Does Electricity REALLY Flow? (Electrodynamics)

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  • čas přidán 18. 12. 2018
  • When charge moves, we call it electric current, but the word current is usually reserved for things like water flows. Does electric current really work like that? Electrons are quantum particles, so we have to be careful.
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Komentáře • 2K

  • @ScienceAsylum
    @ScienceAsylum  Před 2 lety +236

    Anyone who is here from Veritasium's video on circuit energy, you're actually looking for this video of mine: czcams.com/video/C7tQJ42nGno/video.html

    • @butters742
      @butters742 Před 2 lety +6

      Ohhhh yeah. Mind blowing point. Also watched your video. This stuff is great. A lot of illustrations are great to understand the circuits energy but man that one made a lot of sense of things. Please keep the videos on electricity coming. I'm a budding Electrician and theory to me is just as important for the future!

    • @genkidama7385
      @genkidama7385 Před 2 lety +2

      im here because i typed "electrons do not exist" in youtube. cause some guy said tesla didnt believe in electrons. now it seems that veritasium guy found your video too.

    • @allmight7073
      @allmight7073 Před 2 lety

      X @@genkidama7385 v y

    • @DenisLoubet
      @DenisLoubet Před 2 lety +6

      These videos about electricity and fields only confuse me further. I now have no idea whatsoever how electricity works.

    • @joelseph98
      @joelseph98 Před 2 lety +6

      This one is a good follow up though! Thank you for this! Really helped me understand better than veritasium’s video!

  • @howardstern7566
    @howardstern7566 Před 3 lety +190

    In this video THE most important thing you should know is that the "electric field" (current) moves at the Speed of Light and physical electrons move or "flow" VERY SLOW thru a conductor (copper wire). Most electricians will tell you its the electrons moving thru the wire at the speed of light! Which is impossible when you think about thousands of mile of electric wire with electrons moving that fast from point A to point B. The friction alone would cause any size wire to melt INSTANTLY! This science CZcams guy really knows his stuff!!!

    • @mohinderjitaujla6245
      @mohinderjitaujla6245 Před 3 lety +1

      HOWARD STERN …Where does the Friction come from……??…
      The electons being the energy packs , have no course physicality to grind the Conductor....JagtarSinghAujla

    • @harshjais369
      @harshjais369 Před 3 lety +2

      It's common sense. Every medium have some resistance...

    • @50srefugee
      @50srefugee Před 2 lety +37

      @@mohinderjitaujla6245 Electrons flow by jumping from one atom to the next; it takes a bit of voltage to push them along. A bit of energy is lost in the jump, which appears as heat--see the glowing wire in your toaster, made of a material that makes these jumps more difficult.
      As Stern pointed out, the actual electrons travel quite slowly. The speed is known as "drift velocity", and is characteristic for different materials. For copper, it's about a tenth of a millimeter per second.
      What does travel at the speed of light is the impulse. Think of a pipe stuffed with ping pong balls. Push a ball in at one end, and the ball at the other end falls out. The balls themselves barely move, but the impulse travels at the speed of sound.

    • @metalkrill
      @metalkrill Před 2 lety +16

      @@50srefugee the ping pong reference helped me, thanks!

    • @MrMichaelFire
      @MrMichaelFire Před 2 lety +5

      @@danielmarbella1197 Electron movement is ancillary to the electromotive force coursing through the conductor. In fact when its only AC the electrons only jiggle back and forth. Electricians like myself aren't usually amateur physicists, my first degree was electrical engineering.

  •  Před 5 lety +856

    Aspiring physician/biomedical engineer here; I've been a subscriber since your centripetal vs centrifugal video ~4 years ago. I was an undergrad at the time. Despite the plethora of physics content on CZcams, it was obvious to me then that you have an outstanding talent for distilling physics concepts *without* oversimplifying. What makes your channel truly special is the fact that so many others offer a treatment of the subject matter that's so superficial as to be entertaining but practically useless. Like a diamond in the rough, your content somehow manages the seemingly impossible task of providing an entertaining but *useful* treatment of advanced topics that's nevertheless distilled in such a way that makes it as straightforward as possible. Keep doing what you're doing! And thanks. :)

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 5 lety +92

      This is wonderful to hear! Thanks! :-D

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před 5 lety +13

      So true! (Not any sort of engineer myself but I have to agree in all the rest).

    • @ronnyvbk
      @ronnyvbk Před 5 lety +13

      Indeed, levelling us all up by conducting bits of knowledge directly to our brain molecules so by the end of the video we feel energized and charged by a better understanding and get into a positive flow.

    • @mohit-gs3ql
      @mohit-gs3ql Před 5 lety +1

      Hey! You are a biomedical engineer, I would really use your help. Is there any way I can contact you?

    • @janinetrue
      @janinetrue Před 5 lety +10

      Absolutely the best explanations of basic physics I have ever seen AND entertaining. I've been longing for this sort of thing, even though I have a physical sciences degree, you never have time to just put it all together on a practical level. It's hard to explain, but you can ace all your tests and still not really understand this material.

  • @eleneasy
    @eleneasy Před 5 lety +23

    Really pleasing surprised. This was a very good explanation of how current flows in conductors that anyone can understand, even without any knowledge of electromagnetism physics or electrical engineering. You also used the appropriate terminology giving it to the audience in a way very easy to understand. It is not so easy to find on CZcams people that makes videos like you. I have seen people explaining complicated subjects showing their understanding on the subject, but then failing in using the correct terminology and, therefore, creating confusion in how things are really working. Very well done. Kudos!!!

  • @rabbitazteca23
    @rabbitazteca23 Před 3 lety +27

    Omg I always thought electrons were the ones travelling so fast in a circuit and that's why the circuit components work. I knew there was something more to it when I read that electrons move slowly. Thank you for this.

