Weird metal that's also glass is insanely bouncy

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  • čas přidán 16. 10. 2022
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    This amorphous metal has a coefficient or restitution or 0.99 when paired with a ball bearing. It's like watching a glitch in the matrix!
    Thanks to Grand Illusions for lending me the atomic trampoline: www.grand-illusions.com
    Here's my video about heat treating metals: • Self organising steel ...
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 5K

  • @SteveMould
    @SteveMould  Před rokem +1377

    It feels like a glitch in the matrix.
    The sponsor is KiwiCo: Get 50% off ANY crate kiwico.com/stevemould50

    • @InsaneSoloClutch
      @InsaneSoloClutch Před rokem +1

      cool

    • @jsalsman
      @jsalsman Před rokem +14

      Does the Royal Institution lend vacuum chambers to just anyone?

    • @kruks
      @kruks Před rokem +34

      Do the KiwiCo subscriptions come with kitties?

    • @Sepuku78
      @Sepuku78 Před rokem +3

      What if the ball was also covered with a-metal?

    • @presto709
      @presto709 Před rokem +4

      What determines where on the surface the ball settles in to bounce? It looks like is always off center. Is there a sweet spot or maybe a sweet ring?

  • @AdamSmith-qu5bv
    @AdamSmith-qu5bv Před rokem +13838

    Ah! You should've tested the smaller ball bearings again in the vacuum tube, as they were most affected by air resistance.

    • @ittixen
      @ittixen Před rokem +588

      Good point! I wonder what a multidimensional graph of the results for each combination of variables ( air-resistance / ball-size / ball-material / surface-material / base-material ) would be like.

    • @ztoogemcducc6360
      @ztoogemcducc6360 Před rokem +163

      I was hoping he would as well :(

    • @brekkoh
      @brekkoh Před rokem +202

      Given how little it seemed to change his tests, I imagine the square cube law has a much greater affect on the end result

    • @marc_frank
      @marc_frank Před rokem +26

      @@ittixen that would be a radar chart

    • @dinkc64
      @dinkc64 Před rokem +10

      Agreed, it's the first thing I thought about.

  • @NileRed
    @NileRed Před rokem +6996

    That was really cool. This has made me want to try and make one of these... If I succeed, I'll send you one!

    • @alexhu5117
      @alexhu5117 Před rokem +1181

      Cant wait for the video in 3 years😀

    • @BEdmonson85
      @BEdmonson85 Před rokem +61

      @@alexhu5117 😂😆😂

    • @alansaladan
      @alansaladan Před rokem +204

      Maybe Nile Green will make it first?

    • @wakkowarner7391
      @wakkowarner7391 Před rokem +9

      @@dove3853 You'll have to believe it as there's no actual evidence.

    • @Dr.Kay_R
      @Dr.Kay_R Před rokem +19

      Waiting for Grand illusion's comment on broken tube.

  • @MalcolmTroon
    @MalcolmTroon Před rokem +2182

    I can say from personal experience that a steel screw dropped onto a tile floor has a coefficient of restitution of at least 1, and this coefficient value is proportional to the rarity and cost of the screw.

    • @Abmotsad
      @Abmotsad Před rokem +196

      True. Also, the propensity of the screw to be lost upon dropping rises in direct proportion with the rarity/cost of said screw.

    • @_fuckluck
      @_fuckluck Před rokem +6

      XD

    • @_EyeOfTheTiger
      @_EyeOfTheTiger Před rokem +7

      What about shag carpet?

    • @rigidmenace3333
      @rigidmenace3333 Před rokem +136

      They don't bounce. They just teleport to another dimension.

    • @Abmotsad
      @Abmotsad Před rokem +66

      @@rigidmenace3333 They go to the same place as the missing socks.

  • @ianjardine7324
    @ianjardine7324 Před rokem +864

    As an engineer we call the balls ball bearings and the assembly simply a bearing. As a bearing consists usually of an inner and outer bearing run with the bearings working between being ball bearings needle bearings tapered bearings ect.

    • @Henry-Kuren
      @Henry-Kuren Před rokem +14

      Interesting, I've only ever referred to them as xmm balls.

    • @donfinch862
      @donfinch862 Před rokem +4

      Correct

    • @christaylor6529
      @christaylor6529 Před rokem +27

      I know the whole assembly - which contains ball bearings - as a ball race.

    • @HASHBAR710
      @HASHBAR710 Před rokem +22

      As a rancher we call the balls eggs

    • @dog360
      @dog360 Před rokem +1

      @@Henry-Kuren xiao mei mei

  • @fehstamaria
    @fehstamaria Před rokem +3221

    Hello Steve!
    Wow, what a great video! 👏
    I'm a researcher, and I'm coincidentally finishing my PhD in this research field. We used to call it Bulk Metallic Glasses (BMGs), or just metallic glasses, as you mentioned.
    In all these years that I've been studying this field, your way was one of the most interesting to present the public that I've ever watched. I'm so happy to see something I study being presented so well to so many people due to the high visibility of your channel! It made my day!
    You commented on the possibility of someone sending you spheres also made of metallic glass (and yes, you are correct, it would be the ideal way to maximize the bounce time). In the laboratory where I work, we usually produce several amorphous metal alloys, the biggest difficulty is only in the spherical shape, since to get an amorphous structure, as you said, we need a certain cooling rate, and that's why we suck our samples to a chilled mold.
    I am already in contact with my advisor, so that we can study the possibility of producing this type of spherical samples and send them to you!
    Hope this message reaches you! (Help me with a like guys!)

  • @christophersummers1939
    @christophersummers1939 Před rokem +1576

    it took a lot of balls to make this video. well done!

    • @Meg_A_Byte
      @Meg_A_Byte Před rokem +120

      You could even say it took BALLS OF STEEL

    • @zat-svi-ua
      @zat-svi-ua Před rokem +39

      bearing balls.
      NOT. BALL. BEARINGS.

    • @__lasevix_
      @__lasevix_ Před rokem +34

      @@zat-svi-ua he bore balls alright

    • @forced-to-have-a-handle-fck-g
      @forced-to-have-a-handle-fck-g Před rokem +34

      @@zat-svi-ua Ball bearing balls. Sorted.

