An Astrophysicist reacts to THE EXPANSE

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  • čas přidán 2. 06. 2024
  • Is Amazon's sci-fi show "The Expanse" as scientifically accurate as people claim? To learn more about the physics of gravity head to brilliant.org/drbecky and sign up for free! Plus the first 200 people that go to that link will get 20% off an annual premium subscription.
    00:00 - Introduction
    01:57 - Reaction to S1E2
    12:10 - Final Thoughts
    16:28 - Requests!
    19:00 - Bloopers
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    👩🏽‍💻 I'm Dr Becky Smethurst, an astrophysicist at the University of Oxford (Christ Church). I love making videos about science with an unnatural level of enthusiasm. I like to focus on how we know things, not just what we know. And especially, the things we still don't know. If you've ever wondered about something in space and couldn't find an answer online - you can ask me! My day job is to do research into how supermassive black holes can affect the galaxies that they live in. In particular, I look at whether the energy output from the disk of material orbiting around a growing supermassive black hole can stop a galaxy from forming stars.
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 7K

  • @danh8804
    @danh8804 Před 2 lety +3131

    I love how her expectations are so low for sci-fi that it didn't even occur to her at first that their gravity was generated by thrust. Like, when you aren't even mentally prepared to give the show that much credit.

    • @garrettord3304
      @garrettord3304 Před 2 lety +430

      To be fair, realistic ships don't have enough Delta-V to make this a viable option. It's thanks to the show's pseudo-magic Epstein Drive which massively outperforms any current or hypothetically possible thruster. The ability to accelerate constantly at a rate that's useful as artificial gravity isn't something that immediately comes to mind when pondering realistic methods.

    • @EnerJay
      @EnerJay Před 2 lety +144

      @@garrettord3304 agree with what you said, just wanted to add on that one of the expanse mini short stories explains how someone discovered the perfect fuel mixture for the engines to pruduce the crazy thrust.. It was also shown briefly in the series but not with the same detail as the book

    • @thorH.
      @thorH. Před 2 lety +53

      @@garrettord3304 it is sci-fi after all and who knows maybe we get that done in like 300 years 👍🏻

    • @BradleyGibbs
      @BradleyGibbs Před 2 lety +152

      I find it genuinely concerning that an astrophysicist didn't find it immediately apparent that the gravity was from thrust.
      Especially when they make a point of explaining it visually in the show... How did she miss it?

    • @thorH.
      @thorH. Před 2 lety +12

      @@BradleyGibbs true

  • @TimisDaniel
    @TimisDaniel Před 3 lety +3402

    I'm no scientist, but as an engineer I can confirm that "kicking it" could be a valid method to repair certain broken equipment.

    • @kylesulcebarger8399
      @kylesulcebarger8399 Před 3 lety +256

      And don't forget the "get a bigger hammer" and the "poke it with a stick"" methods.

    • @leepreston9637
      @leepreston9637 Před 3 lety +268

      It even has on official name, mechanical agitation.

    • @jaredragland4707
      @jaredragland4707 Před 3 lety +90

      @@leepreston9637 Is there an official name for well-chosen swears? Because I've repaired a lot of equipment, and some of it definitely responded better to dropping it and cursing than any scientifically methodical troubleshooting.

    • @kevinsullivan2153
      @kevinsullivan2153 Před 3 lety +158

      I've tended to use the term "percussive maintenance", with the swearing thrown in gratis. Also, we need to consider that these are (mostly) belters (used to improvising) working on a piece-of-crap ship without sufficient resources. There will not be much "we'll machine a perfect replacement part" and lots of "kick it into alignment, that should hold it for a bit".

    • @dhericean5260
      @dhericean5260 Před 3 lety +15

      I remember a presentation about the Synchrotron Radiation Source at Daresbury, when a picture of a bench with a hammer on it came up the presenter commented about the Daresbury screwdriver.

  • @ifrit05
    @ifrit05 Před rokem +790

    Artificial gravity in The Expanse is generated by thrust. The decks are laid out vertically, not horizontally like in most sci-fi shows. Think of it like an elevator, you experience more weight while going up, and feel less when going down. It's the same as in the Expanse, if the engines are turned off, you essentially are at zero-g.
    EDIT: Well guess I should of waited till the end, you literally explained it word for word as I did lol.

    • @throwabrick
      @throwabrick Před 10 měsíci +19

      It's old-school Heinlein rocket design: strapped into G-couches, flipping and burning hard to get that critical delta-V

    • @IreneWY
      @IreneWY Před 8 měsíci +32

      It annoyed the h out of me that she didn't get it at first. I just ranted about it to my brother for 5 min. I'm glad she seems to grasp it later in the video.

    • @dulloddity
      @dulloddity Před 8 měsíci +18

      Plus the fact they specifically talk about flip/burn to decelerate half way through any trip so they get constant gravity, and end the trip at relatively slow speeds.

    • @mike_d_melb_music_fan5229
      @mike_d_melb_music_fan5229 Před 8 měsíci +4

      There was this rich girl character (may have been Clarissa Mao) , she was so rich and connected, captains would always put off turning off the thrust /gravity till she was finished drinking at the bar :)

    • @ginnymorlock4922
      @ginnymorlock4922 Před 8 měsíci +10

      They are consistent in this throughout the show. To get somewhere, you accelerate halfway there, then flip and decelerate the other half.

  • @EverSoJoe
    @EverSoJoe Před 2 lety +707

    One of the biggest smallest things that still blow my mind is when they shoot a railgun and in the scene you can see them briefly firing up their engine to produce the necessary thrust against the thrust of the railgun to not go backwards. I love these details!

    • @ponfed
      @ponfed Před 2 lety +87

      They use their gun as a "source" of trust at some point also.

    • @DarthRhend
      @DarthRhend Před rokem +21

      The advantage of having read the source material is that they explain the thrust gravity as a matter of course. I think it's interesting that she doesn't see that there is more than one method of producing gravity.

    • @ponfed
      @ponfed Před rokem +43

      @@DarthRhend I think it's more that she's used to sci-fi using techno-babble to explain "artificial" gravity. She didn't even think that the decks of the ship where like.. they are. If you think the decks are longitudinal... you can't figure out where that "gravity" comes from. I mean she might not be a consumer of hard, or even slightly harder sci-fi... Low expectations and all that. Edit: Also... the early seasons weren't all that great at giving you the architecture of the decks, because budget and of course a learning curve. The "vertical" nature of the setup isn't obvious right away...

    • @kishaloyb.7937
      @kishaloyb.7937 Před rokem +10

      @@ponfed Yeah, its in S4 when Alex uses the railgun to pull the Barb out of the gravity field of Illus.

    • @rhaegarren6185
      @rhaegarren6185 Před rokem +10

      @@kishaloyb.7937 Pretty sure you mean New Terra? Lol

  • @michaelcampbell6820
    @michaelcampbell6820 Před 3 lety +2451

    You really have to watch 4 or 5 episodes before it really gets going. Then you wind up binge watching all 5 seasons

    • @stonesie81
      @stonesie81 Před 3 lety +214

      Season 6 finished filming this week, so there's that to look forward to :)

    • @synchc
      @synchc Před 3 lety +97

      Then, if like me, it still isn't enough you'll binge read the books.

    • @BrianHaddad
      @BrianHaddad Před 3 lety +73

      Agreed. Season one had a really slow start. I watched it with people who were ready to quit right before it got good. The early commitment pays off eventually!

    • @James-mb3je
      @James-mb3je Před 3 lety +71

      Season 2 blends seamlessly into Season 3 and it delivers almost every episode, all killer no filler

    • @lordmoos3
      @lordmoos3 Před 3 lety +67

      @@BrianHaddad 4 episodes. If you can get someone to watch through CQB, they're either gonna be hooked, or a lost cause. :)

  • @macmuchmore1
    @macmuchmore1 Před 2 lety +1985

    Thrust gravity - the ships that don’t spin have gravity under thrust as the ships floors are perpendicular to the direction of thrust. When the engines stop, the “gravity” stops.

    • @50crowley
      @50crowley Před 2 lety +102

      Even astrophysicists have to turn to Wikipedia sometimes, lol.

    • @jamied1579
      @jamied1579 Před 2 lety +69

      Then same again when they spin the ship 180° for deceleration, which obviously takes a long time due to the velocities involved...

    • @canyonpoe1859
      @canyonpoe1859 Před 2 lety +42

      This dude mines ice ^

    • @dannylerch
      @dannylerch Před 2 lety +73

      I came here to say this, but knew in my heart it was already done.

    • @Egobyte83
      @Egobyte83 Před 2 lety +27

      Thrust gravity seems so wrong and unnatural to me. XD Like, I understand the physics of it, accelerating constantly to 1G, and it is a typically human, simplistic solution to the issue of gravity on spaceships, but just the fact that the ships are built as skyscrapers instead of aircraft carriers bugs me. XD This is what we do, we simplify solutions constantly... like, we break our heads when we ride bikes. Do we build safer bikes? no, we build little plastic helmets, so we can continue riding our risky bikes. XD

  • @khalbrogo6749
    @khalbrogo6749 Před rokem +243

    One little detail I always loved: The PDC's have a micro-rocket on the back of them that fires whenever the PDC fires. It's easily viewable in any close-up rear shot of a PDC firing. They do this to counter-act the momentum the PDC would generate by firing forwards. Rocket booster fires in the opposite direction as the PDC fires forward to even out the inertia. Very small detail but VERY cool.

    • @9SMTM6
      @9SMTM6 Před 8 měsíci +7

      As someone who didn't look too close, I thought this was just some 'exhaust', but that would not be consistent with our modern guns.
      There is 'guns' that do that, recoilless rifles, but they shoot rockets, not inert munition, and I don't know of a fast firing variant of that. I imagine that would also be very costly, even during the expanse.