  • @Israel220500
    @Israel220500 Před 5 lety +294

    I'm a electrotechnical technician and hopefully a future electrical engineer. I always wondered about how electricity really works from the quantum level to the macroscopic scale. I spent a good time in the last year looking for information in books and websites until develop a good intuition about it, and you basically explained most of it in only 7 minutes! You even talked about the skin effect. Congratulations and thank you for these excellent explanations!

    • @PurvamBaxi
      @PurvamBaxi Před 2 lety

      You are not electrotechnical. You are ITI. but great ambition. But believe me practical or onsite knowledge will help you.

    • @ty-re9or
      @ty-re9or Před 2 lety

      Brother why behaviour Of atoms is different than that of cornor. Atoms are same. What things bring changes in the behaviour of central atoms and edges atoms

    • @johnrice1943
      @johnrice1943 Před 2 lety

      Quantum effects can be seen on the macro scale too. Quantum entanglement has been observed between macroscopic diamond crystals.

    • @anshs6712
      @anshs6712 Před 2 lety

      What is your work like?

  • @seanspartan2023
    @seanspartan2023 Před 5 lety +156

    This is why I love this channel! Not only have I learned more about electric current, I've corrected a few misconceptions I had as well. Thank you for the knowledge!

  • @QDWhite
    @QDWhite Před 4 lety +21

    6:50 I love the Hydraulic Analogy! I'm a lonely electrical guy surrounded by mechanical guys. Whenever I try to explain electrical concepts, I just get blank stares until I start invoking hydraulic equivalents. Then the pinched pipes go off.

  • @johnnytarponds9292
    @johnnytarponds9292 Před 3 lety +9

    I've watched this video series a few times now. I really love how you've managed to make very clear, what high school failed to do thirty five years ago. Thank you!

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 3 lety +6

      You're very welcome. Glad I could help 🙂

  • @Master_Therion
    @Master_Therion Před 5 lety +669

    What do electrons say when they move? "Charge!"

    • @definesigint2823
      @definesigint2823 Před 5 lety +11

      Assuming they know how energetic everyone is: Marco!

    • @larrypatterson3957
      @larrypatterson3957 Před 5 lety +43

      Watts that you say? That pun is revolting. Is it your most current joke. Try to resist the temptation to make bad puns.

    • @cjheaford
      @cjheaford Před 5 lety +29

      Larry Patterson
      Don’t be so NEGATIVE.

    • @monkeybusiness673
      @monkeybusiness673 Před 5 lety +9

      @@definesigint2823 Now that was really boronic! What are the other electrons supposed to answer?! "Polar"???

    • @jojolafrite90
      @jojolafrite90 Před 5 lety

      They don't move in the normal sense. They occupy a certain position and at some other point of observation (bit of time) they are at another.

  • @xandrian123
    @xandrian123 Před 5 lety +32

    First time I was actually able to see how this works. And that the wave travels at the speed of light I didn’t know. Professors were always using the water hose analogy, which I kind of got but not fully. Thanks, Nick!

    • @georgeknowles8762
      @georgeknowles8762 Před 5 lety +1

      I was never quite sure why that was the case when I was at polytechnic. You need to understand hydraulics in the first place. I think it's a throwback to the early days of electrical theory when the principles of hydraulics were already well understood.
      However, after the first year I had a brilliant professor (Professor Stefani) teaching electrical theory. No need to mention hydraulics. He made everything crystal clear.

  • @limbridk
    @limbridk Před 5 lety +4

    Ohh how I wish I had you as a teacher when I was a teenager.
    You have the best way possible to break down questions and looking at them from a rational point of view. Your focus on the language aspect is a huge part of that, I think.
    Thanks once again for a great video. Keep up the good work.

  • @kevineinheuser8643
    @kevineinheuser8643 Před 3 lety +7

    Love your videos! Master auto mechanic here, whenever I do electronic diagnosing, my peers call me a "wizard", but I always think of myself as a plumber when looking for shorts, opens, and high resistance in circuits 🙃

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 3 lety +3

      *"I always think of myself as a plumber..."*
      That's so interesting ...and also valid.

  • @AnEvolvingApe
    @AnEvolvingApe Před 5 lety +69

    I'm almost there I think? OK electrons move slowly (electron drift velocity), but when you get electrocuted (a near instantaneous effect) does that mean you are not getting pumped full of electrons but instead it is your own electrons in your body that speed up from the EM field so essentially you are being cooked by your own electrons' increase in drift velocity? What about lightning bolts? Lightning bolts are just the creation and collapse of a giant EM field?

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 5 lety +56

      Correct. It's your own electrons that kill you. As for lightning, yes, a giant EM field is needed to turn the air into a conductor. Drift velocity depends on a lot of material factors though, so I'm not sure what the speed of the charge is in lightning (off hand).

    • @KohuGaly
      @KohuGaly Před 5 lety +35

      Exactly!
      As for lightning bolts, they work similar way. It's just a giant spark. The quirk in that scenario is the fact, that a lightning bolt is not just charge moving through a conductor. The electric field actually physically charges air (an insulator) into plasma (a conductor). So the bolt actually makes its own conductor in front of it as it goes and carries the electric field with it.

    • @AnEvolvingApe
      @AnEvolvingApe Před 5 lety +3

      @@ScienceAsylum Thanks, sensei!

    • @AnEvolvingApe
      @AnEvolvingApe Před 5 lety +2

      @@KohuGaly Awesome.

