lot of sense.

    • @lukeernst2101
      @lukeernst2101 Před rokem +66

      I mean, you are adding spin without realizing it. In the point mass simulation even the intermediate axis is stable until there was a tiny deviation from exactly straight spinning. Whether it’s you unknowingly rotating it along an axis slightly different than the true intermediate axis, or air later misaligning it, it’s almost impossible to not see this effect in practice

    • @ayooshiyer8621
      @ayooshiyer8621 Před rokem +6

      @@lukeernst2101 if air is causing this misalignment why do we still see this effect in space ?

    • @singh2702
      @singh2702 Před rokem +8

      @@ayooshiyer8621 If the intermediate axis is pulled into a spin by the larger axis then this intermediate spin can only end once the larger axis has spun itself 180 degrees. By this deduction alone the outer intermediate masses must be switched hence the flip.

    • @hellencitaUwU
      @hellencitaUwU Před rokem +14

      @@ayooshiyer8621 cause there is air on that cabin, remember that they are still breathing... i think if they left it in space without air we cant see this phenomenon.

    • @rarebeeph1783
      @rarebeeph1783 Před rokem +9

      @@hellencitaUwU the air has nothing to do with it. as derek (veritasium) said, in the reference frame of the initial rotation of the disk, the centrifugal force inherent to the rotation is what causes the disk to flip, with a frequency dependent on how much deviation the smaller masses are initially given from the axis of rotation. that's why the wingnut spins for so long between each flip, while most other things flip much sooner: the wingnut was given very nearly axis aligned rotation when it was spun off of its screw, so the centrifugal turning forces are very small for a rather long time.

  • @aliasghar_mech_eng9472
    @aliasghar_mech_eng9472 Před 6 měsíci +5

    How beautiful you explained one of the most counterintiuitive physics problems in an intuitive way.

  • @ChrisContin
    @ChrisContin Před rokem +8

    It becomes more difficult to travel further in any one axis. Accelerating in one direction of rotation meets this criteria. The wingnut flips because the continuing rotation acts like an acceleration yet with an easy way to change axes from 0 g.
    The limit as a rational value goes to infinity becomes irrational in the same axis, every time. Nice video!

  • @nathanjohansen7169
    @nathanjohansen7169 Před 4 lety +324

    7:45 - "Normally I don't like talking about centrifugal forces."
    Honestly, neither do I.

    • @frostyjhammer
      @frostyjhammer Před 4 lety +5

      Always heard that word pronounced "cenTRIFugal" but he's got it "centriFUgal" =`8^o

    • @scottmccollum9979
      @scottmccollum9979 Před 4 lety +3

      It's just too rich a subject...

    • @karirytkonen5811
      @karirytkonen5811 Před 4 lety +3

      Is there need in this case either? Can't it be explained by inertia as always? Mass tend to continue on it's path and that is why it ends up on wider circular route.

    • @scottmccollum9979
      @scottmccollum9979 Před 4 lety

      @@karirytkonen5811 I would have to concur...

    • @jerrodbates8480
      @jerrodbates8480 Před 4 lety

      .....they're the WORST!

  • @billdecat855
    @billdecat855 Před 4 lety +700

    So the next time someone calls me "a flipping wingnut" I'll know why.

  • @Evan_Harsh
    @Evan_Harsh Před rokem +12

    I had always wondered why a tennis racket could never flip straight, finally get an explanation! Thank you lol

  • @stainlesssteelfox1
    @stainlesssteelfox1 Před rokem

    Thank you! This is an amazing explanation and I can finally see in my head how it works. I've never been able to follow the maths involved.

  • @andrewchapman2039
    @andrewchapman2039 Před 4 lety +2113

    Video: contains the phrase "prove Feynman wrong"
    Also video: doesn't use this phrase as clickbait.
    I salute you.

    • @shadowcoder19
      @shadowcoder19 Před 4 lety +33

      One could still argue that it is clickbait. Because an intuitive explanation is relative to the person receiving the explanation. And Feynman probably knew his students wouldn't be able to understand this explanation. Hence it being hard for him to intuitively explain it to his students.

    • @funkyflames7430
      @funkyflames7430 Před 4 lety +43

      Living Legend I concur. Derek in this case used 3d animation to explain this phenomenon while Feynman would’ve been limited to making some drawings and mental pictures. The explanation subjectively intuitive but intuitive nonetheless, at least more so than math equations.

    • @TheLaXandro
      @TheLaXandro Před 4 lety +15

      He could make a "3d model" out of a plate and a pencil to mark the axis out, and demonstrate it in a largely similar way.

    • @vsiegel
      @vsiegel Před 4 lety +1

      "prove Feynman wrong" is not working clickbait - it's so obviously spam that nobody would click it. And then... he actually did what?

    • @mvmlego1212
      @mvmlego1212 Před 4 lety +17

      Of course, it's not "bait" if he actually does it (which, in my opinion, he did). I still appreciate that he gave it an informative and non-confrontational title, though.

  • @kodycook1505
    @kodycook1505 Před 4 lety +420

    I'm a carpenter and I'm constantly flipping my hammer while I'm not busy. I've wondered for the past 10 years (I became a carpenter in 2010) why is it the head and claws of my hammer flip flop when I flip my hammer head over handle. I thank you for this video!! I suffer from ADD/ADHD and I find myself pondering this very often (driving myself nuts over it). Thanks again for the answers!!!!

    • @albertoserrano4736
      @albertoserrano4736 Před 4 lety +14

      anxious minds made modern world possible

    • @Lugnut64052
      @Lugnut64052 Před 4 lety +4

      First thing that occurred to me too. Been a carpenter for many years. Hammers will do that every time you flip them.