    • @ralphm6901
      @ralphm6901 Před 8 měsíci +6

      @@9SMTM6 I'm not sure what kind of ammo the PDC's use. Whether it's like normal machine-gun ammo, or a bunch of mini-rockets, there's explosive propellant. Some of the gas generated could be directed backwards to counter the thrust. Modern guns, semi-auto and full-auto, use some of the gas to push the mechanism backwards to eject the empty case. It loads a new round as it's pushed forward by a spring. It's not too big of a stretch to imagine PDCs doing something similar.

    • @ImThe5thKing
      @ImThe5thKing Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@ralphm6901 my thought is that PDC's are just large gatling guns that shoot like 30-50mm explosive rounds or something. I'm mostly basing this assumption off of a game called Space Engineers (if you're into real physics of space you'll hate this game but it's fun) there are mods you can install in the game that add Expanse weapons, engines, etc. and in the game, you can build PDC's for your ship and they take 40mm rounds.

    • @bulma12345678910
      @bulma12345678910 Před 7 měsíci +8

      @@ImThe5thKing iirc it's some sort of caseless tungsten ammo. There's a few times in the books where they have to collect spare ammo for the PDCs and it mentions there's 20000 rounds in a crate which weighs 500 kilos at 1G.

    • @tylerjohn4607
      @tylerjohn4607 Před 7 měsíci +6

      I assume these are recoilless rounds like a few modern weapons have.
      The Rheinmetall RMK30 is a 30mm recoilless auto cannon that vents out the back like we see in The Expanse. It was proposed for mounting on the Eurocopter Tiger as the conventional French conventional 30mm had too heavy of recoil giving it an impractically short range due to poor accuracy as the recoil would make the entire airframe unstable.
      Another benefit of the RMK30 is because it negates it recoil it can use substantially more powerful rounds with higher muzzle velocity than comparable 30mm cannons, as recoil is not such a limiting factor

  • @cmilkau
    @cmilkau Před rokem +252

    The Expanse is the only show I can think of that uses physics to drive the story rather than just inspire it. That changes a lot of things and IMO makes it very unique and enjoyable.

    • @alanj9978
      @alanj9978 Před 6 měsíci +5

      That's because they actually did a good job of turning an excellent hard sci-fi book series into the tv show.

    • @ObsceneSuperMatt
      @ObsceneSuperMatt Před 5 měsíci

      At least, season 1.

    • @bestcatdad
      @bestcatdad Před 4 měsíci +1

      Three body problem should be a relieve hopefully

    • @mr.voidroy6869
      @mr.voidroy6869 Před 4 měsíci

      Space is a character

  • @ryanmcewen415
    @ryanmcewen415 Před 3 lety +594

    "You can't just kick it!"
    Spoken like a physicist.
    No mechanic, engineer or trades person ever born has an issue with this.
    Shows the difference in experiences

    • @krosigrim
      @krosigrim Před 2 lety +47

      It works way more than it should... I noted

    • @alexs4392
      @alexs4392 Před 2 lety +62

      Also as someone who works on helicopter avionics.. she made a joke about turning it off and turning it back on again. That works pretty damn often haha

    • @olaruud9366
      @olaruud9366 Před 2 lety +32

      @@alexs4392 Troubleshooting any complicated system most often wont even be attempted until it has been turned off and on again. Try asking any IT support for help and that is the first thing they allways want to do.

    • @getsideways7257
      @getsideways7257 Před 2 lety +8

      @@olaruud9366 Then kicking it if cycling the power didn't help :)

    • @olaruud9366
      @olaruud9366 Před 2 lety +43

      @@getsideways7257 not kicking it, it's called "percussive maintenance".

  • @chernobyl68
    @chernobyl68 Před 2 lety +1131

    I worked in the propulsion plant of the USS Nimitz.
    I can report that external mechanical agitation (usually with a large wrench) is an entirely acceptable method of troubleshooting.

    • @harvbegal6868
      @harvbegal6868 Před 2 lety +114

      "external mechanical agitation" LOL! Love that!

    • @prongs82
      @prongs82 Před 2 lety +19

      I love the jargon.

    • @apollomars1678
      @apollomars1678 Před 2 lety +9

      by external agitation you can see, if a part of the construction is loose and identify the problem in a fast fashion. its like shacking an arm-wrist-clock to hear, if something broke and now clicks around.
      in many electronic cases the electrotechnical contacts are surprisingly re connectable by sudden agitation, IF it is use don the correct side in the correct strength.
      in my case it was a stove, who got contact with metal, that dissolved by heat over 10 years (to secure that you would by a new stove....typical shit......the external agitation made the electric contacts reconnect on the non-dissolved parts for 2 more years of constant agitation. after that time the whole stove was no longer working.
      this is funny and probably even reality in space or in ships, because both electronic parts of these vehicles have a lot of problems by the natural environment. this is the most inaccurate part about sci-fi. space is a deadly space, even for electronics by cosmic gamma rays and these movies have to treat it less deadly to allow these things to work.

    • @sidewalkere
      @sidewalkere Před 2 lety +9

      Not on the nuclear side of the thing, I hope?

    • @chernobyl68
      @chernobyl68 Před 2 lety +8

      @@sidewalkere 1993-1995, reactor electrical division. worked all over the plants.

  • @Stifle9
    @Stifle9 Před 8 měsíci +58

    As a physics major, this show and few others feel heavy, in the sense that there is actual effort behind it, actual human effort and time spent behind the details. It's much more like a work of art to be appreciated time and again than most shows in the genre.

  • @markleadbeatter6196
    @markleadbeatter6196 Před 7 měsíci +35

    The Expanse is quite simply one of the best Sci Fi series ever made, full stop. The production values, the attention to detail, the quality cast and the story itself are all epic and anyone who hasn’t watched it should do themselves a huge favour and binge it to death. My only gripe is that there are only 6 seasons!

    • @GR3YBU5H
      @GR3YBU5H Před 4 měsíci +2

      Couldn't agree more. I spread the word as much as possible, and those who do watch it always come back to me and tell me how much they enjoyed it. Eztreamly underrated show. Hoping they do the next 3 books

    • @lordorion5776
      @lordorion5776 Před 4 měsíci +2

      it's still theoretically possible to continue the series as they ended right before a huge time skip of like 30 years in the books so i still hope it'll get picked back up again

    • @DevVader
      @DevVader Před 3 měsíci +1

      To be honest, I'm so glad that we even got 6 seasons, as we nearly lost the show after season 3 like so many other shows these days.

  • @WasabiSniffer
    @WasabiSniffer Před 2 lety +1338

    It’s hilarious how many engineers are in here advocating kicking as a valid method of troubleshoot

    • @joncarlow8665
      @joncarlow8665 Před 2 lety +127

      Not as a method of 'troubleshooting', as a method of getting it to work again. There is a difference. It's what you do when you don't want to troubleshoot it...lol. And it occasionally works. Like when your TV remote isn't working quite right and you bang it on the couch arm or your leg a few times, and it suddenly works again. Don't lie...you've done it, ha!

    • @cielphantomhive3202
      @cielphantomhive3202 Před 2 lety +4

      @@joncarlow8665 well, I imagine it's hardly possible to check it out with proper statistics with so many variables😅

    • @dglthrawn1
      @dglthrawn1 Před 2 lety +95

      I believe it's called 'percussive maintenance'

    • @farizshakir2252
      @farizshakir2252 Před 2 lety +31

      I used to fly older 737s, and the rudder pedal adjustment (for taller dudes) would get stuck often... The engineer who fixed it did so by kicking the pedals hard.. apparently this procedure is in his manuals haha

    • @kevrowsome-smith8597
      @kevrowsome-smith8597 Před 2 lety +22

      I think you'll find it's called "percussive maintenance"...

  • @dapeach06
    @dapeach06 Před 3 lety +2362

    Edit: saw that you addressed this after the episode
    No artificial gravity, just acceleration g's, and ships built like a skyscraper with an engine on the ground floor (decks perpendicular to the direction of thrust), that's why the ships flip halfway through their trip, their engines fire the whole time, and the acceleration simulates gravity (usually 1/3g so that they conserve reaction mass and so belters are comfortable). Since they are accelerating for half the trip, they spend the second half decelerating, but the people inside the ship feel the same way, since the ship is flipped around

    • @paullamar4111
      @paullamar4111 Před 3 lety +293

      The one conceit the writers assume is that a new type of drive, the Epstein drive, is invented that allows for long sustained burns at something like that 1/3 g.
      Such a drive probably cannot exist, but if it did, the plot is much more fun. 😊

    • @willemvandebeek
      @willemvandebeek Před 3 lety +43

      It is an incredible waste of fuel though, the only unrealistic part of The Expanse. :)

    • @Philip_J
      @Philip_J Před 3 lety +33

      I've never met a show or movie before with that kind of attention to detail!

    • @rogerlie4176
      @rogerlie4176 Před 3 lety +13

      This is something I have wondered over. How to you flip a ship? If you are travelling really fast it takes a lot of acceleration to turn it around.

    • @PrinceAlhorian
      @PrinceAlhorian Před 3 lety +244

      @@willemvandebeek not a waste of fuel, the whole point of the Epstein drive is to fly straight courses as quick as possible between two bodies.
      Your other option is a ballistic route.
      A few days to Mars vs 9 months. Take your pick.

  • @badredfinn2982
    @badredfinn2982 Před 8 měsíci +4

    I am a boiler mechanic, plumber and electrician; "kicking it" is often the only viable option for repair.