    • @zat-svi-ua
      @zat-svi-ua Před rokem +13

      @@forced-to-have-a-handle-fck-g ball bearing ball bearings, my bad

  • @gregrobsn
    @gregrobsn Před rokem +316

    Perhaps someone else has mentioned this but I noticed that no where in the video did you mention the sound itself as an energy leak. When you created the vacuum test, the sound was quite apparent meaning that each bounce sent a compression wave through the metal disk, then the base metal cylinder, then the brick, then the metal plate, then the air gap, then the microphone. That has to be a major loss of energy, possibly more that any from air resistance.

    • @BarbeqdBrwniez
      @BarbeqdBrwniez Před rokem +36

      While he didn't specifically point out the sound as energy loss, he did reference the different energy losses based on the base that it is on.

    • @TheFredmac
      @TheFredmac Před rokem +4

      You are correct sir. In terms of entropy the base is at a state of rest and the ball is at an energy level higher than it's resting state. Energy will go from higher to lower. So the impact energy transfer will be many times higher than the energy transferred to the air. The ball shaped also contributes to this.

    • @douggale5962
      @douggale5962 Před 7 měsíci +1

      It seemed that the higher energy content of the higher frequency bounce helped it run out of energy almost immediately.

    • @benjiwiebe8128
      @benjiwiebe8128 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@douggale5962 It loses a percent of energy with every bounce. The more bounces per second, the more energy loss events per second.

    • @ReyLaFleur
      @ReyLaFleur Před 3 měsíci

      I remember in kinematics we used to neglect sound energy loss since its insignificant compared to friction/drag and impact losses

  • @Ricksdetrix
    @Ricksdetrix Před rokem +28

    The sound during the vacuum test is a really good illustation of energy lost through the materials when it bounces

  • @mattwatson3407
    @mattwatson3407 Před rokem +442

    I love the bit where the bounces per second matches up with the frame rate and it looks like it’s floating.

  • @stupidsnek
    @stupidsnek Před rokem +419

    Grand illusions is a real one for loaning you that

  • @gitchegumee
    @gitchegumee Před rokem +12

    As a mechanic without an engineering degree, I'm curious if temperature would have an effect? Would heating or cooling either the materials of the bearing and the impact plate or the air within the glass column make a measurable change? Also as a mechanic who deals with bearings in the field and not a lab, would impurities (finger oils or dust) affect results? I've dealt with bearings that a dirty finger print would affect it's performance, although that is probably more a rotational force.

    • @TheFredmac
      @TheFredmac Před rokem +1

      Running tests with the system at different temperatures would be interesting.
      A heated ball would have more energy to start with. But, the electrons in the balls metal could be more free to move around. If it's cooled, the electrons are more tightly held but over all the ball has lower energy. Or, heat transfer with the air would cancel out any temperature change.
      A cool line of inquiry no matter how it turns out.

  • @PantsuMann
    @PantsuMann Před rokem +28

    The brick was interesting. I 3D print and have seen people using stone tiles as a base to stand their printers on, then on a table. The stone slab either absorbs the vibrations or simply keeps them in the machine, more or less, which reduces vibrational noise during operation. I guess this video indirectly answered my curiosity how that even works :D

    • @MrAlex3461
      @MrAlex3461 Před měsícem +1

      I've been using four foam mounts to try and achieve some sound deadening. Thanks to your insight I'll replace those foam pieces with bricks.

    • @PantsuMann
      @PantsuMann Před měsícem

      @@MrAlex3461 Not sure how good bricks are. Might work. A concrete or stone slab has some weight to it that reduces table wobble. But try the bricks, I'm curious if that works too

  • @TimeBucks
    @TimeBucks Před rokem +325

    Your videos are just amazing

  • @TheRealXira
    @TheRealXira Před rokem +134

    Steve, Little tip of advice from an audio engineer.
    If you ever find yourself needing to count the peaks of a audio waveform again. Save your time and eyes, Look up Dynamic Splitting. You essentially set a threshold above the noise floor and it will detect any transients (peaks) above your setting and then splits them all. Resulting in each transient being its own audio "file". Highlight all files and see how many you have selected, or a good Slicer will tell you how many transients are detected before actually splitting for you.

  • @mikeballew3207
    @mikeballew3207 Před rokem +80

    I've never been so sincerely interested in a bouncing ball before

    • @daddy7860
      @daddy7860 Před rokem +3

      It would be even more exciting to watch paint dry... on the molecular scale... timelapsed

    • @thomasellis7564
      @thomasellis7564 Před rokem +3

      I actually have..., but it was part of a recurring nightmare i have when i get the flu. lol.

    • @clauslangenbroek9897
      @clauslangenbroek9897 Před 9 měsíci

      This whole thread is pretty relatable.

  • @photofan64b
    @photofan64b Před 8 měsíci +2

    If you assume a fixed coefficient of restitution (between 0 and 1) for a given ball and surface, even with perfect conditions (vacuum, etc), the time for each bounce is a fixed fraction of the time of the previous bounce. Thus the times of the bounces form a convergent geometric series, making a finite total time. Thus even if there were infinitely many bounces, the bouncing would stop after a finite time. (As you say, physical reality cuts it short in any case.)

  • @joshyoung1440
    @joshyoung1440 Před rokem +190

    Grand Illusions is such a gem, it warms my heart to see you guys team up in any way!

    • @charlestaylor3195
      @charlestaylor3195 Před rokem +10

      Tim is great. I can honestly say I've enjoyed every single show of his. I like how a lot of my subs know each other, and work together. They've even flown from the US to do a show with Steve.

    • @jamescarey6559
      @jamescarey6559 Před rokem +1

      Yes a great illusion. Thumbnail gave the illusion that a ball bearing could bounce on amorphous metal 259 times yet only it was only 45 times. Grand ! Amazing ! Warms my heart too ! Just loved it when I wasted 18 minutes to have the illusion shattered.

  • @ElectroBOOM
    @ElectroBOOM Před rokem +781

    Love the bounciness! Would you be able to explain in another video why the balls tend to bounce back to the center of the trampoline? I have an idea, but after I lost our argument last time, I won't share it just in case!

    • @Kashfam08
      @Kashfam08 Před rokem +57

      I would love to hear your theory even if it is wrong.