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před 5 lety +5

      Exactly. EM is in every sort of matter (if my fingers do not slip through the keyboard and the table, it is because of electromagnetism, nothing else: elementary particles as such are too tiny to matter on their own, chemistry is also electromagnetism) just that most commonly in equilibrium, neutral or almost so. It's when an inbalance of energy (charge to be precise) happens when the current flows and the "push", the "pressure", the "energy" burns through.
      And then you wish it was cold water rather than electricity....

  • @GabrielTLGTaveira
    @GabrielTLGTaveira Před 5 lety +192

    Wonderfull! Don't disappear, man!

    • @Lyle-xc9pg
      @Lyle-xc9pg Před 5 lety +1

      but in what way? What if he dies?

    • @GabrielTLGTaveira
      @GabrielTLGTaveira Před 5 lety +5

      @@Lyle-xc9pg
      He's not allow to die anymore.
      Kkkkk...

    • @Lyle-xc9pg
      @Lyle-xc9pg Před 5 lety

      Gabriel Telles Lins Gonçalves Taveira
      kkk

    • @crouchingtigerhiddenadam1352
      @crouchingtigerhiddenadam1352 Před 5 lety +7

      @@Lyle-xc9pg - We'll just have to make a clone...

    • @daveandrews6670
      @daveandrews6670 Před 4 lety

      Hey guys,I think they already have LOL.psGreat Little video's.thanks to who ever for them.cheers

  • @qwert12345asdfgzxcvb
    @qwert12345asdfgzxcvb Před 5 lety +6

    This is a phenomenal video. I just discovered your channel today, and it is great.
    I got a little lost after you talked about drift velocity vs speed at which the electric field changes. Time to look up how electric fields work.

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 5 lety +2

      This video is part of an entire playlist :-) czcams.com/play/PLOVL_fPox2K9MtRv68T_cmWwQUbg9YR4F.html

  • @LeCepheid
    @LeCepheid Před 4 lety +2

    I have to say that this video was perfect. I've graduated out of my physics undergraduate classes a few years ago and during the courses, many times I found myself lost and not understanding some basics. It wasn't until recently that I'm preparing some educational content for teens that I found myself questioning the basics. If I would have been shown this video at the beginning of a college physics class, many concepts would have been cleared up for me but instead I dived deep into homework with sophisticated calculations without fully understanding some basics.
    Your style of mad scientist is definitely an acquired taste for me, but I now have to say that it's really caught my attention. I would like to say that I'll be using this video in my future lessons. Keep doing this awesome job that you've been doing!

  • @ThanatosXIII0
    @ThanatosXIII0 Před 5 lety +7

    Thank you for your hard work thank you for this Channel.
    A lot of channels stray from their original subject or just get unnecessary.
    You are still where you started in a positive way

  • @unhpsychology3909
    @unhpsychology3909 Před 5 lety +4

    You do a great job producing unique content on topics that are done to death all over CZcams on other channels. Your ability to distill complex concepts down to their most fundamental parts without sacrificing rigor is a sign of true mastery.

  • @brightsideofmaths
    @brightsideofmaths Před 4 lety +5

    What a crazy channel ;) However, it surprisingly fits perfectly. Every joke has a meaning, is in context and helps in the understanding. Great work! Thank you very much!

  • @zukofire6424
    @zukofire6424 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Thanks! I'll mention humbly that in some of your videos, the flow of explanations is kind of interrupted with humorous breaks too often and then I repeatedly fail to catch the explanations. This one was super clear I didn't loose focus.

  • @GiulioFischetti
    @GiulioFischetti Před 5 lety +33

    love how you have standard so high that never recur to the outdated nuclear/planetary atom models, opting instead for a more accurate representation.

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 5 lety +16

      Yeah, I can't do the circular orbit model. It's just so wrong.

    • @GiulioFischetti
      @GiulioFischetti Před 5 lety +6

      @@ScienceAsylum especially for the topic of this video.
      I feel sorry for Rutherford and Bohr though.

    • @ronnyvbk
      @ronnyvbk Před 5 lety +1

      @@ScienceAsylum Maybe explain the energy bands in materials?

  • @brotherkennyh
    @brotherkennyh Před 5 lety +11

    Nice video. I always wondered if the water analogy was accurate or not. And naturally, I liked this video! :-)

  • @bijendrashrivastav8646
    @bijendrashrivastav8646 Před 5 lety +1

    One of the best explaining in this topic ! Keep up the awesome work!

  • @Verschlungen
    @Verschlungen Před 5 lety +5

    Beautifully done! This presentation should be 'required reading' for all students (and teachers) of electrochemistry -- where the long-standing fairy-tale has been that electrons go whizzing about in the beaker and wires to make electrolysis happen.

  • @mrEofPlanetEarth
    @mrEofPlanetEarth Před 5 lety +42

    Ok, I've recently realized how much I love this channel for its uniqueness among science channels. Very concise and articulate as well as purely entertaining. Reminds me of when I was a kid watching Bill Nye the science guy, but with better science! Anyways, keep up the good work, I've already shared your channel with a few people I know. I hope it gets bigger. It definitely deserves it.

    • @MrCHINBAG
      @MrCHINBAG Před 5 lety

      You contradict yourself😙

  • @mickblock
    @mickblock Před 5 lety +7

    I like the Category Alert. And how you explain stuff like that.

  • @delmonti
    @delmonti Před 5 lety +2

    Hey! I learnt something today, Thanks for taking the time to put this video together.

  • @gregpaul6480
    @gregpaul6480 Před 4 lety +2

    I really like your videos. Your a great teacher, and look forward to seeing them daily. Keep it up ,cause I'm loving learning daily.

  • @abhinandan2010
    @abhinandan2010 Před 5 lety +65

    Man, your videos make me fall in love with science again and again!!!! 😌

    • @Crazytesseract
      @Crazytesseract Před rokem

      For the Science of God read Srimad Bhagavatam by A.C.Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada. You may not realise you have diamonds in your own backyard.