    • @pseudogamer4559
      @pseudogamer4559 Před 4 lety +2

      Yeah.....I understand ur struggle for all this year's I mean u could have done nothing about it.....
      If someone from MIT got this idea he would have derived it in few days because of their technology and advancements in maths n physics .....
      I've gone through the same thing many times .....it takes time to solve problems .....unless i meet some expert on that topic and gain complete idea .....then i can solve it xd

    • @carlosbyrd4519
      @carlosbyrd4519 Před 4 lety +2

      @Alexandre BrunetI hope so

    • @squarerootof2
      @squarerootof2 Před 4 lety

      @Compliment Thief Stop thieving.

  • @Kaldrin
    @Kaldrin Před rokem +75

    So this is what happens whenever I flip the remote and it does a half spin

  • @bjbrooks
    @bjbrooks Před 10 měsíci +7

    Quite simply one of the best, most fascinating videos I've ever seen. As a tennis player, it's always fascinated me how the racket appears stable when flipped in from a vertical starting position, yet twists in the air when flipped from a horizontal starting position. I've never found any explanation (though to be fair I've not looked), but happened across this from an answer on Quora. Watch the whole video - the implications discussed at the end are quite literally out of this world. Excellent, 10*

  • @RIP857
    @RIP857 Před 2 lety +285

    This experiment is represented in a humorous way in Kerbal Space Program. When in mid air or a vacuum, while EVA, you can perform an experiment where the Kerbal tries to spin a wingnut, but he spins instead. It's not exactly the same thing, but it's really cool to finally learn from where they drew the inspiration for that animation.

    • @philiphockenbury6563
      @philiphockenbury6563 Před 2 lety +7

      Another KSP fan.

    • @dimanyak373
      @dimanyak373 Před 2 lety +16

      "The strangest thing is not that it happens, but that spacecraft works without this part"

    • @ChrisMcNeely
      @ChrisMcNeely Před 2 lety +1

      lol that's awesome

    • @maxcorrice9499
      @maxcorrice9499 Před 2 lety

      Did that change? When I played it did this, maybe it’s based on specialty

  • @llll-lk2mm
    @llll-lk2mm Před 3 lety +2430

    This explaination is beautiful when you're actually learning this stuff in school... keeps me wanting to know more. Thanks Veritasium!!!

    • @Tattootin
      @Tattootin Před 3 lety +16

      Never been a more deserving like to a comment on a video!

    • @llll-lk2mm
      @llll-lk2mm Před 3 lety +4

      @@Tattootin :)

    • @mapk4655
      @mapk4655 Před 3 lety +22

      I watch this as a break from stupid school work.

    • @jamessmith2622
      @jamessmith2622 Před 3 lety +1

      @@llll-lk2mm %ï

    • @RitaMaru11
      @RitaMaru11 Před 3 lety +7

      @@mapk4655 Good

  • @TeatroGrotesco
    @TeatroGrotesco Před rokem +57

    Watching a mathematician do something physical and coordinated is almost as interesting as the great info provided.

  • @stevenmccrickard1401
    @stevenmccrickard1401 Před 7 měsíci +6

    New sub, thanks for the content. I found your video interesting, informative and entertaining. I experienced this many years ago when I was a carpenter stacking roofs. Showing off I would spin my rigging axe and catch it, it looks dangerous and quite impressive especially with the twist. In reality it is quite stable and predictable.

  • @MexicanPoro
    @MexicanPoro Před 4 lety +735

    There is also a skateboard trick called the impossible flip because of this. They counter it by leading the front foot trough the flip to keep it from flipping on the other axis.

    • @commie281
      @commie281 Před 4 lety +17

      yeah thats exactly what i was thinking and i was like-wait are they defying this theory?

    • @tooba6290
      @tooba6290 Před 4 lety +20

      I saw the physics girl video about that.. but I understood that here..

    • @Horforia
      @Horforia Před 4 lety +8

      czcams.com/video/yFRPhi0jhGc/video.html

    • @FerousFolly
      @FerousFolly Před 4 lety +11

      this effect is also what makes the 360 flip (tre flip) work the way it does.

    • @jonbowman7686
      @jonbowman7686 Před 4 lety +10

      yes! this took forever to learn. btw using the front foot to balance the board is a "front foot impossible." An impossible uses the back foot.

  • @kennethmccomb7926
    @kennethmccomb7926 Před 2 lety +825

    I noticed this years ago flipping a hammer in the air. Each time the head points a different direction. It's cool to have it explained.

    • @michaelm.6043
      @michaelm.6043 Před 2 lety +3

      Me too !!!

    • @musicbruv
      @musicbruv Před 2 lety +28

      And me, used to think it was the way I flipped it.

    • @grimresolve2606
      @grimresolve2606 Před 2 lety +15

      Same, but with a pair of scissors (not recommended).

    • @williamrbuchanan4153
      @williamrbuchanan4153 Před 2 lety +2

      Think it’s about a wing nut in space,nil gravity.. That wing nut spin in space,comes off the thread spinning with its extra inertia.nothing to stop its spin or guide or draw it off its line of original traverse. Not restrained by the thread it has an inbuilt signal of its initial power supply. Having in air on Earth in first use, now it has a atmosphere of the space station. Resistance to the onboard air. Pressure. It gets a build up of resistance and reverses to balance of air resistance. But can’t overcome the power of the thread spinning to remove. Which was excess to requirement for its removal. It is weightless and obey its kinetic energy until it is used by some means of being attracted. It then turned to what ever mass was attracting it as it slowed. The equipment within the space station. Mass attracts weaker mass, if it has freedom to follow the attraction.
      Snooker ball hit too hard will bounce back and forward in the pocket jaws on Earth and not go into the pocket the rebound resistance has changed its path of drop . It has to lose it kinetic energy at its intended terminal, the pocket.