  • @Rastayeti666
    @Rastayeti666 Před 2 lety +7

    most mindbuggling scene for me was as someone dies slowly in zero gravity and begins to cry, the tears cant flow and start to "drown" the eyes

  • @inthewastes
    @inthewastes Před 3 lety +236

    "You can't just kick it!!"
    A mechanical engineer: it's called "percussive maintenance" actually. Basically hit it with a hammer to bounce a component back into place.

    • @atmk
      @atmk Před 3 lety +17

      another mechanical engineer yes percussive maintenance exits, its the worst kind of maintenance but it works (sometimes)

    • @markborg805
      @markborg805 Před 3 lety +5

      I live that it actually has a name

    • @SmokeWeasel
      @SmokeWeasel Před 3 lety +6

      We used to fix Amiga 500's with "the drop test". Re-seated the chips you see.

    • @Harv72b
      @Harv72b Před 3 lety +1

      @@SmokeWeasel We had a particular piece of "man portable" equipment in the army which usually had to be dropped after setup to get it working. Same thing as the Amiga.

    • @muddydave01
      @muddydave01 Před 3 lety +2

      Knew a mining engineer who reckoned the most important tool in his kit was a hammer. If that didn't fix it you just get another one.

  • @WaystedMined
    @WaystedMined Před 3 lety +129

    Yes, FINALLY!
    Edit: Fun additional fact, The Expanse scripts are color coded based on the scene's gravity.

    • @Jop_pop
      @Jop_pop Před 3 lety +6

      I am nerding out so hard after reading that this is true

    • @pepsakdoek1029
      @pepsakdoek1029 Před 3 lety +10

      @@Jop_pop Watch Ty and that guy (podcast/youtubes where Ty Franck and Wes Chatham chats about the show, though they almost chat more about other stuff) for more tidbits like this!

    • @caturdaynite7217
      @caturdaynite7217 Před 3 lety +1

      @@pepsakdoek1029 I watch it every week. It's a great show and they do give a lot of inside information about the show.

    • @abbaszaidi8371
      @abbaszaidi8371 Před 3 lety +5

      @@pepsakdoek1029 I’m still reeling in shock that Wes hasn’t watched Star Trek II The Wrath of Khan!!

    • @Jop_pop
      @Jop_pop Před 3 lety

      @@pepsakdoek1029 Just subbed, thanks for the tip!

  • @oblivion_2852
    @oblivion_2852 Před 2 lety +43

    Also it's an overlooked detail but the asteroids people live in are spun so when you see the belters walking around below their feet is space and above their heads is the core of the asteroid. Docks are therefore on the poles where the spin is zero

    • @aldunlop4622
      @aldunlop4622 Před rokem +5

      Yeah I remember watching the very first episode on Ceres which is very small and would have minute gravity, took me a while to figure out they must spin the rock and wrap the station around it to give spin artificial gravity.

    • @thyssaliki
      @thyssaliki Před 5 měsíci +1

      The "centrifugal" force.

  • @shawnadams1460
    @shawnadams1460 Před rokem +16

    The Expanse has been by FAR my favorite Scify show of the last 10 years hands down. I LOVE the fact that it is based on our current scientific understandings. It leaves us really wanting more, and the story was just so deep..man I miss it. I love how all of the ships are built vertically, not horizontally like we have been used to for so many years.

  • @danbadd
    @danbadd Před 3 lety +800

    I love how they accelerate at 1/3 g halfway to their destination, then cut engines, flip the ship 180 degrees, and decelerate at 1/3 g for the second half of the trip. (Edited)

    • @evandroperes1678
      @evandroperes1678 Před 2 lety +49

      That's the comment I was waiting for a looooong time!

    • @stuartanderws5705
      @stuartanderws5705 Před 2 lety +19

      Astrophysics really need to read more sci fi books like Ben Bove Grand tour books or Gatway books. That would give then a good head start with how things might work.

    • @HDproductionnal
      @HDproductionnal Před 2 lety +17

      Flip and burn maneuverer

    • @mattmarkham9117
      @mattmarkham9117 Před 2 lety +35

      Generally most ships like that accelerate at 1/3 G most of the time, unless there's a pressing reason to go faster.

    • @amdredlambda
      @amdredlambda Před 2 lety

      1G is only 22mph acceleration every second, which is not something that will keep anything in orbit, much less takes you on a interplanetary trip. Good luck buddy.

  • @shookings
    @shookings Před 3 lety +540

    I'm not an astrophysicist, but I am an enthusiast.
    My wife didn't understand when I was pausing and rewinding and saying "oh my God, they got it right". Over and over again.

    • @MP-ut6eb
      @MP-ut6eb Před 3 lety +20

      Poor wife 😂😂😂😂😂 did she ended the film at the end of story or just gave up and slept?

    • @soul0360
      @soul0360 Před 3 lety +9

      @@MP-ut6eb All the partners I have ever had, have all chosen your last option. Just as I would, when ever they were watching reality tv.
      I guess I'll have to do a better job, at finding someone with similar interests to myself. If I don't want to be single forever.
      Thx for opening my eyes. Been wondering for years what I have been doing wrong. But surely, there must be more to my failed relationships then this. he he

    • @shookings
      @shookings Před 3 lety +13

      @@soul0360 my wife is 40 years old, and still watches teen angst dramas. Good thing we have separate computers

    • @mittamoa
      @mittamoa Před 3 lety +8

      @@shookings hahaha, getting targeted ads from such a browsing behavior would be the worst.

    • @mandings36
      @mandings36 Před 3 lety +3

      @@shookings sorry mate, that is brutal

  • @Rekcoj
    @Rekcoj Před rokem +27

    i still remember when i realized how gravity on ships work in the expanse. i've never read anything about it, i just watched the show, so it took a while until i really understood. it's so logical and "easy" and yet every other sci-fi movie/series conditioned me to imagine spaceships to be designed in a different way. tbf though it is only possible because of the epstein drive's unimaginable efficiency.
    fantastic show, i'm whatching it right now, again. already in the 5th season.

  • @thedaywerevolt
    @thedaywerevolt Před rokem +33

    I think something that would help you better understand the ship physics is to look at a photo of the cross-section of the Roci. The decks are not like what you would see on the Enterprise, where the decks are horizontal if looking at it from the side. The Roci's decks are vertical, so if flying straight, the g force would go straight down the length of the ship

    • @scotthewitt258
      @scotthewitt258 Před 5 měsíci +3

      The first time I saw those blueprints, they broke my brain.
      In your head you assume it is laid out like any other scifi show. You know, the ones that ignore physics.....

    • @thedaywerevolt
      @thedaywerevolt Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@scotthewitt258 nope pretty sure in Star Trek the decks start at the top and move down and people walk against the intertia. In the roci, when you are climbing up, the force of gravity is coming straight down on you. Maybe I didn't explain it right. If the crew of the starship enterprise was dealing with expanse style physics, they would have a completely different experience. I'm having a hard time describing it, but I understand the difference. The way the Roci is laid out is completely the opposite of what we are used to. The crash couches serve a purpose and on the enterprise they wouldn't.

    • @basedeltazero714
      @basedeltazero714 Před měsícem

      @@thedaywerevolt The crash couches wouldn't serve any purpose on the Enterprise because it has the Structural Integrity Field for that.
      ... y'know, come to think about it, the closest performance to the Enterprise shown in the Expanse is Eros.
      It does a very good job of breaking down those sci-fi conveniences and then making their *presence* feel extraordinary... like with Miller on Eros or the Hybrid looking up.

  • @Hailfire08
    @Hailfire08 Před 3 lety +274

    "A building on its side" is exactly how the Donnager is described in the books

    • @richard2371
      @richard2371 Před 3 lety +89

      A classic earther view of things, a belter wouldn't ever say that sa sa kay

    • @johanwittens7712
      @johanwittens7712 Před 3 lety +7

      It's how all ships are described, except the nauvoo/behemoth...

    • @TheAkashicTraveller
      @TheAkashicTraveller Před 3 lety +11

      Why would you compare it as on it's side though? It's not as if there's a ground for it to be on it's side relative too. That comparison is just confusing.

    • @johanwittens7712
      @johanwittens7712 Před 3 lety +19

      @@TheAkashicTraveller it's how the ships are described in the books. And yes you're right there isn't a down or floor in space so on its side doesn't make sense unless you view it from an earth perspective where there is gravity.
      Usually ships and planes are designed horizontally and we are used to moving in a horizontal plane. So naturally we view things from this horizontal standpoint even in space. So we tend to look at a moving space ship from this horizontal viewpoint, regarding the longest part of the ship parallel to the vector of movement as the horizontal main axis, because we're used to that in ocean ships and airplanes. But in a building, the longest part of the skyscraper tends to be vertical. So in that sense, it makes sense that a ship in the expanse is like a skyscraper on its side, since it like a skyscraper, but instead of moving horizontally it moves vertically.
      This is all relative off course since there's no horizontal or vertical in space, only the plane of the ecliptic is often used in space as a reference ''horizontal'' plane. So when taking the plane of the ecliptic into account, and since most space ships travel parallel to or in this plane (horizontally), you can say that ship would look to someone looking at the plane of the ecliptic as a ''skyscraper on its side''...
      But in the end it's just a colourful analogy to explain how ships in the expanse work or how they're built, allowing us to imagine them quickly and easily...

    • @thgeremilrivera-thorsen9556
      @thgeremilrivera-thorsen9556 Před 3 lety +4

      @@johanwittens7712 or the Razorback...