  • @jmfp21jp
    @jmfp21jp Před 5 lety +3

    That definitely helped my understanding of electricity, great video! I'm a plumber so I know a lot about water but not a lot about charge. Hey could you do a video on the Venturi effect? That would be so cool!

  • @dr.rebuttal3009
    @dr.rebuttal3009 Před 4 lety +2

    Solved all the confusions. thanks a lot to have taken the time and put in the endeavour.

  • @tomv3999
    @tomv3999 Před 2 lety +1

    I've seen a lot of explanations around this topic. This is one of the most accurate I have come across.

  • @quahntasy
    @quahntasy Před 5 lety +4

    Thank you lucid, amazing animations. Just don't disappear lol.

  • @kinggodwise8119
    @kinggodwise8119 Před 5 lety +5

    You delivery is loved by my 2 children ages 7 and 10 they like your clones and repeat your words. You have a way of connecting with people.

  • @cyndicorinne
    @cyndicorinne Před 2 lety +1

    These explainers do an awesome job of explaining electricity and as such really stand out!

  • @LoveAndPeaceOccurs
    @LoveAndPeaceOccurs Před 5 lety +1

    Thank You, again, for such ... exceptionally, well presented information. Love how easy you help us to learn.

  • @GMPStudios
    @GMPStudios Před 5 lety +6

    Your name says it all. When I hear something from Lucid, stuff in my mind become lucid.

  • @sumanmondal4251
    @sumanmondal4251 Před 4 lety +3

    reminds me of our college days when we first studied em theory and maxwell equations. it changed my perspective forever.

  • @travisgrubbs9227
    @travisgrubbs9227 Před 2 lety +1

    Aye. I watch a bunch of science stuff like this and I love that you just get to the point and break it down in "normal" terms. Love the graphics love it all. Keep it up and keep us smarter

  • @uturniaphobic
    @uturniaphobic Před 4 lety +1

    That was really well done. I never envisioned the valence this way .

  • @HJIsTheBest
    @HJIsTheBest Před 5 lety +5

    great video as always!

  • @sanjayrshinde
    @sanjayrshinde Před 5 lety +3

    Thanks for sharing knowledge.

  • @allan710
    @allan710 Před 2 lety +1

    I remember one of the first classes of physics 3 (book Moysés Nussenzveig) one of the concepts stroke me the most was this that the electrons actually don't move that fast, only the current does. Also, in my classes about semiconductors, I never really understood or got an intuition about the gap, It was a "shut up and just calculate" thing. This video both remembered that wonderful class and gave me a better intuition. Love it.

  • @alexiscorral8006
    @alexiscorral8006 Před 3 lety +2

    Wonderful and Brilliant! This has reinvigorated my interest in science and my aspirations for potentially becoming an electrician. A new subscriber.

  • @rastrisfrustreslosgomez544

    Very good explanation, you even touch on good'ol brownian motion. Maybe you could do a video on the actual speed of light versus what we call "speed of light" just to show how a perturbation on a field propagates at exactly C

  • @guyfrunknown
    @guyfrunknown Před 2 lety +3

    The water flow analogy I feel like works even better when you consider the flow as a river. Even conductors have a certain amount of resistance, which, in a river could be analogous to rocks and other things blocking the flow. Also, when water goes around objects in the river there can be a slight backflow of water particles like when water "spins" back toward the object it is flowing around. Even though some water particles may go upstream temporarily the flow as a whole is still going downstream.

  • @hannabaal150
    @hannabaal150 Před 4 lety +1

    This is an excellent video, thanks for putting it together. The hydraulic analogy is very helpful to me.
    4:39 The flashlight diagram has the switch open when you are speaking about drift velocity. Does drift occur in an open circuit? Perhaps you have another video you could direct me to.
    EDIT: I got my answer in the comments, thanks. Some sharp folks are watching.

  • @getsmartr
    @getsmartr Před 3 lety

    Great stuff man. Keep it up

  • @FGj-xj7rd
    @FGj-xj7rd Před 5 lety +6

    Thank you Lucid, very cool.

  • @MultiSciGeek
    @MultiSciGeek Před 5 lety +8

    A video on Schrodinger's cat thought experiment please!
    I see a lot of misconception about that.

  • @afeni1477
    @afeni1477 Před 5 lety +1

    Omg, I love your clones. Keep up the great content.

  • @hectorstone7
    @hectorstone7 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for a great video, really helped clear up some confusion. One thing that i still dont quite understand, signal reflection and how this relates to the fields and electrical current. I have read about it and i understand it in its simple form but struggeling to connect some of the dots. Would love a video from you on this 🤞

  • @edwardwoods2991
    @edwardwoods2991 Před 5 lety +4

    I know some people consider you pedantic (cough cough minutephysics) but I really appreciate your disclosures about the ambiguity of our "categories." Reality is almost always a complex spectrum of properties. I've said it before, a key principle that has been nailed home to me from your channel is that our black and white categories are only accurate to an extent. Reality is always more complex and gray. This principle is not only important for science, but significant for all of life. So I'd say you're cautious rather than pedantic.

  • @designd9956
    @designd9956 Před 2 lety +4

    Fun fact: silicon is used as a semi conductor because of that gap. This gap can be used for many things, for example, a type of semi conductor, a photoresistor, allows electricity to flow if there is a photon in the gap making a bridge for the flow.

  • @gamingngames7984
    @gamingngames7984 Před 2 lety +2

    Thanks for the knowledge Nick.