    • @onni956
      @onni956 Před rokem +62

      hey funny eletricicty man

    • @thikim8562
      @thikim8562 Před rokem +1

      ok

    • @ryebread3417
      @ryebread3417 Před rokem +25

      I have no idea what im talking about but if i had to guess, i would say that it's because the trampoline deforms in such a way that is kinda slanted towards the center, as the closer you get to the center, the further you are from the supporting springs on the edge. Therefore, when an object impacts the trampoline the point of impact closest to the center is deformed the most since it has the least support, bouncing the object towards the center.

    • @bumblebee2989
      @bumblebee2989 Před rokem +14

      I think the surface must be slightly dished or concave. Each time it bounces off center, it gets steered back toward the middle.

  • @timelsen2236
    @timelsen2236 Před rokem +9

    I feel like I learn more and tire less, watching Steve than anyone I have ever listened to. Supremely fascinating! Kudos to Mehdi as well!

  • @luluonly486
    @luluonly486 Před rokem +6

    When I woke up today, I measured all my cheerios to make sure I was only eating the ones with the correct size and weight for optimal taste

    • @BinglesP
      @BinglesP Před 29 dny +1

      If you need someone to "dispose of" the ones you scrapped, I'm always available

  • @anothorestes
    @anothorestes Před rokem +231

    I love grand illusions! Tim's channel is so positive. It's always pleasant when things I follow collide

    • @fluffysheap
      @fluffysheap Před rokem +20

      And then bounce back with a high coefficient of restitution

    • @Soken50
      @Soken50 Před rokem +5

      @@fluffysheap or break apart, RIP glass tube

  • @SeanHodgins
    @SeanHodgins Před rokem +165

    I created a jig to test COR in university as a project. After testing a number of materials, was very surprised(as was the class when I demonstrated) that cast acrylic had an extremely high COR. I don't know why but everyone assumed it would dampen the bounce.

    • @CharlesBosse
      @CharlesBosse Před rokem +4

      Yeah, you can get acrylic balls at TAP that bounce like really noisy superballs... they also don't really warm up as they bounce. Unless they crack or chip, they really don't stay deformed. PLA on the other hand... "sploot"

    • @threeMetreJim
      @threeMetreJim Před rokem +1

      The 5mm balls used for 'bb gun' ammunition are very bouncy on a hard surface (floor tiling is best but also very bouncy on wood laminate flooring). I think they are also some sort of cast plastic. Used the property for a 'door trap' to make sure no-one was sneaking into a room of mine before - count the balls load them into a pot that is released if the door is openend; because they bounce all over the place it's hardly likely they would all be found and replaced so you know if the trap was sprung (count the balls in the trap without setting it off). Unfortunately I forgot I'd set it one time, and ended up with balls bouncing everywhere on entry. 🙄

  • @extractwise
    @extractwise Před 3 měsíci +2

    I mess with crystallization quite a bit and I really like the way you illustrated the concept of amorphousness.

  • @peterawesomeness1
    @peterawesomeness1 Před rokem +2

    GrandIllusions is one of my favorite channels. Awesome to see their own atomic trampoline in your video Steve!

  • @morgan0
    @morgan0 Před rokem +238

    to count all but the audio rate bounces, you can use audacity’s sound finder feature (i think that’s what it’s called, and it’s in one of the last three menus). it creates labels which are numbered in a separate label track. you can also slow the audio down and then run the sound finder, to give it an easier time finding the bounces.

    • @slots1407
      @slots1407 Před rokem +13

      I think it's called Beat Finder - haven't used it for a while, so..?

    • @aceman0000099
      @aceman0000099 Před rokem +2

      I've not used it since 2003, i think it's called 'mute'?

  • @grapetoad6595
    @grapetoad6595 Před rokem +311

    Watching the metals change by weight making a normal distribution, very cool.
    Why are the amorphous metals suddenly harder to find?

    • @kjdude8765
      @kjdude8765 Před rokem +52

      From what I gather they were made as an Educational demo. So not available commercially in this format. The company (as a spin off) still manufactures items from this material and other similar ones.

  • @EricPalmer_DaddyOh
    @EricPalmer_DaddyOh Před rokem +5

    This is insanely fun to watch. Great explanations.

  • @barontau6552
    @barontau6552 Před 4 měsíci +2

    @Steve_Mould The question at 11:30 actually depends on the phonon generation. An amorphous material has a poorly defined resonance structure for absorbing energy and generating phonons. Phonons are associated with heat and sound (heat is really just sound with randomized phases). With poorly defined resonances, the metallic glass is more likely to reflect the phonons generated back into the bearing. Crystalline structures generally are going to have sharper resonances, generating phonons at that frequency. Those phonons will scatter off defects in the lattice generating heat. All crystals have defects (mathematically the edge of a crystal is a defect). The impact of the bearing on the surface is going to have a spectrum associated with the deformation of the surface. Ideally you want to minimize the phonon resonances at peaks in the the deformation spectrum and those that occur, quickly reflect back into the bearing, before it leaves, and preferably in-phase.
    TLDR: exceptionally stiff, amorphous materials are best.

  • @Guest4465
    @Guest4465 Před rokem +18

    0:35 "bearing balls" 😂

  • @UninstallingWindows
    @UninstallingWindows Před rokem +241

    Plasticity changes a lot with the change in temperature. It would be great to see how frozen metals compare to room temperature metals in this test. Steve probably has liquid nitrogen next to his bed, so he could make a test and let us know how it worked.

    • @jettaeschroff6924
      @jettaeschroff6924 Před rokem +21

      he's too cool not to have liquid nitrogen lying around

    • @No_Way_NO_WAY
      @No_Way_NO_WAY Před rokem +5

      Yes, i was totally expecting cooled and heated slabs too. Eg. how much more time/bounces would a reduction in temp of the block to -40°C yield. Nothing, a bit, much?

    • @Mrluk245
      @Mrluk245 Před rokem +6

      I dont think there will be a big difference. Plasticity in metals comes manly from the movement of dislocations. By cooling a metal the dislocation movement is decreased and therefore plasticity is decreased. Since this is already a glass the dislocation movement is already neglectable.

    • @coltonjones2398
      @coltonjones2398 Před rokem

      Would love to have seen temperature taken into consideration. Even if the changes are almost unnoticeable, it would be cool to see just how much.

    • @sylviaknutcecily
      @sylviaknutcecily Před rokem +3

      I wonder about sympathetic vibration. If you were to produce the same vibration (pitch) near the base, would that affect the bounce? And would a slightly off-pitch tone negatively affect it?
      There are so many interesting ways to modify this experiment!