  • @AridosUK
    @AridosUK Před 3 lety +150

    one of the episodes in the latest season has a space battle where the hero ship fires a railgun, if you pause at the right moment, you see the engine light briefly to counteract the thrust of the railgun, meaning the passengers inside feel a net force of zero, the attention to detail in this show is astonishing

    • @stanislavblinov8454
      @stanislavblinov8454 Před 3 lety +28

      It's also toyed with in season 4, where Alex uses the Roci's railgun as a thruster. IIRC he even explains his reasoning that since the engine is out he'll not get this compensation you mention and so he proceeds to use the kickback from shots to accelerate their improvised tug contraption.

    • @rune12358
      @rune12358 Před 3 lety +55

      The freaking PDCs have tiny rocket engines that fire so they don't impart recoil momentum on the ship. Animated so they are synchronized with the guns firing. Just wow.
      With each season, they get their CGI guys more and more trained in real world physics. And at some point, those guys will work for other shows. So for any Hollywood exec reading: "worked on CGI for The Expanse" should be the best recommendation letter out there.

    • @AridosUK
      @AridosUK Před 3 lety +13

      @@rune12358 that is some attention to detail, but yeah PDC recoil could add random vectoring to a ship, especially if it's tracking fast movers

    • @turboguppy3748
      @turboguppy3748 Před 3 lety +11

      Let's not forget these details were in the books.Sci Fi and the producers/directors didn't just decide "hey let's make a realistic show." They followed the material.

    • @AridosUK
      @AridosUK Před 3 lety +11

      @@turboguppy3748 aye, I've read the books, but usually those details don't often get translated into live action

  • @JaedenRuiner
    @JaedenRuiner Před 7 měsíci +2

    As a physicist, she missed (albeit not fully explained in the first few episodes) that the gravity on ships is inertial, not centripetal. All floors are perpendicular to the primary thrust vector, so constant acceleration simulates gravity. Flip and burn to create similar constant deceleration with the same effect. Thus, turning off the engines cancels their "gravity" and requires mag boots. The Expanse's attention to inertia is an absolute first in almost all sci-fi and action media.

  • @sszy59
    @sszy59 Před 4 měsíci +2

    My favorite “unnecessary” little detail that they got right is that in Season 2 (I think) there’s a scene with someone who is badly injured in 0g and they start crying, and the show spent the special effects money to show how all the tears just pool around their eyes. You have to look closely to see it; but the attention to detail is up to that level.

  • @istvankovasznai
    @istvankovasznai Před 3 lety +582

    Here's a little bit of trivia: In "The Martian", the name of the astronaut stranded on Mars is Mark Watney. In "The Expanse" universe, there is a Martian colony ship named Mark Watney.

    • @raygundesigns
      @raygundesigns Před 3 lety +12

      Nice one :)

    • @mickydoos
      @mickydoos Před 3 lety +8

      Loved that little touch.

    • @cinedelasestrellas
      @cinedelasestrellas Před 3 lety +3

      I always thought that they should name one of the ships the Carl Sagan.

    • @charlesajones77
      @charlesajones77 Před 3 lety +10

      So now the question is, is Mark Watney a real person in this universe, or a character in a book?

    • @ASummersetproduction
      @ASummersetproduction Před 2 lety +16

      Also the year the martian colony was founded is the same year from the martian

  • @RememberTheChase
    @RememberTheChase Před 3 lety +476

    I was just waiting for when she realized the gravity thing, thats one of the reasons I started watching.

    • @DrBecky
      @DrBecky  Před 3 lety +104

      Took me a while but we got there in the end! It wasn't obvious to me at all 😂

    • @chris57035
      @chris57035 Před 3 lety +88

      ​@@DrBecky Also the "Juice" from episode 1 is an anti-stroke injection to keep people from passing out / bursting blood vessels in the brain during high-g maneuvers. There is no magic inertial dampening in the expanse, so if you go from 0.3g to 12g to flip around and turn the ship in a different direction, all the occupants of the ship will feel that 12g, so the writers had to come up with some plausible way of not killing everyone on the ship just to turn around. It's great Hard Sci-Fi.
      In the books, the crews' seats are these 3D-Gimballed crash couches that can rotate 360° in both the X- and Y- axis to always keep the occupant oriented so that their body is inclined at 45° to acceleration forces, which is a big deal with the small, maneuverable Rocinante. That's hard to depict on a TV show budget, though, so they just use regular pilot seats that recline.

    • @jemborg
      @jemborg Před 3 lety +4

      Rofl. I was waiting for the ball to drop. 🤣🤣🤣

    • @jemborg
      @jemborg Před 3 lety +13

      @@DrBecky I have to admit that was sooo funny, I actually wondered if you were pulling my leg. "The artificial gravity stopped when the engines stopped but the power is still on... hmmm. 🤔🤔🤔 Hey, it's more like a building but _on its side!?!"_ 😮
      😂😂🤣

    • @stanlee5465
      @stanlee5465 Před 3 lety +15

      I was screaming the whole time! They don't have ARTIFICIAL gravity, it's 'real' gravity, just produced by MOMENTUM and THURST.
      If the ship isn't moving, then you're in ZERO G. If the ship is under thrust, then you'll be 'pushed' in the opposite direction!
      And they address the entire concept of different the effects of different how different gravity intensity affects the human body, and for instance people born on MARS find EARTH gravity EXCRUCIATING, and people born on asteroids can't even SURVIVE in Earth's full ONE G of gravity!

  • @KingBawb-wg3jo
    @KingBawb-wg3jo Před rokem +19

    The books are amazing. One of the best series I've ever read. The show is one of the best adaptations I've seen as well. Both are very good at trying to get the science correct most of the time. Highly recommend them both.

    • @DeadpoolCR13
      @DeadpoolCR13 Před 7 měsíci +1

      currently just started book 7 so have a couple more to go yet, but thus far also being at the end of season 2.. I concur. Fantastic adaptation (mostly) of a truly fantastic book series.

  • @SGIABC
    @SGIABC Před rokem +9

    I somehow just stumbled across this rather large channel. I love your enthusiasm. I can tell you really have a strong passion for the subject of physics and it's infectious. The Expanse doesn't disappoint. It's slow burner in season one, but it gets better very quickly in season 2. Thanks for the reaction!

  • @AngeloBarovierSD
    @AngeloBarovierSD Před 3 lety +333

    If you're not already convinced, I'd like to throw my piece of wood onto the "Watch the whole series!" fire.

    • @nosuchthing8
      @nosuchthing8 Před 3 lety

      Is it on netflix

    • @cybervoid8442
      @cybervoid8442 Před 3 lety +2

      @@nosuchthing8 it's on Amazon Prime

    • @hypocritex
      @hypocritex Před 3 lety +2

      @@nosuchthing8 Not only is it the best sci-fi show on TV. By the time you watch the available 5 seasons. You may find yourself wondering if it's not THE best show on TV.

    • @chriskelvin248
      @chriskelvin248 Před 2 lety

      Read the books and you have just thrown the keg into that same fire.

  • @MysterySemicolon
    @MysterySemicolon Před 3 lety +181

    If you like the science behind the first few episodes you're going to love how in-depth they get into with everything on the story. From tracking long range missiles to how wounds are treated in zero-g.

    • @DrazenKlisuric
      @DrazenKlisuric Před 3 lety +36

      Yes, I like when they depressurize whole ship before battle so there is no explosive depressurization during the battle. Such a logical move, but I never saw it in the movies or shows.

    • @jonasb.236
      @jonasb.236 Před 3 lety +6

      It is such an amazing show but I have to say, that the last season was really not great. I hope that it gets continued and maybe they could build a brand like star trek or so :D

    • @urduib
      @urduib Před 3 lety +3

      @@jonasb.236 That would be awesome. I would follow it passionately.

    • @robgraham5697
      @robgraham5697 Před 3 lety +15

      @@jonasb.236 I rather liked season 5. With an utter nutbar like Marco Inaros as the antagonist I kept watching hoping A micro-meteor would go through the fungus 9nfected mush he uses for a brain.
      Plus I liked learning more about the past of the various Roci crew.

    • @iarroganti
      @iarroganti Před 3 lety +11

      @@DrazenKlisuric I think the first piece of fiction I've seen that depressurized the ships before battle was David Weber's Honor Harrington series. He put a lot of thought into those small details.

  • @iknowmk
    @iknowmk Před 3 měsíci +1

    The 3 types of gravity I remember from that show are rotational, thrust based and magnetic. "The Expanse" is almost not entertainment. It's so realistic it's like watching a documentary. Glad to see you enjoying this amazing show.

  • @GETitHOWuLIVit
    @GETitHOWuLIVit Před 2 lety +7

    I would love to see you react to the rest of the series. There's some moments that I don't want to spoil for you, but I know you would love for the hard sci-fi and some amazing cinematography! (One scene in particular with the Martian guy bored alone on the ship comes to mind)

  • @keyonhutson1539
    @keyonhutson1539 Před 2 lety +437

    I really love how the idea of thrust gravity just doesn't occur to her, I get the feeling that it's such an overlooked source of gravity that the idea a TV show would actually use it just didn't compute lol.

    • @bztube888
      @bztube888 Před 2 lety +32

      That was I thought, watching too many bad sci-fi ruined her a little bit. Doctor's orders: watching more Expense.

    • @VectorZero
      @VectorZero Před 2 lety +15

      GRAVITY=ACCELERATION

    • @EidolonSpecus
      @EidolonSpecus Před 2 lety +17

      Decades of pseudoscience-fiction has rotted all of our brains.
      Even among the best of us.

    • @joshuaharris1920
      @joshuaharris1920 Před 2 lety +12

      Not so much thats its "overlooked" more so inapplicable. How they generate gravity in the expanse is intuitive and interesting but it hinges on the plot. The engines we build in the future will produce extremely tiny amounts of thrust over long periods of time. Thrust is not a sufficient source of gravity. The epensitein drive is "magic" driven by the plot. Real engines do not work that way.