  • @TheyCallMeNewb
    @TheyCallMeNewb Před 5 lety

    I am only just now meeting this channel, and what an entry! I'm this close to enthusiastically subscribing, but I'll explore your other content first. *I do always watch every video of every channel to which I am subscribed you understand. Not every TED talk the only dispensation.

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 5 lety

      As with most channels, my early videos are very "cringy." Beware!

  • @nic12344
    @nic12344 Před 2 lety +4

    1:55 "But the 3 best conductors are silver copper and gold, in that order"
    You forgot to mention that it is only true at standard temperature and pressure!
    Some elements become superconductors at very low temperatures.

  • @DavidEngineering2023
    @DavidEngineering2023 Před 5 lety +3

    Awesome channel, greetings from Colombia.

  • @chiefseadawg5164
    @chiefseadawg5164 Před 5 lety +1

    Very perspicuously presented info -- Thank You!

  • @mjproebstle
    @mjproebstle Před 3 lety

    A cool related topic video would be to show how systems such as a fire control radar can be modeled utilizing electrical components, and analyzed utilizing differential equations. really ties a lot of concepts together!! cheers!

  • @omerkocer6925
    @omerkocer6925 Před 5 lety +4

    l am a electric and electrical engineer student and i always looked for a channel like this. and finally , l found it .

  • @jam_sam3
    @jam_sam3 Před 3 lety +2

    It really helped me.... Keep going
    Thanks,🙂🙂

  • @michaelegan6092
    @michaelegan6092 Před 5 lety +1

    Good stuff, We need to question things and you are doing it.

  • @spacewater5866
    @spacewater5866 Před 4 lety +3

    Ahha this is guy is legend. THEM nerdy as side shots get me all the time. Hahahha😃😃😄

  • @playgroundchooser
    @playgroundchooser Před 5 lety +33

    Wire Grabby Clone is having a bad day.

  • @harrypalmer3481
    @harrypalmer3481 Před 2 lety +1

    Another, now unsurprisingly, brilliant video!

  • @marcovillalobos5177
    @marcovillalobos5177 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you so much for the picture you made in the lightbulb example. I can't believe it was never explained to me that way even tho in one year I'll be a physics major

  • @007lutherking
    @007lutherking Před 4 lety +3

    This guy is crazy lol so glad i found this channel.

  • @handlebarfox2366
    @handlebarfox2366 Před 4 lety +7

    Your list of conductors reminded me of a fun historical fact. During WWII, the Manhattan project needed lots of wiring for cyclotrons to purify fissile uranium. With all the copper already gone for the war effort, they ended up getting a bunch of silver out of the nation's precious metal supply and melting it down into wire for their cyclotrons. (And melting it back into bullion when they were through with it, of course.)

  • @richardgreen7225
    @richardgreen7225 Před 3 lety

    dx dp < h does not say you cannot measure both. You can measure both but there is a limit on the precision. However, h is a very small number so you have to get to really precise measures before their product is less than h.

  • @trevorgarbutt5758
    @trevorgarbutt5758 Před 5 lety +1

    Merry Chrissy & a happy new year , Trev..

  • @jedadiahtucker2132
    @jedadiahtucker2132 Před 5 lety +4

    so if you suddenly stop the flow of the charge do you get a spike in voltage, or amps or what ever the right term would be? similar to waterhammer when you shut a valve?

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 5 lety +4

      You would get a momentary spike in voltage.

    • @KohuGaly
      @KohuGaly Před 5 lety +3

      Yes you would. In fact, this is commonly used to create high voltage spikes in stuff like halogen lightbulbs or boost converter.
      Note that in case of electricity, the magnetic field is analogous to the momentum of water in waterhammer.

    • @rh001YT
      @rh001YT Před 5 lety +1

      Water analogy is best avoided.....I learned that in first semester of college electricity. The water hammer effect of closing a valve is due to flowing mass of water being suddenly stopped. Mass of electron is too small to matter, and as the prof says, electron moves at approx 5cm/hr. Charge has no mass. When a switch is opened, think about that in slow motion. At first, when break is incredibly small, some little bit of charge will still move across the gap like in a capacitor, but then with a little more space or air gap in the break charge will stop dead, and the distance needed to stop charge dead depends on the driving voltage entering the switch...the higher the voltage, or so-called potential charge, the larger the gap needed to stop charge dead. With high voltages >1000v in air, the charge will ionize air molecules and a little tiny spark of bolt of lightning can be seen jumping the gap as it is opened...then when opened far enough that flow of charge via ionized air will be stopped dead.
      Next, inductance must be considered. If there is inductance in wires connecting to the switch, upon opening the switch there will be a spike of voltage in the opposite polarity to the what had been the applied voltage. Magnetic energy stored in the inductance returns into the wires as charge quite suddenly. Any length of wire has some inductance, the longer the wire the more the inductance. The lower the resistance of the wire, due to short length or large gauge, the more forceful will be the magnetically induced charge and voltage of the spike...yet this is not so simple. Imagine the wires as super-conductors...then no voltage can be induced because everywhere in the wire the voltage will be zero. So in any circuit there is something like a trade off or balance of resistance and inductance that will determine the voltage of the spike. And of course that all depends on the amount of current that was "flowing"....certainly the larger the current flow the larger will be the spike, all things considered and noting that superconductor wires are only used in research facilities.
      Now, btw, the inductance in the wires or actual inductors in the circuit does sort of equate with the mass of water flowing in the pipe. More electric current flow, more magnetic field, more spike upon opening the switch due to field collapse.
      In some circuits a snubber capacitor is connected across the switch contacts. Snubber capacitor is combination of a high voltage tolerating capacitor with a small value resistor, small enough not to heat up but large enough to dissipate the voltage spike as heat, and thus there will be little or no spark when the switch is opened.
      Snubber capacitor prolongs the useful life of switch contacts in two ways 1) eliminates spark, cuz the voltage spike flows through the capacitor and resistor, and thus eliminates carbon buildup on switch contacts 2) sparking, if not supressed, will pit the switch contacts which will degrade the actual contact area and thus increase the resistance of switch, which will lead to switch heating if current is large, leading to oxidation of contacts leading to more heat....then switch failure.
      The better analogy for conceptualizing electricity is the mechanical analogy where resistance =brake, capacitance=spring, inductance=mass, force=voltage, current=displacement, time=time.