  • @blazetownsend8785
    @blazetownsend8785 Před rokem +23

    If it helps, the outer and inner parts of a ball bearing are called races. The reason they call it a ball bearing is to denote the type of bearing inside the races, as there are tapered bearings and rod bearings as examples of alternatives. Awesome video, thank you for sharing.

    • @HarryNicNicholas
      @HarryNicNicholas Před 2 měsíci

      agreed, i wonder why no one seems to know this? i'm an old man (!) but i would have thought the name would have stuck.

  • @thevuntzer
    @thevuntzer Před rokem

    Excellent video. When you pressed your thumb on the artist's eraser around 10 min in it triggered an olfactory memory and I could smell the eraser from my childhood. Fascinating.

  • @wmose3694
    @wmose3694 Před rokem +215

    it would be interesting to retest the smallest ball bearings you had in the vacuum chamber to see if there is a large gain with them as you had already selected for the ones that were least effected by air resistance

    • @wassupusa
      @wassupusa Před rokem +1

      Excellent point

    • @sangvoba4340
      @sangvoba4340 Před rokem

      ok

    • @wmose3694
      @wmose3694 Před rokem

      seems like it would make for a good revisit as it is just retesting in the vacuum chamber so i have me fingers crossed there will be part 2

  • @aquietwhyme
    @aquietwhyme Před rokem +334

    I wanted to be a materials scientist when I was little, until I got a little older and realized that my days would be spent doing things like this all day long. It's much more enjoyable to watch you do it for us, lol.

  • @GabrioSerra
    @GabrioSerra Před 8 měsíci +1

    Very interesting video, loaded with information. To understand it all, I'll probably need to bounce back to it.

  • @gozattila9575
    @gozattila9575 Před rokem +1

    What an amount of work! So impressive!

  • @cogwheel42
    @cogwheel42 Před rokem +28

    I was in the middle of saying "The ruby is a bit sad" right when you said it was disappointing. I just got off a binge watching watch repair videos, and those ruby gems are usually SUPER accurate.

    • @ashkebora7262
      @ashkebora7262 Před rokem +2

      It wasn't so much an accuracy thing as it was a poor coefficient of restitution given its hardness.

    • @cogwheel42
      @cogwheel42 Před rokem +3

      @@ashkebora7262 The problem with the ruby wasn't how high it bounced, it's that it didn't bounce straight so he had to keep the tube around it
      See 2:00

    • @ashkebora7262
      @ashkebora7262 Před rokem +5

      @@cogwheel42 Huh, I took it as more of a general performance gripe. I guess that's what I get for having it as largely background. Not surprising it'd be really hard to make a perfectly spherical ruby, though. Ball bearings are made while soft and _then_ hardened, but there's no way to soften a ruby! It probably takes quite a bit of effort just to get a visually nice sphere, let alone a 'perfect' sphere.
      Even the zirconium oxide bearings, which have a similar hardness, have much easier manufacturing processes than artificial rubies. A somewhat normal ceramic sintering process vs growing a crystal. One you can pretty much define the shape you want even if it's a bit nutty. The other, you have to rely on the crystal structure growing.

    • @cc-to
      @cc-to Před rokem

      @@cogwheel42 About that: I'm wondering if this may not be entirely due to the ball not being sufficiently spherical, but rather that the internal oscillations not damping between bounces. So that apart from the first bounce, it was off-spherical for every subsequent hit, and thus likely impacting a point whose local tangent wasn't in-plane with the plate. Of course, once it rubs the tube it's going to lose energy and start rotating and it's game over from there.

  • @T3sl4
    @T3sl4 Před rokem +214

    A tip on the support: alternating layers of dense and light materials will make a low-pass filter, reflecting more power back up into the ball and keeping the supporting surface quieter. For example, resting the bouncer base on, well maybe just a somewhat wider plate to give it some stability (say a chunky steel plate), then supporting that on something soft like plastic or rubber, or hollow even, like a balloon, or foam (but, foam is also quite dissipative -- this would make more like an RC filter than an LC filter, in electronic analogy), or something flexible in general (like enough springs to support it stably). Then support that in turn with something heavy, and so on and so forth.
    This can't be done hastily, of course; you want similar masses throughout the stack, of the massive components that is, and likewise similar springiness of the light components. (In fact, the relative proportions of each (how much lighter or heavier a component is, relative to the [geometric] mean) gives the shape of frequency attenuation curve.) Just using similar amounts will be reasonable enough, and use enough mass and spring rate that the free-bounce rate of the stack is much slower than the bouncing of the ball. That is, the cutoff frequency is well below the excitation frequency.
    Using things like balloons is obviously a bit complicated if you want to test it in a vacuum, heh.

    • @thomasgeorge815
      @thomasgeorge815 Před rokem +3

      Took the thought right out of my mind. Resonance might be the key to longer bounce times with less energy lost.

    • @thomasdahlgren1985
      @thomasdahlgren1985 Před rokem +9

      @@thomasgeorge815 This. Resonance, being a feedback loop sending energy back into the system, could extend bounce time. A filter will not. All a filter will do is dissipate the energy loss as heat, not sound. Work is work.

    • @candle_eatist
      @candle_eatist Před rokem +3

      Y'all thinking too hard, I love it

  • @bttrpeach2135
    @bttrpeach2135 Před rokem +56

    If you are testing number of bounces again, samplers like the one in Logic Pro x can easily tell you by loading in the audio file and using transients/peaks as the metric that decides chops/divisions. then it will may tell you how many it was able to locate (dependent on the software it should show up pretty apparently, I know logic’s quick sampler does)

    • @ci8001
      @ci8001 Před 5 měsíci

      same with fl

    • @capoman1
      @capoman1 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Reaper does it too. Many ways to do this. Remove silence by playing with the threshold will chop the file into several pieces, select them and it will say how many... Also slice by transient.

    • @ci8001
      @ci8001 Před 4 měsíci

      @@capoman1 do you like reaper how's the UI

    • @capoman1
      @capoman1 Před 4 měsíci

      @@ci8001 I love it. It even handles video well. Interface is great and send recieve setups are extra good. Gets frequent updates, is a tiny install no bloat, doesn't crash much, and allows recording to ogg or mp3 so that projects don't take up alot of space, and has a huge community so lots has already been done with scripts etc and get questions answered quick. Comes with good built in vst as well. And if price is a thing, you can use it free forever.
      It was made by the creator of Winamp back in the day so it's nostalgic for me. But it's missing some of the big boy features, for ex Cubase has cool pitch correction and tempo correction suite only available in Cubase, and you get no vsti or sample packs.