    • @Vary180
      @Vary180 Před 2 lety +3

      i used to flip things in my hand too, but not a hammer.

  • @fbilgrami
    @fbilgrami Před 8 měsíci

    Well done, first time I have seen someone go through the trouble of showing a rotating frame of reference. How a rotating body sees the world around it and the centrifugal forces it experience.

  • @wassenaat
    @wassenaat Před 6 měsíci +1

    always nice to see a video that does rigid-body dynamics more justice than my faculty

  • @2false637
    @2false637 Před 4 lety +400

    This is the content I subscribed for. Well done!

  • @enlxghtened
    @enlxghtened Před 4 lety +1272

    Veritasium: There you have it, an intuitive explanation for the intermediate axis theorem.
    Me: Rewatches again at .50x playback speed.

    • @saggitt
      @saggitt Před 4 lety +24

      Brian C The video has to be light and entertaining enough to be popular. You can’t reasonably expect a deep detailed explanation.
      It was too fast for me as well to get an intuitive grasp on the process.

    • @loredan725
      @loredan725 Před 4 lety +10

      After watching the video, my short summary of the explanation would be "centrifugal pendulum in rotating frame of reference"

    • @shnider42
      @shnider42 Před 4 lety +9

      @divorcedme Whats confusing for me however is what if you were to do the flip over the intermediate axis without any 'little bump'? In such a way that there is no outside forces whatsoever and it was perfectly flipped end over end. Would it still just introduce instability itself? If so, in which direction?

    • @John_SalchiChon69
      @John_SalchiChon69 Před 4 lety +2

      it was really simple to me /:

    • @ArkanoidZero
      @ArkanoidZero Před 4 lety +35

      @@shnider42 No, a perfectly spun object around the intermediate axis would be stable, the key point he left out is that its like balancing a pencil on its point, its stable, but any small nudge and it falls over. In the real world, such stability is impossible, you will always introduce enough error for the effect to occur.

  • @stanweaver6116
    @stanweaver6116 Před rokem +1

    That was interesting and really intuitively explained. Thanks!

  • @CorwinAlexander
    @CorwinAlexander Před 4 měsíci +1

    Thank you. I wondered why the intermediate axial theorem didn't appear to apply to the planet. Thank you for clearing this up.

  • @EtanChamare
    @EtanChamare Před 4 lety +587

    So if we dug up a bunch of mass around the equator and put it on the poles, we could get the earth to flip sideways?

    • @iwasbornfriday
      @iwasbornfriday Před 4 lety +46

      maybe thats why the earth flips its poles.

    • @gJonii
      @gJonii Před 4 lety +26

      That's a neat plan.
      Unfortunately, you'd have to fight against gravity.

    • @Anvilshock
      @Anvilshock Před 4 lety +81

      Please note that "bunch of mass" also includes the Moon.

    • @Charles-fc9gi
      @Charles-fc9gi Před 4 lety +28

      No, it would be like spinning the tennis racket on the long (stable) axis. So to flip earth i think you would have to put the mass at 45° between the poles and equator. And as high as possible. Or if you put it on one pole that would work, but not both.

    • @malachipeterson9661
      @malachipeterson9661 Před 4 lety

      Most likely

  • @milosveselinovic1
    @milosveselinovic1 Před 4 lety +646

    I’m just happy there is a scientific explanation for that

    • @Protonneutronelectron
      @Protonneutronelectron Před 4 lety +1

      Sve je to ok ali sta je sa derbijem? 😜

    • @yatogami7393
      @yatogami7393 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Protonneutronelectron Croatian?

    • @yatogami7393
      @yatogami7393 Před 4 lety

      @@Protonneutronelectron kako to misliš reći?

    • @Make_Boxing_Great_Again
      @Make_Boxing_Great_Again Před 4 lety +10

      Even if there wasn’t, there would still be an explanation, it would just be a unknown explanation.

    • @ftnppg1272
      @ftnppg1272 Před 4 lety +6

      Trump supporters be like,
      it changes direction because god told it to.
      Case closed, no more discussion, solved.

  • @dennis_mihaylov
    @dennis_mihaylov Před rokem

    that was intense ! it's been more than a year probably when I watched the video by the first time and I did not understand much. I'm glad that today I understand more. Thank yo so much for what you do. You are awesome !

  • @carolduvall111
    @carolduvall111 Před 11 měsíci

    Oh my you already got a list you are working on thanks for sharing your knowledge and a bit of fun

  • @Economivision
    @Economivision Před 4 lety +405

    I've never been so educated, filled with a learned horror and then so suddenly and gratefully relieved in a single video. You deserve an award for creating the most educational drama in human history.

    • @patrickmcleod111
      @patrickmcleod111 Před 4 lety +3

      Well, at least we now know that the Earth has 3 potential axis spin directions........... you know, because it's flat....... Darn, why couldn't God have made the Earth round!!?? Lol 😂

    • @andyclark4627
      @andyclark4627 Před 4 lety +1

      Wont it have infinite axe's of rotation due to it being a ball??? (Not taking the piss or being sarcastic or trying to sound clever)

    • @SmashToBits
      @SmashToBits Před 4 lety +1

      @@andyclark4627 it is sphere-ish. But it is heavier in areas like the gravity image of Mars he showed

    • @decidiousrex
      @decidiousrex Před 4 lety

      Watch his other videos. He has some seriously cool plot twists involving nothing but science

    • @bobrolander4344
      @bobrolander4344 Před 4 lety

      Isn't this just a special case of the butterfly effect?