    • @louf7178
      @louf7178 Před 4 lety

      @@rh001YT A water analogy is perfectly appropriate for introductory concepts and macro-analysis.

  • @christoskettenis880
    @christoskettenis880 Před 4 lety +2

    Completely agree with everything, as an Electrical Engineer!

  • @devindoesntlikeyou2546
    @devindoesntlikeyou2546 Před 4 lety +1

    This is my first video on this channel, and I'm already gonna subscribe.

  • @gevamusic5533
    @gevamusic5533 Před 4 lety +1

    Love your videos. Thank you so much!

  • @Pedritox0953
    @Pedritox0953 Před 4 lety +2

    This man is making me CRAZY!! I cant see current the same way i use to see it.... cucu cucu

  • @TheParkingLotGarage
    @TheParkingLotGarage Před 2 lety +4

    Anyone here after Derek’s latest video?

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 2 lety +1

      This is the video you actually want: czcams.com/video/C7tQJ42nGno/video.html

  • @mariamshehzad4839
    @mariamshehzad4839 Před 5 lety +1

    this channel is the best It answers all of my weird questions 👍👍

  • @InncontUv
    @InncontUv Před 2 lety +1

    I like the way of ur explanation ...its Great...👍

  • @MikesCarInfo
    @MikesCarInfo Před 2 lety +28

    Current flows easier through the edge of a conductor vs the center? Does that mean that stranded wire is better than one solid wire?

    • @50srefugee
      @50srefugee Před 2 lety +22

      Yes, if the individual strands are insulated from each other, say by a coat of varnish. "Litz wire" is braided from individual varnished strands, so the current is forced to flow through the whole cross section. It's used to wind high current inductors for frequencies up to about one megaherz. For very high powers, say in radio transmitters, you just use copper tubing--all skin and no center.

    • @electrified4251
      @electrified4251 Před 2 lety +4

      @@50srefugee Ackhually, you use the copper tubing mostly because of the high frequency of the radio signals and not because of the high powers. The Skin Effect is a function of frequency, not Power(or Voltage or Current) mostly.

    • @50srefugee
      @50srefugee Před 2 lety +1

      @@electrified4251 True, but I'm speaking of high-power RF versus low power, which can use Litz wire.

    • @johnrice1943
      @johnrice1943 Před 2 lety +2

      Stranded wire can handle more amperage than solid wire. Electricians know this

    • @50srefugee
      @50srefugee Před 2 lety

      ​@@johnrice1943 I am not finding support for this in the code. Cite?

  • @parthasarathikondapure8631

    If AC is alternating current then how current can move by going backwards and forwards which cancel out ?

    • @Secret_Moon
      @Secret_Moon Před 5 lety +4

      Imagine it like this: you have a fan connected to a water mill on a stream. When the water moves from one end to the other, it pushes the water mill and the fan runs, creating wind. That is DC. When the water flows back and forth instead, it still pushes the water mill and the fan still runs, back and forth of course, but still creates wind. That is AC. If you watch a light bulb connected to AC in extreme slow motion, you can see it doesn't light up all the time but rather blink with extremely fast speed, similar to the fan running and stopping then running backward.
      Of course that is the simple case of the incandescent light bulb. In case of AC motors like electric fans, they have a special design that involves magnetism to keep the motor running in one direction despite the AC current.

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před 5 lety +3

      Where is the energy in water current: in "push", in pressure. Same thing with electricity: no matter if it goes forth and back, it does exert "pressure" (sorta), it transfers electromagnetic energy and for many purposes like a lightbulb or a resistance radiatior that is enough.
      However for other purposes like computers, it's not, so a transformer must change from AC to DC (and also down regulate the voltage, etc.) The reason why AC is used is because, in spite of Edison, who fought for DC and lost, it proved best for transport, I won't pretend I understand the details of this but it's the real reason: energy efficiency in transport by wire.

    • @Ni999
      @Ni999 Před 5 lety +4

      It doesn't cancel out with simple AC because it's not happening at the same time. It alternates - first in one direction and then the other and back and forth and back and forth, hence the name, alternating current. It's *exactly* like a pendulum in that regard. And just like a pendulum, we measure the amount of time the current spends on each swing. The pendulum on a grandfather clock is _about_ a meter long, and it swings once every second. In the US, the current swing for home electricity happens in 1/60th of a second - or 1 cycle (of back and forth) per 1/60th of a second. Or put more conveniently, 60 cycles per each second, and even more conveniently, we use Hertz (abbreviated Hz, pronounced just like hurts) - Hz means *per second,* it's the inverse of time (1/t) - so we refer to it as 60 Hz. Elsewhere, house current flows at 50 Hz. Just as seconds measures time, Hz measures frequency.
      A pendulum does not cancel itself out, neither does simple AC current.
      Not all alternating current is single-frequency in nature. The audio signal in your speaker wires has a broad range of frequencies (theoretically from 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz but in reality, not as extreme) flowing at the same time. The complex waveform is exactly what happens with air pressure when you speak or sing or musical instruments play notes and in those cases, some frequencies DO cancel while others get together and do the opposite, they add together, and everything in between, at each successive fraction of a second. In music, the signal came that way in the air before it was recorded, with the cancelations and reinforcements already built-in.
      *But you do not need an air signal for that - synthesizers can sound like drums, pianos, organs, violins, and voices exactly by creating the cancelations and reinforcements using nothing but alternating current flows.*
      Another analogy to a pendulum is a circle. This video shows how circles can be arranged to make any complex patterns. One turn of a circle in one second is 1 Hz.
      czcams.com/video/ds0cmAV-Yek/video.html
      Fourier in that video is the guy who figured it out centuries ago and the math is the Fourier series. That's all you need to know to put my explanation and the video together to see how awesome the effects are that you've been experiencing all of your life.
      Hope that helps.
      PS - Very good question!