  • @roycefrye3735
    @roycefrye3735 Před 8 měsíci

    Awesome video! Maybe the smaller ball bearings would have a significant difference when placed in the vacuum? Earlier in the video you specifically chose the medium ball bearing because they were less affected by air resistance than the smaller ones.

  • @_blood_moon_proto_1500
    @_blood_moon_proto_1500 Před rokem +16

    0:43 thats a lotta balls

  • @biggusmunkusthegreat
    @biggusmunkusthegreat Před rokem +90

    Wow. Your section on plasticity was ridiculously well explained. Fantastic job as always.

  • @Darthvanger
    @Darthvanger Před měsícem

    I love how these properties can be explained by the atomic structure.
    It's so fascinating. Something they rarely do in the university (focusing on formulas etc).

  • @hygri
    @hygri Před 4 měsíci

    Very cool - I suspect you're right about matching the elasticity of the two surfaces, you're improving the impedance match between the two surfaces thus ensuring the most efficient energy transfer.

  • @PhilieBlunt666
    @PhilieBlunt666 Před rokem +71

    Awww, sir tim is such a sweetheart, that's awesome for him to loan you this. Anyone that watches his stuff can tell how precious every piece is to him

  • @AmpedGaming404
    @AmpedGaming404 Před rokem +62

    As a materials science and engineering student currently taking classes like "Structure and Characterization of Crystalline Materials" AND "Mechanical Behavior of Solids", this was a super cool video to watch! Thank you for sharing your knowledge and doing so in such an intuitive way, Steve!

    • @y_fam_goeglyd
      @y_fam_goeglyd Před rokem +2

      Another one! See above to a fellow student studying exactly what's in the video! Good luck with your studies, I hope you get to do everything you want to achieve in life 😊👍

    • @jimbothegymbro7086
      @jimbothegymbro7086 Před rokem +1

      neat so you're learning about piezoelectric crystals and things like that?

    • @davetran2537
      @davetran2537 Před rokem

      Hey man, are you based in the UK? I applied for mat sci at a load of places and just sent my applications, and wanted to know how your experience is!

    • @AmpedGaming404
      @AmpedGaming404 Před rokem

      @@jimbothegymbro7086 That's actually a class I will be taking next term!

    • @AmpedGaming404
      @AmpedGaming404 Před rokem

      @@davetran2537 I am based on the U.S.'s east coast. That being said, MSE is a great area of study regardless of where you go. In the U.S. at least, most universities have similar curriculums

  • @user-rb9yr7lc4v
    @user-rb9yr7lc4v Před 4 měsíci

    Okay best video out there! Straight to the point and crisp video. Thank you so much! Life Saver!

  • @simir61
    @simir61 Před rokem

    The nerding out never ever ends in this one, I love it, very satisfying.

  • @Xanderviceory
    @Xanderviceory Před rokem +68

    I'm a glass blower and I thought I was going to learn about a new type of glass I didn't know about, however I did learn as much as I usually do with your videos which is a LOT! Thanks again for making great informative videos

  • @danr9183
    @danr9183 Před rokem +69

    In a past job I had the fun of formulating, melting and casting new formulations of amorphous metal that did not contain Beryllium. Be is a very toxic element that is dangerous to work with so we were trying to find amorphous metals that didn’t require Be but still could be amorphous when chilled at achievable rates. The larger a piece of metal you can make amorphous, the more applications there are. Also this stuff melts really low so it can be made to work in metal injection molding. So cool to see Steve playing with it.

    • @chem101studygroup4
      @chem101studygroup4 Před rokem +4

      Are there any non protected formulas you can share?

    • @michaelwerkov3438
      @michaelwerkov3438 Před rokem +1

      What are the applications?

    • @danr9183
      @danr9183 Před rokem +11

      @@chem101studygroup4 Unfortunately no, for at least two reasons. First is what you alluded to, we were definitely under NDA’s for the work we were doing because my company was a vacuum melt shop just making the alloys, not the finished parts. We were doing R&D contract work for the amorphous metal company, basically. Second reason is, as Steve said in his video, there are a whole bunch of elements in the mix, so I don’t remember everything and all their percentages! But the elements he mentioned, Ti, Zr, Ni, were all in there along with several other uncommon metals. Interestingly the process to make the alloy amorphous took at least two steps. You couldn’t just melt from pure starting elements and cast and amorphous part, you had to go through a particular post alloying process to induce the amorphous structure.

    • @danr9183
      @danr9183 Před rokem +5

      @@michaelwerkov3438 not sure what the state of the art is today but I think the earliest applications were things like dental components (braces). I think the idea of a golf club head being made out of this material was someone’s dream. My company only made the alloy not the end product so I don’t any more about that than what you could find on google.

    • @satibel
      @satibel Před rokem +2

      @@michaelwerkov3438 I guess rails for larger ones, and in general bearing surfaces which need to be stiff, also precision things, where plastic deformation would lead to problems over time.

  • @CarrotUK
    @CarrotUK Před rokem +2

    So nice of Tim to lend you their very bouncy metal!

  • @danielthecake8617
    @danielthecake8617 Před rokem +5

    This guys videos are so amazing they spread like mould.

  • @Mothernatura
    @Mothernatura Před rokem +146

    As usually, I find incredible how you managed to condense such monstrous amounts of information in human words in just a few minutes.

    • @Notrees
      @Notrees Před rokem

      @Erico Watts finally!! 😂 Get outta here man

    • @NuisanceMan
      @NuisanceMan Před rokem

      Yep. When they made Steve, they broke the Mould.

  • @ScarfmonsterWR
    @ScarfmonsterWR Před rokem +127

    A collaboration between Steve Mould and Grand Illusions was not one I was ever expecting.

  • @jerichooblivion5406
    @jerichooblivion5406 Před 10 měsíci +3

    4:50 The fact that this is the best material to make a bouncing ball bearing out of is consequential enough to slip me into a trance.

  • @mstalcup
    @mstalcup Před rokem +1

    The ruby bearing is especially wear resistant. These are used as the point [of contact] in performance tops that are designed to spin as long as possible.