  • @paulomanuelsendimairespere3901

    Mechanical Engineers found out many years ago that the best approach for dealing with real problems intuitively is to consider inertial forces. Otherwise, you get lost in a massive amount of equations.

  • @StodOneR
    @StodOneR Před 7 měsíci +1

    I noticed this 7 years ago or more when I was into butterfly knives , actually I'm not sure if it's related , but if u try to spin the butterfly knife so that the narrow part of the knife rotates it will try to open .
    When you spin it length wise so that longer bit is moving it will force the knife to open after a few rotations if u manage to spin it fast enough it might do it a few times too

  • @automateddude
    @automateddude Před 8 měsíci

    Really good video!! Thanks, well explained!

  • @Gaswafers
    @Gaswafers Před 4 lety +754

    The goal of this video is to prove Feynman wrong.
    *8 minutes left.*

    • @DobromirManchev
      @DobromirManchev Před 4 lety +9

      Lol, i did the same thing! When i heard that i paused the video to check the time remaining. :D

    • @_BangDroid_
      @_BangDroid_ Před 4 lety +54

      Well I don't think he succeeded, it's not very intuitive at all

    • @kristinejoybueno8102
      @kristinejoybueno8102 Před 4 lety +1

      Ow ma god ur incredible

    • @josephcope7637
      @josephcope7637 Před 4 lety +8

      This is a concept that's somewhat difficult to comprehend intuitively ... like Euler's Identity.

    • @przemekolchowy8745
      @przemekolchowy8745 Před 4 lety +20

      @@_BangDroid_ Isn't it? Like, it's basic stuff tho. Average high schooler should get it without any problem...

  • @Strothy2
    @Strothy2 Před 4 lety +476

    Proving Feynman wrong is one hell of a task... yet he kinda did it ... :D

    • @MirorR3fl3ction
      @MirorR3fl3ction Před 4 lety +55

      technically Terry Tao was the one who proved Feynman wrong, Derek just reported on it :P

    • @Strothy2
      @Strothy2 Před 4 lety +9

      @@MirorR3fl3ction ... well credits to him then :D

    • @vsiegel
      @vsiegel Před 4 lety +2

      He just plain did it. Took me a while to accept that as fact.

    • @xapver
      @xapver Před 4 lety +9

      I don't pretend to be a genius, but it took me about 15 seconds after observing the videos to realize, that the rotating objects aren't balanced around the spinning axis. It's nearly impossible to do it IRL. So they have to flip, no way around it. If you are not in an ideal world, where you can apply force to one axis w/o disturbing the others along the way, of course.

    • @Nehmo
      @Nehmo Před 4 lety +17

      @@xapver I have to play these videos at 1.5 so that my fast mind doesn't need to slow down. And I was always having to correct Feynman when he was around. He made so many mistakes.

  • @UnIvErS8uL
    @UnIvErS8uL Před rokem

    This is the best explanation, thanks Derek

  • @jayl0151
    @jayl0151 Před 18 dny

    I loved learning from this video. Thank you so much!

  • @johnnyroman3888
    @johnnyroman3888 Před 2 lety +185

    This phenomenon fascinated me as a 10 year old since I’ve been obsessed with skateboarding, (specifically flip tricks); and although I could not explain it, it was what first got me interested in physics.

    • @bradleyries2817
      @bradleyries2817 Před 2 lety +7

      Interesting point! Kickflips and shuv-its are common tricks, yet the impossible is well....harder to do!

    • @megashock1319
      @megashock1319 Před rokem

      @@bradleyries2817 the impossible is my favorite trick and i think tony hawk did a video about this physics property

    • @SoroushTorkian
      @SoroushTorkian Před rokem +1

      I’m kind of surprised there aren’t more pro skaters who like physics, it makes logical sense haha

  • @wlodell
    @wlodell Před 4 lety +185

    As a boy I could never get my tennis racquet to spin evenly whenever I tossed it in the air. I was obsessed and frustrated by that. Fifty years later, now I know!

    • @markgomez3688
      @markgomez3688 Před 4 lety +1

      You're never to old to learn, you can teach an old dog new tricks. A wise man once said.......

    • @samfreed7251
      @samfreed7251 Před 4 lety +1

      @@markgomez3688 TOO, with TWO O's, TO be exact.

    • @markgomez3688
      @markgomez3688 Před 4 lety +3

      @@samfreed7251 So what!... It's not like i am writing a letter to the Queen... oops Queens speech is on now , must go....

    • @warpigs9069
      @warpigs9069 Před 4 lety

      Basically fulcrum crowbar on invisible fulcrum crowbar.

    • @itshappeningla4t86
      @itshappeningla4t86 Před 4 lety

      🤣

  • @jacobpoulton3547
    @jacobpoulton3547 Před rokem

    I've watched this video like 5 times and the hook at the begging is so good I still watch the video the whole way through

  • @revv45acp71
    @revv45acp71 Před 2 měsíci

    Very interesting and a great explanation! Thanks!

  • @CoolGuyDoesNothing1
    @CoolGuyDoesNothing1 Před 4 lety +767

    So technically if we move enough mass from the equator towards the earth poles we can change the rotation axis of the earth?

    • @garethdean6382
      @garethdean6382 Před 4 lety +48

      Yup, though you'll need to move a lot and countering that masses existing RI will exert a toll too.

    • @kanavgagrani9744
      @kanavgagrani9744 Před 4 lety +61

      If you somehow manage to take all the mass towards the poles at the same time you will experience the earth flipping gradually on your way

    • @alvisvalencia
      @alvisvalencia Před 4 lety +121

      Let’s do it

    • @Uocjat
      @Uocjat Před 4 lety +192

      yay! we can finally fix the true north/magnetic north alignment!