    • @Blox117
      @Blox117 Před 5 lety +1

      because electrons are polite and dont shove each other

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 5 lety +4

      Blox117, technically speaking, they _do_ shove each other. That's why they all move together in the circuit.

  • @echapapitopaya7888
    @echapapitopaya7888 Před 4 lety +1

    Great great video by the way. I spend like 2months learning what you tough in 7mins lol.

  • @YoshionoKimochi
    @YoshionoKimochi Před 5 lety

    SUBSCRIBED! I love learning about electricity. Every since I discovered EU theory I've been fascinated to learn about electricity and especially its effects in plasma. Plasma phenomenon is some crazy stuff and this all is so much more than what I learned growing up.
    ... You think you know things....

  • @Hsquared
    @Hsquared Před 5 lety +2

    The reason copper is so conductive is not because it has overlapping valence and conduction bands, but instead because the valence band is not full. This means that the electrons can just jump around in the tiny gaps of the valence bands, but they still jump up the the conduction band. What’s really cool about this is that when an electron jumps up the the conduction band, it falls down in steps each time emitting light slightly redder than what came in. This is what causes copper’s distinct color. Hope this was interesting!

    • @waltermessines5181
      @waltermessines5181 Před 3 lety

      Is that the difference between gold, silver and copper? Indian mythology talks about the four eras: gold, silver, copper, iron. There might be some irony in it...

    • @sukhmandersingh4306
      @sukhmandersingh4306 Před rokem

      @@waltermessines5181 don't know about irony but there definitely is some iron in it

  • @__benjo__
    @__benjo__ Před 5 lety +16

    What about superconductors?

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 5 lety +9

      Best conductors... *at room temperature.

    • @hafizajiaziz8773
      @hafizajiaziz8773 Před 5 lety +1

      @@ScienceAsylum wait, i thought that we need to cool them down?

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 5 lety +14

      Yes, I meant that as a correction to what I said in the video: silver, copper, and gold are the best conductors _at room temperature._

    • @hafizajiaziz8773
      @hafizajiaziz8773 Před 5 lety

      I see.
      Because it confused me a bit because I remember reading things like Cooper pair (I think), and things like topology in quantum system that just doesn't make things easier for me to understand.
      Thank you .

    • @SaturnusDK
      @SaturnusDK Před 5 lety +5

      @@ScienceAsylum Maybe a whole episode could be dedicated just to superconductors. For example that because there is no resistance they are not subject to Ohm's Law. Only current can flow through superconductors, and therefore power or work can only be transferred by interaction with magnetic fields as described by Ampère's Circuital Law (with Maxwell's Additions). The amount of current is limited not by resistance heating up the superconductor but by the Meissner Effect.
      (Note that this comment may raise as many questions as it answers.)

  • @RandomMusingsOfLowMelanin

    Really love your videos. Love to be a crazy in this aylum

  • @lPlanetarizado
    @lPlanetarizado Před 4 lety +1

    good timing, I am reading the sears & zemansky book, and they mention it

  • @gazsibb
    @gazsibb Před 5 lety +3

    Utterly fascinating. 4cm/hr Wow. OK now I need to dust off Avogadro's no. to estimate how many electrons that represents in a 'typical' wire.

    • @sidewaysfcs0718
      @sidewaysfcs0718 Před 5 lety +6

      Lots of em.
      Charge of 1 electron = 1.6*10^-19 Coulombs
      1 Ampere of current = 1 C / second flow, that means 6.25*10^18 electrons per second.
      Might sound like a lot, but it's only ~0.00001 moles of electrons per second, now depending on resistance of the circuit you're accidentally touching this can mean painful death or just a mild tingle.

    • @gazsibb
      @gazsibb Před 5 lety +1

      @@sidewaysfcs0718 excellent thank you

  • @phamminhduc0609
    @phamminhduc0609 Před 5 lety +8

    0:05 Do not try this at home.

  • @Baneslayer
    @Baneslayer Před 2 lety +1

    You're one of the best and nail the details that matter instead of fluffing them off 😎

  • @mandisaplaylist
    @mandisaplaylist Před 4 lety +1

    6:16 The "restriction" is not actually due to "the behavior of the atoms" but due to the changing magnetic field produced by the moving charges (the change is always resisting the change of charge motion). In the middle of the wire the magnetic field is stronger because there is more moving charge around. This effect is not very strong for direct current (the field stabilizes after a short while and then ceases the obstruction as it is no longer changing) but is very strong for alternating current with high frequency (the magnetic field changes all the time). There is a special type of wire called Lorentz wire designed to reduce this effect by bringing the charge from the middle near the skin and back.

  • @adamroach4538
    @adamroach4538 Před 5 lety +24

    I've been lied to my entire life. You would think they would teach you that in high school.

    • @georgeknowles8762
      @georgeknowles8762 Před 5 lety +1

      It depends on the academic level of your final physics course at high school. The teacher also has to cover all of the other subjects such as light, sound, heat, mechanics. Post-secondary education will normally go into greater depth.