  • @karthikeyapotluri2133
    @karthikeyapotluri2133 Před rokem +155

    This channel never ceases to impress me

  • @matthewhafner962
    @matthewhafner962 Před rokem +31

    MetGlass is indeed interesting. It's also the basis for those retail store theft prevention tags. Apparently, they've got some weird magnetic properties, and that's why the detectors only go off if you take a tag through.

  • @MrIrondog55
    @MrIrondog55 Před rokem +2

    Great vid! Watching it made me think of a bounce test, with a steel ball bearing on perfectly flat anvil. The blacksmith in question was extememely impressed on how long the bearing bounced, as well as how much he could conserve in an arm swing with his hammer.
    It totally sits in line with the results in your vid. As we know, energy cannot be lost, but transferred into an alternative form - sound, heat, light, friction, deformation, etc.
    I would love to see the results with a hardened vehicle on a flattened, hardened surface (due to the atomic gaps being smaller) as well as on a hardened amorphous (if it is possible) material.
    Is it physically/atomically possible to revolutionise the ol' hammer? Food for thought!

  • @Amethyst_Friend
    @Amethyst_Friend Před měsícem

    Steve, this is just a wonderful video. I’m really enjoying the channel. Thank you

  • @mikeselectricstuff
    @mikeselectricstuff Před rokem +136

    I suspect the reason for the small ones coming to a stop is more about air turbulance between ball and surface than molecular forces.

    • @pvic6959
      @pvic6959 Před rokem +11

      i think he meant even if you took away air resistance (and related air stuff), still the ball will stop because it will eventually get so close to the surface that molecular forces will start playing part

    • @iteragami5078
      @iteragami5078 Před rokem +4

      @@pvic6959 Even without molecular forces, the ball will eventually stop (assuming imperfect bounces). Since the ball bounces lower each time, it also bounces more often and you get a converging geometric series for the time between bounces. You can find more results online explaining this.

    • @bobstr6224
      @bobstr6224 Před rokem +2

      @@iteragami5078 it bounces lower each time yes, but without intermolecular forces it would keep bouncing just the height of each bounce would approach 0 but never actually reach it

    • @frechjo
      @frechjo Před rokem

      @@bobstr6224 If it's converging, it reaches 0 at one point. I think that you might not be taking into account that the period also shortens.
      You want to walk 100 meters. You walk the 50 ms, and that takes you 1 minute. You walk the next 25, and that takes you 30 seconds. You walk the next 12,5 mts, and that takes you 15 seconds.
      If you continue like this infinitely, halving both the distance and the time, you finally walk the whole 100 meters in 2 minutes.

    • @milemusic_official
      @milemusic_official Před rokem +4

      @@frechjo The example you said only true when the velocity is constant. But when the ball bouncing, its velocity decreasing due to lost of energy: E=1/2×m×v² -> since the mass doesn't change the velocity does. So if you doesn't take air resistance and molecular forces and anything into consideration and you write down the time-hight function of the ball, its limes will be 0 but only in the infinity, so it means in reality it never reaches 0. So in this case the only reason the distance will reach 0, because it will reach the planck length and the ball can't travel less distance than that.
      I hope I could help.
      Sorry if my english isnt the best,
      btw how bad is it?

  • @felipereigosa96
    @felipereigosa96 Před rokem +23

    I love the end of the run when there's that rapid ramp up in the frequency. Reminds me of black hole mergers.

    • @tomasnemec5680
      @tomasnemec5680 Před rokem +1

      I was thinking the exact same thing!

    • @T3sl4
      @T3sl4 Před rokem +2

      The similarity (also Newton's cradle and others) is no accident, on a basic enough level anyway!

  • @tyh.1004
    @tyh.1004 Před 2 měsíci

    LOL, it was great to relive the Liquidmetal infomercial. I'm pretty sure I have the Liqidmetal driver golf club laying around. I remember they made tennis rackets too!

  • @DerkWehler
    @DerkWehler Před 6 měsíci

    Fascinating stuff. I'd love it if you would have explained how something like spring steel counters normal steel's plastic deformation properties.

  • @AndyFromBeaverton
    @AndyFromBeaverton Před rokem +56

    You need to test a Newton's cradle with ball bearings from amorphous metal or Liquidmetal.

  • @prestonbyrd8443
    @prestonbyrd8443 Před rokem +37

    I'm always glad to see you collaborate in a way with Grand Illusions.

  • @ferwildfire865
    @ferwildfire865 Před rokem +1

    Nice video. Missed to mention that it is in fact the hardness property what we are looking for rather than stiffness

  • @speedtoast
    @speedtoast Před 7 měsíci

    Interesting. I would also have liked to see the effect of different temperatures on the plate and ball. Wagering that a colder surface would have better elasticity.

  • @khalilahd.
    @khalilahd. Před rokem +51

    This is actually so cool! I’ve never heard of this but truly quite interesting. I love how much research you put into this experiments 😊

    • @WDECHU
      @WDECHU Před rokem +1

      You never heard because it's a lie. Metal which is also glass does not exist. There is metallic glass, and although it sounds almost the same, it is quite different. The title of this clip is clikbait. After all, amorphous structures are a very interesting topic and it's nice that someone is trying to say something. It's just a pity that it's presented this way

  • @bencushwa8902
    @bencushwa8902 Před rokem +26

    Great video Steve, thanks for sharing.
    I did my graduate work years ago on amorphous carbon films. What's always stuck with me is just how *weird* amorphous materials are compared to their crystalline counterparts. They will behave in ways you totally don't expect and do things you didn't think were possible.

    • @BillyBob-wh4sq
      @BillyBob-wh4sq Před rokem +4

      That sounds really cool! Do you have any examples?

    • @bencushwa8902
      @bencushwa8902 Před rokem +1

      @@BillyBob-wh4sq The classic example is how some types of glass will *very* slowly flow over time under the pull of gravity. Really old glass windows are sometimes thicker at the bottom than the top. (Edit: It turns out that this particular fascinating property of amorphous solids is a myth. Whoops....)
      From my Master's work, amorphous carbon can behave like a semiconductor, and my work centered on using layers of the stuff as thin film solar cells.
      Et cetera.