    • @Oscar1618033
      @Oscar1618033 Před 4 lety +62

      @@Uocjat love the OCD 🤣

  • @Sigmatica
    @Sigmatica Před 4 lety +319

    People: They hid it for 10 years!
    Russian: Chill down I just forgot about it.

  • @fedo18
    @fedo18 Před 7 měsíci +1

    this is why the skateboard trick that spins on the intermediate axis is called the "impossible". You have to keep it stable with your foot.

  • @tittyboiiiiii5137
    @tittyboiiiiii5137 Před rokem

    Thank you!!! Ive been wondering about this for so long

  • @KozmykJ
    @KozmykJ Před 3 lety +401

    I first observed this phonomenon 54 years ago when I was juggling books, as one does, especially at age 10.
    I asked again and again over the years what caused it.
    My parents, teachers, anyone who'd listen,
    No one ever had a answer.
    Most had never noticed it happening at all.
    I'm sure knife throwers must have figured how to predict it even if they didn't know the cause .
    Well. thanks to Veritasium, if finally got my answer last year, in 2019. 🖖

    • @kurtreber9813
      @kurtreber9813 Před 3 lety +16

      I too flipped books and now that you mention it, I HAVE noticed this turn during flip. I just assumed I wasn't balancing the book very well to start.

    • @wonderingalbatros3603
      @wonderingalbatros3603 Před 3 lety +3

      @@kurtreber9813 Ditto. I'm high IQ, ADD as f$%k and embarrassed to admit I didn't question a single thing.

    • @christopherconner6151
      @christopherconner6151 Před 3 lety +2

      I saw it happen as a child, saw that there was no " explanation " shrugged my shoulders and continued to twist flip things to see it's center of gravity so I could educate my self without books and others telling me their point of view. Lol

    • @KozmykJ
      @KozmykJ Před 3 lety +1

      @@wonderingalbatros3603 I'm only 95th percentile ... a bit thick really 😜

    • @glenapfelstadt287
      @glenapfelstadt287 Před 3 lety +6

      Ya know, some read books and others realize physical phenomena as the books fly through the air.

  • @radicalrick9587
    @radicalrick9587 Před 3 lety +425

    I wish this guy was my science teacher back in Elementary School, Jr High School, High school, etc..

    • @Bollibompa
      @Bollibompa Před 3 lety +21

      And this is why being a teacher should have high status in society. Unfortunately, the need for a high quantity of teachers often far outweighs the possibility to keep the quality high.
      An interesting sidenote: Many esteemed physicists and engineers switched to teaching high-school science in their later years. Imagine having a nobel laureate teaching you about forces and moments in ninth grade...

    • @markwashington2412
      @markwashington2412 Před 3 lety +5

      Bollibompa that exactly what happened for my grade nine math class. A former nasa astrophysicist taught us about the slopes of lines lol.

    • @001vgupta
      @001vgupta Před 3 lety

      I too would have enjoyed him, as my teacher.

    • @kennethkline7702
      @kennethkline7702 Před 3 lety +3

      Actually, your science teacher was probably a lot like this guy. You were probably just an immature kid that can high school who wouldn't have listened to anyone, regardless. Unless you were the type that watched mr. Wizard in which case you would have thought your science teacher was cool anyway

    • @markwashington2412
      @markwashington2412 Před 3 lety +3

      Kenneth Kline sorry what?

  • @CoyoteFeral
    @CoyoteFeral Před rokem

    Man, these animations are always top notch.

  • @redasylum
    @redasylum Před rokem

    Thanks for the simple explanation.

  • @aviatordude1961
    @aviatordude1961 Před 2 lety +3797

    I thought the reason the Russians kept this a secret was going to be so their female gymnasts would always win gold!

    • @kimvangvideomarketerbangko3265
      @kimvangvideomarketerbangko3265 Před 2 lety +97

      Hah! Underrated comment

    • @narrator206
      @narrator206 Před 2 lety +40

      Agreed

    • @Icerecruit0
      @Icerecruit0 Před 2 lety +73

      I mean their olympic athletes were at an advantage anyways for other reasons

    • @aozzya1563
      @aozzya1563 Před 2 lety +9

      @@Icerecruit0 What advantage? I don't really keep up with Olympic stuff sorry.

    • @Icerecruit0
      @Icerecruit0 Před 2 lety +94

      @@aozzya1563 the Russians aren’t allowed to compete as “Russia” anymore because they used steroids lmao

  • @Machtyn
    @Machtyn Před 3 lety +1212

    The crazy thing is, skateboarders, specifically, Rodney Mullen, intuitively knew this when he developed the "Impossible" skateboard trick back in the 1980s.

    • @yoda2661
      @yoda2661 Před 3 lety +26

      The best one. Ever.

    • @DL-kc8fc
      @DL-kc8fc Před 3 lety +35

      No. They attributed it to air resistance.

    • @starmc26
      @starmc26 Před 3 lety +4

      No.

    • @French20cent
      @French20cent Před 2 lety +16

      You also watch Physics girl don't you :)

    • @Machtyn
      @Machtyn Před 2 lety +13

      @@French20cent On occasion. Actually landed on the Mullen - Physics Girl episode on a Tony Hawk youtube bender.

  • @stevenlightfoot6479
    @stevenlightfoot6479 Před rokem +1

    Even as an experienced mechanical engineer, I am amazed at what I don't know. Thanks for this,

  • @victorcamara2155
    @victorcamara2155 Před rokem

    This video actually helped my tremendously in my physics class on angular momentum and torque lol

  • @alphapotato_gd9597
    @alphapotato_gd9597 Před 4 lety +71

    Mum: “so what did you learn today?”
    Me: “it’s spinning about its maximum moment of inertia”

  • @btallred
    @btallred Před 3 lety +544

    Oh..., that’s why the bread always lands butter-side down.