    • @bztube888
      @bztube888 Před 2 lety +25

      ​@@joshuaharris1920 Sorry, but it's hard to process what are you talking about. Thurst (or rather the acceleration it provides) is the only known source of gravity other than a planet-size mass being next to you. Acceleration=gravity in a sense that according to Einstein we can't distinguish between the two. 1G requires thrust which is not tiny at all, and 1G would be sufficient for travel as the ship would reach Earth's escape velocity in less than 20 minutes. The drive doesn't exist of course, as it's about imagining future's technology (are you familiar with the genre?), but it doesn't make it inapplicable, let alone "magic". We are even told it's based on fusion, which according to physics (known today, not the Star Trek one) could provide the necessary energy from the small amount of fuel a ship would carry. Today's engines can't do that, because they are all chemical rockets, which is the most rudimentary way of creating trust, so people tried that first: but it doesn't mean we can't have something better in the future. At the time of inventing the aeroplane, they predicted that intercontinental air travel is not feasible. They were completely right. Of course, they meant "real" aeroplanes. Then the "magical" jet engine was born ...

  • @SwiftlyEnterprising
    @SwiftlyEnterprising Před 3 lety +234

    S1 E4 “CQB” is pretty terrific. There’s a lot of thought put into how you’d actually have to fight in space.

    • @finneire1282
      @finneire1282 Před 3 lety +15

      A truly epic battle. I love how long it takes :P

    • @kaguario
      @kaguario Před 3 lety +1

      Absolutely

    • @abbaszaidi8371
      @abbaszaidi8371 Před 3 lety +8

      I used to watch the Expanse as background noise while working on a laptop. Until CQB hit.
      Watched all episodes 2-5 times. Currently watching the same episode twice a week with the weekly podcast
      It’s almost becoming religious while I’m currently reading book 2.
      Beats thinking about work!

    • @dragoninthewest1
      @dragoninthewest1 Před 3 lety +6

      The battle of Thoth Station would also be an excellent choice.

    • @Hudson316
      @Hudson316 Před 3 lety +6

      It's probably a bit heavy on spoilers but the battle from the finale of season 5 is probably the best one so far (and there's a battle in the 6th book I'm REALLY hoping makes it into the show because it's pretty damn spectacular)

  • @nonnonsence
    @nonnonsence Před 3 měsíci +1

    This just popped up in my feed. I remember watching it when it came out. I hope you've finished the whole series.

  • @DarkMetroid777
    @DarkMetroid777 Před rokem +2

    I just finished reading the books and absolutely loved the show tons. I really enjoy the more 'realistic' sci-fi stuff like this. This video was super fun to watch to see what you thought of it and your analysis of certain parts. Thanks for the video!

  • @jordantaylor260
    @jordantaylor260 Před 3 lety +334

    To be honest, just watch the whole show. I’d watch every video. It’s my favourite show.

    • @williammorgan9622
      @williammorgan9622 Před 3 lety

      It was mine tell damsel in distress trope, and the racist sexist writing in the 5 season, and they to make a cribbed joke to end the season. I was in a wheel chair when I was 16 they told me I had MD! I could tell you the 100 ways Tye Franks rewrote the science and characters to be racist, sexist and Bodiest!

    • @jordantaylor260
      @jordantaylor260 Před 3 lety +26

      @@williammorgan9622 bollocks. I am a woman and a proud feminist. One of the reasons I love this show is the resourcefulness and depth of the female characters ie Naomi, Chrisjen, Bobbi, even Peaches. Naomi was never a “damsel in distress” she got HERSELF out of that situation with a combination of intelligence and determination. Not to mention the diversity of the cast and characters. One of the underlining themes of this show IS prejudice between oppressive regimes and those they exploit. So that’s kind of the point, dude. I don’t know what a “cribbed joke” is. A joke you put in a crib? Maybe check your comments aren’t being auto corrected before you post. I don’t mean any disrespect. But my recollection was the last scene was an attack on the ring followed by a ship and it’s occupants being de materialised. I’m sorry for your situation and that genuinely sucks, dude, but I don’t know what your personal situation has to do with the themes of The Expanse. In the end who cares if you don’t like it, that’s fine. But I do and none of your points are saliently made or even make any sense. I think you and I watched a different show.

    • @nias2631
      @nias2631 Před 3 lety +8

      @@jordantaylor260 Nowadays it seems like people just want to have their own personal anger to harbor.

    • @jordantaylor260
      @jordantaylor260 Před 3 lety +5

      @@nias2631 that’s the internet.

    • @amistrophy
      @amistrophy Před 3 lety +4

      @@williammorgan9622 lol you just got roasted
      Fucking uh slactivist

  • @darthmoomoo
    @darthmoomoo Před 3 lety +245

    11:49 The ships are built like skyscrapers with the engines at the "bottom" and levels stacked on "top" of it. So when they are under thrust, they have "gravity" due to the acceleration.

    • @stramaisdead
      @stramaisdead Před 3 lety

      how do landings and docking work? they'd have to be constantly accelerating right? the ship will be moving faster and faster ships that will try to dock will need to intercept at an angle and be able to decelerate safely? or chase from the back at greater speed than the skyscraper's current speed accumulation from all the acceleration?

    • @tbg10101
      @tbg10101 Před 3 lety +13

      @@stramaisdead In general they do docking in zero-g (like when docking to a space station), but they have also done powered acceleration, where both ships are accelerating while they dock. Yes, they need to be traveling at different speeds to rendezvous. The leader can cut engines or throttle down and the follower can accelerate harder to create a velocity difference.

    • @hollywoodguy70
      @hollywoodguy70 Před 3 lety +15

      @@stramaisdead They're constantly accelerating at about .3-.8 G and do the "turn and burn" at which point they are walking on the ceiling at about the same Gs deceleration. The Epstein Drive uses a hyper efficient fuel source so they can maintain these speeds. When you see them get injected with those drugs, those are for higher accelerations and maneuvers .

    • @pete_lind
      @pete_lind Před 3 lety +2

      @@hollywoodguy70 Even if you can do an 1 G acceleration for about a year , before getting to near light speed , biggest problem is that deceleration takes just as long .
      A bit like with bullet trains , they start slowing down miles before station , from 360 km/h emergency braking distance can be up to 7000 meters , thats over 4 miles .

    • @DamianReloaded
      @DamianReloaded Před 3 lety +15

      @@hollywoodguy70 Actually, as the ship pivots 180º and accelerates in the opposite direction (to change their velocity) their momentum still pushes them against the floor as the ship deaccelerates them.

  • @johnmagowan6393
    @johnmagowan6393 Před 6 měsíci +1

    When you mention the distance to the moon, I was reminded of the old TV show Lost in Space. Will Robinson says, "We must be a million miles out in space!" I only 10 or so myself but I remember thinking, they could probably see Earth fairly easy at that distance.

  • @JROMEGA
    @JROMEGA Před rokem +4

    Best space drama ever produced. I hope you finished the full series. It's phenomenal!!

  • @schwig44
    @schwig44 Před 2 lety +303

    "rather than when they were in that long ship"
    Me: "remember the Cant"

    • @OrgeonStar
      @OrgeonStar Před 2 lety +1

      Remember the donne

    • @jasonkesser
      @jasonkesser Před 2 lety

      🤣😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣😂😂❤️

    • @ilyMiickeyBee
      @ilyMiickeyBee Před 2 lety +1

      @Dave Baton Remember the Cant.

    • @DrewLSsix
      @DrewLSsix Před 2 lety

      The ice mining makes zero sense in the show. There's zero reason you would or should strap big chunks of rocky ice to a cargo hold.
      Once you are decades into an established space economy you would just send the stuff to its destination on a slow course. It really doesn't matter if it takes months or years to get there.

    • @brentgutmann
      @brentgutmann Před 2 lety +2

      @@DrewLSsix yes, they could have used a precise throw and catch method, but the boom writers, Timothy "Ty" Frank and Daniel Abraham, chose to imagining they tried asteroid minded ice down with ropes and netting to allow a ship to transport the ice. Either way, you need ships to move solar system resources around

  • @berlindude75
    @berlindude75 Před 3 lety +118

    "The Expanse" is an absolutely great show and a definite recommend to keep watching. It gets so much better and even more intriguing with loads of twists and turns once the worldbuilding first few episodes are done. Episode 4 ("CQB") is usually the first stop that gets people hooked, while the main story mystery takes off in Episode 8 ("Salvage"). Several actual stellar bodies are featured in the show (Earth & Luna, Venus, Mars & Deimos as well as Ceres, Eros, and Pallas of the asteroid belt, and both Jupiter and Saturn with their moons Ganymede, Io, Callisto, Europa, and Titan plus Phoebe, respectively). And nothing said or shown is ever wasted, everything will come together and be explained eventually, with great characters, superb political chicanery, and a heartfelt and riveting plot on top.

    • @CybrSlydr
      @CybrSlydr Před 3 lety +4

      Yup, CQB was the turning point for me too.

    • @georgehope5477
      @georgehope5477 Před 3 lety +3

      CQB from the first season is my favourite episode. The only non-sciencey thing that bothers me about the show are the holograms they use which just seem to hang in the air without a screen or some such thing for the photons to reflect off. Holograms like that are impossible. The lack of robotics bothers me sometimes too, lets face it the Belters would be better replaced by robotic mining rather than risking their lives. Where are all the robots? Apart from that, it's the best Sci-Fi series available!