    • @jarekferenc1149
      @jarekferenc1149 Před rokem +1

      @@bencushwa8902 Thicker bottom? Yeah, it's a nice legend. But in some cases, the upper part of the glass was thicker. Reversed gravity? No. A thousand years ago they produced glass plates with uneven thickness, and probably usually they put the plates into the windows with the thick part down. But not always.
      Considering the fact that glass melts at around 900°C (1200 K), the ambient temperature of 27°C (300 K) is not sufficient to allow any deformation. As a rule of thumb, temperature-induced phenomena inrease their rate twice, if temp. is increased by 10°C. But if a window glass is kept at, say, 300-400°C, deformation is likely after years. A steel kept at 300°C would maintain its shape. I haven't performed such experiment by myself, but working with metals and metallic glasses, I dare to expect such behaviour.

    • @bencushwa8902
      @bencushwa8902 Před rokem +1

      @@jarekferenc1149 I was just about to type out a reply about the properties of glass detailing the explanation one of my professors gave me in grad school, when I decided to do a bit of reading before hitting "enter".
      I'm glad I did. Turns out he was wrong, have had this incorrect notion about amorphous glass rolling around in my head for two decades, and now I have a few choice words for him.
      Thanks for pointing this out.

  • @internziko
    @internziko Před rokem +2

    This channel is a treasure to humanity

  • @byrontheusurper6505
    @byrontheusurper6505 Před rokem +1

    Ayo grand illusions, that's my guy! What a neat channel man!

  • @kellygrant3074
    @kellygrant3074 Před rokem +78

    When the frame rate makes the bearings appear to hover is so cool! Bouncing in and out of the plane of focus is really cool too. Well done. You look like a week off is in order.

  • @MiqelDotCom
    @MiqelDotCom Před rokem +18

    I 💜 how the final section of really tiny bounces starts to look weird as it briefly comes into phase with the camera frame rate!!

    • @CharlesBosse
      @CharlesBosse Před rokem +3

      Someone call the Slow-mo guys, right? But seriously, it would be really cool to compare the deformations of the various balls and the plate as they touch.

  • @DGA2000
    @DGA2000 Před rokem +5

    I'm with you! My first thought was of amorphous metal ball bearings. So curious how that might affect the bounce

  • @MR-puffnstuff
    @MR-puffnstuff Před rokem

    You are a wonderful parent and I am so jelly. Love kittens too.

  • @Drjtherrien
    @Drjtherrien Před rokem +26

    Very cool! I posted a link to this video in my materials class and challenged the students to identify all the concepts you cover that were in my lectures. Dang is that bouncy!
    If you really wanted to see how far you could push this in terms of number of bounces try looking at what blacksmiths do to their anvils; they are trying to maximize the amount of bounce when the hammer strikes in order to reduce fatigue.

  • @johntan2589
    @johntan2589 Před rokem +25

    i like the part where he said ball bearing

  • @toast_recon
    @toast_recon Před rokem +2

    The tuning of the ball material to floor material reminds me of impedance matching for optimal power transfer.

  • @Ricksdetrix
    @Ricksdetrix Před rokem

    I really like those top down shops of the ball falling in and out of focus

  • @geraldmerkowitz4360
    @geraldmerkowitz4360 Před rokem +5

    2:18 "the ruby in particular is disappointing because it cost a lot of money"
    *IT'S DOING ITS BEST OKAY?!*

  • @Reth_Hard
    @Reth_Hard Před rokem +18

    00:02
    "In the late noughties..."
    When was that?

  • @insanecreeper9000
    @insanecreeper9000 Před rokem +1

    It sounds very similar to gravitational wave coalescence, that ramp up of frequency as energy is dissipated from the system is very familiar

  • @ManoChannelTuNelysk
    @ManoChannelTuNelysk Před rokem

    As for the sound wave counting, I would have run a function on my DAW to Turn signals above a certain magnitude into MIDI notes, those are easier to count that individual peaks.

  • @astakimi
    @astakimi Před rokem +7

    I think the ZrO2 ball bearing is a good approximation to an amorphous metal ball bearing. ZrO2 is a tough ceramic material that resist to falling impact (did not dissipate energy forming microcracks) and did not suffer plastic deformation. The fracture toughness of ZrO2 used in ball bearing are almost 2X higher than other technical ceramics like Al2O3 (or ruby) and are more than 10X higher than glass.

    • @CNYKnifeNerd
      @CNYKnifeNerd Před rokem +2

      Zirconium Oxide is a fascinating material.
      It's used in knife bearings, and I've cranked down the pivots intentionally trying to crush the balls, but have never been able to. Also, they will cut channels in 66HRC steel with 23% Vanadium Carbide content (VC content, NOT V content!) after only a few dozen open/close cycles.
      Totally different animal, but Elastic Ceramic is another really interesting material. I'd love to see it featured on this channel.

  • @alexnicolaou3579
    @alexnicolaou3579 Před rokem +16

    one of the best bounces i witnessed was an old style computer mouse wheel, unlike the solid rubber balls, it has a dense metal core and the peripheral rubber doesn't get to deform much. just roll one of those towards a ceramic tile skirting board and you'll be amazed at the speed it'll return back to you

  • @bryceengberg3202
    @bryceengberg3202 Před rokem +1

    The thing that came to my mind when I was watching this was it similarity to Euler's Disks. I would look into the the technology and study behind those because they are just as dependent on material sciences and conservation of energy and you might find some useful information about this topic.

  • @Lando_Commando
    @Lando_Commando Před 10 měsíci +5

    somone should count how many times he said balls

  • @ninam6826
    @ninam6826 Před rokem +67

    Incredible video as always! I love your videos but it's not often that they are in an area of my expertise (materials science)! I was blown away by how well you communicated and animated some really central concepts! Your animation of the rapid cooling of atoms being represented by suddenly applying gravity was really beautiful and intuitive and not something I had seen in my entire PhD program in materials science!
    As I was watching the video, I wanted to comment about rubberbands and why they are my favorite materials science demo. When you elastically deform a spring made of metal, you are storing energy in the lattice by straining the bonds between the atoms for all of the reasons that you very well covered in the video. In a polymer, there is not such an analogous lattice structure (there are crystalline regions in polymers but this is a different and vast and fascinating other topic). The long, flexible chains are pretty easily able to move around one another and rotate about their bonds when the material is deformed and so any given bond is not particularly strained. When undeformed, the polymer chains are randomly arranged among one another, like spaghetti. When the material is deformed, the chains elongate in the direction of the deformation and (this is the really interesting bit) the conformational entropy of the chains is reduced as the chains become more ordered, like dry spaghetti in a box. A restoring force is created (by what? the chains? the bulk material? the universe?) in order to increase the conformational entropy of the chains. If a metal spring can be thought of as an energy spring, a rubber band can be thought of as an "entropy spring"! It is a way for us to feel and experience entropy which can be a very abstract and slippery concept for many.
    Honestly, I think that polymer material science (which was my focus) has so many topics (entropy springs, polymer crystallization and spherulites, polymer single crystal growth, conductive polymers, biodegradable polymers,...) that I think you would find interesting and be right up your wheelhouse!
    Great video as always! Can't wait for the next one! Also, I may (very small chance) have a way to track down a metallic glass ball bearing. I'll keep you posted :)