    • @badusername9903
      @badusername9903 Před 3 lety +58

      you bread spins when you drop it? wish my bread was that cool

    • @gorn9161
      @gorn9161 Před 3 lety +45

      Best clinical experiment: Tape toast, butter-side up to cat and drop them from height.

    • @Miss_Giggy
      @Miss_Giggy Před 3 lety +21

      That's Murphy's law.

    • @joaquintakanaka
      @joaquintakanaka Před 3 lety +22

      That happens because it's heavier on the butter side, that's all.

    • @joaquintakanaka
      @joaquintakanaka Před 3 lety +13

      @@DNVPIVIN It is heavier than none 😉

  • @ForgieDusker
    @ForgieDusker Před rokem

    I think i commented about this one a long while ago, i first noticed the phenomenon while flipping a TV remote just like the tennis racket. Great to get some closure :)

  • @michaelggriffiths
    @michaelggriffiths Před rokem +9

    Flipping brilliant!

  • @KiemPlant
    @KiemPlant Před 4 lety +222

    Man! I've always wondered why this happened when I flip the tv remote like that.

    • @tooba6290
      @tooba6290 Před 4 lety +6

      Me too.. I obsessed with spinning things

    • @Toolmamon
      @Toolmamon Před 4 lety +3

      Yes!!!! Me Too!!!!!!!!

    • @sillybillyno1
      @sillybillyno1 Před 4 lety +6

      Came to comment that exact thing 😳😳

    • @YostPeter
      @YostPeter Před 4 lety +5

      I always thought I just had some mundane skill.

    • @SolvayConference
      @SolvayConference Před 4 lety +2

      Wait, so if there is no "bump" then would it not exhibit that effect at all?

  • @Monkeyheadtpc
    @Monkeyheadtpc Před 4 lety +587

    So... if we put huge weights in arctica and antarctica, we could make the earth flip?

  • @FitzyyLives
    @FitzyyLives Před rokem +2

    ive known about this effect since i was a kid. I didn't know what it was called, but I would do this with my tv remote. it fascinated me how it was doing a half twist in the air. i started tossing the remote higher so it would spend more time in the air to get the full twist or even 1.5

  • @jeremyeagles3237
    @jeremyeagles3237 Před rokem

    Noticed this years ago while throwing knives. Never understood it. Thanks for the video!

  • @johnchessant3012
    @johnchessant3012 Před 4 lety +75

    The tennis racket theorem is so cool. I saw it in my mechanics course years ago and it is still fascinating to me now.

    • @daltoncook3009
      @daltoncook3009 Před 4 lety +4

      I know right! I have always flipped things like that and never new why they would spin like that. I always thought I was doing something with my wrist to cause a spin. I feel a little less special now that I know I’m not a wrist twisting master of tossing things and it’s just physics.

    • @marshallc6885
      @marshallc6885 Před 4 lety +2

      dalton cook there should be a machine that will flip it perfectly just to see if we can do it with it half turning

  • @ismaelabufon1696
    @ismaelabufon1696 Před 4 lety +722

    Spent all my teenage years playing with the tv remote, flipping it on the air and noticing the flip. I never asked why I couldn't flip it vertically without it turning. The trick for me was to throw it higher, so it would turn 2 times, so I would catch it how I threw it.
    Similar with phones when they came around.
    Then, older I became a bartender for a while and while flipping bottles and stuff (flair bartending) I sometimes noticed the same thing as I would try to get the label to face "forward" when the bottle landed on my hand.
    You just solved a mini life-long question that I had hahahaha.... kudos!
    (I was getting a bit judgemental when you mentioned proving Feynman wrong -- "this guy is cocky" hahaha... but then you brought Tao into play and it was all good 🤷🏻‍♂️😂 -- and anyways, is still a bit cheating as Feynman didn't have all the 3D bells and whistles we have today)

    • @khpsphysicsmathematics8277
      @khpsphysicsmathematics8277 Před 4 lety +23

      Hmm u r R8 actually feyman thought on this only for 15 second thats not fair.

    • @wampaku2
      @wampaku2 Před 4 lety +5

      I noticed this too in my teenage years with the remote. I asked everyone I could think of if they knew why. Parents, science teachers, etc. Nobody could provide an answer.

    • @1DusDB
      @1DusDB Před 4 lety +1

      Also me haha !! - noticed the flip since school days with my ruler and since then always tried with rectangle shaped things

    • @nate_storm
      @nate_storm Před 4 lety +4

      Flipping TV remotes is incredibly entertaining

    • @craigfenson
      @craigfenson Před 4 lety +11

      or it could also be that feynman perfectly understood the phenomenon, but since he was asked about an 'intuitive' explanation whilst knowing the difficulty of getting it across in a simple manner, he just said no.

  • @tobiasursmartimuller1657
    @tobiasursmartimuller1657 Před 11 měsíci

    I could follow really good. Thank you!

  • @junaidahmadj
    @junaidahmadj Před rokem

    Thank u veritasium, very nicely explained 👌

  • @DavetheUberSlave
    @DavetheUberSlave Před 4 lety +73

    "Normally I don't like to talk about centrifugal forces" lol

  • @t.pisani8239
    @t.pisani8239 Před 4 lety +257

    I always thought I intentionally flipped my tennis racket like that.

    • @dhy5342
      @dhy5342 Před 4 lety +20

      You do induce the spin, whether intentional or not. when the racket leaves your hand a small rotation is imparted. This is clear in the video although not mentioned or acknowledged.