    • @achillesa5894
      @achillesa5894 Před 3 lety +1

      @@georgehope5477 Yeah they do some things like the holograms which sacrifice realism for making it easier to watch. Even things like full glass face plates on the helmets, as well as face illuminating lights, are done so you can see the actors. I'm pretty sure they never explicitly say they have holograms in the books.

    • @seamusbob3458
      @seamusbob3458 Před 3 lety +2

      I was on the fence with this show but upon reading your comment I think I will give it a go

    • @ninjafukwan7
      @ninjafukwan7 Před 3 lety +2

      @@seamusbob3458Get off the fence Best sci show Ever !! TOP 5 easy 💪

  • @TiGGer1098
    @TiGGer1098 Před rokem +5

    10/10 Watching a astrophysicist looking for a super complicated explanation of the ‘apparent gravity’, that was clearly spelt out to us ground dwelling mortals in the pilot. 😹
    And thank you for reading your ‘Brief History..’ book for Audible btw, with multiple journeys on the M6 to complete this month 😻

  • @mykyrox
    @mykyrox Před 2 lety +4

    So many more details on how things work come as we go. We didn’t learn about how blood clots work till season 3 along with the drive systems. I love how those little detail build a greater understanding later.

  • @Chopperdriver
    @Chopperdriver Před 2 lety +670

    I’ve just watched the final episode. The expanse was the best sci-fi series I’ve ever seen. 12/10. The first season might not grab you but stick it out to season 2, it just gets better and better.

    • @babybirdhome
      @babybirdhome Před 2 lety +33

      I agree. It was the most mature science fiction show I’ve ever seen, I think. It took everything seriously - or as seriously as you could do in a production TV/streaming show. None of it ever felt like it was pandering, or that it was science fiction just for the sake of being classified as science fiction or not having to explain anything.

    • @alextilton2677
      @alextilton2677 Před 2 lety +3

      Agreed

    • @divineflu34567
      @divineflu34567 Před 2 lety +15

      I just wished we could see more about ring builders

    • @kizitom
      @kizitom Před 2 lety +14

      @@divineflu34567 read the books.....

    • @nathansmedley2061
      @nathansmedley2061 Před 2 lety +8

      @@divineflu34567 please read the last 3 books at the very least! I’m sure we’ll see them on TV eventually but they are fantastic. The show did such a good job translating the books you could pick up on book 7 and have only a minor few details be different. Mainly with Drummer (drummer didn’t really have any role in the books until 7, she replaced Michio Pa’s character from the books for the show, she wasn’t the first union president but like the 4th. And Alex not dying during the free navy fight.) the best of the expanse imo is still ahead of you.

  • @michaelfarrell4824
    @michaelfarrell4824 Před 3 lety +79

    "You can't just kick it and it'll work..." Tell that to the TV I had in the early 90's

  • @nathanuncentered6172
    @nathanuncentered6172 Před rokem +3

    A lot of strange stuff, like the boots coming on when they shut down the engines, is resource management. They are using personal power supplies to maximize ship energy reserves. Yay, details. Also, I had trouble getting into the show myself, but I stuck it out for the first few episodes, and now I'm glad I did.

  • @GlenClark
    @GlenClark Před 2 lety +6

    You definately need to keep watching the series. It woudl be super interesting to hear your take on what happens later on in the series. It feels like they got even more detailed as the show went on. Like how they always put on their suits and remove the atmosphere from the ship whent hey go into combat.

  • @jamiegagnon6390
    @jamiegagnon6390 Před 3 lety +244

    'intelligent people are not that smart'; one of the most brilliant observations I have ever heard. My version; "At university, I met some of the smartest people I ever encountered, and some of the dumbest; amazingly they were often the same people..."

    • @turboguppy3748
      @turboguppy3748 Před 3 lety +18

      To be fair, if she somehow missed the part where we first meet Holden, it would be pretty easy to get to episode 2 not realizing the gravity is _not_ powered by unexplainium, but is governed by real world physics. It's not that she's being dumb so much as dumbfounded, because no show ever addresses this level of detail.

    • @sirkrustin
      @sirkrustin Před 3 lety +7

      You describe the Dunning-Kruger effect. Even Nobel prize winners can be idiots.

    • @enzocrespin5806
      @enzocrespin5806 Před 3 lety +14

      If we go by D&D rules, then this might be the difference between "intelligence" and "wisdom", with the people you're describing being "high int, low wis" characters

    • @dragonsword7370
      @dragonsword7370 Před 3 lety

      @@enzocrespin5806 beat me to it.

    • @Drdirkjackson
      @Drdirkjackson Před 3 lety

      @@enzocrespin5806 Beat me to it

  • @sock2828
    @sock2828 Před 2 lety +134

    Something I love about hard science fiction is that really interesting plot points and drama basically emerge from physics itself.

    • @Deccani
      @Deccani Před 2 lety +2

      Amazing Indeed... Shows like these help the future IRL

    • @piotrd.4850
      @piotrd.4850 Před 2 lety +1

      Same thing happens in every McGuffing based s-f - one of best episodes of Star Trek and / or Stargate (or scenes) were tides to in-universe CONSTRAINTS and PRINCIPLES of such "technology" and unintended effects or failures.

    • @cyqry
      @cyqry Před rokem +5

      One thing I loved was the scene between Avasarala and her husband(?) trying to communicate on a video call with the time-lag. Its such a small detail but watching them constantly interrupting each other by accident and then eventually having to stop and simply listen to the other speak was a nice touch. In a way it reminds me of those therapy scenes you see where couples are forced by a third-party to listen to the other person express how they feel.

  • @Magnificent7Seven
    @Magnificent7Seven Před 4 měsíci

    Thanks for reviewing this show! My favorite book and TV series.

  • @richarddobson8709
    @richarddobson8709 Před rokem +1

    Just came across this and think I just fell in love; so much enthusiasm for the nerdy things! 😃

  • @ohthreefiftyone
    @ohthreefiftyone Před 2 lety +128

    10:23 The books go into even more detail on this. Ceres station has been built throughout the asteroid Ceres and the cheapest real estate is closer to the core where the pseudo gravity is the lowest and the Coriolis effect the most pronounced. This is true in other asteroid stations, too such that in the belt, comfort level with gravity and Coriolis is often a manifestation of wealth inequality.

  • @randomcoyote8807
    @randomcoyote8807 Před 2 lety +135

    One of the things about "The Expanse" is that you kinda have to keep watching in order... not just for plot reasons, but to see the consistency of the physics they apply.
    We as an audience are frequently shown science fiction that just throws out bits and bobs of plot-handy things as each situation comes up, and those bits & bobs are forgotten about next time (Star Trek was especially notorious for this, even though it was still quite enjoyable). But watching the overall consistency of physics applied in the Expanse helps build confidence in its consistency and storytelling. You can relax and let yourself immerse without having to pay attention to the plot contrivance of the week.

    • @ryan4640
      @ryan4640 Před 2 lety +11

      They explain stuff in the books a lot better but its harder to do that in a TV show with limited amount of time. I think they did pretty well.

    • @tomarnold7284
      @tomarnold7284 Před 2 lety +10

      Yeah, the things I liked about The Expanse was that they didn't hurry explaining all the technicality all at once, but focused on the characters and stories, the science slowly grows on you as you watch further.

    • @mshell1959
      @mshell1959 Před 2 lety

      Well said and very true!

  • @crazyspace6792
    @crazyspace6792 Před 2 lety +2

    Turning it on and off again is the most reliable form of computer problem solving.

  • @matthewthole6878
    @matthewthole6878 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Great video! The show’s attention to detail is so great. And it’s not even just the science stuff. As silly as it sounds sometimes, all the linguistic choices the show makes are really cool imo. The belter creole is such an interesting and plausible idea and I love how straight the show plays it. Really lends credibility to the world as a living place with history. The missus and I just started watching the expanse cuz we never caught it originally. We’re on season 2 and it’s great so far.

  • @richard2371
    @richard2371 Před 3 lety +46

    I love the thrust gravity in the show, when they're not under thrust they're constantly clicky clacking around on their magboots the whole time.
    The books really flesh out the physics too, tycho engineers spent a huge amount of resources to spin up ceres to 1/3 G without it tearing apart iirc.

  • @360greece4
    @360greece4 Před 3 lety +49

    I love it even though she couldn't figure out how gravity was simulated, once she learnt how it worked she immediately understood how the ships were designed in the expanse.

    • @DrBecky
      @DrBecky  Před 3 lety +31

      I couldn’t believe it ended up being something so simple 😂 my mind was on over drive trying to work it out all episode trying to think of all the crazy sci-if things I’d seen in the past

    • @360greece4
      @360greece4 Před 3 lety +11

      @@DrBecky That is why so many scientists and geeks love this show. All the human technologies are based on simple principlet that work. Even the weapons are just iterations of what we know would work in space. Just keep watching this show, it spoilt so many sci-fi nonsense for us.

    • @DrazenKlisuric
      @DrazenKlisuric Před 3 lety +10

      @@DrBecky Yes, there's no many fantasy things in The Expanse - at least not in the human technology. Only fusion engines are little bit too good, but only in the show. In the books they are spending much more time in the zero gravity with the engines off to save the reaction mass (not the fuel).

    • @davivignola5895
      @davivignola5895 Před 3 lety +1

      The novel series was based on, at the beginning, Euclidean physics. The writers spent a lot of time and energy planning on what would be possible

  • @Rachelebanham
    @Rachelebanham Před rokem +1

    Make sure you get past season 4. It’s brilliant and just keeps getting better Dr Becky!

  • @Andylaw25
    @Andylaw25 Před 4 měsíci +1

    The ships are orientated vertically like a skyscraper, so the force pushing the ship in an upward motion creates downward force, no engine then the float off the flooring.