    • @SteveMould
      @SteveMould  Před rokem +17

      Yes! When I learned that about rubber I was so excited! And if you do get a lead drop me an email (I don't get to read every comment) steve@stevemould.com

    • @Pyriphlegeton
      @Pyriphlegeton Před rokem +5

      @@SteveMould
      Hey Steve! There's a researcher in these comments who can likely get you metal glass balls! Look for "Filipe Henrique Santa Maria".

    • @Graham_Wideman
      @Graham_Wideman Před rokem +6

      This comment by Nina M is among those that make CZcams so worthwhile. Though certainly YT comment streams can get choked with rubbish, it's also a place where we sometimes have the opportunity to hear from people with special and interesting contributions to make. Thanks Nina M!

    • @jannikheidemann3805
      @jannikheidemann3805 Před rokem +1

      When you put a stretched rubber band in the freezer it stays elongated until it reaches a certain temperature. When rubber bands get stretched they get warmer. When rubber bands contract they get cold.
      That points towards temperature above a certain threshold being responsible for the force rubber exerts to regain it's original shape.
      Are there any polymers that act like rubber but can be polymerized in an stretched state?

    • @professorfukyu744
      @professorfukyu744 Před rokem

      We've bumped the hell out of it. Its currently top comment. Please contact him. Just in case he cant find this.
      Actually im gonna repost your email to his comment thread.

  • @TomJones-tx7pb
    @TomJones-tx7pb Před rokem +14

    You could put a hidden planar speaker under the platform and have it make the same sound as the bouncing ball but out of phase with it. By varying the amplitude of the sound of the speaker I think you would see some interesting results.

  • @Bob.Jenkins
    @Bob.Jenkins Před 8 měsíci

    I feel absolutely certain that Grand Illusions would have been enthralled by your tests, observations and results. It takes a keen mind to take someone else's work and think 'what if?'

  • @Prathameshlad2009
    @Prathameshlad2009 Před rokem +2

    would be interesting to see a machined ball of the same amorphous metal on the same surface... since it could be cooled at 1K per second and it would still be amorphous...you can shape it while cooling. It would be bounciest combination ever!

  • @FinnMcRiangabra
    @FinnMcRiangabra Před rokem +20

    I could only wish that you mentioned that the ability to record the bounce sound in vacuum is an example of one type of energy loss. But just fantastic content as usual.

  • @Snowmunkee
    @Snowmunkee Před rokem +129

    One think you should look into for further improvement is to place the rig on an anvil or some other very large hardened steel thing. fun fact, blacksmith anvils are commonly tested for their quality by bouncing a ball bearing and seeing how high it bounces the ball back up. The higher the bounce, the better it will be to forge on.

    • @J0non0
      @J0non0 Před 11 měsíci +6

      @@gregoryford2532 i imagine its also to assist the blacksmith. from what i've seen, blacksmiths use the bounce of their hammer a lot to reduce the amount of effort needed to forge something

  • @buildingwithadad1535
    @buildingwithadad1535 Před 3 měsíci

    I love the practical experimenting of this. I would be curious what would happen if you Cooled the glass and bering down. As this would rise the ridgidness of both surfaces. Also If you also had a layer of Metalic glass between the tube and the brick, or have multiple layers of metalic glass.
    Love the work

  • @Carstuff111
    @Carstuff111 Před rokem +4

    Thank you for this awesome channel :) I am nearly 40 years old, and still love watching stuff like this. Sometimes, being a child at heart means that you never stop learning and keeping things fresh in the mind.

  • @justincase5272
    @justincase5272 Před rokem +39

    One thing you did not state and may not have considered: The resonance frequency of the cylindrical platforms. The sound wave generated by the ball impacting the surface travels to the bottom before being reflected back to the top. Larger balls take longer to deform and bounce than smaller ones. The right-sized balls are probably better timed to be leaving the surface when the reflected sound wave (or multiple) gives it a resonant nudge.

    • @hamzahafejee2732
      @hamzahafejee2732 Před rokem

      Absolute neek

    • @jarekferenc1149
      @jarekferenc1149 Před rokem +3

      Sound in metals travels at kilometres per second. In a millimetre-sized objects this means that the base frequency of standing wave would be of megahertz. How can this be matched to bouncing at 1-10 hertz, and bouncing frequency is variable?

    • @jarekferenc1149
      @jarekferenc1149 Před rokem +1

      @AndrewWithEase11 11 Let me be the advocatus diaboli. He's not necessarily a fool. Basically, the idea is correct: to match the resonance in the bottom platform to the bounces of the balls against the upper surface. The trick is in numbers. We all don't need to be physicists or any kind of experts, and know by heart the values of certain properties of materials.

    • @matthewvincent8971
      @matthewvincent8971 Před rokem +3

      The reflection of energy should be solely the job of the amorphous metal. The mass beneath it is merely a bandaid for energy that leaks below the surface. To that end, the sound that emanates below the mass is the remainder of the leakage. Having a sympathetic resonance might half the leakage but the best bandaid would be the hardest possible mass. A mass made of tungsten or cobalt would allow the amorphous metal to absorb and reflect almost all of the energy itself.

    • @andrewferguson6901
      @andrewferguson6901 Před rokem

      @@matthewvincent8971 am I the only one thinking to also make the ball of amorphous metal?

  • @jessicabrauman
    @jessicabrauman Před 11 měsíci

    I love this video because I only have a 10th grade understanding of physics from 10 years ago, and I barely had any problem understanding this video because it's so well explained.

  • @lis6502
    @lis6502 Před měsícem

    only channel where sponsored segments i enjoy as much as main subject.