    • @Stan_in_Shelton_WA
      @Stan_in_Shelton_WA Před 4 lety +6

      My condolences!

    • @0fflineXD
      @0fflineXD Před 4 lety +6

      dhy5342 he does, at 8:24
      He just doesn’t say it straight out as you want to hear it,
      When you say “a small rotation is imparted”
      He says “what if the disk is bumped, so that it’s not longer rotating perfectly about its Y axis”

    • @Yamaazaka
      @Yamaazaka Před 4 lety

      @@0fflineXD Well nothing in physics in this universe is perfect. A perfectly spinning object like the demonstration can only exist in theory. So "a small bump" is everything normally, essentially.

    • @0fflineXD
      @0fflineXD Před 4 lety

      Sol Ascending ik? I just answered the guy

  • @gautamvashi106
    @gautamvashi106 Před rokem +5

    This guy solves my problems, that I never had. He's simply awesome. 😍 I always learn alot from his every video ❤

  • @johnpapiewski7022
    @johnpapiewski7022 Před rokem +1

    This reminds me a lot of the Wilberforce Pendulum, in which a bouncing up and down motion shifts to a rotating motion and back again, the KE phasing back and forth between the 2 modes. And there's a swinging mode also I think.

  • @adityasaklani8710
    @adityasaklani8710 Před 4 lety +141

    Coincidence: Just started to learn about Moment of Inertia in school. This helps man.

    • @adityasaklani8710
      @adityasaklani8710 Před 4 lety +6

      TY for the heart.

    • @benjaminshields9421
      @benjaminshields9421 Před 4 lety +2

      It's like mass, for rotation. In other words, how easy is it to change the object's rotation

    • @deba123ful
      @deba123ful Před 4 lety

      Landau and Lifshithz man.. refer to that book.. that is gold

    • @duuhdboui2920
      @duuhdboui2920 Před 4 lety

      They're listening

    • @Anvilshock
      @Anvilshock Před 4 lety

      This helps man, this helps animals, this helps rock, this helps universe … Let's eat grandma.

  • @TH-wr1dv
    @TH-wr1dv Před 4 lety +121

    Yay I like much that Vertasium is back at interetsing but not so popular topics.

  • @vsrini
    @vsrini Před rokem

    Amazing ... great presentation

  • @fredrik241
    @fredrik241 Před rokem

    Thanks this is super interesting. It brings to mind the recent discoveries of the massive blobs of higher density that's been found inside the earth.
    Its thought that these have higher density than other parts and if you look at some 3d maps you'll see that they support these rotation theories as the blobs are centered along earths 'mid riff' so could possibly be the factor deciding earths orientation.

    • @davis4555
      @davis4555 Před rokem

      Like the stability-bar on top of the top rotor of an RC helicopter.

  • @YeppyNope
    @YeppyNope Před 4 lety +270

    "Mathematicians, Soviet Secrets and the End of the World"
    Woah there, slow down buddy.

    • @kiplavin
      @kiplavin Před 4 lety +1

      title for a REN-TV shows

    • @vsiegel
      @vsiegel Před 4 lety +3

      He just got up to speed for the bold move: Proving Feynman wrong.

    • @Falcrist
      @Falcrist Před 4 lety +1

      I have a friend in Minsk
      Who has a friend in Pinsk
      Who's friend in Omsk
      Has friend in Tomsk
      With friend in Akmolinsk
      His friend in Alexandrovsk
      Has friend in Petropavlovsk
      Whose friend somehow
      Is solving now
      The problem in Dnepropetrovsk...

    • @benjaminshields9421
      @benjaminshields9421 Před 4 lety +1

      Hey, Vsauce! Michael here!
      What did one of the best mathematicians have to do with Soviet secrets?
      And when is... the end of the world?
      *cue music

    • @milanstevic8424
      @milanstevic8424 Před 4 lety +1

      @@benjaminshields9421 (•_¬)

  • @Hakasedess
    @Hakasedess Před 2 lety +775

    My question after watching this, though, is "How much mass would we need to dump at the poles to make the earth flip 90 degrees?"

    • @mikemondano3624
      @mikemondano3624 Před 2 lety +59

      The questions asked show just how deeply deluded people are who say they understood the video.

    • @awfuldynne
      @awfuldynne Před 2 lety +40

      ​@@mikemondano3624 Going by the abstract "disk with point masses on it" example, we'd need some parts of the equator to have a different mass than other parts for Earth to be in danger of flipping 180°, right? (e.g. the two quadrants centered at 0°W and 180°E are more massive than the other two centered at 90°E and 90°W)
      But that's a 180° flip. Hakkapeele asked about a 90° flip which would put the current poles on the new equator and the new poles somewhere on the old equator.
      edit: posted before finishing the video. The poles would need to have a mass between that of the light equatorial quadrants and the heavy ones to make Earth's rotation about its intermediate axis rather than the one with the greatest moment of inertia. Also, I've been using "mass" where I should be using "moment of inertia".

    • @mikebeam822
      @mikebeam822 Před 2 lety +48

      no, the question is - how much mass(ice) has to disappear before we flip?

    • @Asagofficial
      @Asagofficial Před 2 lety +40

      @@mikebeam822 Well, if you reduce the ice, water from that ice, would move to equator. Witch, would simply slow down the spinning. But if you would reduce the amount of water on equator, and transfer it to the ice and put it on the poles, than there is a possibility of flip.
      But even if you melt, or froze water. The mass of the planet is still the same. So its not really possible. You just change where the mass is. But if you could add more Ice/Water on the planet or transfer out of the planet, than you can change its rotation.