  • @lenm2857
    @lenm2857 Před 3 lety +31

    I almost stopped watching this in the first season, but somewhere around episodes 3 to 5 it REALLY picks up and becomes one of the best shows on TV.

  • @Bioshyn
    @Bioshyn Před 2 lety +74

    As a scientist, reading watching sci-fi can be really hard sometimes. I'm a biologist and it's astonishing how much media gets wrong on evolution and genetics alone.
    I love the expanse, James S. A. Corey got so much right.

    • @steffenthorhauge9549
      @steffenthorhauge9549 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm in automation and recently wondered if the absolutely atrocious way media portrays computers, general IT and security is a common problem across any slightly advanced topic.

    • @arsenioibay414
      @arsenioibay414 Před 2 lety +11

      James S.A. Corey is actually two people writing under a single nom-de-plume.

    • @gz3zbz
      @gz3zbz Před 2 lety +1

      @@steffenthorhauge9549 Mr Robot does it right.

    • @jmclaughlin
      @jmclaughlin Před 2 lety

      @@arsenioibay414 that's also why it's JamesS (plural) and A Corey doesn't exclude there being A nother last name ;)

    • @arsenioibay414
      @arsenioibay414 Před 2 lety +5

      @@jmclaughlin The two writers going by that one name are Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck - "The first and last name are taken from Abraham's and Franck's middle names, respectively, and S. A. are the initials of Abraham's daughter (Scarlet Abraham). So no two "Jameses". )

  • @jasonkelley5961
    @jasonkelley5961 Před 7 měsíci

    Getting into season 5 or 6, there's a point where all the ships have to shut down their reactors. When fired back up, the injured of all groups are taken to the large Mormon ship called the Behemoth due to it being the only ship with spin gravity. Most of the time, magnetic boots are worn, unless on a station that spins. They did a great job when dealing with medical injuries, especially deep tissue injuries that cause pooling of the blood, due to zero G. The Behemoth and its spin gravity was used to prevent these otherwise non-life threatening injuries from being fatal in this environment. Incredible show.

  • @DaddyDoom
    @DaddyDoom Před 8 měsíci +1

    Best sci-fi tv show of the last decade.
    Story keeps getting more and more compelling, Great story arcs and and awesome production values.
    Absolutely apotheose of an ending.

  • @sheamartin8786
    @sheamartin8786 Před 2 lety +337

    The "artificial gravity" comes from the ship's acceleration. The ships in The Expanse are constructed with the floors ascending up from the engines, so the crewmembers walk around with their feet pointing at the engines. Then the ships accelerate at 1g so that the crew feels like they're in 1g of gravity. Then, halfway to their destination they flip and burn retrograde at 1g.

    • @sassyb58
      @sassyb58 Před 2 lety +3

      This specifically clued me in to how gravity was manufactured. I had already watched the @veritasium video she pointed to at @15:45 so I was primed to "get it" when it is explained in a later episode, like you say here. That's why I love how you learn more about the tech the more you watch! Very cool!

    • @vladimir0rus
      @vladimir0rus Před 2 lety +2

      And this is impossible actually.

    • @artonioo761
      @artonioo761 Před 2 lety +6

      @@vladimir0rus How?

    • @vladimir0rus
      @vladimir0rus Před 2 lety +1

      @@artonioo761 Epstein drive is a pure fiction:
      czcams.com/video/JWZqp0QoXcw/video.html

    • @Ramoreira86
      @Ramoreira86 Před 2 lety +7

      @@vladimir0rus epstein didnt kill himself

  • @lewismassie
    @lewismassie Před 3 lety +76

    The Expanse had my attention from the pilot's 'Flip & Burn' scene, and had me totally sold on the debris field scene that followed

    • @EGPuiu
      @EGPuiu Před 3 lety +4

      The way I heard about the expanse was when "Alex", the actor playing the pilot, was on something that was recommended to me for some reason, where he would be invited by someone to do something while promoting the series. I can't believe it had worked, tbh. Though it worked cause it was a video where they were also talking about the realism of the show, which drew me to the video and then to the show. Have been waiting for the new seasons ever since and have started to read the books as well

    • @getsideways7257
      @getsideways7257 Před 2 lety

      @@EGPuiu Want me to spoil it for you? Try Children of a Dead Earth.

  • @malloid
    @malloid Před rokem +2

    Watched The Expanse up to the end of season six and enjoyed it. It always managed to keep surprising me and the characters and stories were generally quite good. I used to binge watch it with my late father, but after he passed away last year I gave up on it.

  • @berndeckenfels
    @berndeckenfels Před rokem +2

    That was a good info with the linear acceleration, I always thought there was only the boots in the smaller ships and the rotating ones

  • @ArcaneThane
    @ArcaneThane Před 3 lety +170

    Is no one going to mention that amazing T-shirt?! Clever girl indeed.

    • @Vince1266
      @Vince1266 Před 3 lety +1

      Me like 2

    • @Molloy244
      @Molloy244 Před 3 lety +3

      Yeah, love the t-shirt.

    • @daz090979
      @daz090979 Před 3 lety +5

      Muldoon’s final words. Now that’s one epic T!

    • @AridosUK
      @AridosUK Před 3 lety +3

      i saw that, gonna buy one for my girlfriend when its her birthday :D

    • @williamhoward7121
      @williamhoward7121 Před 3 lety +2

      Got to buy one for my daughter.

  • @ThermalX90
    @ThermalX90 Před 3 lety +180

    Just watch the whole series, you won't regret it. Best Sci-fi show I've ever seen. It's a thought provocative, thriller type story line that is brilliantly executed through fantastic writing and acting.

    • @MultiTroll81
      @MultiTroll81 Před 3 lety +1

      Heinlein or Star wars a hundred times before that stupid woke s...

    • @Hepad_
      @Hepad_ Před 3 lety +4

      @@MultiTroll81 nah

    • @VayaKahvi
      @VayaKahvi Před 3 lety +14

      @@MultiTroll81 If "woke" here means "has a political agenda" then Heinlein and Star Wars are very much "woke", my dude.

    • @MultiTroll81
      @MultiTroll81 Před 3 lety

      @@VayaKahvi Heinlein was libertarian. Sw is antinazi. Expanse is one of the most disgusting woke stuff with avasarala and the priestess of woke religion.
      Even if it werent woke the plot is utterly stupid, antagonists have as much brain as bugs bunny villains.

    • @spaulagain
      @spaulagain Před 3 lety +12

      @@MultiTroll81 oh look, the troll is a troll. Trying being more original next time.

  • @pierrechaput2439
    @pierrechaput2439 Před 5 měsíci

    Most awesome video Dr. Becky :) Great show for sure.

  • @jakeigoe2578
    @jakeigoe2578 Před 3 měsíci

    Engines cut out, acceleration stops, freefall/weightlessness ensues. This actually makes for very important plot lines later in series. injured people stuck in zero G environments is extremely deadly... Now I see the OP figured it out at the end.

  • @purdon
    @purdon Před 3 lety +262

    when the engines are on, the ship is accelerating. That’s why they have “gravity”. switch off the engines, no “gravity”...

    • @jabonny
      @jabonny Před 3 lety +37

      They also have mag boots that they periodically remind you of by having them put an object in the air in front of them to show they're working in 0 G. I can't remember the episode by in season 3 I believe they even scold a new crew mate for not securing his tools during combat maneuvers, and a drill becomes a projectile.

    • @tecjohnson
      @tecjohnson Před 3 lety +20

      @@jabonny Also, even more subtly whenever they are walking in mag boots they give them sound effects. They are subtle and if you are not paying attention you don't notice, but just another layer of detail they put in.

    • @borismilenski4759
      @borismilenski4759 Před 3 lety +10

      @@jabonny It was Prax in episode 2, season 3 (rebinging right now). It wasn't a single drill, it was the entire tools' cabinet. He was spaced out as he was talking to Amos, and he didn't turn the lock all the way. A few hard turns later they had a chamber full of flying instruments.

    • @justino6595
      @justino6595 Před 3 lety +12

      The ships are built vertically so when engines are on they are being pushed by the rockets G’s until they stop moving

    • @jabonny
      @jabonny Před 3 lety +3

      @@borismilenski4759 I'm binging Stargate at the moment but I need to watch this series again! Pax was Awesome!

  • @kade426
    @kade426 Před 2 lety +86

    One of my favorite details they didn't miss but you as a viewer almost have to watch frames to see it are the railguns. Because of the recoil they actually have a burp from the main drive cone to counter and thrusters to maintain position for just a split second. You should also see the scenes about the slingshot racing and when one had an instant stop.

    • @DarthRancid
      @DarthRancid Před 2 lety +2

      Underrated comment. I loved the physics in those episodes. It grounded it so much for me and I always imagined "guns" in space working like that instead of Star Wars type "lasers" haha.

    • @karnach3880
      @karnach3880 Před 2 lety +14

      The Point Defense Cannons or PDCs also have a small jet opposing the barrels when they fire to counteract the thrust produced by firing...

    • @RobertBeckk
      @RobertBeckk Před 2 lety +1

      @@karnach3880 holy shjt

  • @Masoch1st
    @Masoch1st Před 6 měsíci

    i've seen this series 3 times, and i'm down to watch it again. i loved every season.