    • @adamroach4538
      @adamroach4538 Před 5 lety

      @@georgeknowles8762 I'm taking physics when school starts back in January.

    • @TFYS-QA
      @TFYS-QA Před 5 lety

      @@adamroach4538 If you are interested in physics, have you checked in the double split experiment?

    • @adamroach4538
      @adamroach4538 Před 5 lety

      @@TFYS-QA Yes, I know what that is

    • @GeneralPet
      @GeneralPet Před 5 lety

      @@adamroach4538 i'm second year undergrad, if you have questions about modules you can ask, the subjects are really interesting but second year quantum mechanics is hands down the best for me. Can't wait for 3rd year QM, bring on the pain physics I double dare you. Check out the quantum eraser experiment for some time-traveling electrons and a sprinkle of existential crisis. :)

  • @ABHAY-hu9kw
    @ABHAY-hu9kw Před 2 lety +4

    Just come here, when I see the science asylum comment on veritasium video on the same topic

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 2 lety +5

      This is probably the video you actually wanted to watch: czcams.com/video/C7tQJ42nGno/video.html

  • @seanp8840
    @seanp8840 Před rokem

    Lol, 5 years of youtube trying to figure out current and this has glued a lot of info together. Great! Can you please scale this up to utility scale and describe how voltage (pressure/ potental) can be swapped for current (energy from Anyware), how multimeters can detect these things and how loads on things like motors can increase amps draw. Please and thank you.

  • @OziBlokeTimG
    @OziBlokeTimG Před 2 lety +1

    Iove your work, excellent teacher...

  • @atranas6018
    @atranas6018 Před 5 lety +5

    Due of the skin effect, does a multi-strand wire is more conductive than a similar size single core wire?

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před 5 lety +1

      It may play a role but my guess is that as the strands are placed next to each other forming in practice a single mass the effect mostly cancels out. The main reason I believe is that multi-strand wires are more flexible and resistent to fracture and even you can use the various strands to make braids and knots at your convenience when tying them to some device like a plug without requiring any welding.

    • @atranas6018
      @atranas6018 Před 5 lety +1

      @@LuisAldamiz yeah the main reason is more flexibility but I do wonder how it effects the conductivity. I always thought single big core got less resistance as it acts like bigger pipe, or wider road.

    • @Tore_Lund
      @Tore_Lund Před 5 lety

      @@atranas6018 To avoid skin losses there are special wire called "Litze wire" where the strands are individually insulated. This relevant in AC electric motors when the motor controller switching frequency is in the kHZ range, like in electric vehicles and using such a wire can improve motor efficiency 4-5%.

    • @rh001YT
      @rh001YT Před 5 lety +2

      to understand a wire and what goes on inside it you have to use calculus. You imagine any wire made up of infinitely small strands, each with it's own magnetic field. The field of one strand opposes the field of all stands adjacent to it, thus creating inductance. And not just immediately adjacent but a little further than that, but just a little further as the intensity of the mag field reduces according to the inverse square law...in other words it peeters out. So while the current in each strand sums up, the mag field opposing the current does not sum up....its less, so to speak.
      Near the perimeter of a strand the mag field is less because, for instance, the outer most ( imaginary infinitesimal) strands are not surrounded by other strands...at least on one side, the outside of the strand. There is less inductance near the perimeter of a strand.
      Consider now stranded, but not insulated wire. Although the strands are all touching each other (assume tightly bound or twisted together) because each strand is round there will be some space where they are not touching. Where not touching the inductance will be slightly less.
      WIth dc current the slightly less inductance of stranded wire vs solid wire hardly matters....except perhaps for very long wires, but still it is in almost all cases insignificant. But with ac currents the matter of solid vs stranded is more significant because ac currents are more susceptible to inductance as the frequency rises. Even the thin insulation of individual strands of Litz wire does give some improvement due to the small increase of distance between strands. Audiophiles prefer Litz wire to connect phonograph pickup to preamp, and such connections are typically only 2 to 3 feet in length, the whole idea there being to decrease inductance to facilitate high frequencies which are not just part of the high frequency instruments but part of all percussive sounds as well, for instance even the plucking of strings by finger of bow. The reproduction of the French horn may not benefit much from Litz wires as it is intended to be non-percussive.

    • @mickblock
      @mickblock Před 5 lety

      The main reason for stranded is said to be flexibility and ability to be routed. So it is used in cars and home appliances, etcetera where movement and or vibration is expected.
      I was told in school that stranded has a tendency of overcoming the skinning effect, but I think that's not demonstrable, and it certainly wouldn't be worth the difference in manufacturing steps.

  • @ggeasy8499
    @ggeasy8499 Před 5 lety +3

    WE WANT MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS!!!

    • @ScienceAsylum
      @ScienceAsylum  Před 5 lety +1

      I can't just jump into that. I have to work up to it.

    • @ggeasy8499
      @ggeasy8499 Před 5 lety

      @@ScienceAsylum I understand, sorry. I'm too excited :)) Also, I want to show my appreciation for all the videos. Thank you a lot!

  • @peterkovacs9349
    @peterkovacs9349 Před 5 lety

    Great video just like all. Great for people who can never rest until the answers make sense down to the last detail. Just wanted to make a remark about the flaws in analogies specifically how water pressure ( analogy of voltage) fails to explain voltage drop in an electrical circuit. A resistor (pinched pipe ) will likely have a different voltage (drop)over it than the wires and other components connected in the circuit under normal circumstances. Pressure in a pinched pipe will be the same as the rest of the pipes (non pinched) connected to it, I would have thought.

  • @kavkazboy2000
    @kavkazboy2000 Před 3 lety

    I love your simple but very scientic explanations man..you are the best and awesome..and a litle bit crazy to..but i love this..😉😆👌👍👍👍