    • @mikebeam822
      @mikebeam822 Před 2 lety +5

      @@Asagofficial Let me ask you this, remembering that, as a planet we go through periodic ice ages - which weighs more ice or water? If ice weighs more, then, as the polar ice caps re-freeze, which we can easily assume is true, weight(water) will move from the equatorial regions freezing and condensing at the poles. Correct? Leading to the flip.

  • @harrymattah418
    @harrymattah418 Před rokem

    Reminds me of the inertial roll coupling experienced by some aircrafts (F100, F102). This was theorized by Philips in 1948, and experienced some years later..

  • @CountryEEngineer
    @CountryEEngineer Před rokem

    @Veritasium.
    This was very enlightening. As an Electrical Engineer, I spend my time understanding the intangible. I’d really love to have a discussion about this topic and the history of Earth and global warming solely focused on the potentials of this science.

  • @steffliot3788
    @steffliot3788 Před 4 lety +229

    Hi Derek, the notification of your videos makes me throw all my work away and sit with my tab.
    You're incredible.

  • @LiterallyMark1
    @LiterallyMark1 Před 4 lety +96

    I always noticed this flipping the TV remote in my hand.

    • @RJ-lj3zt
      @RJ-lj3zt Před 4 lety +15

      I noticed it when my mother in law fell🤔

    • @d.h.2145
      @d.h.2145 Před 4 lety

      Same

    • @geoff7936
      @geoff7936 Před 4 lety +4

      I was also just such an armchair physicist - literally..

    • @staomruel
      @staomruel Před 4 lety

      Right?

    • @glennosmond4306
      @glennosmond4306 Před 4 lety +1

      I always noticed this remotely while flipping the TV...

  • @epictales1307
    @epictales1307 Před rokem +2

    I had seen a video on this subject awhile back and today I heard something about it and it turned on the lightbulb. I searched for a video of this happening and wrote in the comments:
    "I know why they do this, and it is a lot more simple than it looks!! To figure it out, all you have to do it watch the ending half of this when the handle spins slowly enough that you can play in slow motion and see the moment of change. It is a balance issue from material being removed to add in a set screw location for the handle. That small imbalance is enough to cause the flip every few rotations due to build up of imbalance. The handle part of the T handle doesn't play a role in inducing the "dancing" effect."
    Then realized it wasn't even a science channel and wanted to put this somewhere that others would read it instead of readers just being awe struck with the video alone and ignoring the how and what is going on.

  • @benjamin11235
    @benjamin11235 Před rokem

    Part of why I like your channel: around 4:55 you just casually drop that the paper is wrong, when in academia you would have had to go through peer review to publish your claim that the authors are wrong.

  • @sonorousguitars2670
    @sonorousguitars2670 Před 3 lety +870

    I experienced this with a racket when I was eight in 93’ and couldn’t explain it. My neighbor told me to stop smoking dope when i told him..........well screw you Carl!!

  • @Yalikejazzboi
    @Yalikejazzboi Před 4 lety +713

    This explains everything, the Russians have been rotating me a 180 degrees during my sleep.

    • @MarkAhlquist
      @MarkAhlquist Před 4 lety +19

      I don't get it, but I like it.

    • @theev3436
      @theev3436 Před 4 lety +1

      😂😂

    • @mcxhalo
      @mcxhalo Před 4 lety +1

      You win.

    • @goodperiodictablecom
      @goodperiodictablecom Před 4 lety

      @@cheem2952 Please Watch this: czcams.com/video/H4uKwvPez3c/video.html
      and if you like it, subscribe, click the Thumb up and please share it. Thanks
      Mick

    • @engineerauthorpilot
      @engineerauthorpilot Před 4 lety +1

      I just liked your comment to bump your "like" stat to 666. Was it the Russians that somehow compelled me (subconsciously) to do this or was it Satan? Or... are Russians actually Satan?

  • @raulbergen3049
    @raulbergen3049 Před rokem

    This is amazing thank you!!

  • @wesjones7126
    @wesjones7126 Před rokem

    Great explanation! Tks

  • @lamboqin2180
    @lamboqin2180 Před 4 lety +366

    Veritaaium: The earth is stabe.
    V-Sauce: Or is it?(raises eye brows)

    • @Goldrusher-ee3jo
      @Goldrusher-ee3jo Před 4 lety +2

      "Kid maker"
      Hmmmm

    • @LukeMXack
      @LukeMXack Před 4 lety +11

      you can hear this comment

    • @LoneBeastYT
      @LoneBeastYT Před 3 lety +21

      I literally heard vsauce theme music dude

    • @ThatUnknownDude_
      @ThatUnknownDude_ Před 3 lety +2

      *SCIENCE BATTLE INTENSIFIES*

    • @pawan235able
      @pawan235able Před 3 lety +1

      but what if we could somehow make the earth unstable??? we all would be flipping :D :D .... need to find a flipping planet in the space and we would find alien life, cuz who doesn't want free joy rides??

  • @Sahuagin
    @Sahuagin Před 3 lety +50

    I've actually thrown a tennis racket and other similar objects like that before and knew this effect well without actually realizing it was something important.

    • @starz2114
      @starz2114 Před 2 lety

      i showed this effect to friends with my phone we all kept being amazed it flipped over upside down and we had no idea why

    • @halweilbrenner9926
      @halweilbrenner9926 Před 2 lety

      Ya knew something screwy was going on.

  • @garyriley9353
    @garyriley9353 Před rokem

    Nice video! You should consider doing a video dedicated to why we have or think we have magnetic pole shifts on the earth

  • @Mic_Glow
    @Mic_Glow Před 6 dny

    this video is flippin amazing