  • @TallPaulKnits
    @TallPaulKnits Před 4 měsíci

    Amazing how you geeked out on the water pouring thing! Totally my jam….. and I want your t-shirt 🦖

  • @glenchapman3899
    @glenchapman3899 Před 3 lety +53

    Two of my favorite moments in the show, was watching a Martian adapt to walking on Earth gravity, and the other is a ship in battle is taking evasive action. One of the equipment lockers breaks open and tools are zooming around the compartment like bullets

    • @gateauxq4604
      @gateauxq4604 Před 3 lety +3

      Me-which Martian was that? Oh. Oooooohhh 🤦

    • @glenchapman3899
      @glenchapman3899 Před 3 lety +3

      @@gateauxq4604 It would be a big spoiler if I say anything :(

    • @enzocrespin5806
      @enzocrespin5806 Před 3 lety +2

      In addition one scene early in the second season shows the crew depressurizing their ship in preparation for a space battle, which makes sense for a number of reasons and is quite cool

    • @SeanGarratt
      @SeanGarratt Před 3 lety +5

      As I recall that person said they trained at 1G in centrifuges just to be prepared for that. And even so martians had to take booster drugs for muscle/bone strength on Earth. What really freaked .. that person . .out was when they walked outside a building and there was infinite space, no pressure dome etc. Like reverse claustophobia. And they got all dizzy and fell over. I love the Expanse. And the character we are referring to .. one of my favourites.

    • @glenchapman3899
      @glenchapman3899 Před 3 lety +3

      @@enzocrespin5806 Yes I have been reading and watching science fiction for 50 years. When that scene happened I was what?.............ohhh yeah makes complete sense lol I like it when I can be challenged like that

  • @billross7245
    @billross7245 Před 3 lety +11

    One of my favorite lines from The Expanse book series is describing Gravity on Luna, "as less a force of nature and more of a suggestion".

  • @Neopopulas
    @Neopopulas Před 8 měsíci +1

    The best way i think i explained the artificial gravity (in ships) in the expanse to someone who had no idea what was going on was to tell them, basically, that the ships are always going UP. In the expanse, all the ships are flying up, no matter where they are going, they are going up, so its pushing everyone on the ship down, and that makes gravity.

  • @OhAncientOne
    @OhAncientOne Před 2 lety +2

    Definitely one of the finest blooper bits ever.
    Anyone who hasn't dribbled water down their front skipped childhood. Adults who do it, have briefly exceeded their capacity for multi-tasking. And so get a wakeup call.
    Glad it was just water 😊
    Happens to the best of us!
    As demonstrated here

  • @gearspider
    @gearspider Před 3 lety +68

    Season 1, Episode 4 of The Expanse, titled "CQB" for Close Quarters Combat is one of the best Expanse episodes in the history of the show, and a really well done example of a space battle.

    • @chimaera4461
      @chimaera4461 Před 3 lety +5

      It's also the episode that really shows the artificial gravity via linear acceleration, as the engines cut in and out due to battle damage

    • @gearspider
      @gearspider Před 3 lety +4

      @@chimaera4461 Yes! The show is very well done. I play a space game called Elite Dangerous that also does it's best to adhere to physics as much as possible. And in the game I have a Corvette-class ship named Rocinante 👍

    • @brianyoung9829
      @brianyoung9829 Před 3 lety +5

      Is that the one where someone loses their head? ; ) If so, YES, watch this one! There's an entire scene with liquid being affected by various conditions and it is just amazing. It is this episode that sold me on the show.

    • @gearspider
      @gearspider Před 3 lety +2

      @@brianyoung9829 That's the one!

    • @Yellow_Leader
      @Yellow_Leader Před 3 lety +4

      @@brianyoung9829 There's also a scene in a later season where a station is under attack and they have to get the wounded into the spinning drum where there is gravity. It's never explicitly stated but bleeding in zero g is bad news, especially internally. The attention to detail to demand that they get the wounded to gravity is great.

  • @DaveBrownell
    @DaveBrownell Před 3 lety +41

    You should just continue watching this show and pick a few episodes here and there to do a reaction to! The physics aspect gets really good, and the TWISTS! omg I want to go watch this show again haha

  • @jamesraykenney
    @jamesraykenney Před rokem +1

    Kicking, or more commonly hitting something with a heavy object(aka percussive maintenance), is a tried and true method of (at least) finding out where the problem is.
    Like in electronics, it is(or was) common to always have a can of freeze spray(Freon back in the day), that you would spray on likely components while the problem was occurring, and if it started working for a few seconds, you knew that the part was overheating, thus most likely defective. Now it is common(if you have the money) to use an infrared camera and watch the circuit heating up. The equipment will typically highlight anything above a set temperature in red, so you can check it. Very nice, and saves a LOT of time if you can afford the 'very' expansive camera.

  • @marielouisepeignerichard4398

    In book 2 of The Expanse, I loved it when they explain the pathophysiology of Mei's disease, with T cells and defects in cellular signaling pathways.

  • @davidcoleman757
    @davidcoleman757 Před 3 lety +68

    You need to keep plugging with this show. There's plenty in S1 to keep you interested, but dramatically it really hits its stride in S2, and S3 is wild. You haven't met half of the best characters yet. I also think you'll find plenty of science to keep you interested. It's the best show in town.

    • @stanlee5465
      @stanlee5465 Před 3 lety +1

      Yep, this show took a couple tries to get into, but once I 'got it', I was HOOKED! Even if it did start to get a bit too much like a space soap opera than sci-fi action...

    • @vickdinvick5485
      @vickdinvick5485 Před 3 lety +1

      Season 3 i think is still the best season of the expanse soo far. I hope they top that in the next one.

    • @HistoricHisterics
      @HistoricHisterics Před 3 lety +4

      Season 5 episode 3. Fucking nuts.

    • @hypocritex
      @hypocritex Před 3 lety

      Camina Drummer. That is all. That actress is amazing. czcams.com/video/z-glWaAvK6o/video.html You're welcome!

  • @stanthechanman
    @stanthechanman Před 3 lety +41

    You could just do a whole series of videos where you react to the cool physics stuff in The Expanse. There's something in almost every episode.

    • @mip5041991
      @mip5041991 Před 3 lety

      I’d watch !

    • @andrewquesinberry773
      @andrewquesinberry773 Před 3 lety

      At a minimum the thoth station battle season 1 ep 4 and season 5 episode 10 specifically the battles at the end

    • @andrewxu3602
      @andrewxu3602 Před 3 lety

      @@andrewquesinberry773 Spacedock already did the latter.

  • @jerryoconnor-ps8bb
    @jerryoconnor-ps8bb Před 11 měsíci

    Great explanation on The Expanse. BTW love your blooper section.

  • @omegaofgaia
    @omegaofgaia Před 14 hodinami

    I work on industrial machinery and i can confirm that striking broken equipment will cause them to start working about 30% of the time.

  • @conabot
    @conabot Před 2 lety +70

    I was so impressed when I saw how they portrayed crying in space.. they did it right, they really did it right.. waited wayyy too long for a show or movie to be this accurate! Totally love it and it's a shame the show ends after season 6..

  • @Svenz0r
    @Svenz0r Před 3 lety +15

    You can indeed kick stuff and make it work, percussive maintenance can do wonders for things that aren't quite connected or seated right.

    • @OptimiSkeptic
      @OptimiSkeptic Před 3 lety +2

      Right. That scene and others like it make sure we stay aware that other than Earth and parts of Mars, this is not a rich and glamorous solar system. It's hand-me-down overalls, once in a lifetime bathing, and spaceships made of baling wire and salvaged parts. Except the Rocinante which is the epitome of perfection and beauty.

    • @R3LF13
      @R3LF13 Před 3 lety +1

      "Purcussive maintenance" ...lol, I'm going to remember that. 👏👏

    • @eltreum1
      @eltreum1 Před 3 lety

      hehe Sometimes all you need is some good ol' slam-tronics...

  • @summitap1
    @summitap1 Před 5 měsíci

    Great review and I love that you plugged Red Rising!!!

  • @xoxoxox77gate
    @xoxoxox77gate Před 2 lety +1

    I love the expanse and so the physics behind it. Thank you for the astrophysicist review of the expense!

  • @amateurwizard
    @amateurwizard Před 3 lety +41

    I liked how consistent they were with simulating reality. When a character moves to another area the messages the send and the video chats they have include accurate amounts of latency. Sometimes they're so close that they accidentally talk over one another, which is something that they would never in most shows.

  • @theamericandemocracyausers513

    "Don't _kick_ it! ... I guess that's like 'Have you tried turning it off and turning it on again?'"
    So you're saying he... :sunglasses: Re-booted it? #YEAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHH

    • @gremlinsarered5259
      @gremlinsarered5259 Před 3 lety +2

      " I guess that's like 'Have you tried turning it off and turning it on again?'"
      This was exactly what I suggested when Hawking died.... hey it was worth a shot!

    • @Insanerobert44
      @Insanerobert44 Před 3 lety +2

      Yet sometimes it worked on old tech, like radios, TVs etc. They were also not brilliantly built and some defects may have caused various issues, like poor connections held together by loose screws that got apart from heat dilation or dust got in between and so on, interrupting the connection and a kick or two would make the whole thing vibrate, make the parts vibrate and hopefully fall back in a proper position where the pins connect again with their contacts and voila, you have a working device again!

    • @Kurazarrh
      @Kurazarrh Před 3 lety +2

      @@Insanerobert44 You been whooshed by the dad joke! ;D

    • @Insanerobert44
      @Insanerobert44 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Kurazarrh well.... true.

    • @samprada9298
      @samprada9298 Před 3 lety

      Aww I've missed that meme thank you ☺️

  • @BlackstarLore
    @BlackstarLore Před 7 měsíci +1

    Loving your videos! The Expanse is such a good show

  • @marianogonzalez1977
    @marianogonzalez1977 Před rokem +1

    One thing that struck me in this show is how much time space ships spend decelerating (they literally rotate and thrust backwards when getting [not that] close to their destination). Not what "sci-fi" conventional movies tell us. Love the channel BTW, cheers from Argentina!!!